Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 24, 1965 Latin Schools Send Teachers to Seminar Representatives from 17 Latin American countries will arrive in Lawrence this weekend for the upcoming Sixth Seminar on Higher Education in the Americas beginning next Monday and continuing through April 11. Participating educators include: Argentina — Jose Maria Escalera, general secretary of the National University of Cordoba; Father Jaime Heraclio Amadeo, director of studies, supervisor of schools of architecture and social services of Catholic University. Cordoba. BOLIVIA MARCEL VARGAS Vacaflor, director of the cultural department. University of Chuquisaca. Brazil — Aderson Andrade de Menezes, rector of the University of Amazonas; Athos de Silveiria Ramos, president and chemistry institute of the University of Brazil. Chile—Jorge Millas Jimenez, head of the department of philosophy, University of Chile; Juan de Dios Vial Larrain, assistant secretary general of Catholic University of Chile. Colombia-Sven Zetelius Penalosa professor of chemistry of Nationa. University, Bogota; Eduardo Camacho Guizado, head of the department of Spanish American literature, University of Los Andes. COSTA RICA—LIC, FERNANDO Montero Gei, dean of the faculty of microbiology, University of Costa Rica. Ecuador—Alfonso Martinez Aragon, rector of the University of Guayaquil. El Salvador—Manuel Guillermo Campos, director of Salvadoran government's Superior Normal School. Guatemala—Felipe Jose Mendizabal, registrar of the University of Guatemala. HONDURAS - HUMBERTO LOpez Villamil, secretary general of the University of Honduras. Mexico—Enrique Romero Zozaya technical secretary of the National Association of Universities. Panama-Rafael E. Moscote, professor of history, University of Panama. Peru—Agustin Gavidia Salcedo, rector of the Agrarian University of the North; Hernan Rojas Rengifo, professor, faculty of letters, University of Trujillo. URUGUAY—MARIO GARBARino Couto, professor of political economy, University of Republic of Montevideo. Venezuela—Jorge Vera Escobar, vice-rector of the University of Carabobo; Margarita Dobles, technical advisor of National University Council, Ministry of Education; Jose Lorenzo Perez, Office of Educational Planning, Ministry of Education; Alfonso Gamero, dean of the faculty of science, Central University of Venezuela. Education School To Hold Remedial Reading Lectures The School of Education is planning a lecture series in reading, with emphasis on remedial instruction. This series is designed to present current information to a combined group of students and interested professional personnel. Dr. H. Alan Robinson, director of the reading conference and workshop at the University of Chicago The first lecture will be given on Friday in 411 Summerfield Hall. Dr. George D. Spache, professor of education and chairman of the reading laboratory and clinic at the University of Florida, will be featured. Official Bulletin TODAY French Club Meeting, 4:30 p.m. Room 11, Fraser. Le Cerule Francais se recuira a 4 heures et demie, Salle 11 de Fraser. M. John Williams donnera une causerie avec projections sur "Une Annee en Chaument." Carillon Recital, 7:00 p.m. Albert Gerken. Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "Little Caesar." Fraser Theater. Civil Rights Council, 7:00 p.m. Parking lot east of Union, marching to Hoch auriform. Demonstration protesting University sanction of discriminatory practices. College Life, 7:15 p.m., 1921 Vermont. 7:00 p.m., Timely Topics, "Who's This Guy?" Cardinal Newman," Fr. Brendan, 8:00 p.m., Newman Executive meeting Little Symphony, 8:00 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall. Featured Speakers Lecture, 8:15 p.m. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, "The Rule of Law and Survival." Hoeh Auditorium. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Little Mary, Sunshine." People to People. informal reception equipment. 4 p.m. Cottonwood, Room, Kansas Union Epicapish Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Psychology Colloquium, 2:30 p.m. p.m. Theory Forum, New York, University of New Toronto, Room Floor, Kansas City Mathematics Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. Prof. B. R. Ehoades, CUPM. 119 Strong. Wesley Foundation Evensong, 5:00 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oread. St. Lawrence Student Center Activities: 10:40 a.m., Theology 102; 4:00 p.m. Theology 101; 7:00 p.m., Theology 101; 7:00 p.m. Phi 101, Contemporary Philosoph- hology. Ethics and Society, 8:00 p.m. Dr. Tasmin Assaz, M.D. Forum Room, Kansas Union. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Little Mary, Sunshine." The third speech will be entitled "Initial Teaching of the Alphabet" and will be given in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, March 23. Dr. Albert J. Mazurkiewicz, director of the reading and study clinic, the initial teaching alphabet studies center, at Lehigh University, will talk. will be the second speaker. He will give a talk entitled "A New Concept on Remedial Instruction" on March 6 in Bailey Auditorium in the School of Education. Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 25: Hickman Mills, Mo., Consolidated School Dist. No.1, elementary and junior high. On April 3 the last lecture will be given by Donald Neville, director of the child study center at George Peabody College for Teachers. His topic will be "Intellectual Characteristics of Children with Reading Disabilities." It will be held in Bailey Auditorium. Communist China Aims at African Target Despite the fact that the United States remains Red China's No.1 propaganda target, the Chinese are not neglecting Africa. By Tim Newton UPI Foreign News Analyst The addition will be ready for occupancy Sept. 1, 1965. Broker said There the Chinese press both their policies against the United States and their struggle with the Soviet Union for influence in Afro-Asian affairs. By Phil Newsom Recent events illustrate the varying degrees of their success. From Buiumburu, Chinese agents advised and financed Congolese rebels and supplied them with arms shipped across Tanzania, formerly BURUNDIS CAPITAL of Bujumbura on the shores of Lake Tanganvika had been regarded as a major headquarters for Chinese subversion and propaganda against the west. In January the Chinese suffered a major setback when the African kingdom of Burundi suspended diplomatic relations and ordered Chinese diplomats out of the country. Nick Brocker, Prairie Village sophomore and chairman of the ground-breaking ceremonies, said Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will be the main speaker at the event Chancellor Wescoe is an ATO alumnus. LIVING QUARTERS in the new addition will be based on the Princession system. Each four-man unit will have a central study room with bedrooms at both ends of the study section. Brocker said. capancy Sept. 1, 2003, Broeker and B. H. Green Construction Co. Lawrence, was awarded the contract by the Kansas Gamma Mu Memorial Building Fund, headed by Max Fuller, Lawrence alumnus. KU's Gamma Mu chapter of Alpha Tau Omega will break ground for a $60,000 addition to the chapter house at 3 p.m. Sunday after two years of planning and fund-raising. The red-brick addition will be in the same architectural style as the older part of the house at 1537 Tennessee. It will provide facilities for 25-30 extra men, increasing housing capacity from 75 to 92 men, Brocker said. Lack of space in the older house had caused some four-man rooms to be temporarily converted for sixman use, he added. Assisting as hostesses at the ground-breaking ceremonies will be the Sisters of the Maltese Cross, sister organization of the ATO's. Sharon Stalcup, Lawrence junior, is president of the recently formed sisterhood. ATO's to Build House Addition the independent countries of Tanganyika and Zanzibar. The Red Chinese embassy staff was the largest in the capital and Chinese funds were flowing into the pockets of Burundi politicians. NOTICE relations with the United States have sharply declined — especially since his nation became a waypoint for shipment of Chinese arms into Black Africa. Micki Milliken's Secretarial Service has moved to RED DOG INN BLDG. 640 MASS. On Jan. 15 came the assassinator of Premier Pierre Ngendandumwe who had been appointed to check Chinese influence. Most of those arrested in the plot were identified with the pro-Chinese group. Typists and secretaries on duty from 9 a.m, to 10:00 p.m. WE specialize in: Student Papers; Theses; Manuscripts; Copy and all other correspondence. We offer Notary Public Service; Mimeograph, offset printing, photocopy work and Spenorett dictating equipment. The break with China came two weeks later. Phone VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947 AMBASSADORS FROM both nations have been summoned home. ADVANCE APPOINTMENTS GET PREFERRED SERVICE CALL VI2-1626 VI3-5947 In Algeria, the Chinese moved strongly to offset large-scale Soviet military aid. IN THE LATTER half of February, the Chinese bounced back with a treaty of friendship with Tanzania. In announcing the new treaty, the Chinese praised Nyerere's courage in defying the U.S.' "paper tiger." Red Chinese influence had been particularly strong in Zanzibar where the Chinese promoted themselves not only as revolutionaries but the nation with recent experiences and problems most similar to Zanzibar, particularly in agriculture Although President Julius K. Nyerere of the newly-combined state had been regarded as an African moderate and had been warmly received in Washington in 1963, his On Feb. 13, the 13,000-ton cargo ship Shuanguang (The Light of Down) docked in Algiers harbor. It was a Red Chinese gift to Algeria. Previously it had been announced that the two governments had signed an agreement for the supply of "some materials" for Algeria's popular militia. The Chinese also have been active in Algeria on the cultural level. THERE WAS speculation that the Chinese were seeking Algerian support for the campaign to ban the Russians from the forthcoming Afro-Asian conference scheduled to be held in Algiers on June 29. College Bowl Meets Set Sunday The KU College Bowl will begin Sunday with matches scheduled for 2:30 p.m., 3:15 p.m., and 4 p.m. Forty teams, from organized houses, scholarship halls, and residence halls will participate, according to Bill Cibes, Altamont senior and College Bowl chairman. The playoff Sunday will be single elimination bouts. The 10 winners will then participate in double elimination matches on the following Sundays, March 7, 14, and 21. Cibes said each team continues to play until it loses two games. THE FINAL WINNER on March 21 will receive the Bowl's traveling trophy, a statue of Rodin's "The Thinker," and will participate in the Big Eight College Bowl May 14 to 16 at the University of Nebraska. Cibes also revealed the Bowl will present a team trophy to the winning women's group. The women's trophy is new this year. The trophies are on display in the show case in the Union, Cibes said. A sign will be posted in the Union lobby telling which teams are playing in the various rooms and at what time. "Everybody is welcome to come . . . the questions which will be asked are both interesting and educational." Cibes commented. MODERATORS FOR the various matches next Sunday will be: Prof. Eldon Fields—Political Science; Prof. Barbara Craig — French; Prof. Charles Lees—Zoology; Asst. Prof. Sam Anderson — Slavic Languages; Asst. Prof. Robert Burton—Eastern Civilization; Assoc. Prof. Earl Nehring—Political Science; Prof. William Conoby—Speech and Drama; Assoc. Prof. Burgsthaler—Chemistry; Prof. James Seaver—History; and Prof. Wakefield Dort—Geology. The College Bowl is sponsored by the College Intermediary Board who selects a steering committee in charge of making up the questions and organizing the contest. The KU Bowl was started four years ago. SUA Going Home or Just Wanting to Go Somewhere? Spring Vacation Charter Bus Express, No changing of buses non-stop service direct to: New York & Philadelphia Round Trip Fare $44.00 Save-$25.00 Los Angeles & San Francisco Round Trip Fare $54.00 Save $10 to $15 Buses also going to St. Louis Deadline for Reservations—Monday, March 22nd ($15.00 deposit) For Reservations and Information contact the SUA Office in the Union Bldg. or Bob Sharp at VI3-8878 VI2-1200