Final Examination Schedule, Spring 1966 The last day of classes is Thursday, May 26. Friday, May 27, 1966, is set aside for study and review. There will be no classes and, except for English and Mechanics and Aerospace as noted below, no examinations on Friday. 7:30 MWF sequence*... 3:10- 5:00 Monday May 30 7:30 TTS sequence**... 3:10- 5:00 Tuesday May 31 8:30 MWF sequence*... 9:40-11:30 Saturday May 28 8:30 TTS sequence**... 9:40-11:30 Wednesday June 1 9:30 MWF sequence*... 9:40-11:30 Monday May 30 9:30 TTS sequence**... 1:00- 2:50 Wednesday June 1 10:30 MWF sequence*... 9:40-11:30 Tuesday May 31 10:30 TTS sequence**... 3:10- 5:00 Wednesday June 1 11:30 MWF sequence*... 7:30- 9:20 Wednesday June 1 11:30 TTS sequence**... 7:30- 9:20 Thursday June 2 12:30 MWF sequence*... 3:10- 5:00 Thursday June 2 12:30 TTS sequence**... 3:10- 5:00 Saturday May 28 1:30 MWF sequence*... 7:30- 9:20 Tuesday May 31 1:30 TTS sequence**... 1:00- 2:50 Tuesday May 31 2:30 MWF sequence*... 1:00- 2:50 Monday May 30 2:30 TTS sequence**... 9:40-11:30 Thursday June 2 3:30 MWF sequence*... 1:00- 2:50 Saturday May 28 3:30 TTS sequence**... 1:00- 2:50 Thursday June 2 4:30 MWF sequence*... 3:10- 5:00 Tuesday May 31 4:30 TTS sequence**... 3:10- 5:00 Tuesday May 31 German A, B, 1, 2, 3, 4, & 5 (All Sections) ... 7:30- 9:20 Saturday May 28 General Biology (All Sections) ... 7:30- 9:20 Monday May 30 English 1, 1a (All Sections) ... 1:00- 2:50 Friday May 27 ... 3:10- 5:00 Saturday May 28 Project (5:10-7:00 for students who have 12:30 TTS exams at 3:10-5:00 Sat, May 28) - Administration 40, 41 & 50 (All Sections) - 3:10-5:00 Monday - May 30 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 7:30 MWF exams) May 27 Mechanics & Aerospace 1, 2, 50, 51, 74, & 75 (All Section) 1:00-2:50 Friday 1:00-2:50 Fri. May 27 (3:10-5:00 for students who have English courses ... 7:30-9:20 Saturday May 28 Mechanics & Aerospace, 3, 61, 63, & 64 (All Sections) ... 3:10-5:00 Wednesday June 1 Geography 6 (All Sections) ... (5:10-7:00 for students who have 10:30 TIS exams at 4:00) Psychology I (All Sections) 3:10-5:00 Thursday June 2 12:30-12:00 MWE exams at 5:10-5:00, June 2) - 5 and 4 hour classes; 3 hour classes meeting Monday, Wednesday and Friday; 2 hour classes meeting Monday and Wednesday, or Monday and Friday, or Wednesday and Friday; 1 hour classes meeting Monday, Wednesday or Friday; at the hour indicated. meeting Monday, Wednesday or Friday; at the hour indicated. **3 hour classes meeting Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday; 2 hour classes meeting Tuesday and Thursday, or Tuesday and Saturday, or Thursday and Saturday; 1 hour classes meeting Tuesday, or Thursday or Saturday; at the hour indicated. Regular classes with laboratory work will be examined as other classes except that the hour may be any one of the several. These extra classes are made up of instruction with the students and with other instructors concerned. Irregular appointment classes and appointment laboratory classes will be examined at the time to be set by the instructor after consultation with the students and with any other instructors. In case this option is insufficient to avoid conflicts the instructors concerned will submit in advance a application to the Calendar Committee a written substitute schedule of examination hours for the confining course. In case of mixed courses in which the laboratory work does not come at the same hours as the class work, the examination may be scheduled in either of the following ways: examination covering both the class and the laboratory work, or examination for the class only. The class work at the time scheduled for the class hours, and one for the laboratory work, at the time scheduled for the laboratory periods. The School of Law is authorized to make its own examination schedule provided that it takes care of all non-law students without causing them conflicts with their other examinations. SUA flight to take 76 to Europe Seventy-six people will be flying to Paris via the "SUA Flight" each representing the University either directly or indirectly. Leaving on June 13 from Kennedy Airport in New York, they will go on a group flight as guests of Air France, Steve Johns, Wichita sophomore, said. Originally, SUA had planned to charter a plane. However, about 80 were needed to do this, Johns said. "We expect to have more luck in getting people to go next year. The people going this year will provide enough advertising by themselves to boost the interest considerably" Johns said. THE ROUND-TRIP transportation costs this year total $336 each. This is a savings of about $200 each. However, Johns said, there are many groups on campus going to Europe; if they could be organized into one group, the cost for each would decrease as the size of the group increased. If enough become interested, the cost could be reduced to $250 each with the chartering of a plane. SUA does not arrange any tours. Rather, they simply provide an inexpensive mode of transportation to and from Europe. That is their only responsibility, Johns said. Tour arrangements can be made individually through local airline agencies. THE SUA IS hoping to offer more next year in coordination with the flight to Europe. They will try to get a bus that will leave Lawrence for New York, Johns said. Presently, each must arrange for his own transportation to New York. They are also thinking for providing papers for passports and driver's licenses, which also must be done individually this year. The return trip to the United States, which takes eight to ten hours, will be made from Paris Manhattan was almost selected as a site for KU. In 1861 the Kansas Legislature passed a bill making Manhattan the site, but Governor Robinson vetoed it. The governor was a resident of Lawrence. Why Lawrence? on August 11. Eligible for participation were students, faculty, administrative staff, employees of KU, housemothers and immediate families. Only if a Universityaffiliated person were going could a family member take advantage of the trip. CAN THE COLLEGE GIRL COPE? In June Redbook, college girls from nine colleges tell why they question the sexual codes of their parents...what they hope to gain from their so-called "freedom" ...and how the "sweetness and terror" of this moral liberation has created new problems to replace the old. Don't miss this frank, revealing article in June REDBOOK REDBOOK A BUSY MAN Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, is a busy man. An interview with him has to be booked well in advance. Frank Burge directs Union for 14 years Burge, his grey hair close-cropped and thinning on top, said his home was in Lone Tree, Iowa, where he was born Sept. 28, 1921. He graduated from Iowa State University in 1942 with a degree in business administration. HE SERVED in the artillery as a major and saw active duty in Europe. Returning from the war he became assistant director The Magazine for Young Adults Now on Sale In 1952 Burge came to the Kansas Union as director and has been here ever since. Although the appointment is yearly, he has been re-elected every time. of the ISU Union in the fall of 1946 and stayed there till 1952. He was married in 1947 to a girl he had met as a student at ISU. They have no children. 10 Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 25, 1966 KIEF'S Record & Stereo Rolling Stones December's Children L.P. $1.99 TOPS Cleaners Launderers Offers the Students 请在阅读本报告前了解相关法律法规,并请保持阅读原稿。 10.9285743121305620000000000