--- Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 18, 1959 Around the Campus Gallic Acid Study KU Gets Chemicalgets $7,200 Grant Research Grants The National Science Foundation has granted $7,200 for research by Dr. A. W. Burgstahler, assistant professor of chemistry, on the structural geometry of a synthetic product from gallic acid. Gallic acid is a widely distributed plant acid used in the manufacture of inks. It is found in such plants as gallnuts, sumac, tea-leaves and pomegranate. Dr. Burgstahler and graduate student assistants have been doing research with the acid. A report of a synthetic application of the product is given in a recent issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Moore Given Petroleum Medal The highest honor of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists was conferred yesterday on Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology at the University. Prof. Moore received the Sidney Powers Medal in recognition of his outstanding contributions in petroleum engineering. The award is presented annually. Prof. Moore works with the Kansas Geological Survey in addition to his teaching duties. Chemist Supervises Prep Course Film Calvin VanderWerf, professor or chemist, is a member of the committee which supervised the production of Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., color filming of the world's first complete chemistry course for high schools. Prof. VanderWerf said this film is the answer to an urgently needed scientific teaching aid in the United States.The film will provide a thoroughly modern approach to chemistry to every high school in the nation, he said. Seminar Speaker Named Duane G. Wenzel, professor of pharmacy, will speak on "The Role of Nicotine in Experimental Arteriosclerosis" at the physiology seminar at noon Friday in 103 Haworth Hall. The National Science Foundation and Petroleum Research Fund of the American Chemical Society have granted support to two basic research projects in chemistry at KU. The $24,000 grant for three years will support a project directed by Dr. William E. McEwen, professor of chemistry. The project will be "Timing of Covalency Changes in Competitive Rearrangement Reactions." Dr. McEwen and Dr. Jacob Kleinberg, also professor of chemistry, are director of another project which received a renewal grant of $10,000 for a year from the American Chemical Society. Graduate student assistants on the project are Glen Buell, Lee's Summit, Mo., Abe Berger, Brooklyn, N. Y., and Donald Bublitz, Lawrence. George D. Heaton To Talk at Seminar George D. Heaton, who is well-known in the personnel consultant field, will be the featured speaker for the second annual Supervisory Seminar tomorrow at the Kansas Union. Almost 125 local business and industrial supervisors are expected to attend the meeting. The program will get underway at 2 p.m. and will adjourn at 8:30 p.m. Newman Club to Meet The Newman Club will hold an executive meeting at 7 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center. A regular business meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. A film, "The Dialectics of Communism," will be shown. Refreshments will be served. Grease Job $1 Brake Adj. 98c Mufflers and Tallplipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. "A Safe Place to Buy Diamonds" 916 Mass. Premier's Diamonds For Those Who Appreciate Quality and Recognize Value! Zone E, behind the Military Science Building, will be closed for an indefinite period until the construction of a new driveway in that area is completed. Three Lots Open To Zone E Permits Campus Police Chief Joe Skillman said that all zone E permits will be honored in zones M, N, and O. Students holding zone E permits are asked to park in one of those three areas. Aluminum production in the United States is expected to total more than 800 million pounds by 1960. Economist Predicts Motels To Become Fewer, Farther A KU economist predicts a gloomy future for central Kansas motels. Clinton Warne, assistant professor of economics, writes in the current issue of the Kansas Business Review that the state will have many more travelers crossing the border, but fewer tourists stopping for the night in the central region of the state. Prof. Warne discusses the future of the Kansas motel industry in the article. He writes that the tourist of tomorrow will cover distances up to 1,000 miles daily instead of the 600-mile range of today. "Owners of motels in the 200-300 mile zones enroute to major destinations along interstate highways face a reappraisal of their positions," he writes. 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