Anti-war group 'arms' for rally By Barbara Phillips "Peace in Viet Nam." "America the Warfare State." These will be two of the signs displayed outside the Federal Building in Kansas City, Mo., Saturday as a result of the efforts of the KU Committee to End the War in Viet Nam. These and other signs were produced by committee members last night in the Students for a Democratic Society house on Ohio Street. The members were split into two groups, one half stenciling the signs and the other half painting in the letters. BREAKING AWAY from sign painting activities for a moment, Richard L. Hill, Manhattan junior and chairman of the Viet Nam committee, said student response to the demonstration has been encouraging. So far more than 50 have agreed to participate, and Civil engineer to talk Ray K. Linsley, head of the Department of Civil Engineering at Stanford University, will speak on "Water Today and Tomorrow" at 2:30 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall. Because providing a sufficient supply of water in the United States has usually been considered one of the major crises for the future, Linsley will examine the current water situation, possible future problems and also corrective steps. Linsley has served as a waterresources consultant to United Nations Educational, Service and Cultural Organization, to the World Meteorological Organization, to the governments of Venezuela, Israel, and the State of California. He has been Chief Hydrologist for the United States Weather Bureau. During 1957-58, he was a Fulbright Professor at the Imperial College of Science in London. Must reading for anyone who wants to know what American Communists really think—not what others say they think. 128 pp. Price 95c+5c postage Special discounts on quantity orders New Outlook Distributors 32 Union Sq., E., Rm. 601 New York, N.Y. 10003 Please print clearly I enclose $ for consist of NEW FOBGRAM Name ... Address ... City, State ... these, plus any others who want to go along, will meet outside the Kansas Union at noon on Saturday, he said. The demonstration will start at 2 p.m. and will be followed by a rally at which the speakers will be Mike O'Hanlon of the Berkeley Viet Nam Day committee; Pam Smith, former KU student and one-time worker for the Congress of Racial Equality; and Laird Wilcox, editor of the Kansas Free Press. Hill said, "It is important for KU students to join us in Kansas City on the International Days of Protest, a time when people around the world will demonstrate their opposition to American intervention in Viet Nam." FRIDAY NIGHT WILL see the first activity in the two Days of Protest, a debate sponsored by the KU Committee to End the War in Viet Nam and the KU Students for a Democratic Society. The subject will be "Which Way Wiet Nam: A Debate on U.S. Policy in Viet Nam." The program will start at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Speaking in favor of Administration policy will be Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science, and John T. Moore, teaching assistant in philosophy. They will be opposed by Hill and by Bill Hartzog, SDS community organizer in Topeka. Tapes of the Toronto teach-in will be played at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Union. The program is a part of the Student Union Activities Current Events Forum. Teach-in tapes to be heard The tapes are of a debate on revolution and American and Soviet foreign policy, said Barry Elvin, Wichita freshman and Forum chairman. Zbjgniew Brzezinski, head of the department of Soviet Affairs at Columbia University, discusses foreign policy with Victor Nekrasov, former London correspondent for Pravda. COMMENTS BY TWO KU faculty members and a question and answer period will follow the tapes, Elvin said. "Brzezinski is generally regarded as one of the most knowledgeable scholars of Communist studies," said Herbert J. Ellison, professor of history. He discusses present American Pharmacy scholarship James Metzger, University of Kansas pharmacy senior from Sabetha, has been named the American Foundation for Pharmaceutical Education Scholar for the spring semester. To be eligible for the $200 award, the student must be in the upper fourth of his class for the last three years of the five-year pharmacy program. Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 23, 1966 policy, the development of post World War II policy, the relationship between Soviet and Chinese governments and how this has changed, Ellison said. "Nekrasov takes the orthodox Soviet position, but he makes some concessions. For example, when Brzezinski asks him about Soviet policy in Hungary, he says it was a serious mistake on the part of the Soviet government." ELLISON SAYS that it is a "lively" debate and one of the most sophisticated of the teachins because it is impartial. After the tapes are shown, Jaroslaw Piekalkiewicz, assistant professor of political science, and Chae Jin Lee, acting assistant professor of political science, will clarify and interpret the films, Elvin said. They will also lead the question and answer period which follows their comments. Elvin said the tapes were originally scheduled for the KU teach-in earlier this fall but they can not arrive in time. ASC Committee Applications are available now from your living group president or the ASC office. A general information session about the committees' purpose and duties will be held Thursday, March 24, at 7:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Student Union. For Questions Call Leo Schrey Carl Struby Bill Robinson VI 3-5113 VI 2-6600 VI 3-4102 1 & C'S BLACK PATENTS ARE A STROKE OF SPRING BRILLIANCE Go Lightly Sensational straps, beautiful bows, exciting pumps reflect the fashion news in gleaming black patent by Town & Country Shoes. 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