Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 29, 1962 Photo Bureau Path Is Complete Maze By Steve Clark The KU Photo and Graphic Arts bureau, a University Extension division, is involuntarily offering a labyrinth for its patrons while the Watson Library addition is being built. If a student wishes to use the bureau facilities he follows a series of arrows. "He can't miss it," reports Ed Julian, director of the bureau. The bureau will be without a front entrance during the construction since the area between Watson and Fraser is fenced for working and safety purposes. IF A STUDENT WISHES to find the bureau, he must follow a series of arrows into the bowels of the library. "He can't miss it," reports Ed Julian, director of the bureau. To find the bureau, one enters the library at the front door then takes either right or left stairs down to the undergraduate library level. That's the easy part. And that's all that can be explained. From this point, follow the arrows and good luck. It is important not to become discouraged. But it's a discouraging job inching past musty bookshelves looking for arrows that become smaller and smaller. BUT ONCE ONE arrives, he finds himself in one of the most interesting departments at KU. From their home in the dungeons of Watson Library, photo bureau employees handle all photography, art work, layout and design of many of the University's publications. The modernistic design in dark blue on the University's new catalog is a Photo Bureau product. The smaller booklets on each of the schools were also designed there. The Bureau is constantly taking pictures of KU and its activities. Bureau services are also offered to outside groups visiting the campus. THE BUREAU IS also a valuable aid to students. Many graduate students use the Bureau to reduce charts and graphs and to lay out their theses. Art students often have reproductions made of paintings they have done or are studying. With the stress on visual teaching aids in modern instruction, the bureau prepares slides for many faculty members to supplement their lectures. The Bureau this fall prepared an exhibit, "Higher Education for a Better Tomorrow," which was displayed at the Hutchinson State Fair. The photo bureau's purpose is to serve students. It is available and willing, if one can find it. Heavy Conference Faces KU IFC Men Several busy days lie ahead to KU's four delegates to the National Inter-Fraternity Conference being held through Sunday in Pittsburgh, Pa. While attending the meeting, Big Eight delegates will meet to plan the Big Eight IFC conference to be held in the spring at Oklahoma State. Last year, KU hosted the conference The delegates Jim Carr, Carthage, Mo., senior; David Cain, Prairie Village junior; David Stinson, Lawrence junior, and Steve Stotts, Prairie Village junior, yesterday boarded a plane for the conference. The purpose of the meeting is to discuss common problems and goals which fraternity systems on different campuses face. Ideas on fraternity functions such as rush week and Greek week will be exchanged. The four will compile the ideas expressed and consider possibilities of initiating them in the KU system. Muslim Architecture Talk Set Muslim architecture will be discussed and illustrated with color slides by James E. Seaver, professor of history and director of the Western Civilization program at 7 tonight in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Rothwell to Cover British Poet's Work Kenneth Rothwell, assistant professor of English, will present readings from British poet John Betjeman in his discussion of "Works of the Modern Poet" at the Poetry Hour at 4:30 today in the Kansas Union music room. FAST FINISHED Laundry Service Prof. Rothwell said that the Anglican church and Victorian architecture were the two main themes which dominate most of Betjeman's poetry. RISK'S 613 Vermont 613 Vermont LONDON — (UPI) — Sir Winston Churchill's 88th birthday rolls around tomorrow and the venerable statesman's family and friends are delighted at the opportunity of stressing his age. Winnie Still Tough at 88 "Happy 88th birthday," they will say — and hope the hint sinks in. For the old man is feeling so well at the moment that he tends to forget his years. "FRANKLY." said a friend today, "we are afraid he may over extend himself. He has got to be reminded of his great age and a birthday is a fine and natural time for doing just that. We wouldn't dare do it at any other time." Sir Winston is clumping around his town house in Hyde Park Gate on a cane these days fretting because the doctors do not think him quite ready for a journey to the sun of the French Riviera. His continuing recovery from a broken thigh bone suffered in a fall in Monte Carlo last June is remarkable, but Sir Winston is convinced the leg will be completely normal if he can only bask in the sunshine for a few hours a day — a forlorn hope in the cold rain and mists of an English winter. "He is keeping the pressure on," said the friend, "so I suppose they won't be able to hold him here much after the first of the year." SIR WINSTON is making one important change in routine this year as a result of the leg injury. He will not attend the annual sing-song of his public school, Harrow-on-the-Hill, thus breaking a tradition extending back 21 years into the worst days of the war. These are emotional occasions with the boys of the school, in starched white-collars and black mess jackets, singing to Sir Winston the songs he himself sang when he was a student nearly 75 years ago. But the old statesman cannot yet maneuver on his own the long walk and the steps from the road PLEASE! SEE IT FROM THE VERY START! AT 7:00 AND 9:10 into the ancient auditorium of the school and apparently he does not want the boys to see him carried or wheeled to the dias. The 88th birthday celebration will be a simple affair at the town house with only family and a few close friends present. Now Showing! Limited Engagement "Words Are Completely Insufficient To Express The True Quality And Extent Of Eloquence Got Into This Picture!" THERE MAY BE a surprise guest — the youngest member of the Churchill clan, Sir Winston's first great grand-child, Mark Dixon. He will be only two weeks old but Sir Winston is anxious to see him. Mark is the grandson of Diana Churchill and her former husband, commonwealth and colonial minister Duncan Sandusk. BOSLEY CROWTHER, NEW TORK TIMES Rita Tushingham Winner Best Performance Award Cannes Film Festival 1962 Murray Melvin Winner Best Performance Award Cannes Film Festival 1982 Winner of 4 British Academy Awards Performances 7 and 9 Adm. $1.00 Sir Winston spends his time reading, playing beizque (a card game) with friends and lunching and dining with a few old cronies. He no longer writes or paints but he pays close attention to his many business affairs, including Paramount Pictures' effort to screen his early life under the title: "Heart of the Lion." Sir Winston packed so much living into his first 25 years, the period covered by the proposed film, that Paramount is having trouble squeezing it into two and a half hours. Before his election to parliament as a national hero in 1900 he covered and fought in several campaigns as the highest paid war correspondent of his time, took part in the last cavalry charge in British military history at Omdurman — he is the last surviving officer — and made a spectacular escape from the Boers in the war with South Africa. Produced and directed by TONY RICHARDSON A Comprehensive Distributing Inc. Adults Only! DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway 40 A HAMMER-FILM PRODUCTION - A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL RELEASE NEXT - ATTRACTION - VARSITY THEATRE . . . . . Telephones VIVIMS 3-1065 HOLLYWOOD PREVIEW ENGAGEMENT Sister, sister, oh so fair, why is there blood all over your hair? "WHAT EVER HAPPENED To BABYJANE?" For ment and 920 1 3200 Bette Davis and Joan Crawford One STARTS A 2 pus burn Full mont 5 p. WB Warner Bros. - SATURDAY • GRANADA 1310 ready gentle 2-roo ment 5:30 2 be carpchoice Phor Vacarary bath week Why on t 1245 lent and ment Free TREATRE . . . . . 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