Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1963 AWS Rules Group Meets March 16 KU women may find a few changes in regulations governing women students and organized women's living groups next year after the KU Associated Women Students Regulation Convention meets March 16. THE MEETING, which will be divided into two sessions: 9 a.m. through 12 a.m. and 1 p.m. through 4 p.m. Delegates to the convention will be the AWS House representative and four women selected from each organized living group. The regulations adopted by the convention must be ratified by the AWS Senate and Emily Taylor, dean of women, before becoming final. Karlene Howell, Kansas City, Kan. senior and assistant to the dean of women, is the AWS convention adviser. The convention meets every four years to form rules and regulations governing women students. ONE NEW REGULATION adopted during the last AWS convention was the senior key system. Denise Storck, Kansas City, Mo. junior and member of the convention steering committee, said the convention is a learning process by which the women of KU come to understand the nature and function of AWS. Black Muslim Group Meets Other members of the steering committee are Susan Callender, Bonner Springs senior, chairman; Mary McGuire, Prairie Village senior; Susan Cole, St. John sophomore; Judy Ricketts, Ness City senior; Joyce Neaderhiser, Davenport, Iowa, senior, and Hilda Gibson, Lawrence junior. Prof. Ise's talk will be on politics, economics and whatever else the popular KU speaker pleases, according to Pete Aylward, Wichita junior and chairman of Young Democrats. John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, will speak at a meeting of KU Young Democrats tomorrow night in his first speech on campus since last fall. Employee Agency Needs Help It has more than 200 job openings mostly for interviewers who help other job applicants find jobs. BOSTON - (UFI) - The Massachusetts Division of Employment Security, the state's largest employment agency, has a problem. Thief Took Wrong Car CHICAGO — (UPI) — The "Black Muslims," a militant sect which preaches the supremacy of the Negro race, met in national convention today under the leadership of their "Messenger of Allah." Elijah Muhammad. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. Muhammad, 65-year-old self-styled prophet who once went to jail as "Elijah Poole," was expected to stress his anti-white, anti-Christian dogmas in addresses before afternoon and evening sessions at the Chicago Coliseum on the City's near South Side. MERIDEN, Conn. —(UPI)—State police today hunted an especially unlucky car thief. MUSLIM LEADERS said they expected thousands of Muhammad's followers at the convention. Police were also on hand. Prof. Ise to Speak At YD's Tomorrow The auto he took from a restaurant parking lot belongs to Acting State's Atty. Harry Hagel. Police task force commander Robert Lynskey said unified police and plainclothmen would be at the Coliseum and a reserve force of policemen would be stationed in the area "as a precaution." PROF. KOLTHOFF was born in Holland. He received the Ph.D. from the University of Utrecht in 1918 and lectured there until 1927. He served as head of the Division of Analytical Chemistry at the University of Minnesota until his retirement in 1962. Prof. I. M. Kolthoff, of the University of Minnesota, will present the 15th annual E. C. Franklin Memorial Lecture at 8 p.m. Friday in Summerfield auditorium. The Franklin Memorial Lecture series was established in 1941 as a tribute to E. C. Franklin, whose research and teaching began a tradition for inorganic chemistry at KU. THE LECTURE is sponsored by the Alpha Rho Chapter of PhiLambda Upsilon, honorary chemical society, and the department of chemistry. He is now a professor emeritus at the University of Minnesota. Prof. Kolthoff has won such awards as the Nichols Medal, the Fisher IT IS A YEAR and a day since the last Chicago convention of the sect, which shuns the word "Negro." Last year, Muhammad and George Lincoln Rockwell, self-styled head of the American Nazi Party, drew vigorous applause with their appeals for racial separation and freedom for Negroes. Rockwell last night addressed a student group at the University of Chicago campus amid a storm of controversy over the propriety of giving him a forum for his ideas. Award in Analytical Chemistry, and the Anachem Award. In 1947 the Netherlands Government knighted him a commander in the Order of Orange-Nassau. Prof. Kolthoff will speak on "Induced Reactions." Prof. Kolthoff's research concerns analytical and physical chemistry. He is the author or co-author of nine books and several publications, and is editor of the "Treatise on Analytical Chemistry." Safely enshrined in the 1000-point career club, KU guard Nolan Ellison is aiming at Jerry Gardner's all-time high of 1030 established for Kansas guards last year. Nailing 13 in the 45-39 win at Nebraska Saturday, Ellison ran his varsity total to 1003, to become the seventh Jayhawker and 22nd Big Eight player to score 1000 career points. Ellison starts down the stretch of his final three games against Kansas State tomorrow night at Manhattan. Following are Missouri here March 1 and Oklahoma State at Stillwater March 9. Nolen Ellison Aims At Gardner's Record Rockwell last year described Muhammad, owner of a sumptuous 19-room South Side residence and another home in Phoenix, Ariz., as the "Adolf Hitler of the Black People." Wednesday Night CHICKEN SPECIAL All You Can Eat ONLY $1 drink and dessert extra Little Banquet Ample free parking on the Malls Ambrose Saricks, professor of history, will speak on Edgar Lee Masters and his "Spoon River Anthology" at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. History Professor At Poetry Hour Saricks said Masters tried to imitate classical poetry in his early books. When "Spoon River Anthology" received much notice Masters fell too much into imitation of it. Masters has written 52 volumes of prose and poetry, but he is known for only one, the "Spoon River Anthology," of 1915. Saricks has participated in a stage reading part of the anthology Minnesota Chemist Is Memorial Speaker ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS & PHYSICISTS: If space is your future, your career is with Hughes IN ASTROSPACE IN AEROSPACE IN TERRASPACE IN HYDROSPACE As far back as 1890, Jules Verne visualized excursion trains to the moon. Today — 73 years later — Hughes offers you the opportunity to play an important part in man's actual conquest of space. Help us soft-land the SURVEYOR on the moon — or work with us on exciting advanced projects such as: TFXN)—Guided Mission System MMRBM—Mobile Mid-Range Ballistic Missile (Integration, Assembly & Checkout) SYNCOM—Communications satellite BAMBI ARPAT ANTI-MISSILE DEFENSE PLASMA PHYSICS & ION PROPULSION ADVANCED FIXED-ARRAY RADAR Systems LASER & MASER RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT NUCLEONICS & MOBOT* SYSTEMS SOLID STATE MATERIALS & DEVICES DATA PROCESSING & COMMAND-CONTROL B.S. M.S. and Ph.D. Candidates Members of our staff will conduct CAMPUS INTERVIEWS March 12, 1963 Find out more about the wide range of activities, educational programs and relocation allowances offered by Hughes. For interview appointment or informational literature consult your College Placement Director, Or write: College Placement Office, Hughes, P.O. Box 90515, Los Angeles 9, Calif. Creating a new world with Electronics HUGHES HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANY An equal opportunity employer *Trademark Hughes Aircraft Company Bettman Archive