P-to-P group hears European tour plans Students interested in an indepth experience in European travel were invited to contact the People-to-People office soon for information about its student abroad program now being organized. "It is a program for independent-minded students," Jean-Louis Baudoin, coordinator for the international program, said at a People-to-People meeting Tuesday night. Baudoin, who is touring the U.S. speaking to college chapters of People-to-People, stressed that it is not a guided tour, but a program with a guided introduction for individual travel. EACH STUDENT lives three weeks in a home in a European country he choses and he is then free to travel on his own for seven weeks. Baudoin explained. "The seven weeks on his own are the most worthwhile to the student," Baudoin said. "We are trying to give the student in ten weeks an experience that would take six to eight months for persons who are dropped into Europe on their own without experienced planning." During their first week in Europe, students are introduced to political, social and economic points of view. GROUP PROGRAMS and individual activity with the students' European families helps to eliminate any cultural shock during the first few days, Baudoin said. Students receive aid in planning their travel itineraries from the Advice, Service, and Savings in International Student Travel (ASSIST) office in Brussels, Belgium. The program extends from the middle of June to the last of August. The sophomore class congress, the first class government of its kind in the country, has initiated a campus-wide stamp campaign to provide food for needy families overseas. Stamp campaign to begin The stamps will be collected in large ice cream cartons to be placed in all living groups Friday. They will be sold to the Northern Idaho Council of Churches which will, in turn, sell them to private collectors and the federal government. The money will be used to send surplus food to needy families and orphanages overseas. "THE ONLY stamps we don't want are four-cent Lincolnns and five-cent Washingtonss," said Dave Keesling, Herrington sophomore and vice-president of the congress. "We especially want to encourage foreign students to donate their stamps," he added. "Those are extremely valuable." Ancient Greece will make its annual appearance at KU with the opening of Greek Week April 24 to 29. Approximately 300 pounds of food for every $1 worth of stamps is the usual exchange. Greeks set week Correction Air mail, foreign or American commemorative stamps average The spohomore class variety talent show will be held Feb. 11 in Hoch Auditorium instead of December 11 as stated in yesterday's Kansan. $25 worth of food, and some bring as much as $100. 10 Daily Kansan Thursday, December 1, 1966 Campus fraternities and sororities will initiate the five days of planned activities with exchange dinners, followed by a bridge party for housemothers and selection of the Greek Week queen at a Kansas Union banquet. Community service projects by fraternity and sorority members are also planned. Activities will end with the traditional East Hills-West Hills football game, Greek Week sing and the fraternity relays in Memorial Stadium. TH E Spoofer Shop... A new and DIFFERENT kind of College shop, offers the WILDEST Line of Christmas Gifts in the MIDWEST. Wearing apparel... Sweatshirts-T-Shirts-Niteshirts Surfer Jackets-Henelys Shirts-Hats .all printed to order. 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