Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 28, 1964 Around Campus College Bowl Continues Sixteen teams,representing various KU living groups, will compete in the second preliminary round of the KU College Bowl Sunday afternoon in the Kansas Union. Eight matches will be run simultaneously during each round. The first round will begin at 2:30, the second at 3:15 and the third at 4 p.m. The eight teams with the highest score averages will enter the semi-finals with the eight teams that won February 23. This week's round will end the preliminary competition. The semi-finals will be run on a single-elimination basis, rather than on score averages. Teams to compete in Sunday's competition are Alpha Chi Omega, Kappa Sigma, Joseph R. Pearson No. 2, Stephenson Hall, Sellards Hall, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Hashinger Hall, Watkins Hall, Independent (Zenn), Alpha Kappa Lambda, Beta Theta Phi, Miller Hall, Corbin Hall, Alpha Phi, Pearson Hall, and Foster Hall. KU Gets Science Funds The National Science Foundation has granted KU $48,300 for an undergraduate science education program in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The funds, more than $10,000 greater than the amount granted last year, will support research of about 50 undergraduate students in most areas of the College. Each participant may receive a maximum of $800 for conducting studies under faculty members next summer and in the 1964-65 academic year. Business Award Given Clyde Harms, Aruba Island senior, was presented the $150 Solon E. Summerfield Senior Award in Business Administration yesterday by Dean Joseph W. McGuire. The award is given each semester to the School of Business senior who has completed the junior core and who has compiled the highest grade average through the junior year in required business administration and economics courses. Harms received the award at a coffee in the Kansas Union held for students who made the School of Business honor roll for last semester. Time Writer to Speak John Scott, special correspondent for Time magazine, will give a public lecture Tuesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union at the University of Kansas. The School of Journalism and the East Asian Area studies committee are sponsoring his 7:30 p.m. talk on "The Sino-Soviet split." Scott, a members of the Time staff since 1941, spends about one-third of each year making a fact-finding trip to some important area of the world. He reported on Communist China in 1962. He will confer with faculty and students Tuesday afternoon and will leave Wednesday after being honored at a breakfast given by Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Scott was a schoolmate of Thomas R. Smith, professor of geography and chairman of East Asian studies at KU, at the George School in Pennsylvania. 1961 Falcon Futura 2 door 6 cylinder standard transmission for economical transportation. This is a low mileage car traded in on a new Ford. Solid black with red bucket seats. 4 speed transmission and white sidewall tires. A bright red color with red buckets. A new Ford trade-in with plenty of service left for you. 1961 Corvair Monza Club Coupe TAKE YOUR PICK FOR $1395.00 JOHN HADDOCK FORD VI 3-3500 714 Vt. Red Terror Stepped Up in Viet Nam Saigon—(UPI)—Increasingly bold Communist terrorists today bombed the home of an American military adviser in the town of Long Xuyen and tossed a hand grenade at a suburban Saigon police station, the official Vietnamese press agency reported. copped. No casualties were reported in the Long Xuyen attack, but five policemen were wounded, one seriously, when the grenade exploded in the entrance to the station house. A passing woman was struck by a grenade fragment. The explosive device used in the pre-dawn attack on the American's home in Long Xuyen was a plastic bomb. The home and nearby residences were damaged. It was the latest in a series of anti-American terrorist assaults blamed on the Communist Vieg Cong guerrillas. Long Xuyen is about 90 miles Southwest of Saigon. Patronize Kansan Advertisert YOU COULD EVEN HAVE YOUR WIGS CLEANED AT... LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711