Monday, Sept. 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 3 (Dol- that my title Fanny book being Many KU Students Receive Scholarships cour 22, the rough more art and words n Cru- ing, and in, say, ted by liter d folk Frazer. Goodyear Aid gic, taim saver. The orature, THERS The University of Kansas has recently been selected to participate in the Goodyear aid-to-education program. and it is at from Cinder- as, Tom ? White This means that two students in the School of Business at KU will receive Goodyear Foundation Scholarships in Business Administration for the 1964-65 school year. 16, 1912, te Press. new York on rates: ofermon niversity at Law= The students selected by the honors and awards committee of the School of Business and approved by officials of the Goodyear Foundation are Geoffrey W. Donnan, Webster Groves, Mo. junior, and Charles A. Hurty, Wichita senior. Both are accounting majors. Editor Managing ts Editor il Editors Manager advertising n Fisher y Grazda Wagner Fund Awarded Heintzelman has attended Rockhurst College and has worked for the Leavenworth county engineer. H. Robert Heintzelman, Leavenworth senior, will hold the $100 Wagner Scholarship Fund award of the Kansas County Engineers Association this year. This will be the second year Heintzelman has received the Wagner award. The annual fund of $200 is divided equally between K-State and KU and is available to juniors and seniors in civil engineering. Eight more KU students have been designated as honor scholars for the 1964-65 school year, Bob Billings, director of aids and awards, said. More Honor Scholars Named Honor Scholarships are earned through Watkins and Summerfield Scholarship competitive examinations in Kansas high schools or through academic achievement at KU. The financial support may come from other scholarship or endowment funds or gifts. The eight honor scholars are: Bruce Bikales, Prairie Village senior; Don Blevins, Wichita senior; Mary Ella Kline, Wichita senior; Sharon Menasco, Wichita senior; Lynn Payer, Wichita sophomore; Gary White, Lawrence junior; Joanne Woster, Mission junior; and Gary Wright, Wichita junior. Dwayne L. Littee, Moran senior, will hold the Frontier Chemical Company scholarship during the 1964-65 school year. Litteer is a chemical engineering major and a member of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Chemical Award Given The Frontier Chemical Company, a division of Vulcan Materials Company, is a producer of agricultural, industrial and specialty chemicals with its main plant in Wichita. Pharmacy Student Aided Darrel G. Steinshouer, a senior in the University of Kansas School of Pharmacy, will receive the $300 Kansas Rexall Club Scholarship for the 1964-65 year. Pharmacy Foundation Aids 3 Three KU students have been honored by appointment as American Foundation for Pharmaceutical Education scholars for the fall semester in the School of Pharmacy. Each scholar receives $200 for the payment of fees, books and other educational expenses. He also may borrow $200 more from the matching funds of the School of Pharmacy. The three are William Dale Brodle, Eureka senior; Duane Douglas Miller, Larned fourth year student. and Fugene Joseph Sparks, Glendora, N.J., senior. Herbert J. Ellison, chairman of the KU Slavic and Soviet area program, is giving five lectures on "The History of the Communist Party in Russia." The series, filmed this summer at the University of Notre Dame, is produced by the Institute on Communism and Constitutional Democracy at Vanderbilt University. A KU professor is among scholars on Soviet and Chinese communism who have been chosen to give lectures for a unique college-level television series. KU Professor To Give Talks This large-scale program is unique because past efforts have been limited to week-end institutes or shorter, more specialized courses, Prof. Ellison explained. Purpose of the series is to provide teachers with a broad background for instructing about communism, Prof. Ellison said. Lectures on doctrine, economics and political science, as well as history, are included. Other lecturers include Alfred Meyer, Harvard University; Karl W. Wittfogel, University of Washington, Seattle; Milorad Dravchkovit, Stanford; W. W. Kulski, Duke; and Gerhart Niemeyer, Notre Dame. J & N Marking Products & N Marking Product Jack and Nancy Hurley 712 Mass. — VI 3-6372 Engraved Formica Plates Specialty printing, rubber stamps and other marking devices "It's Marking Time" New "Live" Album by THE ASTRONAUTS It's A Blast: Hear Favorites Like "Diddy Wah Diddy,""Linda Lou, " Shop Around" Kief's Record & Stereo Mall's Shopping Center VI 2-1544 Two U.S. industrial leaders will speak here this year as Kenneth Aldred Spencer Memorial Lecturers, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced today in his opening convocation speech. Chancellor Announces Two Lecturers Frederick R. Kappel, chairman and chief executive officer of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co., will speak in Lawrence and Kansas City Nov. 5-6. Simon Ramo, executive vice-president of Thompson Ramo Wooldridge, Inc., and president of Bunker-Ramo Corporation, will speak April 12-13, 1965. The Spencer Memorial Lectures were founded in 1960 by relatives and friends of Kenneth A. Spencer, an alumnus of KU and an industrialist, shortly after his death. The income from the memorial is used to bring to Kansas City and KU lecturers and scholars in the fields of engineering, science, and business. In 1941 Spencer founded the Spencer Chemical Co. He was a founder of the Midwest Research Institute of Kansas City, Mo., and a director of several locally based companies. The first Spencer Memorial Lecture was delivered in April, 1963, by Sir John Cockroft, a Nobel prize winner for his nuclear research and one of Great Britain's distinguished men of science. XB70 Plane Makes Maiden Flight EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif., —(UPI)— The revolutionary XB70 "winged missile" made its historic maiden flight today to become the world's first forerunner of future supersonic airliners to take to the sky. Flames gushed from the undercarriage as the wheels of the XB70 touched the landing strip but were fanned out by the time the big plane came to a stop on the runway. The triple-sonic six-jet ship, one of the most controversial planes ever built and aviation's heaviest aircraft, swept over the Mojave on a brief but crucial one hour and five minute test hop. Officials of the Air Force and North American Aviation, builder of the XB70, hailed the successful maiden flight as the first step in the development of future supersonic airliners that will dash across the nation in only 90 minutes. The "winged missile" swept skyward from nearby Palmdale airport with spectacular jet power, resembling a giant white dragonfly. After performing a series of basic maneuvers in a lofty, circling flight, it landed at this flight test center. The XB70, designed to streak 2,000 miles an hour and to an altitude of 80,000 feet, demonstrated only part of its speed and altitude potential during the epic maiden flight. OLD WORLD HOSPITALITY ... MODERN CONVENIENCE! The Round Corner Drug has been serving Lawrence since 1855, providing Lawrence and, later, the Campus with every pharmaceutical need and sundry item with Quality and complete service our constant goal. We have based our Reputation on Quality and Service and we strive to keep that Fine Reputation. Round Corner Drug Store 801 MASS. MEL FISHER VI 3-0200