Architects Plan Awards Banquet Page 3 The Department of Architecture will conclude its 50th anniversary celebration with an awards banquet at 6:30 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. More than 300 alumni and friends of the KU architecture department are expected to attend the dinner. The featured event will be the presentation of scholarships and awards to KU students of architecture. The department of architecture awards, which have resulted from contributions by alumni and national and local chapters of the American Institute of Architects (A.I.A.), amount to between $5,000 and $7,000 annually. THERE WILL also be a general university scholarship awards program. In addition to the department and general university awards there will be an awards program for students participating in the competitive "Architects as Artists" exhibit now on display in the south lounge of the Kansas Union. There will be an award made to the student who has contributed an overall outstanding display; two awards in the upper and lower divisions of design, and three awards in the categories of painting, sculpture, and the related arts, such as photography and ceramics. JOSEPH R. PASSONNEAU, dean of the School of Architecture at Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., and member of A.I.A., will be the guest speaker. Augustine Kyei, fifth year architecture student from Ashanti, Ghana will read his original poem "Au revoir U.S.A." A collection of Kyei's original poems-was recently featured in the March 1963 edition of "The International Campus." The departments' anniversary activities during the day will include a movie "Ancient World; Egypt," and "Architecture West" in the morning, and an afternoon panel discussion on "Critical Contributions Needed from Education." The panel members will include NROTC Instructor Going to Viet-Nam Lt. Cmdr. Robert L. Dodd, NROTC Operations and Navigation instructor for the past two-and-a-half years, has been assigned to Viet-Nam as a military adviser. He will leave San Francisco June 24. The tour of duty will last about a year. He considers the assignment a challenge. "I'm looking forward to being where the action is," he said. Lt. Cmdr. Conn, who has been on the U.S.S. Helena of the Pacific Fleet, will replace Dodd as military science instructor. Dodd's wife, Isabel, and son Steve, will stay in Belvidere, New Jersey, with Mrs. Dodd's mother. The Navy will not allow them to accompany Dodd. "Across From Granada" THE HARBOUR 1031 Mass. SPECIAL BIG PITCHER — 75c Every Wednesday 7:30-12:00 Eugene Mackey, St. Louis, Mo. moderator; DeVon Carlson, dean of the University of Colorado School of Architecture; Charles Haines, New York City; Dorn Hatch, San Francisco, Calif. — all members of the A.I.A., and Edward Robinson professor of philosophy at KU. Gallery Finds No Use for Rubbish Bowling Games Golf Games KANSAS CITY. Mo. — (UPI)—A truck load of items which arrived at the Nelson Gallery of Art yesterday, ostensibly for use in its "pop art show" opening Sunday, fooled no one. The items were junk, not art. 1031 Mass. VI 3-9779 The truck pulled up to the gallery bearing a cargo which included old wire cages, assorted boxes, numerous wire coat hangers, some small steel girders, and a wide assortment of items whose origin was not easily distinguishable. The driver carried a letter which he handed to Mrs. George Bunting, assistant curator. The writer, identifying himself as a "fellow artist" said he felt obliged to "participate in kind in your aesthetic endeavor" in the pop show. The letter was signed "Wilber E. Phillips." Phillips, who is director of the Kansas City Museum, said the signature was genuine. He added that he sent the load of junk to the gallery as a "good natured prank." PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Mrs. Bunting went along with the joke. "We were particularly impressed that he sent us such nice junk and such a nice selection," she said. Raymond G. O'Connor, associate professor of history, will speak to ROTC cadets on "Force and Diplomacy" at 7 p.m., Monday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. 'Force and Diplomacy Topic of ROTC Talk A junior-senior brunch and a sophomore picnic are scheduled this weekend in connection with All Women's Day. AWS Will Hold Brunch and Picnic The AWS junior-senior brunch will be at 9 a.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. It will feature a fashion show sponsored by the AWS Mademoiselle Fashion Board. The fashions will be furnished by the Jay Shoppe. Models will be the KU women who participated in the Fashion Boards recent "Best Dressed Coed" contest. Women attending the brunch will vote for the AAUW outstanding senior women who will be announced at the Honors Night program Monday. The AWS All Women's Day activities will be concluded Monday with a display of art work by KU women in front of Hoch Auditorium. In case of rain the exhibit will be on the second floor of Strong Hall. Honors Night will climax All Women's Day. The program, designed to recognize the outstanding women on campus, will be Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. The AWS sophomore picnic will be held at 5 p.m. Sunday at Potter Lake. In case of rain picnickers will take shelter in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The Little Banquet SMORGASBORD Fine Foods and Fast Service 23rd & Louisiana VI 3-9646 Ample Free Parking on the Malls NEW APARTMENTS $75.00 and $85.00 One or Two Bedrooms We are presently decorating these units. Tenants renting now may select wall colors. .drapes. .etc. All Units Are Air Conditioned Carpeted and Have Disposals. Provincial Furniture Available Swimming Pool Available. University Daily Kansan PARK PLAZA SOUTH Ph. V12-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night Chicago Police Arrest Eleven Student "Cops" CHICAGO—(UPI)—Eleven "student policemen" were free on bond today while authorities tried to determine whether the force they were being trained for actually exists. Chicago police raided the "Leesville Police Academy" Wednesday night and arrested the 11 men, five on charges of impersonating an officer and the other for carrying concealed weapons. Guns, handcuffs and tickets to a policeman's ball were confiscated. THE ARRESTED MEN and their ex-convict instructor, Joseph Johnson, 38, said they were going to form the police department of Leesville, Ill., a small Negro community about 20 miles southeast of Kankakee. The population of Leesville is estimated to be from 200 to 9,000 persons. But its status as a village and whether it has a police force were up in the air. Kankakee County State's Atty. Edward P. Drolet said the community has no legal right to a police department because, he said, it is not incorporated. CARLOS V. LINDSEY, who said he was village president, said that Leesville is incorporated. He said the town's police force was chartered Jan. 4, 1962. Leesville village officers were elected in December, 1961, although Drolet said the election was not authorized by the courts. A maze of court proceedings apparently is unresolved. The arrested men, all Negroes from Chicago, said they understood they would receive a weekly salary of $100 as Leesville policemen. Chicago police said half of the "students" didn't know where Leesville was. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS ATTENTION SENIORS "LET'S GO TO THE LAST BLAST" Why are you just sitting there reading this paper, when there's a party going on this very minute? BIG BARN TODAY 4:30-7:30 FREE BEVERAGE