PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1951 Student Court Fines 5 Persons Five students were fined, two cases were dismissed and two cases were granted continuance in student court Wednesday evening. Three College freshmen women were fined $2 each for smoking in the entrance of Watson library. They were Shirley Broady, Pat Howe, and Marv Schumacher. Robert M. King, third year law student, was fined $10 for parking violations. Police told him to ignore the first two tickets he received since he would be getting his parking permit. The court fined him because he neglected to secure his permit after getting five more tickets. The cases of Arnold Kottwitz, College freshman, and Harry Depew, third year law student, were dismissed. Kottwitz said a mechanical difficulty with his car prevented him from moving it when he had to attend class. Depew had witnesses with him to support his objection that he had not parked overtime. Both cases were dismissed. George G. Gould, Jr., second year law student, was fined $2 for parking in the visiting section at the Museum of Natural Historical. Kernie Binyon, College junior, and Charles Bether, business junior, were held over for next session. Both felt they had been issued tickets unjustly for parking violations. The court was in sympathy with their objections that they were given tickets for overparking during Christmas vacation. Douglas Cooley, graduate student did not appear in court, as he had been instructed to do. Fashion Fellowships Offered To Women Three fashion fellowships, valued at $50 each, are being offered to University women graduating before Aug. 21. The fellowships, offered by the Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion Careers covering full tuition for a one-year course, will be awarded in annual nation-wide competition among senior university women. Registration blanks for the contest may be obtained from the school, 851 Madison avenue, New York City. Registration must be made before Jan. 31. Browsing Room Library Grows To 500 Volumes Sartre's "Existentialism," Hemingway's "Across the River and Into the Trees," Finklestein's "Jazz, the People's Music," Menninger's "Love Against Hate," and Rose's "Wine, Women and Words" are a few of 70 new books which are being bought for the Browsing room in the Union. Official Bulletin Jan. 12, 1951 Episcopal Students club, 5 p.m. Sunday, Trinity church. Supper at 5:30. Lutheran Student Association, 6 p.m. Sunday, Trinity Lutheran church. Cost supper. Continuation of dual series: "When You Marry" and "Preface to Bible Study." Quill club, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Pine room, Memorial Union. All members and initiates attend. Housemother's Association, 2 p.m. Monday, Delta Chi house. Mrs.H. J, Overholser, hostess. Lost and Found will be closed during finals week beginning Monday, Jan. 15. Opening date for next semester will be announced after registration. Sale of unclaimed items collected 1949-50 will be held next semester. Students Get $10,000 From Rebate Tickets Rebates totalling $10,000 have been distributed to students from the original $20,316.61 available to students from the Union book store eighth rebate period. Excess rebates are kept in a fund for five years, and after that time the bookstore committee decides how the money is to be used. Usually about 85 per cent of the rebates are claimed. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence. At office of the university, after Saturday and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class on September 17, 1910, at the Office of Lawrence, Kans., under the Act of March 1879. Patronize Kansan Advertisers The Browsing room, which, with the new shipment, will have a fiction collection of over 500 books, is open from 8 a.m. until 7 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. It also contains a collection of over 500 classical and semi-classical records. The library is made up of anthologies, novels, poetry collections, biographies, non-fiction works, classics, and instructional books. The books are selected by a committee from Student Union Activities. Students who would like the committee to buy certain books should talk to the committee in the S.U.A. office. Also in the new list are Lockridge's "Raintree County," "Ibsen's Plays," Rand's "The Fountainhead," Anderson's "Winesburg, Ohio," and Saroyan's "The Human Comedy." Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. Drill Night From a point high on the campus, a radar beam searches the sky. Lights burn in classrooms. Khaki replaces tweed and covert for the night as college men assigned to Reserve units study the machines and methods of defense. Preparedness is the order of the day. And the Bell System stands prepared. In five busy years, we have added more than 12,500,000 telephones.Many improvements have been made in the quality and speed of service. Our force of highly skilled, experienced men and women has been greatly enlarged-and now numbers more than 600,000. A nation in a hurry goes by telephone. This country has the best telephone service in the world. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM BELL SYSTEM RESPONSIBLE FOR MULTIPLE ELECTRICAL SERVICES IN HAMMOND, WI.