University Daily Kansan Friday, February 25, 1950 Page 8 Public Relations Institute Opens About 35 Kansas Public relations directors were here for the opening of the fourth annual Public Relations Director's institute at 2 p.m. today in the Jayhawk room of the Student Union. The institute is sponsored by the School of Journalism, the University Extension Bureau, and the Public Relations association of Kansas. Paul A. Schrader, director of news and public relations for the Toledo Blade gave the keynote address on "Public Relations: Management's Challenge" at 2:20 p.m. A panel discussion of the address followed. Max Foresman, director of plant and public relations for the Spencer Chemical company will speak on "What the Business Executive Expects in Public Relations" at a dinner at 6 p.m. tonight at the Hotel Edridge. Discussions of the three prize winning public relations campaigns during the past year in Kansas will be held at 9 a.m. tomorrow. Mary Turkington, editor of the "Kansas Transporter," of the Kansas Motor Carriers association, will preside. Awards for the winning campaigns will be presented by Hamna Welling, president of the Public Relations association of Kansas, at a luncheon at noon in the Kansas room of the Student Union. Official Bulletin **Petition forms for vice president of the Engineering Student council can be issued from the dean's office, must be signed by the president. Engineering voters, and turned back into the dean's office by March 3. Engineer-verse submitted petitions, and vice president from submitted petitions.** TODAY Sociology club coffee-forum. 4 p.m. room 17. Strong Annex E. Richard H. Holte "Democracy and Dictatorship in the Contemporary Middle East." Museum of Art concert noon and 4 pm. Locaholi: Concerto da Camera; Firenze: La Tromba. Hillel services, 7-7.25 p.m. Jewish Community center, 149 Tennessee TOMORROW Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. Trombone Music of Beet- man Liahona Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. Backward Party a the church SUNDAY Lihana Fellowship chair practice, 9 p.m. Cabinet meeting 5 p.m., supper, 9 p.m. Museum of Art record concert, 4 p.m. Piano Music of Edward MacDowell. anbury association, 5 p.m., Trinity church Bishop Feinke's visitation Lutheran Student association cost tupper. 5:30 p.m. social rooms. Trinity church. 13th and New Hampshire. "The bees Lenten service series." Criminal" bees Lenten service series. Graduate club sponsored social. 8-30 Dancing and games. Newman club chapel. MONDAY Episcopal morning prayer 6:45 a.m. Fols Communion, 7 a.m. a.d. Fols Communion, 7 a.m. a.d. Museum of Art concert, noon and 4 p.m. Drums of Haiti. Baptist Student Union devotions and prayer, 12:30-12:50 p.m. Dawnthiforth chapel Baptist Union devoutors and prayers 12:30-12:50 p.m. Diondarch父庙 Education 12:30-12:50 p.m. 904 Student Union. Lawrence Superintendent William Wolf, speaker. Dues 50c, collected. All interested in education welcome. CCUN executive meeting, 4 p.m., Student Union. ASME joint meeting with IAS, 8 p.m. Jayhawk room. Student Union. George G. Edwards. arenautical research center. AMES Aeronautical laboratory. Lloffetts. AMES Laboratory. Tunnel at NACA. AMES Laboratory." Illustrated. All engineers invited. Use Kansan Classified Ads. EXPERT WATCH REPAIR Electronically Timed 1 Week or Less Service Guaranteed Satisfaction WOLFSON'S 743 Massachusetts Miss Shore, Augusta Editor To Get Fraternity Award Miss Bertha Shore, editor and publisher of the Augusta Gazette, will receive Epsilon chapter's award to an outstanding Kansas newspaper woman at the annual Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalism fraternity Matrix dinner Thursday night. Miss Shore is well-known for her daily column, Half and Half, which contains half jokes and editorial comments and half advertisements. In 1928, she entered newspaper work when she and her brother, Chet Shore, a KU graduate, bought the Augusta Daily Gazette. Later the paper was converted to tabloid size and now is a semi-tabloid daily except for Sundays. The paper is strictly a hometown paper carrying only local news. Following World War II, Miss Shore and her four employees bought out her brother's share in the paper. Each owns one-fifth of the paper and she said, "The arrangement has worked because everyone is busy minding his own business and doing his share of the work." Miss Shore was born in Hiawatha, Kans. She attended grade school in Lawrence and high school in several towns, Hiawatha, Scottsville, and Pleasanton. She attended Emporia S t a t e Teachers college, Pittsburg State Teachers college and Colorado St. Teachers college, receiving a life's certificate in teaching. Airline Hostesses TRANS WORLD AIRLINES If you are interested in this career and will be twenty-one by next June and are 5' 2" to 5' 8"' and able to pass a rigid physical examination, write for an application form. Address: TWA EMPLOYMENT OFFICE 10 Richards Road, Kansas City, Missouri The Tang of the Sea Is captured in DUCK'S Sea Foods. Air Express shipments insure fresh sea flavor in all our sea foods. Enjoy a Dinner at Duck's Tonight DUCK'S Sea Food Tavern 824 Vt. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section. The beautiful Bel Air Sport Coupe with Body by Fisher It's highway robbery! For sheer fun out on the road. Chevrolet's stealing the thunder from the high-priced cars! Not any more! The Motoramic Chevrolet has changed all that. Who could wish for more excitement than the Up to this year, maybe there were reasons for wanting one of the higher-priced cars. If you demanded something really special in the way of driving fun, you simply had to pay a premium to get it. new 162-h.p. "Turbo-Fire V8" delivers? (For those who do, 180-h.p. is optional at extra cost in all V8 models.) Chevrolet also offers the two highest powered sixes in its field. Come in and see how the Motoramic Chevrolet is stealing the thunder from the high-priced cars! motoramic CHEVROLET SEE YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER D. 10cm2(mm²)