Dean to deliver talk James R. Surface, vice chancellor and dean of faculties, will deliver the official welcome at the International Festival April 22 in Hech Auditorium. Emmanuel Akuchu, Cameroon senior and chairman of the general steering committee of the festival, made the announcement at a committee meeting last night. SURFACE WILL SPEAK at 8 p.m. just before the program show. The festival starts at 6 p.m. when the exhibits are opened to the public. Clark coan, dean of foreign students and advisor to the festival committee, said the exhibits and show programs of the festival are free to the public. So far the national groups participating in the festival include Africa; Arab World; China; European group; France; Germany; India; Iran; Latin America; Nepal; Pakistan; Thailand; Turkey; Union of Soviet Socialist Republi-舌; Japan; Argentina; South East Asia; and the United States of America. African to speak "Uganda as seen in the Framework of Africa through the Eyes of a Philosopher" will be discussed at the KU African Club meeting 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union. Engelbert Ssekasosi, Ugandan graduate student, will be the featured speaker. Heavy emphasis will be put on culture. A discussion will follow Ssekagosi's talk. CAST ADDITION HOLLYWOOD —(UPI)— Ex-stripper Miss Beverly Hills has joined Glenn Ford and Angie Dickinson in the new horse opera, "Pistolero." Dance clinic set Saturday The annual dance symposium, sponsored by the KU Physical Education Department and Tau Sigma (honorary dance fraternity) will be held March 25 in Robinson Gymnasium. Guest instructor will be K. Wright Dunkley, professor in dance at the University of Oregon. The "L'Arena" newspaper in Verona, Italy, said he was "rare expressive power and musical sense." The "Gazzetta De Popolo" newspaper in Verona salled him "a stupendous artist for his adherence to the art through pure action." Dunkley has been in demand for master classes and similar performances on the West Coast and in Europe. IN THE PAST. classes have been held just for high school students from Kansas and nearby areas of Nebraska and Missouri. But this year there will be separate college and high school classes. ALLIGATOR WINS VOTES CEDAR FALLS, Iowa —(UPI) —An alligator, living in a cage in a State College of Iowa green house, came in third in the e election for student body president. He polled 198 write-in votes. 8 Daily Kansan Friday, March 24, 1967 When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansan Classifieds. Alexander's For Easter Corsages Green & Flowering Plants Cut Flowers Candies Distinctive Gifts Distinctive Gifts Prompt Free Delivery 826 Iowa VI 2-1320 How to make the most of a hard-won engineering degree *electrical, electronics mechanical, aeronautical aerospace, physics Look first at a career with LTV Electrosystems. Examine your future with the same care and objectivity you would bring to a physics experiment. Evaluate the creative challenge, the chances for advancement, the benefits, the educational opportunities, the company's growth and the location. Relate the potential to what you want and what you like. After all, you've spent the past several years developing your talents and your tastes. You should recognize a worthwhile opportunity when you see one. We think you'll find a special promise waiting for you at LTV Electrosystems. Our primary business is the design and development of highly sophisticated, major electronic systems with an enormous range of ground, air, sea and space applications. For the full story, talk it over with our representative when he visits your campus. Excellent openings now available at our Garland, Greenville and Dallas, Texas, facilities. Campus Interviews Our Engineering representatives will be on campus March 29 Please contact your placement office for appointment. GARLAND DIVISION / GREENVILLE DIVISION / CONTINENTAL ELECTRONICS COMPANIES LTV ELECTROSYSTEMS, INC. A SUBSIDIARY OF LING-TEMCO-VOUGHT, INC. An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F