6 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, March 18, 1968 Festival of Arts to begin Friday The second annual KU Festival of the Arts will open with an appearance by Mark Van Doren, the Pulitzer Prize winning poet, who will present a reading of his best poems at 4 p.m. Friday, in Hoch Auditorium. The Oscar Peterson Trio, a popular jazz group, will perform at 8 p.m. Sunday, March 24, in Hoch Auditorium. Peterson, one of the top jazz pianists, will be assisted by sidemen Sam Jones, bassist, and drummer, Bobby Durham. The School of Fine Arts Concert Course will present the Harkness Ballet at 8 p.m. March 26 at Hoch Auditorium. Ed Emshwiller, a leading exponent of the underground experimental film, will present a collection of his works, at 8 p.m. March 25 at Hoch Auditorium. Henry Geldzahler, Curator of Contemporary Art at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, will present a program at 8 p.m. March 27 at Hoch Auditorium about the visual arts today. Al Capp, noted cartoonist, satirist and columnist, will add his spicy brand of humor to the Festival at 8 p.m. March 28 at Hoch Auditorium. For more than 30 years, the adventures of L'il Abner, Capp's creation, have occupied a prominent place in the cartoon section of almost every U.S. newspaper. Ella Fitzgerald, the reigning queen of female vocalists, will end the Festival at 8 p.m. March 30 at Hoch Auditorium. New Cinema, a connection in internationally famous short films, will give the KU audience a look at the cinematic art at 8 p.m. March 29 at Hoch Auditorium. In conjunction with the Festival, the KU Art Museum is showing works by James Albert Newbill, visiting lecturer in the KU drawing and painting department. Newbill's one-man show consists of 16 abstract paintings and drawings. A faculty exhibit of works done by members of KU's department of painting and drawing will be in the Kansas Union South Lounge. Kennedy, Johnson even after latest Gallup poll PRINCETON, N.J. —(UPI)—President Johnson and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy ran a dead heat as potential candidates for president in a Gallup Poll taken before last Tuesday's New Hampshire Primary. The poll, released Sunday, gave each 41 per cent. Eighteen per cent were undecided. Those polled included persons of all political affiliations in a national sampling. When the same question was asked in January, the President received 52 per cent and Kennedy 40 per cent. have the convention select?" Voters were asked: "Suppose the choice for president in the Democratic Convention narrows down to Sen. Robert Kennedy of New York and President Johnson. Which one would you prefer to Since the latest sampling was made, Kennedy has announced that he is seeking the nomination. The new poll gave Johnson a slight lead among Democrats and independents. Among Democrats, he received 45 per cent to Kennedy's 44 per cent with 11 per cent undecided. Independent voters favored Johnson by 39 per cent, while Kennedy received 38 per cent with 23 per cent undecided. Leaders study ethics of heart transplants NEW VORK — (UPI) The American Heart Association named 15 leaders in medicine, law, religion, education and communications Sunday to study the much-debated ethical, moral and legal implications of heart transplants and similar experiments on humans. The association said the Ethics Committee would hold its first meeting here March 26 and 27. Dr. Eugene A. Stead, Florence McAlister professor of medicine at Duke University in Durham, N.C., will be chairman. The announcement came just one day after Dr. Philip Blai- Actor to speak in theater colloquia Clayton Corbin, Broadway actor and current star of the University Theatre's production of "Macbeth," will be the guest artist in a theater research colloquia at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in 341 Murphy Hall. The topic of the informal discussion will be "The Actor's Task." The public is invited. berg, the only survivor of the first six heart transplants, left Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, 74 days after his operation. Official Bulletin Seminar on Industrial Mineral De- velopment and National Union Alice Tuesday, Wednesday. Six Weeks' Grades Due. 5 p.m. Registrar's Office. TODAY KU Film Society. 7 p.m. "The General." Keaton. 303 Bailey. Theatre Research Colloquium 3:30 Corbyn, 341 Murphy Way. Clayton Corbyn. 341 Murphy Way. Senior Recital. 8 p.m. Marsha Farewell, pianist. Sawhout Recital Hall. College Faculty Meeting Cancelled. Next: April 23. Repertory Week. 8:20 p.m. "Hedda Gabler." University Theatre. Mu Epsilon Nu. 7 m." Opportunities for Men in the feld of Education with E. Anderson. Kansas Union. Open to all men interested in education. Quack Club Clinic. 7:30 p.m. Robinson Gymnasium Pool. Brazilian Documentary Films. 7:30 p.m. Fear. Dyche Auditorium. Christian Science Organization. 7:30 p.m. The Testimony Meeting. Danforth Chapel. Sigma FsI-Personnel Administration Fraternity 7.30 p.m. Pine Room. Lecture. 8 p.m. "Past and Future of Chinese National Drum."Dr Joseph R. Levenson, University of California. Forum Room. Kansas Union Repertory Week. 8:20 p.m. "Blithe Spirit." University Theatre. If you don't agree that business destroys individuality maybe it's because you're an individual. There's certain campus talk that claims individuality is dead in the business world. That big business is a big brother destroying initiative. But freedom of thought and action,when backed with reason and conviction's courage, will keep and nurture individuality whatever the scene: in the arts, the sciences, and in business. Scoffers to the contrary, the red corpuscles of individuality pay off. No mistake. Encouraging individuality rather than suppressing it is policy in a business like Western Electric—where we make and provide things Bell telephone companies need. Because communications are changing fast, these needs are great and diverse. Being involved with a system that helps keep people in touch, lets doctors send cardiograms across country for quick analysis, helps transmit news instantly, is demanding. Demanding of individuals. If your ambition is strong and your abilities commensurate, you'll never be truly happy with the status quo. You'll seek ways to change it and—wonderful feeling!- some of them will work. Could be at Western Electric.