University Daily Kansan Page 3 Friday. Feb. 19. 1960 Around the Campus Sutherland Granted $9,428 for Study G. B. Sutherland, assistant professor of physiology, is the recipient of a one-year Air Force contract for $9,428 for the study of the properties of various proteins. Prof. Sutherland said that by injection of foreign proteins into rabbits to produce antibodies, he will be able to prepare serum from which can be isolated a precipitate of foreign proteins and their antibodies. He will be assisted by Norman MacDuffie, research assistant. KU Grad to College Helm Dr. William S. Row, a 1929 graduate of KU, has been elected president of West Georgia College. Dr. Row, now dean of the college, was elected by the University System of Georgia Board of Regents on the recommendation of Dr. Ingram Westinghouse Renews Grant The Westinghouse Educational Foundation has announced the renewal of a $500 scholarship at the University of Kansas for the 1960-61 academic year. Kenneth Hull, Pratt senior, holds the scholarship this year. Raymond Cerf, professor of violin, and Roy H. Johnson, assistant professor of piano, will present a concert at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall Monday. The faculty recital program will be the third in a series of a complete cycle of the sonatas for violin and piano by Beethoven. Faculty to Present Concert Concert Tickets Available Student identification can now be exchanged for tickets to the Victoria de Los Angeles concert, Feb. 25. The tickets can be exchanged at the Fine Arts office in the Music and Dramatic Arts building. Christian Scientist to Speak Mr. John D. Pickett will speak on "Christian Science: The Power of an Active Faith" at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Lawrence High School auditorium, 19th and Louisiana. Quill Distribution Scheduled for Monday Quill magazine, student literary publication, will be distributed Monday in Fraser Hall, Strong Hall and the Hawk's Nest in the Student Union. This is the final issue in which articles are being admitted on the basis of the manuscript alone. Recommendations from faculty members and Quill Club members will be considered in choosing the articles in the next issues. KU Gets Air Force Contract A sub-freezing electro-chemical process will be the nature of a two-year research contract with the Air Force, according to Ralph N. Adams, associate professor of chemistry. Prof. Adams said the project, believed to be the first endeavor of electro-chemical processes in low-temperature solutions, was awarded $41,000 under the heading of "Low Temperature Voltammetry." Prof. Adams has conducted previous research in electro-analytical and instrumental methods. Townspeople of Rome have torn down and carried off the grandeur that was Rome 2,000 years ago. Today only a shadow of the immortal city remains. Seaman Says Townsfolk Kill Rome This was the picture of the gradua destruction of Roman buildings William Seaman, professor of classical languages at Michigan State University, presented. Prof. Seaman lectured last night at the Kansas Union. "In Italy today, you often find farmhouses, outbuildings, yes, even chickenhouses, built with stones taken from an ancient temple, arch or other edifice," said Prof. Seaman Houses Have Ancient Foundations Using a series of color slides taken in Italy, Prof. Seaman pointed out modern Italian farmhouses built on foundations of ancient stone. He said he had found one farmer using the Faculty Recital Scheduled The School of Fine Arts will feature Theodore O. Johnson Jr., violinist, and Marian Jersild, pianist, in the Faculty Recital series at 3 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall, Feb. 29. for a new apartment house had discovered the remains of an ancient building. YOU ARE OUR MOST IMPORTANT CUSTOMER "Anyone making such a discovery is supposed to inform the authorities immediately. The contractor knew that if he called the authorities, the building would be delayed. He just blew the whole thing apart with dynamite." - Tire and Battery Service - Road Service HOT DONUTS 8-12 - Complete Auto Repairing MOTOR IN ONE STOP SUPER SKELLY SERVICE 827 Vermont VI 3-4955 JOE'S BAKERY 412 W. 9th, VI 3-4720 Sunday Special SPAGHETTI & MEATBALL DINNER ancient vaults in the foundation as a wine cellar. All You Can Eat (Drink Included) "The second class of destroyers were the lime burners, who reduced every piece of marble they could get their hands on to make lime." 85c 710 Mass. VI 3-1086 But Prof. Seaman blamed marble-cutters and lime burners of the 12th century for the obliteration of many classic structures. He explained that these men spent three centuries pulling down the ancient structures and using the marble as flooring for other buildings. 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