Page 12 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 7, 1963 Eight Selected to Receive Alumni Award for Service Eight KU alumni have been selected to receive citations for distinguished service which will be awarded jointly by the University and the Alumni Association at commencement exercises. Three faculty members have been chosen to receive the honor this year. In the past, only five alumni have been chosen. The increase resulted from an Alumni board recommendation that retired faculty members be considered for the award. THE FIRST faculty members to be honored are Ray Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry; Herbert B. Hungerford, professor emeritus of entomology, and John Ise, professor emeritus of economics. The five alumni who will be cited at the 91st annual commencement exercises June 3 are: James A. Bell, chief of the Time magazine bureau in Bonn, Germany; Major General Charles L. Decker, Washington, D.C., the judge advocate general of the U.S. Army; Hollis D. Hedberg, special professor of geology at Princeton University and vice-president of the Gulf Oil Corp.; Albert P. Learned, senior partner, retired, Black and Veath Consulting Engineers, Kansas City, Mo, and Byron T. Shutz, senior partner, Herbert V. Jones and Co., Kansas City, Mo. PROF. BREWSTER, who will retire at the end of this school year, earned the M.A. degree from KU in 1915 after receiving the A.B. from Ottawa University. He has been at KU 44 years, 16 of them as chairman of the chemistry department. Prof. Brewster received the senior class HOPE award in 1960. Prof. Hungerford, an authority on water insects, earned A.B. and M.A. degrees from KU in 1911 and 1913. He was a member of the faculty here for 45 years. Since his retirement in 1956 he has continued research financed by the National Science Foundation. Prof. Hungerford was chairman of the entomology department for 26 years. Prof. Ise earned three degrees from KU and two from Harvard. He is a noted writer and lecturer and is a former president of the American Economic Association. Bell was graduated from KU in 1940 with a journalism major. He has been with Time since 1942, except for military service. GENERAL DECKER attended KU two years before he transferred to West Point where he was commissioned in 1931. He has been major general and judge advocate of the Army since January, 1961. Prof. Hedberg earned the A.B. degree from Kansas in 1925 and graduate degrees from Cornell and Stanford. He is vice-president for exploration of Gulf and joined the Princeton faculty in 1959. Learned, an engineering graduate in 1910, was with a Kansas City law firm until last January when he retired to be a consulting engineer. Shutz was a member of the class of 1922. He is a director of 10 corporations and trustee or board member of many Kansas City institutions. Regulations of the University Senate provide that final examinations will be given at the end of the semester in most courses. To avoid confusion, final examinations must be given according to the accompanying schedule in all classes in which final examinations are given. Should adherence to the published schedule conflict with some other event which would be extremely difficult to reschedule, a request for examination at a time other than that prescribed in the schedule may be made. Such requests must be submitted in writing to the Chairman of the Calendar Committee, 122 Strong Hall, not later than Friday, May 10, 1963. The Calendar Committee may approve changes in the examination schedule only if the proposed time for examination falls within the regular examination period, without conflict with other examinations, and only for the most compelling reasons. Final Examination Schedule The last day of classes is Thursday, May 23. Friday, May 24, 1963, is set aside for study and review. There will be no classes and, except for English and Engineering Mechanics, as noted below, no examinations, on Friday. BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—(UFI)—Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said today that negotiations are in progress that could bring about an end to Birmingham's racial strife that has resulted in more than 2,200 arrests of Negro demonstrators. 7:30 MWF sequence* 3:10-5:00 Monday May 27 7:30 TTS sequence** 3:10-5:00 Tuesday May 28 8:30 MWF sequence* 9:40-11:30 Saturday May 25 8:30 TTS sequence** 9:40-11:30 Wednesday May 29 9:30 MWF sequence* 9:40-11:30 Monday May 27 9:30 TTS sequence** 1:00-2:50 Wednesday May 29 10:30 MWF sequence* 9:40-11:30 Tuesday May 28 10:30 TTS sequence** 3:10-5:00 Thursday May 30 11:30 MWF sequence* 7:30-9:20 Wednesday May 29 11:30 TTS sequence** 7:30-9:20 Thursday May 30 12:30 MWF sequence* 3:10-5:00 Wednesday May 29 12:30 TTS sequence** 3:10-5:00 Saturday May 25 1:30 MWF sequence* 7:30-9:20 Tuesday May 28 1:30 TTS sequence** 1:00-2:50 Tuesday May 28 2:30 MWF sequence* 1:00-2:50 Monday May 27 2:30 TTS sequence** 9:40-11:30 Thursday May 30 3:30 MWF sequence* 1:00-2:50 Saturday May 25 3:30 TTS sequence* 1:00-2:50 Thursday May 30 4:30 MWF sequence* 7:30-9:20 Friday May 31*** 4:30 TTS sequence** 9:40-11:30 Friday May 31*** French 1 & 2 German A, B, 1, 2, 3, 4, & 5 (All Sections) 7:30-9:20 Saturday May 25 Spanish 1 & 2 General Biology Zoology 2 (All Sections) 7:30-9:20 Monday May 27 Physiology 2 (All Sections) 7:30-9:20 Monday May 27 Chemistry 1, 2, 2a, & 3 (All Sections) 3:10-5:00 Tuesday May 28 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 7:30 TTS examinations at 3:10-5:00 Tuesday, May 28) English 1, 1a, 1H (All Sections) 1:00-2:50 Friday May 24 Physics 3, 4, 5, 6, & 116 (All Sections) 3:10-5:00 Saturday May 25 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 12:30 TTS examinations at 3:10-5:00 Saturday, May 25) Business Administration 40 & 41 (All Sections) 3:10-5:00 Monday May 27 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 7:30 MWF examinations at 3:10-5:00 Monday, May 27) Engineering Mechanics 1, 12, 16, 48, 49, 55, 57 (All Sections) 1:00-2:50 Friday May 24 (3:10-5:00 for students who have English examinations at 1:00-2:50 Friday, May 24) Economics 9 (All Sections) 3:10-5:00 Wednesday May 29 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 12:30 MWF examinations at 3:10-5:00 Wednesday, May 29) Geography 6 (All Sections) 3:10-5:00 Thursday May 30 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 10:30 TTS examinations at 3:10-5:00 Thursday, May 30) *5 and 4 hour classes; 3 hour classes meeting Monday, Wednesday and Friday; 2 hour classes meeting Monday, Wednesday or Monday and Friday; or Wednesday and Friday; 1 hour classes meeting Monday, Wednesday or Friday; at the hour indicated. **3 hour classes meeting Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday or Thursday and Saturday; 1 hour classes meeting Thursday or Saturday, at the hour indicated. *** Graduating seniors who have classes at 4:30 MWF or TTF earlier in the week so that their final grades may be turned in by the class. Regular classes with laboratory work will be examined as other classes except that no one of the several hours scheduled in the laboratory period, the choice to be made by the instructor after consultation with the students and with other instructors concerned. Irregular appointment classes and experimental laboratory classes will be examined at the time not set by the instructor after consultation with the students and with any other instructors concerned. In case this option is insufficient to avoid conflicts the instructors concerned will submit an advance for approval by the Calendar Committee a written substitute schedule of examination hours for the conflicting courses. Racial Conflict Nears Climax He told a news conference that racial demonstrations would continue until "a start" has been made toward agreement with demands of Negroes here. The School of Law is authorized to make its own examination schedule provided that it takes care of all non-law students without causing them conflicts with their other examinations. In case of mixed courses in which the laboratory work does not come at the same hours as the class work, the examination may be scheduled in either of the following ways: (1) a single examination, one of the class works; (2) the laboratory time scheduled for the class hours; (2) two examinations, one of the class works; the time scheduled for the class hours, and one for the laboratory work, at the time scheduled for the laboratory periods. Grades should be reported by the faculty to the Registrar's Office as soon as possible following each examination, and graded at 10:00 p.m. on Friday, May 31. Grades for graduation seniors must be turned in by 9 a.m. on Friday, May 31. The Negro leader said meetings were held between Negroes and white leaders several times prior to the arrival last Friday of U.S. Assistant Attorney General Burke Marshall, head of the Justice Department's civil rights division. President Kennedy was described as "preoccupied" with the Birmingham situation and a White House spokesman said the President was in continued contact with Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy. The largest mass arrests—about 850—occurred yesterday, filling three jails to overflowing. It took more than four hours to serve breakfast at the city's main jail today. Many of those arrested yesterday still were being processed today. Alabama Gov. George Wallace told the state legislature in Montgomery he was "beginning to tire of agitators, integrationists and others who seek to destroy law and order in Alabama." Wallace renewed his pledge to resist integration attempts in the state. Thus far, Wallace has not intervened in the Birmingham struggle. Six Pharmacy Students Get Recognition Six KU students have received awards for outstanding work in the School of Pharmacy during the past year. Rodney H. Dunlap of Hutchinson received the Rexall antique mortar and pestle trophy given to the senior with the greatest scholastic improvement. Theodore Weeks of Tonganoxie received the Johnson and Johnson mortar and pestle given to the senior with the highest in the business courses. Eva Vachal Roeder, Lawrence fourth year student, received the Merck award given to the senior with the highest scholastic standing in prescription compounding. Bonnie Eaton Grundeman of Law- rence was awarded the Lehn and Fink Gold Medal award and the Bristol award for having the highest scholarship average in the senior class. Larry D. Milne of Hiawatha was named the senior who has contributed the most to the profession. He received the American Pharmaceutical Assn. Student Branch Award of a gold key. Paula Mausolf of Hoisington was named the junior with the highest scholastic standing. She received the Rho Chi award of $25 to be used toward a trip to a pharmaceutical house next spring. Vicker's presents FOR MOTHER'S DAY — MAY 12th Lawrence's largest selection of well-chosen gifts of good taste including... Holland Pewter Swedish crystal bud vases Brass bowls and candlesticks Wooden salad bowls, trays, cheese boards High styled summer jewelry Dansk Imports Decorative accessories from the Orient Colorful place mats Scandinavian Imports Blenko colored glass bottles, vases, etc. Early American copper, ironstone, milk glass Pretty and practical aprons and towels Hummel figurines Your selection will be giftwrapped and packed for mailing with our compliments. Vicker's Gift Shop (Across from the Granada) VI 3-5585 1023 Mass.