Advisory board selects members New student advisory board members have been selected for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Education, the School of Business, the School of Journalism, the School of Fine Arts, and the School of Engineering. Student advisers from the college are, Bill Karnase, Kansas City junior; Cathy Campbell, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, sophomore; Larry Peterson, Newton sophomore; Nancy Gallup, Lawrence sophomore; Garry Garrett, Neodesha sophomore; Ed North, Clinton, Iowa, sophomore; Bill Sampson, Topeka sophomore; Larry Robinson, Iola sophomore; Randy Jacobs, Leawood sophomore; Dorothy Sloan, Norton sophomore; Kathy Strayer, Mission Hills junior; Bonnie Beisecker, Topeka sophomore; and Dave McClain, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore. New education student advisers are, John Vratil, Larned junior; Kay Plumlee, Wichita sophomore; Bonnie Stenzel, Ness City junior; and Judy Cady, Beloit sophomore. NEW ADVISORY board members from the School of Business are, Bob McAdoo, Larned junior; Charles Waldren, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; and James Tidwell, Wichita sophomore. Bob Dotson, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore, is the only new student adviser for the School of Journalism. Mary Jane Eckhoff, Leawood junior; Terry McCulloch, Kalispell, Mont, junior; and Kim Randel, Kansas City junior, are the new board members from fine arts. NEW BOARD members from engineering are, Willard Bolton. Academy will give Oscars HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) The greatest array of movie stars in memory will provide a background of glamor for the Academy Award show tonight focused on the battle of the two beautiful Julies from England, Andrews and Christie. The British blondes, long-time personal friends, are the leading contenders to win best actress occurs at the 38th annual presentation ceremonies. MISS CHRISTIE won her nomination for "Darling," an amoral swinger as contrasted with the sweet religious novice played by Miss Andrews in "The Sound of Music." Competing with the two Julies for the prized Oscar are Samantha Eggar, "The Collector"; Elizabeth Hartman, "A Patch of Blue," and Simone Signoret, "Ship of Fools." All but Miss Signoret and Miss Hartman will attend the awards. The best actor candidates will be out in force, too. Lee Marvin, "Cat Ballou"; Rod Steiger, "The Pawnbroker," and Oskar Werner, "Ship of Fools," will be on hand. Only Richard Burton, "The Spy Who Came in from the Cold," and Sir Laurence Olivier, "Othello," will be missing. THE TWO-HOUR SHOW will be telecast in color for the first time by ABC-TV, 9 p.m., with comedian Bob Hope as master of ceremonies at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. Leawood junior; Jim Eller, Leavenworth junior; Bruce Peterson, Prairie Village sophomore; and Ed Benson, Kansas City, Mo., junior. It's a close race for best picture honors, too. Both "Sound of Music" and "Doctor Zhivago" won ten nominations each. One of the two is expected to win the Oscar. The other contending movies are "Darling," "A Thousand Clowns" and "Ship of Fools." About 30 members of this year's board will also serve next year. This includes all board members who are not graduating. New board members were chosen after interviews held last weekend. Present board members made the selections. A meeting of both the old and new board members will be held after spring break. Labor woes debate set The third KU-Y current issues forum of the semester will be held tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The speakers will be James R. Surface, vice chancellor, and Mike Youngblood, Prairie Village sophomore and Student Labor Organization president. Surface and Youngblood will discuss the problems concerning student labor, according to Paul Consolver, Wichita sophomore and co-chairman of the KU-Y current issues forum series. SLO has been working to get the student wage raised to the $1.25 minimum. It was recently announced that wages will be raised to $1.00 per hour beginning July 1. NEW YORK —(UPI)— New York's grand o' llipy house, the hallowed, grandoise, seamy, grimy, and anciently inefficient stack of sickly yellow brick known as the Met, stood tuneless as a snapped fiddlestring today. Met to be razed, moves uptown Opera, after 83 years of posturing and prancing, and purging human emotions with some of the loveliest sounds ever to fall across soft air, had left it for a shiny and efficient new home uptown in Lincoln Center. ONE FINALE REMAINS for the Metropolitan Opera House, which opened its three entrances at 39th-40th Streets and Broadway on Oct.22,1883. That comes when the big iron ball begins to beat an Anvil Chorus of wreckage on the old walls next month. And so, the faithful, 4,000 of them in various states of affluence and dress, came Saturday night to the "gala farewell" for the Metropolitan Opera House. A sort of magnificent vaudeville melange by more than 60 leading artists, and 11 conductors, of arias and ensembles from 25 operas, with some 40 singing greats of the past sitting in nostalgic backdrop on the now-splintery stage at the start. When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansan Classifieds. 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