Summer Session Kansan Friday. June 17. 1960 Page 8 College Honor Roll Headed By 49 Students (Continued from page 5) peka; Nancy Marsh, Minneapolis, Minn.; Jeanette Martin, Hawiatha; Mary McCalla; Lawrence; Daniel McColl, Arkansas; Lawrence; Neal Stewart McCoy, Lawrencia; Neal Stewart McCoy, Cedar Vale; Arthur McGowan, Kansas City; Charles McLure Jr. VanHorn, Tex.; Carol Surc McMilleen, Coldwater; Lucinda Migalsik, Morgan; Wichita; Mary Nelson, Morgan; Wichita; Mary Nelson, Beatie; Sheila Nichols, Lawrence; Brian Oheron, Torrington, Conn. Carolyn Ontjes, Hutchinson; Howard Parker, Mission; David Patterson, Kansas City; Mire Patton, Independence, Mo.; Miee Peachley, Hugoton; Robert Kaye Man, Jacksonville; Steve Stors, Conn.; Karl Pfuetze, Prairie Village; Patricia Pierson, Ottawa; Lee Pilonka, LaCrosse; Gerald Prager, Cincinnati; Ohio; Penelope Ann Purnell, Topeka; Robert Rati, Pittsburg; Robert Remple, Lawrence; Kathleen Rourke, Rutherford; Ruthefried, Garden City; David Ryan, Prairie Village; Shella Ryan, Aurora, Mo. Carol Sue Schmucker, Hutchinson, Jeanne Sebaugh, Wichita; Piggy Shank, Hiawatha; Frank Spitznogle, Augusta; Sally Sponable, Paola; Karen Stoltle, Mcouth; Carl Oberlander, Prescott; Robert Kansas City; Mo.; Arthur Traugtowg; Ellinwood; Darlene Trueblood, Mission; Elnor Varah; Liberal; Nancy Vogel, Lawrence; Neal Wagner, Topeka; Robert Waid, Kansas City; Sarah Jane Walker, Leavenent; Anaana Groman; Johnson; Linley Warne, Topkei; John Webster Groves, Mo.; Marsha Wertzberger, Kansas City, Mo., and Susan Wolverton, Kansas City, Mo. FRESHMEN—Ann Amsden, Wichita; Stanley Andeel, Wichita; Mary Lou Auer; El Dorado; Randolph Austin, Salina; Lloyd Barling, Kansas City, Mo.; Thomas Beissecker, Topeka; Carol Jean Betlik, Leoti; Larry Lee Blackman, Leavenworth; Gary Dean Boldt, Ulysses; William Breckenridge, Louisburg; Clara Brewood, Wilson; Willis Brewer; Phyllis Brown, Humboldt; William Cannon Jr., Humboldt; Robert Joe Cash, Hiahasta; Hoite Caston, Independence; Cynthia Chebeshrough, Overland Park. Betty Joan Coffman, Minneapolis; Richard Michael Cory, Wichita; George Costello, Kansas City, Mo.; James Lee Crabb, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Margo Falzone, Moberly. Mo.; Kenneth Fork, Coffeyville; Mary Ellen Fowler, Kansas City, Mo.; Lois Mae Freudenthal, Overland Park; Ralph Dana Jage, Wade; Judith Geisendorf, Sarah Beth Guehrer, Richard Goeffert, Marysville; Martha Ann Graves, Independence; Sharon Leigh Graves, Logan; Vern Bennom Grimslies, Garden City; Joe Haines, Haven; Richard Lalibrink, Salina; Lynn Harner, Dodge City; Susan Jane Hay, Junction City; Sondra Margaret Hays, Salina; Carolyn Hendricks, St. Francis; Jenean Hendrickson, Kansas City, Mo.; James Edward Hesser, Wichitown; Carolin Finnan, Hays; Carolyn Hunlittuc, Sabeth; Constance Hunter, Hutchinson. Judith Rav Jamison, Ottawa; Carol Ann Jamie, Wilson; Lovell Jarvis, Winfield; Elizabeth Johnson; Katherine City, McLean; Jackson Kane, Kenneth Keeler; Bartlesville, Okla.; Betty Ann Kell, Kansas City; Warren Keller, Prairie Village; Dorothy Ellen Mission; Ilaine Larsman Ulysses; Fauna Lynch; Ethel Lagel Paola, Paula; Elizabeth Londolb, Moberly, Mo.; Patricia Leroux, Wichita; John Lesky Letton, Pittsburg; Gerald Marcoussak, Kansas City; Paula Marie Mausolf, Holsington; John Hancock Maxwell, Columbus; Donald McKillip, Prairie Village; Philip Merritt, Kansas City; Ruth Sauer, Kansas City; Jon David Muller, Bethine Elaine Mummert, Coffey-ville. Carole Obowick, Kansas City; Dell Roseanne Odell, Mission; Naomi Olsen, Hinsdale, Ill.; Harvep Palmer, Augusta; Charles Patterson, Kansas City; Patterson William Patterson, Kansas City; Dale Peterson, Paola; Kenny Peterson, Topeka; Roger Pope, Whitewater; George Anne Porter, Kansas City; Nadine Beth Prouty, Newton; Kim Kee, Rankin, Leewood, Ronna Joan, Linda, John, Bonner Springs; Phillin Roberts, Wichita; Sally Roberts, Toneke; Christina Robinson, St. Marys; Carol Ann Samuelson, Kansas City, Mo.; Sharon Saylor, Morrison Iowa; Rivera Schwartz, Ottawa, Manitoba, Schwartz, Manhattan; David Clark Scott, Jackson Heights, Queens, N. Y. Karen Patricia Sears, Kansas City; Joy Ann Sharp, Topeka; Naush Shotill, Kansas City, Mo.; Carolyn Louise Shull, Lawrence; Martha Dee Sipes, Mission; Marie Smith, Mission; Penelope Sommerville, Lawrence; Linda Loa Stark, Salina; Joanne Kay Stover, Colby; Johanna Stuckemann, Ellinwood; Rodney Lee Thompson, Kansas City, Mo.; Janis Tomlinson, Praibie Village; Linda Kavio Albenei, Franz Otto Sauer, Ward Woods Wm. III, Kansas City, Mo.; Donald Warner, Tonkea; Jackie Wash, Bartlesville, O. Kla; Lydia Weller, Central Isilb, N. Y.; Alice Wlegand, Mission; Marjorie Wolf, Kansas City, and Victor Zucher, Whitewater. The National Health Education Committee estimates that there are 3.8 million problem drinkers in the United States. Murphy Hall Praised Hume Lauds KU School The University of Kansas Music and Dramatic Arts Building, recently named Murphy Hall, "must be visited by those thinking of building a national cultural center in Washington," Washington Post music critic Paul Hume wrote recently. The building contains "one of the finest concert halls in the world," said the critic who attended the Second Annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music held here in May. "Composers, indeed all alert musicians, need and profit from the kind of intelligent planning and work that characterizes the school of music at the University of Kansas." Hume wrote in a two-part article which appeared in the Washington, D.C., Post on May 29 and June 5. The critic highly praised the "magnificent school where music is a vital and developing, highly practiced art." Howard Matkze, professor of anatomy, has received an additional $5,000 grant to support his research project in the Belgian Congo. Dr. Matzke and his family left June 8 for the Belgian Congo where he will spend the summer investigating the central nervous system of mammals. It is expected that the study will be particularly significant in areas such as Parkinson's disease, cerebral palsy, tremors and forms of paresis in humans. Writing of Dean Thomas Gorton of the KU School of Fine Arts, Hume said, "I was easily roused to a state of jealousy as he took me on a guided tour of the fully equipped, built-for-the-future building he did so much to create." Matzke Gets Bigger Grant The first phase of the study will be carried out at the Institute for Scientific Research in Central Africa at Lwiro, a town in the mountainous area of the Belgian Congo. The $5,000 grant from the Whitehall Foundation, Inc., supplements grants from the KU Endowment Association, the U.S. Public Health Service and the World Federation of Neurology. The first Father's Day was observed June 19, 1910. The critic added, "Into as advantageous a setting as this, Gorton and his alert faculty are putting some of the most lively music making in the country" which is "making the name of Kansas University known to musicians across the country." MU Alters Rush Rules COLUMBIA, Mo. —(UPI) - The University of Missouri has announced that women students will be permitted to pledge social sororities only after they have attained sophomore standing. The new policy will go into effect next year. Thomas A. Brady, dean of extradividend administration, said the new regulation was recommended by the committee on student affairs after a year-long study. Previously, women students have been permitted to become pledges as freshmen but were not allowed to live in sorority houses. All freshmen must live in the university-operated residence halls. The new rule will not affect students entering the university this fall, Dr. Brady said. He pointed out that criticism of the current rushing system has included an argument that a student can make a more intelligent selection of a sorority after she has spent a year on campus and "proven her scholastic capabilities." Hume praised the "expert ability" of KU's orchestral conductor, Robert Baustian, and lauded the choral piece, "All Pleasant Things," by John Podzro, associate professor of music theory and chairman of the symposium. The Washington music critic found this work by a "gifted composer" sung with "fine control" by the University Concert Choir, directed by Clavton Krehbiel. "It's just wonderful,' says my wife. Says she can't put it into better words. Along with her electric range, dryer and water heater, she finds electric heat keeps the house clean . . . there is no blast of dirt and dust. It's a quick, even heat, too; a penetrating warmth that makes you comfortable however you're dressed. And its cost is so reasonable." "We installed electric baseboard heat to find out what it would do . . . people had been asking me and I didn't yet have the answer," said Mr. Ogilvie, "From experiencing it personally, I can now say electric heat beats 'em all!" Fozdro has recently won a Ford Foundation Award to write a symphony for the Oklahoma City Symphony. says John Ogilvie, Electrical Contractor, Madison, Kansas. Let our heating specialists give you free electric heat planning service. Just call or write KPL. "The level of performance heard from students and faculty throughout the symposium was a credit to the quality of instruction working there." Hume wrote. He pointed out that the KU School of Fine Arts had in residence composer Bernard Rogers of the Eastman School of Music, and the Fine Arts Quartet of Chicago; a guest lecturer, composer-arranger Gail Kubik, and a guest critic, Hume himself. The critic called the four-day program, held here May 2-5, one of "unusual facets and endless opportunities for hearing and discussing new music of a wide variety of styles." Sixteen works were heard for the first time. Hume wrote of the KU facilities for music and drama, "Architects, acoustical experts, musicians and administrators worked together to achieve a result that is unbelievably complete and workable." He concluded, "Any college or university possessing adequate music facilities could and should attempt such a program, but few will equal it." J-School Names 8 to Honor Roll Three seniors and five juniors were named today by Dean Burton W. Marvin to the spring semester scholastic honor roll of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. They compromise the top 10 per cent in grade point averages of the students enrolled in the school. Seniors listed are George L. Debord, Kansas City; Jack G. Harrison, Hays, and Paul Bruce Lewellyn, Hutchinson. Lewellyn is the top June graduate of the school in scholastic standing. Juniors on the honor roll are Allen F. Brauninger, Raytown, Mo.; Rosa E. Lind, Lawrence; Carl John Peterson, Topeka; Clyde Thommartin Jr., Emporia, and Alan W. Wuthnow, Hope. ENT Michener to Study At British Museum Charles C. Michener, chairman of the entomology department, left this week for London where he will do research at the British Museum. Prof. Michener's project is a reclassification of Australian bees. He has been working on the subject for some time and recently spent a year in Australia on a research grant. Prof. Michener hopes to finish the study this summer with a National Science Foundation grant of $3,600. He will attend the International Congress of Entomologists Aug. 17-26 in Vienna and return to Lawrence Sept. 1. More than 5,265,000 American workers have insured pension plan protection under 28,430 pension plans in effect at the start of 1960. SPECIAL of the MONTH Grand Canyon Suite with Wellington's Victory Morton Gould, Conductor Mono — $1.98 Stereo — $2.98 BELL'S Downtown and Hillcrest