Kitchen check continues; Watkins adds health unit A public health unit will be added to the Student Health Service to provide continuing inspection of sanitation in kitchens of living groups, Dr. R. A. Schwegler, acting director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, said today. The unit, now in planning stages, will assist directors of kitchens in eliminating inadequacies discovered by the recent State Health Department food survey and in maintaining high standards of sanitation. Other functions of the service will be to inspect sources of food served in living groups, to inspect downtown eating places and publish a list of acceptable ones, and to inspect off-campus housing for sanitation and safe ventilation. The radiation control committee, which already checks all radioactive materials on campus to maintain safe levels of radiation, will also become a part of the service. There is no disagreement about the need for the service, Schwegler said, but the problems of methods and financing still must be solved. Bailus Walker, St. Louis, Mo., graduate student, who has had experience with similar programs in other universities, is preparing a report on the proposed service, Dr. Schwegler said. It is expected to be complete within about three weeks. THE STATE Board of Health has promised the necessary legal The plan is to begin by employing a sanitarian and later to add employees with other technical skills, such as engineering and architecture, for building inspection. authority to conduct inspections. Financing will be chiefly through student fees to the Student Health Service. Dr. Schwegler said he hoped the program could be combined with graduate research so that grants will be available. Crash injures four students early Saturday morning Lawrence Memorial Hospital listed Roy E. Ranney, Wichita, as suffering from a chest injury, rib fractures, brain concussion and other head injuries. Emily A. Benson, El Dorado, also suffered rib fractures. Two KU freshmen are reported in poor condition today following a two-car accident early Saturday morning which also injured five others and demolished both cars. George D. Kasten and Bonita A. Wingard, Independence freshmen, were reported doing very well at Watkins Memorial Hospital today. KASTEN WAS DRIVING the car in which the students were riding when it collided with a car driven by Jack Roche of Manhattan. With Roche, who manages 6 Daily Kansan Monday, February 21, 1966 Half-price to college students and faculty: the newspaper that newspaper people At last count, we had more than 3,800 newspaper editors on our list of subscribers to The Christian Science Monitor. Editors from all over the world. read... There is a good reason why these "pros" read the Monitor: the Monitor is the world's only daily international newspaper. Unlike local papers, the Monitor focuses exclusively on world news — the important news. The Monitor selects the news it considers most significant and reports it, interprets it, analyzes it—in depth. It takes you further into the news than any local paper can. If this is the kind of paper you would like to be reading, we will send it to you right away at half the regular price of $24.00 a year. Clip the coupon. Find out why newspapermen themselves read the Monitor and why they invariably name it as one of the five best papers in the world. --the Mont Bleu Ski Lodge, were his wife, Rosemarie, and their two sons, Greg and Frank. The Christian Science Monitor THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR FOCUS L. G. GRIDLE W. HARREY and KIM 1 Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 Please enter a Monitor subscription for the name below. I am enclosing $ ... (U. S. funds) for the period checked. □ 1 year $12 □ 9 months $9 □ 6 months $6 Street... Apt./Rm. # ... Citv... State... Zip... Mrs. Roche was in fair condition at Lawrence Memorial this morning and her son Greg was listed as poor. Roche suffered only minor juries and the other son was not injured. College student ___ Year of graduation. College student. Year of graduation. Faculty member P-CN4 r faculty member P-CN-65 Spring Fling planned Spring still seems far away to many students, but not to the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH). computers may pair independents Interviews were held this weekend to fill 200 committee positions for the AURH Fling Fling, Mar. 21-27. The fling will begin with exchange dinners between paired scholarship halls and residence hall floors, and end with Spring Sing on Sunday, Mar. 27. The "outdoor sport" includes a gymkhana in the Templin parking lot, a volleyball tournament in Allen Field House, and events at Potter Lake, including an egg toss, "bod race," and a bicycle marathon. THE SPRING FLING Dance Friday, Mar. 25 will feature the Kingsmen. Saturday the independents will move outside for some "outdoor sport." Cheryl Ball, Olathe junior and AURH social chairman, said the Spring Fling committee is trying to arrange an electronic date selection for a picnic on Saturday followed by a woodsie that evening. Entertainment will be by the AURH-KUOK Hoot n' Holler folksingers. A BANQUET SUNDAY will honor AURH leaders, and the Spring Fling traveling trophy will be awarded the group with the greatest total point accumulation for the week's activities. Have astronauts made pilots old hat? Sure, the boys who go off the "pads" get the big, bold headlines. But if you want to fly, the big opportunities are still with the aircraft that take off and land on several thousand feet of runway. Who needs pilots? TAC does. And MAC. And SAC. And ADC. There's a real future in Air Force flying. In years to come aircraft may fly higher, faster, and further than we dare dream of. But they'll be flying, with men who've had Air Force flight training at the controls. Of course the Air Force also has plenty of jobs for those who won't be flying. As one of the world's largest and most advanced research and development organizations, we have a continuing need for scientists and engineers. Young college graduates in these fields will find that they'll have the opportunity to do work that is both interesting and important. The fact is, nowhere will you have greater latitude or responsibility right from the start than on the Aerospace Team—the U.S. Air Force! Interested? The place to find out more is at the office of the Professor of Aerospace Studies, if there is an Air Force ROTC unit on your campus. Ask about the new 2-year AFROTC program available at many colleges and universities. If you prefer, mail the coupon below. Officer Career Information, Dept. RCN 62, Box A, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas 78148 Name Please Print College___Class of 19___ Address___ City___ State___ Zip___ UNITED STATES AIR FORCE