Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 17, 1962 Six KU Graduates To Study in Europe Six KU graduate students are among the 1,000 American students who will study abroad under the Fulbright foreign study program next year. Five students will study in German language and literature. They are: Ira Ameriks, East Orange, N.J.; at the University of Tuebingen; Alan Latta, Wichita, at the University of Saarbruecken; Joann Ruth Hull, Edgerton, at the University of Vienna in Austria; Kurt David Phillips of Lawrence, at the University of Bonn, and Frances Mary Scholz, Kansas City, Mo., at the University of Mainz. Janet Wright, Prairie Village, will attend the University of Nancy. Faculte des lettres for studies in French history. J. A. BURZLE, professor of German and Fulbright program adviser, said other grants will be awarded later. The full U.S. government grants awarded the six graduates provide round-trip transportation, maintenance, tuition and books. KU has sent 105 students abroad for studies in 46 countries since 1948. The Institute of International Education which administers the graduate student scholarship program has announced that the deadline for applications is Nov. 1, 1962. Interested seniors or graduate students may obtain application, forms and information from Prof. Burzle at 306 Fraser. THERE ARE FOUR basic eligibility requirements: U. S. citizenship at time of application. - A Bachelor's degree or its equivalent before the beginning of the grant. - Language proficiency sufficient to carry out the proposed study and to communicate with the people of the host country. - Good health. The local Fulbright Committee interviews each applicant. Final selections are made by the Board of Foreign Scholarships and the President. Members of the KU Fulbright Committee are: Prof. Burzle, Oswald P. Backus, professor of history; Oscar M. Haugh, professor of education; Reinhard Kuhn, associate professor of Romance languages; Bryon A. Leonard, professor of zoology; Richard Sheridan, professor of economics; Carlyle S. Smith, professor of anthropology; Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, and James Maloney, professor of chemical engineering. The Barn Door Closed Late SAN JOSE, Calif. — (UPI) — Jeweler Lou Oros shut off his faulty burglar alarm system Monday so it would stop summoning police on false alarms. Monday night someone cut a hole in a store window and stole watches and rings valued at $290. A-Test Session Called Useful The three KU students who backed the nuclear testing "fact-finding" session Tuesday night feel that such sessions provide a service here, and they hope to continue the idea next fall. Artemus W. Ogilvie III, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said last night in a telephone interview that he "thinks something like that is always good. It stimulates thinking." Ogilvie compared such discussions to dormitory "bull sessions, except that there are better minds involved." OGILVIE SAID THAT CHARLES Landesman, assistant professor of philosophy, who took part in the Tuesday debate, is willing to sponsor a series of similar sessions next fall. Two of the three sponsoring students expressed dissatisfaction with the Student Peace Union's discussion of the same topic held recently. They said that the SPU discussion was too one-sided to be of much real value. One of them, James R. Lewis, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said that the account of the Tuesday debate by the Daily Kansan was unfair. "I would rather not have had an article than one like the Kansan carried. "WHAT WAS SAID MIGHT have been a rehash of what has been said in "Time" or "Newsweek" or some of those magazines, but it certainly was not a rehash of what has been said on campus." Lewis also expressed dissatisfaction with the debate itself. "It was not much of a debate," he said, "it was more of a discussion, with people expressing their opinions." PERFECT DIAMONDS . . 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