Retired health service director dies Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service at the University of Kansas from 1928 until his retirement in 1965, died early Tuesday morning at his home. Canuteson, a native of Wisconsin, volunteered and served two years in the Army infantry in World War I. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1924 and received the doctor of medicine degree from the University of Minnesota in 1926. In 1928 Canuteson came to KU to organize the first major student health service, which was made possible by the building of He pioneered many innovations in this field, and his services were recognized in 1965 when he bea student hospital by Mrs. Elizabeth M. Watkins. Apr. 2 1970 KANSAN 13 came the fourth person to receive the Hitchcock award of the American College Public Health Association. He also served that organization for four years as secretary-treasurer and three years as president. He was president of the Kansas TB and Health Association from 1951 to 1963 and served as president of the Mississippi Valley Conference on TB and of the Trudeau Society. He was also a board member of the National TB Association for 20 years. Canutelson was active in the fight against tuberculosis and was among the first to make skin tests and chest X-rays a routine part of student physical examinations. Canuteson was the recipient of the Samuel J. Crumbine Medial of the Kansas Public Health Association in 1956, and in 1962 he received the Hoyt E. Dearbolt Memorial Medal of the Mississippi Valley Conference on tuberculosis. Canuteson was one of the organizers and the first president of the Kansas Heart Association. He is survived by his wife. He is survived by his wife. INVENT A SLOGAN • WIN A PRIZE "Whatever Your Cause, It's a Lost Cause Unless We Control Population" That's the best population slogan we've been able to come up with. Can you top it? A citation and an honorarium of $10 from the best slogan turned in to the advertising team for paper before the forthcoming Environmental Teach in on Earth Day, April 22. The winning slogan from this campus is eligible to compete for the national $500 PRIZE to be awarded for the best slogan prepared by a student on any of the 215 campuses where this ad is appearing Rules Simply derive a brief state. ment of the importance and urgency of checking population growth — to the extent of peace. Send it on or before April 22 to this newspaper addressed "Population Watch" at http://populationwatch.org, three members of this paper's staff appointed by the ad manager. All designee must be eligible for big national prize; to be judged by Paul Ehrlich, David Brown. Write your slogan today. One entry per student. For free literature on population explosion, write Hugh Moore Fund, 60 E. 42nd, New York 10017. "As far as I'm concerned, The DRAUGHT HOUSE is going to be the PLACE to groove this FRIDAY and SATURDAY night. TOGETHER will lay some really heavy vibrations on your far out ears and you can really get down and Do Your Thing. Now don't forget, FRIDAY and SATURDAY groove with 'TOGETHER' Can you dig it? $1.00 ADMISSION $1.00 PER PITCHER 8:00 to 12:00 804 W.24th