University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 21. 1971 5 great apt to one. Loyalty Tag Kansan Staff Photo by JIM FORBE While many students display their allegiance through the use of KU Sweeps Sports Car Events In an event relatively unknown to most fans, the University of Kansas trounced their u-liver team in a Saturday and Sunday in a combination rally and gymkhana. The two day event was put on through the K-State Sports Car clubs. The rally started on the K-State campus Saturday afternoon and led competitors to Lawrence via unusual routes. After winding through Manhattan the rally progressed to such places as Alta bumper stickers or University of Kansas decals, Gary Adams, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, exhibits his preference with a specially-made license tag. Adams was a starting safety for the Jayhawkers last football season, so his stunts loyalty can be easily understood. Biochemistry Talks Begin Next Week A lecture series designed to explore the relevance of biochemistry to society begins Monday with a lecture by Dr. James C. Reeves, the department of biochemistry at the University of Illinois. "The lecture series is designed so that the non scientist can get into the know of the work worth of our endeavors," Lou Houston, KU assistant professor of sociology at Hood College. McClure will speak on "Butterflies of the Soul (Drugs and Mental Illness)" at 8 p.m. Monday in Woodruff Auditorium; sponsored by the KU chapter of the American Chemical Society. The series will continue next fall with lectures every other week. Houston said. He outlined four goals of the series: to show what chemistry and biochemistry can do for students, to benefit of research in these fields which is paid for by tax-payers, to show the impact of this research on students, and that "the University is the major source of new chemical knowledge that provides the foundation for for new advances in chemistry." Why are prophets needed today? A prophet is somebody who is close to God, who sees spiritual solutions to world problems, who leads the people to them. Joseph G. Heard of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship thinks we need some prophets today. Hear him tell what it takes to become one in a talk titled "Today's Prophet." Vista, Alma, Hessdal, Keele, Lawrence Still and Stainland. Lawrence was the competitors were required to cross the river at Pillsbury站. Winners of the rally were Winnery Braun and Sue Keenan of the Iowa Hawkeyes and Sherry Vrault, KU; third were Jim Carter and Mark Kirk and Linda Langer, KU; fifth were George Liverwood and Trish Hope, K-State and sixth were Diane Fonseca and Dave Fonseca, of KU. Thursday, April 22 7:30 p.m. Pine Room Kansas Union Sponsored by CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION Sunday afternoon another gymkhana was held in the Lewis Hall Parking lot. Again KU肌 speed, maneuverability and skill. Bomb Damages California Bank BERRLEY, Calif. (UPI) — A third of America branches today — 24th bombing directed against the world's largest bank in the last 14 months. The 5.30 a.m. blast at the Auburn Avenue bank in Berkeley was almost a carbon copy of one our same bank six weeks earlier. As was the case with the March 3 blast, about 10 windows were broken in the front of the bank and four in a Chinese restaurant across the street. Wodding faced the front of the facade of the bank. In each case, the bomb was placed next to a pillar at the front of the bank, near the entrance. No injuries were reported. A police spokesman said there were no suspects. There have been 23 previous bomb attacks on Bank of America in the United States since February, 1970. The most recent bombings were in Los Angeles. On a points breakdown of 9, 6, 4, 3, 2,1 for first through 5th, KU accumulated 60 points to K-State's 42. will be a braille rally with the school board. Kansas School for the Blind in Kansas City, Kan. Interested persons should contact Benny The next KU Sports Car Club event will be Sunday afternoon. It LOTS OF PARKING SPACE! NO TIPPING! JIFFY SERVICE! QUALITY FOOD! Success of Daisy Hill Bookstore Immeasurable Until Next Year The new Daisy Hill branch or the Kansas Union bookstore still appears to be in the experimenta stage because of usuna By ROBERT BURTCH financial conditions. The store, opened last year, has maintained the Hangzhou Jiaxing provides rapid access to materials frequently needed but not readily available. 9 Receive White Award NEW YORK (Staff)-Nine distinguished journalists received the William Allen White Foundation's medallion Tuesday. Stanley H. Stauffer of Topeka, conferred the foundation, conferred the special breakfast at the Waldorf-austoria Hotel in New York City. The award has been made annually since 1950 to those who have demonstrated the Alen White's ideas in service profession and community. The medalion denoting the award being commissioned last year who received the award and medallion Tuesday were: Gardner Cowles, editor-in-chief from Cowles Communications, MN; Daniel Cohen, Moines Register and Tribune; Walter Crankite, CBS news correspondent, Mark Ethridge, long-time publisher of the Louisville Times and Courier-Journal; Wes Gallagher, general manager of The New York Norman Isaacs, former managing editor of Newsweek; Paul Miller, president of Gannet Newspapers and chairman of the New York Mollenhoff, Washington bureau chief for Cowles Publications; Oscar S. Stauffer, chairman of The New York Stauffer Publications of Topeka James R. Reston of the New York Times was the first to receive the White citation and honorary degree from the White Memorial lecture at the University of Kansas. The most recent national recipient of the award was Vermont Royster, former editor of the Wall Street Journal. RICHARD BRAUTIGAN THE ABORTION: An Historical Romance of 1966 This novel is about the romantic possibilities of a public library in California JUST PUBLISHED $5.95; TOUCHSTONE PAPERBACK, $1.95 SIMON AND SCHUSTER Fight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Although floor space is limited, every effort is being made to provide additional services. Customers who buy a product may write it down in a notebook. If a sufficient number of requests are made, the product will be shipped to Christmas has approved everything from notebooks to pantieshe, he said, but he cannot guarantee that all art supplies could take up the floor. J. D. Chestman, bookstore manager, said sales at all Union facilities were experiencing the expected vareend decline. One of the key factors that inflation has caused sales to be lower than in any previous year he has witnessed. He said the success or failure of the Daisy could not be measured until the end of the semester next week. Long wearing, good looking sandals from Van Eli. Great with everything. They come in navy or golden brown. The store will be open this summer for the summer campers. The annual delegates will be able to buy a line of University of Kansas fans. entire space, and a partial line would lead to disappointments Christman said he benefited that the store would be a success when it opened next fall. He said he would like to see it expanded, he said, and he would department. The top ten college sellers in paperback form are the only books sold there. Greeting cards are available, and a line of cards made in California and eventually in the sample ball will be for infall. The present store hours of 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. seem most convenient to all involved, he said, and will probably conclude only as long as it is supported by the students, he said. main store a mile away. Walk away in a pair soon. 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