7 C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. Monday, March 10, 1952 University Daily Kansan Grad 1 ...3073 Page 7 etz. er- tion lary egee Classified Ads rley nes, atsy arts nda ggy red bbb aer, col- Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid within 30 minutes during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univeter-ernal Library on campus. Journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 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 WANTED BUSINESS SERVICE SECRETARY (CSI). Ideal position for a graduate student in Electrical Engineering until June 1. Return September 1 and continue on 9-months school year basis. Aeronautical Engineering Department TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mr. Robert Lewis, $^{®}$ phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. 14 OREAD BARBER SHOP FOR expert barber service on the Hill. 8:00 to 5:30 Laundry Laundry Dry Cleaning. Charles Oread and Bernard Borst. 1237 Oread. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet store, we need our services are our business. Our one-stop pet. get-fun. fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. Phone 418. **tt** FREE TUTORING in English. Phone GSW. 12 TYPIST: References; prompt, accurate service and late model Royal typewriter. Convenient to KU Bring to 1723 Indiana or call Mrs. Blesner, 3011R. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. Moore, 838 La. Apt. 4, upstairs. P. 2775J. TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tf** STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. **tt** BPOIO AND TV repair service on all parts. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip- ment area and thus assures fast, efficient service. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. ff CRYSTAL CAFE* serves choice steaks sandwiches, malfats, home-made ples and a kind of workspace for customer a-conditioned kitchen. a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe. 609 vt. MISCELLANEOUS MOVED TO NEW QUARTERS. Business Student Union Book store. Frank has Student Union Book store. REAL ESTATE listings wonted. Sales- ers buyers. William J. V. Almen, 3110R. AMERICAN STUDENT Tours furnishes All reservations and accommodations arranged for. Co-educational students only. Information call Karen Bieloc, phone 877-321-5062. TRANSPORTATION AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange nation and international travel, whether for business or pleasure. Professionals Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661 Downs Traffice Service, 1015 Mass. FOR 'YOUR information, every scho- moring a bus leaves Haskell at 7:30 on direct, with no transfer Columbia 388 for any schedule informa- tion 12 Rapid Transit. Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passage now for European travel next week. Learn more about our National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30 BOARDERS WANTED Home-cooked formal Nui Sig House, Phone 366. 10 587-259-7600 DEERSKIN GLOVES at Danfort, Please contact Mel Reuber at 965. 11 WANTED LOST WOMAN'S WHITE GOLD watch. Vincity 12th and 14th STREETS on Ohio. Nancy Shepeard. Phone 2299R. 1134 Ohio. 12 Clothing Cushions Fall Fort Worth, Texas— (U.P) —His chilly job was credited with saving Fritz E. Lebow from serious injury when he fell down a second-floor elevator shaft. Lebow wears heavy clothing to work in 10-below zero temperature in a frozen food vault and the clothing cushioned the fall. Ex-Philippine Missionary To Be Here During Religious Emphasis Week Dr. E. K. Higdon, executive secretary in the foreign missions division of the United Christian Missionary society, will speak during Religious Emphasis week March 16-20. Dr. Higdon was a missionary to the Philippine islands from 1917 to 1937. In Manila he was pastor of the Taft Avenue church and the Union Church of Manila. From 1930 to 1937 he was executive secretary of the National Christian Council of the Philippines. After returning to the United States in 1937 he served as chairman of the Philippine com- eka college, Eureka, Ill., Yale university, and Chicago Divinity school. In 1943 Drake university honored him with the D. D. degree. In February 1951, Dr. Higdon visited the Disciples of Christ stations Mexico, and inspected the Spanish language school in San Jose, Costa Rica. In the fall of 1946 he made a three-month inspection visit to China. For six weeks, late in 1949, he visited the missions of Disciples of Christ in Puerto Rico, Argentina and Paraguay to survey the need for missionary personnel. He also saw the work of missions in Rio de Janeiro and in Lima. Peru. mittet of the Foreign Missions Conference of North America until 1946 He is the author of "Jesus and National Aspiration", "How To Find God", "Faith Triumphant in the Philippines", and co-author with Mrs. Higdon of "From Carabao to Clipper". He was for several years the Philippine correspondent of the Christian Century, and wrote a weekly column for Front Rank. He has had numerous articles on the Philippines published in various magazines and periodicals. The week's schedule of programs be heard on KFKU. University adio station, found at 1250 on the adio dial. Radio Schedule Monday Dr. Higdon is a graduate of Eur- Jayhawk Junior classroom ... 2:30 Flying Carpet: "The Three Golden Swan" Broadway Rhadsody 2:45 Old Irish in music from show show. Great Symphonies ... 7:00 Rachmaninof's third symphony ... Tuesday Jayhawk Junior classroom ...2:30 Art by Radio; Drawing taught by Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education KU Cavalcade of Hits 7:00 top tunes of the week on Mt. Tread Mountaintop Memo Pad ...7:25 A collection of cultural events in the Kansas City, Lawrence, and Topeka area. Wednesday Jayhawk Junior classroom ... 2.30 Prairie Footprints: "Wheels to the Bend" KU in the News 2:45 Tom Yoon reporting the University Dissertation Concert Hall ... 7:00 Featuring Helen Trubuel and E. Kampfer, organist. Jayhawk Junior classroom ... 2:30 writing on the Blue Danube. Brainbusters ... 7:00 Friday Jayhawk Junior classroom ... 200 Storybook Train: "Lazy Lizza Lizard" told by the Old Conductor story- teller, the alderwood, associate unprofessor, entertainer. Museum of Art 2:45 Organizational: Jeraid Hamilton, at the console. Chamber Music ... 7:00 Brahms Sonata in D Major. The Rev. Donald Davies, rector of the Episcopal church in ElDorado, will be the Canterbury club speaker for Religious Emphasis week, March 16 through 20. Rev. Davies To Speak During Religion Week He attended the University of Tulsa, Okla., and the Western Theological seminary at Pittsburgh, Pa., where he received both his bachelor's and master's degrees. He has been a member of university faculties in South Dakota, Oklahoma, and Kansas. Rev. Davies, chairman of the department of Christian education of Kansas, as the Episcopal speaker at a Mass Service. Religious Emphasis we recently Theatre Timetable Otis "Bud" Hill, 50, was released from Ethel hospital at Newton recently after recovering from a slight brain concussion he suffered when his car skidded on ice pavements near Newton. Granada. "Lone Star," 2:54, 7:24, 9:22. Jayhawkwer, "Bugles in the After- noon", 2:53, 7:23, 9:26. '50 Graduate Has Accident Varsity, "Red Stallion," "Red Stallion of the Rockies", 7:00. 10:16. Patee, "Meet Danny Wilson," 7:32, 9:32. Interpreter Cites Impatience As Holdback In Truce Talks Clinton, N.Y.—(U.P.)—The impatience of the people back home is the greatest weakness of the United Nations in the Korean truce talks, according to one of the American interpreters at the Panmunjom meetings. Army Lt. Richard F. Underwood, writing in the Hamilton College Alumni review, said that "if there is one thing we lack, it is patience." Underwood explained: "The foremost reason for this is that the Communists do not care about public opinion. On the other hand, the strength of the UN, both moral and physical, is in direct proportion to the strength and will of the people behind it. "When they become impatient, their leaders are hard pressed to achieve 'results.'" Underwood, who like his brother, Navy Lt. Horace G. Underwood, is an interpreter for the UN truce team, is one of four Underwood brothers who attended Hamilton college here. The pair speak Korean like natives, having been born and educated in Japan. Another has been president of Chosen Christian university for several years. The two brothers believe there will not be a "peace at any price" in Korea. The article continued: "We are trying to bring about a fair and equitable military armistice, and of course we all know that the reputation and future of the UN, and the safety of our forces here, depends on our actions. "The delegates are daily faced with the delicate problem of 'what it will cost?'—in money, bullets and the lives of our men at the front." One thing the UN representatives are getting, Underwood wrote, is experience in dealing with "these people who have absolutely none of the basic principles we expect to find in men." "The Communists base their plans on the 'fickelness' and 'peacefulness' of the democratic nations and the UN, and believe they can outlast us in patience. It is up to every one of us to prove that we can be just a little more patient, more firm, more resolute than they are." Underwood went on in detail to explain the daily routine with the Reds and sums up his article with this warning: Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Path-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS NOW — Ray Milland Helena Carter "BUGLES IN THE AFTERNOON" (Color by Technicolor) News - Color Cartoon VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD NOW — BIG RED "RED STALLION" -and- "RED STALLION OF THE ROCKIES" News - Sports Work Slowed At Lindley Construction work on the new astronomy laboratory on top of Lindley hall has been thrown a month behind schedule by bad weather. Constant Construction company officials report. The work had been scheduled for completion by March 1. After completion it will take considerable time to install and adjust the 27 inch reflecting telescope once on the stationary station on the west end of the campus. Dr. N. W. Storer, chairman of the astronomy department, said he did not know how long it would take to adjust the adjustments on the telescope. Several pieces, part of them custom-made, must still be ordered, Dr. Storer said. The telescope will be used for research only. The six-inch refractor telescope will still be used on openhouse nights when the public is allowed to look at the stars. N-O-W! the battle of Texas... and the battle of the sexes! CLARK GABLE AVA GARDNER BRODERICK CRAWFORD in M-G-M's LONE STAR LIONFI RARRYMORE BEILAH BOND Mat. 2:36 - Eva. 7 & 9 p.m. Features: 2:54-7:24-9:22 Color Cartoon - News SOON SOON "David and Bathsheba" and Regular Prices, Too It is from Red sources. IN RED HANDS—This is the first photo to appear of Philip Denene representative of the London Observer and INS special correspondent, since he disappeared behind the Red bamboo curtain in Korea High School Girls To Visit Here Mortar Board will have a pane discussions freshmen women women to present a skil Class Visits Art Gallery Fifty high school senior girls will attend the annual high schoo leadership day sponsored by the Associated Women. Students Saturday Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will welcome the group to the campus. Miss Martha Peterson, acting dean of women, and Mary Pe Hardman, freshman dormitory counselor will address them... Freshmen women will act as hostesses for the high school seniors during leadership day activities. LAST TIMES TODAY Features: 7:32 - 9:32 p.m. The Oriental art class recently visited the William Rockhill Nelson Gallerv of Art. Kansas City. The class is under the direction of Laurence Sickman, visiting professor of art history and director of the gallery. FRANK SINATRA SHELLEY WINTERS Starts Tuesday It is not our policy to play second run pictures, but in answer to the many requests from ladies of Lawrence . . . we are showing this picture for a very limited engagement! Jane Wyman nominated for academy award for "BLUE VEIL" the Portrayal... The Cast... The Drama of the Year! JERRY WALD and NORMAN KRASNA present R K O B U O - MATINEE TUESDAY -