Auxiliary to have tea Wednesday The E-Co Berets will have an information tea at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 4 at the Military Science Building for all girls interested in joining the coed affiliate of Pershing Rifles. Those who are interested will then sign up for interviews at the tea. E - Co (pronounced echo) Berets, the coed affiliate of Pershing Rifles is an organization with several service projects. The members are writing letters to men in Vietnam, helping girl troops in Lawrence, and aiding the morale of the men in ROTC. At Christmas the Pershing Rifle and E-Co Berets gave a Christmas party for 35 children from the Ballard Center. They assisted the Red Cross during the last two blood drives on campus. Nazi's son pledges to free him E-Co Berets was organized and established in November 1968. The drill team traveled to Champaign, Illinois to participate in one of several occasions where they performed last year. All girls interested are urged to attend the tea. BERLIN (UPI) — The son of Rudolf Hess, former Nazi deputy fuhrer, saw his father Monday for the second time in 28 years and pledged he would preserve in efforts to free him. Wolf Ruediger Hess, 32-year-old Hamburg engineer, saw his father for 30 minutes in the presence of an American official, a French official and two Russians in the British Military Hospital in West Berlin where the 75-year-old man is being treated for a stomach ulcer. The wife of Hess, the only Nazi still in four-power custody, had been scheduled to visit him too, but a snowstorm grounded her airplane in Munich. The younger Hess said he was encouraged by the promise of the British government to seek an amnesty on humanitarian grounds for Hess, who was sentenced to life by the International Military Tribunal in Nuernberg on Oct. 1, 1946. Profs visit to lecture to afro class The president of Lincoln University, a predominantly black institution in Jefferson City, Mo., will speak at KU this spring for History 80, an Afro-American history and culture course. Walter Daniel, president of Lincoln University, will be one of six or seven visiting lecturers for the course which will be a cooperative course with guest lecturers from Kansas City, Mo., and Lincoln University. Other lecturers from Lincoln will include Thomas D. Pawley, head of the department of English, speaking on drama, and James D. Parks, head of the department of art, speaking on Afro-American art. W. Stitt Robinson, chairman of the history department, said this course originated at the request of Oliver College and that a subsequent request for a similar course taught by a black professor resulted in History 80. Feb. 3 1970 KANSAN 17 Accused of Yablonski murders Trio enters innocence plea CLEVELAND (UPI)—Three Cleveland men accused of conspiring to murder United Mine Workers (UMW) official Joseph A. Yablonski pleaded innocent at Tuition fees for KU students will be due Wednesday, February 11th, said Richard Steffen, manager of student accounts. Tuition fees must be paid February 11 their arraignment in federal court here Monday. Although no official statement has been issued, Steffen predicted the deadline for paying fees would be Feb. 11th and added that the penalty for tardiness would be a $10 reenrollment fee. Steffens said fee statements will be mailed to the address given by the student at enrollment. He said if students do not receive a fee statement they should go to the registrar's office. Steffens said the students must have a fee statement to pay their fees. Attorneys for Paul E Gilly, 36; Claude E. Vealey, 27, and Aubran W. Martin, 21, entered separate pleas before chief District Judge Frank J. Battisti. The three men were indicted last Thursday by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiracy, obstructing justice, and interfering with the rights of a labor union member in the New Year's Eve killing of Yablonski. His wife and daughter were also slain the same night in their Clarksville, Pa., home. The suspects have been charged with murder in Pennsylvania. Gilly, Martin and Vealey have been kept separated in the Cuyahoga County Jail since their arrests Jan. 21. They entered the courtroom separately, and the entire arraignment proceeding lasted only 17 minutes. The three men were not expected to be brought to trial on the federal charges, which carry a maximum sentence of six years in prison and a $6,000 fine, because the Pennsylvania murder charges take precedence. A lengthy court battle over extradition was expected here. While Gilly, alleged in the indictment to be the holder of a payroll for Martin and Vealey, was arraigned, his father-in-law, Solious Huddleston, 61, waited in the Statler Hilton Hotel for the grand jury hearing to resume today. Huddleston is president of a UMW local in LaFollette, Tenn. KNOW ANY FRENCH TOASTS?: Get acquainted with french toast and other breakfast favorites at the Captain's Table. Open at 7:00 a.m. RCA On Campus Interviews for Computer Sales and Systems February 20 BS, BA and MBA candidates: interview RCA, on campus, for our Computer Sales and Systems Program. The Program consists of ten weeks of formal training at Cherry Hill, New Jersey that will provide you with a broad knowledge of the field of your choice -Sales or Systems followed by an assignment at one of our field sales offices located throughout the United States. You will be working directly with the complete Spectra 70 family of computers which are highlighted by large-scale communications and time-sharing applications. See your placement officer to arrange an interview. Or write to RCA College Relations, Dept.CSS Building 205-1, Camden, N.J. 08101. We are an equal opportunity employer.