UDK News Roundup (Continued from page 1) Plane crash kills 150 MARACAIBO, Venezuela — Investigators dug the flight recorder from the wreckage of a Viasa DC9 jetliner and began today the task of determining what caused aviation's worst disaster. The plane smashed through a Maracaibo suburb spewing flaming fuel and killed at least 150 persons yesterday. All 83 persons aboard the Miami-bound Venezuelan airliner, including 47 Americans, apparently were killed, Viasa officials said. Most passengers were still strapped into their seats when firemen reached the scene. At least 67 persons in the suburb of La Coruba died Laird defends ABM WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Melvn R. Laird twice this week must defend before Congress President Nixon's decision on the modified antiballistic missile (ABM) system. While the lawmakers prepared for their first crack at questioning the new plan, initial soundings indicated the proposal will win eventual approval—easily in the House, more closely in the Senate. Laird's first appearance will come Wednesday at a private session of the Senate Armed Services Committee, a panel generally friendly to the ABM idea. The second will be Friday in a public hearing before the much more critical Senate. Top Communists meet BUDAPEST - The rulers of most of the Communist nations in Europe assembled under tight security in gray, misty Budapest yesterday for a summit meeting said to center on Red China, Vietnam and the Middle East. Soviet Communist Party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev and his delegation, including Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko, were the first to arrive at 10 a.m. under leaden skies for the meeting which opens today. Blacks to renew strike LOS ANGELES - Militant black students, who led a school boycott last week which resulted in the most widespread disturbances in Los Angeles school history, vowed to renew the strike today. At meetings in the south-central area during the weekend, strike leaders, mostly members of the Black Students Union and Black Students Alliance, contended the boycott was successful. Space photos ready SPACE CENTER, Houston - Technicians, working with special chemicals and machines, yesterday finished processing the photographic bounty brought back to earth by Apollo 9's pilots. Astronauts James A. McDivitt, David R. Scott and Russell L. "Rusty" Schweickart meanwhile went through their second hard day of debriefing on the mission which cleared the way for an American moon landing attempt in July. --original music is a product of the joint efforts on the part of all the members; the lyrics are often adlibed and have provided audiences with wit and humor unabashed by sophistication and unrestrained by set patterns or scores. Doug Clark has combined musical talent, creativity, and a heck-of-a-sense of humor to bring to his public not only good rock'n'roll but also a brand of witch that is unequalled in this part of the country. Doug Clark and The Hot Nuts will appear in Lawrence at the Red Dog Inn Friday, March 21----8 p.m. Doug Clark and The Hot Nuts To Appear In Lawrence Friday The University of Kansas and the people of Lawrence will be treated to an evening of Soul and laughter as the RED DOG INN presents Doug Clark and the Hot Nuts Friday night at 8 p.m. The Piedmont area of North Carolina might be known for such erudite institutions as Duke University of Durham, the State College at Raleigh, U.N.C. at Chapel Hill, and the omnipotent HOT NUTS of Dixie. Since 1955 the infamous group has been shaken! shy lassies from Princeton to Georgia Tech. Their unique delivery of a classic theme has brought acclaim from collegiate administrators and students alike. Their "boasts of heraldry" can be attributed to their bawdy songs of love and lust. Doug rompin' the skins, June Bug blin' the trumpet, Big John bompin' the sax, Chicken Little plunkin' the strings, and Prince providing the local vocal have stimulated rapacious riots from Ole Miss to Yale, from Sewance to U. Va. The parentless patrons of these universities have been amused by their featured rendition of the HOT NUTS song. This and most of their other songs were written by Doug, his brother John, and Prince Taylor. The Let's hope that we never see Doug and his boys fettered in chains (they get a little rowdy every now and then) and that they will remain the same insincere, wild group they are, for their services to the uninitiated and the initiated alike is second only to their musical ability, and their humor is guaranteed to make even TWO OLD MAIDS laugh. If you are the least bit prudish or puritanical you will not like this group and you might as well not waste your money on it; if, on the other hand, you are like millions of others who know how to laugh and don't blush too easily then waste your moncy on some good bawdy music and fancy talkin' Friday, March 21—8 p.m. at the RED DOG INN. KU compared to art institute Individualism stressed in art prof's comments 'The Painter' Julius Hatofsky is concerned with the student and artistic means of expression, rather than with theories and hypotheses. A visiting professor of drawing and painting, he tends to "the individual needs of the students." Hatofsky, visiting professor of drawing and painting from San Francisco Art Institute, has been instructing KU painting classes in Strong Hall since the beginning of this semester. He has been a faculty member at San Francisco since 1962. Julius Hatofsky dislikes generalizations. He prefers to withhold comments about hypothetical situations. Mar. 17 1969 KANSAN 11 Comparing KU with the art institute, he said, "I'm just a painter; it is difficult to make generalizations about the two institutions. "The main difference," he said, "is that the art institute is more intense." He explained there is basically a difference of environment. The intensity results from a more liberal attitude and more time for art, Hatofsky said. There are people of all ages at the art institute. There is not as much academic course work involved. "For people who aren't sure of what they want to do," he said, "the university should be the first place for a student to go. It gives the artist a chance to broaden his scope and to find himself," Hatofsky said. Hatofsky feels "teachers should be interested in and responsive to the individual needs of students. "You have to be awfully careful so that you don't kill the student's expressiveness," he said. An exhibit of Hatofsky's drawings and paintings is on display in the Spooner Art Museum. SPECIAL! Ranch Fresh—Smakin' Good HAMBURGER (Reg. 19c) FRENCH FRIES (Reg.19c) Golden brown, Krinkle-Kut Choose Coke, orange, Sprite, etc. 10c DRINK (Reg.10c) Regular Total 48c ★ Good thru March,1969 Special Price 38¢ SAVE A DIME!