University Daily Kansan Page 7 ders for to city for beents) and the abch as 25 aws and plied the makers. llywattle s, 43, is merangs in Melly asked pomerang intends pons. curved rown in around but the tribal hoes clog chief good club approxio a com- both a CLASSIFIED ADS Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Br Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by telephone, called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals must be submitted 345 p.m. the day before publication date. VACANCIES FOR MEN STUDENTS at end of semester. Single beds. See at 1631 Illinois or call 26743 between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mrs. Laughlin. 1-14 FOR RENT LOST AND FOUND GIRLS: Several openings at mid-term CARDS: No openings. Cells: Phone 3282R, 1245 Louisiana, 1- 3-ROOM Furnished basement apartment Gas furnace heat, private entrance. Private bath. Utilities paid. $60 a month. Phone 3350 or 2641R. 1-12 SMALL BLACK PURSE. Money needed badly by foreign student. Reward and faith in campus honesty. Virginia Moeren, 1011 Indiana, Ph. 1758. 1-13 BERNITY RING, gold and onyx with A K a crest. Lost just before Christmas vacation. Please call Leland Bell. 991. FOR SALE 1942 OLDS—1948 motor (76), 5,000 miles radio, hearer, new seat covers, new paint, good rubber. See Marvin Wortman at 841 La., or call 2995J. 1-11 1942 BUICK SUPER CONVERTIBLE Vernort. Ph. 2771M 15-11 Vernort. Ph. 2771M 15-11 COLOR FILM-KODAK: 36 exposures 12-1 pall, 12-1 pall, or 3:30-7 p.m. Ronald Chen. DVD BUSINESS SERVICES PROFESSIONAL TYPING at student rates. Prompt consideration, accurate and fast. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker ave. Ph. 721W. MWF-tf FORMAIL AND INFORMAL dreammaking and paper mats. Ph. 1843L - 4, 825 N Y. MWF-U - TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1396M. MWF-7 TYPIST: Experienced, accurate typist will give immediate attention to your work. References upon request. Mrs. Fevurly, MWF-tt 3228-M. FEMININE SEWING and DRESS ALTERER same day received. Call 1831J. 1-13 JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our inventory includes fins, nets, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Giff Shop. 1218 Conn. Phone 4181. ti EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do all kinds of typing at home. Standard rates. Accurate and fast service. Come to 1616 Vt., or phone 23738. Joan Manion. tt CABINET-MAKER a nd FREFISHNIR Antique pieces, Bar-top finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E Higginbothom. 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. tt TRANSPORTATION WIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Phone Jim Sellers, 310J. evenings. MTW-tt NEED RIDE from K.C. to K.U. for 8:00 classes Monday through Friday, return after 4:00 classes. Phone Collette Shull. 205 Lawrence. 1-13 ASK US about airplane rates, ski coach, family days, round trip reductions, all expense tours and steamship lines. For business attendance at the First National Bank for in- formation or itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. sts. Phone 30. tt Quack Club Elects Previews 1954 Ballet Carol Christmann, business junior, was elected president of Quack Club at a meeting last week which also featured a preview of the 1954 Quack club water show. The presentation is scheduled for Feb.24, 25. and 26. andals, pinnings, murders, a chemical discovery, and personals will be covered. The water ballet, entitled "Extra Kansan," will dramatize a special edition of the Daily Kansan. Plane crashes, interpreted by divers, will light the show. News such as More than 27 million Americans moved to new homes during 1952, according to a commercial survey. British Teams Of Investigators Probe Jet Crash (U.P.) British teams of investigators Azuze, Island of Eba rushed today to this island of Napoleon's exile to hunt for sabotage clues in the perfect weather crash of a Comet jet airliner in which 25 persons were killed. "We don't rule out the possibility of sabotage," a British overseas Airways corp. spokesman said in London. The airliner, the same plane that opened the world's first jet airliner service almost 19 months ago, crashed in flames into the calm Mediterranean sea yesterday 10 miles off Punta Di Calamita (Point of Calamity). It had taken off for London from Rome only 30 minutes earlier on a flight that had started in Singapore. There were 29 passengers and six crew members aboard. Wet-eyed fishermen held their hats as two launches yesterday unloaded 15 almost naked and dismembered bodies, including the remains of one of the crewmen. Among the passengers aboard the 500-mile-an-hour plane was Chester Wilmot, famed Australian-born journalist, writer and war correspondent. He had boarded the ill-fated Comet at Rangoon after completing filmed interviews with Britain's Southeast Asia High Commissioner Malcolm MacDonald and Malaysian Commissioner Sir Gerald Templer. There were no Americans on the passenger list released in London by British Overseas Airways. The crash was the fourth involving a Comet since BOAAC started providing the fastest passenger flying service in the world. Shortly after the crash fishermen put out for the scene in boats between Elba—where Napoleon spent a brief exile before returning to power—and the storied isle of Monte Cristo. U. S. Navy search planes also joined in the search. Lt. Richard Boyle of Minneapolis said at Naples after returning from his search misison yesterday that he saw a score of small boats fishing bodies out of the water. "There was no sign of big pieces of wreckage." Boyle said. "The water was littered with floating baggage and papers." Two other Americans assisting in the aerial search were Lt. Arley Vickers of Texas and Lt. William Tannheiser of Massachusetts. Detroit —(U.P.)— A warrant charging attempted murder was drawn today against Donald Ritchie, the key witness against four men suspected of the attempted assassination of CIO President Walter P. Reuther almost six years ago. Ritchie was last seen in the company of a smartly-dressed woman identified as his common-law wife at Chatham, Ont., about 50 miles east of Windsor, Ont. Ontario said she had been positioned $3,500 in a bank in Chatham and bought a 1852 sedan for $1,500 to continue his flight. Warrant Issued Against Ritchie Ritchie, 33, Canadian-born, small time hoodlum, fled a police guard and was reported to be heading West somewhere in Canada. Wayne county Prosecutor Gerald K. OBrier said the warrant was needed to allow Canadian authorities to pick up Ritchie. It was hoped he could be taken into custody before he became the victim of underworld vengeance. One of the men he implicated was still at large and Prosecutor O'Brien said he "fears for Ritchie's life." Canadian police said a tipster told them he saw Ritchie and the woman leaving Chatham for the west late Saturday night but efforts to pick up a trail were unsuccessful. Kansan Classifieds Bring Results. Official Bulletin Phi Mu Alpha, 5 p.m., room 131. Strong knowledge of important exam. Exm. atpatrums* required. Home Economics Department open house. 3:30-5:30 p.m. Fraser hall. Displays and demonstrations illustrating all home economics homes. Everyone is invited. Independent Student association, 7 p.m. 306. Union Members urged to attend. TODAY KU Dames, 8 p.m., Museum of Art, Eldon Teflot, sculpting demonstration. Junior Panhellenic Council, 4 p.m. Chi Chi葛 House. attend. REW Executive Council 4 p.m. Mysers Pepper meeting, 5pm. Memorial U.S. Airborne. Attendance required. Special Speech. Student-Faculty Coffee, 4 p.m., Music & Browsing room, Memorial Union. Mr. LoBello, Sociology dept., speaks on students and faculty welcome. TUESDAY Phi Sigma, 12 noon, 301 Snow. Dr. T. G. Bolte, 12 noon, Amino Acid U-Utilization by Rickettsiae. University Veterans organization, 7.30 University Room, Room. Union, Prof. E. Ribel will speak at the event. WEDNESDAY Fresh-Hawk Club, 7:30 p.m. 101 Snow bearings are acquired News con- cerns on K-State trip Monday. Jan. 11. 1954 Pre-Nursing Club dinner 6 p.m. Me- tam Pre-Nursing Club dinner 6 p.m. Miss Peterson by Tuesdays afternoon. No Jay Jane meeting until Feb. 10. Airlines Head Dies in Crash Kansas City, Mo. —(U.R.)—Tom Braniff, 70-year-old president of Braniff International Airways was killed last night in a plane crash near Shreveport, La., which took the lives of 11 other persons. He was a native of Salina, Kas. The well-known airline executive had received a world citation in January, 1952 at Salina for work inounding the World Brotherhood—a branch of the National Conference of Christians and Jews. Mr. Braniff attended school in Kansas City until 17, when he moved to Oklahoma. He maintained membership in the Kansas City Chamber of Commerce and made frequent trips to that area. the elderly man, whose airline pioneered flights to South America, made his last official trip to this area when he attended the American Royal in October. Pandit Proposes To Reconvene UN New Delhi, India - (U.P.) - Madame Vajaya Lakshmi S弘PI, President of the United Nations General Assembly, proposed today to reconvene that body at India's request to consider the Korean problem. Madame Pandit cabled UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold in New York, asking him to poll the member states on her proposal. A majority of the member states must approve the move. An official spokesman here said the Indian government had asked Madame Pandit to reconvene the eight session of the General Assembly "at an early date and in reasonable time before the dissolution of the Neutral Nations Repatriation commission." Madame Pandit is the sister of Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who long has felt the entire Korean question should be turned back to the UN General Assembly. For Extra Cash, sell those items with a Kansan Classified. PWs Receive Awards For Resisting Reds Washington—(U,P)—The defense department today embarked on a policy of decorating men who courageously resisted Communist torture while prisoners, but left the door open for punishing those who succumbed. As the first step, five Marines—four officers and one enlisted man—were to receive medals for "singu- ping" during the war. The prisoners of the Reds in Korea. Meantime the Army-Navy-Air Force journal said there is a "strong indication" the Defense department will order court martial proceedings against men who turned "progressive" while prisoners of war. The unofficial service publication said military commanders believe it is important to "establish a principle" that men who violate the military code while prisoners—for example by informing on their fellow prisoners—will face trial after their release. Twenty-one unrepatriated American prisoners threw a tea party for 100 Indian guards but none took advantage of the "perfect chance" to ask to come home, an Indian spokesman said. The Americans, who rejected repatriation in "operation big switch" and refused to attend "come home" interviews that ended Dec. 23, entertained their Indian custodians for two hours Sunday night. "They (Indian troops) were standing around there for two hours," the spokesman said. "Anyone could have gotten out if he wanted to." Most members of the American Repatriation commission already have conceded unofficially that the 21 men invicivously have given up their families, homes, and country for an uncertain future with Communism. In Tokyo, however, Cpl. Claude Batchelor of Kermit, Tex., one of two Americans who rejected and then accepted repatriation, said in an interview he believed four men in the "North" camp might come back. "Kyoko (Batchelor's Japanese wife) and I have written letters to four of the men who are most likely to come back," Cpl. Batchelor said. "I don't want to give up their names." Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya, India chairman of the Neutral Nations Repatriation commission, said last Friday he would conduct a "head count" of North camp prisoners, giving them another chance to ask for repatriation before they become civilians Jan. 22. Cpl. Batchelor disclosed today that the U.S. Army plans to keep him here until after all the 21 pro-Communist war prisoners he left behind have had their final chance to come home. The former ringleader of Americans who chose self-exile with the Communists said he has been told he would remain under interrogation in Tokyo for about one month. Nearly two million Americans live permanently on wheels, in 9,000 trailer parks. U.S. Forces In Korea Get Strength Cuts Notification that further troop withdrawals are in prospect—but not imminent—was given to Congressional leaders at White House conferences last week. Washington — (U,P) — President Dwight D. Eisenhower plans to withdraw additional combat troops from Korea, but not for several months. The President, Defense Secretary Charles F. Wilson, and Adm. Arthur W. Radford, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, were understood to have stressed that all U.S. withdrawals—including the pullback of the two divisions already announced—will be slow and orderly. One source reported that the two divisions, whose withdrawal already has been announced, will be withdrawn, as far as possible, by sending home troops due for discharge and rotation and reassigning more recent arrivals. He predicted that the process will take some time. The decision to cut U.S. forces in Korea already has drawn heavy fire from some Democrats. Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D-Wash.) said yesterday, for example, that "it puts us in the position of inviting a big war" and is "really dangerous." Senate Republican Leader William F. Knowland (Calif). declared, however, that he considers the decision sound because it provides more mobility without sacrificing strength. The issue will be up for discussion again when the Senate Armed Services committee questions Mr. Wilson and Adm. Radford tomorrow. A marker to Gen. Billy Mitchell has been erected on the new coastal highway through the Cape Hatteras National Seashore in North Carolina designating the area where it was first proved, on Sept. 5, 1923, that an aerial bomb could sink a battleship. Florida has the largest number of different kinds of trees found in any one of the United States-314.