Page 3 Firms Schedule Job Interviews Ten companies have scheduled interviews for prospective engineering graduates for next week. Students interested should sign interview schedules in the office of Dean T, DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering. Wednesday—General Electric Co. Lockheed Aircraft Co., California and Georgia divisions; Los Angeles County Civil Service Commission. The schedule: Monday—General Electric Co. Magnolia Petroleum Co., Sohio Petroleum Co. Tuesday-General Electric Co. Mannolia Petroleum Co. **Thursday—Maytag Co., Standard Oil of Indiana, U.S. Naval Ordnance Laboratory of Corona, Calif., U. S. Naval Civil Engineer Laboratory, Port Hueneum, Calif., and the U.S. Naval Air Missile Test Center in Point Mugu and Port Hueneum, Calif. Friday—Standard Oil of Ohio, Sohio Pipe- Line Co., North American Aviation, Inc., Los Angeles, Calif., and the U. S. Naval Laboratories. Simpson Recital ToBe Held Sunday Guy Criss Simpson, associate professor of organ and theory, will present a faculty recital at 3 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. The program will include the introduction and allegro from Handel's second organ concerto, "Sonata Eroica" by Joseph Jongen, "Fantasia and Fugue in C Minor" by Bach, and other shorter works. Friday. Nov. 4, 1955. University Daily Kansan Mr. Simpson has been a member of the KU faculty since 1930. The program is open to the public. KU ASTE Chapter Largest In U.S. The University chapter of the American Society of Tool Engineers claims a pair of "mosts" this year With 96 members, the chapter is largest in its nine-year history. Its STE chapter in the United States, edging out two chapters in Michigan. The KU chapter claims to be the first student chapter ever organized, functioning for several years as a student affiliate of the Kansas City City professional chapter No. 57. Senior Engineer Wins Scholarship James R. Carl, Wichita senior, has been awarded the Coleman senior engineering scholarship given annually by the Coleman Company of Wichita. Carl is a member of Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity; Triangle, and the student chapter of AIEE. Butter can be made from the milk of zebus. The University ratio of men to women is bad enough without the IBM machines marrying off any more available dates. Relax Men, Sally's Not Really Married The most serious mistake in the student directory, according to Sally Jo Reno, Mission, freshman, is listing her as being married. "I'm not!" she protested. The names, school information, marital status, and addresses are compiled from the IBM cards used in enrollment. Married persons are designated by an asterisk in the left margin. The schol of Engineering and Architecture is offering evening graduate courses for residence credit at the Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., this fall. Courses are offered in the departments of aeronautical, chemical, civil, electrical, and mechanical engineering, and in engineering mathematics. The total enrollment of 98 is a 7 per cent increase over last spring's enrollment of 92 students. The courses, sponsored by the School of Engineering and Architecture in cooperation with the Graduate School, were begun in the Engineers Enroll In Graduate Study The acoustically-perfect auditorium seats only 526. An overflow audience sits in the Whittall Pavilion where they can hear but not see the performers. Thousands more listen to broadcasts of the concerts "live" over radio stations. In Chicago, Los Angeles and other cities the programs are tape-recorded. The graduate courses are taught for the same length of time and by the same professors as those taught on the University campus. School officials believe the first master's degress will be awarded in 1957. Still more listeners, out of radio range, flock to Coolidge Foundation "extension concerts" at their local colleges and universities. fall of 1953, with three departments participating. Small Seating Capacity program allows them to continue their education and hold a full-time job at the same time. Works Of Living Composers Foundation concerts usually include one or more selections by a contemporary composer. Mrs. Coolidge, personally and through the Foundation, commissioned works from many living composers. The Coolidge Auditorium, standing in a courtyard of the Library of Congress almost within earshot of the United States Capitol and Supreme Court building, has been the scene of more than 800 chamber music concerts since 1925. * When Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge, the "fairy godmother of chamber music", formally presented the auditorium to the American people, she hoped that the audiences would "listen sincerely and appreciatively." Her wish has been fulfilled many times over. Americans in nearly every state and in Hawaii and Puerto Rico enjoy the Library's chamber music. Coolidge Auditorium Offers Music To Entire Nation From Hell To Paradise She wrote chamber music herself. One of her pieces, an oboe quintet, was performed at Falls Village, Comm., in 1953. A Harvard WASHINGTON, D.C.—The same small area of land that supports the nation's highest legislative and legal chambers also echoes to its finest chamber music. Graduates from 41 universities and colleges are represented in the courses. The program is the first of its kind in the Kansas City area. Many industrial firms are helping their engineers who, because of lack of finances or military obligations were formerly unable to complete their work for graduate degrees. The YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCHE OPTICAL CO. Y1-93-266 1025 Mass. PARADISE, Mich. —(U.P.)- Park Ranger Harold Peterson moved from Hell to Paradise today. Mr. Peterson transferred from the ranger's job at Hell, Mich. to become ranger in Paradise, Mich. The ● Wrought-iron record index holds 40 records . . . $1 Your headquarters for the latest records and record equipment! - Record album with beautiful decorative cover holds 15 records . 90c - Don't chisel your records with worn needles. We have Columbia and Fidelitone needles. In Rowlands' Bookstore - 1241 Oread Disc chemistry professor played the solo—her son, Albert Sprague Coolidge. WANT A 1956 FORD? Mrs. Coolidge attended many concerts until her death in 1953. A discriminating critic, she was known to have shut off her hearing aid if the music didn't suit her. SAVE up to $200.00 or more! Large stock to choose from Immediate Delivery Call GLEN LUSH now CALL VI 3-3202 A Campus-to-Career Case History "It sounded good to me" Charles Poole, B.S. in Business Administration, Boston University, '52. is working for New Jersey Bell Telephone Company as a Traffic Superintendent. For a young man he has a lot of responsibility. And responsibility is what he likes. He has three New Jersey exchanges under his supervision—Dover, Madison and Washington—which total nearly 16,000 customers, and he manages a force of some 160 operators, including nine chief operators and fifteen service assistants. “It's the type of job,” says Charlie, happily, “where you can never say you're caught up. There's always something to do." Each day brings Charlie new problems, new experiences. And with every passing day his grasp of the telephone business is getting stronger, his value to the company is growing. That spells the kind of future that Charlie wants: the opportunity to take an ever-increasing part in an ever-expanding business. "It sounded good to me," Charlie says, remembering what he thought when the telephone interviewer had finished telling him about the company and its future. And, as you might expect, it still sounds good to him. Charlie Poole is typical of the many young men who are building careers in telephone work. Similar opportunities exist today with other telephone companies, and also with Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation Your placement officer has the details. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM