Pharmacy meet set Four speakers will be featured at the 25th Biannual University of Kansas Pharmacy Extension Course meetings set for Sept. 23-26 in four Kansas towns. Pharmacists may attend meetings in any one of the four locations: Sept. 23, at Ramada Inn, Hays; Sept. 24, at Broadview Hotel, Wichita; Sept. 25, at Ramada Inn, Salina; and Sept. 26, at Ramada Inn, Lawrence. The topics and lecturers are: the topics and lecturers are: "Family Health Records," Dr. David A Knapp, associate professor, pharmacy administration, College of Pharmacy, Ohio State University, Columbus. "Trends in Antibiotic Therapy." Dr. Robert A. Wiley, associate professor of medicinal chemistry, School of Pharmacy, KU. "Institutional Pharmacy — Its People and Its Ways," David D. Almquist, director of pharmacy services, Wesley Medical Center, Wichita. "Drugs Used for Immunosuppression," Dr. Ian H. Pitman, associate professor of pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy, KU. In connection with the meetings, a block of tickets has been set aside for the Sept. 27 KU- Sept. 11 1969 KANSAN 19 Syracuse football game in Lawrence. Tickets are not included in the $20 enrollment fee. The ninth annual Pharmacy Open House also will be held Sept. 27 in connection with the meetings. Coordinator of the course is Robert M. Nelson of University Extension. The meetings are sponsored, in addition to the KU Extension, by the KU School of Pharmacy, the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association, the Kansas Regional Medical Program, and the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy. Registration, dinner, a reference notebook, and other materials relevant to the program are included in the enrollment fee. Also, a part-time employee or a student interested in pharmacy may attend for a $5 sponsored student fee. A $65,000 grant from the National Science Foundation will enable a University of Kansas professor to study a relatively new area of mathematical theory. Zamir Bavel, associate professor of computer science, will use the two-year grant for a research project titled "Structure, Connectivity and Homomorphisms of Automata." Bavel says the field of "automata theory" is only 10 to 15 years old. Back for my Tenth Year at KU $ ^{*} $ Grant to professor mathematical structure." As examples of its application, he pointed to computers, or more common yet to the laymen, vending machines and combination locks. The theoretical application of this mathematical structure is common not only to mathematics and computers, Bavel says, but to electrical engineering as well. Though I received my B.S. in Business in 1952, "I am not a professional student. As a professional, I am beginning my sixth year selling life insurance exclusively to KU juniors, seniors, grads, medstudents, and staff members. During this time I have started over 650 individual life insurance policies. Take time this fall to let us show you why the College Life Insurance Benefactor with its deferred deposits program has helped college men establish their plan early. *Dwight Boring 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone V1 2-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA The cat flea not only infects domestic cats, but also leopards, opossums and mongooses. ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men "Automata theory," Bavel said, "is an example of an abstract You Will Find The Greatest Selection In Kansas At Lawrence Surplus 740 Mass. V13-3933