THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1951 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE NINE Official Bulletin April 26 Gamma Alpha Chi, 7:15 p.m. today, East room, Union. KuKu initiation, 7:30 p.m. today, meet on Green hall steps. Make plans to attend conclave Saturday afternoon and evening. Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich Donnerstag um 5 Uhr in Fraser 502, Dr. Burzle spricht über "Deutsche Volksbrauche." College Daze entire cast, 7:30 p.m. today, 102 Strong. Le Cercle Francais se reunira jeudi a sept heures et demie, 113 Strong. Tous ceux qui s'interessent au francis que cordialient invites. Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30-8:30 p.m. today, 206 Strong. Dr. Lionel Gurney, medical missionary to the Sudan, speaker. All students welcome. L. V.C.F. Missionary meeting, noon to 12:50 p.m. Friday, Danforth chapel. Open to all students. W. A.A. general meeting, 7:30 p.m today, Robinson gym. Election; all members attend. Pershing Rifles, executive meeting, 7:30 p.m. today, Military Science lounge. Absences must be excused. Y. M.C.A. all membership meeting 7:30 p.m. today, English room, Union. Rev. Bradshaw, speaker. Alpha Kappa Psi spring party, 9 p.m. Friday, Big Seven room, Eldridge hotel. Dress rehearsal with orchestra College Daze chorus and cast, 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Hoch auditorium. College Daze chorus and cast, 7-10 p.m. Friday. Houdt audition. KUDF: all members attend election breakfast, 8:30 a.m. Sunday, First Christian church. Graduate student picnic, meet at Union, 5 p.m. Friday. Practical Nursing School To Open At Medical Center Episcopal Students club, 5 p.m. Sunday, Trinity church. Supper at 5:30. Bishop Fenner, speaker. A school in practical nursing has been established at the University of Kansas Medical center. Classes will begin in September, with 24 persons enrolled. The school has been named the Florence Cook department of Practical nursing. It expects to be the first practical nurschool school accredited under the 1949 Kansas law for the licensing of practical nurses. Miss Campbell was graduated from the Bethany hospital nursing school, Kansas City, Kan., and did post-graduate work at the University of Chicago. She received a bachelor of science degree from Columbia university. Miss Mabel Campbell, former assistant director of the nursing service at the University of Chicago clinics, will be director of the school. The training period for practical nurses will be one year. Classes of 24 persons will be admitted every four months. The first four month period will be devoted to classroom lectures and demonstrations given by a registered nurse and a home economics instructor. Classrooms and office space will be provided for this part of the course by the Kansas City, Kan., board of education at Karsas City Kan. Junior college. During the second four month period the students will be given practical clinical experience in bedside nursing and patient care at the medical center. The third four month period students will work in small hospitals and private homes. Hospitals which will participate in the training are Ranson Memorial hospital at Ottawa and Lawrence Memorial hospital. The home nursing department is receiving funds from an eastern foundation's post-graduate grant made to the medical center in 1950. Because of these funds no tuition will be charged. CHICAGO COLLEGE of OPTOMETRY Entrance requirement thirty semester hours of credits in specified courses. Advanced standing granted for additional L. A. credits in specified courses. Registration Now Open Excellent clinical facilities. Recreational and athletic activities. Dormitories on campus. Approved for Veterans. An Outstanding College in a Sulendid Profession Fully Accredited 1845-H Larrabee St. CHICAGO 14, ILLINOIS However, laboratory charges, uniforms, other white clothing, and textbooks will cost each student about $100 during the first four months in addition to lodging and food costs. Approximately $500 is earned by the student during the last eight months of supervised practice. Applicants for training must be 18 years old or older, in good health, and have finished two years of high school if under 25 or the eighth grade if older than 25. These are the qualifications listed in the law for licensure of a practical nurse. Professor Of Anesthesia Returns From Two-State Tour Dr. Paul Lorhan, chairman of the anesthesiology section, at the University of Kansas Medical center in Kansas City has returned from a two-state lecture tour. Dr. Lorhan spoke at the Creighton University School of Medicine in Omaha on "Operating Room Accidents, Their Prevention and Treatment." His topic was the same at the Iowa State Medical society general assembly meeting in Sioux City. Also at Sioux City he discussed "Blood Volume Studies Following Spinal Anesthesia" at an Iowa Anesthesiology society meeting. Speeding on U.S. streets and highways last year injured 475,500 men, women, and children. GI's To Get Free Policies Washington (UF)—President Truman signed into law today a bill to give all servicemen free insurance of $10,000. The program is permanent. It also is retractive to June 27, when American troops were committed to the fighting in Korea. Enactment of the new law terminates the National Service Life insurance (N.S.LI) program as millions of World War II servicemen knew it. No new N.S.LI policies will be issued. However, a veteran's rights in any existing or lapsed N.S.LI police are fully protected. Under the N.S.L.I. program it was optional whether servicemen took out government insurance, and they were required to pay regular premiums for it. As a result, many died uninsured. Under the new program, insurance is automatic and free. Men in service who already have N.S.L.I. policies can hold on to them, and keep up their payments, or drop them until they leave service, re-instating them then. Where the existing N.S.L.I. policy is less than $10,000, free coverage will be provided to make up the full amount. There can be no double coverage to provide insurance of more than $10,000. Although the free insurance cannot be carried over into civilian life—as N.S.L.1. policies could—servicewill be entitled, within 120 days after discharge, to buy a new form of government insurance. This will be term insurance, based on a new morality table and with much lower premiums than were available under N.S.L.I. The term policies must be renewed every five years at increasing rates. Professor's Book Chosen For Exhibit A textbook on art by Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of art education at the University, has been selected for the 13th annual "Exhibition of Textbooks of the Year." The exhibit, sponsored by the American Institute of Graphic Arts, will show Miss Ellsworth's Book 3 "Seeing and Doing" of the "Growing with Art" series. Dr. Mike Andrews, formerly of the K.U. staff and now at Ohio State university, collaborated in producing the book. The exhibition will open May 15 at the Hotel Pierre in New York and then move for a month to the New York public library. It will then tour the United States for a year. Firemen Can't Attend Fire Newburyport (U.P.)—When firemen answered an alarm at a defense plant, they were halted at the gate because they weren't wearing uniforms or badges. The guard maintained he couldn't let unauthorized persons go by. 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