MONDAY, MAY 21. 1951 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 15 Official Bulletin May 21 AFROTC banquet for cadets being commissioned and their guests, 6:45 p.m. Tuesday, Hawk's Nest, Union. Chess club, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Eng- lish room, Union. Important for those wishing Summer Session chess. Mathematics colloquium 5 p.m. today, 203 Strong. Prof. S. Chowla Martin Kaufman, engineering senior, received the American Institute of Architects award on May 18 for outstanding scholarship by a graduating senior in architecture. Nine Engineers Get Awards Kaufman received a medal and a book. Runner-up book award was given to Howard Nearing, '51. The awards were announced at the annual department of architecture banquet. The Thayer medal and $25 award went to Milton Blunt, engineering senior, for excellence in design. Clayton Comfort, engineering junior, received the Gertrude Goldsmith prize book for excellence in beginning architectural subjects. For the most progress during the year in beginning architectural subjects, Robert Powers, engineering sophomore, received the Lorentz Schmidt $25 prize. The J. Wilson Brooks $25 prize for the second-year student showing the most improvement in draftsmanship went to Franklin Walters, engineering senior. The Boskamp and Slezak $25 prize went to Bernard Wanner, engineering senior, for excellence in eighth-semester design. The Scarab, architecture fraternity, first-prize silver medal for the best architecture awarded to Dud- PAGE THREE The problem was awarded by Benton, graduate student. The second prize bronze medal went to Richard Bills, engineering junior. Dunwoodie New Head Of Engineering Group Duane Dunwoodie, engineering junior, has been elected president of Tau Beta Pi, national engineering honorary society. The society corresponds in engineering to Phi Beta Kappa. Koppa officers elected were Robert Kipp, vice-president; J. Robert Ashley, corresponding secretary; William McGlimn, recording secretary; Edward House, treasurer; and Jack Long, historian. Donald G. Wilson, professor of electrical engineering, was chosen faculty advisor. "Class Numbers of Binary Quadratic Forms," and Prof. G. W. Smith, "Forty-four Formulas for Four Fours." Red Peppers: The Union Bookstore will pay $5.00 for used sweaters that are clean and in good condition. I. S.A. Movie at Granada, Tuesday and Wednesday, Ticket No. 6. Seniors: Exchange your blue receipt for a ticket to senior class breakfast by Wednesday, Dean of Men's office. Rider Bureau service lists now in Union. Please sign now if you want ride or passengers. SUA office or hostess desk. Parking regulations will be enforced in zones and on Jayhawk drive during and following the examination period. Spring semester permits expire noon, Saturday, June 9. Summer session permits will be mailed to staff about June 1. Students may apply or re-apply now for summer session permits. Applications to be submitted at the Parking Committee office at the center door of Robinson gym. Speaker Raps Mechanism Dr. Dalton, assistant professor of sociology and human relations, was the 11th speaker in the Sociology on the Air series. There is less satisfaction in work because there is less thinking or allowing the personality to enter into work, Melville Dalton said Sunday over KLWN. "It would seem," he said, "that the closer we come to full automatization, without actually reaching it, the more nerve-wracking and unpleasant work becomes." Today only remnants of early day work skills and satisfaction remain, he said. "As complex machines have rapidly developed over the last two centuries, craftsmanship and joy in production have declined proportionately," he explained. Since World War I, society has been moving into the Third Revolution—from semi-automatic to automatic production, he said. With the increase in this type of production there has been an expansion of recreational and amusement institutions, possibly as a method for the workers to seek relief from job boredom. UN Votes China Embargo Flushing, N.Y. (U.P.)—The United Nations general assembly today ordered a world-wide strategic embargo on Communist China and North Korea by a 47 to 0 vote. Vet's First Musical Work Played By Boston Orchestra Boston (U.P.)—A paralyzed Navy veteran found it difficult to believe that a song he had picked out with one finger shared concert billings with composition of Handel, Mendelssohn, and Tschaikowsky. But all Robert Grant, 26, had to do to convince himself he wasn't dreaming was to look again and again at the program Conductor Arthur Fielder and the Boston Pops orchestra presented in Symphony hall recently. An audience of 2,500 stood and cheered Grant after the orchestra had played "Evening Prayer," a hymn in which a man who can not walk thanks God for all his gifts. "It was the greatest night of my life." Grant said. "This happening to me is out of this world. It just must be." Mrs. Charles Davidson, a Red Cross Gray Lady, had encouraged him to write the song. Grant had always loved music, through his undergraduate days at Dartmouth, as a Navy radioman in the Pacific in World War II and in the monotony of his hospital confinement with multiple sclerosis. Mrs. Davidson thought a poem that Grant had written was too beautiful just to be spoken. So she told him he should put "Evening Prayer" to music. Grant had plenty of time and started picking out the melody on a hospital piano. Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and holidays. Published in examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. University Daily Kansan He had never thought of composing, because he had no experience or technical knowledge of songwriting. Fielder heard about the song, listened to it, and sent his arranger out to make a full orchestration. Professor Suggests Process For Permanent Anti-Freeze Plunging temperatures may not be as rough on your pocketbook in coming winters. That is, if the process for a permanent type anti-freeze suggested by Dr. Fred Kurata, associate professor of chemical engineering, is accepted. has been known to scientists, but not widely accepted. The institute, which was at- Kurata before the Mid-west meeting of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers is one which tended by 500 engineers, ended Wednesday after a five-day meet. Dr. Kurata believes that his process is commercially feasible. The anti-freeze would be produced from natural gas or waste gases from petroleum refining. The natural or refinery gas is converted to antifreeze by adding oxygen and water. Dr. Kurata emphasizes the fact that the many refineries in this area would facilitate production. He pointed out that the Missouri river would present an ample supply of water. Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests Number 8...THE SEA GULL Maybe our little over-water friend is just fishing for a compliment. On the other hand, he may have reference to all these quick-trick cigarette tests you hear about nowadays. Well, he's not the only one who's been at sea. Frankly, how can you judge a cigarette by a swift sniff? Or another cigarette by one fast puff. What's all the rush about, anyway? When it comes to making up your mind about cigarette mildness, we think you'd like to take your time. That's why we suggest: The sensible test—the one that you make on a day after day, pack after pack tryout for 30 days. It's the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test! Simply smoke Camels—and only Camels—for 30 days. Let your own "T-Zone" (T for Throat, T for Taste) be your proving ground. When you've tried Camels as a steady smoke, you'll know why . . . More People Smoke Camels than any other cigarette!