University Daily Kansan Page 9 College Bowl Leaders Named for Next Term The 1965-66 College Bowl Committee has been announced by the College Intermediary Board. This committee will be responsible for the preparation of the 1966 spring matches on campus. G. Terrill (Terry) Hammons, Oswego junior, was selected for the chairmanship. Henry F. Bisbee, Toledo, O., junior, will head the questions committee. IN CHARGE of arrangements will be David L. Tilford, Wichita junior, Janice M. Brenner, Parsons freshman, will handle the publicity. The College Bowl was initiated on the intramural level at KU in 1961. The matches are conducted in question-answer sessions similar to the TV program. The teams represent various living groups and professors serve as moderators. The other members of the committee are: Mary Ann Cheatham, Tulsa, Okla. juniur; Paul Consolver, Wichita freshman; Paul L. Bock, Dodge City sophomore; Carole A. Cour, El Dorado sophomore; Edward C. Gordon, Fort Scott freshman; Sara L. Harvey, Overland Park sophomore; Donna J. Hunt, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Elizabeth J. (Tucky) March, Tulsa juniur. ALSON R. MARTIN, Shawnee There are still some tickets left for the last performances of the Experimental Theatre's show, "The Play's the Thing." Sachem Initiates Select Officers Mission sophomore; J. Thomas Payne, Salina junior; S. Boyd Pearce, Topeka sophomore; Thomas G. Rader, Greensburg freshman; Madaline B. Reeder, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Klonda K. Speer, Scottsville sophomore; Dennis M. Taylor, Grand Forks A.F.B., N.D.; Billie G. Thompson, Ballwin, Mo., junior; Judith G. Thompson, Lawrence junior; James W. Wheatley, Garden City junior; and Jane A. Zimmerman, Fort Scott sophomore. The play, which is the last of this season's shows, is sold out for Friday and Saturday night, but there are still about 30 tickets left for tonight's performance. Sachem, senior men's honorary society, selected its new officers by lot last Sunday. "The Play's the Thing," Ferene Molnar's comedy about theatre people involved in a love affair, was a hit on Broadway in the twenties and in 1948, when it was revived for the Broadway stage. Bircher at WU Upheld Tickets Remain For Last Show WICHITA — (UP) — Would-behecklers at a Wichita State University appearance of three members of the John Birch Society were squelched Wednesday night by Dr. Emory Lindquist, president of the school. Selected were: Jeff Nichols, Stockton junior, president; Steve Munzer, Salina junior, vice president; Mike Vineyard, Wymore, Neb., junior, scribe; Terry Hammons, Oswego junior, treasurer; and Larry Bast. Topeka junior, boy (this is a miscellaneous job). Sachem also initiated its new members last Sunday behind the football stadium. This was followed by a dinner in the Kansas Union for the initiates and their parents. Robert Love, Kenneth Meyers and Dr. George Cox, all Wichita states, were invited to speak by Wichita State's International Club of foreign and American students. "He would have appeared if I had to open the doors of the lecture hall myself," he said, adding that Hughes appeared as a nationally known poet, not a politician. "I do not believe in the Birch Society," Lindquist said, but he asked the students to listen "in the name of the University tradition." Love, who appeared first, was interrupted by an unidentified student. Lindquist immediately asked permission to speak. Lindquist said he was bitterly criticized for allowing Langston Hughes to speak on the campus recently. He received several minutes' applause and there were no further attempts to heckle the speakers. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry. A B F Δ E Z H θ J K A M - Guards - Mugs - Rings - Pins - Lavaliers - Crests 809 Massachusetts M O P R T F X Y Q When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds SUA FRIDAY FLICKS The Ugly American starring Marlon Brando, Sandra Church PLUS W.C. Fields in The Circus Slicker Admission 35¢ FRASER THEATER 7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. Communist Speaker at MU Greeted by Hostile Crowd COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UPI)— Amid catcalls and jeers from an obviously hostile audience, an American Communist party leader Wednesday night told a University of Missouri group that America must adjust to a changing world or face certain disaster. Claude Lightfoot, a 55-year-old Chicago Negro, former vice chairman of the party's national committee, addressed a standing room only crowd of about 550 persons sponsored by the New Fabian Society of the university. Wednesday night's meeting was attended by a dozen members of the Missouri House of Representatives, about evenly split between Republicans and Democrats. A close watch was kept by campus police and at least one state highway patrolman in plain clothes and an FBI agent were spotted in the crowd. Lightfoot blamed the American philosophy for holding down progress in African nations and elsewhere in the world, charging that much racial bias had been caused by a feeling in this country that one race was inherently less capable than another. "Ignorance has made the American people the most hated nation in the history of mankind," he exclaimed. See Lawrence from the AIR! Just a Penny-a-Pound Now's your chance to see Lawrence from the air. Plane rides over Lawrence for just 1c a pound by your weight. (1.00 minimum) Erhart Flying Service Sunday, May 23rd At the Municipal Airport