Wins Page 11 ze framely $15 in the ity second day night g. University Daily Kansan t of vari- 著sorened an- it this so- ry. The ocean bor- n Lewis oderland."l tic imag- up of the animals. s won by rity and bin-North Alpha PfaI colver, col- Anderson, anderson dGlover, fBrazier, Holman res, Ross, Pleasant, taylor, groves OIN ...N istributed Tried ball midnight Common- oy Sigma en- d Pi Tau cal engi- will play be semi- couple for be pur- Willis onond and seniors; jung engineer- Holds portholes the annual burry day er house. by girls es to their n dieses hlited the d around ta. Dean Alt. Bert A. Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be returned on time, during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journey is required in 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date DES: 98¢ Dressing Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING SERVICE. Experienced theses, Mr. Hailk, Mrs. Hailk, 506 West 6th. Phone 1344W. LET US GIVE you a lending hand! Rent a typewriter and improve your grades. Student $50 per month or $1.00 per week. Student - Book Store, room 14. Strong Frank. TYPING: Theses, application letters, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work. Prompt service. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Phone 1601. tf JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop, including one-stop pet shop has everything for car, fir, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales- men buyers. William V. J. Will- Almene, 31108 TYPIST: References; prompt, accurate service and late model Royal typewriter. Convenient to KU Bring to 1724 Indiana or call Mrs. Bliessner. 3011r. IT TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses, prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stamley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers note books, theses, medical and biologi reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. Reports, 838 Ls. Al. 4 upstairs. Ph 2757J. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area, thus assuring fund availability. Boston Radio Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. ff UDYING late tonight? Refresh your self with fountain beverages and wiches-for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 6044, 1109 Mass. FOR SALE CRYSTAL CASTA serves noce steaks, sandwiches, maltis, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. a.m. to midnight. Crystal Café 609 Vt. 1941 PLYMUTH convertible, radio and heater, white-wall tires. Looks sharp, drives good. Call 3744M after 6 p.m. for appointment. 10 DIAMOND ring very fine stone in soil- less sand. 400 Terms. Write Box 10. Daily Kanman. WILSON Southern-Cross tennis racket. Almost new. Light weight, gut string. Priced to sell. Call Fred Chen, McCook hall, number 4. phone 3705. . . . . 1950 FORD, radio and theater and over- seasoned. For delivery to: 7394798R after 4:30 and before 6:30 p.m. 14 WHITE PUCKET fence about 40 feet long, ideal for baby's play pen. Steel posts included. Phone 2834R or ask at 27C, Sunnyside. 14 WHYTHING—you have to sell will reach over 5,000 potential buyers in these classes. But just as you are now, Call KU 376 about this week's SPECIAL RATES. IT'S SPRING! Time to give yourself a lift! Use a College Outline Series handbook or our coursebooks. See them at your Student Union Book Store, room 24, Frank Strong. 10 WE HAVE THEM! Yellow second sheet pads. 140 sheet count. Still only 25c at the Student Union Book Store, room 14. Frank Strong. 10 PORTABLE RADIO Clearance—All Motorola portable radios and automatic clock radios reduced to clear. Student accounts welcome. B. P. Gordrich. 5-14 MISCELLANEOUS SOONER OR LATER your TV or radio will need repair. When this time comes, call 280. Downtown TV Service. 846 Mass. Phone 280. 4-30 LOST SMALL WHITE glass case containing glasses and two locker keys. If found please return to Dolores Hawkins 1332 Louisiana. Phone 3735. Reward. 10 TRANSPORTATION ASK US ABOUT airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions, American Express land tours, Cunard and Matson Steamline ships, Call Miss Gleisen at the First National Bank for Airlines, 8th, Mass. streets. Phone 30. tf ARMY-TYPE SIREN during rally for KU team. Please notify DAILY Karam office AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether at or near theirineraries. Phone: Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 610-535, Downs Traffic Service, 1015 Mass. WOULD CONTACT couple or woman and son interested in modern housing proposition near KU and bus. Can e-change some work. Phone 1474J. 14 WANTED: Dally ride to and from Topeka. Call (Topeka) 2-1070. 10 WANTED I NEED A LOCAL RESIDENT to handle my smart line of costume jewelry in the laundry room. I have samples sent for inspection. Dial Niles, 5645 SW 80th St., Miami, Florida. 10 THREE ROOM furnished apartment in new home. Private bath, laundry privileges. $80. per month. 746 North Third. Phone 2999. 14 FOR RENT THREE ROOM nicely furnished apartment for rent. Will be available June 1 to couple or two boys. 839 Mississippi. Phone 1832. 10 WILL THE young man call for the blu zipper jacket left at Alamo Cafe? 1 FOUND Philip Kassebaum, college junior was chosen president for next year's Student Union Activities board at interviews ending Tuesday night. Officers Chosen For SUA Board Other officers chosen for next year were John Mann, engineering junior, vice-president; Marilyn Hawkinson, college sophomore, secretary, and Shirley Piatt, college sophomore, treasurer. SUA board members for next year will be chosen by the four new officers, a board of representatives the operating department and the director of the Student Union. The officers were chosen by the Union operating committee, a student-faculty governing body. Applications for board member positions may still be obtained and filled out in the SUA office. The applications will be considered next week. The concert will be in recognition of Armed Forces week. No admission will be charged. Air Force Band To Play Here The U. S. Air Force symphonic band will play a concert in Hoch auditorium May 14 under sponsorship of the School of Fine Arts. Appearing with the 85 musicians in the band will be the glee club known as the "Singing Sergeants." Col. George S. Howard is the director of the band, and Lt. Robert L. Landers will lead the 25 "Singing Sergeants." The band will play a series of Armed Forces week concerts in the midwest. It will fly from Washington, D. C., to Kansas City, give the concert at KU May 14, and fill two or three other engagements before returning by plane to Washington. Students who have demonstrated superior writing talent will be considered for free tuition scholarships to the 1952 writers' conference in the Rocky Mountains, Monday, July 21 to Friday, August 8. Tuition Prizes Offered Writers One student, under 30 years of age, from each of a number of selected colleges and universities will be eligible for a scholarship to the conference sponsored by the University of Colorado. Nominations must be made by the heads of English departments or teachers of creative writing by Thursday, May 1. The tuition scholarships, valued at $100 each, entitle successful candidates to attend any of all of the institutions offered. Expenses besides tuition are not covered. Professional' writers who will staff the conference are Jean Stafford, Westport Conn., novel workshop; Karl Shapiro, Chicago, editor of "Poetry magazine, and Thomas Gaskell's book on the art of Arthur Gordon. Clearwater, Fla., formerly editor-in-chief of "Cosmopolitan" magazine, non-fiction. Jessamyn West, Napa, Calif, short story; William E. Barrett, Denver, popular fiction workshop; Phyllis Whitney, States Island, N.Y., juvenile fiction, and C. E. Scoggins, Boulder, serial novel. Only man and chimpanzees suffer colds . . . Dogs, cats, rabbits and other animals can't catch cold. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY DRIVE-INTHEATRE "THE TOUGHER THEY COME" Thursday, April 10, 1952 "THERE'S A 1/2 Mile West on Hiway 59 - Phone 260 ENDS TONIGHT = "TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY" GIRL IN MY HEART" This is NOT a suggestion that you become a counterfeiter—but you can be sure of always having money with you by keeping your funds in your check-book. Manufacture your own money The Lawrence National Bank WRITE YOUR CHECKS ON 7th and Mass. Member FDIC How does Clyde Lovellette, KU's basketball all-American, sign his checks? He has at least 25 nick-names to choose from. Clyde Has So Many Names He Should Be Bewildered Sportscasters, fans, sportswriters and coaches alike all get a great delight out of devising new and better nicknames for the giant of the cage game. A few sportscasters and writers have used the more classic epithets like Mount Lovellette, Mr. Magnificent and the Leaning Tower of Kansas, the Great White Whale of the Planks, the Big Turkey, the Monster of the Music hall, Power-Tower Lovellette, Hercules of Hoch, and Campanile of the Court. Clyde didn't seem to be simple enough for most sportswriters, so they tacked on prefixes. He's been called Cumulus Clyde, Cumbersome Clyde, Colossal Clyde, Cloudburst Clyde, Hookin' Clyde, Hillbilly Clyde, and Campanile Clyde. Bob Hope, in a show in the Municipal auditorium in Kansas City, Mo., asked Lovellette and his teammates, who were present, to stand. After a few warm-up cracks Lovellette received a new description from Hope—a control tower with shoes. Not satisfied with this, they delivered into Mr. all-American's background and came up with the Terre Haute Terror, the Hoosier Hot-Shot and the Fabulous Frenchman. Speech Professors To Attend Conference Kim Giffin, assistant professor of speech, and E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, will attend a conference of the Central State Speech association, Friday and Saturday, April 18 and 19, at Tulsa, Okla. Prof. Giffin has been asked to organize a special round table on the problem "Unity and-or Diversification in the Development of Our Regional and National Speech Organizations." 15 BIG STARS! A BIG PICTURE! Mat. 2:30 - Eve. 7 and 9 Features: 3:08-7:38-9:43 ALSO COLOR CARTOON MOVIETONE NEWS STARTS SUNDAY "MA AND PA KETTLE AT THE FAIR" Soon . . . on the Way "Singin' In The Rain" "Pride of St. Louis" "Quo Vadis" Some authors have taken advantage of Clyde's better-than-extraordinary size to dub him the Peerless Percheron and the Prolific Percheron. Clyde hasn't even been safe from his own teammates. Famous for his pranks around the court, he was one of the greatest players. Clown'd by his basketball buddies. But his checks read Clyde Edward Lovellette. Added • Color Cartoon and Late World News "Steel Town" Is Coming! Plus: Late News-Sports "ALLEN'S ANIMAL KINGDOM" And K.U. vs. Peorin And K.U. vs. Peoria ENDS TONITE ENDS TONITE "SINS OF MADELEINE" "STRANGE WOMAN" FRIDAY-SATURDAY FRIDAY-SATURDAY Spade Cooley "BORDER OUTLAWS" -and- Richard Travis "DANGER ZONE" -also- -also- Ch. 9 "Iron Horse" Late News Events