Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 9, 1963 Madrid U. Students Protest Arrests MADRID — (UPI) — About 80 Madrid University students staged a hunger strike today to protest the arrest of students demonstrating in sympathy with the 75,000 industrial strikers in northern Spain. Among the arrested students is one American, 26-year-old Allen Triester of Chicago. He was picked up Monday in a crackdown on demonstrators but later released. He was arrested again yesterday. U. S. Embassy officials said Triester denied having anything to do with the demonstration, but police refused Embassy requests for his release. POLICE CONTINUED rounding up labor agitators and other suspects in an effort to break the month-long strikes which threaten to paralyze industry in the three northern provinces. Over 200 students and faculty members received Type I oral polio vaccine at Watkins Memorial Hospital the past two days. But despite the measures, 5,000 workers walked off the job in the San Sebastian area today, and informed sources predicted thousands more would join them soon. Polio Vaccine Now Available The vaccine is now available to students and staff and any Douglas County resident at the hospital. Type I vaccine is used for immunization of the virus that is responsible for 89 per cent of polio cases in Kansas over the last five years. The immunization program is part of a statewide program to make the vaccine available to as many people as possible. Type I vaccine will be available until May the 12th at the hospital daily from 8 a.m. until noon and from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Type I vaccine will also be available at the following places: Strong Hall — Thursday, 9 a.m. until 11 a.m. Marvin Hall — Thursday, 1 p.m. until 3 p.m. Summerfield — Friday, 9 a.m. until 11 a.m. Malott Hall — 1 p.m. until 3 p.m. Chief of State Gen. Francisco Franco last Friday declared a state of emergency and suspended civil rights in the three provinces. Local authorities have shipped an undisclosed number of agitators to other areas. THE SOURCES said the next major strike would be made by the 11,000 workers of the Altos Hornos steel mill. The government yesterday closed down the Beasain railway equipment factory because of a partial strike, and the workers at three foundries joined the strike. The students remained in a downtown university building overnight and said they would not eat until police released all students arrested during the past four days. This is a demonstration of solidarity with the industrial strikers. About 40 students have been detained in the aftermath of police moves against the demonstrations. Yesterday, the students were in the streets again, marching and chanting slogans of sympathy for the northern strikers. But a caravan of police jeeps roared up and police quickly broke up the marchers. 'Double, Double...' Starts Run Tonight "Double, Double . . . ." by Marston Tate, opens at 8 tonight in the Experimental Theatre as the last of a series of three plays in the third annual Drama Symposium. The comedy, directed by Tandy Craig, Joplin, Mo., graduate student, centers about an institute of human research. Tickets are available at the University Theatre at 50c for students and $1 for non-students. 8 Students Given NSF Study Grants Eight KU engineering students will participate in the National Science Foundation (NSF) undergraduate science education program in chemical engineering this summer. The students will each receive a $600 stipend for 10 weeks of research. The program, sponsored by a $5,520 grant from the NSF, will be directed by Harold F. Rosson, assistant professor of chemical engineering. The students will be working with members of the chemical engineering department. Philip W. Westin, Formoso sophomore; Stanley J. Copeland, St. John freshman; George W. Taylor, Independence, Mo., junior; Akos Kovacs, Novi Sad, Yugoslavia, junior; Dean A. Lebestky, Kansas City sophomore; Gary W. Rosenwalk, Topeka junior; George L. Ward, Overland Park junior, and Richard L. Hoffman, Independence junior. The participants are: Officers Named for Directory, K-Book Editors and business managers for the University of Kansas student directory and the K-Book date book have been named for the 1962-63 year. Nicholas Stucky, Lawrence freshman, will be editor of the student directory. Business manager will be Jerry Harper, Wichita sophomore. Editor of the K-Book will be Stephen G. Powell, Joplin, Mo., junior. John Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore, will be business manager. Around the Campus Concert Set for Tonight at 8 Reflect your good taste with a gift for Mother from the vast collection of pretty and practical gifts . . . gift wrapped with our compliments. Open till 8:30 p.m. This Thursday 1023 Mass. (Across from the Granada) Before You Start Home . . . BE SURE YOUR BRAKES ARE SAFE UNIVERSITY FORD will check your linings, drums, wheel cylinders and brake mechanism INSPECT complete hydraulic system, Adjust brakes, including pedal clearance, Adjust parking brake, ADD necessary hydraulic brake fluid. All For Only $1.49 714 Vermont Parts extra, if needed UNIVERSITY FORD "Apollon Musagete" (1923) by Stra-vinsky; "Variaciones Concertantes" (1953) by Alberto Ginastera, and "Violin Concerto No. 3 in G Major" by Mozart. VI 3-3500 Raymond Cerf, professor of string instruments, will be the soloist in the Mozart concerto. Admission is free. HRC Questionnaires Are Available Today The University Little Symphony, directed by Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will present its spring concert at 8 tonight in Swarthownt Recital Hall. The program will include the Overture to "Esther" by Handel; English Instructor Receives Fellowship He is George F. Wedge, who will study at the Linguistics Institute at the University of Washington June 18 to Aug. 17. A KU instructor of English has received a summer fellowship in linguistics from the American Council of Learned Societies. Wedge, who has been at KU since 1958, has studied at the U.S. Naval Academy, Middlebury College, and the University of Minnesota, where he is currently a candidate for the Ph.D. Human Rights Committee questionnaires on fraternity and sorority discrimination are now available in the Dean of Students' office. The questionnaires can be picked up by students living in apartments and unorganized housing. The deadline for obtaining a questionnaire is 5 p.m. Friday. par for the course.. Manhattan. Le Cheval true-action sportknit designed to move as you move! For freedom on the fairway...Le ChevalTM. with exclusive ribbed-knit shoulders and sleeves (they never bind, allow plenty of room for motion) and longer back tail (it never rides up)! Of 100% cotton fine 2-ply lise, Le Cheval is completely washable, shrink resistant and shape retaining! Our collection in a wide and handsome choice of color-fast fashion colors. Look for the Majestic horse embroidery that identifies the one and only Le Cheval! $5.00 W As seen in Sports Illustrated THE Town Shop Larry is con things world 1 THE Lauda these to intervie Laudi in his office in a pencil right he on his DOWNTOWN "I SP at Ohio very di freedom "I was adminis and the all the 20-year a from Lauc ate te philosco structs studen elemer University HE C This sp year c when philoso He vity th Danfor Iowshi Lauc about "The cided Fair F May." success ward ! disapp ON THE HILL