Campus has 529 students from 85 nations enrolled The 529 international students from 85 nations is a new spring semester high at KU, just 13 fewer than the record total last fall. In addition there are 52 foreign nationals from 14 nations at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. On the Lawrence campus 450 of the international group are men, 79 women. There are 277 at the graduate level,193 are undergraduates and 59 are in the Intensive English Center. Nationalist China (Taiwan) is the most heavily represented with 78 students, followed by India with 53 and Saudi Arabia with 33. OTHERS ARE: Iran 27, Venezuela 26, Korea 21, Germany 14, Costa Rica and Thailand 13, Hong Kong 12, Greece and Peru 11, Iraq and Philippines 10. Canada 9. Great Britain and Pakistan 8; Bolivia, Egypt, Japan and Turkey 7; Lebanon 6; Algeria, Chile, France and Mexico 5; Argentina, Brazil, Cuba. Indonesia, Israel, Panama, Republic of South Africa and Rhodesia 4; Austria, Cambodia, Guatemala, Honduras, Malaysia, Nigeria, Okinawa, Somali, Spain, Sweden and Syria 3. Two each, Colombia, Cameroons, Denmark, Italy, Kenya, Kuwait, Libya, Netherlands, Switzerland, Tanzania, Uganda, Viet Nam and Yemen. One each, Afghanistan, Bahrein, Brunei, Burma, Burundi, Congo, Cyprus, Czechoslovakia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Finland, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Haiti, Iceland, Malawi, Malta, Morocco, Netherlands Antilles, Nicaragua, Norway, Poland, Sierra Leone, Yugoslavia and Zambia. NEW BOOK DUE Griffin writes on KU A forthcoming history of KU by Clifford S. Griffin, associate professor of history, will focus on "the problem the people and the university faced in determining what the university should be." the Kansas Historical Quarterly. Parts of the first two chapters of the book, to be entitled "The University of Kansas: A History, 1864-1964," make up the lead article of the Spring, 1966 issue of PROF. GRIFFIN has been working on the two-volume history since 1960, and he hopes it will be ready for publication late this year. Daily Kansan 11 Wednesday, March 23, 1966 Bold Stroke Oxford The visual points of difference in this luxuriously cool Gant cotton oxford batiste button-down are its evocative stripings; their edges are thinly framed with a second color to give more articulate definition. In color-framed stripings of navy on sea-blue ground; loden stripings on bamboo ground; or rust stripings on maize ground. $7.50 1420 Crescent Road Johnson sends two aides to Viet Nam WASHINGTON—(UFI)—President Johnson has ordered two of his closest aides into Southeast Asia in his determined effort to reconstruct war-wracked South Viet Nam. to the President yesterday, and presidential Press Secretary Bill D. Moyers will leave Tuesday, accompanying Deputy Defense Secretary Cyrus R. Vance. close tabs on the Viet Nam development effort. Johnson said the trip would give Moyers and Komer an "onthe-ground picture" of the health, education and agricultural problems of South Viet Nam. THE ASSIGNMENT of the two top aides was seen as another example of Johnson's desire to keep White House aide Robert Komer, 44, named a special assistant Dedicated To The Young At Heart