UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS GE EIGHT MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1951 architecture receives Gift or 5th Time A fifth gift in two years of $250 from an anonymous donor to the department of architecture at the diversity was revealed today by off. George M. Beal, chairman of a department. The donor's only stipulation was at the $1,250 be used for the bent of architectural education. Professor Beal said the money he be used for specialized equipment to be placed in a solar laboratory soon to be constructed in Marshall. Space for the laboratory is been allocated and the work be done by buildings and bonds workmen. The first instrument to be put in new light laboratory will be inside-outside heliodon, which is designed by Professor Bea or to World War II. This device, ich can simulate the sun's course any day in any season in relan to any location in the northern misphere, has since been built m the K.U. plans by two otherools. They are the Universities Oregon and of Florida. when the laboratory is finished, $1,250 from the anonymous nor will finance construction of device to implement the helio- n. The machine already has been signed. it will be much smaller than the heliodon and more easily manulated. From the new machine sectional and angular light readings in degrees may be obtained without special calculations, will quickly angles the its rays make with the earth's face. The architect then may use use angles to check the designed alter in regard to the quantity of sunlight included or included by the proposed architectural design. The K.U. architecture faculty is the $1,250 can well be spent advancing more accurate and complete studies of sunlight in buildings, according to Professor al. The proper amount of sunht enhance the human values of health and graceful living, he said, well as producing economy in eating. Authorities say coffee should not boiled and that for best results e should start with freshly drawn ld water. Hot water out of a acet may give it an undesirable te. Watkins Pharmacist Leads Busy Life By ELLSWORTH ZAHM Remember the last time you were sick and took a prescription to the Watkins hospital pharmacy for medicine? The man that filled that prescrip- tion was probably James Gillispie, Watkins hospital pharmacist for the past four years. Mr. Gillespie, who wears horn-rimmed glasses, a friendly smile, and usually a bright bow tie, received his bachelor of science in pharmacy degree from the University in 1942. The pharmacist fills on an average of 100 prescriptions each day and has filled as many as 275 in one day. Each prescription is individually compounded, whether it is a bottle of cough syrup or a sulfa drug. The label on the container is the key to these personalized prescriptions. It includes the patient's name, directions, the patient's name, and the name of the doctor who wrote the prescription. "We don't have any specialties," Mr. Gillispie will tell you. "The medicine is just what the doctor prescribes, but I do make up more cough medicine and nose drops than anything else." All of the prescriptions are written on the same form, but the form is printed on both green and white paper. Narcotic prescriptions are written on green forms and ordinary prescriptions on white. The green forms are placed in a special narcotics file. All the forms are kept for two years in a file and then microfilmed to form a permanent record of all prescriptions filled by the pharmacy. The total cost of the drugs in the prescriptions is not included in the health service fee that the students pay every semester, Mr. Gillispie said, but they are filled for the students at cost or less. "The most unusual prescription I ever filled was one which was brought in by a Swedish student New Instructor In Physiology Appointed The appointment of Mrs. Donald Carttar as a full time instructor in physiology at the University was announced today by Chancellor Deane W. Malott. Mrs. Carttar holds A.B. and M.A. degrees from the University of Chicago and has been teaching there. She also has worked in the toxicity laboratory of the University of Chicago. Her husband, who formerly lived in Winfield and is an alumnus of Kansas State college, will enroll in the K.U. School of Law for the spring semester. NEW SPRING SUITS ARE NOW ARRIVING REGULARLY Come in tomorrow and make your selection from our grand array of new spring clothing! You'll enjoy seeing these new Gabardines, Flannels, Sharkskins, and Tweeds. VARSITY—TOWN BOTANY '500' CLOTHCRAFT who was studying at the University," he said. "He brought in a prescription written by a Swedish doctor and I had to go over to the School of Pharmacy to get some of the drugs called for in the prescription." Another duty of the Watkins hospital pharmacist is the maintenance of several stockrooms. On each floor of the hospital a stock room is maintained under the supervision of the head nurse. In these stock rooms are kept ample pharmaceutical supplies for daily use. $50 to $65 Besides making up prescriptions Mr. Gillispie is purchasing agent for the hospital. He orders all supplies except housekeeping supplies, X-ray films and special laboratory materials. Glad To Show You Other services of the pharmacy include the fitting and renting of crutches, supplying the laboratory technicians with acid, fixing and hardening bath solutions, and the mailing of specimens to the University Medical center in Kansas City. 905 Mass. St. Uniforms? They're Ours Phone 905 Persons visiting the state reformatory for boys at Hutchinson the night of Jan. 12 would think the inmates had pretty snappy uniforms for a correctional institution. Actually, the uniforms belonged to 120 members of the University band who had given a concert earlier in the evening and were quartered for the night in the officers quarters. These are the same quarters used by the governor and his party while attending the state fair. The band played in Convention hall before an audience of 3,000 persons representing approximately 40 Kansas towns. Read the Daily Kansan Daily. Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERRANCE WELCOME NEW STUDENTS Your Appearance Will Be Clean and Neat If You Send Your Clothes To Us. Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPARATUS —926 Mass. The pharmacy is open from 8 to noon and from 2 to 5 p.m. on weekdays and from 8 a.m. till noon on Saturdays. The pharmacist is on call for emergencies at all times. The pharmacy is primarily, however, a service unit serving the students and the various departments of Watkins hospital by means of its prescription, purchasing, and stock maintenance services. EXPERT WATCH REPAIR Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 Week or Less Service WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Things Are Just Daisy With Her We Admit it . . . She's a Pampered Cow! We keep her in tiptop health, to give you the first GRADE A milk . . . Homogenized-Pasteurized DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR AT NO EXTRA COST. Golden Crest Dairy 2016 Learnard Phone 3162 Phone An Ad, Then Be Glad, With Kansan Want Ad Results.Call K.U. 376. Enroll-Then Go To for - OUR FAMOUS CHATEAU SPECIAL (Made from Grade A beef served sizzling hot on a fresh bun). - TEMPTING SANDWICHES - FOUNTAIN SPECIALS - GET A COMPLETE MEAL from 5-7:30 p.m. 18th and Mass. Open Daily 11 a.m. Curb Service 4 p.m. 14th Street Plaza Phone 234 We Deliver Coe's Phone 234