Nixon- Continued from page 1 of the state problems and has been out of the national picture," Nehring said. The last strong choice by Nehring is Nelson A. Rockefeller, Governor of New York for his third term. Nehring says, "Rockefeller is a man with the experience, background, and knowhow. So far Rockefeller has insisted that he will not run. And he has strongly backed Gov. Romney. But he still may figure in the race. "The key to the race," Nehring said, "is the crucial period of the next six months and what happens then. The polls change and I wouldn't be surprised to see them change a half dozen times in the next year. "I do feel that the Republicans will go back to the old tradition of running a conservative and a liberal together. And the race could continue and finally be decided at the Republican National Convention." Important dinner— Continued from page 1 Green came to KU as an assistant professor in 1964. On July 1 he was promoted to an associate professor. "BETWEEN semesters this year, a team of seven engineers from KU went to visit Venezuela for two weeks. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has a co-operative program with the Universidad de Oriente in Venezuela. "Brooklyn Polytechnical was supposed to help the University with a grant from the Ford Foundation, but their program fell through. We decided to help them after this failure. "Floyd Freston (a professor of petroleum engineering) was named head of the team because he had spent a year in Venezuela and knew the head of the engineering school. Two chemical engineers, two electrical engineers, and two mechanical engineers went along. I was one of the chemical engineers." "OUR PLAN was to tell the engineering department about ways we could cooperate and provide help. As it turned out, the Ford Foundation cut down on its grants, and the program died. Just the same, it was an exciting two weeks, in spite of the fact that we were housed in a make-shift building. "Preston and I still have our part of the program in progress with the school of engineering. There is a good chance that I will go back to Venezuela for a week or two next semester in connection with this. This summer Green is doing a research project in connection with his work as acting director of the water resources institute. "The federal government passed a law establishing a water resources institute in each state to support research on problems related to water resources. K-State and KU are co-operating on this, and I am the acting director for KU," he said, fingering two ballpoint pens. DOES THE professor's professor have an image of the student's student? "There are two kinds of students that I like best. First, I like the student who digs in and pushed the teacher—the student who does the problem different than the normal approach because he is thinking for himself. I also like the student who starts off poorly and who, after working with the teacher, sees the light and really learns. This costs personal time, but it's enjoyable. "I say, 'Thank God for students!' because they're the prime reason I'm here. I think the best class is one where I get the whole class DONALD W. GREEN involved," he commented, his hand on his chin. "So, he got a crate that was the right size, and then he discovered that he couldn't ship art work out of the country until someone had decided that it wasn't a work of art. I've got the painting now, so I guess it isn't a work of art," Green commented as he smiled. Three pictures hang on the wall in the office Green took over from Rosson, who is on leave. Two are Rosson's, but the third is Green's. "THAT PAINTING has an interesting story behind it," he began. "My first student who received a master's degree, Franco Gioia, is now at the University of Naples. He created this picture to send to me, but the post office refused it because it had the wrong size crate. Does Green have any co-eds in his classes? "In the three years I've been here I've had one girl, and she dropped out to take accounting," Green chuckled. Summer Kansan Friday, July 14, 1967 Residence hall residency rate up The number of applications for space in University residence halls for the fall semester is eight percent more than at the same time a year ago. As of July 1, 4,191 students have applied for space, according to J. J. Wilson, director of housing. This is up around 300 over last year. THE BIGGEST increase is in upperclass women, with 154 more. Men are up 80 and freshman women have 60 more. If things proceed at the present rate, Wilson predicts that all 4,800 spaces in the halls will be reserved by Aug.1. At this time he stated he sees no changes in the hall assignments with all of them housing the same group they did last year. This fall the cost of residence jumped to $400 per semester, a 10 percent increase. Last year it it was $350 a semester. Robinson to fall in fall Old Robinson will be razed early this fall after bids are let this August. Bids have not yet been let because the University has not found space for the groups now operating in the building. The Speech and Hearing Clinic, the Federal Credit office, and certain mechanical drawing classes meet there now. Wild chimpanzees have a large vocabulary of calls signifying emotions such as fear, pain or pleasure. SUA ART FORUMS offers a tour of the exhibition "Chinese Art from the Collection of H.M. Gustaf VI Adolf, King of Sweden" under the sponsorship of The Nelson Art Gallery tour conducted by Dr. Chu-Tsing Li professor of art history, Kansas Univ. Friday, July 21st limited number of tickets available at the SUA office Kansas Union, until Thursday afternoon, 5:00 p.m. bus tickets $1.00 bus leaves Kansas Union at 1:00 p.m. will return to KU at 5:00 p.m. The World's Most Recommended Drycleaning famous fashion creator MR. MORT* recommends our Sanitone drycleaning process "We can depend on the skill of the professional Sanitone drycleaner to keep the fashion-fresh look in MR.MORT creations." *They say: For the best drycleaning value in town, get our Sanitone drycleaning . . . the drycleaning most recommended by the people who know clothing care best. Call on us today. a national service LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners