CAMPUS TALENT, 66 Show to hold auditions Fall Campus Talent '66 will hold auditions Friday from 3:30 to 6 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy. The show is produced on location with a mobile video tape unit and it will feature the talent of many Kansas universities and colleges. It is sponsored by Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. Co. B. Calvin Jones, producer of the show, or Jon Stainbrook, director will conduct the auditions. Students trying out will be asked to provide their own accompaniment. A piano will be available in Swarthout Hall. THE SHOW WILL BE an hour long special and it will be televised throughout the state this fall. Singers, dancers, musical groups, and speciality acts such as gymnasts, monologists, comics, or magicians are needed for the show. Its sponsor is producing the program as a representative selection of student performers in the variety arts. Performers for the program will be paid a professional fee. Background music will be individually arranged and recorded by a professional orchestra for any acts requiring it. SPRING CAMPUS TALENT '66 featured four KU students. They were Patricia Anderson, White City sophomore; Irene Ballinger, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Paul Hough, Topeka senior and Patricia Wise, Oklahoma City, Okla. graduate student. Miss Anderson is a voice major and she attended Eastman School of Music. She plans a career in opera or comic opera. Official Bulletin TODAY Carillon Recital, 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. Tau Sigma Dance Auditions, 7 p.m. 120. Robinson TOMORROW SUA Membership Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Ballroom. Kansas Union. Wichita Chamber of Commerce Air-Cade, 12 noon. Big 8 Room, Union. Ph.D. Final Exam. 3 p.m. Mrs. Nancy Vanovich, Speech & Drama. Mary Brennan, Speech & Drama. Latin America Area Majors Career Counseling by departmental representatives of LA Committee, Sunflower coffees, coffee fries, interested are Welcome, coffee fries Rock Chalk Revue Meeting, 7 p.m. Meeting for Representatives of Interested groups. Pan-American Room, Union. KU Students for a Democratic Society, 7:30 p.m. Open meeting feature "REP, "MacBird," Kandide, Campus Programs, Cottonwood Room, Union. Miss Ballinger is a theatre arts major and plans a theatre career. Hough is also a theatre arts major. He was a State Department representative to Eastern Europe in the Cultural Exchange Program and he plans a career as a musical comedy director. Miss Wise was graduated from KU last spring with a music education degree and she plans an operatic career. as a musical comedy director. Another campus talent show is being planned by Southwestern Bell for broadcast in May. To Alex Brown, Lawrence freshman and pre-business major, dancing means "the freedom to put everything you have into something." Brown, member of Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity open to all men and women students, said "The only thing that limits your dancing is your own ability. The thrill comes from putting everything you've got into something." Dance fraternity offers student involvement This was the feeling of many of the 40 co-eds as they practiced last night with Elizabeth Sherbon, instructor in physical education, for the Tau Sigma try-outs, to be held at 7 p.m. today in new Robinson Hall. Elaine Roberts, Topeka senior and also a physical education major, said that each movement allows the individual to create and express a different feeling. WARM-UP exercises dominate the scene as music was improvised by a music therapy student. Turning to floor patterns with an emphasis on pattern instead of movement, the instructor, with an easy smile, explained the necessity of using self-discipline in dance and keeping the syncopated feeling within oneself. The interest of Jill Perry, Lawrence junior and physical education major, which reflects the instructor's attitude, revolves from the tendency of everyone to "have a good time together." CYDNEY CLUTTER, Larned sophomore, said one must know about and appreciate dancing before he likes it. In the development of her dancing skills through the years, she has found dancing to be a beautiful art in which "everything is learned and controlled." "Dancing makes you more at ease with people," suggested Terry Browne, Kansas City junior and elementary education major. It gives one poise. With the opportunity for self-expression, dancing helps eliminate that inhibited feeling, Miss Browne added. Tau Sigma Delta was organized at KU in 1921 not only to promote interest in and the caliber of dancing, but also to enlighten students in the dance world. Intramurals set kickoff, Sept. 28 Opening kick-off for intramural touch football season is set for Sept. 28 with over 1,200 men expected to compete in A and B groupings, according to Robert Lockwood, intramural director. leads the league with six receptions for 88 yards. Teams will be divided according to fraternity and independent teams and ability grouped in A and B leagues. All games will begin at 4:15 p.m. and are scheduled at the intramural fields surrounding Robinson Gymnasium. Lockwood said the deadline for entering is next Tuesday and prospective players should contact intramural managers in their respective fraternities or dormitories or register at the intramural office in Room 208 of Robinson Gymnasium. A round-robin grid tournament, to be played before Thanksgiving vacation, will establish Hill champs for fraternities and independents in groups A and B. Each organization is limited to one A touch football team but may enter an unlimited number of B teams, Lockwood said. Players must sign medical permits and pay a 25-cent entry fee. Registration for other fall intramural sports—golf, badminton, handball, horseshoes and tennis—is open now with a Tuesday deadline. Daily Kansan 7 Wednesday, September 21, 1966 "THE PANCAKE MAN" 1528 West 23rd Students' Breakfast Special . . . . 59c 1 egg, bacon, toast Special Luncheon Daily 99c 11 a.m.-2 p.m.except Sat. & Sun. 18 Varieties of Pancakes and Waffles 9 Flavors of Syrup Chicken 'N' Fries 99c To go or eat here Steaks, Chops, & Chicken Dinners from $1.45 In passing, injured field leader Bob Skahan leads in total offense with 230 yards. Skahan's prime target Halley Kmpschroeder Offsetting the 23-7 Saturday loss to Texas Tech, three Jayhawks took the lead in four Big Eight offensive departments. Hawks lead for Big 8 areas 7 A.M.-8 P.M.--CLOSED MONDAY STARTS TODAY! Tonight at 7:15 & 9:15 audrey hepburn and peter o'toole IN WILLIAM WYLTON HOW TO STEAL a MILLION SPARKLER ELI WALLACH HUGH GRIFFITH CHARLES BOYER A WILLOW WHITE FLOOR KIDS MOVE COLLECTION PANAVISION • COLOR BY DELUXE PANAVISION® • COLOR by DELUXE NOW! Matinees Daily 2:30 p.m. Matinees Daily at 2:30 p.m. Evenings at 7:15 & 9:15 COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS 20 DRYAN FORBES PRODUCTION OF THE EASTMAN COLOR WRONG BOX Coming Soon! "DOUBLE 007!" Now Showing! Show Starts 7:00 "The Longest Day" - PLUS - "My Son the Hero" OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK © 1987 Seven Seas Division + Faberue Inc.