Visiting professor exhibits art work An exhibition of paintings and drawings by Julius Hatofsky will open at 2 p.m. Friday in the KU Museum of Art, announced museum director Bret Waller. Hatofsky, visiting professor of drawing and painting from the San Francisco Art Institute, has been at KU since last fall. He has presented one-man shows in New York, Chicago and Portland, Ore., Waller said. He also has been represented in group exhibitions. A reception open to the public will be from 2 to 4 p.m. Friday in the Museum of Art. Steinhardt receives music grant Milton Steinhardt, professor of music history, has been invited by an international group of musicologists to serve on a committee for the publication of compositions by Philip de Monte, a 16th century musician for the imperial courts of Vienna and Prague. Steinhardt's sabbatical leave, to begin March 15, was made possible by a $1,250 grant he received from the American Philosophical Society, a spokesman for the School of Fine Arts said today. CYD petition helps kill House bill The Collegiate Young Democrat (CYD) petition opposing House Bill 1144 was successful, Mike Dickeson, Atchison junior and CYD president, said yesterday. "The Governor and representatives knew of our petition," Dickeson said, "and they passed a milder resolution instead. The bill itself is dead." Approximately 1500 people signed the petition against the bill which provided that students in a state school engaged in a demonstration be expelled from school upon failure to obey the orders of a police officer. The resolution provides that the Kansas Board of Regents has the power to deal with the punishment of demonstrators who infringe upon rights of others, Dickeson said. KU ranks 5th in Wilson designates The University of Kansas is ranked fifth among the nation's colleges and universities in its number of Woodrow Wilson designates, the office of institutional research in Washington, D.C., said today. Of the 1,106 students chosen by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation 16 KU students were selected. Cornell University led in the number of Wilson designates with 30 winners. MANHATTAN (UPI) — Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana said yesterday talk of international peace is not possible without recognizing Red China as a leader in Asia and the Western Pacific. Mansfield says no peace without Communist China He said the United States "will have to learn to live with the Pacific and the nations of its western reaches. "China will not remain forever, as is now the case, in substantial isolation," he said. "Its proper role is as a leading nation in the council of the world. Sooner or later, China will assume that place." "The very vastness of Red China projects its relevance not only over the Asian main land and the Pacific, but in fact, throughout the world," he said in a lecture at Kansas State University. "It is not possible to talk about the future of international peace, let alone about our future in the Pacific, without reference to the great nation which lies on its farthest shore. Official Bulletin Carillon Recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. TODAY Classical Film. 7 & 9 p.m. "The Bridge." Dyche Auditorium. Philosophy Lecture. 8 p.m. Prof. Joseph Margolias, Temple University. The Confirmation of Meta-Moral Theories." Forum Room, Kansas Union. Concert Course. 8 20 p.m. Pittsburgh Symphony. Hoch Auditorium. Chance for summer work in Europe TOMORROW Supervisory Seminar, All Day. Kansas Union. The American-European Student Service today announced that KU students who desire to work abroad may have an opportunity this summer. Kansas High School AAAA Bask- sall Field 1:30 & 3 p.m. p. Allen Field House Panel Discussion, 4 p.m. "American Foreign Aid" Jayhawk.kansas, Kansas U. University Films By Festival Underground Filmmakers. 7 p.m. 303 Bailey. Kansas High School AAAA Bask 峡 场 7 & 8:30 p.m. Allen Field Professor to join firm Play. 8:20 p.m. "What's Happening in the Church Fellowship, 1314 Oread Harvey Berenson, assistant professor of law, said yesterday he will leave KU in June to join Proskauer, Rose, Goetz and Mendelsohn, a New York City law firm. faculty since 1957, specializes in family and criminal law. He has done work with the Kansas Defender Project and said he hopes to do some appointive work as counsel for indigent criminals. "Guns of the Trees," produced by Mekas, and Kramer's 65-minute film, "In the Country," will be shown at 7 p.m. tomorrow in 303 Bailey Hall. Underground films will be shown tomorrow and Friday as an introduction to the works of two New York underground film-makers. Jonas Mekas and Robert Kramer will be on campus participating in the Festival of the Arts March 16-22, said Ron Cote, Groveland, Mass., graduate student and SUA Special Films chairman. SUA introduces underground films Berenson, a member of KU's The collection, "Enseignement et Jeunesse," consists of 449 volumes in French. In a question-and-answer session following the lecture, Mansfield was asked who he thought would run for President in 1972 on the Democratic ticket. Watson Library has received a collection of children's books on loan from New York's French Embassy, said L. E. James Helyar, assistant library director. Berenson holds an undergraduate degree from Yale University and has a law degree, The Service offers jobs in Germany, Scandinavia, England, Austria, Switzerland, France, Italy and Spain in forestry and domestic work, and in jobs requiring specialized training. "The war has not contained China in any sense," he said. "If anything, it may be having the opposite effect." "You'll have to ask Sen. Edward Kennedy that," Mansfield replied. "We have done so on the assumption that China is bent on military expansion and that it is essential for the United States to contain that expansion. The program gives students the opportunity to meet the people and learn customs of European countries. Students receive room and board and a wage, scaled to European economies. Working conditions are controlled by the labor ministries in each country,the Service said. "He (Kennedy) would make a first-rate President," Mansfield said. "He will run. The only question is when. He's a man of destiny . . . I don't think there's any denying that." Library borrows French volumes the war in Vietnam. Mansfield did not specifically say that Red China should be admitted to the United Nations. He said that would be putting "the cart before the horse." "That we have erred in the form of our response, even if the assumptions are accurate, is illustrated, in my judgment, by In his only reference to Vietnam, Mansfield said the U.S. for the first time in its history has deployed military power in mass along the whole arc of the Asian main land. Mar. 12 1969 KANSAN 3 Like Fresh Flowers in your Room? We have a Cash & Carry Special Every Thurs., Fri., Sat Owens MINTH & INDIANA VI.3-6111 FLOWER SHOP VISIT OUR OMNIBUS SHOP Second Level