Page 3 mpleinus But n am an itseffort oport-wap-hip-able. united The Union rmaw-fem able to did, did, KU LADY LAWYERS—June Patton, Roeland Park third year student, and Anne Morgan, Kansas City, Mo., first year student, are among eight women enrolled in the KU Law School. Both are very interested in the study of law, and being in the minority does not stop these women from pursuing the career they want. Female Perry Masons Hold Minority at KU About the only thing Anne Morgan and June Hyatt Patton have in common is that they are in a distinct minority group here. They are among eight women in the KU School of Law, but their reasons for studying law and their future plans are poles apart. Miss Morgan, Kansas City, Mo. first year student, is interested in criminal and juvenile law. A 1963 GRADUATE OF MIDDLEBURY College in Vermont, where she majored in political science and art history. Miss Morgan is interested in improving the nation's laws dealing with criminal and juvenile offenders. She hopes to get the background she needs at KU. Mis Morgan, who has traveled to Europe several times and to South Africa, also expressed an interest in diplomatic work. She thinks there is a definite prejudice against women in many professions, including law. She admits she sometimes feels a little uncomfortable in such a minority, but it hasn't stopped her from pursuing a career she wants. MRS. PATTON, Roeland Park third year student, will be graduated this spring and plans to go into corporate and commercial law with Lawrence R. Wagner, Roeland Park attorney, for whom she has worked part time for almost two years. Mrs. Patton and her husband are president and vice-president of their own corporation, Systems and Management Consulting, Inc., in Kansas City where they do consulting work in the electronic data processing field. Mrs. Patton earned a bachelor's degree in psychology at Kansas City University in 1959 and worked for a year analyzing securities and investments. SHE BECAME INTERESTED in law almost by chance, when she enrolled in a KCU law course "partly out of curiosity and partly for some intellectual activity." Besides meeting her future husband in that course, she also developed a deep interest in law. "I got 'hooked,'" she said. And she decided to enroll as a full time law student here. Mrs. Patton thinks many women are well suited for legal careers, because they have patience with detail and have the ability to think deeply. "IT'S A SHAME THERE are not more women in law. Many have a See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales — Rentals - Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 great variety of abilities which can best be utilized in law. I wish more school counselors would suggest the possibility of legal careers to women," she said. Other women in the KU School of Law are Meredith Appel, Wichita first year student; Elizabeth Dyson, Lawrence third year student; Clarine Smissman, Lawrence second year student; Karen Stewart, Hutchinson second year student; Elizabeth Handleley, Dallas, Tex., first year student, and King Lan Lin, Taiwan special student. Candidates Named In Class Elections Sophomore, junior and senior class officers for next year will be elected April 1 and 2. Announced candidates to date for senior class offices are: La- Follette, Overland Park and John "Tonto" Mays, Lyons for president; Dan Wanamaker, Salina and John Daniels, Kansas City, Mo. for vicepresident; secretary, Carol Stotts, Prairie Village and Mary Kay Kennedy, Lyons; treasurer, William Engber, Wichita. Junior class slates will include Alan Brightman, Leawood and Clay Blair, Joplin, Mo. for president; Lester Kahler, Hollyrood and Earl Wagner, Independence, Mo. for vicepresident; Peggy Smith, Garden City and Carol Nichols, Hiawatha for secretary, and Kathlyn Hogue, Topeka for treasurer. For the sophomore class Robert Smith, Kansas City and Donald Hunter, Abilene will run for president; Thomas Aiken, Lawrence and William Stringer, Overland Park for vice-president; Diane Spickard, Shawne Mission and Jean Burgardt, Des Moines, Iowa for secretary. Elizabeth Roberts, Shawnee Mission is the only declared candidate for treasurer. Applications for class officers and ASC council seats to be elected at the same time may be picked up in the Dean of Students' office, Dick King, Kansas City sophomore and ASC elections committee chairman said. Freshman class officers are elected at the beginning of the fall semester. 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