Bailey, Clark set for law-press talk Famed defense attorney, F. Lee Bailey of Boston and former Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court Tom Clark will be among the group of nationally known participants attending the State Bar Association meeting. This year's meeting will be a symposium seeking solutions to current free press-fair trial problems. It will be held May 3 in Kansas City, jointly sponsored by the KU Schools of Law and Journalism. KU STUDENTS and faculty members from both schools will attend the meetings. Bailey, who defended Dr. Sam Shepherd of Cleveland and the so-called Boston Strangler, will sit in on several panels and discussion groups. Justice Clark was appointed to the Supreme Court in 1949. He will present the dinner address, May 3. Judges, lawyers, law enforcement officials, and newspaper and broadcasting executives will be present at the meeting. DISCUSSIONS WILL stem from the present problems concerning the newspaper and legal professions. Under consideration will be the Reardon Report, a report giving sanctions against lawyers from leaking news to the press, causing prejudice. John H. Colburn, editor and publisher of the Wichita Eagle and Beacon will moderate two panels, involving audience participation. New UDK boxes placed Situated on University property in places convenient to the majority of students are approximately 15 Kansan boxes. Two boxes like the model in front of Marvin Hall replaced old green boxes on Daisy Hill last Thursday. THE NEW BOXES give greater weather protection to the campus University Daily Kansan (UDK). According to Mel Adams, professor of advertising, home delivery would be infeasible under the present set up. It would be very expensive and double the price the students must pay for the UDK. Each full time KU student pays about $1.45 each semester for the paper. Adams said, "In other colleges students have to pay up to $6 a semester for the campus paper. K-State students pay $4.25 a semester. The KU student pays one of the lowest prices for its paper." THE UDK COULD only be financed three or four months by what the students pay alone. The deficit is made up by advertising, which supports 80 per cent of the paper, according to Adams. A five-year grant from the National Institute of Health totaling $221,411 has been awarded to Dr. Ross E. McKinney, the Glen Parker professor of civil engineering at the University of Kansas, in support of a unique graduate training program in solid wastes treatment. Grant given Prof. McKinney 12 Daily Kansan Monday, March 27, 1967 When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansan Classifieds. NON-PARTISAN APPLICATIONS for NOMINATION TO STUDENT BODY OFFICES, ALL STUDENT COUNCIL SEATS. AND CLASS OFFICES ARE AVAILABLE in the DEAN OF STUDENTS OFFICE 228 STRONG HALL Applications must be completed and returned to the Dean of Students Office by 5 p.m. Thursday, March 30 For further information call UN 4-3710 HERE COME THE OUTSIDERS! Hear them sing "TIME WON'T LET ME" and other great hits WEDNESDAY