Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Nov. 1, 1960 7th Annual Kansas Designer Exhibit Announces Winners The Seventh Annual Kansas Designer Craftsman Show's 31 prize winners were announced at the exhibition Sunday. The exhibit features 184 pieces of ceramics, sculpture, silversmithing, furniture and textile work of 99 selected craftsmen and will be on display until November 9, in the Kansas Union. THE SHOW IS sponsored by the KU department of design, University Extension, Kansas Union Activities and Delta Phi Delta (honorary art fraternity). Work picked for the exhibition was selected from 429 entries submitted by 141 craftsmen. Prize winners were judged by David Bradley, regional director of the Southwest Area American Craftsman Council; Malin Selander, Orebro Weaving School, Orebro, Sweden; and Bernard Frazier, KU resident sculptor. Prize winners are: CERAMICS—Clarence Alling, Topeka graduate student, $10 Cloud Ceramics Award; Jerry Campbell, Livonia, Mich., sophomore, honorable mention; Marilyn Austin Lehman, Lawrence, $50 anonymous award; Donald Perry, Hutchinson freshman, $10 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cook Award; Donna Davis Slimon, Wichita, $100 Dr. and Mrs. Justin A. Blount Award; Edna M. Tilton, Topeka, honorable mention. JEWELRY AND SILVERSMITHING-Annette Broyles, Lawrence graduate student, $25 Dick Williams Award; William Burnison, Ontario, Calif., senior, $25 Carl Rice Award and $25 Josie Eresch Award; Condon Students! Grease Job $ Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tallipins Installed Free Open 24 hrs on Duty Brakes Relined Page's SINCLAIR SERVICE 6TH & Vermont Kuhl, Euclid, Ohio, $50 Irving Hill Award; Sally Schober, North Hollywood, Calif., honorable mention; Ronald Wyancko, Prairie Village senior, honorable mention. WEAVING—Nellie Buru, Glenbrook, Conn., three-year subscription Handweaver and Craftsman Award; Craig Craven, Stanberry, Mo., junior, $25 Leah Crump Award and honorable mention; Margaret Johnson, Aspen, Colo., $80 merchandise Countryside Handweaver Award; Ellen Krucker, Independence, Mo., $25 Mrs. William Volker Award; Marian Powell, Perry, Iowa, $25 Kansas City Weaver's Guild Award; James Rowland, Lawrence graduate student, $10 Rheva Spitcatsfury Award and $10 Shaw Award; James Wheat, Overland Park, merchandise Countryside Handweaver Award; Lottie Wortman, Chanute, a book, Countryside Handweaver Award; Blanche Carstenson, Kansas City, Mo., $25 Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Weaver Award. SCULPTURE - Cecil Carstenson, Kansas City, Mo., Sculpture House Award; Wendell Castle, Holton graduate student, Studios Inc. Award, $10 Keeler Book Store Award and $10 Lawrence Sanitary Milk Co. Award; Marguerite Kerfoot, Lawrence graduate student, $100 Maurice L. Bridenthal Award; Gabriella Polony, Kansas City, Mo., $25 Journal World Award; Winthrop Williams, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, $10 Ernst Hardware Award. FURNITURE—Clarence A. Teen, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, $50 Hallmark Award. MISCELLANEOUS — Fern Cole, Akron, Ohio, $50 Thomas C. Thompson Award; Craig Craven, Stanberry, Mo., junior, honorable mention; Mary Kretsinger, Emporia, honorable mention; Donald L. McKinley, Wayland, N. Y., $25 Lawrence Paper Co. Award; Polly Rombold, Wichita, honorable mention. GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Get Pizzacated at Earl's Pizza Palace ★ Fast Delivery Service ★ 13 Varieties Brick Hearth Baked Open Daily: 4 p.m.-12 p.m., Sat. and Sun. till 12:30 a.m. 729 Mass. VI 3-0753 Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL The best tobacco makes the best smoke! R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N.C. WASHINGTON — (UPI) If you're tempted to stay away from the polls Nov. 8, on the theory that "one vote won't matter," you might ponder these facts of history: One Vote Does Matter One vote in Congress saved Selective Service just 12 weeks before Pearl Harbor. California, Idaho, Texas, Oregon and Washington became states by the margin of a single vote in Congress. Rutherford B. Hayes was elected President in 1876 by a majority of one electoral vote. In 1884, James G. Blaine lost New York State — and with it the presidency of the United States — to Grover Cleveland by less than one vote per precinct. Woodrow Wilson became President in 1916 by carrying California with less than one vote per precinct. A shift of one vote in each precinct would have changed the outcome of Michigan's gubernatorial race in 1950, and of the 1954 Senate contests in New Jersey and Ohio. BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING Your vote may be the crucial one in your precinct. 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