Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964 Around the Campus Professor to Present Thesis Walter M. Kollmorgen, university distinguished professor of geography, will present a thesis next week at the annual convention of the Association of American Geographers. Prof. Kollmorgen, who will be a visiting lecturer at the University of Colorado this summer, will present his thesis on "The Grazing of Transient Cattle in the Blue-Stem Pasture Areas of Kansas-Oklahoma." Also attending the convention Sunday through Thursday in Syracuse, N.Y., will be John P. Augelli, George Jenks, A. W. Kuchler and Thomas R. Smith, professors of geography, and Robert E. Nunley, associate professor of geography. Harvard Professor Here I. Bernard Cohen, a professor at Harvard University, will give a lecture Monday, with sponsorship by the committee on the history and philosophy of science. He will speak on "Newton, Kepler and Galileo" at 3:30 p.m. in 426 Lindley Hall. Grant Aids Graduates A new program supporting eight graduate traineeships in engineering at KU has been inaugurated by a $39,344 grant from the National Science Foundation. The trainees will receive $2,200, $2,400 or $2,600, depending upon the level of graduate study. In addition, University fees will be paid, and dependent allowances of $500 for a wife and each child will be provided. Two awards will be in electrical engineering, two in engineering mechanics, one in sanitary engineering, and three in fields to be determined by the University. This is the first year the NSF program will go into effect, William J. Argersinger Jr., associate dean of faculties for research, said, who will direct the program. Dean Argersinger said it is expected the program will be expanded next year to include a larger number of grants, not necessarily restricted to the engineering sciences. Shakespeare Scholar Speaks Giles E. Dawson, curator of books and manuscripts at the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, D.C., will give the 11th annual KU library lecture on books and bibliography. Dawson will speak on "Four Centuries of Shakespeare Publication" at 3:30 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Dawson is an Elizabethan scholar and an expert in Elizabethan handwriting. He has written articles and reviews dealing with the Elizabethan stage, and since 1950 he has been associate editor of the Shakespeare Quarterly. He has been associated with the Folger Shakespeare Library since 1932, and since 1935 he has lectured in English in the graduate school of the Catholic University of America. Dawson is now studying English town records for information about wandering players. The project has uncovered much information about the provincial theater in Elizabethn England. The lecture is one of many events in the year-long celebration of the quadricentenary of Shakespeare's birth. Casting Foundry Displayed The first prototype design for a bronze-casting foundry by Stuart Barger, Harrisonville, Mo., graduate student, will be displayed and discussed during the Third National Sculpture Casting Conference here today, tomorrow and Saturday. Barger, the only student participant in the conference, said that previous foundries had been rather "makeshift." His design represents the "ideal" bronze-casting foundry. Barger's plans will be on display in the Kansas Union during the conference. Lecture Goes Into Record The text of the William Allen White memorial lecture delivered last month at KU has been inserted in the Congressional Record. The address dealing with the investigative responsibilities of the press was given at KU February 10 by Clark Mollenhoff, Washington correspondent for the Cowles Publications. It was printed in the Record for March 3 at the request of Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon. Mollenhoff, in the address, was critical of the Washington press corps for failing to dig for the real stories behind the official statements. NATO Future Worries Europe GENEVA—(UPI)—Allied leaders this side of the Atlantic are increasingly worried over the future of NATO, the West's principal defense alignment against Russia. Their immediate fears have been triggered by the serious clash between Greece and Turkey over their conflicting interests in Cyprus. Both are members of NATO and constitute the alliance's chief pivot on NATO's sensitive southern flank in Europe which guards the strategic Mediterranean. GREEK-TURKISH tension is likely to linger, even if the immediate danger of a head-on clash over Cyrusus is averted. But this is only one of the troubling aspects which cast a shadow over the NATO alliance. Already NATO has been weakened by French President Charles de Gaulle's go-it-alone tactics that have reduced France to a member in name only of the Western defense alliance. More recently De Gaulle has been reported to be seeking a sweeping reorganization of NATO which would reduce American leadership and alter the Atlantic character of the alignment. West Germany, too, is dissatisfied with the way NATO is run. She feels she should be given a bigger say and representation in NATO's highest strategy councils, equal to that of the United States, Britain and France. BUT THIS IS not all Britain, in turn, is chary of keeping 55,000 troops in West Germany under NATO arrangements while scraping the barrel of her strategic reserve at home to meet emergency requirements, such as the recent flare-up in Cyprus. Britain also is cool to American suggestions that, along with other European nations, she should make a larger contribution to NATO's conventional forces. Already she resents having to put up $225 million a year for the upkeep of her forces in Germany for which she has to beg for German relief support. The smaller NATO nations also how decreasing enthusiasm for keeping up their contributions to NATO. They often are under pressure from opposition parties at home which cite lessened international tension as a reason for cutting the arms bill. These developments tend to have an increasingly paralyzed effect on both immediate and long term defense planning, and European diplomats frankly fear the handicaps might get worse. BE PREPARED! FOR W-O-O-D-S-I-E-S GET YOUR TRANSISTOR AND CAR RADIO REPAIRED Southside TV CAMPUS PICK-UP & DELIVERY VI 3-5140 1422 W.23rd When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kanson Classified WHICHEVER STYLE YOU PICK... THEY ALL SAY HE LOVES YOU RAINBOW SET His $24.50 Her's ... $22.50 His .. $29.50 Her's .. $27.50 GOLDEN THREAD SET ... $27.50 Her's .. $24.50 LARGO SET His .. $27.00 Her's .. $27.00 ALEPPO SET His .. $37.50 Her's .. $37.50 ORACLE SET His .. $39.50 Her's .. $39.50 TENDERNESS SET His .. $35.00 Her's .. $32.50 MEADOWLARK SET His .. $50.00 Her's .. $42.50 His .. $39.50 Her's .. $35.00 Rings enlarged to show detail. As seen in BRIDE'S MODERN BRIDE BRIDE & HOME If you wish we'll show you as many as 300 styles, but you simply can't pick wrong! They're all *Artcarved*—long famed for impeccable styling, extraordinary, ever-fresh detail work. (And that detailing stays sharp and brilliant forever, due to *Artcarved*'s gold-crafting genius, perfected by over 100 years of ring-making craftsmanship.) Come in soon. You're sure to find the *Artcarved* ring that says "I love you" best! Prices from $8. WEDDING RINGS [ ] 743 Mass.