UN still seeks members Steering committee members of the Model-U.N. will visit activity chairmen of living groups this week in what is perhaps the last attempt to get more registered delegations. The number of registered delegations is now 69. Dick White, Wakefield, Mass., senior and secretary general of the steering committee, said that the quest for numbers is aimed at making the Model-U.N. more real, for the greater the number of delegations on the floor the greater the reality. The least represented blocks in the Model-U.N, this year are in descending order. Africa 40 per cent, non-aligned Asians 42 per cent, Arabs 50 per cent. The other block areas have shot the 50 per cent mark. The amount of time involved in this year's Model-U.N. is being Columbia teacher to present lecture The 18th annual E. C. Franklin Memorial chemistry lecture will be given by Harry B. Gray, professor of chemistry at Columbia University, at 8:15 p.m. tonight in 411 Summerfield Hall. The lecture is being sponsored by Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemistry fraternity. It is in honor of the former KU faculty member who achieved fame both here and at Stanford University. Professor Gray will speak on "Metal Stabilization of Unusual Ligand Structures." Phi Lambda Upsilon will hold its spring initiation following a dinner honoring Professor Gray. Dinner tickets can be obtained at the chemistry office, 224 Malott. Daily Kansan 5 Wednesday, March 23, 1966 For Skiing The First Week In April Write ● the widely-known ● top quality ● inexpensive Miller's Idlewild Inn Winter Park, Colo. Phone: 303-726-5313 Here at Campus Hideaway QUALITY is a natural ingredient. Come dine with us and see. WE ABSOLUTELY DELIVER. one-half days of assembly meetings, and about five hours research. emphasized, for it is fewer than in previous years. With block meetings out, there are two and CRC to examine role The KU Civil Rights Council has scheduled a special meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union to discuss the purpose of CRC in relation to the university community. Neil Stone, Shawnee Mission freshman and CRC president, said, "We want not only CRC members, but all persons interested in student rights, to attend tonight's meeting. "We will question whether we should concern ourselves in on'y student affairs or whether we should go beyond into the Negro situation, for example. Another issue tonight will be Provost Surface's answers to the questionnaire on in loco parentis." Winds foil bomb hunt PALOMARES, Spain—(UPI) High winds and heavy seas again today prevented the U.S. Navy from dragging an H-bomb from its precarious position 2,500 feet below the sea to a safer area before attempting to lift it out of the water. Huge ground swells and wind gusts up to 30 knots paralyzed the operation to recover the 20-megaton device. THE BOMB. missing for nine weeks, was found last Wednesday by the 22-foot two-man submersible "Alvin." The operation was further complicated when the bomb and a parachute attached to it slid 20 feet down a steep underwater slope. It was feared that the weapon might fall into an ocean bottom crevice which would make recovery extremely difficult, in fact, almost impossible. ACCRA, Ghana — (UPI) The border between Ghana and Togo- land, closed during last month's military coup in Ghana, has been reopened. Ghana border reopens Paul Haney says Gemini 8 roughest astro challenge NEW ORLEANS-(UUP)—Paul Haney, "The Voice of Gemini Control," said yesterday the United States manned flight program encountered "its roughest and most challenging" problem when Gemini 8 began a violent roll that caused the mission to abort. A short in one of Gemini 8's maneuvering jets caused the potentially disastrous situation Astronauts Neil Armstrong and David Scott encountered in their flight. MORE THAN HALF of the thruster fuel normally reserved for reentry was used to stabilize the craft. Haney said previous pilots used between two-thirds and three-fourths of their thruster fuel supply for reentry. The flight was terminated because so much of the fuel was used in the stabilizing process. In spite of the difficulties, Haney said Gemini 8 "was just three miles off target," when it landed. Haney denied tapes of Armstrong's and Scott's conversations during the critical period were withheld because officials wanted to play up only the good points of the mission. Playing the tapes "could have been morbid if the flight had other than a happy ending," he said. University of Kansas Theatre Experimental Series Frederick Durrenmatt's THE PHYSICISTS March 23, 24, 25, 26 and 30, 31, April 1 Tickets: $1.50 or 75c with current Certificate of Registration Murphy Hall Box Office UN 4-3982 If communications were good enough you could stay in the sack all day Moving your body around is highly inefficient. If communications were perfect, you would never have to. Of course, you would still have to get exercise. But that's your problem. We want to make it easier for you to contact people, learn, get information, attend lectures, and hold meetings. We developed Picturephone $ ^{*} $ service so you can see as well as talk when you call. And be seen, too. We introduced Tele-Lecture service (two-way amplified phone calls) to let you hear lecturers in distant locations. And so you could ask them questions no matter how far away they were. Right now, many students can dial from their dormitories to a language lab. Soon a student will be able to dial into a computer thousands of miles away to get information for his courses. Depending on the nature of the information, he might get his answer back audibly, printed on a teletypewriter, as a video image, or a facsimile print. Some of these services are available now. Others are being tested. For the next week or so better get a move on. *Service mark of the Bell System Bell System American Telephone & Telegraph and Associated Companies