Angel Flight lists officers KU's chapter of Angel Flight, an honorary service organization affiliated with Air Force ROTC, today announced 1969-70 elected officers. They are: Cache Seitz, Ft. Bragg, N.C., junior, commander; Leslie Layman, Colorado Springs junior, executive; Cathy Steinmetz, Parsons sophomore, administration; Priscila Myers, Overland Park sophomore, personnel; Cindy Artman, Hays sophomore, comptroller; Barb Freeman, Pratt junior, information; Sandy Darche, Topeka sophomore, operations, Fran Finney, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, historian; Pam Gaston, Topeka junior, pledge trainer, and Sue Gauen, Evanston, Ill., sophomore, rush chairman. Geologist receives grant Marion Bickford, associate professor of geology, has been awarded $34,800 by the National Science Foundation for study in the areas of rock dating and formation, the department of geology announced yesterday. Bickford will continue study started last year on the absolute ages of rocks approximately 1,400 million years old in the St. Francois Mountains in Missouri, south of St. Louis. With Jay Earl Anderson, assistant professor of geology, Bickford will investigate unusual volcanic rocks to determine formation. Others working on the project are Douglas G. Mose, Clarendon Hills, Ill., graduate student, and Thomas F. Cudzilo, Chicago, Ill., graduate student. Profs to host students KU-Y offers students this semester an opportunity to become more than casually acquainted with a professor. Professors and students will exchange views on any topic once a month beginning at 2 p.m. Sunday in the home of a faculty host, said Tom Moore, KU-Y adviser. Moore said discussion groups are modeled after a similar group at Washington University in St. Louis. He explained this is the first time such as idea has been tried at KU. Nigerian symposium set Nigeria's political situation will be discussed at a symposium "American Support For Peace in Nigeria" from 3:30 to 6 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the Kansas Union Big 8 and Forum Rooms. Organized by the Americans for Peace in Nigeria, the symposium is sponsored by the KU chapter of the Nigerian Student Union, said Raymond Agbanobi, Nigerian graduate student and president of the KU chapter. Scheduled KU speakers include: Malcolm Barnett and Roger Kanet, assistant professors of political science; Gregory Knight, assistant professor of geography, and Bob Wunner, San Francisco graduate student. "If there is secession in Nigeria, similar steps will take place across Feb. 12 KANSAN 3 1969 amaril steps will take place across the continent," Agbanobi said. "There is need for sovereignty in Nigeria." Institute deadline Saturday Application deadline is Feb. 15 for the Summer Institute for Mediterranean Studies in Rome. Students should submit applications to the office of international programs, 224 Strong Hall, Sandra Traversa program adviser, announced today. The summer program, sponsored by a consortium of universities of the American Universities Field Staff, is designed to expose the student to a new scholastic environment centered in his area of study. "Advantages of the institute include a progressive liberal arts program instructed in English, Mrs. Traversa said. There will be no foreign language prerequisites, and the program is available to both graduate and undergraduate students. Edmund Eglinski, professor of art history, and Clifford P. Ketzel, professor of political science and Institute director, are members of the Institute faculty. Six courses will be offered to a limited enrollment of approximately 70 students. Political Conflict in Contemporary Mediterranean History, required of all students, suggests the nature of the program. Courses will focus on the Mediterranean region in the areas of modernization, international organization, political affairs and Italian art. The Institute should be valuable because the student will "get on the spot references to course work," said Mrs. Traversa. The fee for the summer session, June 16 to August 13, is $975. This includes round-trip airplane fare from New York to Rome, room and board. Personal expenses such as laundry and meals away from the pension are not included. Classes for the Institute end August 8. Students will have four days for travel or other activities. A student should plan to include $100 to $300 for personal expenses above the basic fee. Applications are being accepted now. Deposit deadline is March 15. Environment crisis topic of Urban Plunge survey The Urban Celebration Enablement Community, a part of KU's University Christian Movement (UCM) is sponsoring an Urban Plunge into Kansas City, Mo., Thursday, Friday and Saturday. More than 80 persons from Missouri, Oklahoma and Wisconsin will join KU students in surveying the crises of urban environment, said the Rev. Morni Leoni, campus minister of Wesley foundation and member of Urban Celebration. Named "Eros" after the Greek mythological god of love, the Plunge is designed to expose participants to repression, oppression and suppression in society, Mrs. Leoni said. In Kansas City, participants in the Plunge will meet Saturday morning with local black "Orientation of the Plunge deals with white, middle-class problems," she said. "The white community is being subjected to a variety of forms of cultural suppression. Values are placed on things and property rather than on human needs of the people." Hillcrest Restaurant In The Bowl Sandwiches, Dinners Students Welcome 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. daily VI 2-1477 leadership "confrontation with the black revolution," Mrs. Leoni said. She emphasized this meeting would not be a conference, but a "plunge," saying "too much talk has resulted in too little action." "We are not trying to manipulate or move people, but to make them understand the black revolution," Mrs. Leoni said. At 12:30 p.m. Sunday at 57th Street and Wornall Road, Kansas City, Mo., a worship service on the "Liturgy for Man Awakening" is open to the public. "A local rock band will perform, and we will play taped music of such popular groups as the Beatles and Joan Baez," said Mrs. Leoni. James W. Donaldson, director of the Commission of Church and Race for the Southern California Conference of Churches, will speak about the "New Image of the White Man." Urban Plunge is the first phase of a three-unit package offered by Urban Celebration. Two Urban Study meetings are scheduled for Feb. 19 and March 26 at Wesley Foundation. Open to those who have participated in the Plunge, Urban Study will deal with the history of urbanization; business, industry and government complex; law and order, and other urban problems. The final phase of Urban Celebration is Urban Confrontation. Participants of Urban Plunge and Urban Study will travel to California March 28 for meetings with a Los Angeles urban confrontation group. Participants will spend five days studying cultures of different races Peace Corps Placement Test during "Peace Corps Week" in Oread Room of Kansas Union Feb. 10-14. Mon.-Fri. at 10:30 & 2:30 Sat. at 10:00 & 11:00 745 N.H. Make appointments and pick up information in the Peace Corps Committee Office B-114 of Kansas Union. Call 842-1780 This is Mr. Meyers using the John Bean LIFT-A-MATIC wheel alignment machine. Save your tires . . . line up today! Precise accuracy guaranteed. We also have COMPLETE BARRETT BRAKE SERVICE. V13-4321 FRITZ CO. Money is swell stuff. It makes a party .政治 or social. It builds theatres for people to laugh in, houses for people to live in and churches too. It can make a better mousetrap, develop a vaccine or clear a slum. Lots of fine things are done with money and lots of young people are finding out about the excitement inherent in a banking career. As the largest Southern California based bank, Security Pacific is proud of its "now" atmosphere and the many young executives who make the decisions that put things in motion. If you would enjoy the involvement of working with a big, strong bank, we'd like to talk to you. We'll be on campus Monday, February 17 Make your financial partner SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK An equal opportunity employer