Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 18. 1963 Rockefeller to Talk Before Peace Corps John D. Rockefeller IV will be the main speaker at the Statewide Peace Corps Conference to be held here May 3 and 4. Th conference, open to interested high school and college students. Peace Corps liaison officers, and parents of volunteers, is designed to better inform these people of the functions and philosophies of the Peace Corps. Registration deadline for interested groups is April 22. Rockefeller served as a special assistant to Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver, and was a member of the National Advisory Council of the Peace Corps before he took charge of the Peace Corps Far East Region Philippine program. ERADSHAW MINTENER JR., a Peace Corps specialist in African affairs, will be one of the discussion leaders at the meeting. Mintener is a special assistant to the director of the College and University Division of the Office of Public Affairs. The conference will open Friday evening at 6:30 with a dinner in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Dean George Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will give the keynote address on "KU and the Peace Corps." ROCKEFELLER will open the Saturday session with an address entitled "The Significance of the Peace Corps." The remainder of the mornig and the first part of the afternoon will be devoted to group discussion meetings. Topics of special interest to the various groups of participants have been prepared for these sessions. A summary session at 4 p.m. will conclude the program, and will feature Rockefeller's address on "The Future of the Peace Corps." Der deutsche Stammtisch trifft sich Donnerstag, den 18. April, in Alceve "A" des Cafeterias. Alle sind herzlich engeladen. Official Bulletin TODAY Mathematics Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. 103 Hall St. Berkeley, CA 94720 'On the Differentiability of Solutions of Dissipative Boundary Probabilities' Corder, University of California at Berkeley Petry Room 4.30 p.m., Music Room Union, Grant Goodman, Haiku Poetry International Festival Rehearsal: Participants in the Festival evening program will meet in Hoch Auditorium at 6:45 p.m. tonight for rehearsal. Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome. College Life, 7:30 pm Cottonwood Life Director of Kansas City Pearce. Young Life Director of Kansas City Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963, in any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailey Hall. April 19-117 Bailey -Antelope Valley High School, Lancaster, California. April 19—117 Bailey—Parkville, Missouri Public Schools. Kennedy Ponders Steel Price Raise WASHINGTON — (UFI) — The consequences of the steel price increases are being considered by President Kennedy today in the form of a report from his Council of Economic Advisers. Council Chairman Walter Heller was called to the White House to make the report less than five minutes after Kennedy returned from Palm Beach, Fla., yesterday. He is not expected to include the matter in his prepared speech, but the editors will probably ask questions about steel after the speech. THE REPORT concerns the percentage of steel output affected by the increases, and the percentages of company receipts involved. BEFORE THEY left Palm Beach, Hatcher said, the President was "in constant touch" with the council regarding the price increases. He was trying to determine whether they fell within his definition of protecting "over-all price stability." Acting White House Press Secretary Andrew T. Hatcher said he did not expect Kennedy to make any immediate statement on the issue. But he may make his views known tomorrow at an American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE) lunch. The Pentagon said it was not looking into the effect the increases would have on the defense budget, although last year, when steel companies announced increases, it assailed them as gravely injurious to national security. NILS LENNARTSON. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs, said "It is my understanding that we have no inquiry in this matter." Sen. George A. Smathers, D-Fla., said the steel increases could wipe out any benefits the average citizen might get from President Kennedy's proposed tax cut. Kennedys Don't Always Win PORTERVILLE, Calif. — (UPI)— Jack Kennedy was one of nine candidates for two trustee seats in Tuesday's Porterville elementary school district election. He finished last. Applications available in Activities Director's office ★ Applications are due Tuesday, April 23,1963 ★