Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 6, 1967 Area Cities Will Host Relations Conference Bv Vinav Kothari KU students and faculty members have been invited to attend the Kansas Institute of International Relations to be held March 15-17 at Wichita and March 17-19 at Topeka. Arnold J. Toynbee, British historian and writer, will be the guest speaker at the 28th annual Institute at Wichita and 15th annual Institute at Topeka. TOYNBEE, NOTED for his nine-volume history of various world civilizations, will speak on "Toward World Unity" at 8:00 p.m., March 16, at Wichita West High School. Toynbee is currently a visiting professor at Grinnell College in Grinnell, Iowa. Adult tickets for the Institute are $5 or $1 for daytime and $1.50 for evening sessions. The student tickets are $2 or 50 cents a session. Those interested in attending the Institute should send their reservations by March 11 to Fern Merrifield, 8291 North Waco, Wichita Kan. The theme of the Institute is "World Without War." The Institute will consist of six sessions with tea and coffee breaks. Kenneth E. Boulding, professor of economics at the University of Michigan and director of the Center for Research in Conflict Resolution, will speak on "The Economics of the War Industry" at 8 p.m. at the Y.W.C.A. in North Topeka Other speakers at the Institute will include; Meter Man Moves Meter Late SUTTON BRIDGE, England — (UPI) The gas board removed the meter yesterday from Colin Dewhurst's home but they were two years behind schedule. Dewhurst said when he asked the board what happened they told him they "were catching up on old orders." SAUL H. MENDLOYITZ, professor of law at the Rutgers University School of Law, will speak on "Law and World Peace" at 9 a.m. March 16, at the Y.W.C.A. He is the author of many articles concerning international law and society. BOULDING, TOYNBEE. Mendlovitz, and Dr. Marie Pfister, will speak again at the Institute of International Relations March 17-29 at the Whitson School Auditorium, W. 17th Arnold, Topeka. Dr. Pfister is a medical officer for the World Health Organization and is currently a visiting lecturer at the Menninger Foundation. Westminster Center To Present Reading Westminster Center will present the first production of its spring season at 8:15 p.m. March 11 and 12 at Westminster Theatre. The presentation will be a staged reading of "Spoon River Anthology," arranged by J. Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama, from the poetry of Edgar Lee Masters. "Spoon River" opens in a graveyard where spirits of the dead comment on their earthly existences without sham or pretense. Speakers playing the parts of spirits are Prof. Crafton, Nan C. Scott, Lawrence graduate student, and Terry Kovac, Wichita junior. KU Professor to Play With Dallas Group Cellist to Perform Tomorrow Afternoon A French cellist who won the Prix Piatigorsky when she was 15, will play at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall. Roy Hamlin Johnson, associate professor of piano, will appear with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra at 3:30 Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. Reine Flachot is currently on a tour of American colleges and universities arranged by Carnegie Hall in association with the International Federation of Jeunesses Musicales. This national concert tour for European exchange artists is part of a comprehensive exchange program made possible by a special grant given to Carnegie Hall by the Kitchens of Sara Lee, a leading American Industry. Stage-Movie Actor Reads Drama Tonight Basil Rathbone, stage and movie actor, will present dramatic readings and poetry at 7:30 tonight in Hoch Auditorium. The Dallas Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Donald Johannes will play "Tone Poem 'Don Juan', Op. 20" by Richard Straus, "Concerto No. 2, for piano and Orchestra" by Bela Bartok, and "Symphony No. 4, E minor, Op. 98" by Brahms. Rathbone will proceed from stage recollections to a poetry session, and close with scenes from Shakespeare. He will include the works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Dylan Thomas, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Edgar Allan Poe, A.E. Housman, Robert Browning, and William Shakespeare. Johnson, who joined the KU piano faculty in 1955, graduated from the Eastman School of Music, and was granted the doctor of musical arts degree from there in 1960. get Lots More from L&M It's the rich-flavor leaf that does it! Among L&M's choice tobaccos there's more of this longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. And with L&M's modern filter—the Miracle Tip—only pure white touches your lips. Get lots more from L&M—the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke.