31. 27 20 5 26 49 Parking Permits Now Avaliable Applications are now being received for fall semester parking permits since the summer session permits expire at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday. Application blanks for the new permits are available at the traffic office, center door, Robinson gymnasium; the School of Education office; the School of Engineering office, and the dean of men's office. Applications must be turned in at the traffic office. Parking regulations have been in effect since Sept. 8. This means, in addition to the other regulations listed in the leaflet available at the traffic office, that parking is now being restricted on Jayhawk boulevard and all zones other than the five free zones. The parking permit fee for the 12 month period beginning in September will be $1.50. Persons also may make applications for a single semester. The charge for the individual semester is 75 cents for the fall and spring semesters and 50 cents for the summer session. Permits issued will be good only in the zones for which they are issued. The committee will consider physical disability, necessity for an automobile in the individual's work, and distance from the campus in awarding the applications. Permits to be issued will be given at the University business office, window No. 4. College Senior Wins Kelly Award Mary Lou Keihl, college senior has been awarded the Finch Kelly scholarship for the coming year. The scholarship is given to encourage serious study and unprejudiced understanding of the forces that shape current opinion on public affairs. The scholarship amounts to the annual income from a $2,500 bequest made by the late Florence Finch Kelly. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, Sept. 15, 1952 University Will Apply For TV Station Permit The purpose of the study was to explore the possibilities of cooperation between the two institutions looking toward an efficient, economical, and adequate television service for Kansas. One of the first major steps in the cooperative endeavor was the filing of an application by Kansas State in July. Under present plans the two schools will carry many of the same programs on television stations operated by the two institutions. Each station will carry programs originating on the other station's campus. This will enable each station to provide a more complete service without duplication of effort. An application will be made this month by the University to the Federal Communications commission for permission to construct a non-commercial educational television station, R. Edwin Browne, director of radio and television, announced today. When the "freeze" on the construction of television stations was lifted last spring, Lawrence was one of the few communities of its size in the country to receive a key frequency channel reservation for commercial educational television station, Mr. Browne explained. University authorities who had joined in the fight to win channels for education redoubled their efforts to make possible an appropriate educational television service for Kansas. The application for a construction permit to operate a non-commercial educational television station on the Lawrence channel was completed in August. It was sent to cooperative offices of Joint Committee on Educational In Washington, D. C., for review before being submitted to the FCC. Initiated jointly by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and President James A. McCain of Kansas State college, a study had been begun months before by committees representing the two state institutions. Mr. Browne said the plan has received much favorable comment among educators and others in Kansas and in other states. KU is no novice in the field of television, he pointed out. The KU Medical center's television system was the first permanent installation in the nation for the purpose of day-by-day use of television as an aid to medical education. Last fall, the installation of color television at the Medical center marked another milestone in television pioneering at KU. This was the first color installation of its type in the nation. The U. S. Public Health Service has given the University $7,245 to continue for one year a study of how various nerves and organs develop in response to their chemical environments. Dr. Paul G, Roofe, professor and chairman of the department of anatomy, is directing the research. Dr. Eleanor Wenger and Leland Keller, a graduate student from Lawrence, are the research assistants. Research Project Extended 1 Year The study is being made on the nerve patterns in the embryonic development of the tiger salamander, Dr. Rooef said. The salamander lends itself to accurate observation. In the first year of the study, the KU researchers charted the behavior of the salamander embryo and located its nerves. The next objective is to correlate the chemical pattern of the central nervous system with the behavioral patterns. Medical Student Gets Polio Award Elvin Altenbernd, medical junior from Eudora, was awarded a summer fellowship by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis to do polio research. This is part of the foundation's expanded research program to allow young investigators in the fields of medicine and related sciences to gain research experience in laboratories of the nation's 72 approved four-year medical schools. A candidate is named from each school and receives a $400 grant for the two-month study. Don Klosterman of Loyola at Los Angeles is considered the passer player of all time. Last year in nine games he attempted 315 passes and completed 159 for a 50.5 per cent average. 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