Tuesday, Oct. 12, 1954 University Daily Kansan Page 7 club As- ates, presi- erson, arlene reas- edu- hair mpe- homa -Classified Ads- PHONE K.U. 376 Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five day days days $1.00 60c 75c $1.00 25 words or less ... 50c Additional words ... 1 Additional words ... 1c 2e 36 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office, Journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. BUSINESS SERVICES BEVERAGES, lee cold, all kinds, by the six pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American ServIC Co., 616 Vt. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit our "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our anything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. Grant's 418. tf OREAD BARBER SHOP, third building 631 W. 18th St., 2nd floor; Hours: 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. MWF; 10-22 Friday through Saturday. TYPING—themes, theses, reports, etc. Reasonable rates. Neat and accurate. Mrs. Ehrman, 1812 Vermont. Phone 2771M. tf TYPING: Experienced in theses, term papers, and reports. Accurate and neat ww9. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone 2559J. MWF-tt PERSONALIZED CHRISTMAS CARDS from your favorite negative or black and white photos per dozen (post 12) Michel Picture 40-29 Chestnut, Olathe, Kansas EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Will do any typing job. Themes, reports, etc. Standard rates. Prompt accurate service. Joan Manion, 1616 Vermont. Call 2373R. TYPING WANTED. Have had experi- ence in typing theses, term paper, legal documents, etc. Reasonable rates. Phone 572, Mrs. Earl Wright. 10-12 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Theses, term papers, reports, given immediate attention. First, accurate service at report. Mrs. G琳ika, 119 Tennessee. Ph. tf 1396M. FOR RENT EXPERIENCED TYPIST. near campus, quick, neat, and accurate service on all campuses; these themes, these themes, Standard ratings, these Houghts. 2003 Oxon Rd. Rd. PH3567J. 10-25 ROOM, single, for KU student. Linenus magnified. Ph. 1959J. 1542M. Teiten 10. 1983. BUMPER CLUB NIGHTS LOST K & E SLIDE RULE in tan leather case. Name printed inside. Please call Bob Magers at 2454. Oread hall, room 148. Reward. 10-13 RING. man's art carved white gold band Inquire. Shirley Price, phone 731. DILAPIDATED black faille purse with my name inside. Contains glasses which are very dear to me. Reward. Call Lemon. 537. 10-15 LADY'S WALLET, tan and red, containing Pennsylvania drivers license. Lost around Green Hall, Friday. Please contact Ruth Johnson Dordrill. Please 2433W. 10-12 BROWN BILLFOLD-Contains identification Reward. Shirley Carson, Phone (310) 555-7290 TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and conducted tours. Ask us about Skye-cock and family day rates. Call Miss Rose Glesesen. Nikon Bassi for new pamphlets and information for itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. Phone 30. tf TOM MAUPIN Travel Service. Lowest airline fares, tourist and family fare, available on all scheduled airlines. Authorized agents for all steamship lines. Tours and cruises. Business and interview trips arrangements. Literature on your Summer vacation. TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. 1015 Mass. Phone 3661. tf RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita Friday. Returning Sunday evening. Phone 453 ask for Jim Davis. Evenings between 6 and 8. 10-14 FOR SALE SWEET CIDER for sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Pennsylvania Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 16130 10-13 NEW 1954 WILLIES Hard Top, $195.9 Kauan, write box G-ELL, or Daily Kauan c447 DESOTTO convertible in good condition Phone 3140 Clifford Mierzer at 805 10-12 Phone 3140 1951 FORD VICTORIA—overdrive, radio and heater. A-1 condition. Priced reasonably. See at 213 Moundview, Sunset Hills or phone 2840W. 10-13 HI-F1 record playing system. 20-watt amplifier, 3-speed changer, 45 spindle. two remote, enclosed speakers, fifty for cable. $80. Call 400-193-6-10 CLOTHING this week. Week, tues. through Fri. only. Sizes 7, 9, 10. Some new with original price tags attached. Phone 1753 for appointment. 1942 PLYMOUTH blue club coupe. 751 Dodge motor. A good school buy, all accessories, reasonably priced. 1408 Tenn. Phone 84. 10-18 WANTED WOMEN WANTED—Make extra money, Address, Mail postcards spare time every week. BICO, 143 Belmont, Belmont, Mass. 10-25 WASHING AND IRONING. Smiffy's WASH and ATTENDEE 4376 for free up, and delivery. 10-14 MISCELLANEOUS MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS patients, their relatives, friends, or anyone wishing to learn more about M.S. and the National Mental Health Association, Write for Mina Wolfe, 597 Maine, 3289J. 10-14 The wooden paddle, long a symbol of the warm and painful welcome extended to freshmen, is becoming as dated as the raccoon coat. Fraternity Hazing Is on the Wane New York—(U.P.)-Hazing, as father and grandfather knew it, is disappearing from the campuses of American colleges. Few fraternity pledges today are handed a bottle of castor oil and told to start drinking. They are more likely to be loaded down with cans of floor wax, window cleaner and paint, and told to get busy. A survey of 10 leading universities around the country shows that hazing, in its barbaric, abusive and sometimes even fatal forms, is on the wane for two main reasons: 1. Student bodies are now made up of large numbers of war veterans who are too mature to go in for the old kind of pranks. 2. Upper classmen have discovered that a freshman can be hazed just as effectively by making him work. Besides, the freshman class is a good source of cheap labor. On most campuses surveyed the traditional "Hell week" has been replaced by "Help week.' The National Inter-fraternity council has helped the trend along by taking an official stand against hazing in the old sense. At the University of Iowa, hazing is practically non-existent. Daly Faune, dean of students, reported, "Hazing definitely is dying out here. Compared to 1940, it amounts to nothing." Topeka — (U.R.)— Kansas rounded out three full years of drought last month with just half the normal September rainfall. This was disclosed Thursday by the state weather bureau, which also reported this was the second hottest September in Kansas in 68 years of weather records. Kansas Has 3 Drouth Years With the exception of only a few areas, Kansas counties have had 24 to 27 months of deficient precipitation in the last three years, said A. D. Robb, U. S. meteorologist. The drouth began in October, 1951, after a summer which brought the worst floods in Kansas history. Rainfall averaged just 1.4 inches in Kansas during September. Only a limited southeastern area had above normal precipitation. Monthly totals ranged from more than three inches to less than half an inch over much of the southwest and locally in the northwest. McCune in the southeast got 5.48 inches, but Johnson in far western Stanton county received just a trace of moisture the whole month. September temperatures averaged 76 degrees, six degrees above normal. Only September of 1931 was hotter. Extreme readings were 108 degrees at Burlington to 34 at Burr Oak and Goodland. Iowa's inter-raternity council has laid down rules of conduct for initiation rites and it has been years since university authorities have had to intervene and call a halt to any scheme. NOW! 2-7-9:05 The energy which freshmen used to expend rolling peanuts down a sidewalk with their noses, or hiking 30 miles from a coun-croween in the underwear, is being channeled into constructive work. At the University of Indiana, where hazing is "decidedly dying out," fraternity pledges are made available to work on community projects, such as cleaning up parks. University officials believe some paddling may still be going on but it is on the decline. The same holds true at the University of Washington in Seattle, where "Work week" has replaced "Hell week." Campus authorities say they had expected a resurgence of the old style of hazing after the crop of World War II veterans left the university, but now a large number of Korean war veterans are enrolled and the anti-hazing attitude prevails. pledge 30 or 40 miles outside the city and leaving him without money to get back the best way he can. Otherwise, freshmen are used to save labor costs in giving the fraternity quarters an annual cleaning. "We still get wind of scattered incidents." Dean Foster E. Alter of Miami said, "but it's strictly little stuff. Hazing is mainly a thing of the past here." At Columbia University in New York, the most frequent hazing practice today consists of taking a A strict rule has limited hazing at the University of Miami, Fla., since 1951, when two young pledges were killed by a truck as they slept beside a fog-blanketed road. The traditional "midnight hike in the Everglades" is now forbidden. A fatal "hike" also led to a toning down of initiation rites at the University of California. A pledge was struck down and killed by an automobile in the Contra Costa hills five years ago. And since then the Inter-Fraternity council has banned most of the old hazing customs and established "Work week." Knox college at Galesburg, Ill., last week began an investigation of its fraternities after two students were killed at the climax of an inter-fraternity beer drinking contest. After a six-hour session in which students drank an average of seven and a half quartes of beer each, a car carrying four of them plunged over an embankment and burned. Color Cartoon — News Dance Fraternity Pledges 9 Women They are Lark Johnston, college sophomore; Carol Schatzel, college junior; Roberta Hinds, college sophomore; Judy Martindale, college. freshman; Karen. Ward, fine arts sophomore; Johanna Scott, college junior; Barbara Blount, fine arts junior; Carol Bird, college junior; Margaret Finney, college sophomore, and Nancy Collins, college junior. Following tryouts Sept. 28 and last Tuesday, Tau Sigma, honorary modern dance fraternity, pledged nine women. TODAY thru THURSDAY 90 Minutes filled with FUN & LAUGHTER Dean Jerry Martin and Lewis in "The Caddy" CO-STARRING Donna Reed CARTOON 'Pack of Trouble' SHORT "Animal Hotel" Plus BUMPER CLUB • TONITE Open 6:15 Show at Dusk Come early and get home early Oklahoma scored 11 touchdowns against Kansas State in 1942. Open Sunday Daily 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. In 1952 Oklahoma scored 407 points in ten football games. Walt Disney's "LIVING DESERT" Tomorrow AND THURS. Winner of 9 Academy Awards! THE MOST HONORED PICTURE OF ALL TIME! THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES SAMUEL GOLDWYN'S MYRNA LOY - FREEDR MARCH DANA ANDREWS - TERESA WRIGHT VIRGINIA MAYO - HOAG CAMICHAEL AND CATYN O'DONNELL + HAROLD RUSSELL WALT DISNEY TREVENANT A BRIGHTER ADVENTURE BEAR COUNTRY TECHNICOLOR Our Specialty - Home Made Pecan Pies Thick Malts The Crystal Cafe 609 Vt.