University Daily Kansan Page 7 Kansan Classified Ads Monday, Sept. 22, 1959 Call KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kauai business office. Journals are later delivered at 45 p.m. the day before publication date. One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c BUSINESS SERVICE TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1396M. MWF-1f RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area of service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tf STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360.1199 Mass. tt TYIPING SERVICE. Experienced theses. 506 West 6Eth. Phone 1344W. Mrs. H. 506 West 6Eth. Phone 1344W. REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales- Almen, 3110R. buyers. William J. V. Altem. 3110R. TYPING: Theses, application letters, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work. Prompt service. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Phone 1601. JIAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are as ours; everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastry. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight. tf TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses, prompt, accurate service: Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. tf WANTED CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, burgers, desserts, and coffee. Free parking for customers. STUDENT PRINTER to work part-time in composing room and typography laboratory. See or call Mr. Ryther, telephone KU-373. 9-28 WANTED: Baby sitter, to sit in my home 29-F Sunryside or phone 3423-J 9-23 ROOM, BOARD and salary, beginning of fall semester to girl wishing to live with faculty family. Some housework, some baby sitting. Call 3782. 29 PART TIME MAN-West Bend Aluminum Co. can use part-time man in sales division. If you can work from five until nine evenings, and have car you can make around seventy people make connection with large manufacturing company. Address Kitchen Craft Co. Merriam, Kans. 9-24 WANTED: Male student to share apartment with Journalism senior and Engineering junior. Close to excellent boarding house and town. Phone 3481M- 9-24 MISCELLANEOUS RADIO and TV service-same 'day as service on all makes. Most complete stock of tubes and parts in this area. Bowman and Derrick 64 Vermont. Phone 1384 126 prompt service. $7,500.00 net income, property to trade for well-improved farm, business or city property. Owner, James G. Smith, 1801 E. 29th St., Kansas City, Mo. 9-23 TO SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, to watch the week. Round Corner Drug, 101, Mass. 10-3 Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 136M. tf TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Rider or driver from Mission Bell, Calif. Call W. 9-22 ley, Yellowstone Yellow #12 WANTED: Ride to Sunflower either after one o'clock class or from Sunflower for nine or ten o'clock class Monday, Wednesday, Saturday. Please contact John Vogel, Box 5, University Daily Kansan. 9-26 RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers. 3101J evenings. RIDE or exchange ride from Prairie village. Return noon. Fe 8918. 9-24 WANTED: Cau pool or riders from south East Coast. Phone H. Lohengel, KE 1865. 9-26 ASK US ABCTU airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reduc- American Express land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miss Glessean at the First National Bank for 8th Street. 9th Street. 14th and Mass streets. Phone 30. tf AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel, lunerates. Phone Mrs. Lols Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. USED CAR, 1951 Studebaker Regal Champion. Over-drive, hear and radio. 1800 miles. See after six o'clock. 2245 Tenn. Phone 2829. 9-26 FOR SALE PUREBREED Cocker Spaniel pups. A.K.C. registered, six-generation pedigree furnished. Have had distemper inoculation and have been wormed. See at 2134 Learnard. Phone 2189, Ken Franks. -24 1940 PONTIAC-Six, two door, low mileage, one owner, good tires, heater; excellent condition, 1722 Louisiana, phone 2516. 9-24 TUXEDO=Perfect condition. Size 36 $25.00. Call 799M or come to 845 Mason 9-26 1938 CHEVROLET 2 door sedan. Verry good to heat. heater. Calm Step Norma- 443. SLIDE RULE Friday morning on west end of campus. Reward. Phone 1320. Bob Rickey. 9-26 PARKER S1 pen, silver and black. Re- tain the Call Home the Economics 9-24 or 1535. LOST Leading newspapers of the country, most of them Republican, have made statements regarding the charge that Republican vice-presidential candidate Richard Nixon accepted $16,000 to help him meet the expenses of his office. GOPPapersWantNixon'sWithdrawal NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE (Backing Eisenhower) — There is no question but that the financial arrangements by which the Republican vice-presidential nominee furthered his work . . . have put the senator in an ambiguous position. The proper course for Sen. Nixon in the circumstances is to make a formal offer of withdrawal from the ticket. How this offer is acted on will be determined by an appraisal of all the facts in the light of Gen. Eisenhower's unsurpassed fairness of mind. NEW YORK TIMES (Eisenhower)—The "fifty to 100" private citizens who during the past two years have contributed some $16,000 to Sen. Nixon to help him meet the expenses of his office showed poor judgment in making such a gift, and Sen. Nixon has shown poor judgment in accepting it . . . Mr. Nixon must realize that this practice is not to be condoned, particularly on the part of a Republican vice-presidential nominee whose campaign is based in large part on raising the moral level of government. The question which the Republican leaders must now face, and Anyone interested may audition for the Radio Players Wednesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. State Station or Engineering Experiment Station building. The organization, which is two years old, is now working on the point system. Points are given for assistant producing, acting, writing, and sound effects. After obtaining a required number of points, a person becomes a member of the Radio Players, a division of radio and television. The purpose of the program, conducted by the Special Training division, is to instruct research workers from university, industrial and government laboratories and hospitals in the proper techniques of handling radioisotopes, a new research tool. The Radio Players is a group interested primarily in the production of dramatic plays over the air—radio training being a by-product. They were among 32 research workers enrolled in a 4-week course conducted by the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear studies. Though the Oak Ridge program is in its fourth year, this is the first time representatives from the Lawrence campus have attended. Several School of Medicine workers have had the course. His defense of gift-taking is utterly out of keeping with the Republican pledge of a "top-to-bottom" cleanup and of "woodshed" honesty. In fact, it is evidence that the cleanup cannot be limited to the executive department. Auditions Slated For Radio Players RICHMOND (VA.) TIMES-DISPATCH (Eisenhower)—The California senator should resign so that the Republican National committee will be left free to replace him with an acceptable candidate. PHILADPLIHA INQUIRER — (Eisenhower) — Sen. Nixon may have a wholly acceptable explanation—giving details, not generalities—showing that there was nothing improper or unethical about any part of the transaction. He should produce it at once. Edward James Sarcione, assistant instructor in the department of biochemistry, and Frank Dolyak, graduate student in zoology, have recently returned from Oak Ridge, Tenn., where they studied the techniques of using radioisotopes in research. Excitingly new are stoles created to be worn as originally intended or wrapped around the waist, cummerbund fashion. Research Workers Christian Group Visit Oak Ridge Changes Name DRIVE-IN Theatre WASHINGTON POST (Eisenhower)—The senator is, we believe a man of basic decency with laudable aspirations for public service. But . . . he has no decent course except to remove himself from the Republican ticket. Now Showing 1/2 Mile W. of Mass. on 23rd St.-Ph. 260 RALEIGH N.C.) NEWS AND OBSERVER-(Stevenson)—If the practic became general it would also become a general practice for those contributing to such funds to ask and receive special favors. KIRK DOUGLAS - EVE MILLER "THE BIG TREES" decide without loss of time, is whether Mr. Nixon's record in this matter has not marred fatally his usefulness as a candidate for the office of vice president. In Technicolor OUTDOOR MOVIES The Kansas University Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, campus interdenominational religious organization, has changed its name to the Kansas University Christian fellowship. Reasons for the change were cited in a letter from Duane Nelson, president, to Dean of Men Laurence C. Woodruff which stated that Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship is the name of a national religious group of which the local organization is a member, and the name change was made to avoid confusion between the two. He also pointed out that "Inter- Varsity" might mislead some per­ sions into thinking that KUCF was an athletic organization. Officers for this year are, in addition to Nelson, Gordon Wakefield, vice-president; Evelyn Richardson, secretary; James Peterson, treasurer; Florence Thomas, missionary secretary; Carl Blair, publicity secretary, and Joe Engle and Ben Raines, social chairmen. WARNER BROS. PRESENT RAY BOLGER... "WHERE'S CHARLEY?" ALLYN MOLLETIE TECHNI COLOR Late News Events Bugs Bunny "Water Water Every Hare" STARTS THURS. Bob Hope Jane Russell Roy Rogers "Son Of Paleface" It is wrong for Democratic office holders to receive mink coats or any other objects of value from favor seekers. It is equally wrong for a Re-publican senator to receive $15,000 or any other sum from private individuals for the performance of a public duty. It is doubtful if you could call the coll of either Senate or House without finding that close to 100 per cent of the members received extracurricular stipends without technically violating a law. DALLAS NEWS—(Eisenhower)—Sen. Richard Nixon's California-supplied expense fund is political ammunition for the Democrats. Sen. John Sparkman's nepotism in keeping his wife on the federal payroll is political ammunition for the Republicans. Both have been above board about the arrangement. Neither has committed an illegal act. CHICAGO TRIBUNTE — (backing neither candidate)—Mr. Nixon has borne a good reputation and received his nomination largely in recognition of his notable services in the uncovering of the Hiss treason. He owes it to himself and to his party to disclose every fact of the questioned transaction. Regardless of the personalities in the current election, of who wins or loses, the fiscal situation in public office needs a cure and there is none in sight. SIX-FIVE CAB CO. HELD OVER THRU THURSDAY She's DYNAMITE! Matinee Tuesday 2:30 Evening Shows 7 and 8:54 Features: 3:08-7:38-9:32 COLOR CARTOON - NEWS Nev PATEE PHONE 321 —SOON— "DIPLOMATIC COURIER"