Page 7 arrings, voli- During enh, in- argu- University Daily Kansan fornia led by a. The report fornia. gram user to e 1951 of the radio -Classified Ads- BUSINESS SERVICES Terris. Cash. Phone orders are accepted on the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in before 12 noon. Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Tuesday, or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office, Flint Hall. LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary Singers, Parakeets, all colors from sunny Texas - complete stocks of cages and stands, fresh foods and toys. Complete tufts for dogs, grooming tips for canines, fillings, Fish, Turtles, Chameleons, Hamsters, etc. Everything in the Pet Field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone VI 3-2921. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Theses, term papers, reports, given immediate attention, accurate service at request to Miles.琳ika, 1911 Tennessee ff Phone III-12400 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Mainge, Phone V-37-6544. tf TYPING: Experienced. Fast and accurate; reports, theses, etc. Regular rates. Call Barbara Carrier at VI 3-5879. tf TYPING: Themes. theses, reports, etc. receiving rates. 1736 La Vi 3-5275. Mhrr. Ethniz. languagesMAKING-Formals; alterations- Wedding gowns. Ola Smith, 941% Mass. CABINET maker and finisher. Antique machines available in the shop at 623 Alhambra M i 3-1288, f and shop at 623 Alhambra M i 3-1288, f AT MOM'S. 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. 7:55-2 meals. 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. 7:55-2 CYCLONE Fence needs Commission Man in your community. Excellent opportunity for part time sales. Write CYCLONE FENCE, United States Steel Corp., 1401 Fairfax Trafficway, Kansas City, Kansas. 3-2 PORTRAITS TINTED ...reasonable Your patronage will be my education. Satisfaction guaranteed. 2501 Montana or Phone VI-30369 after 5 p.m. FOR RENT FOR RENT: Furnished apt. no children 1 or 2 adults. VI 3-0439. 2-27 FOR RENT - Sleeping room. Clean, nice. FOR heat. Private entrance. Telephone. On bus line near KU. $14.50 per month. Limousine furnished. Room kept VI. 9-27 V. 9-27 FOR RENT: Well-furnished studio apartment. Suitable for advanced student or faculty. Private entrance. 3½ blocks from campus. Reasonable rent. Call T12-328 Two-room furnished second-floor apartment. One room furnished apartment, both at 1310 Kentucky. Utilities paid—no pets. Call VI 3-0556. 2-28 FOR RENT: Large room for man Nice, room for woman Nice, or dinner hour, 2213 Vermont. FOR RENT: 3 single rooms with ice box, 2 blocks of stairs from campus. 1229 OHIO. VI.3-1389. FOR RENT: Young couple wishes to rent 2 second floor bedrooms. Double $17.50 per person, single $20. Semi-private. Lance furniture furnished. Bedside beds. furnished. Room kept. Can see starting Monday after 6 p.m. Close to campus, 707 W. 12th. 2-29 Sleeping room and bachelor apartment. Large close-to-newly decorated—entrance. CV VI 3-4591 after 5:30 p.m. or anytime Saturday. 940 Indiana. 3-2 FIRST floor apartment for boys, Furnished nicely. Private bath. Private ence. Call VI 3-7990 or VI 3-8741. 2-29 FOR RENT: 3-room furnished apt. first floor. Utilities paid. 1399 Ohio. VI 3-7284. 3-2 TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day tours. Call Miss Rose Glossen at the Fire Brigade Battery for pamphlets and information for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mast. Phone VI 3-0125. tf ATRILEIN reservations and tickets, tourist (coach) and first class, or family travel (car), as well as ship accommodations. Hotel and resort reservations. See your experienced, full-time travel agency. Tom Mamip Travel Service Office, 128 Madison St, VI 3-1211. FOR SALE: Desk and Furniture tops. Glass blocks and mirrors. Auto Glass. Free Estimates. Call Wilson Window and Glass, VI 3-6136. 512 East 9th. 2-27 FOR SALE Medical Microscope. New, one-year written guarantee 2/3 market price. If interested, write to Ronald Chen, Kansas University Medical Center, KC3, Kansas. one copy "Money and Banking" by one bank of the condition. Contact D Kansan. KU 767 Blow out your brains ... drive your room mate mad! Olds Recording Trombone. like new. Deluxe 'case. Call Don Inde afternoons. VI 3-1620. 1428 Ohio. 3-2 MISCELLANEOUS 1000 books. Open Thursday from 4 till 8 only choice $15c-71_{2}^{1}\mathrm{Mass}$ . 3-2 Journalism School Included In Study The William Allen White School of Journalism has been included in a study of instruction program development and related changes in 40 of the nation's leading schools of journalism. The study, covering the journalism training units that had been accredited by the American Council of Education for Journalism by 1951, was written as a thesis for the State University of Iowa by James H. Herring. Areas studied were course offerings, buildings and laboratory facilities, faculty, enrollment and graduates, and miscellaneous changes. Graduate Club Lists Lecture Series The first of a series of bi-monthly lectures, sponsored by the Graduate Club, will be held at 8 p.m. today in the Fine Room of the Student Union. The Symposium on "Religion and Human Relations," will be discussed by a panel including DeWitt Baldwin, Religious Emphasis Week speaker; Ranendra Sinha, graduate student from Calcutta, India; Kay Kerr, Pittsburgh, Pa., graduate student, and Destama DeWilde, graduate student from Brussels, Belgium. Topics to be discussed at future lectures are "Brain Trust" with questions asked by the audience, "Freudism—Variety of Interpretations," and "Prospects of Automation." In San Salvador, a motorist who injures a person in an accident in which the driver is at fault must stay in jail until the victim recovers. More than half of the nation's service stations have part-time employees. Universal International presents JANE WYMAN ROCK HUDSON COLOR CARTOON-NEWS NOW SHOWING Ui MAT. 2 P.M.-EVE. 7-9 DIAL VI3-5788 Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletins should impress the Daily Kansan. Notices should include the name, place, date, and time of release. Mathematical Colloquium, 4 p.m. 233 Strong Hall. Speaker: Prof. Chai Yeh. An Approximate Approach for Solving and Nonlinear Differential Equations. Religious Emphasis Week keynote assembly, 4 p.m. Strong. Auditorium. Speaker with health benefit. This basis for Health Co-operation." Detail Baldwin. "Crucial Issues of Our Time." Newman club, mass. 6:30 a.m. m. missa rectita; Rosary. 5:10 p.m. St John's church. Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Danforth Chapel, Holly Communion, 7 a.m. Today Graduate Club, 8 p.m., Fine Room. Speakers: Dewitt C. Baldwin, Dr. Ranendra Saha, Kany Kerr, Lue DeWilde, Boydunion on Religion and Human Relations." Seminar, 9 a.m., north of cafeteria Speaker: Ann Amimmerman, Limi- tary Director Seminar, 10 a.m., south lounge of the Ursula Building in Helmich 'Are The Degrees of Morality' Morning meditations, 7:30-7:50 a.m. Danforth Chapel. Seminar. 10 a.m. Pine Room. Speaker: Cathleen Religion in the Life of the Business Man." Faculty luncheon, noon, alcove, Student Union Cafeteria. Speaker: Rev. Milton McLean. "The Bases for Inter-religious Co-operation." Baptist Student Union, 12:30-12:50 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Devotions and prayer. Reception. Speaker: Ben F. Sage. "Should the Church Be a Lobby Organization?" Seminar. 4 p.m. Trophy Room. Dr. Charles Kemp. "Psychology of Skeletal." Alpha Phi Omega, 7:30 p.m., office. Alpha Phi Omega, 10:45 a.m., officers and committee chairmen attend. CCUN steering committee, 4 p.m., office, Union. Math Club, 4 p.m., 203 Strong Speaker Mr. Harry Nelson. KU Dames bridge group, 7:30 p.m. Thien CCUN, 7:30 p.m., Room 305A, Union Speaker: Herman Chubb. "Recent International Political Changes." Slides. Coffee will be served. Thursday *Poetry Hour.* 4 p.m. *Union Music* *translation.* Reader: Sidney Johnson *translation.* Reader: Sidney Johnson Le Cercle Francais se reunit à jeudi a 4 le 13 mai et long en anglaise. Chansons françaises. The state game farm on the old Darlington Indian agency site near El Reno, Okla. is the largest quail hatchery in the world. JAYHAWKER CUSTOMIZED CHAIRS NOW THRU WED. 2:00-7:00-9:00 Howard Keel—Ann Blyth NEWS—CARTOON "Double Or Mutton" WARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD NOW 7:00-9:00 DANNY KAYE "COURT JESTER" News - Cartoon "Rocket Squad" Watch for Play Date COMING SOON A Tiny Oasis In A Desert, 16 Feminine Engineers The ratio is great, but the classes get lonesome. That is the concensus of opinion of the 16 women students in the School of Engineering and Architecture. The general opinion of the women is that it is a little bit embarrassing at times to be greatly outnumbered by the men, but very interesting. All the female students agreed the hardest part of adjustment was during the freshman year, when their classes were filled with men. By the second year they were used to the situation. Mary Jo Schlotterback, Ellis senior, "I never really stopped to think about it. I am used to it now so it loesn't bother me anymore. They ust treat me like one of the boys." Carol Barber, Chanute freshman, "I find it a little embarrassing at times. Everybody has been real nice and smart," she said, "but more it in more of my classes." Donna Walker, Wichita freshman, said, "There should be more girls. I get lonesome because I am the only girl in all my classes. How- ever, I like the ratio." Marjorie Heard, Russell senior. "I think the ratio is just fine. The boys have been perfect, and I have no complaints. Every now and then someone slips and says something that he shouldn't have. Usually the boy who slipped gets more embarrassed than I." Prissie Schartz, Ellinwood sophomore, "The first semester is a little embarrassing, but after that, you get used to it. During my freshman year, I had only one girl in all my classes, and that was in Descriptive Geometry." Mary Jane Laird, Holly Springs, Miss. "No comment." special attention of Chemistry Club Hears Talk Several insurance companies cffer non-drinkers sharp rate reductions for automobile liability and collision insurance. A great future in gaseous chromatography was predicted by Dr. Leonard Sorge, chief chemist at the Standard Oil Refinery, Sugar Creek, Mo., in a speech to the Chemistry Club recently. ENGINEERS AND ELECTRICAL PHYSICISTS FEBRUARY 29 HUGHES RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT LABORATORIES Culver City, Los Angeles County, California-Tucson, Arizona HUGHES ANNOUNCES OPENINGS ON ITS STAFFS FOR THOSE RECEIVING B.S. M.S. OR PH.D. DEGREES DURING THE COMING YEAR, MEMBERS OF THE HUGHES ENGINEERING BAFT. WILL CONDUCT PERSONAL INVESTIGATION. CONSULT YOUR SCHOOL FLAGEMENT OFFICE NOW FOR APPOINTMENT. OPENINGS ARE IN THESE FIELDS: for work in RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT Airborne Radar Systems, Servomechanisms, Computers, Systems Analysis, Guided Misless Systems, Automatic Controls, Physical Analysis, Microwave Tubes, Pulse Circuits, Information Theory, Ground Radar Systems, Solid-State Physics, Transistors, Test Equipment Design, Miniization, Electromechanical Design, Gyros, Hydraulics, Subminitization, Mechanical Design, Instrumentation, Telemetry, Antennas, Wave Guides for work in OTHER AREAS Technical Writing, Missile Field Engineering, Engineering Administration, Radar© Missile Instruction, Radar Field Engineering, Patent Law,