Wednesday, April 24, 1968 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 11 ASC asked to give $500 radio; elects three ex officio members By Sandy Zahradnik Kansan Staff Reporter Resolutions asking the All Student Council (ASC) to study the possibility of placing one voting student representative on all administrative committees that affect students, and asking for $500 to buy a two-way radio for Watkins Hospital were presented at the regular weekly ASC meeting Tuesday night in the Kansas Union Sunflower Room. Gus diZerega, Wichita junior and the unmarried-unorganized representative to ASC, introduced the administration representative resolution. The committee plans to submit a full report to the ASC within two weeks. Allen Merritt, Wichita senior and co-chairman of the Student Health Commission, submitted the request for the two-way radio. The radio would keep the hospital in contact with the ambulance service in town, and would allow the hospital to prepare for an incoming injured patient. "As it stands now, if a student is injured, there is no way for the hospital to know he is coming." Merritt said. Merritt asked that ASC include the request for the radio when it prepares its yearly budget. The ASC also elected three ex officio members as provided for in a resolution passed last week. Fine Arts senior presents recital The School of Fine Arts will present Sister Regina Malmstrom in a senior piano recital at 8 p.m. Thursday in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. Sister Regina, a member of the Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth, will play Andante and Variations by Haydn, Sonata in C Minor by Beethoven, works by Chopin and Le Tombeau de Couperin by Ravel. Elected were Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student; Steve Joyce, Ulysses sophomore; and Susan Trottman, Kirkwood, Mo., junior. These members will have no vote on the council, but will be able to hold council offices. In other action, the council: Heard a request by John Lungstrum, 2nd year law student from Salina, that the director of the Kansas Union, Frank Burge, appear and explain why money was allocated to build a tunnel between the Union and X zone. There will be no admission charge for the recital. Voted down a resolution which called for open houses in male residence halls every Saturday between 3 and 10 p.m. Voted down a resolution to be represented at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Tabled a resolution which asked that a recommendation be made to the City Commission of Lawrence to install stop signs at the intersections of 11th and Indiana Street, and 11th and Louisiana Street. Tabled an amendment concerning membership on the Student Court. Heard a report from Joe Geering, Moundridge junior and student body vice-president, that a program similar to "Upward Bound," which would acquaint low-income group high school students with a University atmosphere, was not possible at this time because of a lack of both time and money for such a project. Samson given grant for metabolism study Frederick E. Samson Jr., chairman of the department of comparative biochemistry and physiology at KU, has a $31,569 grant from the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness of the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) to continue research into the energy metabolism of nervous tissue. The study, which is concerned with chemical compounds known to be involved in energy metabolism of the brain and the effect of various agencies upon the concentration of these compounds, is in its twelfth year. ES NO BULL Bullfighter Month Throughout Month of April Buy a taco and get a card. Ten tacos will fill it— AT TACO GRANDE Then you get 2 free! (No limit on cards) Each cord will be used 1720 West 23rd St. for a free drawing in May! PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE HOSPITALITY TOUR TO KANSAS CITY TO SEE THE SPURS PROFESSIONAL SOCCER TEAM Sunday, April 23 SIGN UP ON PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE OFFICE DOOR $1.00 DEPOSIT QUESTIONS: CALL KATHY ALEXANDER VI 3-5800 Former White Foundation citees will be guest panelists at seminar Five former William Allen White Foundation national cites are among the nine journalists who will serve as panelists for the foundation's April 28-30 seminar on "The Role of the Mass Media in a Free Society" at KU. The former cites are Hodding Carter, editor and publisher, Delta Democrat-Times, Greenville, Miss., cited in 1961; Irving Dillard, former editorial editor, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 1957; Ben Hibbs, retired editor of the Saturday Evening Post and now contributing editor for Reader's Digest, 1959. Norman Isaacs, executive editor, Louisville Courier-Journal, 1955; and Ernest K. Lindley, special assistant to the secretary of state and former chief of Newsweek's Washington bureau, 1951. Three others will join this group as critic-commentators for the seminar: Samuel Blackman, Grover Cobb and Houstun Waring. New Arrivals BANDOLINO'S SANDALS TAKE OFF IN BANDOLINOS—YOU'LL GET EVERYWHERE! Bandolino makes excitement this season with its adventurous collection of Italian imports. Supple leather, racing colors, zingy shapes. Who knows where they'll take you! Yellows, Orange, Bone, Village Brown Sizes to 11. From Eleven dollars Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop 837 MASS. VI 3-4255