University Daily Kansan Page 7 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Trips Planned LOST AND FOUND To Art Gallery Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by cash during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals must be received by 45 p.m. the day before publication date. FOR SALE 1949 PACKARD CONVERTIBLE New Gene Stucker, 1608 Tenn. Pit- 278-M. ONE OF TWO CARS FOR SALE. Recently married and have 2 cars. Will sell either 1951 FORD-A-MATIC Club Coupe 4x4 or 1951 STYLING Styline DL Chevrolet 4 drive, 27,000 actual miles. Both completely equipped in excellent condition. Call 2473M. 12-7 EXAKTA 35 mm CAMERA. Tessar lenq; rifice. New condition. Sanf. rifice. Ph. 2334W. FOR RENT APARTMENT to young man. No smoking or smoking in room. With us at 12:30pm. 1616 Indian. 12-7 DOUBLE ROOM for 2 KU men students- private entrance, shower and bath, linens furnished. Close to KU and town. Also a single room. See at 928庐堂. 12-7 WANTED: RIDERS to New York City, leaving Lawrence Dec. 26, returning Jan. 1. New car $35 per person round trip. Call 41109. 12-2-7-8 TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wilhita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Phone Jim Sellers. 3101J, evenings. TWM-tf GRADUATE STUDENT SEEKS RIDE TO CALIFORNIA for Christmas vacation, preferably leaving around Dec. 20—willing to share expenses. Ph. 2256. 12-8 WANTED: RIDE TO BOSTON or vicinity for Christmas. Will help with driving and share expenses. Phone Donald Chang, 322. 12-9 TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. Low AIRLINE RATES home for Christmas stillERVATIONS NOW to be sure of a seat.SEE ORM imported HOLY LAND gifts for Christmas. PLAN NOW BEFORE CHRISTMAS for your Summer 1954 European vacation trips. TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. phone 3661 10-12 Massachusetts. ASK US about airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions, and bus trips. For business or pleasure trip call Miss Rose Giesman at the First National Bank for information or iteraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. iss. **phone** ff BUSINESS SERVICES PROFESSIONAL TYPING at student rates. Prompt consideration, accurate and fast. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Bark ave. Ph. 2721W. MWF-U TVPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1396M. MWF-ff FORMAL AND INFORMAL dressmaking. also draperies and silipcovers, and alterations. Phone 1843-L-4. 825 New York MWF-ff TYPIST: Experienced, accurate typist will give immediate attention to your work. References upon request. Mrs Fevirley, ph. 3226-M. MWTF- JAYHAWKER: Give yourself a pleasant surprises and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our focus. We provide everything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grants' Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do all kinds or typing at home. Standard rates. Accurate and fast service. Come to 1616 Vermont, or phone 2373R. CABINET - MAKER AND Refnisher: Antique pieces, Bar-top on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E. Higginbottom. Res. and Shop, 623 ADA BERVERAGES, lee cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. t STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360. 1109 Mass. EXPERT WATCH REPAIR Electronically Timed 1 Week or Less Service Guaranteed Satisfaction WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. PAIR OF BUCKSKIN GLOVES. Light colored with dark stitching. Reward. Notify Duane Hefner at 1115 Tenn. Ph. 1035. 12-9 PICKET AND ECKEL SIDE RULE, room Number. Will find winder 3305? 12-8 $0.00. The University Employment clinic will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Union ballroom. Job Clinic To Be Held The purpose of the clinic is to help business school seniors and other graduates interested in business find jobs in the business world. Talks will be given by Harry Snell, personnel relations supervisor of the Bell Telephone company, who will speak on qualities a student should look for in a job; William P. Harsh, personnel director of Hall brothers, makers of Hallmard cards, who will speak on qualities a business firm looks for in a college graduate, and J. D. Heysinger, assistant dean of the Business school and assistant professor of economics, who will speak on job hunting processes—method and conduct. Photo Display Shows Mexican Ballet Art A discussion period will follow these talks. A collection of pictures, by a painter who decided photography was also a good medium for expression, is now being displayed in a downstairs gallery at the Museum of Art. The photographs were taken by David L. Straight, a free lance painter who was once a photographer for the National Gallery of the Mexican National ballet. Dr. Klaus Berger, acting director of the Museum, said the purpose of the exhibit is to present the vigorous form of the Mexican ballet, which he said, does not follow the traditions of classical ballet. County Reporters To Get $75 in Prizes A total of $75 in prizes will be awarded by Statewide Activities to county correspondents. The awards, based on clippings from hometown newspapers, are: first prize, $30; second prize, $25 third prize, $8; fourth prize, $7; and fifth prize, $5. Those interested should contact Jason Ott, college sonhomore. Benson Avoids Cotton Cut Washington — (U.P.)— Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson left it up to Congress today to relax the prospective harsh cut-back in cotton production next year. Benson said he could find no authority to permit, him to ease acreage controls, but he urged Congress to act quickly in January to relieve the impending cotton cut back. Kansan classifieds bring results. NOW thru WED. NOW THING WED. BURT LANCASTER VIRGINIA MAYO "Southsea Woman" CO-FEATURE GORDON MACRAE "Desert Song" NOW thru WED. The THUNDERING STORY of UNCLE SAM'S FLYING BULLETS! "SABRE JET" Two University-sponsored trips will be available for students to visit the 20th anniversary exhibition of the Nelson Art gallery in Kansas City, Mo., Robert Sudlow, painting and drawing instructor, has announced. One trip will be Tuesday, Dec. 15, and the other will be Thursday, Dec. 17. On both trips two buses will leave from Strong hall at 12:30 p.m. and will return to Lawrence the same afternoon. The cost per student for transportation will be 85 cents for the round trip. Deadline for payment will be Dec. 10, and Mr. Sudlow said there would be no refunds after that date. Students who intend to go should contact the painting and drawing office, 325 Strong, Mr. Sudlow said, ading that the capacity of each bus is 35. Reservations will be made on a "first-come first-served basis." Paintings borrowed from other museums all over the U.S. will be on display at the Nelson gallery during the 20th anniversary commemoration which begins Dec. 10. Western Front, Korea —(U.P.)—A Chinese soldier surrendered to American troops recently, but only after he spent two hours trying to convince the GIs he was a Communist soldier. Red Chinese Caught In A GI Chow Line Military police officials said today that American soldiers thought the man was joking. They thought he was a Korean laborer employed by the Army. The Red soldier had walked across the peace line and tried to surrender to an American guard. The sentry did not believe the man's broken English plea, nor did several other GIs the Chinese approached. He finally walked to Fox company, where he joined American soldiers in the chow line. A Korean mess attendant struck up a conversation with him, learned his identity, and turned him over to the guards. KDGU Schedule 4:00 p.m.—Stardust in Song 4:55 p.m.—New Sounds 5:00 p.m.—Your Union! 5:00 p.m.—Pachworks 5:30 p.m.—Facts on Record 5:55 p.m.—News 6:00 p.m.—Fantasy in Strings 6:30 p.m.—In the Mood 6:55 p.m.—News 7:00 p.m.—Bookstore Hour 8:00 p.m.—Notes in the Night 9:00 p.m.—Sign Off The otter, at one time an important fur-bearing animal in Nebraska, is now extinct in the Cornhusker state. 4 MORE DAYS of HILARIOUS FUN ENDS THURSDAY HELD OVER! "ONE OF ENGLAND'S BEST..." →Newsweek →Magazine TECHNICOLOR STANLEY • GEORGE HOLLOWAY • RELPH WAYNE • GREGSON WAYNE • GREGSON * A Arthur Rank Organization Presentation A.J. Arthur Rank Organization Presentation A Universal-International Release Shows 7-9 Feat. 7:35-9:35 Harvard Crimson Gets New York Circulation New York—(U.P.)—A group of eager Harvard university students rushed into New York's newspaper vacuum last week with 10,000 copies of the Harvard Crimson, their undergraduate daily. They gave the newspapers free to crowds in this city where seven major dailies have suspended publication because of a strike of photo-engravers. The Crimson's editorial chairman Milton Wirtzmann, a U.S. law professor, said he tried to catch former President Harry S. Truman at breakfast to give him a copy. An extra press run of the Crimson was loaded into automobiles at Cambridge, Mass. The first carload of 4,000 papers arrived in the city and was distributed to hotels and newsstands with instructions they be given away free. Gwirtzman said the New York distribution—a special issue omitting usual college news—was the idea of himself, Michael McCoby, of Mt. Vernon, N.Y., president of the Crimson, and George Abrams, of Newton Mass., managing editor. A tongue-in-cheek editorial in the Crimson said "those interested in the intellectual well-being of the United States" viewed the lack of newssoapers in New York with "unrest." The appearance of the Harvard Crimson was only one instance of the change of reading diet for New Yorkers brought about by the strike. Nine other newspapers in Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Washington were sending extra copies to New York. "The Crismon, in its small way, could no longer sit by and watch such a situation continue," the editorial said. Out-of-town news dealers said most buyers did not seem to care where a paper came from, as long as it contained news and features in black and white. West coast newspapers were being read eagerly by New York natives who had seldom penetrated farther west than the Alleghenies. Knotts Draws for Manual Illustrations by George Knotts, education senior, have been included in an instructor's manual recently published for the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Knotts contributed 33 pen and ink drawings to the book, which is titled Zion League Leader's Handbook. Reds May Try 3 U.S. Men The unconfirmed reports, which came from travelers from Peiping, said former U.P. correspondent Richard Applegate, Don Dixon of International News Service and merchant marine Capt. Ben Krusner were in "good health" and still waiting for a trial. NOW! Hong Kong — (U.P.)— Reports from Portuguese Macao said the fate of three Americans seized by Chinese Communists while sailing in a yacht last March may depend on the outcome of political developments in Korea. Robert CUMMINGS Marie WILSON CONTINUOUS SHOWS DAILY FROM 1 P.M. Shows 7:00 and 9:00 Features 7:42 and 9:40 COLOR CARTOON -NEWS Christmas Gift Books Now on Sale! $2.50 and $5.00 WEDNESDAY BOX OFFICE OPENS DAILY AT 12:45 PRICE SCHEDULE MONDAY FRIDAY 1 p.m. Until 2 p.m. - 75c 2 p.m. Until 5 p.m. - 90c 5 p.m. Until Closing $1.20 PRICE SCHEDULE