Page 7 -Classified Ads- day 50c 25 words less three five days days 75c $1.00 rooms. Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in the morning or later, and sundays for the issues of Friday and Tuesday, or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business office. Flint Hall. BUSINESS SERVICES If you are looking for someone to do your alteration, shortening your coat, dress or styling, call VI-326-6075 for appointment. First class insurance, guaranteed. 842 Indiana. df LIVE GIFTS - Ninjigateau Canary Singers, Parakeets, all colors from sunny Texas-complete stocks of cages and stands, fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs, beds, fish, pets for hawks, fish, Fish, Turtles, Chameleons, Hamsters, etc. Everything in the Pet Field. Grant's Phone and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. Phone VI 3-2321. tf TYPIST-Experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist. 1935arker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Theses, term papers, reports, given immediate attention. Faculty accumate at college Fax: Glinka, 1911 Tennessee tf Phone VI:3-1240 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine, Phone V1-73-5645. tt DRESSMAKING—Formals, alterations- Wedding gowns. Ola Smith 9411 Mass. 848 West 76th St. Chicago, IL 60615 TYPING: Themes, reports, reports, etc. Reasonable rates. 1738 La. VI 3-5275, Mt. CABINET maker and finisher. Antique and modern cabinets on bottom. shop at £25 Aluminum 3-128s 6-170x135mm DRIVER'S License renewals at 15 E 7th St. (across south from Post Office). Secure our renewal before your appointment. 9-4:30 weeks. Saturday 9-12. 2-13 TRANSPORTATION MUSICAL arranger wanted for "pop" quartet and dance band. Steady or part time work. Pay depends on quality of work. Call Dou Huff. VI 3-5144- 2-16 WANT Ride from K.C. to KU daily, Will John Wolger, engineering student, 2-14 John Wolger, engineering student, 2-14 WANT ride or riders, or car pool to 6 p.m. Call VI 3-0850 for p.m. 2-15 3-0850 RIGKETS to anywhere by airplane, creamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Visit www.skycoach.com for details. National Bank for free pamphlets and information for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phones VI 3-012f. ARLINE reservations and tickets, tourist (coach) and first class, or family vacation. Call hotel and ship accommodations. Hotel and resort reservations. See your experienced, full-time travel agency, Tom Maupin Travel Travel House 1238 Marriott phone V3-121-71 Commuting to and from Kansas City Interested in car pool. Wabash 3-35433 MISCELLANEOUS WILL anyone see hit-and-run accident involving parked car in 1100 block on Mississippi Wednesday morning, Feb. 8; please call VI 3-1517 after p. 6.2-14. LOST LOST: Brown leather purse. Room 103 Green. Jan. 16th. Need Driver's License and I.D. card. Glenda McFerrin. VI-3- 1100. Anyone having any information leading to the recovery of my Bach trumpet no. 14016, taken from the locker in Hoch, Hella Anderson at VT3-14018. 2-17 PICKED UP wrong overcoat at Dine- A-Mite Saturday night, Feb. 4. One I would like to exchange a coat, worth. Will exchange for mine. John Harper, 1541 Tenn. VI 3-310- 2-13 FOUND FOR RENT FOR RENT: One single and one double room for men students available for second semester. 1135 Ohio, Phone VI-2838. FOR RENT: Attractive single room. Linens furnished. Share bath with one man. Private entrance. 1638 Indiana. VI 3-7198. 2-13 FOR RENT. 3-room furnished apart- ment on bus line. Extra clean. Nice, two or couple. Laundry privileges if desired. Vi II VI 3-7830 $55 monthly. All bills paid. FOR RENT: 2-bedroom furnished house. Med. Kitchen. March 1, $75. Phone: 304-768-5060. Mobile: 304-768-5061. FOR RENT: To a graduate girl student. Son's second floor room. 1245 Oread. Son's fourth floor room. 1390 Oread. COMFORTABLE. well-furnished room for gentleman, next to bed, spacious closet. Will rent double. 938 Missouri. 2-15 FOR RENT: Single room close to campus. 1406 TEMI. VI 3-5658. 2-14 FOR RENT. Rooms for boys 15; blocks furnished. St. Danius, VI. 3-18-3. Furnished. St. Danius, VI. 3-18-3. FOR RENT: Room and board or room. Single beds. Linens not furnished. Close to campus and bus. 1138 Mississippi. VI 3-1572. 2-16 BOY'S first floor single room, and basement kitchen, near University and bus line. $25 to approved applicant. Phone VI 3-4927 (a.m.) . 2-14 NOW ENDS WEDNESDAY FOR SALE FOR SALE: Excellent 2-bedroom home in one desirable Southfacing location, on the first floor of a high-end FOR SALE: 1853 Studebaker Commander FOR Hardtop, fully equipped with overdrive transmission. Call Frevert at VI- 3-8544. 2-15 FOR SALE: 3FACTICAL: Practically new Woofl CALL Bill Lindsay, VI 3-79225 regs 21-48 Call Bill Lindsay, VI 3-79225 regs 21-48 SHOWS 2-7-9 Neff Denies Gift To Case WASHINGTON — (U.P.)—Oil company attorney John M. Neft, who tried to give Sen. Francis Case a $2,500 campaign contribution, testified pday that he had not contributed to any other senator's personal campaign funds in connection with the natural gas bill. He gave this testimony as a blue ribbon Senate committee investigating the contribution wound up its hearings at least for the present. The special committee, headed by Sen. Walter F. George (D-Ga.) recessed its investigation "indefinitely" after hearing Mr. Neff. A small fire in the basement of the Delta Upsilon fraternity house in West Hills Feb. 11 caused little damage when an overstuffed chair caught fire. The blaze was extinguished by fraternity members shortly before a fire truck arrived. No extensive damage was done. DU Chair Catches Fire Longer-lasting and more comfortable shoes may result from research on vegetable-tanned leather insoles done by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. University Daily Kansan 20th CENTURY-FOX presents TOM EWELL SHEREE NORTH ADDED: BUGS BUNNY CARTOON—NEWS Students who are withdrawn for nonpayment of fees must pay a reinstatement fee of $5, a late fee penalty of 10% to the regular fees, to be rerolled. 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 Bulletin material to the Daily Kansan. No longer should the Daily Kansan, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Fees for the spring semester of 1956 are due and payable at the business office or through the building, picked up in the basement of Strong Hall according to the following schedule: A penalty of $2 a day for the late payment of fees goes into effect beginning on Feb. 16, whose enrollment of any student whose fee is paid by Monday, Feb. 20, will be canceled. Students whose fees are paid from scholarship funds, or from other out-going sources, must present and bring them to the business office according to the above schedule, to avoid payment of the late fee penalty, or withdrawal from school for nonpayment of the fee. Newman Club rosary, 5:10 p.m. St John's Church. KU Dames, 8 p.m. University Women's Lounge, Spoon-Thayer Museum. Get-acquainted Valentine Party. All student wives and students' wings invited. A, B, C, D, E, F today G, H, I, J, K, L today M, N, O, P, Q, R Wednesday S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z Thursday Schedule of Fee Payment Foreign students and International Club dance lessons, 7-9 p.m. Student Home Economics Club, 7 p.m., 110 Fraser. Speakers: Miss Elizabeth McCune and Mrs. Mary Jane Horner. "Feeding A Nation." Student Union, 12:30-12:50 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Devotions and prayers. Newman Club rosary, 5:10 p.m., St. John's Church. International Club meeting, 7.30 p.m. 615 Louisiana St. (home of Prof. J. Lortham) Mary will be shown and can be ordered Refreshments. CCUN steering committee, 4 p.m., office. Student Union. Design and Interior Design Clubs, 7:30 p.m., 305A Student Union. Speaker: Kenneth Jennings. "The Chicago Market." Pre-Nursing Club meeting, 7:15 p.m. 110 Fraser. Social hour to get acquainted. Refreshments. All pre-nursing students invited. Wednesday Gamma Alpha Chi, 7:15 p.m., 207 Flint Newman Club, mass. 6:30 a.m. missa. recitazione chair practice. 7:30 p.m. rosary. massa. Morning meditations. 7:30-7:50 a.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome. Poetry Hour, 4 p.m. Music room. Student Room: Lowell. Read: Nat- tural Lawyer Psychology Club. 7:30 p.m., Parlor A. Student Union. Speakers: Mr. and Mrs. John Gullahorn. "American Students in France." Everyone welcome. YM-YWCMA Bible study, 4 p.m. Oread Room. Speaker: Mr. L. S. Florence. "The Spirit as Recognized by a Jehovah's Witness." Everyone welcome. Newman Club mass, 6:30 a.m. H., 5:10 p.m. H., 5:10 p.m. H., St. John's Church; Holy H., 7:30 p.m. Executive meeting immediately after Holy H., nominations for new Sigma XI—Kansas chapter, 7:30 p.m. Spikerer Prof. G. Jenkins "Genesis of a life in" Sigma XI—Kansas chapter, 7:30 p.m. Chess Club, 7:30 p.m., Oread Room. Student Union. Beginners to experts. An elaborate Jocomotive and car-testing plant is being constructed on British Railways to obtain exact information of the performance of rolling stock at a wide range of speed in all weather and track conditions. Tulane, Brown Universities To Try New Honor Codes NEW ORLEANS —(U.P.) A new honor code and constitution have been written for the College of Arts and Sciences at Tulane University The constitutional revision, the first since 1939, was designed to fit in with the new student body constitution. The honor board has been increased from seven to nine members. The president of the university will designate a chairman to be approved by the Student Council. Four members of the honor board will serve on an examination board to collect evidence, secure witnesses, and prepare cases. Penalties for honor violations have been modified. Under the new code, punishment can range from loss of credit in one course to expulsion. "Under the new system, we won't be lenient with flagrant offenders, but lesser offenders will not be over severely punished due to the low inflexibility of the rules." the committee chairman said. "The fairness of the code will give conscientious students the opportunity to uphold and defend the honor system of their college without jeopardizing either themselves or their fellow students." The faculty board will still' review Honor Board decisions. They can accept the students' decision or ask that it be reconsidered. In Providence, R.I., the faculty of Brown University has agreed to institute a student-administered honor code. This system will especially include unproctored examinations. This is the first time such a system has been tried at Brown. Although the faculty has approved it, the measure must still have the approval of 75 per cent of the classes. The dean of the University said that three years ago he would not have approved of unproctored examinations, but he feels that students today are "more responsible." The Brown faculty agreed to the measure on the conditions that a faculty member be on hand at the beginning of the examination to answer any questions, and that a student be appointed to collect the examination papers at the end of the class and to "handle any emergency which would ordinarily fall within jurisdiction of the instructor in charge." Ouill Club To Hear Speaker Guest lecturer at the Quill Club meeting at 7.15 p.m. Thursday in the Pine Room of the Student Union will be Miss Caroline Gordon, visiting professor of English. She will speak on "How Not to Write a Short Story." In 1856, James Buchanan received the Democratic nomination and won the election, gaining 174 electoral votes to 114 for John C. Fremont, Republican candidate. Senior's Exhibit Now On Display Drawings and paintings by Barbara Beers Spainhour, Lawrence senior, are on display in a graduation exhibit on the third floor of Strong Hall. French Club To Meet The exhibit consists of representa- tive work in drawing and painting from each of her academic years. It includes ink and pencil sketches, water colors, pastels, and oil paintings. The exhibit will continue this week. Mrs. Spainhour will return to the University in the fall to begin work on her master's degree. Her sales include a line drawing to The New Yorker. The French Club will have a regular meeting at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in 113 Strong. Philippe Hieronimus, Paris, France, graduate student, will give the program. Norway's retail sales value in the first half of 1955 was six per cent higher than in the corresponding period of 1954. VARSITY THEATRE OF THE WORLD ENDS TONITE 7:00-9:00 "We're No Angels" —schedule— WEEK DAYS OPEN 6:30 START 6:45 FEATURE 7:00–9:15 NOW THRU TUESDAY (French) "Holiday For Henrietta" HILDEGARDE NEFF PANGBURNS