Page 7 Kansan Classified Ads Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the understaff will be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University by a licensed agent. Travel plans, airport baggage, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.30 Additional words ... 1c 2c $1.60 EXPERIENCED typist will do neat and accurate工时 at regular rates. Phone 2721W. Mrs. Betty Vequisl. 1935 Barker ave. 3-6 BUSINESS SERVICE TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1396M. MWF-t STUDYING into tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360. 1199 Mass. tf BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the crushed Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American ServICE Company, 618 Vt. ti TYPING WANTED Prompt, accurate Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston. tf JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in field. Their needs are important. Our fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. ti MISCELLANEOUS WANTED By mature woman: part time shorthand and typing office work. 2-27 rADIO and TV service. Same day service on all makes. Most complete of tubes and cameras in this area. Bowman for radio TV, 826 Vermont. Phone 138 for prompt service. SAVE MONEY and give your child the best care. Balanced diet, regular period. Can furnish information references you probably know. Call 2473M. 2-26 CONOCG SERVICE - B. P. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plus expert automatic transmission Conoco Services, 19th and Massachusetts. TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wilchita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers, 310J evenings. MTW-uF ASK US ABOUT, airplane rates, ski coach, family days, round trip re- sults, and travel to the Express and the Mountaineer land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Gieseman at the Mountaineer Bank for albums, hotels, Phone 30. 8th and tt KU 376 FOR SALE Feb. 25,1953 University Daily Kansan HALLICRAFTERS s-40A communications receiver, excellent condition, complete antenna kit. Must sell, will sell cheap. Call Prather 2505M. 3-3 TRUMPET. Buescher professional model. You make an offer. Phone 3173. 2-25 HELP WANTED STUDENT MACHINIST; experienced. part-time. Dept. of Applied Mechanics. Room 188. Marvin. 2-25 FOR RENT DESIRABLE two room furnished apartment, second floor. Share bath with two adults; $45. Ph. 1958 after 6 p.m. 3-3 Bureau to Study Nursing Functions Improved health care in the small rural hospital is the object of a study of nursing functions starting soon at the University bureau of government research. The program will be sponsored by the Kansas State Nurses association through a grant by the American nurses association. It will begin about April 1, Miss Irma Law, executive secretary of the state association, said yesterday. The study will determine the activities of professional nurses in a selected sample of small rural hospitals in Kansas. Approximately 30 hospitals, each with 25 or fewer beds, will co-operate. Raymond R. Carmon, assistant director of the KU bureau, will conduct the program, with Horace Mason and Lyle Kyle, administrative assistants, making the study through personal visits and questionnaires. Citizen Gets Refund Gifts Pittsburgh—(U,P)—Sam Harris received his income tax refund yesterday—seven checks totaling $581. Harris received his own refund check and six others. He is returning the other checks—amounting to $575. Students interested in doing secretarial work on the Jayhawker should contact Susanne Berry at 3534. Jayhawker Needs Typists Quill Club Gives Contest Details All students entering the Quill club's spring literary contest should submit manuscripts to Walter Meserve, Quill club advisor, 313 Fraser. Winners will be announced in the spring issue of Trend. All entrants will be considered for membership in Quill club. Parke, Davis and company of Detroit has granted the University $5,400 for research in pharmaceutical chemistry during the 1953-54 school year, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy has announced. Entrants should submit two typewritten copies of each manuscript signed with a pseudonym. The student's name and pseudonym should be placed in a sealed envelope and turned in with the manuscript. The envelopes will be opened following the judging by Quill club members. Detroit Company Grants Study Fund the jacking of $5 Prizes of $5, $3, and $2 will be awarded in each of two divisions, poetry and prose, which includes short stories, articles, essays, radio and play scripts. Dr. Joseph H. Burckhalter, professor of pharmacy, will direct the studies. The deadline for the contest is March 25. The company does not specify the type of research. The studies will be a continuation of investigations now underway, Dr. Burckhalter said. Two graduate fellowships will be awarded from the grant to William S. Briniger Jr., graduate student, and John A. Durden Jr., graduate student. Three Schools Set For Public Relations A series of three public relations schools for Kansas social welfare workers will be held during March, sponsored by the state department of social welfare and University Extension. At the Lawrence program, Max Foresman, public relations director for the Spencer Chemical company, Kansas City, will give the first-day dinner address on "Why have a public relations program?" The schools will be held March 9-10 in the Union building here, March 11-12 at Wichita, and March 13-14 at Garden City. Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, will be one of the three instructors. Wednesday, Feb. 25, 1953 New Army Anti-Aircraft Gun Fires With Little Assistance Flint, Mich—(U.P.)The Army today took the wraps off its newest automatic anti-aircraft gun—the "skysweeper"—which it says can rake enemy planes out of the sky practically with the flip of a switch. The 10-ton weapon finds, follows and fires 75 MM shells at enemy aircraft almost without human guidance. Occasion for today's unveiling was the delivery of the first skysweeper fire control system to the army by the AC spark plug division of General Motors corporation. LT. Gen. Williston B. Palmer, assistant Army chief of staff, told AC workers that the skysweeper is "un-doubtedly the finest weapon of its type in the world and will make our anti-aircraft defenses several times more effective." more effective. Once the unit is emplaced, the radar operator pushes a button, causing a radar to scan the sky in a 15-mile radius once every 40 seconds. When a plane appears on the radar screen, the operator stops the rotation of the scanner and makes adjustments in range, expected line of fire and elevation. As the target comes within the gun's four-mile range, either the computer operator or the radar operator squeezes the trigger. The gun automatically fires 12 $ _{1/2} $ pound proximity fuse shells at the rate of 45 each second. of fire and the radar then goes back to automatic operation. It tracks the plane and feeds target data to the computer. The computer automatically plots range, speed and course of the approaching plane and determines where the gun must point so a shell fired at any instant will intercept and destroy the target. The only human operations after the radar locks the gun on target are placing the shells in the gun's magazines and pulling the trigger. EXPERT WATCH REPAIR Electronically Timed. Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 Week or Less Service WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Lawrence's Distinctive Theatre! NOW! ENDS THURSDAY SHOWS: 7:00-9:00 FEATURES: 7:45-9:45 THE BIGGEST YOU'LL SEE IN '53! STARTS FRIDAY Upstream to Give $5 For Best Articles Prizes of $5 each for the best short story and critical article will be awarded in Upstream magazine's spring literary contest. Entries will be judged by the Upstream staff: John E. Hankins, professor of English; L. R. Lind, professor of Latin and Greek, and two outside judges. Prize-winning entries will be published in the final edition of the magazine this spring. Short stories should be submitted to Prof. Hankins, 303 Fraser, and articles to Prof. Lind, 206A Fraser. Deadline for the contest is March 14. Two copies of each manuscript should be submitted, signed with a pen name, and accompanied by a sealed envelope containing real name of the author. Papers should not exceed 2,500 words. STARTS THURSDAY THEY RIDE . . . PLAY ... AND LOVE HARD ... IN THE BRAWLING CAMPS OF BIG-TIME RODEO! "MAKE A BUCK, SPEND IT FAST... MAT. 2:30- EVE: 7:00-9:00 FEATURES: 2:46 - 7:16 - 9:25 LATEST MOVIETONE NEWS