Page 3 All You Need Is Beauty In Miss Beautyrama Contest Miss Beautyrama will be crowned at the "Beautyrama" show in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium May 12 through May 15. There is no age limit and the entrant may be married or single. Entrants should send a spare photograph (none can be returned) with the following information on the back: Name and address, phone number, measurement of hips, bust, and waist, and height. A lock of hair should also be included so the girl can be judged in the proper color division of blonde, brunette, and redhead. The only requirement needed to win the contest is beauty. The information should be sent to Beautyrama, P.O. Box 755, Kansas City, Mo., by midnight Monday, April 23. Staged by the beauty industry at the invitation of the Katz Drug Company, the show will consist of hundreds of interesting exhibits and such outstanding stars of motion pictures and TV as Zsa Zsa Gabor, Hal March, Dennis James, Hoag Carmichael, Morton Downey, Mitch Miller and many others. Stephens Elected To Photo Office John Stephens, Stafford junior was elected national vice president of Kappa Alpha Mu. professional photography fraternity, at the annual KAM national convention at the University of Oklahoma, during the spring vacation. A photograph by Tom Siegfried, Independence, Mo., junior, will be included in a college photography course on display at the Student Union. Siegfried's "Night Light" is a picture of Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy's home at night with Christmas tree lights. Water from melting glaciers irrigates rice paddies in Nepal. Farmers stir the mud with wooden plows but leave the sowing and reaping to their wives. Law Queen Deadline Due "The thing speaks for itself" is the translation of the latin title which will be bestowed upon the queen of the Law School during Law Day activities Friday. Miss Res Ipsa Loquitr will be selected from candidates nominated by organized women's houses. Judges will choose three finalists at 10:30 a.m. in Green Theater. The queen will be crowned at the banquet at 7 p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom. Wednesday is the deadline for entries which should be submitted to Herbert Horowitz, Kansas City, Mo., second-year law student, queen committee chairman. Coffee Hour Series Has New Program "Behind the Ivy," a new addition to the coffee hour series sponsored by the Student Union Activities, will begin with Reginald G. Hennessy, library staff, talking about "Rare Books" at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Music Room of the Student Union. The programs for the rest of the semester are: April 18, James E. Seaver, associate professor of history, "Opera recordings"; April 25, Edward A. Maser, director of the Art Museum, "Museum of Art"; May 2, John J. Taller, instructor of drawing and painting, "Etchings," and May 9, Milton B. Howarth, instructor of speech, "Set Designing." Grad Named GM Executive Victor P. Matthews, 1926 graduate of the School of Business, was in charge of the salaried personnel school of General Motors in Detroit, Mich. Summer Study Awards Offered An opportunity for a vacation combined with a conference on public affairs has been offered to students by the Summer Institute for Social Progress. The Institute will hold its 24th annual meeting at Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, from June 29 to July 13. University Daily Kansan The scholarships for students will cover board, room and tuition. The students must pay travel expenses and a small conference fee. Applications may be obtained in 304 Fraser. The Institute was established in 1833 to provide a place where private citizens could counsel with experts from various fields and exchange ideas and points of view. Lectures and round tables are alternated with free time for tennis, folk dancing, swimming, informal parties, and teas. Among the speakers who will be discussing this year's theme "Behind the Campaign Headlines" are Herbert Block, cartoonist of the Washington Post and Times Herald; His Excellency G. L. Mehta, Ambassador of India to the United States; and Mrs. John G. Lee, president of the League of Women Voters of the United States. KC Star Writer To Be Honored Nell Snead, writer on the staff of The Kansas City Star, will be the honored guest at the Matrix Table of the Kansas City alumnae chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism fraternity for women. The dinner will be held at 7 p.m. Saturday, April 21 at the Hotel Muehlebach in Kansas City, Mo. It will commemorate the founding of Theta Sigma Phi in 1909. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Gordon W. McKenzie, 4608 West 62nd Terrace, Mission. Tuesday, April 10, 1956. Awards Offered To Students Active In Inter-Faith Work A special committee, authorized by the University Committee on Aids and Awards, has been established to distribute awards and scholarships to students active in the advancement of inter-faith relations. Scholarships to summer interfaith institutes are being sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews, the Lisle Fellowship, and other inter-faith institutes and work camps. The awards will be from $25 to $75. Funds for the awards will be provided by B'nai B'rith Hiliel Foundations, national organization of the Jewish faith. Applications for scholarship aid and nominations for awards should be sent to the Methodist Student Center, 1314 Oread, not later than Friday, April 20. Members of the committee distributing the awards are Robert Sokal, assistant professor of entomology, the Rev. Harold G. Barr, To be eligible, the applicant must be a student regularly enrolled this school year. He must return for regularly enrolled work in 1956-57. Professional leaders of the religious groups working among students have application blanks. Blanks and additional information may be secured at the Methodist Student Center. Theta Sigma Phi Elects Officers Theta Sigma Phi, professional fraternity for women in journalism has elected officers for 1956-57. They are Jane Pecinovsky, Kansas City, Mo., junior, president; Barbara Bell, McPherson junior, vice president; Virginia Bartlett, Hutchinson junior, secretary; Margaret Armstrong, Westfield, N.J., junior, treasurer; Joan George, Caney junior, keeper of archives, and Felecia Fenberg, Kansas City, Mo., junior, social chairman. dean of the School of Religion, and the Rev. Edwin F. Price of the School of Religion. YOU'LL BOTH GO FOR THIS CIGARETTE! T.V. Wiggles WE CURE THEM Expert Radio Service BIRD TV-RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. 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