Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 10, 1955 1st Science Camp Planned R. C. Mills, professor of biochemistry, will direct the first science camp for high school students to be held at the University next June. Assistant director will be David Paretsky, associate professor of bacteriology. Enrollment in the two-week course will be limited to 80 high school students. They will be selected from applications to the University and upon recommendation of their high school science teachers. Besides hearing staff members from the 12 University science departments speak on their fields, the students will do laboratory work in each department and take field trips. The science students will be housed in the same buildings and have the same meetings and entertainment as those enrolled in the six-week music camp directed by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra. 2 To Attend Meeting Of Historical Society W. Stitt Robinson, associate professor of history, will present a paper on "Indian Policy of the Southern Colonies," at the annual meeting of the Southern Historical Association today until Saturday in Memphis, Tenn. The paper will be read at a session on "Southern Indians" for which Prof. Edward Everett Dale of the University of Oklahoma will be the discussion leader. Robert W. Johannsen, assistant professor of history, also will attend the meeting from KU. Sweetclover will grow almost anywhere there is more than 17 inches of rain suitably distributed and the soil has sufficient lime. Sociology Head To Attend Seminar Dr. Carroll Clark, chairman of the department of sociology will attend a regional faculty seminar sponsored by the Center for Study of Liberal Education for Adults in New Orleans Thursday through Sunday. The meeting is in cooperation with Tulane and Loyola Universities and will set up workshops for the national meeting of the American University Evening Colleges. Dr. Clark will attend the national meeting Monday through Wednesday and serve as a chairman for the workshop groups. Ouill Club To Meet At 7:30 The Quill Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the English Room of the Student Union to receive new members and give awards to winners in their recent writing contest. Six girls will begin their five weeks of living in the home management house following Thanksgiving vacation. 6 Girls To Begin 'Housework' Soon The girls, all seniors, are Jane Hoerath, Marilyn J. Kipp, and Susan Montgomery, Lawrence; Madelyn Makenite, Mission; Verdi Crockett, Kansas City, Mo., and Virginia Westhausen, Hutchinson. Miss Frieda Sloop, assistant professor of home economics and home management house supervisor, said the women will study ways to conserve time, energy, and money in the management of a home. "The girls will live as a family group, and they will consider goals of a family group," she said. "Modern procedures and equipment will be used for reaching these goals," she said. There are seven official U.S. grades of carcass beef: prime, choice, good, commercial, utility, cutter and canner. The Amadeus Quartet will present a concert of chamber music at 8 p.m. Monday in Strong Auditorium. Tickets are available at the School of Fine Arts office, 128 Strong, and the Student Union. Amadeus Quartet To Perform Concert Monday In Strong The program includes the Mozart Quartet in C major (K.465), Bartok's Fourth Quartet, and the "Death and the Maiden" quartet by Schuber. ◊ The four members—Martin Lovett, cellist; Norbert Brainin and Siegmund Nissel, violinists, and Peter Schildlof, violi—are in this country from London for their second American tour. During the Nazi regime, their families moved to England. The boys, although quite young, worked in war factories, and continued their musical studies. Only one member of the quartet, Mr. Lovett, is a native Englishman. The others are of Austrian descent and had their early training in Vienna. The four played together as students and their first public appearance was in 1948. Their success in England was immediate with concerts and broadcasts. They went on an American tour during the 1952-53 season. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. FREE Installation On Mufflers and Tailpipes KU Student Special Lub. Job $1 Page's Sinclair Serv. 6th & Vt. Ph. VI 3-9894 FEARLESS FOSDICK by AL CAPP THIS IS A (HA!)-HA! ONE-WAY WAY T TH THE MOON, FOSDICK! FORTUNATELY, THE FOOL DID NOT NOTICE MY SECRET NOSE- EARTH. MAGNET. WHAT WILL YOU HAVE, SIR? CLUE: It's In The Student Union Building WHAT IS IT? Identify The Photo, You May Win. . Rules: TWO FREE 1. Identify what is in the picture above. 3. There will be only one winner each week. The first entry received, which correctly identifies the photo, wins two free steak dinners. 2. Mail or bring your entry to Box H, University Daily Kansan. 4. Staff of the UDK and employees of the Student Union and their relatives are not eligible. Contest is limited to students. STEAK DINNERS HAWK'S NEST (pizza: Wed., Fri., & Sun.-4:45-6:45) No Winner Last Week! Last week's WHAT IS IT was a tough one.Not one student guessed it correctly. "It" was a portion of the top of a salt shaker. BETTER LUCK THIS WEEK! 11 D Eisco high and gran be pre F sno Fri far The the dela M taille situa Hoo state port intel Arm how bos' on a he the dent Mr cone ment the Th blow mini wher any Me Se Bef will oly h an A To on s in s and Air board the Wa Wayr day l Presi pe above Sen Presi next wante GOP dent's ago. the public run a Chair he was some Mr. Her a cor quire dent first Ike Suc PAS ard P dent believe anyboy decide "It the n there Presid former night. "Bu run I choice selves race." MU driver tell, the man smoke "Dry tion.