Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 14. 1962 Students Win Awards at Dinner Forty-seven students in the School of Journalism and Public Information were honored Saturday night at the annual University Daily Kansan Board dinner. Fred Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo., received the Henry Schott Memorial Prize as the outstanding junior man in the school. Thomas W. Turner, Montgomery, Ala., was awarded the Sigma Delta Chi professional journalism society citation as the outstanding senior man. The Sigma Delta Chi scholarship certificate was given to Allen F. Brauninger, Raytown, Mo., senior. News-Editorial—Thomas W. Turner, Montgomery, Ala., and Mary Ann Smith, Wichita. Students who received recognition as outstanding seniors are: Advertising - Thomas Brown, Hutchinson, and Susanne Ellermeier, Norton. Radio-TV—Mark L. Knapp, Pratrie Village, and Cynthia Lackie, Lawrence. The Alpha Delta Sigma, men's advertising fraternity, award for service to the fraternity was given to Harold Smith, Kansas City senior. Recipient of the Gamma Alpha Chi, women's advertising sorority, recognition award was Susanne Ellermeier, Norton. Charles Martinache, Pittsburg senior, was given the Kansas City Advertising Round Table recognition award for outstanding work on the Kansan advertising staff. The Kappa Alpha Mu photo-journalism fraternity presented its outstanding service award to Douglas W. Kilgore, Salina senior. Awards for excellence in news coverage for radio station KUOK, student laboratory station, were presented to five students: Mrs. Iva Lee Koleber, Ottawa junior; Mrs. Iva Lee Koleber,ankato graduate student; John E. Stuckey, student; sophomore; Thomas Rosenbaum, Shawnee session freshman; Jerri Weaver, Milford university Robert A. Brooks Jr., Leawed sophora of citation for outstanding work on KUOK, Kurtis, Independence senior, received an outstanding announcing and documentary credit. The following scholarships were presented: $250 Mabel McLaughlin Beck Scholarship — Trudy M. Mserve, Abilene sophomore, and Margaret Cathcart, Kansas City, Mo., junior. Second half of the Gladys Feld Heb- marship — Joanne M. Prima, Overbrook. William Randolph Hearst, Scholarship in Journalism ($250) — Dennis D. Farney, which is the first time for the award, which is drawn from $5,600 Hearst Foundation award to the School of Journalism as first-place winner in the 1980-61 news-writing contest. Florence Finch Kelly Scholarship — John E. Stuckey Jr. Pittsburgh sophomore Mr. and Mrs. Oscar S. Stuart Scholarships in Journalism in amounts from $100 to $200, depending upon need: Ray R. Adams Jr., Kansas City, Mo. freshman; R. Dennis Bowers, Kansas City sophomore; Bernard D. Henie, Topeka senior; Bernard D. Henie, Junior College student; Roy F. Miller, Topeka freshman; Jan Marie Pielkarski, Kansas City, Kan.; Junior College; Stephen en. Stoneburn, Lee's Summit, Mo. mohren. Awards for work on the Dally Kansan were Promotional Advertisements; First — Charles Martinache, Pittsburg senior; second — Susan L. Suhler, Cross N. Junior; third — William Woodburn, Pleasent; honorable mention — Danny Meek, Coffhville senior and James Williamson, Forkville junior. Institutional Advertisements: First — James Williamsham, Hutchinson junior; second — John Ward, Prairie Village junior; third — Sasheer Ellermere, Norton Junior; fourth — Nathanion Harold Smith, Kansas City senior and Thomas Allen, Coffeville senior Feature Stories: First — William Wigglesworth, Lawrence junior; second — Adam Hirschfeld, third — Fred Zimmerman, Kassie City Mo. Junior; honorable mention — Deni Fernandez, Wilson junior; Herman R Bonet, Fawzia, Nicholas, Student, and James Alsbrook, Lawrence junior Photography: First — Ronald Gallasher; Fort Scott senior; second — Tony Reed; Hutchinson senior; third — Carol Sue Haryfield. Minneapolis senior; honorable merit. Stephen Clark. Coffeville sophomore and Arthur Miller. Pittsburgh Junior. Editorials, all to seniors. first — William Mullins, Kansas City; second — Ronald Gallagher, Fort Scott; third — Karl W Koeh, Eudora; honorable men—Karl Fimmerman, Kansas City, Mo. and Carol S Merry滩, Minneapolis junior. News Stories: First — Fred Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo., Junior; second — Clayton Keller, Winfield graduate student; third — Tie between Roy Miller, Topeka freshman and Arthur Miller, Dennis Farney, Wiley Professor; James E Alsbrook, Lawrence junior, and Karl Kuch, Eudora senior. 'The Plague and Men' Forum Series Topic Four faculty members will participate tomorrow evening in a panel discussion of "The Plague—and Men." The meeting, one of the Humanity Forums series, will be held in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union at 8 p.m. Peter J. Caws, associate professor of philosophy, will moderate the discussion between Reinhard Kuhn, associate professor of Romance languages, Vaclav Mudroch, assistant professor of history, and Frank C. Nelick, associate professor of philosophy. Shop Before You Buy Premier Jewelry 916 Mass. Let a K.U. Alum Help You Plan Your Future Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:50 a.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road Public Lecture: 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. Dr. Fritz Martini, Rose Morgan Professor, University of Stuttgart, "The Contemporary German Novel." TODAY TUESDAY Musicians一 ★ Accounting ★ Engineering ★ Managerial Positions ★ Office Work ★ Sales ★ Technical ★ Chemists Episcopal Holy Communion & Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House, **KUOK:** 3—News & Weather; 3:05—Top Forty Tunes; 4—Hilltopping; 6—News & Weather; 6:15—Sports; 6:20—Society News; 6:25—Spotlight on Science; 6:30—Boat Mediases; 6:45—Public Service Program; 7—News & Weather Flight, Stage I; 10—News & Weather; 10:15—Night Flight, Stage II; 12—Sign Off In Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. (Continued from page 1) Department of Romance Languages is departement du Romance. The department is subtiles, 'Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme de Moliere.' 7:15 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas and the departments of French are expected to attend. Official Bulletin Positions For Men & Women defeated in Independent "A" league play, is headed by Don Bissing, Lawrence graduate, catcher. The other team members are Loren Gibbons, Lawrence graduate, and Hobart Woody, Lawrence resident, pitchers; Dave Berkebile, Kansas City, Mo., graduate, and John Jeffery, Lawrence graduate, first base; Rey Iwamoto, associate professor of chemistry, and Charles Owens, Lawrence graduate, second base; Doug Neckers, Lawrence graduate, and Ivory Nelson, Lawrence graduate, third base; Lauran Wilson, Lawrence graduate, and Jim Chambers, Shawnee Mission graduate, shortstop; Dave Young, Lawrence graduate, Larry Hathaway, Belen, N.M., graduate, and Fritz Franzen, Lawrence graduate, outfielders. Office Hours Monday - Friday 9 - 5 or Phone GR 1-6656 For Appointment PAUL GELLENS EMPLOYMENT SERVICE 1115 Grand, Suite 225, Shokert Bldg. Kansas City, Mo. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Other Kansas volunteers include Janet Fern Hanneman, Junction City, West Pakistan; Gerald Shogren, Seneca, Southeast Asia; Carolyn J. Eckdahl, Merriam, the Philippines; Gayle Kantack, Clifton, El Salvador; William R. Austin, Bennington, Africa; Emery M. Bontrager, Scott City, the Philippines; and Robert P. Scheuerman, Bison, Africa. Paul Burmeister, another Kansas youth, from Otis, is serving with the Peace Corps in India. He has been assigned to work on agricultural machinery in the University shop, and he and another Peace Corps member are working on a trailer which will be used for carrying tools for Peace Corps projects in outlying villages. A Costa Rican training program at KU will begin Oct. 26. RECENTLY, THREE KU STUDENTS have been notified of their acceptance by the Corps, but they are not certain yet just what their appointments will involve. Ron Gallagher, Fort Scott, senior, and David Livingston, Independence, Mo., junior, are scheduled for Liberian projects. Terrance Brungardt, Hays graduate student, will go to Borneo. Gallagher plans to go on the People-to-People student ambassador flight to Europe this summer, then into the Peace Corps next fall. Gallagher says he is "considering switching to the Costa Rican project." Brungardt says "the project to Borneo is some sort of a special project, but I don't know exactly what it involves right now." Peace Corps Gains - THOMAS GALE, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR of history, who will direct the eight-week session, recently returned from a meeting with Peace Corps officials in Washington. The contract has been prepared and approved and is expected to be signed by KU and Peace Corps officials this week. (Continued from page 1) "Boyd joined up with the West Pakistan group last September and has been in that country since Dec. 8, 1961. He is in the same group that Janet Hanneman of Junction City is in, and they are the only ones from Kansas in the group that went to West Pakistan. "BOYD IS STATIONED at Lyallpur, and is working with four other men as an agricultural team to help with crops, livestock and soils. Boyd is doing most of his work in the livestock field. Recently, he had a real thrill when he had the privilege of shaking hands and visiting a few minutes with Mrs. John Kennedy when she saw the Peace Corps is action, just after she landed at Lahore." The Costa Rican project, which will prepare 45 volunteers specifically for service in that country, is the first one conceived by a university and then submitted to the Peace Corps Department for approval. A man with Alopecia Universalis $ ^{*} $ doesn't need this deodorant 591 He could use a woman's roll-on with impunity. Mennen Spray was made for the man who wants a deodorant he knows will get through to the skin . . . where perspiration starts. Mennen Spray Deodorant does just that. It gets through to the skin. And it works. All day. More men use Menen Spray than any other deodorant. Have you tried it yet? *Complete lack of body hair, including that of the scalp, legs, armpits, face, etc.