Tuesday, May 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Kansan Award Banquet May 12 L. E. Stollenwerck, general manager of advertising and public relations at Spencer Chemical Company, Kansas City, Mo., and a 1950 KU graduate, will address the annual Kansan Board Dinner at the University on Saturday, May 12. His subject will be "Is Anyone Listening?" The dinner, the annual event for presentation of William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information awards to students, is sponsored by the governing board of the University Daily Kansan and will be held at 6 p.m. in the ballroom of the Kansas Union. Mark Dull, Kansas City graduate student, is chairman of the board and will preside. HONORS TO BE presented at the dinner include: L. E. Stollenwerck Citations to students for superior performance on the University Daily Kansan during the 1961-62 school year. Certificates will be presented for best advertisements, news stories, features, photographs, and editorials, and William Allen White Foundation cash prizes will be presented to the writers of the three best editorials of the year. School of Journalism scholarships for the 1962-63 school year. The Henry Schott Memorial Prize, a cash award presented annually to the person selected by the faculty as the outstanding junior man in the school. Citations for achievement and scholarship presented by Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic society, and Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity. Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 WILL WE DEVELOP THE NEUTRON BOMB Scientists have conceived the deadliest weapon yet — the neutron bomb. Its rays would destroy life — yet leave property untouched. Science writer William Laurence says it's impracticable, costly and may never be built. Yet U.S. Sen. Dodd says "it can be built." Get all the facts about the N-bomb in this week's Saturday Evening Post. ALSO: Read "Backstage With Andy Williams" and watch his TV Special on NBC, Friday night— The Saturday Evening POST MAY 5 ISSUE/NOW ON SALE Fresh Foods Should Not Be Spurned WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Government health officials said today Americans will be healthier if they maintain a balanced diet instead of spurning fresh foods for fear of radioactive fallout. The Public Health Service (PHS) said it was keeping an eye on the amounts of radioactivity from Russia's 1961 nuclear tests showing up in the vegetables and dairy products being produced this spring. two monthly samplings between January and July. It reported expansion of a contract with Consumers Union of U.S.A., Inc., to conduct a $40,000 study of four monthly samplings of the total diet of teenagers and infants in 30 American cities. The contract originally had called for The PHS said the study was designed "to help trace the changes in fallout elements in total diet resulting from the 1961 series of Russian nuclear weapons tests." Public health scientists have said some increase of Strontium 90 in food was expected this spring as a result of the Soviet tests, but levels would not be anywhere near high enough to warrant measures to reduce food intake. "Disruption of sound dietary patterns would cause more damage to health than intake of the very small amounts of radioactive material involved," health officials reported. Get Lucky the taste to start with...the taste to stay with What makes Lucky Strike the favorite regular cigarette of college smokers? Fine-tobacco taste. The taste of a Lucky is great to start with, and it spoils you for other cigarettes. That's why Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. So, get the taste you'll want to stay with. Get Lucky today. $ \textcircled{C} $ A. T. $ \mathrm {C o_{2}} $ Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name"