Pass/no credit slip reminder Freshman and sophomores in a College within a College are asked to turn their pass/no credit slips in at their college office, the registrar's office announced Wednesday. Juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences may pick up the pass/no credit slips and return them at window 1 of the registrar's office. Students in other schools may pick up their slips at the registrar's office but must return them to the office of their school. Students may sign up for the pass/no credit option through Feb. 27. Advisory committee to meet Friday The Professional Advisory Committee to the School of Social Welfare at the University of Kansas meets Friday. The advisory committee consists of social workers, sociology professors, social workers from welfare agencies and professionals in the field of social welfare. They will discuss problems of the school in relation to the profession. Margaret Gwinn, director of the Department of Social Service at the KU Medical Center, is chairman of the committee. The session will meet in the Pine Room, Kansas Union from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Pre-delinguent work grant awarded The National Institute of Mental Health awarded KU a $36,758 grant to continue work at Achievement Place, 1320 Haskell, a home for pre-delinquent boys. The project will be aimed at developing educational procedures for pre-delinquent boys. Research will focus on social skills, self-care skills, academic skills, and pre-vocational skills. Achievement Place is supported by funds from local and civic organizations and private contributions. It houses six to eight boys who are assigned there by court action. Assignment comes after the boys are involved in acts which bring them to the continuing attention of local law enforcement officers. KU to be represented at model UN Two students from the University of Kansas will attend the Midwest model United Nations program in St. Louis this weekend. Mike Blakely, Topeka junior, will head the delegation representing Bulgaria in the three and a half day session. Dave Weber, Overland Park junior, will be chairman of the delegation representing Bolivia. Midwestern universities This event is co-sponsored by several Midwestern universities. There will be 120 delegates representd in this event. Some of the topics to be discussed will be admission of Red China to the U.N., control of sea beds, admission of micro-mini states, population control, drug traffic control and the Arab-Israeli border clashes. AE Phis to join Panhellenic The University of Kansas Panhellenic President's Council voted Monday night to invite Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority to join its association. Kathy Hoefer, Prairie Village junior and Panhellenic president, said that in 1966 the Panhellenic Association gave the sorority three years to develop to a membership of 30 and obtain a house. She said the group lived for two years in Lewis Hall before buying the house where they now live, at 10th and Indiana. Nancy Riss, Prairie Village senior and president of the chapter, said they would be installed as soon as they were notified by their national chapter that they had been recognized. Delta Delta Delta offers scholarship Applications are now available for the annual Delta Delta Delta service projects scholarship worth $350. All full-time undergraduate women students are eligible to apply. Applicants will be considered on the basis of academic achievement, contribution to campus and financial need. The deadline for all applications is March 1. Applications may be picked up at the Dean of Women's office, 220 Strong Hall. The winner of this local scholarship will automatically be eligible for one of the $1,000 awards given by Delta Delta Delta's national service projects fund. The deadline for the national award applicant is March 15. Medic professors win grants Stanley Friesen, member of the surgery faculty, received a $25,000 grant from the American Cancer Society to begin research in gastric factors. Five research grants totaling $140,982 were given to professors in the University of Kansas School of Medicine. The other four awards were from the National Institutes of Health for continuation of projects: Daniel L. Azarnoff, medicine and pharmacology, $26,416 for factors influencing cholester metabolism; Albert L. Chapman, professor of anatomy, $46,761 for viral etiology of cancer. 6 KANSAN Feb. 19 1970 leukemia; Stanley Nelson, pharmacology and surgery, $10,073 for metabolic rate and isoenzyme activity in brain tumors; and Santiago Grisolia, biochemistry, $28,866. Evaluation committee seeks changes through petitions Educational changes might become a reality, said George Laughhead, Dodge City senior, if students make their requests. He is presently circulating petitions to gain an indication of what students think on certain matters. Laughead, a spokesman for the Committee on Teacher/Course Evaluation, said that his committee's purpose was to act as a central organizing office for all groups seeking educational changes. Some educational changes being sought are a change in the grading system and the dropping of the Western Civilization requirement. Also being considered are changes in the foreign lan- "The real problem before," he said, "was that there was no central organization for changes. Now various student groups know what another is doing in the interest of completing a change." Official Bulletin Today University Council: 108 Blake, 3.30 p.m. Jayhawk Joggers Club; East Door Robinson Gymnastium; 4:30 p.m. AALP Meeting; Kansas Room, Kansas Union, 6 p.m. Jayhawk Joggers Uldb Eagh Door Door Jacket AAPM Meetings Kansas Roan Kana Film "Pork Chop Hill." Dyche Auditorium, 7 & 9 p.m. KU Synchro Club; "Newcomers Show. Natatorium, Robinson Gymnastics." sas Union. 6 p.m. Film "Pork Chop Hill." Dyche Architecture Lecture: Walter A. Netsch, Chicago, Forum Room, Kan- Humanities Lecture: The Humanist- istic Voice in Early Modern Europe. Woodruff Auditorium 8 p.m. Experimental Theatre: "Rimers of Eldrith" 8:20 p.m. guage requirement and the evaluation of faculty and classes. He said that many students won't fill out a petition because they think it won't do any good. Laughead disagreed with this thought by suggesting that a petition fulfilled two purposes. He said that it gave students a chance to express their personal thoughts so that various colleges would know student opinion. Besides presenting colleges with actual situations, he said, they also provided statistics. He stressed that students must be willing to fill out petitions so that when the committee suggests their ideals, they will have facts to back them up. "The sooner deans and colleges realize the scope of the problem." Laughead said, "the sooner decisions will have to be made." Sink into the most comfortable chair around the Inflatable-at HAAS Hardware 1029 Mass. Ever since the first ship was built for extended journeys in which food supplies were brought aboard, the ships captain always had the finest of the staples available. Often captains had their own supply which was far superior to that of the lower ranking officers and crew. This, in addition to the fact that the ship's captain was considered a king in his own right, led to the prestige of the captain's table. In the early days the captain often ate alone, and as time and knowledge of the sea progressed, the voyages became much longer. History doesn't say whether it was from boredom of eating alone, losing touch with the ship's officers, or the discussion of ships' business during dinner, but the captain began inviting his officers for dinner. This soon extended to the prominent and rich passengers aboard ship and there was much prestige accorded to those who were invited to dine at the captain's table. This tradition has been handed down through centuries and even today aboard luxury liners and tramp steamers alike, there is a certain aura to being invited to dine at the captain's table. Not wanting to set naval tradition back several centuries we feel here, every table is THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE. Each selection is separately priced for two reasons. First, our unique cash register system requires individual pricing. Second, it is the owners opinion that a customer should not have to pay for something that comes with a dinner that they do not wish to eat, but may order from a menu items that they do wish to eat. Hence, the very economical appearance of certain prices. These low prices certainly do not reflect the quality of merchandise. Quite the contrary; to date we have brought before you the finest we can find, and we plan to continue on this course. We hope that The Captain's Table will be an adventure in fine dining.