CLASSIFIED Phone KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted before 10 a.m., and payment is due he paid promptly. All must be collined in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer- sal Daily Kansas Business office. Journalism day is from 8 a.m. to 4:35 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days .59c 75c $1.00 .1c 2c $1.30 25 words or less ... Additional words BUSINESS SERVICE CABINET - MAKER AND Refinisher Antique pieces, Bar-top finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E. Higginbottom. Res. and Shop, 623 Ala. 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 staff is trained to find flies, fish, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. 713-665-9100 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** STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-iches-for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 560.1109 Mass. FOR RENT SINGLE ROOM AND Private Garage for one man student. $25. Call 345J-10, 800-746-9272. HELP WANTED PART TIME HOSIERY SELLING jot available. Make $2.00 or more an hour. Give experience. Box 851, Burlington, N.C. 10-12 FOR SALE 1947 FORD CONVERTIBLE 35,000 miles safety tubes, one owner Call 4196 10-12 ONE-HALF PRICE, NEW. size 10 formal. never worn. Phone 2278R. 10-8 SMITH-CORONA (silent) portable type- model at 1126 Tenn, or port 3028W. 10-9 1948 STUDEBAKER CHAMPION. Excel- mile records. drive 10, drive 10. miles at 1126 Tire A SELMER TENOR Saxophone. Excellent condition. Ph. 2233W. 10-7 BELL AND HOWELL 8MM MOVIE- CAMERA, and a K4E drawing set, for sale. Call 1636J. Can be seen at 801% maine. 10-7 TWO SIAMESE KITTENS. Fine Blood shots in photos included. Young, ph. 3482M. 10-7 A SELMER CLARINET, a Buffet Clarinet, in Tuxedo to Fax. Contact: Green, ph. 1700. 10-7 CONCOQ SERVICE: B. F. Goodlrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service and automatic transmission service. Buckingham Conoco Service, 19th and Massachusetts. LOST AND FOUND BLUE SCHAFFER PEN LEN in vicinity of Fraser hall. Has "H. David Zerfas" inscribed. Reward! Call 1315 or bring to 1127 Ohio. ENDS Starts THURSDAY Page TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Phone Jim Sellers, 31013, evenings. MTW-tt ASK US about airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions, all expense tours and stemship lines. Rose Gieseman at the First National Bank for information or itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. sts. Phone Chicago —(UP)— The American College of Surgeons, which split the medical profession into quarrelling factions last year with its investigations of fee splitting and "ghost surgery," today considered another proposal to advance medical ethics. Box Score Plan Considered by Medical Group Dr. Harold L. Foss, retiring president of the College of Surgeons, said last night that hospitals should set up a "box score" system to check how efficient they and physicians really are. The ACS, meeting here in its annual clinical congress, is already working on a set of standards for such a reform. Dr. Foss said. He said the medical profession owes it to itself to "clean its own house and reduce the possibility of needless interference" from the government and other sources. The "box score" system, Dr. Foss said, could be used to determine the proper length of time a person should be hospitalized for various diseases, the "batting average" of accuracy in diagnosis, cases of misused drug therapy and other practices. Growing public indignation about surgery practices prompted the undertaking of the "box score" program, Dr. Foss said. He said the new standards now being developed would be used in a trial at 14 Michigan hospitals starting next Jan. 1. To illustrate the need for such reforms, Dr. Foss told of an unidentified hospital where a doctor performed 25 appendectomies on children less than four years of age, seven of them less than two when acute appendicitis is believed to be rare. Tuesday, Oct. 6, 1953 Longshoremen Back at Work Under Taft-Hartley Order University Daily Kansan New York—(U.P.)-Striking longshoremen of two rival unions returned to work on Atlantic coast piers today under a Taft-Hartley court order banning their strike for at least 10 days. Tugboat crews and cargo handlers, idle since last Thursday in a walkout that tied up more than 200 ships in Eastern ports, began an early but sporadic response to the back-to-work order. Normal operations were not expected to be resumed until tonight or tomorrow, however. The return to work at some New York piers got under way at the morning "shape-up" hour when longshoremen are hired for the day's jobs. Earlier, tugboat crewmen who also are members of the longshoremen's association began manning tugboats in the harbor. At another pier, 160 longshoremen whose union local bolted the ILA last week to join a new AFL union went to work on two freighters of the Grace line. A pier official said a number of longshoremen who ordinarily work at the pier and who had remained loyal to the ILA did not take part in the shape-up. LA officials had warned that their men probably would refuse to work at piers where AFL longshoremen were employed. One of the first ships to dock was the big Swedish liner Gripsholm, which was nudged into a Manhattan pier by tugboats at 8 am. About 100 longshoremen, members of the ILA, responded for the shape-up to begin unloading the ship's 700 tons of cargo. 2 BIG UNITS OF BREATH-TAKING THRILLS NO.1 WILDEST AFRICA...Never Before Filmed! SEE SEE NO. 2 NOW SHOWING NOW SHOWING Open 6:45 - Shows 7:10-9: "Sahara" at 7:55 - 9:45 "Eskimo" at 7:15 - 9:05 Adults 65c - Children 20c TODAY Patrick J. Connolly, acting head of the ILA, said he believed most longshoremen would not get back to work until tonight and tomorrow because of "confusion." 4.00—Rhythm Rendezvous 4.00—Remember When 4.00—Young American Union 5.00—Pachworks 5.00—Moving Time 5.00—Blue Barron 5.55—News Roundup 5.55—Fantasy In Strings 6.00—In the Mood 6.55—News Roundup 7.00—Bookstore Hour: Thro' The Lis- ness Entomology Club Elects Richard W. Fredrickson, graduate student has been elected president of the Entomology club. D. A. Crossley, graduate student, is vice president, and Ellis Hayden, graduate student, secretary-treasurer. A committee was appointed to plan a picnic, the date to be announced later. NOW! Ends THURSDAY Located On West 23rd St. Dean of Education Sets Colorado Talk Dr. Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the University School of Education, will address a general session of the Rocky Mountain Conference on Science Teaching Oct. 9 at the University of Colorado. Dean Anderson, vice president of the National Association for Research in Science Teaching, will discuss implications for teacher education in science. The conference will consider science programs in elementary and secondary schools. Five IFC Members To Attend Conclave Five Inter-fraternity council members were chosen to attend the national IFC convention Nov. 26-27 in Incinnati, Ohio; at a meeting Monday. They are Darrell Fanestil, college junior; William McEachen, college senior; Robert Worcester, engineering senior; Richard Verbruggie, engineering senior, and James Duncan, engineering junior. President Verbruggie introduced faculty advisers Prof. Sherwood Newton, assistant professor in accounting, and Lt. Joe D. Faull, instructor in military science. NOW thru WED Shows 2:30 - 7 - 9 BURT LANCASTER "FROM HERE TO ETERNITY" 3 - D NOW thru WED FERNANDO LAMAS ARLENE DAHL "SANGAREE" STARTS THURSDAY A Paramount Picture The man of every girl's dreams GREGORY PECK meets the screen's "most audacious" new star AUDREY HEPBURN in William Wyler's 'Roman Holiday'