Campus Briefs Study German Sixteen KU students are among the 34 attending the University of Kansas Summer Language Institute in Holzkirchen, Germany. Darrell W. Woelk, Hutchinson, has been awarded a $400 Muchnic Foundation Scholarship for the 1969-70 academic year in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. KU students in Holzkirchen are: Betty Bartsch, Overland Park; Steven Berline, Mission; Michael Bowman, Leavenworth; Ruth Cathcart, Manhattan; Dan Conyers, Florence; Kathleen Currey, Kensington; George Davidson, Salina; Stephen Davis, Shawnee; Leland Eaton, Plainville, Tex.; Diedre Emery, Hutchinson; Steven Engwall, Roswell, New Mex.; Farzin Ferdowsi, Tehran, Iran; Robert Franzen, Webster Groves, Mo.; Stephen Glover, Leawood; Ann Goodall, Prairie Village; and David Gripp, Smith Center. Muchnic Scholarship The nine-week program in Holzkirchen offers an intensive study of the German language, composition and literature. While in Germany, participants will live with Bavarian families. The students are enrolled in KU summer school and receive KU resident credit. Woelk, who will be a senior in engineering physics, has a cumulative grade point average of 2.48 and has been on the Dean's honor roll. The scholarship was established by the Muchnic Foundation of Atchison to encourage and reward excellent academic work by juniors and seniors in the School of Engineering. Trainee program James G. Stachowiak, KU associate professor of psychology, has been awarded a $113,203 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) for continuation of a trainee program in clinical psychology at the Ph.D. level. The regular KU staff and native instructors conduct classes. The director of the institute is Francis Lide, assistant professor of German at KU. Included in the program are museum visits, guided excursions and theatrical and concert performances. Included in the program are two years of university clinical experience and a 12-month clinical internship. The long range emphasis is upon rehabilitation, child-clinical and mental retardation. The grant includes trainee salaries for fourteen graduate students, one of whom has yet to be named. Those named are: Nikola Trkula, Niles, Ohio; Alan G. Willner, Sherman Oaks, Calif.; Joseph H. Evans, Atchison; Robert G. Urie, Flagstaff, Ariz.; Daniel D. Elash, Lawrence; Janet F. McCown, Austin, Tex.; William J. Charlestrom, Lawrence; George J. Kimes, Scranton, Pa.; Arthur L. Novak, Los Angeles, Calif; Gerald L. Schroeder, Hillsboro; Roderick D. Bush, Rochester, N.Y., and Linda M. Joslyn, Beverly Hills, Calif. Jly. 11 1969 KANSAN 3 ??GETTING MARRIED?? If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To MEADOWBROOK 15th and Crestline Phone VI 2-4200 Jack L. Collins, Shawnee Mission, has been awarded a $300 Charles A. Haskins Scholarship in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. Haskins scholar Collins, who will be a juior in the department of petroleum engineering has been on the Dean's Honor Roll. His cumulative grade point average is 2.62. Gary E. Leikam, Hays, has been awarded a $300 William J. Squire Scholarship for the academic year 1969-70 in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. The scholarship was established in 1957 in memory of Charles A. Haskins, an alumnus of the University of Kansas and an engineer in Kansas City, Mo. Leikam, who ranks in the top five percent of his class at KU. will be a senior in electrical engineering. Squire scholar The scholarship is given by Mrs. William J. Squire of Kansas City, Mo., in memory of her husband who was an engineering graduate of KU and operated the Squire Electric Company there. Wins scholarship John S. Smith, Wichita, has been awarded a $300 Muchnic Foundation Scholarship for the 1969-70 academic year in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. Smith, who will be junior in mechanical engineering, has a cumulative grade point average of 2.14. The scholarship was established by the Muchnic Foundation of Atchison to encourage and reward excellent academic work by juniors and seniors in the School of Engineering. Geology grant A $20,000 grant to H. Robert Malinowsky, assistant director of libraries at the University of Kansas, has been made by the American Geological Institute for an "Inventory Analysis of the Geoscience Serials of the World." Geoscience includes all areas of geology plus related topics in physics, chemistry, astronomy biology, and engineering. Most of the project will be compilation of a list of the world's continuing geoscience publications, estimated to include between 5,000 and 7,500 titles. Malinowsky said each title will be analyzed in regard to place of publication, languages, copyright data, periodicity, where indexed and abstracted, publisher, price, and library holdings. The inventory analysis being made at KU is part of the American Geological Institute's larger goal to create an "Inventory System for Specialized Geoscience Information Resources." After the various basic inventories of geoscience resource materials are made, the system will function as a continuing clearing house and information center for U.S. earth scientists. Duer Scholarship John B. Edwards, Wichita, has been awarded a $350 Duer Scholarship at the University of Kansas for the 1969-70 academic year Edwards, a physical therapy major, will be a senior. He is a member of Owl Society, honor for junior men, and is a varsity letterman in gymnastics. The scholarship was established in 1946 by Dr. G. R. Duer, an alumnus in Marinette, Wisc., to offer financial assistance to deserving men students of high scholastic standing and potential. Wilbur Jorgenson, assistant professor of civil engineering, is a second-year research fellow at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) Lewis Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, this summer. Research Fellow SANDALS Custom Made Just For Your Feet Over 20 Different Styles. Immediate Delivery Primarily Leather During the 10 week program, Jorgenson will do research in the field of materials and structures and attend lectures and seminars. He was one of 28 men who pioneered the summer faculty fellowship program that now functions at seven other NASA centers. Gets scholarship Christopher M. Carrier, Prairie Village, has been awarded a $250 Muchnic Foundation Scholarship for the 1969 fall semester in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. 812 MASS. - DOWNTOWN The scholarship was established by the Muchnic Foundation of Atchison to encourage and reward excellent academic work by juniors and seniors in the School of Engineering. Carrier, who will be a senior in civil engineering, has a cumulative grade point average of 2.30 Nieman Fellows One of the 1966 recipients, William F. Woo of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, received his B.A. in English from KU in 1960. Eugene F. Goltz, an alumnus of KU, is among 11 journalists in the 1969-70 class of Nieman Fellows at Harvard University. Knox scholar Goltz, a reporter for the Detroit Free Press, will study law and American history. He attended KU in 1951-52 and is the second KU alumnus in three years to receive an appointment to the program established in memory of Lucius W. Nieman, founder of the Milwaukee Journal. Barbara N. Conner, El Dorado, has been awarded a $400 Sarah D. Knox Scholarship at the U iversity of Kansas for the 1969-70 academic year. Miss Conner, who will be a junior at KU, held the same scholarship last year. The award was established in 1960 for students from El Dorado or Butler County. 711 West 23rd Malls Shopping Center "Bring in this coupon and you'll get . . . 50c off on a PIZZA!" "Bring in this coupon and you'll get . . . 50c off on a PITCHER OF BEER!" GOOD FOR FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY 544 W. 23rd V1 2-2266