They ng all Page 3 Student Teaching Starts Thursday Topeka-Mary B. Garver, Kansas City, Mo; Virginia Glover, Topeka; Diane Guvot, Arkansas City; Mary Griswold, Lawrence; Mary C. Hartley, Winfield; Jane Nance, Kansas City, Kan; Jean S. Cooper, Hutchinson; Linda Simpson, Salina; Prudence Rowles, Jenkintown, Pa. Georgelyn White, Valley Center; Jolene Lutz, Lawrence; Robert Jaquith, Emporia; Marilee Fisher, Lawrence; John Lounsbury, Lincoln; Mary Jean Eckles, Fond du Lac, Wis. Forty-eight senior education students will begin the first quarter semester of practice teaching Thursday. Mid-term conferences will be held on the campus Oct. 12 and the last day of teaching will be Nov.6.Follow-up conferences will then be held Nov.7,8,and 9. The schools and the students assigned to them: Shawnee Mission—Lois C. Engle, Abilene; Alonzo J. Flores, Concho, Okla.; Wanda Lathom, Baldwin; Marjorie Kaaz, Leavenworth; William Lashbrook, Kansas City, Kan. Lawrence- Sharna Blumenfeld, Decatur, Ill.; M. Jane Ontz, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Wagner, Colby; John Waite Bowers, Alton, Iowa. Leavenworth—Carole Rawlings s, Marjorie A. Tinsley, Joanne Johnson, Leavenworth; Wallace Greenlee, Scott City; Norma McPherson, Vernon, Tex. Aitchison—Carolynne Anne Fisher. er, Lexington, Mass. Corinth — Jean Dwyer, Kansas City, Mo.; Daneen Streeter, Independence, Mo. Seaman — Marjorie E. Ladbury, Medicine Lodge. Prairie Village — Martha Lynn Kew, Atchison, and Bette Rhoades, Hays. Highland Park — Nettie Garber, Lawrence; Carolyn King, Kansas City, Kan.; Lowell D. Stanley, Lenora. Roseland — Mildred Olson, Axetell. Linwood - Sheryl Davis, Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Kan. — Karmin Twigg, Baldwin; Sylvester Heath Jr., Arthalia Edwards; Charles Molina, Kansas City, Kan.; Leon J. Stillwell, Lawrence. Wyandotte — Donald E. Nease, Lawrence. Washburn — Connie Jordan, Topeka. Westwood View — Sylvia Mahon. Oberlin. Ten Get Scholarships For Engineering Study Ten awards to engineering students for the 1957-58 school have been announced by the School of Engineering and Architecture. The fourth annual Schlumberger Collegelig Award of $500 went to Richard G. Hinderliter, Wichita senior. Hinderliter has a grade point average of 2.4. He has been on the dean's honor roll four semesters and has been elected to Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Tau, national honorary engineering fraternities. Steel Firm Donates Bruce F. Bird, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, has been awarded the Alfred M. Myers Scholarship, donated by the Kansas City Structural Steel Company. The $500 award can be renewed for a maximum of five years. The George E. Nettles Scholarship has been awarded to Gary L. Thompson. Wellington sophomore. The $650 scholarship can be renewed for four years if the student maintains a high grade-point average. Jobs Plus Grant Osawatomie, and Edward Simons. Rock Creek. The first renewal of the Kansas Contractors Assn. Inc., Scholarship to Robert Luce, Ottawa sophomore, was announced. The $500 award is renewable for a total of four years. Robert Fessenden, Mission sophomore, was awarded the Howard A. Fitch Scholarship, donated by the Kansas City Structural Steel Company. The recipient receives $500 annually for a maximum of five years, plus a summer job at the company's Kansas City plant. A United States Public Health Service grant of $5.750 for studies of virus immunity has been awarded to Dr. Albert A. Benedict, a new member of the KU bacteriology department. Gordon L. Culp, Lawrence freshman, was also awarded a $500 Kansas Contractors Assn., Inc., Scholarship. Culp was valedictorian of the Lawrence High School Class of 1956. Dr. Benedict plans to do research on basic aspects of cellular immunity in virus diseases. "There are certain cells containing antibodies which play a role in combating virus infections," he said. "I'm interested in determining the characteristics of the antibodies and the role they play in resistance to virus infections." Gerald M. Simmons, Parsons junior, was awarded the Cities Service Oil Co. Scholarship, a $600 award. Simmons has a grade point average of 2.75, having been on the dean's honor roll for four semesters. Assistant to Help Dr. Benedict, an associate professor in bacteriology, had been assistant professor in the department of preventive medicine and public health at the University of Texas School of Medicine since 1952. Dr. Benedict's assistant on the project will be Clarence McFarlane, a graduate student in bacteriology from Galveston, Tex. Three entering freshmen have been awarded the Ahrens Scholarships in Engineering. Each will receive $250. They are Donald Lee Homrighausen, Paola; Gary F. Read, Reserve now for the available low cost ship and airline space to Europe, summer season, 1958. Only a few economy ship reservations now available. He has done considerable research on diagnosis of parrot fever in turkeys and is the author of numerous papers. 3 Awards to Freshmen EUROPE - 1958 He did his undergraduate work and received his Ph.D. degree in 1952 from the University of California. He served in the Army in 1940-45. Office Hours 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday Reservations made and airline tickets provided for all scheduled airlines. Dr. Benedict is one of 30 experts from over the United States invited to participate in a symposium, "Animal Diseases and Human Health," by the New York Academy of Sciences and National Institute of Health. AIRLINE TICKETS California Graduate Scientist Given Grant To Study Virus Immunity Foreign Students Tuesday, Sept. 17, 1957 University Daily Kansan TOM MAUPIN Travel Service 1236 Mass - VI 3-1211 Foreign students who attended KU last year and who have not reported this fall to the foreign student adviser should do so sometime this week. The office is in 228 Strong. They all smile When New York Delivers Their Clothes .. Law students after this fall will have to attend school a total of seven years to receive their degrees, one more than previously. Bar Requirements Stiffer; Takes 7 Years For Degree Because their clothes (like yours) are given INDIVIDUAL care. All of your cleaning specifications are strictly adhered to at New York Cleaners. A recent ruling by the Kansas Supreme Court made seven years of study a requirement for entrance to the State Bar Assn. A student will now have to earn his B.A. degree before entering the School of Law. VI 3-0501 926 Mass. Under the old system, a student was eligible to enter the School of Law when he had earned 94 credit hours, the equivalent of senior standing. He received his B.A. degree after one year in the School of Law and his law degree after two more years. The deadline for taking the bar examination under the old system is Students now in the School of Law will be able to receive their degrees and apply for admission to the bar under the old requirements, but anyone entering the school after this fall must first have his B.A. degree. Science Books Move To Malott In an effort to improve library service at the University 21,000 books in the fields of physiology, anatomy and biochemistry have been moved from Haworth and Watson libraries into the Malott Hall science library. June 1, 1960. Students who enter the School of Law this fall will be able to finish before the deadline by attending the next two summer sessions as well as the next five semesters of school. The science library has contained only physics, chemistry and pharmacy books. Members of the library staff and the physiology, anatomy and biochemistry departments feel the move will result in better service and more convenient hours. "This change is necessary due to the increasing complexity of the law profession and the necessity for more pre-legal as well as legal training for law students." Dean M. C. Slough of the School of Law said. "Further training of our students will help to uplift the standards of the profession." Engineering Dean Chosen For Panel Dean John S. McNown of the School of Engineering and Architecture has been appointed to an advisory panel of the National Science Foundation. He will serve on the Advisory Panel for Engineering Sciences whose duty is to review requests for funds from the National Science Foundation for research projects and scholarships in the engineering sciences. The earth's atmosphere serves as a storm window that absorbs the killing rays of the sun. Without atmospheric pressure—about 18 tons per person—blood would literally boil in the veins. Swifts, the most aerial of all birds, never alight on the ground unless hurt. They gather all their food and nesting material while flying. They drink skimming over water, and mate in mid-air. THE BEAUTY IN BACK Dacron and Cotton, white only—$5.95 1424 Crescent Road Private Parking