10 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, February 7, 1968 Six nominees named for Alumni Assn. Six KU alumni have been nominated for the board of directors of the KU Alumni Association. Three will be elected for fiveyear terms by mail ballots distributed in April to the association's 18,000 members, according to Roy A. Edwards Jr. of Kansas City, national president of the association. The nominees are William R. Hagman Sr., Pittsburg; Mrs. Gladys Bitter Harms, Great Bend; John R. Kline, Hutchinson; Jack D. Reese, Liberal; Robert B. Riss, Shawnee Mission; and Oliver J. Samuel, Emporia. Hagman, a liberal arts graduate of 1932, is president of Hagman's Inc. in Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri and president of the F. S. Edwards Tobacco Co. of Kansas City and Topkena. Past president of the Pittsburg Chamber of Commerce and of the National Association of Tobacco Distributors, he has been a member of the University's development committee for several years. Mrs. Harms, an education graduate of 1942, is president of the Barton County KU Alumni Club and has been chairman of the county's KU Centennial Concert and Lecture Series. Kline graduated from the School of Business in 1911 and is now a partner in the Kline Insurance Agency. He is a past president of the Reno County Alumni Club and of the Hutchinson Insurance Board. Dr. Reese, graduate in Liberal arts in 1953 and in medicine in 1957, has been in the general practice of medicine in Liberal for 10 years and has been Seward County health officer since 1963. He is also president of Globe Electronic, Inc., a firm selling electronic devices to local and federal police agencies. Riss, a business graduate in 1949, is president of Riss and Co. and a director of Johnson Motor Lines. He is a past president of the Greater Kansas City Alumni Association and is a member of the KU Council for Progress. He was national chairman of the Greater University Fund and in 1956 was named "Most Outstanding Young Man in Missouri" by the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce. Samuel, an engineering graduate in 1948, was president of the Lyon County Alumni Club and is now county chairman for the Program for Progress. He is also president of the Emporia Kiwanis Club. Other nominations may be made by petition until March 1. Alabama out for KU grads Research indicates that native Kansas students at KU would most like to live in Colorado, Kansas, or California after graduation. They would least like to live in Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Nevada, New York, New Jersey, or West Virginia. In his article, "Regional Perception and Its Effect on Industrial Location," Robert T. Aangreenbrug, assistant professor of geography, is interested in the "mental preference" maps drawn by persons looking for an industrial location or job opportunities. Van Doren to open second Festival of the Arts Poet Mark Van Doren will open the second annual KU Festival of the Arts program at 4 p.m., Friday, March 22, in Hoch Auditorium. The week-long program will also feature singer Ella Fitzgerald, cartoonist Al Capp and the Oscar Peterson Trio in an attempt to show a spectrum of the arts, according to Mike Kirk, Kansas City, Mo., junior and Festival director. Van Doren, previously scheduled to appear on March 29, is co-sponsored by the KU English department. Appearances by the other Festival participants will begin at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. The schedule includes the Oscar Peterson Trio, Sunday, March 24; filmmaker Ed Emshwiller and experimental movies, Monday, March 25; Harkness Ballet, a concert in the School of Fine Arts, Tuesday, March 26; and Henry Geldzahler, curator of modern art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, Wednesday, March 27. Cartoonist Al Capp, Thursday, March 28; art films previously shown at Lincoln Center in New York City, Friday, March 29; and Ella Fitzgerald, Saturday, March 30. In conjunction with the Festival, the KU Art Museum will show works by James Albert Newbill, visiting lecturer in the KU Drawing and Painting Department. IN LAWRENCE, THE NUMBER ONE CASHABLE CHECK IS A JAYHAWK CHECK IN A HANDSOME KU CHECKBOOK. When in Lawrence, do as the Lawrenciens do; write your checks on Number One, The First National. But write them on your own Jayhawk check, and you're immediately identified as a Number One Student. (Makes check cashing as easy as back home!) Even small accounts are practical; there's no service charge on Jayhawk accounts. Just a dime-a-check as you use them. Helps you keep your balance. Stop in and get your first 50 checks, free. Get known at the First, and you're known where it counts-at cash registers all over Lawrence. Come in to the Number One Student Banking Center, right downtown, Eighth and Massachusetts. Now.