Page 12 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 13, 1965 Proceed Slowly—Repairs KU drivers are cautioned to proceed slowly on Sunnyside Avenue tomorrow. Vice-chancellor Keith Lawton reports that the final phase of resurfacing the street will take place all day tomorrow. "A complete surface coating will be applied the full length of Sunnyside—from Naismith Drive to Sunflower Road—if weather permits." Lawton said. "THROUGHOUT THE construction period, KU drivers have been very forbearing and understanding. And we'd like to say to them; this will be the end of it!" Lawton added. Last fall, new curbs and sidewalks were built along Sunnyside. Asphalt coating along the Zone M parking apron had to wait until warmer weather. Lawton said. The final coat of oil and chat to be applied tomorrow will not be laid in front of parking lot entrances during busy hours, Lawton said. Drivers wishing to leave the lot at other times throughout the day may be faced with a 15 to 30 minute wait. Lawton cautioned. "The coating will probably not be laid from 7 to 8 p.m.,11 to 1:30—during the noon hour—and from approximately 4 to 5 in the afternoon." he explained. "HOWEVER, THE CHAT will be applied over the oil immediately so that a driveable surface will be available as soon as possible." Lawton added. Parking area entrances, Lawton explained, will be coated last. if she doesn't give it to you... Stay of Execution Denied 2 Slayers TOPEKA — (UPI) — U.S. Dist. Judge George Templar today denied a stay of execution for condemned killers Richard Eugene Hickock and Perry Edward Smith, scheduled to die on the Kansas galls early Wednesday. Kansas Gov. William H. Avery today also denied a request for executive clemency for Hickock and Smith. The Kansas Supreme Court late Monday rejected their latest appeal. Avery sat in on a clemency hearing in Topeka, but no decision was announced. Word of the Supreme Court denial presumably reached the condemned men, scheduled to go to the gallows at a few minutes past midnight, by radio. Each man has a transistor powered radio in his cell. Smith and Hickock, the confessed killers of Herbert Clutter, his wife, and their teen-age son and daughter, waited on death row today for some last minute word which might save them from the gallows. Visiting hours, restricting callers to a total of four hours per month, were lifted from them some time ago. Miss Parmelee Bates, Bronxville, N.Y., freshman, has become the 1965 Miss Lawrence-KU. Miss Pat Wise, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior, relinquished the title when it conflicted with an opportunity to perform with the Santa Fe Opera company this summer. Frosh Named New Queen Miss Bates, who was runner-up to Miss Wise in the local pageant March 26, will represent Lawrence at the 1965 Miss Kansas pageant at Pratt this summer. Miss Wise was notified of her acceptance by the Opera Company on April 2, only a week after she had been crowned Miss Lawrence. "IM TERRIBLY,terribly happy," Miss Bates said last night. "I'm looking forward to the pageant in July." She said she was extremely surprised when she answered the telephone and was told by one of the contest officials that Miss Wise was resigning her title. She will be understudying five or six roles for the opera company this summer. She will also take part in the premiers of several operas, including "The Nose." She has a part in the chorus of "La Traviata." "ABOUT 300 TRIED out for the positions, and only six new members were chosen for the summer," Miss Wise continued. Immediately after school is out, she will leave for Santa Fe, where rehearsals will begin on the ninth of June. She will sing with the opera company until August 29. She will be working with Robert Boston, KU's Orchestra Director, who acts as Director of the Santa Fe Opera Orchestra, and directs all music for the opera company. Fiction Contest Sponsored By The New Literary Magazine The Cottonwood Review To be judged by the Awards Committee of the English Department First Prize $50 May 1 Deadline Cottonwood Review Reserves The Right To Publish Any Fiction Submitted. Jobs are available on the French Riviera this summer JOBS IN EUROPE Grand Duchy of Luxembourg — Paying jobs in Europe are available in such categories as resort, hotel, office, sales, farm, factory, camp and shipboard work. Wages are as high as $400 a month and the American Student Information Service is giving every applicant a $250 travel grant. Job and travel grant applications and complete details are available in a 36-page booklet which students may obtain by sending $2 (for the booklet and airmail postage) to Dept. L. ASIS, 22 Ave. de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. presents SUA POETRY HOUR Dr. Robert Nunley Thursday, April 15---4:30 p.m. Geography and Latin American Area Professor Music Room of Kansas Union