Friday, March 6, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 9 CANDIDATES FOR AWS SENATE—Top from left: Paula Dickens, Sharon Anderson, Joy Long, Pat Goering, Carolyn Brewster, Spring Stidham, Jill Kleinberg, Sharon Stalcup, Lynn Berg, and Carol McMahan. Middle from left: Wendy Fisher, Jayne Loyd, Anne Shontz, Joan Fowler, Sherri Whitcher, Viviam Williams, Mary Lynn Schwentker, and Mary Lasley. Bottom from left: Ann Peterson, Cheris Shelton, Janet Phelps, Jane Speirs, Donna Hunt, Jill Newburg, Claudia Reeder, and Susan Hartley. AWS Examines Female Morals Conducts Campus-Wide Survey KU women are being asked to consider moral rights and wrongs by the Rules of Women committee of AWS. The committee this week is administering a survey consisting of 64 hypothetical situations which require answers of morally and ethically right, generally acceptable. generally unacceptable and morally and ethically wrong. WOMEN ARE ASKED to answer the 64-question survey as to what is morally right or wrong to them personally, and not to society as a whole. The answer sheets are anonymous except for the year of graduation. Volleyball, Table Tennis Plaved by KU Women By Susan Hartley Judy Cordonier, Kansas City freshman, won the women's intramural table tennis championship Wednesday night by defeating Ann Peterson, Shawne Mission sophomore 21-10 and 21-8 in the final round of play. Twenty-one girls participated in the single elimination tournament sponsored by the Women's Recreation Association, Carolyn Guy, Lawrence sophomore and tournament champion, said. Women's intramural volleyball competition moves into the fourth round of play next week with eight teams remaining in the single elimination tournament. In Tuesday night's action, Alpha Delta Pi won over GSP (1E) 2-1 and GSP (2W) defeated Delta Delta Delta also by a score of 2-1. Pi Beta Phi won over Watkins 2-0, and Hashinger defeated Kappa Kappa Gamma 2-0. In other action, GSP (3E) won over Corbin 2-0, GSP (4W) defeated Douthart 2-0, and Kappa Alpha Theta defeated Carruth O'Leary 2-0. The following teams will meet next Tuesday, March 10: Hashinger vs GSP (4W) Kappa Alpha Theta vs Pi Beta Phi Alpha Delta Pi vs Chi Omega 7:4: GSP (2W) vs GSP (3E) The winners of these matches will participate in the semi-final round of the WRA-sponsored tournament. The general categories of questions and examples are: - Authority — Feeling resentment for being called before your living group's board of standards. - RELIGION - CHANGING religious beliefs because of what is presented to you in college classes. - Sex—engaging in mixed swimming parties in the nude. - University regulations—Failing to report that a member of your living group has liquor in her room. - Cultural values—Wearing short shorts in town. - Dating—Dating a man who has also been dating a member of your living group. - Patti Behen, Kansas City senior and chairman of the Roles of Women committee, said the survey is to determine moral standards at a midwestern university in comparison to eastern schools such as Vassar. - Drinking — Drinking to "feel good" at a party. "WE ARE ESPECIALLY interested in seeing what the women consider to be moral and ethical questions, both right and wrong." Miss Behen said. Cheryl Adams, Union Star, Mo. senior to Bud Anderson, James-town. N.Y. junior. 295 Women Move 32.000 Books Mrs. Wood said the "bachelor as a cook just doesn't compare to the married man. We can tell almost immediately that a recipe has been submitted by a single man. Dawn McFee, freshman at Wichita University to Mike Hubbard, Wichita senior. THIS YEAR, there were 194,000 recipes submitted by 120,000 men, of whom 38 per cent were bachelors and 62 per cent married men, said a spokesman for the potato chip institute international which sponsors the contest. Mrs. Wood, a nutritionist and food expert, for the last five years has examined and tested thousands of recipes sent in by amateur chefs to the men's national cooking championship. The 1964 title will be settled at a "cookoff" Feb. 11 at the Americana Hotel in Miami Beach, Fla. Jane Boyington, Goodland senior to Robert Moore, Meade junior. There was a day when a woman being in a library was looked upon as ridiculous. Many thought women shouldn't have to use their brains. "It usually has some kind of wine in it as an ingredient. The bachelor has gathered that wine cooking is gourmet cooking. Mrs. Wood said every one of the men's national cooking championships has gone to married men. And in the last five years, only nine of the state championships which precede the national have been won by bachelors. IT WOULD seem, she indicates, the only hope for the bachelor is to get married so he will have an "established" kitchen at his disposal. And the sheer thought of women being able to use their muscles was absurdity. Madonna Obermueller, Westfall senior to James Head, Des Moines. la. senior. The girls, volunteers from all the organized houses, worked in three two-hour shifts for four days. Not so now. KU women used both a couple of weeks ago. 295 women moved a total of 32,000 volumes into the new stack areas of the library. Mrs. Wood said that on the whole men are becoming better cooks each year, based on recipes she combs through. There also must be more men cooking; the number entering the contest grows each year anyway. NEW YORK—(UPI)—Bachelors are lousy cooks, says Marni Wood. And if anyone should know, she should. The project was sponsored and organized by the service committee "And it is sort of a hurry up, recipe—almost inevitably a man living alone doesn't cook at all or cooks in a hurry. Of course, there are exceptions. The true gourmet, a rare breed." "HE IS likely to overseason." Bachelors Can't Cook Miss Devore said 590 hours were devoted to moving the books. She said most of the English and American literature sections, all of the philosophy and psychology volumes and several of the history sets were moved from the old stack areas to the newly-completed one. of the AWS House of Representatives. Pinnings The women dusted the books and shelves and re-adjusted the height of the shelves before the books were actually moved to the new sites. Jewelda Devore, Belleville sophomore and chairman of the service committee, said the library staff assistants instructed the women on the proper places for the moving books. Nancy Sramek, Oswego freshman, to Glen Barnard, Oswego sophomore, Tau Kappa Epsilon. Kay Lutjen, Des Moines, Ia. sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Clay Blair, Joplin, Mo. sophomore, Phi Delta Theta Un-Military Ball Herb Smith Quartet and "The Student's Favorite Beverage" Saturday, March 7 8:00 p.m. 1420 Ohio Contribution: $1.00 per person $1.75 per couple 2. 1.3.1n8.2