KU-K-State game a sellout The Athletic ticket office said the game Saturday is a sellout. An extra 250 student tickets were put on sale for the KU-KSU basketball game Saturday because of increased student interest in the game, said David Miller, Eudora junior and chairman of the Athletic Seating Board. The extra tickets are available to be sold because less than 6500 student season tickets were sold this year. Usually only 250 student tickets are put on sale to those students without season tickets, Miller said. Organizational meeting planned The White Student Union will hold an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. During the meeting the White Student Union will name objectives it hopes to achieve. Anyone interested may attend. Program based on Gunn's book ABC-TV's fall schedule of television shows includes a program based on a book by James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor for University relations. The program is "The Immortal," an hour series to be shown from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Thursdays. The book, "The Immortals," was printed in magazines as a series beginning in 1955 and published in collected form in 1962 and reprinted again in 1968. It has been translated into German, Italian and Japanese. Zero population meeting set The second meeting of the Douglas County chapter of Zero Population Growth, Inc. will be held Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium. Zero Population Growth, Inc. is an organization dedicated to the preservation of the environment through population growth control. The primary business of the meeting will be explanation of the duties and further organization of the several committees. The meeting is open to all interested persons. The Douglas County chapter now has more than 50 members and the membership goal for this year is 250 persons. KU host art conference Two thousand senior and junior high school art students from over the state will be at KU April 10 for the 27th annual High School Art Conference. The conference will include informal studio demonstrations of art techniques and presentations of the various programs offered at KU in the visual arts. A representative display of student work from the department of design and from the new visual arts freshman foundation program will be on display. Harvard architect to speak Eric Teicholz of the Laboratory for Computer Graphics and Spatial Analysis of the Harvard Graduate School of Design will speak at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Forum Room. His appearance 2 KANSAN will be part of the School of Architecture and Urban Design's visiting lecture series. Mar.6 1970 launderers and dry cleaners daily pickup & delivery to all dorms, fraternities and sororities A complaint was filed Wednesday with the University Disciplinary Board relating to the alleged confiscation and destruction of the University Daily Kansan on Feb. 23, Martin Dickinson, associate professor of law and chairman of the University Disciplinary Board, said Thursday. 1029 New Hampshire Sullivan said the Black Student Union was being tentatively charged with the destruction of the papers in the formal letter. "If this act of vandalism is ignored, any faction that wanted to protest could destroy University or student property and expect to get away with it," Sullivan said. Phone 843-3711 Complaint filed with UDB Dickinson said the complaint, filed by Thomas E. Sullivan, Kansas City junior, asked that the BSU be fined in the amount of the value of the papers destroyed plus an additional fine of $100. White Student Union," Sullivan said. "It doesn't matter if the people who did this are black or white. It was vandalism and should not have been done." Students vie for internship Sullivan said he was following the rules set by the Student Senate that requires the extent of the punishment asked be stated in a formal letter. Four KU students have been nominated by the University to be considered for the federal government's new Washington Summer Intern Program. "I have asked several law students for help in preparing the charges that will be stated in the formal letter," Sullivan said. This letter, he said, will be presented to the Disciplinary Board no later than Monday. "I want to make it clear that I am in no way connected with any They are: Theresa Ann Bridges, Norborne, Mo., sophomore; Norman Ray Mueller, Marion junior; Dennis J. Parle, Pontiac, Mich., graduate student; and Mary Joanne Thum, Atchison junior. The nominees were selected from 16 KU finalists to compete with nominees from other colleges and universities for the 400 positions that will be made available in Washington agencies during the summer. Each participating college was asked to nominate from two to four students depending on its size. The program is an effort by the federal government to involve talented college students in the operation of federal agencies. The interns will be paid from $425 to $850 a month, depending on their educational level and the job classification. Each undergraduate nominee was required to have a grade point average of 2.5 or better on a 3.0 system, and graduate students were required to be in the upper half of their class. Leadership, honors, awards and other recognitions received, and career goals and interests were the other criteria for selection. NEXT WEEK-March 13 & 14-TOGETHER