Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 13, 1963 Around Campus Samson to Speak at Symposium Dr. Frederick Samson, enn仪man of the department of comparative physiology and biochemistry, will be a principle lecturer at the Kansas Symposium on Physiological Determinants of Behavior here June 4-5. The implications of physiological determinants for mental retardation will be the main topic for discussions. Guest lecturers will be Dr. Mark R. Rosenzweig, professor of psychology, University of California; Dr. Jack H. Rubinstein, director of the Hamilton County (Ohio) Diagnostic Clinic for mentally retarded; Dr. Robert E. Bills, assistant dean for research, University of Alabama; Dr. Ronald Melzack, associate professor of psychology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Dr. Leslie Y. Ch'eng, Kansas Neurological Instituet, Topeka. Twenty-two Elected to Sachem Twenty-two junior men have been chosen for membership in Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa. Selection for the national honor society for senior men is made on the basis of academic record and leadership in University activities. The new members are: Lawrence Beard. Meade; David Brollier, Hugoton; Robert Bush, Glendale, Mo.; Robert Cathey, Shawnee Mission; Dan Milton Epp, Tribune; Larry Gamble, Pittsburg; Harry Gibson, Kansas City; Robert Guenthner, Augusta; Bruce Hall, Coffeyville; Cordell Meeks Jr., Kansas City; Jerry Harper, Wichita; Breon Mitchell, Salina; Jerald Pullins, Council Grove; Gary Smith, Kansas City; Forrest Alan Stamper, Plainville; David Stinson, Lawrence; Robert Swan, Topeka; Thomas Tatlock, Wichita; Max Logan, Holliday; Frank Thompson Jr., Iola, and David White, Prairie Village. Faculty Club Bridge Tonight The Faculty Club will hold its bi-monthly duplicate bridge session tonight at 7:30 in the Faculty Club Building, 1317 Louisiana St. ASCE To Hold Elections The KU chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) will elect officers for the fall semester at 12:30 p.m. Friday in Room 18 of Marvin Hall. Latin Revolutions is Discussion Topic Revolutions in our neighboring countries to the south will provide the topic of discussion in today's Humanities Forum. Seymour Menton, professor of romance languages, will lead the forum on the subject, "The Novel of the Revolution: Mexico, Guatemala, Bolivia and Cuba," at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. History Fraternity to Honor Initiates About 25 members will be initiated tonight into Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history fraternity. The banquet dinner will start at 6 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Thomas R. Buckmann, director of KU libraries, will be the principal speaker. CHICAGO—(UPI) — Otto Kerner meets with state officials today to seek a solution to a legislative crisis that threatens thousands of relief recipients with hunger. Illinois Relief Funds Gone Thousands Face Hunger The crisis was caused when an emergency appropriation to the state's bankrupt Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) and general assistance programs was hung up in the legislature by a bitterly partisan dispute over whether to put ceilings on welfare checks. The aid programs ran out of money two weeks ago. The state Public Aid Commission (PAC) began notifying reliefers it had completed plans to distribute federal surplus foods beginning tomorrow. Welfare agencies and private citizens were donating money and food for the relief recipients. The PAC has mailed cards to 12,000 relief families notifying them to report for food pickups at distribution centers beginning tomorrow. The food will be doled out until the legislative dispute is settled. Raymond M. Hilliard, director of the public aid department in Cook County, which has 193,000 persons on relief, said the surplus foods were "good for adults, but not good for infants." He issued an appeal for baby foods. HILLIARD SAID reliefers would receive a month's supply of food at distribution centers which would operate from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. He told housewives to "bring carts, wagons, containers of any kind and to get someone to drive them to the warehouse because that KU Bowler Places Fourth In Tourney Terrel Hays, Shawnee Mission senior, won fourth place in the Western Regional of National InterCollegiate individual bowling championship game Sunday. Hays' average score was 202 of 32 games in the final which was two below the highest average. After succeeding in the eight-game qualifying round over several hundred other bowlers, he participated in the semi-final game with other 15 bowlers and was chosen among top eight for the final round. Dave Rybolt, Lawrence junior, and Don Kahl, Lawrence sophomore, also participated in the championship game held in Chicago. Rybolt rolled a 179 and Kahl 183. In Springfield, the state capital, most elected officials indicated they would attend the Democratic governor's meeting. But Secretary of State Charles F. Carpentier, considered the Republican's No. 1 gubernatorial candidate, declined. much food will not be easy to carry." He charged Kerner with "failure to be forthright with the Republican senate and refusal to accept reasonable ceilings." PATRONIZE YOUR - ADVERTISERS • Three-Day-Old Girl Assigned Social Security Number KANSAS CITY, Kan. —(UPI)—The Social Security Administration office has assigned a Social Security number to 3-day-old Anne Cecilia Winter, of Ottawa, Kan., and thinks it may be some sort of a record. District manager Charles S. Garrison said the child's father was complying with the Internal Revenue provision that any person who receives $10 or more in interest or dividends must have a social security number. **STARING** CHRISTIAN MARQUAND - ANTONELLA LUALDI paint Guers Jouel-Renate Ewert directed by Michael Gaart-ANN MUNSE NRL RELEASE