AURH changes open house, closing rules As a result of the brainstorming session held at Lewis Hall Feb. 26 by the Association of University Residence Halls, many changes are in store for the students who will live in University residence halls starting next fall. The most changes came within the women's residence hall regulations. Siama Nu was biggest. In 1922 the KU Sigma Nu chapter was the largest fraternal estate in the world. In that year the house and furniture were purchased for $52,000. Included in the purchase was $28 1/2 acres of land, most of which has since been sold. "Many more suggestions were given, but could not be dealt with immediately." Mrs. Frank Shavlik, assistant dean of women said Tuesday. "But, we will be meeting again to discuss how more of the suggestions may be worked out," she said. Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall will be the only freshman women's residence hall which will have mandatory closing hours. Also at GSP, open houses will be held only occasionally. At Corbin Hall, there will be no closing and weekend open houses only. Both Joseph R. Pearson Hall and Templin Hall will house only men and they will have the option of having open house whenever a majority of floor residents can agree upon it. Hashinger Hall, which will house upperclass as well as freshman women, will have no closing hours and open houses at set times. Lewis Hall, with upper-class women only, has the same option for open houses as Hashinger. Mrs. Shavlik said they were now working on setting up open house hours for each floor in the women's residence halls which may have open houses any time. She said that women students would then be able to choose even the floor which they wanted to live according to when they wanted open house privileges. Ellsworth Hall, Oliver Hall and McCollum Hall will all be coed, Mrs. Shavlik said. However, Oliver will house only freshman WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Tuesday passed a bill that would outlaw cigarette commercials on radio and television, effective Jan. 2, and strengthening the health warning on cigarette packages. "Thanks to this bill, Marlboro country will fade into television history, as of next January," said Frank E. Moss, D-Utah, sponsor of the measure. Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., hailed the action as "landmark legislation in the health field." He said "great economic forces were aligned against" it, a reference to lobbying by broadcasters and the tobacco industry. Radio, TV cigarette ad ban approved by Senate vote The House still must act on the bill, but passage is considered virtually certain since the final version of the bill was worked out last week in a House-Senate conference committee. The Senate vote was 75 to 9. Six months after President Nixon signs the bill, it would require this warning on all cigarette packages: "Warning: The Surgeon General has determined that cigarette smoking is dangerous to your health." The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reported June 30 that the cigarette industry's 1968 advertising expenditures included $217.2 million on television, $21.3 million on radio, and $44.6 million in newspapers and magazines. Moss said if the industry switches its broadcast advertising money to other media, he will "urge and support" imposition of the FTC's proposal that a mandatory health warning be required in all printed cigarette advertisements. The bill would ban regulation of cigarette advertising by state governments, but would free the FTC, effective July 1, 1971, from the prohibition against federal regulation of cigarette advertising which has been in effect since 1965. Paintings, bequest donated The University of Kansas is heir to 130 framed oil paintings plus several stacks of sketches by the late Ward Lockwood. The paintings will not belong to the University for several more months because they are still tied up in Lockwood's estate. The paintings came to the University provided in the will of his widow, who died last October. Mr. Lockwood died in 1963. The paintings are currently in the Spencer Library until they can be processed. They came from the Lockwood home in Rancho de Taos, N.M. A $300,000 bequest was made to the Endowment Association in addition to the paintings. The bequest is for the Claude Bone- Official Bulletin Today Classical Recital: Albert Gerken, 7 p.m. Classical Film: "Red Dust." Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. Thursday Thursday Poetry: Jack Anderson reads his works. Forum Room, Kansas Union, 4 p.m. Jayhawk Joggers Club: East Door, Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m. Johninson Gymnasium Natoratiorum 7 Film: "Village of the Damned." 1982. Amorortum 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. Latin American Film: "The Ex- terninating Angel." (Mexico) Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, 7-30 p.m. Architecture Lecture; Eric Telchoh, Forum Room, Kansas Union, 8 p.m. brake Lockwood and Ward Lockwood Art Scholarship Fund. The income from the endowment will provide awards to seniors or graduate students of exceptional merit and promise in creative painting or sculpture. Lockwood, a native of Atchison, studied at KU for two years. He was a practicing artist for many years and was a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Texas at Austin, Tex. During the 1957-58 academic year he was a Rose Morgan visiting professor and artist in residence at KU. 16 KANSAN Mar. 11 1970 The University awarded Mr. Lockwood a distinguished service citation in 1942. The estate will be closed in October and a sale of the paintings will begin. The sale is expected to take 20 months. Mrs. Lockwood specified a list of 18 nationally known museums that A professional art expert is being hired by the Endowment Association to catalog, photograph and write descriptions of the paintings. THE CONCORD SHOP - Decoupage Materials - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Oils and Acrylics The faculty committee which will handle most of the arrangements concerning the paintings for the Endowment Association consists of Bret Waller, director of the Museum of Art; Marilyn Stokstad, chairman of the Art History Department, and Raymond Eastwood, professor of painting and drawing. The KU Art Museum will select a representative Lockwood collection after the sale to museums to be added to the permanent KU museum collection. The remainder of the sketches and paintings will be offered for sale over a 25 year or longer period to ensure that the works are sold at their true value. - Stretcher Frames - Balsa Wood - Stretcher Frames and sophomore students. - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 are to be offered a "major Lock-wood work." The museums are to be contacted in the order listed in the will and each will have 30 days to accept or to reject the offer before the next museum is allowed to make a selection. Proceeds from the sales will be added to the scholarship fund. It will cost students $900 to live in the residence halls next year and students will sign a full year contract, which Mrs. Shavlik said will insure "optimal services for students remaining in the halls for the entire year." Mrs. Shavlik said many more of the suggestions which students offered are still being considered and will be finalized within the next few weeks so that further plans can be made for next fall's residence hall program. If your trousers are just pants, be aware of the new, newly arrived in our stocks. Traditional tapers, smoothed to a super-slim silhouette. And stovepipes, playing it straight to give a man a little more "machismo". In the hit fabrics of the summer, cool and neat.