Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 15, 1956. Council Offers Eastern Tour The Kansas Council on World Affairs will sponsor an educational tour for high school students to New York and Washington, D.C., in late April, Dr. Clifford P. Ketzel, associate professor of political science, said today. Dr. Ketzel is a member of the Kansas council's executive committee. Robert V. Kester of the William Allen White Library at Emporia is the council's director. The Kansas high school group will begin the week-long chaperoned tour at Kansas City, Mo., April 29 and return May 5. Highlights of the tour include a reception in their honor by Sen. Frank Carlson (R-Kan.) and Kansas Congressmen, a special briefing on State Department foreign policy in Washington, a tour of National Broadcasting company television studios, sitting in on the United Nations General Assembly, and a vacht trip around Manhattan Island. They will meet Dr. Ralph Bunche, assistant secretary-general for the UN, for a briefing on that organization. Dr. Bunche spoke at the University of Kansas at an all-student convocation in 1953. Lutheran Students Elect KU Woman Mary Swedlund, Salina junior, was elected president of the Lutheran Student Association Midwest Region at the Leadership Training Conference, at Lincoln, Neb., Saturday and Sunday. Miss Swedlund is vice president of the University Lutheran Association. Those who attended the conference were Marianne Anderson, Lawrence junior; John Wilkinson, 1st year law student of Cherryvale; Martha Crosier, Lawrence freshman; Charles Clutz, Rochester, N.Y., freshman, and Miss Swedlund. Merchant Talks On Home Fabrics "Material for the home and clothing styles coincide," Kenneth Jennings, Lawrence department store operator, said Tuesday at the Design and Industrial Design clubs meeting. Mr. Jennings returned from the annual Chicago Furniture Show last week. He showed samples of the latest materials for drapes and coverings, and demonstrated new colors being sold this year. He compared samples of home decorations and clothing styles. Taste, shade, and tone are essential in the comparison, Mr. Jennings said. Radio Engineers To Have Dinner The Institute of Radio Engineers, Kansas chapter of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, will hold a dinner meeting 6 p.m. Thursday at the Dine-A-Mite. A speaker from the Bendix Aviation Corporation will be heard at 7:30 p.m. in room 201 of the Electrical Engineering labs. Electrical engineering students including freshmen wanting dinner reservations should call Marion F. Moon, Pratt senior, at VI3-7405 by Wednesday night. TOPEKA—(U.P.)—Kansas' improving road safety record was bolstered by another 24 hours of deathless driving, the state accident records bureau said today. Since the start of 1955, Kansas had one per cent in Kansas over the same period last year. The toll is 56 compared with 67 on this date in 1955. Kansas Death Rate Down Pearson To Speak In Topeka TOFEKA—(U, P.)—Washington columnist Drew Pearson will speak here Tuesday before the Topeka Knife and Fork Club. Latest estimates indicate North Dakota has 52,942 farms with central station electric service, or 84.4 per cent of the farms in the state. The Wagon Wheel says Hours 10-12 Every Day THANKS FOR COMING TO OUR OPENING Try One of Our WAGON WHEEL SPECIAL CLUB STEAKS HOME MADE CHILI HOME MADE PIE On the 14th street hill between Ohio and Louisiana The "Hub of the Hill" CHEMISTRY: Radioactive tracers determine effectiveness of solvent extraction in purification of mermanium tetrachloride, later processed into metal. PHYSICS: X-rays of metals show specific pattern for each material. They are used to identify impurities. Here a sample is positioned for careful analysis. **METALLURGY:** Burial uranium strip for fabrication into fuel elements. 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