16 Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1970 University Daily Kansan 10 ROTC Students Get 'Distinguished' Award Ten University of Kansas Army ROTC students were cited as "distinguished military students" at an awards ceremony Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall. Col. Phillip H Riedel Jr., professor of military science, presented the awards. To be eligible for the award, the student had to be in the top 10 per cent of their military class or the top one-half of their college class, and had to have been chosen by a selection board and the dean of their school. Receiving the awards were: Stephen Chartrand, Leawood senior; William Cipra, Overland Park senior; Sterley Cole, Petersburg, Tex., graduate student; William Davis, Natchitoches, La., senior; Dale Eggleston, Medicine Lodge senior; Larry Ford, Panama Canal Zone senior; Nile Glasebrook, Lawrence senior; Danny Hewes, Cimarron graduate student; James Ud曼stock, Lawrence senior and Kenneth Webb, Pittsburg graduate student. Upon graduation, those selected "distinguished military students" may obtain a commission in the regular Army instead of the Army reserve. Sixteen others received the "academic achievement wreath" for being in the top 10 per cent of their military class for two consecutive semesters. Speaker Cites Health Crisis Closing the "missing links" in the delivery of health care to the people should be of great concern to all persons, said Dr. Paul Cornelly, Monday at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Cornely, who is president of the American Public Health association and head of the department of Community Health Practice at Howard University, Washington, D.C., was the principal speaker at a symposium. 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 Back for My Tenth Year at KU* Kerkman said the purpose of the small enrollment was to make it possible for all to participate. Human Relations courses have been taught at the University of Kansas since 1949. In 1967 the human relations division of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the speech communication division of the department of speech and drama were merged into one. 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Speech 141 is restricted to junior, senior and graduate students, Dean H. Kerkman, lecturer in speech and drama, said. Phone 842-0767 "One of the ways to learn about groups is to be part of one," he representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA Sensitivity, Interaction Stressed In Human Relations Courses ...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Twelve classes of Speech 141, Human Relations in Group Interaction, are studying the workings of groups. The classes, each with an enrollment of 18 or fewer, use their own group as a model for study. said. Speech 141 is much in demand. Since 1960 the annual enrollment in the course has averaged 500 students. The School of Social Work, School of Education, Nursing education, Music Therapy, Occupational Therapy and Personal Management either require or recommend 141 as a part of their curriculum, 47 different majors have been represented in one semester. The program has exhibited an experimental nature in the specifications for certain sectional enrollment. ONE-STOP MUSIC STORE Reeds Recorders Banjos Ukes Guitars Violins Cellos Bongos Cymbals Strings Horns Drums Organs Amplifiers Pianos Mandolins Tambourines Heads Sheet Music Rose's Keyboard Studios 1903 Mass. 843-3007