0 2 2 2. (1) $a \neq 0$ ($a \neq -1$) ($a \neq 1$) ($a = -1$) (2) $a = 0$ ($a = 1$) ($a = -1$) ($a = 1$) University Daily Kansan Page 8 Chemistry Dept. Awards Set Up The establishment of a new fellowship and renewal of another in the Department of Chemistry have been announced by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. The Du Pont stipend will be $1,400 if the fellow is single, or $2,000 if he is married. A grant of $1,200 to the University will again accompany the fellowship for expenses to cover research. Pan American Refining corporation and Du Pont company are placing the fellowships at KU. The fellowships stem from satisfaction they have had with KU graduates, company officials wrote. The two fellowships are worth approximately $4,000, and are for the academic year of 1952-53. Pan American said KU was selected for its $1,300 fellowship because of "the high reputation the Chemistry department has established for itself and the quality of the KU men employed by the company." Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, acting department chairman of the Chemistry department, considered the Du Pont fellowship as the most valuable one under control of the department. Selection of the recipient will be made at the end of May. The fellow is to be selected by the University and, preferably, is to be in his final year of work toward his doctor's degree. A fashion show, with the profits going to children in North Lawrence who were flood victims will be sponsored by the Panhellenic council Thursday and Friday, March 20 and 21, in Strong auditorium Panhell Plans Fashion Show Tickets will go on sale Monday. March 10. They may be purchased from Junior Panhellenic members or at Harfeldres for 50 cents. Everything from suits to party dresses will be modeled by 15 girls, one from each sorority, and one from both Corbin and North College halls. All the clothes will be provided by Harzfelds. Chairman of the show is Beverly Shop BROWN'S First Thursday, March 6. 1952 Open Saturday Till 9 p.m. FINAL CLOSE OUT PRICE ON "B 9" PARKA HOOD COATS Sizes 38 to 50 Genuine Fur Hood Quilted Rayon Lining Wool Storm Cuffs Elastic Waist Band Water Repellant O. D. Outer Shell $19.98 Special B 15's $10.98 Special TUXEDO RENTALS First Door South of Patee Theatre Brown's Toggery 830 Mass. Foreign Student Adviser To Attend Regional Meet Here J. Benjamin Schmoker, secretary of the National Association of Foreign Student Advisers, will attend a regional meeting of the association tomorrow at the Faculty club. Mr. Schmoker is making a tour of the United States talking with advisers of foreign students, said K. Akiderson, KU foreign student adviser. He is presently visiting colleges along the west coast. "The conference will be conducted on an informal discussion basis," Mr. Alderson said. Alumni Office Queen candidates from organized houses' may pick up pictures at the Alumni office, 226 Strong, before 5 p.m. Friday. Queen Pics At Alumni Office Bishop, college senior. Her assistant is Louise Swigart, fine arts junior. A "lazy Susan" will be awarded the house selling the most tickets. Museum Of Natural History Receives $3,500 Grant; South Dakota Work Three thousand five hundred dollars has been granted by the National Park service to the Museum of Natural History for the archaeological work in South Dakota, C. S. Smith, assistant curator of anthropology, announced today. Dr. Gordon Baldwin, regional archaeologist of the National Park service of Omaha, Neb., was on the campus Wednesday to make necessary arrangements concerning the grant. The grant is the third presented to the University by the National Park service bringing the total to $9,500 granted for work on the Talking Crow site in the Fort Randall reservoir in South Dakota. For the past two years summer expeditions, led by Dr. Smith and made up largely of University students, have worked at this site. The University is one of several co-operating institutions selected by the National Park service to assist the federal government in salvaging valuable archaeological data from areas that will be flooded by dams currently being built in the Missouri basin. Excavations in the past two years indicate that the Talking Crow site is rich in the information being sought by the National Park service, Dr. Smith said. Archaeologists are interested in reconstructing prehistory of the Great Plains and retracing the cultures of tribes living in the region when early white explorers first arrived in the area. "The 1952 season should complete all necessary excavations at the site," Dr. Smith said. A detailed report will later be made of the three years' work. The University expedition this summer will be made up of approximately 15 students. Some Indians may be hired to assist in the work. The party will establish a tent camp adjacent to the site and will spend from the middle of June to middle of August working in the area. So far, 40,000 fragments of pottery and 2,500 other artifacts have been found at the site. It was probably occupied by the ancestors of the Pawnee and Arikara tribes about 1700. The site is marked by the remains of some 20 earth lodges, each about 40 feet in diameter and built of logs covered with earth. IT TAKES A GOOD PILOT TO BRING A SHIP SAFELY TO PORT . . and good business planning to steer a successful course among today's economic shoals! Today, more than ever, the right presentation of your advertising message in the right medium may be the essential factor in maintaining an adequate sales volume to offset everrising costs. As always,a consistent program of newspaper advertising offers you the most economical means of presenting your sales message to the widest possible audience. To help you obtain better results from your advertising . . we offer you, free of charge, the use of the world's finest advertising services. We urge you to avail yourself of the outstanding art work, timely merchandising ideas, authentic fashion presentations, and other selling helps shown in our modern mat service. The Daily Kansan