8 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, May 6,1968 Brunch held Sunday The ultimate is "one-upmanship" is being able to make your own hamburger buns, women attending the Associated Women Students (AWS) Junior-Senior Brunch Sunday morning were told. Mrs. Robert Stump, instructor of art history, was the guest speaker at the brunch held in the Lewis Hall cafeteria. Motto of the brunch, which marked the beginning of All Women's Week at KU, was "Visions of the Future." Mrs. Stump gave other "practical" tips needed by young women going into the world. One of these was the necessity of knowing how to raise and lower hemlines. A lesson learned from personal experience was that "you can pull a fast one now and then, but don't press your luck," Mrs. Stump said. On the serious side of her talk she urged the women to follow their natural feminine instincts of compassion. Fashions from a Lawrence clothing store were modeled during the brunch. Later in the day, Frosh Frolics, a freshman women's picnic, was held at Potter Lake. At 7:30 p.m. tonight in the University Theatre, awards will be presented to the outstanding senior woman, the outstanding women from each living group, the AWS Fashion Board members, and the Cwens and counselors for the freshman halls. This is called Honors Night and the motto for the night is "Hello Darkness." Coeds show sporting blood in Phi Psi 500, Derby Day KU coeds had a chance to show their sportin' blood this weekend as two fraternities held mini-versions of the Indianapolis "500" and the Kentucky Derby. For the fourth year in a row, Alpha Gamma Delta won the Phi Kappa Psi 500 held Saturday at the chapter house. Placing second and third in the series of tricycle races were Delta Delta Delta and Hashinger Hall. A traveling trophy, which may be retired after three consecutive wins in the event, went to the AGD's last year, and they are working on their second trophy with their win this year. Linda Morris, Ulysses sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta, was crowned queen of the event. A derby hat grab at Potter Lake Friday preceded the main events of Sigma Chi Derby Day Saturday. Coeds were awarded a point toward the overall trophy for each derbied Sigma Chi they could tackle. Belief is lecture topic "Belief as Setting the Stage for Action" will be the topic of a philosophy lecture at 8 p.m. today in Dveche auditorium. R. B. Braithwaite from Cambridge, England, will be the speaker. Gamma Phi Beta was the overall winner, Kappa Kappa Gamma took second and Alpha Chi Omega placed third. The results of the 10 events held Saturday at the Sigma Chi house are as follows: Bat relay, Gamma Phi Beta; musical buckets, Alpha Phi; snake, Alpha Chi Omega; ping pong ball relay, Kappa Alpha Theta; egg swat, Gertrude Sellards Pearson; quest, Kappa Alpha Theta; noisemaker, Pi Beta Phi; and mystery event, Pi Beta Phi Candy Cantrell, Yates Center junior, Gamma Phi Beta, reigned as queen over the event. Activists- Continued from page 1 "I think this so-called radical group—which it might have been in the past—has really calmed down and gotten much more conservative," said Clif Conrad, Bismarck, S.D., junior and student body president. "I was very pleased how responsible people have been. I promise to use all of my efforts for this spring and summer to bring a definite plan back to the University Senate in September," Conrad said. That the "Student Voice" group wasn't completely satisfied with answers to its demands was obvious by the mixed responses members gave. "I am pleased in a way and discouraged in another. I am pleased that this group, 'Student Voice,' was able to get the administration and the University Senate and the ASC to take a stand—and I think we have a good chance of developing a revolutionary educational program here in the next couple of years," Hamilton Salsich, assistant instructor of English, said. "I am discouraged that it took the threat of a sit-in to get the University and the University Senate moving." Salsich said. Some felt that a sit-in after the University Senate had offered student representation in the future, would do more harm than good. "This is not the time to let up pressure—but by the same token it is not the time to have a sit-in because that would iniliate the student body." Harrington said. Beachcombing was once a recognized profession on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Theater colloquium to feature Spanish prof "The Image of America in Spanish American Drama" will be the topic of the theater research colloquium at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in 341 Murphy Hall. George Woodyard, assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese, will be the speaker. Woodyard has read Spanish American plays which deal with the United States and has composed a theory about what the Spanish Americans think of the United States based on these plays. 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