Page 6 University. Daily Kansan Friday, March 18, 1955 RELIGIOUS NOTES About 14 KU students will attend a state conference at the Sailina University Methodist church Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. Mr. Jameson Jones, president of the national conference of Methodist youth, will speak to the group. The Sunday evening fellowship will meet at 5:30 p.m. at Westminster house. The discussion will be centered on the question, "Is Your Conscience an Infallible Guide." "Barabbas the Robber" is the name of the Lenten devotional film which will be shown at 7 p.m. Sunday at the United Student fellowship meeting of Plymouth Congregational church, 925 Vermont st. The 40-minute film traces, the events leading to the trial before Pontius Pilate in Jerusalem, the release of Barabbas, and the crucifixion of Jesus. Following the film, a short worship service will be led by Janice Kay Jones, college sophomore. Sunday evening prayer will begin at 5 at Trinity Episcopal church. Supper and discussion will follow. The Rev. Andrew Berry will lead the discussion on Holy Scriptures. The results of the election of officers by the Presbyterian men held Tuesday night are: Thor Bogren, business junior, president; James Whittaker, education sophomore, vice president, and Michael Grove, fine arts freshman, secretary-treasurer. --the representatives also approved bills that would: The officers will be installed in May. M. Hal Viehman, executive secretary of the department of campus Christian life of the board of education of the Presbyterian church, will speak at a meeting of Presbyterian students at 5:30 Wednesday at Westminster house. His topic will be "Your Responsibility on the Campus." Mr. Vichman will also speak Wednesday with the Westminster board concerning the study, philosophy, and program of the Kansas Presbyterian foundations. He will be a guest at the supper meeting at 5:30 at Westminster station. At 8 p.m. Mr. Viehman will meet at Westminster house with a committee in charge of sessions of the First Presbyterian church and of the West Side Presbyterian church to make a study of the relations of the Westminster foundation and local churches. He will also review the building program of the Presbyterian student center soon to be built. Nine members of the Liahona Fellowship of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints will go to Graceland junior college in Lamoni, Iowa Saturday in an effort to acquaint the students there with the University of Kansas. Members going on the trip are Jack Waddell, college senior; Ronald Davis, college junior; Nan Bayless, education junior; Mae Young, business junior; Byron Hershey, fine arts junior; Richard Troeh, college junior; Alice Eastwood, college senior, and R. Edwin Brown, director of radio --the representatives also approved bills that would: The Celtic Cross organization elected officers Wednesday night at Westminster house. They are William Brigden, college freshman, president; Gary Patterson, college junior, vice president, and Susan Fredrick, college freshman, secretary-treasurer. Hillel will hold services at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Jewish community center, 1409 Tennessee st. A choir practice of the Liahona Fellowship will be held Sunday at 9 a.m. A demonstration will be given by the study commission of Liahona Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints entitled "Nature of Belief—God and Man." Danforth chapel will be open from 5 to 1:55 p.m. daily during Lent for silent meditation through the co-operation of the YM-YWCA. Kansas Legislators Pass Labor Bills Topeka—(U.P.)The Kansas House of Representatives approved three labor relations measures last night. It was the fourth straight night session for the legislators. The bills, approved on a roll call vote coming after 11 p.m., would: Outlaw secondary boycotts, including picketing of a firm accepting or selling goods from a struck plant. Require a secret strike ballot under regulation of the State Labor department before participation in any work stoppage. Order unions to give 20 days of work if perishable goods are involved. Authorize the State Labor commissioner to name a mediator in efforts to avoid impending strikes. They are required time close approved Make a second $500.00 available for construction of a Southeast Kansas Tuberculosis hospital at Chanute. Official Bulletin Sociology club coffee forum, 4 p.m. room 17, Strong annex E. Discussion leader, Dick Scott: "Breast Feeding, Toilet Training, and other Directeds: Some Ideas on Culture and Personality." ASTE field trip to Fairbanks-Morse, Tuxedo City, leave - Powder 6:15 p.m. Tuxedo City, leave 7:00 p.m. Members going sip, sip in 200 Fowler. TODAY Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. Gabriel Faure: Trio in D minor Op. 120; Maurice Ravel: Trio in A minor. Daily organ meditations for Lent. 5 assoc. in NY, NY-WCA, Open in everyone. Kappa Phi, 7 p.m. Methodist Student center. Installation of new cabinet. Program: play. "A Challenge to Faith." Hillet evening service, 7:30 p.m. Jew- TOMORROW YM-YWCA cabinets 10:30-12:00 noon Activities lounge, Student Union. Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. Buxhetehue: Missa Brevis, in Te Domine Speravi, Aperite Mihi Portes Justital, Jesu Dulcis Memoria. Graduate club sponsored International Education Exchange conference. 1:30-3; 3:15-5 p.m., Jayhawk room, Student Union. Lahona fellowship choir practice, 9 Saturday of Belief-God and Man, n. churches SUNDAY **Museum of Art record concert, 4 p.m.** Richard Strauss: Till Eulenspielg's Merry Pranks. Don Juan; Norman Dello Jolo: New York Profile. Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Communion, 7 a.m. Danforth Hall! International club sponsored discus- sion "Religion in Africa" 1537 p. 50 m. Recorded 1537! Tennessee Museum of Art record concert noon and pm. William Schumann: Sym- ythea Hopkins: Baptist Student Union devotions and prayer 12:30-15:00 p.m. D an f o r t h KU *Dames* Child Study Group, 8 p.m. Women's club lounge, Museum of Art Dr. Beatrice Wright: "Sex Education." All KU Dames invited. organ meditations for Lent, S- 5.15 p.m. Danforth chapel, Sponsor by Baptist Church of God in Christ. Engineerettes business meeting, 8 p.m. 827 Tennessee. Dean Carr, speaker. Journalism Faculty Member Is Cited Miss Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism is mentioned in the 40th anniversary edition of Matrix magazine, publication of Theta Sigma Phi, national fraternity for women in journalism. The edition is just off the press in North Hollywood, Calif., and bears on its cover page a congratulatory message from Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower. The issue also contains a message from Mrs. Harry S. Truman and a special article by Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, an honorary member of the fraternity. Mining is one of man's oldest industries, some 8,000 workers, for instance, having been employed in the sixth millennium B.C. in copper and turquio mines on the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt. The national chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha, honorary political science society, is sponsoring a contest for the best essay or research paper written on any political science subject. Pi Sigma Alpha Charts Contest Any undergraduate student in the University is eligible to enter. On the local level, prizes of $50 and $25 will be given for first and second places, respectively. The two winning papers then will be submitted to the national committee and entered in the national contest. All papers must be submitted to Dr. Francis Heller, associate professor of political science, Strong Annex E, by April 1. Flute Recital Set For Strong Tonight Jo Anna Sellards, flutist, will be presented in a senior recital by the School of Fine Arts at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium. Accompanied by Floyd Chroniston, pianist, Mrs. Sellards will play selections by Bach, Hindemuth, Foote, and Canlet. Mrs. Sellards has been a member of the University of Kansas Symphony orchestra and band and has played in the Little Symphony. She is a member of Mu Phi Epsilon, and was selected this fall to appear on the Fine Arts honor recital. Last summer she assisted in the Midwestern Music camp as an instructor of flute. Hefty Theft Galveston, Tex.—(U.P.)—The sheriff's office thinks weight lifters must have been involved in the theft of 2,700 pounds of lead—27 bars weighing 100 pounds each. They were stolen from a pier warehouse. Value of the lead was $900. Box office opens 6:30 Show starts at 7:00 No strain on the billfold now to own the correct style shoes for everyday, dress-up or casual wear. Buy all three styles at a price you'd expect to pay for a single pair. Shop at widths $7.95, $7.95 and $8.95. Ask your dealer for FREE moneyfield* *Higher in the West and South* don't be shoe-sky! enjoy a new 3-pair shoe wardrobe for only $2385 Ph. 3313 As advertised in Esquire THE VERY NEWEST NAME IN YOUNG MEN'S SHOES W. on 6th St. TWO BIG FEATURES Come out for an evening under the stars. Driver of the car admitted free. Free prizes for the kiddies. GALA REOPENING TONIGHT FUN FOR ALL MIDNIGHT SHOW SATURDAY PHANTOM FROM SPACE Box office opens at 6:30. Show starts at 7:00 Med Contest Offers $100 A first prize of $100 and a second prize of $50 will be awarded by Dr. Don Carlos Guffey, clinical professor emeritus of surgery, for the two best papers written on the history of medicine. An additional prize for honorable mention offered by Dr. Guffey will be a two-volume set of Major's "A History of Medicine." The first large labor organization in America was the Noble Order of the Knights of Labor, the direct antecedent of the American Federation of Labor. The contest is open to any undergraduate in the School of Medicine. Papers should be typewritten and double spaced, and must be submitted on or before March 31. The papers should be turned in to the Library of the History of Medicine in Kansas City. TV-RADIO PHONOGRAPH REPAIR BELL'S Ph.375 925 Mass. HONEYWELL OFFERS DIVERSIFIED OPPORTUNITIES The opportunities for engineers in the automatic control field are unique in their variety and in the insight provided into all of the industries of today's modern world. The development and manufacture of tiny transistors for electronic control . . . the design and manufacture of quality electronic photo flash units . . . the challenge of finding fish with underwater sonar . . . of providing automatic flight for supersonic jets . . . temperature controls for today's modern home . . . for atomic piles . . . These are a few of the fields in which Honeywell's several divisions are engaged, providing automatic controls for industry and the home. These controls are made possible by the creative imagination of highly trained engineers working with the very latest research and test facilities. With twelve separate divisions located throughout the United States and with factories in Canada, England and Europe, Honeywell offers unlimited opportunities in a variety of challenging fields. Based on diversification and balance between normal industry and defense activities, Honeywell will continue to grow and expand because automatic control and instrumentation are so important to the world's progress. That is why we are always looking for men with the ideas and imagination and the ambition to grow with us. In addition to full time engineering and research employment we offer a Cooperative Work Study program, a Summer Student Work Study program and Graduate Fellowships. If you are interested in a career in a vital, varied and diversified industry, see our representative, Mr. Hilding Eckstrom. He will be on your campus for interviews March 21. Make arrangements with your Dean of School of Engineering & Architecture, T. DeWitt Carr. MINNEAPOLIS HONEYWELL First in Controls