14 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, February 14, 1968 Students are eligible for summer in Spain The Spanish department has announced the students eligible for the Summer Language Institute in Barcelona, Spain. There are still several openings available. Students participating are Ron Burstein, Prairie Village sophomore; Linda Burton, Prairie Village sophomore; Paul Dinovitz, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Marcia Eleser, Shawnee Mission freshman. John Gargay, Wichita junior. Students will travel extensively through Spain. The itinerary includes Madrid, Cordova, Granada and a long stay in Barcelona. The total living and travel expenses will be $1,000 plus tuition. John Garvey, Wichita junior; Claudia Hamlin, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Merry Hancks, Garfield freshman; Don Hanna, Dighton junior; Barbarale Horesei, Ellsworth junior; Mary Catherine Jackson, Kansas City freshman. Gail Jansen, Denver, Colo, freshman; Darryl Klippsen, Prairie Village sophomore; Andrew McDonald, Garnett freshman; Sherry McGowan, Lawrence sophomore; Kathleen McKown, Derby freshman; Brenda Metzler, Delmar, N.Y., freshman. Edward Pfeiffer, Princeton, N.J. sophomore; Mary Pitts, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Janet Ross, Osage City freshman; Cynthia Sinclair, Lawrence sophomore; JoAnn Thomson, Overland Park freshman; Jonas Walton, Los Angeles, Calif., freshman, and David Wood, Overland Park freshman. KU plans new food service The stomachs of freshman women may profit next fall in answer to some of KU's growing pains. A project to consolidate the food services of Corbin and Gertrude Sellards Pearson received bids yesterday afternoon. Plans call for the construction of a two-story addition to the northeast corner of GSP. A closed corridor will connect the two freshman women's residence halls. The addition will have about 4,000 square feet of floor space and provide additional kitchen and serving line space. A closed 100-foot corridor, partly underground, will connect the halls. The corridor is to be lighted and heated. The addition will allow the Corbin kitchen area to be used for storage. Construction costs are paid from residence hall reserve balances. Twins live, die together TURLOCK, Calif.-(UPI)-The Jackson twins were pert, pretty, popular. When Joan smiled, identical twin Janice was happy, too. And when Janice was blue, so was Joan. In the past year Janice had be- gun to brood over her boyish fig- ure and the fact that she was 5 foot 1 inch, too short, she be- lieved. Depression gnawed at her. The twins left home Sunday night, saying they were going for a drive. They were dressed alike, except their sweatshirts were a different color. About that time, several miles away in a rural countryside, a woman and her daughter began pruning their vineyard. The car was out of gas, the engine cold, and the despondent girls were dead, victims of self-inflicted carbon monoxide poisoning. fight it. Get Eaton's Corrāsable Bond Typewriter Paper. Mistakes don't show. A mis-key completely disappears from the special surface. An ordinary pencil eraser lets you erase without a trace. So why use ordinary paper? Eaton's Corrasable is available in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In 100-sheet packets and 500 sheet ream boxes. At Stationery Departments. Only Eaton makes Corrasable. $ ^{\textcircled{8}} $ EATON PAPER CORPORATION, PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS Callahan photos in Union A collection of award-winning photographs by Harry Callahan is displayed in the lobby of the Kansas Union. The collection features 150 photographs personally selected by the artist. It will be displayed through Sunday, Feb. 25. It is loaned by Hallmark Gallery in New York where the show premiered in 1965. "I am interested in revealing the subject in a new way, to intensify it," Callahan wrote in a description of his work. "A photo is able to capture a moment that people can't always see. Wanting to see more makes you grow as a person." Some of his subjects are common, but the tone and sharpness mirror art more than photography. NROTC officers named Raymond M. Carter, Springfield Mo., senior, has been appointed battalion commander of the NROTC unit at KU for the spring semester. New staff officers, all seniors, are George R. Baldwin, Prairie Village, battalion executive officer; Roger A. Lake, Spokane, Wash., battalion operations officer. Ronald L. Wagner, Rock Hill, M., battalion adjutant; Robert M. Shepard Jr., Smith Center, battalion supply officer; James D. Cole, Yenj, Wash., battalion public affairs officer; Roy S. Belcher, III, Lquisville, Ky., battalion athletic officer, and Clark S. Spalsbury, Salina, battalion chief petty officer. Company commanders appointed are Mark S. Brothers, Cherry-vale; John G. West, Cedar Lake, Ind., and Wallace R. Scott Jr., Kansas City, Mo. The drill team commander is Frederick R. Emmons Jr., Lawrence. WEAVERS RECORD DEPT. Soundtrack "Good, Bad, and the Ugly" $399 5.79 Stereo Reg. 5.79 Stereo Thurs., Fri., Sat. T&C PLAYS THE COLOR DUET A beautiful spring melody is the two-color calfskin pump by Town & Country Shoes. Select from these brilliant combinations for the best spring look afoot: lemon yellow with sun orange, apple green with lemon yellow, swinging blue with fire red, bone with blondie or fire red with lemon yellow. AAAA to B to 11, Sixteen dollars.