Page 3 Part-Time Job Prospects Are Bright For KU Women Wednesday, February 6.1951 University.Daily Kanson Prospects for part-time student employment for women are good, but part-time jobs for men are more scarce, the employment bureau said today. According to Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, there is a particular demand for women who can take shorthand. Full time secretarial jobs are also available. A need for women office workers continues from last fall, Miss Peterson said. The shortage is mainly a result of inconvenient class schedules and lack of training. In addition to office jobs, there are several serving positions in dormitories available which is unusual for this time of year. "On the whole the women's employment picture is good. Most job requests are met." Miss Peterson said. Men's jobs are not as plentiful a women's. However, it is possible for a man to get a job if he really need Pharmacy Student Given $100 Award A $100 scholarship has been awarded to Roy H. Muntzert, pharmacy senior, according to Dean J. Allen Reese of the School of Pharmacy. Muntzert will use the scholarship during the spring semester and will receive a bachelor of science degree in pharmacy in June. During the five semesters Muntzert has attended the University, he has been on the honor roll three times. He is president of Rho Chi honorary pharmacy society. This scholarship was established by the American Foundation for Pharmaceutical Education. This grant is awarded to juniors or seniors in the School of Pharmacy who have grades averaging "B" or better. The Mid-Western Art camp will hold its first session at the University from Sunday, June 15, to Thursday, June 26. Art Camp Session To Begin In June This summer session will be sponsored by the School of Fine Arts and managed by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts. The Art camp is affiliated with the Mid-Western Music camp, which will be held at the University this summer for the 15th year. All courses will be adjusted according to the needs of the individual. Subjects of study include design, painting, jewelry and silversmithing, ceramics, weaving, drawing, cartooning and sculpture. Recreational activities, such as softball, tennis, golf, pingpong and swimming, will be featured. The camp will publish a yearbook which will need students to work in the fields of advertising, sports, art, twisting, photography and humor. For information about the camp write Marjorie Whitney, professor of design, who is art camp director. one, Mrs. Virginia Matthew, secretary to the dean of men, said. Many men students ask for jobs that require only a few working hours a week and pay top wages. Few jobs of this type are available. At present, men can get part-time jobs as fountain workers, waiters, janitors, bellboys and window washers. The main reason for the seasonal scarcity is that most employers have found workers to fill all positions by this time. 2 Students Join Radio Workshop Caroline West, College sophomore, and Frank LaBan, College junior, were accepted as Radio work shop players at a trout Jan. 31. For the first time, the Radio players will present two dramatic productions a week. Mrs. Ruby LeNeva Motta, script writer-producer for KFKU, said the two students must meet these three requirements to become Radio players: Be in three radio plays, show quality and versatile voices and be submitted and approved by old Radio player members. Mrs. Motta said Miss West showed rood diction and a good voice. One of the productions, "Flying Carpet," a dramatization of literature for children in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades, is a continuation from last semester. LaBan was good in imagery, Mrs. Motta said, and in addition showed an ability to speak Spanish, Italian, Scotch and French dialects. The other production, "Prairie Footprints," an authentic account of Kansas history, is new this semester. It also is dramatized for children in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades. KFKU To Present New History Drama A new dramatic production, "Prairie Footprints," written and produced by Mrs. Ruby LeNeva Motta, script writer-producer for KFUK, will begin at 2:30 p.m. today on KFKU. The 15-minute program will give an authentic presentation of actual Kansas history. Mrs. Motta said the people, but that people make events. The first play is concerned with three incidents on Lewis and Clark's expedition. The first incident takes place on a Missouri hilltop at the junction of the Missouri and Kansas rivers and tells of the explorers being able to look down the river and see an old camp of Kansas Indians through Lewis' field glasses. The second incident tells of an escape with a bear, The last incident tells of the two men trying to reach the Shoshome Indians to get guides and horses across the continental divide. Mrs. Motta said Kansas teachers have responded enthusiastically to the idea of a history series. OUR COMPLETE GARAGE SERVICE Keeps Your Car Value UP Operation Cost DOWN! Make Sure Your Brakes are tight - Wheels are aligned - Fenders are in good shape - Motor is in top running condition Dean Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion gave a series of lectures at the Interdenominational Bible institute in Beatrice, Neb., Jan, 26 to 29. The lectures were on four New Testament books, First and Second Corinthians, Galatians, Romans and Philippians. SANDERS MOTORS - Radiator has enough Anti-freeze Dean Barr Talks At Bible Institute - Lights are dependable 622-24 Mass. Another series of four lectures entitled "Common Sense Religion" is based on the "wisdom books" of the Bible. These lectures are being given by the country's national country church in Kansas City, Mo. They are held Thursday nights. Gets 30 Days For Sleeping Future lectures will be on Feb. 7, 14 and 21. Phone 616 Detroit—(U.P.)-Jack Dobbins, cold and tired, found a heated garage and went to sleep in one of the cars inside. Dobbins, had chosen the police garage as a lodging. Found guilty of being intoxicated, he was given 30 days. Aja! Aja! -of proper packaging and loading. Donkey Makes Same Noise No Matter How You Spell It! Chicago—(U.R.)—Dr. Austin L. Rand, curator of birds at the Chicago Museum of Natural History, got to wondering how animals sound to persons who speak foreign languages. He asked Spanish and German colleagues to write the sounds of some familiar creatures, with these results:
| English | German | Spanish | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Donkey | he-haw | Iha! Iha! | Ajal Ajal! |
| Cat | meow | miau | miau |
| Duck | quack, quack | wack, wack | cua, cua |
| Owl | Who | hu | ju |
| Cow | moo | muh, muh | meu, muuu |
| Pig | grunt, oink | ouik, ouik | grup-grup, wink |
| Frog | croak | quak, quak | cruac, croac |
| Rooster | cock-a-doodle-doc | Kickkerki | quiquiriguiii |
| Dog | bow-wow | wau, wau | guan, guan, guan |