10 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, February 21, 1968 Spearhead examined; may date 10,000 B.C. A spearhead, possible proof of a Paleo Indian civilization in Kansas 9.000 to 10.000 B.C., is now being examined by the archaeology department of the KU Museum of Natural History. The spearhead was turned over to KU's anthropology department last week by Don Hammel, Clay Center junior. Hammel's father found it while plowing five miles north of Clay Center in 1940, Hammel said. Viet expert to discuss war policy An outspoken authority on Southeast Asia will talk on "Vietnam: the Inevitability of Withdrawal" at the Minority Opinions Forum at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. David Wurfel, professor of political science at the University of Missouri, will speak about his observations and conclusions made when he was sent to Vietnam to study the presidential elections held there in September. He is considered an expert on the international relations and politics of the region. Upon his return from Vietnam, Wurfel participated with many groups in the promotion of peace in Vietnam. He spoke before the biennial Assembly of the Protestant Episcopal Church and has worked with Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord of Washington In addition to his appearance in the Kansas Union, Wurfel will speak on "Recent Trends in South Vietnam Politics" at a faculty supper at 5:30 p.m. in the Wesley Foundation Center. Hammel said the spearhead "just kind of stayed around" until he and his wife ran across it when they were visiting Clay Center for the weekend. They decided to bring it back to KU for study. The spearhead is approximately $4\frac{1}{2}$ inches long and $1\frac{1}{2}$ inches wide, said Alfred E. Johnson, head of the museum archaeology department. Johnson said the specimen is the point of a "projectile of an antiquity before bows and arrows." It is a type of spearhead known as a Clovis point, he said. Points of this kind were first found around Clovis, N.M., from which the Clovis point was named. The Clovis point is usually found with the remains of an extinct kind of elephant, a mammoth, Johnson said. He said the Paleo Indians were big-game hunters, hunting mammoths and mastodons with the spearheads. Johnson said the archaeologists hope eventually to find Clovis points still buried with the bones of a mammoth, so they may better guess at the Paleo civilization. The spearhead will be returned to Hammel after analysis, Johnson said, rather than keeping it in the Museum's collection. Chinese to honor Year of Monkey Members of the Chinese Students' Association at KU will celebrate the Chinese New Year with a dinner at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the First Presbyterian Church, 901 Vermont. Tickets for the dinner are now on sale at the information desk of the Kansas Union. Cost of the dinner $1.50 for Chinese students and $2 for others. SEN, ROBERT F. KENNEDY HOUSE HAS BEEN CANCELLED City Clerks School. All Day. Kansas Union. Official Bulletin TODAY Lecture. 4 p.m. "Mental Health in Eastern Europe." Dr. Henry P. David, D.A.S. Forum Room, Kansas Union. Carillon Recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. Nomura Company of Tokyo. "Kyoto- ism in Modern Style." Free, University Theatres. Little Symphony. 8 p.m. Karel Bavelot soloist. Swainout Houlce Rall Hall. French Film Festival. 7 p.m. "Lola." Dyche Auditorium. Study Break Devotions. 9:30 p.m. University Church, Church. TOMORROW Minority Opinions Forum. 4:30 p.m. "Vietnam: The Inevitability of Withdrawal." David Wurfel. Ballroom, Kansas Union. Classical Film, 7 & 9 p.m. "Varie- le Diario," Fellini, 1950. Dyche Auditione. Ernest H. Lindley Lecture, 8 p.m. J. N. Findlay, Yale. "The Systematic Unity of Value." Forum Room, Kansas Union. "Every time someone writes a story about nude models we get letters from religious groups all over the state," he said. KU's India Club to give program Apparently, one might add, from people who have never seen religious art from the Renaissance or the Vatican frescoes, or anyplace else except the Sunday bulletins. "Sanget Gahar" (Musical Spring), a program of group songs and dances, dialogue and documentary movies, will be presented by the KU India Club at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico But asking questions about it is like grilling a French peddler where he gets the post cards he sells to tourists. Models needed for art classes Green put an advertisement in the Daily Kansan asking for students to pose in school clothes for classes working on head and shoulder drawing. He doesn't know why the students quit; they just do, even though all the students have to do is sit still and get paid for it. Green didn't say how much. Maybe the students' friends think they're posing nude—something students aren't allowed to do. Professional models are hired to do that, simply because art students have to know how to draw the human figure. "Every time someone says anything about models, our student models quit," Robert B. Green, acting chairman of the drawing and painting department, said. Pss! The drawing and painting department needs models. The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, conducted in cooperation with professors from Stanford University, University of California, and Guadalajara, will offer July 1 to August 10, art, folklore, geography, history, language and literature courses. Tuition, board and room is $290. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, California 94305. Stories about that cause Green problems too. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE at Lawrence Surplus THESE PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 24th 214 Pairs! Men's Reg. $6.98 PERMA-PRESS IVY SLACKS $2.00 About 20 of These! Men's Reg. $22.50 CORDUROY SPORT COATS $12.00 36 Pairs! Men's Reg. to $17.95 COWBOY BOOTS $6.00 About 100 Here! Men's Reg. to $2.50 LONG-SLEEVE SWEAT SHIRTS 88c 25 to Sell! Men's Reg. $12.95 C.P.O. SHIRTS $5.00 Plaid Patterns Only All Remaining WINTER JACKETS AT 1/2-PRICE OR LESS! Many, Many More Big Values Not Mentioned In This Ad! LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Massachusetts St.