Thursday, April 18, 1968 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 9 Physics society chartered to install officers May 3 The local chapter of the Mid- American Health Physics Society recently received its charter from the national society. the majority of its 55 members come from KU and Lawrence, the rest from an area within a 100-mile radius of Lawrence. The charter will be formally presented by Wright Langham of the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory and president-elect of the national society at a dinner meeting May 3 in the Virginia Inn, said Ed Barnes, Brownington, Mo., graduate student and temporary president of the local organization. Health Physics is a profession interested in the protection of man in radiation environments, Barnes said. Officers to be installed at the May 3 meeting are: president, Dale Dean, health physicist at the KU Medical Center; secretary, Larry Simpson, Satanta graduate student, and treasurer, Gerald Jacobson, Kansas City, Mo., veterinarian. Three councilmen, Ben Friesen, associate professor of radiation biophysics; Bill Vanderiet, Grosse Pointe, Mich., graduate student; and Loel Gilbert, with the Topeka Public Health Service, also will be installed Official Bulletin TODAY Trip to the Ozarks. International Club trip to the Ozarks will be the Ozark Regional L-Club office, Kansas Union. Free transportation. Deadline: April 25. Foreign Students. Going home this summer? You are encouraged to approach one-week Summer Crossroads program in Colorado. See 226 Strong Hall. Symposium of Nuclear Structure. Athens. Through April 20. Kansas Union. Peace Corps Language Aptitude Test. 11. amm. (Also 2 & 4 p.m.) A non-competitive aptitude test for the Corps applicants. 305 Kansas Union. Kansas Relays. 2 p.m. Stadium. Panel, 4 p.m. "Peace Corps in unteers from Thailand, the Philippines and Malaysia. Moderated by Deputy Director of the KEKS Core. Sigma Pst. 7:30 p.m. Speaker: Gerald Caywood, Employment Manager of Boeing Co., Wichita Division. Pine Room, Kansas Union. Peace Corps Discussion. 7:30 p.m. "Married Life in the Peace Corps," by Jeanine Jantz, Rod Albrecht, mer volunteers in Panama. 305 Kansas Union. 'Catch-22' author at KU next week The author of the bestselling novel "Catch-22," Joseph Heller, will be writer-in-residence at KU from Tuesday to Friday next week. Heller will meet with students in the fiction-writing classes of Edgar Wolfe, associate professor of English, and James E. Gunn, instructor of English. He also will give a public reading of his writings at 8 p.m. April 24 in Hoch Auditorium. Sales of "Catch-22," a novel built around the experiences on a Mediterranean island air base of some American pilots during World War II, are approaching the five million mark. Faculty Recital. 8 p.m. Baroque Camber Players. SWarthwout Recital Hall FRIDAY Social Work Field Instructors. All Day. Kansas Union. Kansas Relays, 8:30 a.m. Stadium. Test. 11 a.m. (Also 2 & 4 p.m.) A 30-minute non-competitive test for all players in the qualifying placement with you, 305 Kansas Union Peace Corps Bag Luncheon. 11.30 am. For former volunteers, applique demonstrators. For Dr. Brett Ashabranner, deputy director of the Peace Corps, will speak on The Role of the Peace Corps in Devotion to the Sunflower Room, Kansas Union. KU Muslim Society. 12:45 p.m. Draveur Kansas Union Engineering Exposition, 2 p.m. Learned Hall. Computer Science Lecture. 4 p.m. Prof. Donald R. Fitzwater, University of Wisconsin, "Modeling of Computer Systems." 301 Summerfield. Popular Film, 7 & 9:30 p.m. "King Rat." Dyche Auditorium. Read by 12,000 people in 26 states Find out what it's all about! No obligation-No one will call SEND THIS AD WITH YOUR: Name Address. State OPEN EVENINGS David Beatty AUDIO COMPONENT SPECIALIST 1616 Westport Rd. (W, 43rd) JE-13109 3 BLOCKS EAST OF STATE LINE STEREO $129 to $16,000 PERSONAL POSTERS Posters made from any black and white or color $ 3 75 Single Poster plus postage - Snapshot a Negative - Photograph - Drawing - Document - Magazine Pic A free "5"x "7" glossy print of your original sent with each order. Check your wallet now for your favorite picture. Give a poster to your boy friend, girl friend or family and keep one for yourself. Great for Gifts -SPECIAL OFFER Your original returned 2 week delivery All posters black and white Two posters from one original $6.00 $600 Add $5.0 for postage for each return address Fill in, and mail with cash, check or M.O. to PERSONAL POSTERS P.O. Box 3071, St. Louis, Mo. 63130 School Name Please print clearly or type Address State. Monitor editor wins award Zip reau chief. He then moved to the newspaper's home office in Boston, where he rose from general news editor to managing editor and his present position. Through the years Canham has been appointed to various presidential commissions and he served as an alternate U.S. delegate to the United Nations. The editor-in-chief of the Christian Science Monitor, today was presented the William Allen White Foundation award for journalistic merit. Warren K. Agee, Foundation director; and dean of the school of journalism, presented the citation to Edwin D. Canham at a breakfast meeting of foundation trustees in Washington, D.C. The award is made to an American journalist judged to exemplify the ideals of William Allen White, Emporia editor, in service to his profession and his community. The award has been made annually since 1958 to the journalist selected to deliver the William Allen White Day lecture at KU. Recently, however, the trustees voted to present the award to previous speakers. Canham delivered the third annual address in 1952. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe was a Markle Scholar. Canham, editor-in-chief since 1964, joined the Monitor staff in 1925. From 1932 to 1939 he served as the Monitor's Washington bu- 1526 West 23rd 1517 West 6th In by 9 - Out by 5