6 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, February 27,1968 '3-D' pictures are objects of research KU has received a grant of $15,000 from Hallmark, Inc., to attempt to develop a new method of representing a three-dimensional image. Harry E. Talley, associate professor of electrical engineering, is project director. Grier compiling Whitman book The National Endowment for the Humanities has made a $3,000 grant to Edward F. Grier, professor of English, to compile the notebooks and prose manuscripts of Walt Whitman, 19th century American poet. Violin recital set Grier has been gathering material on Whitman for about eight years. He hopes to have the edition collated by 1969. Paul Todd, assistant professor o music theory, will present a violin faculty recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Swarthout Recital Hall. Richard Reber, instructor of piano, will accompany Todd. Admission is free. Dwight Boring* says... "You'll find the best answer to your life insurance problems—both now and later—in College Life's famous, college men's policy, The Benefactor. Let me tell you about it." *DWIGHT BORING 2020 Harvard Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 2-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA The research will deal with a branch of integral photography, according to Talley, in an attempt to duplicate holography, which now is the only method for making a three-dimensional photograph. ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Holography involves exposing a high-resolution photographic plate, without camera or lens, near a subject illuminated by monochromatic, coherent radiation—usually from a laser. When placed in the laser beam, a three-dimensional image of the subject is formed on the photographic plate. Official Bulletin Christian Science Organization. 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel Religion Forum. 7:30 p.m. "On Civil Disobedience." Profs. Pickett, Lujan, Burgstahler. Forum Room, Kansas Union. TODAY Basketball. 7:30 p.m. Nebraska. There. Jayhawk Kode Club 8 p.m. Kansan Union. (See bulletin board for room.) Foreign Students. Interested in Home Hospitality for a weekend? See the Office of the Dean of Foreign Students now to sign up. WEDNESDAY Hi-Y Youth in Government Pre- Legislative Conference. All Day, Jayhawk Room, Parlors A, B, C, Kansas Union. HDFL-Psychology Colloquium. 4 p.m.' "Developmental Changes in Pat- terson's Relegation." Dr. Eugene S. Gollin, Former Institute. Forum. Room, Kansas University. Carillon Reeital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. Classical Plim. 7 & 9 p.m. "An Enthusiast" with Charlie Chaplin." Dvehc. And. Flight to Europe Coffee Hour. 7:30 p.m. Kansas Room, Kansas Union. 8:30 p.m. Film: "Man's Search for Hardiness." Forum Room, Kansas Union. Bayles named president of teachers' association The presidency of the National Society of College Teachers of Education has been assumed by Ernest E. Bayles, professor of education. The Society is allied with the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education. Together, they represent all areas of teacher-education. Bayles was president of the Philosophy of Education Society in 161-62 and is a member of the executive board of the John Dewey Society. Bayles has been a member of the faculty since 1928. He will retire from active teaching in June. ERNEST E. BAYLES Why should you confide in a guy you've never met before? Because the guy we're talking about is a college recruiter from Alcoa. And the only way to play it is honestly. He'll be on campus in a couple of days. And here's what we recommend you do at the interview. First, lay your cards on the table. Tell him what kind of work would really turn you on. Then, sit back and listen while he explains how your plans figure into Alcoa's plans. (You'll be surprised how versatile Aluminum Company of America can be.) Change for the better with Alcoa So make it a point to meet Alcoa's recruiter. He's a confidence man you can really trust. Interview date: March 8 An Equal Opportunity Employer A Plans for Progress Company