Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962 Forty Seniors Elected For Phi Beta Kappa Forty seniors have been elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society in the liberal arts and sciences. The election of the 40, along with 10 students who were elected last spring during their junior year, brings the proportion of 1962 seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences chosen to Phi Beta Kappa to 7.8 per cent. The 40 seniors elected to Phi Beta Kappa are; Judith E. Baker, Salina; Allen F. Brauninger, Raytown, Mo.; Carol Susan Cross, Topeka; John M. Falletta, Arma; John Robert Finger, Topeka. Jerry D. Gardner, Wichita; William J. Gissendanner, Kirkwood. Mo.; David R. Gray; Lawrence; Charles W. Hargrove, Lawrence; Boyd Kent Hartman, Highland. Ind. Karlene R. Howell, Kansas City; Karen Jennison, Healy; Frederic H. Jones, Merriam; Gary M. Jones, Parsons; Mary Scott Killgore, Parkville, Mo. Richard Lee Lewis, Dodge City Mary Ellen McCalla, Lawrence Neal Stewart McCoy, Cedarvalle Mary Hughes McCue, Liberal; Arthur O. McGowan, Kansas City. Charles B. M McLure, Jr., Van Horn, Texas; Carol Sue McMullen, Coldwater; Dell Roseanne Odell, Shawnee Mission; Constant Poirier, Topeka; Marilyn Ann Rockwell, Wichita. Chairmanships Open On P-T-P Committee Interviews for committee chairmen within the People-to-People hospitality committee will be held 6:30 p.m. April 26 in the Kansas Union. Chairmanships are open for the following committees: home placement, vacation placement, weekend dinner placement, farm tours and industrial tours. Anyone interested in applying for one of these positions should contact Sharon Foster at VI 3-3120. Weather Partly cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms this afternoon and tonight. Saturday clearing West partly cloudy with scattered showers or thunderstorms East. Increasing southerly winds this afternoon, warmer extreme Northeast portion. Cooler tonight West Portion. Lows generally in 50s. Cooler tomorrow. Highs 60s West to 70s East. Freshman Chosen Yearbook Queen Carol Stotts, Leawood freshman, was named the 1962 Jayhawker queen last night by the 1962 Jay- hawker staff. The Jayhawker princesses are Janet Benson, Kansas City freshman; Jane Harber Lawrence, Leawood sophomore; Margaret McNulty, Coffeyville senior, and Patricia Wilson, Kansas City junior. The queen and princesses were selected by Warren Beatty, star of "Splendor in the Grass" and the "Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone." Car Theft Reported A KU student reported to KU police that his 1959 model car was stolen early this morning. The student, David Allen Cooley. Mission senior, told police that the stolen car is a light blue Volkswagen. Circus Lion Escapes, Kills Dog, Then Naps CAGLIARI, Sardinia—(UPI)—A circus lion escaped yesterday and terrorized the village of Castelsardo for about an hour, killing a dog but injuring no one. The lion romped around the village and finally slinked into a courtyard where he fell asleep. Police and circus employees threw a net over the lion and returned the beast to its cage. Jon R. Rutherford, Garden City; Sheila M. Ryan, Aurora, Mo.; Harold L. Sanders, Kansas City; Carol Sue Schmucker, Hutchinson; David Clark Scott, Jackson Heights, N.Y. Mrs. Donna Rankin Stuber, Leawood; Carl M. Sutherland, Prescott; John Robert Swanson, McAllen, Tex.; John S. Swenton, Bonner Springs; Clyde O. Thogmartin, Emporia. Robert M. Thomas, Jr., Marysville; Arthur R. Traugott, Ellinwood; Julia Ann Walker, Lawrence; Sarah Jane Walker, New Smyrna Beach, Fla.; Janet Wright, Prairie Village. The 40 seniors, along with six juniors elected earlier this spring, will be initiated before the annual banquet May 10. Stewart Hughes, of Harvard University and 1961-62 Phi Beta Kappa national lecturer, will speak. KU Easter Bunny To Give Puppets The Easter bunny will be sure to visit the youngsters at the Children's Rehabilitation Center at the Kansas University Medical Center in Kansas City, this year. His Easter present will be about 20 puppets made by members of the Home Economics Club at KU. About 20 members of the club worked one evening and made the puppets out of scraps of material—old socks, yarn and buttons—Laurie Van De Mark, Lawrence senior and chairman of the project, said. THE PUPPETS are all different and range in personality from dragons to clowns to princesses. They are hand puppets and will be useful in the children's rehabilitation program as well as fun to play with, Mrs. Van De Mark said. The project was so successful that club members plan to make puppets for the KU Nursery School next year. ONE CLUB MEETING each year is devoted to a community service project. Last year the girls made slippers for the children at the Medical Center and gave them as Christmas presents. Several girls will take the puppets to the Rehabilitation Center and give them to the children. Bean bags donated by one member will be given at this time also. The Home Economics Club is composed of about 30 members. They meet once a month for the purpose of developing professional attitudes in their field. 'Twelfth Night' Roles Assigned The casting for the University Theatre's production of William Shakespeare's comedy, "Twelfth Night," scheduled for performances at 8 p.m. each night April 25-28, will be as follows: Duke Orsino, Paul Ackerman, Colby sophomore; Olivia, Diana Abruzcino, Huntington, W. Va. graduate student; Viola and Cesario, a double role, Peggy Connors, Wichita sophomore, and Sebastian, Viola's brother, Tom Woodard, Des Moines, Iowa, sophomore. Principal roles: Supporting roles: Malvolio, Keith Jochim, Birmingham, Mich., junior; Sir Toby Belch, Phil Harris, Lawrence graduate student; Sir Andrew Aguecheek, Mike Jackson, Prairie Village senior; Maria, a minx, Marilyn Miller, Olathe junior, and Feste, a clown, Dan Kocher, Toepea junior. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The chug chug of Japanese fishing boats in Alaska's Shelikof strait this week reverberated through Washington and meant one thing — a dilemma. Japanese Boats Cause Dilemma Agreement yesterday by Alaskan officials to let two boats charged with poaching in "state waters" depart in peace while the issues are resolved in court removed much of the urgency but not the ultimate problem. Tickets are now available at the University Theatre, Murphy Hall, and at Bell's Music Co. downtown. The University Theatre box office hours are 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday, and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on performance nights. This involves more than Alaska and more than Japan. It blends U.S.-Asian relations, federal versus state authority and election politics. If the U.S. State Department agrees with Alaskan Gov. William Egan that the Shelikof Strait between Kodiak Island and the Alaskan peninsula is an inland or territorial sea, it would slap the wrist of Japan at a time when much of Asia is already sensitive over forthcoming U.S. nuclear tests in the Pacific. More than this, it would encourage territorial sea claims of other nations which the U.S. has always opposed. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Indonesia, an island archipelago, has claimed sea rights to all the waters around and between its is- slands. The area could also could affect Pacific shipping routes. El Salvador and other Latin American countries have claimed territorial seas reaching out 200 miles. The Soviet Union has claimed 12 miles, while the U.S. only recognizes a three-mile limit. If the State Department says the Shelikof is international, it evokes a federal-state battle which would fall in the midst of Alaska's primary elections. As a result, the department has been officially speechless. Though territorial sea limits usually are considered a federal rather than state question, it has hinted it will simply let the courts decide. Peace Corps Exam Given Tomorrow Peace Corps examinations will be given at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Lawrence Post Office, 645 New Hampshire. Persons wanting to take the test do not have to register beforehand. The complete examination, including the teacher qualification test, takes about 6½ hours. ROME—(UPI)—Professional boxing it not sport but a "useless and ferocious massacre," a leading Catholic magazine said today. Catholic Magazine Says Boxing Is 'Useless Massacre' In an article provoked by the recent death of Cuban fighter Benny (Kid) Paret, the Jesuit bi-monthly review "Civilita Cattolica" said boxing, with as many as 1,500 blows being traded in a match, involves the risks of death or "psychophysical deterioration." "Our protest will be opposed not only by those who live and speculate, with huge profits, on the boxing profession, but also by lovers of violence and force, the number of whom is not small in today's world," the magazine said. "We therefore must raise a voice in defense of human life which is threatened by a civilization which . . . condones the assassin in diverse ways and under all kinds of pretexts. "To produce serious brain damage (resulting sometimes in death) . this is the price for the title of champion." The magazine said the crowds that attend the fights ask only that their favorite "KO his opponent, or finish him off when he is already on the ropes." "Whoever saw Paret's face, horribly disfigured and swollen, certainly cannot speak of the sporting nobility of boxing," the review said. "If this form of legal assassination . . . cannot easily be abolished, the blame will fall not only on those who defend it, safeguarding their own interests, but also—and mainly—on the public that favors this useless and ferocious massacre." Official Bulletin TODAY Applications for Sachem are available in the Dean of Students office, 228 Strong Hall. Completed applications are due in the office on April 20. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m. Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union. Don Thompson will speak on Daniel: 2. International Club: 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. Mayor Ted Kennedy, speak on the history of Law and justice, and answered by games, refreshments and dancing. Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m., 1221 Oread Devotional studies and fellowship. SATURDAY Peace Corps: Interested students should plan to take the Peace Corps examination Saturday morning at 8:30 a.m. at the Lawrence post office downtown. International Students: The Industrial Tour to the Kansas City radio and television station will leave from the Kansas Union at 1 p.m. SUNDAY Lutheran Services: 8:30 & 11 a.m. Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th and Vermont, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Danfortn Chapel. Catholic Mass; 9 & 11 a.m. Fraser Hall. Church Meeting: 10:33 a.m. Danforth Church **KUOK:** 3—News & Weather; 3:05—W Vancouver; 4—News & Weather; Concert; 6—News & Weather; 6:15— Horizons; 8—Hagen's Hothouse; 10—News & Weather; 10—Hoy's Room; 12 Portals of Prayer. BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES GOOD NEWS TRAVELS FAST! YOUR FURNACE CAN BE CLEANED ANY TIME OF THE YEAR The NEW Kleen Air method cleans ALL 6 of the vital dust and soot collecting areas in your heating system. 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