Monday, May 13, 1968 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3 Pharmacy frat hears Ky. prof A national officer of the Kappa Psi pharmacy fraternity was the guest speaker at the second annual Kappa Psi awards banquet Saturday. Richard M. Doughty, professor of pharmacognosy at the University of Kentucky, spoke to the Rho chapter here in the Kansas Union. Doughty discussed the functions and responsibilities Kappa Psi members have in pharmacy. James Whitaker, a fifth year pharmacy student of Nortonville, was given special recognition at the banquet for holding the highest grade point average in the school. Several other students of pharmacy were given certificates for maintaining a 2.0 grade point average. Trophies also were awarded for the Kappa Psi golf and handball tournaments. A KU sophomore died early Saturday in a Topeka hospital from head injuries received about 7:30 p.m. Friday when he was thrown from a car about three miles west of Stull. Topeka soph dies after auto wreck James Scott Townsend, 19, Topeka, was tossed from the car driven by Nina E. Johnson, Fargo, N. Dak., freshman, when the car went out of control and rolled 112 feet into a ditch on Stull Road west of the Douglas County-Shawnee County line. Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the Holy Name Catholic Church, Topeka. Art Museum exhibits work of KU alumnus More than 110 drawings and paintings by the late Ward Lockwood, a KU alumnus, will be exhibited in the Museum of Art through June 15. A reception Sunday afternoon at the museum opened the exhibit. Lockwood, a native Kansan, was among the first alumni—in 1942—to be honored with the Citation for Distinguished Service. He taught for many years at the University of Texas and at the University of California at Berkeley. He returned to KU in 1957 as the first Rose Morgan visiting professor and artist-in-residence. ROTC men fight a 'war' — Continued from page when to get up again, the loss of men was not a permanent or painful thing. The controllers were Major Poole, Capt. William Silvey, Sgt. Charles Hubbartt and cadet Capt. Don Willoughby. Continued from page 1 These men would run up to a group of men and say something like, "You men have just been wiped out by that machine gun The cadet in command of these particular men would then have to figure a way to knock out the machine-gun so the remaining men could pass by. which has been firing at you from behind those rocks." During heavy fighting, noise from the weapons made it sound as if a real battle were taking place. M-1 rifles were firing and M-60 machine guns barked and spat in almost the same way as weapons with live ammunition. There was some danger involved, even though weapons used blank ammunition. A person closer than 50 feet could be struck by the paper wadding which flies out of the muzzle. This wadding could break the skin, but would more likely cause welts and skin irritation. Radio-TV-film sequence gives awards at banquet The School of Journalism's radio-TV-film sequence presented twenty-one awards to students and other persons in the broadcasting field at its 16th annual banquet Friday night. Broadcasting awards were given to R. P. Stringham, of KANU in Lawrence, Lena Rivers Smith, of WDAF in Kansas City, and Roderick B. Cupp, of KOFO in Ottawa. Donn Pearlman, Chicago, Ill., junior received the Richard Harkness Award. The Tom Daniels Memorial Award was given to Gemuh Akuchu, Cameroon, West Africa, senior. Outstanding Merit Awards went to David Winegardner, Atchison junior, James Mitchell, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student and William Mauk, Overland Park graduate student. Special service awards were presented to Robert Wilson, Hutchinson senior; Rick Shaffer, Hutchinson sophomore; Robert "Fig" Newton, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore; Janice Clark, Independence. Mo., sophomore; Allen Eagen, Topeka junior; and Chuck Berg, Lecompton graduate student. Special performance awards were presented to Roger Pieratt, Shawnee senior; Michael Reardon, Kansas City, Mo., senior; and Robert Bettcher, Lawrence senior. Larry Deutch, Mission freshman, and James Peacock, Quincy, Ill., junior, received radio sports-casting awards. John Nance, Chicago, Ill., graduate student and Michael Sheets, Newton graduate student, received department film prizes. Kansan awards presented Awards were given to 35 students for outstanding service on the University Daily Kansan and performance in the School of Journalism Saturday evening at the annual Kansan Board dinner in the Kansas Union. Outstanding seniors were cited for performance in the three journalism sequences. They were Linda Slefel of Norton and Dan Austin of Salina in the news-editorial sequence; Marsha Barth of Leawood and Robert Campbell of Lawrence in advertising; and Jo Anna Shipley of Kansas City and Robert Dotson of Webster Groves, Mo., in radio-TV-film. Students cited for the best work on the University Daily Kansan are Randy Leffingwell, Wilmette, Ili, sophomore, photography; Betsy Wright, Topeka senior, editorial writing; John Marshall, Lincoln junior, feature writing; Monte Mace, Garnett junior, news writing; Carl Williams, Wichita senior, promotional advertising; and John Hill, Prairie Village junior, was given special mention for his column "The Hill With It." Michael Willman, Atchison senior, institutional advertising. After the fighting at the bridge, there were smaller skirmishes the rest of the afternoon. The defenders settled down for the night and those not on patrol tried to get some sleep. The temperatures were in the high 40's, and the men lying on the ground in sleeping bags hoped it would not rain. Pharmacy extension classes held this week About 9 a.m. Sunday, the troops were trucked back to the KU campus. The battle was called by many a stalemate, but one person called it an example of how a small group of men (16) could tie-up and whittle away at a larger group (48) by using hit-and-run tactics. Twenty - two other students were cited for service and achievement. Arthritis and gout therapy, pediatric pharmacology, drug stabilization and pharmaceutical economics will be studied by 225 Kansas pharmaceus participating in KU's 22nd biannual pharmacy extension course Tuesday through Friday. Start Looking Now The course, sponsored for 11 years by the KU School of Pharmacy, the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association, the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy and the University Extension, will be given in four cities. If you are graduating or planning marriage, now is the time to look for home and apartment furnishings. The meetings will be at the Ramada Inn in Junction City Tuesday; at the Silver Spur Lodge in Dodge City Wednesday; at the Broadview Hotel in Wichita Thursday; and at the Holiday Inn in Kansas City Friday, according to Robert Nelson, Extension coordinator. Don't sit around the campus again this weekend, wishing you were some place else. Be there...and back fast with Ozark. And if you're under 22, you qualify for Ozark's Youth Fare. Your Identification Card, good for one year from date of issue, costs only $10 and you save 1/3 on confirmed reservations. Call your travel agent or Ozark. A I R Classified ads get results WILSON'S SUPPLY & SERVICE Sporting Goods Keys Made—Locks Opened 1016 Mass. 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