'68 seniors to vote on class doodads Voting on sweatshirt designs, motts, hats and colors for the class of '68 began this morning and will continue until tomorrow at 5 p.m. Ballots were passed out this morning in the organized living groups to students who will be seniors either in the fall or spring semester of the 1967-68 school year. Students in private housing may vote at the Alumni Association office, 127 Strong Hall Anne Hamilton, Shawnee Mission junior and co-chairman of the class of '68's senior regalia committee, said "This year the committee has decided to go about their selection in a democratic way. We thought this would create more class spirit and would be more fair." LAST THURSDAY evening the committee decided on four each of final sweatshirt designs, hat ideas, mottoes and class colors. Mottos on the ballot are the following: "We're out of sight." "The word is great in '68." "We're going places." "We're going places." "We're on our way." Choice for senior hats is between a derby, cowboy hat, a Tom Jones or triangular hat and a top hat. The class color will be either fire engine red, navy blue, light blue, or loden green. PICTURES OF the sweatshirt designs and hats appear on part of the five-page ballot. Results of the voting will be announced Thursday, Miss Hamilton said. 3,000 shake it up at cathedral 'be in' The home-made sign scrawled on a huge bed sheet decorated the grounds of the famed National Cathedral Sunday night as 3,000 mini-clad girls and long-haired boys twisted and galooaled to the psychedelic sound. the psyche. It was the capital's first mass musical be-in—"Sound and Spirit 67"—an ecumenical effort to bring the church to Washington's mid-teens. WASHINGTON—(UPI)—"God is not dead. He's just not in the top forty." "Hymns sung in church are songs. This rock and roll music is just another way of expressing." There were 18—count them, 18—rock 'n' roll bands. One 15-year-old girl, still panting from exertion, tried to define it all. MOST GIRLS danced with each other. Boys seemed content to be wallflowers. After two hours of uninhibited dancing, the bells tolled to signal the beginning of services inside the gothic cathedral. WEATHER The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts clear to partly cloudy skies and warmer temperatures through tomorrow. Low tonight 50 to 55. Precipitation probabilities less than five per cent tonight and tomorrow. The services were led by Fr. Norman J. O'Connor, who appears annually at the Newport jazz festival. The thousands of teen-agers were solemn as a young girl read: "Let us sing into God a new song; let us praise Him all the day long; and when the music has gone through our hearts and breast; never put that tune to rest . . ." There was a moment of silence, then the teen-agers scattered back to the band and dance sites for a final furious fling. NEW YORK—(UPI)—Today's golf professional also is a "pro" in selling apparel as well as in teaching and playing the game, according to the research department of Meinhard-Commercial Corporation. So many of the nearly 9 million American golfers are becoming fashion-conscious on the fairways that the pro is becoming an expert on fibers and fabrics, says the C.I.T. Financial Corporation financing and factoring subsidiary. This means the pro has to coordinate his schedule of lessons and tournament competitions with selling time so that golfers who patronize his shop can coordinate their clothing combinations while they're learning to cure their hook or slice. by Kenneth Bloomquist, then filled Hoch with Montenegro's thunderous "The Fanfare." Equally popular with the audience was a later number featuring tubas and the familiar strains from the "Mickey Mouse Theme." The emphasis was on gay, swinging and powerful sounds at the annual University Pops Concert yesterday in Hoch Auditorium. Busy pros The four University choirs, the University Orchestra and the KU Brass Choir presented two hours of classics, jazzed-up classics and just plain jazz. Throughout the program the brightly-clad University Singers, an all-freshman choir, served refreshments to the audience. If you see news happening call UN 4-3646 JOE'S BAKERY Later, as they left their job of serving rootbeer, the Singers added to the spring-like tone of the Have a Happy Summer and Visit Us Next Fall. A slow jazz number, pianist Bill Evan's "Time Remembered" featuring drums, bass and trumpets, was played from Paul Tardif's arrangement for brass choir. THE CHAMBER CHOIR, a group half the size of the 70-member concert choirs, reeled off "Camptown Races," "My Love Like a Red, Red Rose" and "Nellie Bly." Says "Thank You" For Your Patronage This Year Concert 'swings' at Hoch Long hairs go modern All three choirs then combined to present "I Dream of Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair" from an arrangement by Roger Wagner. Baritone soloist was Bob Benton, Des Moines, Iowa, sophomore. JOE'S BAKERY concert with "April in Paris," "Swing Low Sweet Chariot" and "Once in Love with Amy." 619 W. 9th VI 3-4720 12 The KU Brass Choir, directed Daily Kansan Monday, May 22, 1967 --- FOR MEN-ON-THE-GO THE SIR PERIOR $ ^{ \textcircled{*} } $ SUIT WITH THE COVERT LOOK BY HASPEL Styled especially for the man-about-town, this smart suit has the crisp covert look. Haspel tailors it of a wash and wear blend of 67% Dacron* polyester-33% cotton. Choose from a wide selection of covert shadings plus a new group of fine stripes in charcoal, navy and olive. $47.95 *DuPont's reg. tm 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896 ---