Student elections to be held University elections will be held Tuesday and Wednesday. University elections will be held Tuesday and Wednesday. Elections will be for student body president and vice president, student senate positions and class officers, said Kathy Newcomer, Omaha junior and elections chairman. Polling times will be from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m.at Strong Hall, Murphy Hall and the Kansas Union. Additional polling times will be from 7 p.m.to 10 p.m.Tuesday at Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Oliver and Ellsworth Halls. The University of Kansas Interim Judiciary will be completed Tuesday when the appointed members meet and elect a chairman and vice chairman. New judiciary structure to be completed Tuesday As of now, 11 of the 12 non-student members of the hearing division and all four of the law school faculty members of the hearing division have been appointed. The 1970 Medical College Admission Test for students applying for admission to medical colleges in the fall of 1971, will be offered on May 2 and October 17. Medical exam dates announced Applications may be obtained through the Guidance Bureau, 116 Bailey Hall. Deadlines for the applications are April 15 and Sept. 30. The final non-student member is expected to be appointed late Monday, following receipt of a recommendation from the KU Medical Center. The test is designed to measure general information and scientific knowledge. It is offered under the auspices of the Association of American Medical Colleges. The new Judiciary replaces the old University Disciplinary Board (UDB) and Board of Disciplinary Appeals, and the interim mem- Ski-Hi club schedules meeting Ski-Hi Sky Divers, a local sky diving club, is holding an informational meeting on sky diving at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Jim Garrison and Matt Farmer, two sky divers, will show two films and give a short talk about parachuting and sky diving. The club meets one mile northeast of the Sunflower Ordinance Plant near Desoto. Physicist to speak Thursday Mind-body problems viewed through modern computer technology and theory is Jaki's principal research project. Stanley L. Jaki, research professor of the history and philosophy of physics at Seton Hall University, South Orange, New Jersey, will speak on "Science and the Mirage of Infinity" on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in 124 Malott Hall. Jaki's appearance at the University of Kansas was arranged in cooperation with the University Christian Movement. There is no admission charge and there will be a question and answer period following the talk. Art exhibit entries due Paintings, sculptures, prints, drawings, watercolors and photographs by artists of this region may be entered in the Mid-America III exhibition at Nelson Art Gallery, said Phillip Brimble, director of publicity at the gallery. Artists age 13 and over who live in Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Iowa, Tennessee, Kentucky or the southern two-thirds of Illinois may compete for $3,000 by submitting their entries at Nelson Art Gallery at 45th and Rockhill Road in Kansas City Tuesday. Entries must be hand-delivered or shipped prepaid to the Nelson Gallery. Judging will be held March 23 to 24. German professor to lecture Friedrich Beissner, the current Max Kade Distinguished Visiting Professor from the University of Tubingen, Germany, will lecture at 10:30 a.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Beissner is an authority in Greek and German classical literature. His lecture will be entitled "Holderlin Ldr Die Grienchen," and will Mar. 16 KANSAN 3 1970 be held to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the birth of the German poet, Hoderlin. fessor of English; Richard Cole, professor of philosophy; Martin Harmony, associate professor of business administration; Harold Rosson, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering. Stanley Shumway, associate professor of music theory; Wyman Storer, professor of astronomy; Mary Townsend, instructor of psychology; Gordon Wiseman, professor of physics; Nita Wyatt, professor of education. bers will serve until their replacements are elected in May. Charges wait for selection of Judiciary The Judiciary is to establish an office for itself. Charles Oldfather, professor of law and chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, suggested that Strong Hall would be a likely site for the Judiciary office. The non-student appointees are: The charges that will be filed with the new University Judiciary against the Black Student Union (BSU) and printers employed by the University Printing Service are in the final stages of preparation, Michael G. Norris, third year law student from Wichita, said Sunday. Sullivan said, "In both cases there was censorship of a sort; in both cases certain members of the University community set themselves up as judges of what publications the rest of the community should have access to." Michael Cherniss, assistant pro- Norris, legal council for Thomas E. Sullivan, Kansas City junior, said the charges will be presented to the University Judiciary as soon as the board is chosen. The charges are being pressed by Sullivan and five other University of Kansas students for the destruction of the Feb. 23 University Daily Kansan and the refusal of the Printing Service to print the Harambee. For the best in: • Dry Cleaning • Alterations • Reweaving 926 Mass. 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