Classified Ads Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates Terms: Casn. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be sent during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office, Journey Building, 345 East 345 p.m. the day before publication date. Page One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c TRANSPORTATION FOUR-CAR POOL commuting to KD daily 8-5. five days. Want 5th car. Cal Don House, Ar 4080 between 6:30 am 9 p.m. AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on land or by plane. Fows Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book the summer tour. Call Miss Glessean at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 50- 197-4628. TYPING DONE promptly and accurately. Bring to Mrs. Merritt at 1499 Rhode Island, 2nd floor apartment, or call 2670J. 20 BUSINESS SERVICE FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6 TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses, prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. EXPERIENCED TYPE: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. Bouchard, 838 Lau. Apt. 4, upstairs. Ph. 275JS. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight. STUDYING late tonight? Refresh your self with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 410. 1198 Mass. RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area and service them. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. ff CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. We serve hot or for customers conditioned. Opens 8 a.m., till midnight. Crystal Cafe, 690 Vt. JAXHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are ours, but they have everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tt FOR SALE COCKER PUPPIES. Registered. 10- weeks old. Parti-colored. Weaned and just right for training. Mrs. E. E. Alex. and juster. 345 Mississippi, ph. 11838. ZI 1948 BUICH special sedan and 1949 Pon 1103 Lindley, or phone Lawrence 882. 50 1117 Lindley, or phone Lawrence 882. 50 HET-TUP 36 Plymouth marked down to Goes, Sealed-beam lights. Strong oline and battery. Displayed edge drill field, west of Sundsime. Call 2841R. 18 ROYAL QUET deluxe portable typeface Jacob Kossel, 994, or see at 1505 Ohio. 22 Jack Folsom, 994, or see at 1505 Ohio. 22 DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pelican Graphos instruments are here. For drawing, get your own large selection now available your Student Union Book Store. 22 Special rates to Students on subscriptions to TIME, LIFE, AND NEWSWEEK magazines. Order yours today at the Student Union Book Store. 22 Have your FOUNTAIN PEN REPAIRED! Student Book Repair. repair work. Student Book Book Store. New shipment of POCKET BOOKS just them at the Student Union Book Store. REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales- person buys, buyers. William J. Van & Almen. 31108 University Daily Kansan MISCELLANEOUS FOUND A. SLIDE RULE, during final week. Owner may have by identifying and pay- for this ad. Call Less Owen, phone M. 20 Nursery School Workshop May Become Annual Affair The workshop, held for the first time this year, is for the purpose of studying ways of caring for children of pre-school age, and was partially sponsored by the department of home economics. Because of the success of the recent pre-school workshop held at the University nursery school, the workshop may become an annual affair, Mrs. Luella Foster, instructor of home economics, has announced ___ More than 70 parents, teachers, nurses, ministers and operators of nursery schools attended the work- day meetings for Saturday, from Jan. 12 to Feb. 2. Persons as far away as Wichita attended the workshop. Also there were representatives from DeSoto, Omaha, and Kenworth, Kansas City and Lawrence. Every Saturday films were shown concerning child care and a discussion period was held dealing with problems in caring for children of certain age groups, individual child programs for day care and nurseries. Other sponsors of the workshop besides the home economics department, were the state board of health, division of child and maternal health; the state department of social welfare; division of nurses; the Lawrence Pre-school association, and University Extension. Consultants for the workshop were Mrs. Foster, Miss Ruth McNeill, teacher at the University nursery school; Dr. G. M. Martin, director of the division of child and maternal health, state board of health, Topeka; Mrs. Mary Daniels, director, cooperative nursery school of Lawrence; Mrs. Alberta Hillier, director of the community nursery school, Topeka, and Miss Thelma McClure, group care consultant, state department of social welfare, Topeka. Bankers Get Tips On Robbery Curbs Quinney, Mass.—(U.P.) —The man who installed the burglar alarms in the U.S. Treasury in Washington has a "lucky seven" he'd throw in the face of every holdup man in the nation. Clarence L. Flagg, 71, retired former protection engineer says his "lucky seven" suggestions could wreck the plan of any "Slick Willie" Sutton who comes along. "Bankers' Hours." Flagg says, are traditional and he would make use of them in foiling holdup men. Flagg suggests keeping bank vaults closed with time locks set for 15-minute delayed openings. No bandits, he says, will wait 15 minutes for any vault to open. Monday morning, when weekend receipts are taken from night deposit boxes, place them in the vault and count them up after bank doors are closed at the afternoon. Are they won't be any "easy pickings" for handets. Don't let any "customer" just stand around looking at the inside of a bank. Ask if you can help him. That will avoid a chance of someone "casing" the bank for a holdup. His other suggestions: Do not allow safe deposit box customers in the bank after closing hours. Someone else might be waiting to follow them in. Keep a pile of worn bills in every cashier's cage with the serial numbers recorded. Bandits won't spend money, but they'll never suspect worn ones. Never let payroll messengers use the same routes, same times, and if possible avoid the same days. Keep checking up on branch banks and have branch employees always on the alert. With less help, such banks are more vulnerable. Do you have trouble with buttons popping off your coat or dress? Here's a solution: when you buy a new garment, touch the center of each button with transparent nail polish before you wear it. This seals the threads so they will not unravel. FOR RENT Problems varying from "Who is my congressman?" to a statewide survey of flood control occupy the staff members and undergraduate researchers of the 50-year-old, politically neutral, KU government research bureau. Research Bureau Solves Problems Ethan P. Allen, Professor of political science, heads this investigating organization. He is assisted by E. O. Stene, professor, and J. W. Drury, assistant professor of political science. The services of the bureau include a consulting service for state and local agencies to aid them in solving technical and administrative problems. One of the latest projects of the bureau has been a comprehensive study of the Newton city water supply system. VACANÇY for two boys. 1218 Miss. phone 514. 18 The bureau also holds annual training schools of three to five days for public service personnel. A-city clerk training program will be held Thursday and Friday and city managers will attend a school in April. Qualified undergraduates may do research on current governmental problems while still on the campus. Internships on various agencies are also arranged for qualified graduate students. RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new semester with higher grades. Only students receive $35 per month for portable and standard machines. **Study Union Book Store.** **22** For the general public the bureau each day answers questions which range from "What is the state mill levy?" to "Who started the war in Korea?" The Sociology newsletter, a weekly publication, is being distributed among members of the department of sociology and anthropology. Sociology Newsletter Has Summary Of Radi Speech The mimeographed sheet contains a summary of the talk made by Seba Eldridge, professor of sociology, on the KLWN program, Sociology on the Air, Sunday. Sidonie Brown, college sophomore, and Virginia Ferguson, college senior, are editors of the publication. Monday, Feb. 18, 1952 German Educators Visit University Three members of the German commission of UNESCO visited various departments of the University recently to study educational methods. They were Dr. Walter Beck, and Dr. Helmut Stark, university professors, and Frau Annedore Lebar, publisher of children's educational books. Clayton Crosier, president of UNESCO in Douglas county, was host to the three visitors. They were accompanied by Leo Molinaro, executive secretary of the state UNESCO organization. Film Series Has Foreign Flavor A schedule of four foreign movies will be shown as the remaining film series presentations this semester. The Feb. 29 production will be "The Titan," the story of Michelangelo. It is a Robert Flaherty production and is narrated by Fredric March 21, a Spanish film with English titles, "Locura de Amor," will be given. The last film series presentation of the year will be April 4 when "The Wall of Malapaga" will be featured. This movie is an Italian film with English titles and dialogue in both French and Italian. All film series presentations are free to students and faculty. They are held in Hoch auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Reporter Elected Chicago Alumni Head James M. Mundis, '37, recently was elected president of the Chicago Alumni association. Mr. Mundis, a reporter for the Chicago Daily News, will replace Jack Truchart, '43, outgoing president. Paul Kihm, '38, was re-elected vice-president and Mrs. Bernice Tabor Vander Vries, '11, was re-elected honorary vice-president. Wade Stinson, '51, is the new secretary. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, spoke at the meeting. The movie "Football Highlights of 1951" was shown. N-O-W! MID-WEST PREMIERE! THE GREATNESS, THE GLORY, OF THE NORTHWEST! Mat. 2:30 - Eye. 7 and 9 p.m. - Features: 3:03-7:20-9:24 Soon "FIXED" BAYONETS" Also Cartoon News EVENING FEATURES 7:12 and 9:23 p.m. - Next Hit - "Bright Victory" "All university students join or of the hundreds of political parties she said. "Often, if a teacher know a student belongs to a party opposing his, it is very hard to pass the examinations." Students in Greece are so strongly interested in politics that they are often demonstrations and riot on the campuses and in the clite special student group at Athens, Greece, told the Sociolog club recently. It is very hard to enter a university in Greece, she said, because of the expense and the high competitiveness of the entrance examinations. Out of 1,300 students who too examinations to enter the medical school, only 300 were placed. Greek Students' Politics Hot The living expense is very high it going to a university she said, an there are opportunities for stu employment which such are available in the United States. Students do not live in organize houses and have little chance to go acquainted with one another because the classes are very large, sh said. Classes consist entirely of lectures. All Greek children must go to school for six years, Miss Syrro explained. They may then go to gymnasium (high school) if the like for six more years and then on to a summer camp, she said, at least 70 per cent of th students go to gymnasium after finishing the first six grades. Sheriff Finds His Blackjack Lewiston, Idaho—(U.P).—S h e r i f Clarence Kyle found his blackjack when he sorted through a pile c stolen articles cached under a haystack. On Our Stage Thursday Nite 8:45 ADELANE'S Presents VACATION: Anywhere U.S.A. Spring and Summer Fashion Show Featuring Lovely Models From L.M.H.S. - K.U. And Lawrence's Prettiest Young Matrons