Page 4 University Dauy Kansan Monday, May 11, 1964 '65 Class Plans Year The class of '65 is planning its senior year while its members are still juniors. According to the new senior class president, John (Tonto) Mays, Lyons junior, the class of 1965 will add a senior council of living group representatives, a service projects committee for service to the University and a special events chairman to coordinate all senior parties. SENIOR DAY HAS already been set for Oct. 17, the date of the University of Oklahoma game here. Mays said over 150 juniors applied for senior class committees. Those selected to serve as chairmen or co-chairmen are: Breakfast, Nancy Egy, Topeka and William Flannagan, Scott City; Ring, Al Bendure, Kansas City, Mo.; Gift, David Martin, Coffeyville; Calendar, Jon Alexiou, Mission; Publicity, Robert Ritter and Robert Burkart, both of Kirkwood, Mo.; Announcements, Gene LaFollette, Overland Park; Regalia, Barry Becker, Leawood; Alumni Relations, John Daniels, Kansas City, Mo.; Hope Award, Fred Slicker, Tulsa, Okla., and Wendy Fisher, Topeka, and Coffees, Winifred Frazeye, Wichita, and Robert Benson, Kansas City, Mo. HEADING THE Senior Events committees will be John McArtor, Webster Groves, Mo. Under him will be committees for: Senior Day, John Pound, Fredonia, and Patricia Koos, Mission; Picnic, John Suhler, Cross River, N.Y., and Brown Lewis, Emporia; Fall Party, Richard M. Miller, Wichita, and Donna Multer, Pueblo; Colo.; Spring Party, Michael Stevens, Hutchinson, and Gloria Farha, Wichita. Karl Becker, Wichita, is the chairman of the Service Projects. CAMBRIDGE, Md. — (UPI) A group of civil rights demonstrators in this racially tense town met briefly early today to sing "freedom" songs. Police reported there was no violence. Police said about 20 persons gathered in the Negro section at midnight to sing and chant such songs as "We Shall Overcome." After about an hour, the demonstrators returned peacefully to their homes. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Righters Gather In Tense Town A National Guard spokesman said there had been no disturbances in the Chesapeake Bay fishing town that was the scene last summer of large-scale riots which forced Gov. Millard J. Tawes to call out the National Guard. The city has been relatively quiet during recent months, but the guard detachment is being reinforced today by 400 troops. The additional soldiers were called in to prevent any incidents when Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace delivers a campaign speech here tonight. ATLANTA—(UPI)—Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, praising the "present reality" of progress in the South, urged the region today to remember the "shortcomings and inequities" of the past as it moves to the future. Lady Bird Lauds South Mrs. Johnson, in remarks prepared for Emory University's honors day convocation, told students they should become master of the "science of human engineering" able to make a "better life for all people." The first lady asked her audience to consider what in the future it could do to improve and revamp the cities of the South; reduce the number of those living in poverty and ignorance; turn "automation from beast into blessing;" and "master the most important art of all — human understanding." MRS. JOHNSON'S one-day visit here followed by 72 hours a tour made by the President who spent two days in Georgia last week at the end of a six-state Applachia tour. The first lady's whirlwind visit in cluded meetings with high school students, ground breaking ceremonies for a new federal auditorium and a meeting with Georgia state legislators. Mrs. Johnson recalled the past contributions to American literature made by southern novelists Thomas Wolfe, William Faulkner and Harper Lee as examples of southerners who enriched the English language. Now, she said, "we need our southern recruits to the ranks of those who ennoble not simply our noble language, but also our traditions of mutual help in the very basic process of living itself." THE SOUTH has made much progress in her lifetime, Mrs. Johnson said, referring to her college days in the depression when Southern farmers, earned an average income of $186 a year. Now, she said, Georgia's per capita income exceeds $1,800. "Still, there are among us people in need." Mrs. Johnson said. 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