Festive week— Continued from page 1 convocation at 3:30 p.m. on "Our Crimes Against Criminals: A Plea." Dr. Menninger organized the training program that became the Menninger School of Psychiatry, the world's largest training center for psychiatrists. He has also written works on psychiatry and psychology for both technical readers and the general public. BRITISH SCIENTIST Arthur Clarke closes the seminar series with a lecture at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. "Explorations in Tomorrow" provides the subject matter for the science fiction writer who in a recent New York Times Magazine interview predicted colonization of other planets by 2000, human contact with extraterrestrials by 2030, creation of artificial life by 2060 and immortality by 2090. Student of astronomy, rocketry and space exploration, Clarke has written more than 25 non-fiction books and science-fiction novels on nature, science and space. The 10:15 a.m. program and address by Murphy on Thursday concludes the "world's fair of ideas." Faculty members again will assemble for the academic procession. Throughout the four-day program, various luncheons and dinners are open to the public. The Deane W. Malott luncheon in the Kansas Union begins at noon Monday. The official seminar dinner in the Kansas Union is at 6 pm. Tuesday and the Franklin D. Murphy luncheon begins at noon on Thursday. tickets for lunch and dinner scheduled during the seminar may be purchased prior to the event at the Kansas Union ticket center. Lunch on tickets are $2.50 and the April 12 official seminar dinner costs $4. Tickets may be reserved up to noon of the day preceding the event. IN ADDITION to the seminar events, a number of departments and schools will sponsor special programs called "colloquia" during the week of the Inter-Century Seminar. The colloquia emphasize specialized fields of interest to the students, faculty and alumni of each department. The Monday series of colloquia begins at 3:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union with a talk on "Soviet and Chinese Aid to North Viet Nam" by Jan S. Prybyle, professor of economics at Pennsylvania State University. Fairfax M. Cone, chairman of the executive committee and creative director of Foote, Cone and Belding Advertising Agency, Chicago, presents the Basil T. Church Memorial Lecture at a 6 p.m. journalism dinner and colloquium in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. A reception and press conference at 5:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union precede the dinner presentation by Cone, who also is chairman of the board of trustees of Chicago University. ON TUESDAY, two sets of colloquia are scheduled for 10:30 a.m. Film critic Dwight Macdonald and anthropologist Ashley Montagu will discuss "Can High Culture Survive in a Democratic Society?" in Swarthout Recital Hall. In Dyche Auditorium, Philip Abelson, director of the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution, lectures on "Chemical Events on a Primitive Earth." At 3:30 p.m. two departments present colloquia. "The Nonsense of the Non-Western Label for Latin America" is the topic of Dr. Harry Eermstein, professor of history at Brooklyn College, City University of New York, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Eermstein, chairman of the Conference on Latin American History of the American Historical Association, also will address The Human Relations colloquium meets at 3:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union to hear Clovis Shepherd, program director of the National Training Laboratories, Adult Education Association, Washington, D.C. KU's sixth annual Seminar on Higher Education in the Americas April 13. SYNDICATED cartoonist Jules Feiffer, originator of the sick humor vogue, will speak at the Student colloquium at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Hoch Auditorium. Sylvester L. Weaver, former president of NBC-TV, and Robert Lewis Shayon, radio and TV critic for the Saturday Review, will combine for a session on "Has Network TV Reached an Automatic Dead End?" at the 1:30 p.m. Wednesday Speech and Drama colloquium in Swarthout Recital Hall. Mark J. Hiebert, chairman of the board of Sterling Drug Co., New York, and a former KU student, will discuss contributions by the drug industry in a pharmacy colloquium at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Forum Room. The KU Council for Progress, a group of approximately 300-350 alumni and friends of KU studying financial projects for KU's second century, will meet Thursday afternoon in Swarthout Recital Hall. The executive committee will present recommendations for KU projects meriting the private financial support of citizens. STUDENTS RECALL KU's history with their own special type of centennial celebration—the Jayhawk Jubilee on April 16. The atmosphere will be "country fair" at Potter Lake from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m, with carnival rides, folk and banjo music, hot dogs and root beer at old-fashioned prices. Throughout April and May, the centennial program committee has scheduled musical performances by well-known groups, an Ecumenical Institute and Centennial observances for the Kansas Relays April 22-23 and the June 2-6 commencement week exercises. The Robert Shaw Chorale performs April 18 in Hoch Auditorium and the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra follows on April 21. The world premiere of the opera "Carry Nation" opens April 28 in Murphy Hall. New York City and Metropolitan Opera Company stars sing the principal roles. An Ecumenical Institute led by three theologians who are among the nation's foremost interpreters of the ecumenical movement is planned for May 1-3. Joseph Sittler, professor of theology at Chicago University; Father Dan O'Hanlan, professor of theology at Alma College, Los Gatos, Calif.; and Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum, New York director of Interreligious Affairs of the American Jewish Committee, will lead discussions attended by clergymen from several states. DURING THE spring centennial celebration, KU will name an honor roll of prophets who have demonstrated exceptional vision in the past century. The persons to be honored may be living or dead, American or foreign, drawn from any profession. A flood of nominations have been received by the selections advisory board, said Conboy. Daily Kansan 13 Thursday, March 31, 1966