Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 4, $195^{\circ}$ Around the Campus Speech I Orators Banquet Held Hold a Potpourri For ASTE Jerry L. Street The top student from each of the 33 sneech I classes will take part in the Speech Potpourri to be held today, tomorrow and Wednesday in Fraser Auditorium. Eight finalists will be chosen from today and tomorrow's elimination speeches. Instructors from the speech and dramatics department will judge the speeches. The elimination speeches will not be accompanied by an audience. At 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, the eight finalists will speak to other speech I students and visitors at Fraser Auditorium. Five teachers from schools other than KU will judge the speeches and chose three winners. Arthur E. Kean, instructor of speech and drama and journalism said: "The speeches are very interesting. The subjects vary from missiles to men and from house pets to university co-eds. "The Speech Potpourri has proven to be a tremendous help for speech I students. It helps them to build confidence, initiative, and a will to excel." The contest is held each semester for students of the speech I class. a token prize from the Kansas Union bookstore will be given to each of the three winners. Radio-TV Banquet Set for Tonight Charles Tower, of the National Association of Broadcasters, will be the speaker at the 4th Annual Radio and Television Awards Banquet at 6 o'clock tonight in the Kansas Union. An award for the outstanding commercial Kansas broadcaster will be made at the banquet. Outstanding KU students in the radio and television field will also be given awards. Alpha Epsilon Rho, national honorary radio and television fraternity, will announce its new members. Representatives from radio and television broadcasting companies who are members of the KU Advisory Council will be guests at the banquet. The Advisory Council is made-up of KU administrators and broadcasters throughout Kansas who work mutually towards better student training. Delta Sigma Rho To Initiate Six Delta Sigma Rho, honorary speech fraternity, will initiate six new members May 12. Students who will be initiated are Stephen Hill, Lawrence senior, Edward Collister, Lawrence sophomore, Robert Walker, Frankfort junior, Alan Kimball, Derby sophomore, Robert Nebrig, Leavenworth junior, and Larry Ehrlich, Russell sophomore. All six students are in the upper 35 per cent of their classes and have participated in KU debate activities. 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) Jerry L. Strache, Bethel junior, was installed as chairman of the KU chapter of the American Society of Tool Engineers at its annual banquet Friday evening. Other officers are: Donald N. White, Pittsburg junior, vice-chairman; Edmond C. Leonhart, Prairie Village junior, second vice-chairman; Louis E. Geiler, Kansas City, Kan, junior, secretary, and Frank R. Swenson, Clay Center junior, treasurer. HIXON STUDIO About 75 persons attended the banquet held in honor of graduating seniors, incoming officers, and committee chairmen. The guest speaker was Russell Krites, Ottawa business man and past governor of Lions International. DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 An Army ROTC parade will march down the military parade ground tomorrow in honor of the new cadets taking command of leadership positions for the coming fall semester. AROTC to Honor New Executives New officers are: division commander, Michael J. Johnston, Independence, Mo., and division executive officer, Robert A. Nebrig Jr. Leavenworth, both juniors. Company commanders are; Robert H. Davis III, Leavenworth; Paul D. Reynolds, Dallas, Texas; Avrom A. Rosen, Kansas City, Mo.; Joseph S. Pugliesi, Brooklyn, N. Y.; and William D. Martin, Kansas City, Mo. All are juniors. Boeing Co. Assists Professor in Project The Boeing Airplane Co. in Wichita recently donated technical assistance and $250 for labor to construct a combustion nozzle for the mechanical engineering department. Russel E. Peterson, assistant professor mechanical engineering, designed the combustion nozzle for use in a combustion aerodynamics tunnel developed by himself and Ivan V. Nemecek, associate professor of mechanical engineering. For Expert Watch Repair And All Your Jewelry Needs WOLFSON'S CREDIT JEWELERS 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 Top Chemistry Students Cited Outstanding chemistry students in the 1958-59 academic year were recognized Thursday night at the department's annual awards banquet. Thomas D. Bath, Mission chemical engineering senior, was named the outstanding student of the year. He was awarded a medal by the American Institute of Chemists. The award is based on scholastic achievement, leadership and character. Gerald Throop, Wamego senior, and Bath were named the year's outstanding students by Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity. They will have their names engraved on a plaque which has listed each year's outstanding student since the 1930's. The DuPont Teaching Fellowship of $2,400 plus fees was given to Robert C. Larson, Topeka graduate student. The Monsanto Chemical Company Fellowship of $1,500 was awarded to Arthur Blade, Mexico City graduate student. Larson also received an award for the best service as a teaching assistant. William Pivonna, Albert graduate student, received a prize for best service. E. Paul Papadopoulos, Thessaloniki, Greece, graduate student, received a prize for the best organic colloquium talk. Seven undergraduates were awarded certificates for outstanding work in chemistry. They were Raymond Davis, Neodesha junior; Harold Fearing, Lawrence freshman; Larry Kevan, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Robert Remple, Lawrence freshman; James Robinson, Humansville, Mo., freshman; Clifford Mullen, Kansas City junior; and Virginia A. Lewis, Montrose, Pa., sophomore. Women Leave Racy Posterity LONDON — (UPI) — Mrs. Margaret Whines, a delegate to the annual congress of the Women's Cooperative Guild, complained yesterday that if the posters, publications and motion pictures gathered for the congress were preserved for posterity, "a future generation will think all we wore were pants and bras." Suspension Still Stays for Students L. C. Woodruff, dean of students, said today there has been no change in the status of the students suspended April 27 since two were taken off suspension last week. "As far as I know it's all closed," he said. David Blackburn, Parsons junior, who was suspended and said he would appeal to the chancellor, has left the campus without making the appeal. MOSCOW here we come! Kansas University students will be aboard the special college student tour seeing Russia this summer. Sam Anderson, Russian instructor at K.U., will conduct a 72-day holiday and exploration excursion through Europe, Scandinavia and the Soviet Union. Departure date is set for June 28th. Space is still available and there is time left to secure your passport, if you hurry. The all-expense prepaid tour will travel by charter deluxe motorcoach first seeing Englang, then across the Channel to Belgium, Holland, Northern Germany and into the wonderful land of the Danes, Sweden and Finland are en route before entering Russia at Leningrad for 31 days of USSR adventure including the Ukraine and White Russia, a Black Sea Cruise, the resort of Yalta and Sochi of the Caucasus. You will be in Moscow for the historic first American National Exhibition. Poland, Czechoslovakia, East and West Germany including the two Berlins, Luxembourg and France are all part of the itinerary. For itinerary and Reservation Application see Maupintour, 1236 Massachusetts, Lawrence. Phone VIking 3-1211.