KUOK to air election returns KUOK, the KU campus radio station, will broadcast election returns tonight beginning at 7:30. Five-minute reports will be read every half hour until the complete results are tabulated. Regents to meet Friday The Kansas Board of Regents will hold their monthly meeting Friday at the State Building in Topeka. Max Bickford, chairman of the Regents, said the meeting will convene at 9:30 a.m. Ralph Matlaw, professor at the University of Chicago, will give a lecture tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. His topic will be "Dostoevsky and the Golden Age." All interested persons are invited to attend this lecture, sponsored by the KU Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. SMOP applications available Applications are now available for the Scholarship Money's Our Purpose (SMOP) committee's annual memorial scholarship. The theme of this year's scholarship is "The Role of the Educated Woman in the '70's." The applications, available in 220 Strong Hall, are due on April 15. Physics society to view film Festival of Arts, 1970: The Society of Physics Students and Sigma Pi Signa will hold a meeting and show a film at 7:30 tonight in 238 Malott. The film, "Strangeness Minus Three," is a film concerning the development of ideas on partical symmetry groups and the discovery of the elusice omega minus partical. Coffee will be served. Dean to speak on future of cities Charles Kahn, Dean of the KU School of Architecture, will speak before the Faculty Forum Thursday noon. Kahn's speech topic is "Future of our Cities." The Faculty Forum meets in the Westminster Center at 1204. Oread A hot lunch will be served for $1.00. Call 843-4933 for reservations. Engineering conference planned The Department of Civil Engineering will sponsor the 15th annual Structural Engineering Conference April 3 in the Kansas Union. The program, which will last one day, will feature speakers from KU's engineering departments. The theme of the program will be "Failures in Steel Structures." The conference is open to the general public with a registration fee of $15 per person. The cost covers registration, a luncheon in the Union and a copy of the conference proceedings. High school art meeting slated The 27th annual High School Art Conference, sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, will be held April 10. The conference is designed to provide high school students who are interested in a career in art with information on career opportunities and programs of study. A representative display of KU student art work will be displayed during the conference. Science lecture Thursday The Rev. Stanley L. Jaki, research professor of history and philosophy of physics at Seton Hall University of South Orange, N.J., will speak at KU at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in room 124 of Malott Hall. Jaki's speech will be on "Science and the Mirage of Infinity." Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity, will sponsor a Spring Dance Concert April 18 and 19 at the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall. The concert will be a combination jazz and modern dance by guest choreographer Marsha Paludan. Tau Sigma plans concert The concert will be free for all KU students with their ID's and tickets for the general public may be obtained at 201 Robinson. African art exhibit planned The Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City will have an exhibition of African sculptures on display from Friday through April 29. This exhibition will be shown in only two other galleries in the United States. The display includes masterpieces from all major art-producing tribes of Africa and is being sponsored by the chiefs of the diplomatic missions from 34 African nations. The International Exhibition Foundation is circulating the exhibition, which includes nearly 200 pieces from private collections in Europe, Africa and the United States. William Fagg, African art authority at the British Museum, assembled and documented the exhibition. Mar. 18 KANSAN 3 1970 Admission will be $1 for adults, 50 cents for students and teachers, and 25 cents for children. Students must have their ID cards. Barbara Rose, art critic and author, and the New York Rock and Roll Ensemble, composed of three Juilliard musicians and two rock advocates, will appear as part of the 1970 Festival of the Arts in April. Author, ensemble to appear Appearing at 8 p.m. April 2 in Hoch Auditorium, Miss Rose is recipient of the College Art Association Award for Distinguished Art Criticism in 1966 and 1969 and regular columnist for Vogue magazine. She is also a contributing editor of Artforum, a publication of art news and criticisms. Miss Rose has written five books on the history of American art and Dutch and American painting. A sixth book about the painter Helen Frankenthaler will be published in 1971. She has arranged the exhibit "A New Aesthetic" for the Washington Gallery of Modern Art. After receiving her master's degree at Columbia University in New York in 1960, she was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to Spain in 1961 to work on her dissertation on sixteenth century navarrese painting. She has taught at Queens College, Charlotte, N.C., the University of California at Irvine and San Diego, Yale University and Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, N.Y. Miss Rose is presently living in New York and working on a new book on art and technology. The New York Rock and Roll Ensemble will appear in concert in Hoch Auditorium, at 8 p.m., April 1. Formed in the spring of 1967, this group writes its own music and arranges other compositions. The Ensemble has released three Atco LP's, "Reflections," "Faithful Friends — Flattering Foes" and "Kiss Her Once." Among their rock staples are cello, saxophone, English horn and oboe, which blend the dynamics of their playing into imaginative projections of tomorrow's music. Through eclecticism, the group has developed an intelligent combination of musical forms. They carefully integrate their numbers, so that just when the inner ear is about to blow up out of the chaos, rhythm returns. Brutal pounding of the organ like a bongo drum neatly dissolves into Baroque harpsicord, and deadly drum beat might become sensitive and precise rolls. The group has appeared at many of the major colleges, underground rock rooms and high- brow concert halls. In addition, the Ensemble has also appeared on many of the major television shows including the Tonight Show, Merv Griffin, The Today Show, Steve Allen and the Mike Douglas Show. They have just released their second album and will embark this year on their first European tour, starting at London's Festival Hall. "Available Now" The Long Awaited Second Album by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. reg. 5.98 $388 now ATLANTIC Available NOW on 8 Track Tape at $477 Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Center Attention Women Students APPLICATIONS are available now for women's personnel positions in the residence halls for the school year 1970-'71. COMPLETED applications should be returned to the Dean of Women's Office by March 20,1970. ANY junior or senior woman is eligible to apply. OPPORTUNITY will be given to specify the particular hall in which the applicant prefers to work. CONTACT a member of the Dean of Women's Staff if you have any questions.