Thursday, March 11, 1954 University Daily Kansan Page 11 Europe, Asia, Africa- KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Classified Advertising Rates three five days days 75c $1.00 89 89 Terms: Cash, Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in by noon on Friday (except on Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business office, Journals Building, 345 p.m. on Monday of previous publication date. FOR SALE BRAND NEW Swiss Pilot's wrist stopwatch and chronograph. Ideal for flight training. Must sell. Lynn Osborn, 1228 Ohio. Phone 1147. 3-16 1949 CHEVROLET four-door Styleline, light green, radio and heater, extra clean, runs good. Reasonably priced for a 1412R, after 6 p.m. 3-12 NEW-ANSCO flash attachment type I. An NSCO flash attachment box, Becid. Electric console phonograph, adaptable to P.A. Electric portable disc drive from three-way floor lamp. Appl. 931W. VIST GUILFOLI Sporting Goods, 1711 Minnesota, Kansas City, Kansas for your sporting goods—sweat jackets, hats, tennis racquets, softballs, baskets balls. Team discounts. Write for free catalog for your fraternity or sorority. 3-15 BATTERIES: Guaranteed unconditionally for six months. $5 and old battery. Battery Stores Associated. 512 East 9th, home-owned. Phone 943. th BUSINESS SERVICES JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are everything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do all kinds of typing at home. Standard rates. Accurate and fast service. Come to 1616 Vt., or phone 2373R, Joan Manion. f CABINET-MAKER a. D REFINISHER: Antique pieces, Bar-t top finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E. Higginboth居。Res. and Shop, 623 Ala. BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf FOR RENT LOST AND FOUND ROOMS FOR MEN. One available April 4. See 1218-3 111. sissipi or call 514. SOMEONE TOOK TUCK sunday jacket incket at the Bray Brewery Tuesday by m-15 Call Ray Breery, 811-274-6010 Scouts to Attend Relays April 17 A contingent of more than 500 Boy Scouts will attend the 12 annual Scout visitation to the Kansas Relays Saturday April 17. The visitation is sponsored jointly by University Extension and Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity. Lawrence Klempnauer, Alpha Phi Omega president, college junior, said Scouts have been invited from Kansas, southern Nebraska, and the Mississippi Scouts will tour the Engineering Exposition and attend the Relays. Mr. Klempnauer said Alpha Phi Omega has started a program of demonstrations and instruction in scouting skills. The program will be presented to Boy Scout troops in the Lawrence area through the cooperation of the local units and the Kaw council. Chicago College of OPTOMETRY (Fully Accredited) Excellent opportunities for qualified men and women. Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. REGISTRATION NOW Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service. Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus. OPTOMETRY 1851-C Larrabee Street Chicago 14, Illinois CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita Friday afternoon and coming back Sunday evening. Phone Jim Davis at 973R evenings between 6 and 7:30. 5-12 ASK US about airplane rates, ski coach, family days, round trip reductions, all expense tours and steamship trips. For business or pleasure trip call Miss Rose Glesse- mentation at 212-870-3950 for information or itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. sts. Phone 30. tf Each spring in the University Honors convocation, outstanding students are chosen for membership in Pi Sigma Alpha, national political science fraternity. Government Is Group Interest Members are chosen from faculty members, graduate students, and undergraduates. The objective of the group is the stimulation of high scholarship and achievement among men and women in the subject of government. The fraternity was established in 1920 at the University of Texas. The founding members felt the need for an organization that would bring together those interested in government. Since that time it has grown into an organization of 55 chapters and 9,000 members distributed throughout 26 states. The University chapter, Gamma was the second to be established and was organized in 1922. It has among its alumni L. P. Cookingham, city manager of Kansas City, and Dr. Frederick Guild, director of research for the Kansas Legislature. Over half of the 40 members of Gamma chapter are graduate students in mathematics or economics and graduates. The rest are faculty members and honorary members. Jerome Lysaught, college senior is president. Foreign Students Set Talk A panel discussion, "Foreign Students Look at KU," will be featured at the Psychology club meeting at 7:30 p.m. today **tn** 22 S trong. Richard Walters, graduate student from New Zealand will lead the discussion. NOW • Shows 2:30-7-9 The world trip planned by Dean Paul Lawson of the College and Mrs. Lawson will have several objectives in mind—to get acquainted with the peoples of other lands, to visit schools and universities in England, Scotland, and India, and to gather insect specimens for the Snow hall collection. Dean and Mrs. Lawson will leave New York by ship July 9 for a month's stay in the British Isles on the first leg of their trip. The dean has written to the British consul in Kansas City for the names of three typically British villages where he and Mrs. Lawson might get acquainted with the attitudes and opinions of the British people first hand. "The people are most important in the long run." Dean Lawson says what they think will determine what action their government takes. Bv LEO HACK Lawsons Plan World Trip Dean and Mrs. Lawson plan to spend the autumn in Western Europe, visiting the Netherlands, France, West Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and Italy. Spending six or seven months there, they will visit Pakistan; Bombay, Cochin, Delhi, and Colombo, Ceylon. to arrive in India about Dec. 1, Mr Lawson said. In the late autumn they will visit the Middle East, including such cities as Athens, Greece; Istanbul, and Smyrna, Turkey, Beirut, Syria, and Cairo, Egypt. They plan The dean will make a study of higher education in Indian universities. He also will spend time in some of the smaller villages to get acquainted with how the common people live. "India has moved more in the last ten years than in the previous 500," Dean Lawson said, "but life in the small villages is pretty much the same as it has always been. Living conditions are no better." Dean Lawson moved from India with his parents when he was five years old. "In the universities of India I will get the viewpoint of the educated people of India, and in the small villages, I will learn what the common people think about things." "The spirit of the people is the important thing—their courage, outlook, and understanding." Dean Lawson said. "I'm brushing up on my Hindustaniian. I have been looking over a dictionary reviewing the words," Dean Lawson said. Hindustani is a In India Mr. Lawson plans to collect thousands of leafhoppers for the collection in Snow hall. Patee PHONE 321 Ends TONITE • Alec Guinness in "Lavender Hill Mob" dialect understood by the common people of India. From India, the Lawsons will visit Siam, Burma, and Hong Kong. They decided to visit Hong Kong after reading a chapter from the book, "The Voice of Asia," by James Albert Michener, who calls Hong Kong the "showcase of Asia." STARTS TOMORROW... Dean and Mrs. Lawson hope to be able to visit Japan before crossing the Pacific ocean for the United States. The Lawws have intentionally planned few exact dates of their trip so that they might spend as much time as they wish in certain places. Dean Lawson plans to meet many former University students in the lands he and Mrs. Lawson visit. The 14-month trip will bring them back to Lawrence by September 1955, when the dean will teach entomology here. "I will not bare my secrets even to you, Doctor!" . . . a fantastic conflict of science and sorcery. PROUD MOROCCAN PRINCE bewitched by the haunting, barbaric beauty of the wild Berber-girl. Filmed entirely in authentic scenes of wild, hot-blooded Morocco! STARRING CORNEL WILDE MEL RITA FERRER·GAM An M.G.M Picture An M-G-M Picture Mat. 2:30 - Eve: 7:00-9:00 Features 3:11-7:41-9:44 Color Cartoon- News Soon- "Glenn Miller Story"