Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 2,1965 Education School Spring Honors List Shows 158 Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, has announced the names of 158 education students who achieved listing on the school's spring semester honor roll. Each earned a grade-point average of at least 2.5. Those included are the upper 12 per cent of the school's spring student body. Seventeen students earned "straight A" grades for a 3.00 average. They are: Diane U. Anderson, Omaha, Neb., senior; Victoria Berin, Bronx, Xi.; Mona U. Anderson, Mona, Mona; Janine Shari Davis, Lawrence senior; Ronnie Ann Eckmeyer, Prairie Village senior; Virginia Emerson, Bartlesville senior; Carol Anert Evert, Kirkwood, Mona, Mona. Danielle M. Goering, Moundridge senior; Lance H. Jeevis, Jesum, Denmark; senior; Barbara L. Kerlinger, Sedalia, Mo. senior; Jo Ann Kutz, Kansas City senior; Diane Elaine Magers, Shirene Mission senior; Jane Stone, Jane Stone; Jane Ann Tusten, Lawrence senior; Sharon Budd Weiss, Skagway, Alas, senior; Kathleen L. Withee, Independence, Mo., senior; Colleen S. Boggs, Denver, Colo., junior. Campers Work In Busy Week The first week of camp certainly was a busy one and the second week promises to be much the same. The leading events of the first part of the week were the movie "Bridge on the River Kwai" which was shown Tuesday in the Templin Cafeteria and "The Music Man" which was put on at the University Theatre on Thursday night at 8:20 p.m. Friday the Bowling League will play at 6:30 in the Jay Bowl while at 7:15 in the Templin cafeteria the movie, "The Mouse That Roared," starring Peter Sellers, will be shown. There will be a change of pace Saturday when the theatre, science and ballet divisions will go to Kansas City to the Starlight Theatre. And 300 other campers will take part in a "moonlight swim" at Holiday Park. There will be a Jewish service at 10 a.m. in the Hi-Fi room at Templin. Sunday, the usual late (8:00) awakening will be followed at 10 by the chapel service at Swarthout. Both concerts again will be held in the University Theatre this week with the choir and orchestra concert beginning at 3 p.m. and the band concert starting at 7:30 p.m. Monday the newly-elected Camp Council will hold their first meeting at 8 p.m. in Templin cafeteria. KU Ranks 23rd In Executives KU ranked 23rd among all colleges and universities in the nation in producing top officers for the 600 largest non-financial corporations, according to a study just published by the magazine "Scientific American." The study, "The Big Business Executive/1964," updates an important sociological study performed by Dr. Mabel Newcomer, former head of the department of economics at Vassar College, "The Big Business Executive—The Factors that Made Him: 1900 to 1950." Nine of the approximately 1,000 "big business executives" in the study received their undergraduate educations from the University of Kansas, placing it midway on a list of 45 colleges and universities which supplied five graduates or more to this group. KU ranked ninth among state universities. There were 18 state universities on the list, including six representatives of the Big Ten institutions and five representatives of the Big Eight. Voting Bill Advances WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The House Rules Committee yesterday cleared the way for House action next week on President Johnson's voting rights bill. The vote was 11 to 4. Others on the Honor Roll include Others on the Honor Roll include: Charlotte R. Almquist, Bridgeport senior; Mary Ruth Andes, Lawrence senior; Martha Ann Ashbaugh, Wichita senior; Patricia Sue Barnes, Osage City senior; Gloria Lura Barron, Rogers, Ark., senior; Barbara Anne Bauerle, Harlan, Ja, senior; Wanda Irene Beard, Janssan, Nancy Beth Beln, Claude- ninson junior; Lynette J. Berg, Claude Tex., junior. Helen Louise Berge, Sabeth senior; Carolyn V. Berneking, Lawrence senior; Belinda Sue Brown, Topeka junior; Nancy Rebecca Brown, Arcadia junior; Priscilla Bulkeley, Prairie Village senior; Betty J. Burgat, Topeka junior; Bonnie Marsh, Topeka Junior; Virginia M. Cannon, Kansas City, Mo.; Billie R. Carpenter, Pacific Palisades, Calif., senior; Margaret G. Carpenter, Udall junior. Stewart A. Carter, Oxford junior; Nancy March Caston, Scott City senior; Nancy Lee Cline, Wichita senior; Harold Walter Cox Jr., St. Joseph, Mo., senior; Donna Ann Craig, Kansas City junior; Gerald W Crispin, Barberton O., seni- tor; Janet Searle, St. Louis, Jean Marie Degrand, St. Louis, Mo., seni- jor; Joanne H. Dovishvich, Western Springs, Ill., senior; Virginia Lee Douglas, Crawfordsville, Ind., senior. Louis Ashley Elbl, Shawnee Mission senior; Janet Louise Evans, Wichita senior; Marjory C. Faeth, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; Robert M. Fanning, Shawnee senior; Janet Mae Fassnacht, Overland Park junior; Karen A. Finfrock, Lawrence-Kirchridge junior; Mildred Fakes, Lawrence senior; Cynthia Sue Gallup, Overland Park senior; Mary Anne Garlow, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior. Susan Kay Griffiths, Chanute senior; Barbara M. Guenter, Wilmington, Del.; senior; Roy James Guenther, Breckenridge, Okla., senior; Linda B. Guyot, Wichita senior; Linda Sue Hale, Wichita junior; Martha Sue Harp, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior; Nancy L. Harrington, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior; Hawk, Lawrence junior; D. Holm, El Dorado Springs, Mo., junior; Kenneth M. Hibbard, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Karla Kay Hozelel, Kansas City. Mo. minor; Barbara K. Hoffmann, Shawneen senior; Joyce E. Houser, Howard senior; Daniel B. Warner, James K. Warnock; Donna Jane Hunt, Kansas City, Mo. minor; Myrna S. Iddings, Wichita senior; J安 E. Janentz, Hill City junior; Dianne Sue Karnze, Princeville senior; Kay Karmze, Prarieville Senior; Mary Kary Keempny, Lyons seniors Dennis Allan Klein, New York City, N.Y., senior; Marlan Jean Koepke, Topekaade, Janet M. Laffey, Mahwah senior; Madeline M. Laffey, Fredonia senior; Bonnie Lamontaine, Leavenworth senior; Linda F. Lance, Wichita senior; Rebecca J. Larson, Tulsa, Okla., Junior; Sharon Elhine Law, Kansas City, Mo.; Morgan J. Lientz, Shawnee Mission junior. Georgia Luetkemeler, Moline, Ill., senior; Barbara Anne Lupher, Kirkwood, Mo.; senior; Sally Ann Lytle, Kansas City senior; Patricia S. Manuel, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; Irene C. Marinos, Maizeville, N.J.; senior; Wichita junior; Cheryl Annie Walker, Kansas City senior; Nancy Jane Speirs, Dodge City senior. Nancy A. McArthur, Hawarden, Ia. senior; Sharon R. McIlrath, Hugot senior; Judith M. McKlimey, Lawrence senior; Katie Kauzner, Jean E. Miller, Hawatah Junior; Judith L. Miller, Pittsburg senior; Lois Evonne Miller, Alma senior; Susan Kay Jr., Evonne Miller, Marilyn Jean Moffat, Great Bend senior; Mary C. Morrozo, Counsel Grove senior. Kala Amy Musiek, Minneapolis senior; Daniel A. Myers III, Kansas City senior; G. Ann Mills, Oklahoma senior; Nilsse Nielsen, Overland Park senior; Sharon Esther Nelson, Larned senior; Jill V. Newburg, Carmell, Ind., senior; John Sidney Nickels, Mission senior; John Sidney Mitchell, Joanne Olson, Omaha senior; Nancy J Padgett, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Kathel Ann Payne, Prairie Village senior; Gena Lewis Peters, Dodge City senior; Verne Ray Peterson, Lawrence junior; Jeanne Anne Phelps, Carpe Girardeau, Mo., senior; Sherri S. Plank, Bethel senior; Pat Postlethwaite, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Linda Lee Pin, Kan. Mo., senior; Kristen Randle Rancho Kansas City, Mo., senior; Rose Lee Ramirez, Lawrence senior; Elizabeth Muell Reed, Des Moines, Ja., senior. Helen A. Remington, Wichita senior; Colleen Anne Ryan, Shawnee Mission senior; Janice Ania Sajwj, DeSoto junior; Elijah Ciechanowicz, Robert Henckel, Herkimer senior; Judith Woelk Schrag, Newton senior; Marilyn M. Schutte, Kansas City senior; Sherryl Ann Selby, Belleville senior; Theresa R. Shannon, Kansas City senior; Linda Grace Simon, Overland Park seni- dor; J. Searcheil, Baxter Springs junior. Phyllis E. Sleeper, Overland Park senior; Kay Frances Smith, Newton senior; Linda Ann Spier, Phillipsburg senior; Stephen Pace, Hutchinson senior; Michelle D. Steele, Wichita city; Gwen Sue Stuart, Lawrence junior; Anna C. Stucky, Lawrence senior; Barbara Ann Trump, Kirkwood, Mo.; senior; J. S. Turrence, Independent; Cuney, Kansas city; Lee Scott Varner, Arlington, Va., senior; Doreen G. Voigt, Atchison senior; Carol Patrick Wagner, Kansas City senior; Kay Ann Walker, Edina Mn., senior; Gerald J. Wynne, Kansas city; Janice M. Whitaker, Little River senior; HerbertEdward White, Wakefield, Mass. senior; Karen Ann Wight, Tulsa, Okla. junio; Harriet Ellen Will, Memphis, Memphis; Michael Wood, wood senior; Janet Hunter Woerner; Oberlin senior; Mary Lynn Woodhull Kansas City, Mo., senior; Mary Je Zahradnik, Kansas city senior. Students Aid Blood Center Blood supplies in Lawrence and Ottawa hospitals received a strong shot-in-the-arm from KU students last year. Most students gave one pint, but 52 contributed two pints during the nine-month period. An additional 52 students not on the list tried to contribute, but were rejected for medical reasons. Figures released show 342 University students contributed 394 pints of blood to the region's Red Cross Blood Center—more than one-third of the 1,619 pints collected in the region between September and June. Judy McArthur, the center's chief nurse, termed the University donor program "the best ever by a long shot." Donations were boosted by mobile unit drawings at Templin Hall and several fraternity houses, but many were made individually at the center. The mobile donation program was coordinated through a Student Council committee. Hospitals supplied with blood from this region are Lawrence Memorial, Watkins on the University campus, and Ransom Memorial in Ottawa. The region provides blood to hospital patients without charge. Anthropology Student Honored for Paper Robert L. Bee, graduate student from Lawrence at KU, is the first prize winner in the student research paper competition of the Central States Anthropological Society. He received the $50 prize and citation for his paper on "Fottawatomie Teyotism—The Influence of Traditional Patterns." The future character of the United Nations and its ability to carry out peace-keeping operations may well depend upon the way in which it resolves its current financial dispute, an article published by the Governmental Research Center states. Financial Dispute Termed Key to Prospects of UN The article, "Deadlock in the United Nations," appears in the May issue of "Your Government," a publication of the Governmental Research Center, The University of Kansas. Until the deadlock is resolved, the article states, the General Assembly "will remain virtually paralyzed while the veto in the Security Council will prevent the consideration of important measures by the Council if the United States and the Soviet Union are not in agreement." The central figures in the dispute are the United States and the Soviet Union. The stand of the United States is that all UN members are obligated to help meet the costs of UN peace-keeping operations, whether these members approve of the operations or not. The Soviet Union, on the other hand, triggered the dispute by refusing to pay its share for two such operations which it opposed: peace-keeping operations in the Middle East in 1956 and in the Congo in 1961. While both the US and USSR couch their arguments in legal terms, "it is generally believed . . . that the legal arguments are not the real ones but merely faqades for the political differences they hide," the article states, "These differences focus on the role of the General Assembly and its authority to act in peacekeeping and other situations over the objection of a single major power. "The Soviets, and to a lesser degree the French, want to return control over peace-keeping efforts to the Security Council where they possess a veto over such action. The Soviet Union is using its refusal to pay as a method of reasserting its power to prevent actions from being taken with which it does not approve. The Soviet Union and France simply do not want the General Assembly to exercise authority for actions that they believe inimical to their national interests. "The United States, having initiated the 'Uniting for Peace' resolution in 1950 to circumvent the veto in the Security Council (by emphasizing peace-keeping authority on the part of the General Assembly), does not want the Assembly's freedom of action checked by the opposition of a single, or few powers." Underlying this stand by the United States, the article states, is its confidence that "its basic policies are mirrored in a majority of the General Assembly." Although it is likely that the conflict will be resolved, the dispute nevertheless probably will affect UN peace-keeping operations in the future. the study states. "Since neither the United States nor the Soviet Union (nor any of its members, now that Indonesia has withdrawn) wants to destroy the UN, there seems little doubt that some mutually agreeable solution will be achieved . . . But however the deadlock is broken, and whatever scheme is developed for future peace-keeping financing, it seems unlikely that the UN will extend its role in the vital area of keeping the peace to the same degree it did during the past decade." --- SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES Summer Schedule July 7 Laurel & Hardy in "Way Out West" July 14 Charlie Chaplin in "The Gold Rush" July 21 Lon Chaney in "Phantom of the Opera" July 28 Italian Cine Classic (1914) "Antony and Cleopatra" Wednesdays Forum Room Kansas Union (AIR CONDITIONED) 7:00 p.m. Admission: 50c