Archeology researcher gets grant The National Science Foundation has awarded $35,400 to Anta Monetet White, anthropology lecturer and researcher at KU, for a two-year archeologic investigation at the Termo-Pialat site in the Dordogne Valley of southwest France. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Miss White hopes to find more evidence of early paleolithic occupation dating from 25,000 B.C. or earlier. Assisting her will be three KU graduate students in anthropology who will be selected later this month. The KU team will leave for the site sometime in June. The site has been known since 1910 when a carving of a woman's figure was found there. Modern dating techniques have set the age of the carving at 23,000-25,000 B.C. I-students to attend Colorado program THE INTERNATIONAL students who will participate in Crossroads have either finished their study in the United States or will be finishing at the end of the summer. A handful of international students at KU are now being selected to attend the 11th annual Summer Crossroads program to be held in Colorado Springs, Colo., June 11-17, Clark Coan, dean of foreign students, said. The Summer Crossroads is one of three terminal programs for international students in the country. The others are in Williamsburg, Va., which also holds its program during the summer, The KU group will be among 60 international students studying in this country who will participate in the program. Last year six KU students attended. and New Paltz, N.Y., which conducts a winter program. Although the students must provide their own means of transportation to Colorado Springs, their meals, room and board will be provided by the hospitality of several American families in Colorado Springs working in conjunction with the program. THE PROGRAM is sponsored by the Institute of International Education, a Colorado Springs community hospitality group, and Colorado College. The purpose of the program is to promote serious discussion by international students who have studied in various parts of the country, and to provide an opportunity to compare notes, take stock of their experiences and prepare themselves for going home. Hazardous honeymoons LONDON — (UPI) — When a marriage goes sour and ends in divorce, the trouble often starts right with the honeymoon, according to marriage counselor Anne Allen. A study of 5,000 letters from people involved in broken marriages showed, she wrote in a marriage guidance magazine, how dangerous the honeymoon can be. Typical "honeymoon" complaints cited were sexual disappointments, arguments over money and — by women — lack of attention by their new spouses. Daily Kansan Thursday, May 11, 1967 8 THRILLING CANOE TRIPS Explore, fish, relax in the Quetico- Superior Wilderness. Only $8.00 per person per day, also group rates. Write: BILL ROM, CANOE COUN- TRY OUTFITTERS, Elm, Minnesota. Remember MOTHER'S DAY Sunday, May 14 Remember ANDREWS GIFTS Every Day Andrew's Gifts Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523