Tuesday, May 25, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 UDK Names Staff Nineteen students have been selected for staff positions on the University Daily Kansas for the 1965 fall semester. Students named to positions are Judy Farrell, Topeka junior, managing editor; Susan Hartley, Atwood junior; Jane Larson, Scotch Plains, N.J., junior; Susan Tichacek, Omaha, Neb., junior, and Glen Phillips, Topeka junior, assistant managing editors. Jacke Thayer, Ellsworth sophomore, city editor; Nancy Scott Council Grove junior, feature and society editor; Ernest Ballweg Cottonwood Falls junior, sports editor; Robert Stevens, Junction City sophomore, telegraph editor, and Harry Krause, New Haven, Conn., junior, photo editor. Karen Lambert. Wadsworth junior, and Janet Chartier, Salina junior, will be co-editorial editors. Krause will also be associate editorial editor. Students selected for positions in the business department are Ed Vaughan, Leawood junior, business manager; Dale Reinecker, Wellington junior, advertising manager; Eugene Parrish, Kansas City, Mo., junior, national advertising manager; Mike Robe, Arkansas City junior, circulation manager; Keith Issitt, Abilene junior, promotion manager; John Hons, Wichita junior, merchandising manager, and Mike Wertz, Tulsa, Okla., junior, classified manager. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds CASH For Your Bookstore Rebate Slips CALL VI 2-1791 PHOTO BY DE VIA Beloved by brides for over 100 years For bridal etiquette, for wedding-gown fashions—the "BRIDE & HOME" magazine is the guide for the girl who demands perfection. She's the one who knows the wedding ring must be perfect too. So, of course, she wants an Artcarved—for its excellence of design, its tremendous choice of styles. And, clever girl, she knows they cost no more—start at $81! A. CHAPEL SET B. RAINBOW SET C. TENDERNESS SET Groom's Ring ... $29.50 Bride's Ring ... $27.50 Groom's Ring ... $24.50 Groom's Ring ... $35.00 Bride's Ring ... $22.50 Bride's Ring ... $32.50 Your KU ID is your pass to credit. They were not having a last fling before exams, they were taking the final exam in Dean James K. Logan's Legal Profession course. The test was based upon the events occurring in the movie "Anatomy of a Murder," which was screened at the beginning of the examination period in Bailey Hall. The students were then given one and a half hours to write on several essay questions concerned with legal ethical problems which arose in the movie. A class of 70 KU law students went to the movies Saturday afternoon. Law Students Go to Movies As Part of Dean's Final Exam DEAN LOGAN said the film had caused considerable controversy in the legal profession with respect to some of the portraits. VI 3-8866 743 Mass. Before screening "Anatomy of a Murder," each of the students were given an examination sheet containing questions concerning ethical problems which arose during the movie, such as the interviews held between defense counsel Paul Biegler and his client (the defendant) Lieutenant Manion, who was charged with murder. Other ethical problems which the students were asked to write on included the conduct of the prosecuting and defense attorneys during the trial itself and the question of whether or not the portrayal of members of the legal profession was favorable or unfavorable. ED BOYLE, Shawnee Mission third year law student and editor in chief of the KU Law Review, said the test was certainly a novel idea, but he felt that it should be limited to a pass and fail course such as Legal Profession. "I don't feel that this type of examination has too many prospects of becoming stand- ard procedure in the law school," Boyle added. Fund Raisers Named for Myers Hall An executive campaign board has been named for the School of Religion to aid in a fund drive for a new building to replace the present Myers Hall. full-time faculty, library and religious-education services of the school, Paul Shivel, development director, said. The twenty-member board will kick off a fund drive in September to provide $1 million for the new building and an expansion of the State chairman for the drive is C.Y. Thomas, of Mission Hills with U.S. Senator Frank Carlson, Concordia, serving as honorary chairman.