Volunteers needed for clinic A 100 per cent increase in patient load this year has brought an increased need for receptionists, social workers and nurses, at the Lawrence Planned Parenthood Association clinic Mrs. Aldon Bell, association member, said yesterday. Students and faculty who will volunteer to work at the clinic should attend a training workshop beginning at 9:30 a.m. June 14, Mrs.Bell said. Danny Cox to appear in concert Student Union Activities (SUA) will sponsor a concert featuring Danny Cox, a folksinger who commonly appears at the Vanguard Coffee House in Kansas City, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Concert tickets are $1 and may be purchased at the door or at the SUA office in the Kansas Union, said Bob Johnson, Prairie Village sophomore and chairman of the Danny Cox committee. Cox has recorded one album entitled "Sunny," Johnson said. Sculpture seminar set KU will hold its fourth annual "KU-in-Colorado Visual Arts Program" Aug. 4 to 16 at Elk Mountain Lodge in Crested Butte, Colo., the art department announced recently. The sculpture seminar, to be headed by Elden C. Tefft, professor of design at KU, will be limited to 20. Enrollments must be sent to E. S. Avison of University Extension. Cancer drive to begin The kick-off breakfast of the Douglas County Cancer Crusade will be at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Eldridge Hotel in Lawrence, said Kelvin Hoover, Douglas County unit president. "We want everyone of the organization members to attend this breakfast for instructions and to obtain materials that he will need to use in the drive," Hoover said. Converted missionary to speak Arthur Katz, plains states director for the American Board of Missions to the Jews, will speak on "Christianity-Cure-all or Cop-out" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Forum Room. In addition, he is the Interactive Christian Fellowship. Katz's talk is sponsored by the Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship. KU to honor poet's anniversary The KU departments of English and Libraries will celebrate the 150th anniversary of the poet Walt Whitman, May 8, with three authorities on the poet taking part. Charles E. Feinberg, Detroit, Mich., will present the Kenneth Spencer Library with an original proof set of one of Whitman's poems, "Out of the Cradle May 5 1969 KANSAN 3 Endlessly Rocking." Robert Duncan, a visiting KU professor from San Francisco and authority on Whitman, will give a reading of Whitman's poems at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Forum Room. Both men will then join Edward F. Grier, professor of English, for a program of lectures and reading at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Forum Room. The entire gamut of contemporary musical forms will be represented in a lecture-recital on contemporary music for the voice at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall. Special displays in Watson and Spencer libraries will feature Whitman and his works. Martha Bert, Newton graduate student, the recitalist, said styles would range "from the traditional to the electronic." The concert is divided into two parts, "For Singer and Piano" and "For Singer and Tape Recorder." Part one begins with "Five English Songs," by Vittorio Rieti, composed in 1949. The piece consists of poems by Shakespeare, Herrick and Sidney set to "traditional" music, Mrs. Bert said. 6:30 Thursday, May 8 Modern musical forms to be featured in concert Centennial Room—Kansas Union The third work, "Music for Singer," is chance music, freely improvised, with a text "The Dying of the Light" is a Dylan Thomas poem set to music by Wallingford Riegger that makes free use of the twelve-tone row. Dr. L. K. Anderson, Bell Telephone Laboratories Physics Department Banquet "Lasers, Holography and Communications" - PUBLIC WELCOE - Weather Banquet Tickets—$2.85 Purchase at 143 Malott before noon, May 6. No charge for lecture at 7:30 The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts considerable cloudiness with occasional showers and thunderstorms today, tonight and tomorrow. Southeasterly winds 15 to 25 mph today. Little temperature change with highs this afternoon 74 to 80. Low tonight 55 to 60. determined by the letters in the recitalist's name, she said. The second part of the concert begins with "In Memoriam," music by Emerson Myers to a poem by Wilfred Owen. Singing on-stage is accompanied by off-stage, tane-recorded speaking voices. "Alleluia," by David Ahlstrom Mrs. Bert describes as "hippie-influenced music for meditation." During that composition, the theater is blacked out, the singer sings off-stage right, an organist plays off-stage left, and a tape recorder plays from the back of the hall. 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