THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5.1950 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Official Bulletin Thursday Applications for 1951-52 Fulbrigh Scholarships due Oct. 31. See Prof. J. A. Burzle. . . . . . Red Peppers, 7:15 tonight, Strong auditorium. Last time anyone will be able to join. Candidates for membership in the University Players required to attend meeting, 7:15 tonight, Little Theater, Green hall. German club, 5 today, 402 Fraser hall. Election of officers; program. Those interested in German culture invited. Social work club, 4:30 today, East Room, Memorial union. All social work majors invited. American Chemical Society Student Chapter, 4 today, 305 Bailey. Interested freshman through seniors. Freshments. Froshawks, 7 tonight, 9 Strong hall. Kuku's joint meeting with Jay Janes, 7:30 tonight, 101 Snow hall. Delta Sigma Pi business meeting 7:30 tonight, 24 Strong hall. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 to 8:30 tonight, 268 Strong hall. Dr. Karlis Leyasmeyer, of Latvia, speak. Everyone welcome. Tau Beta Pi business meeting and nominations, 7 tonight, Hydraulics classroom. Lutheran Student Association hayrack ride and weiner roast, 7 p.m. Saturday. Meet at Trinity Lutheran church, 13th & New Hampshire. Regular Sunday meeting, 6 p.m., supper and program. Engineerettes, 7:45 p.m. Friday. home of Mrs. DeWitt Carr, 1247 Tennessee. Wives of engineers and architects. I. V.C.F. Missionary meeting, 12 noon to 12:50 Friday, Dandorf chapel. Dr. Karlis Leyasmeyer, of Latvia, speaker. K. U. Table Tennis Association, 7:30 tonight, Card room, Memorial union. All old and new members requested to attend. Mathematical collocium, 5 p.m. Monday, 203 Strong hall. Mr. Arthur H. Kruse, "Divided Differences and Differentiation." All Ward meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday, West ballroom, Memorial union. All unorganized independent men invited. Social functions and dates of ward meetings will be announced. Christian Science Organization, 7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel. Alumna Wins Scholarship Miss Margaret Beltz, '50, sailed September 20 on the Queen Elizabeth for Switzerland where she will be an exchange student at the University of Zurich. She has been granted a one-year scholarship by the Swiss-American Society for Cultural Relations. The past spring Miss Beltz won a $500 Ferdinand W. Lafrentz fellowship for advanced study in German, the Germanistic Society of America. She was on the Dean's honor roll for four years, president of the German club, and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Alpha Theta, and Delta Phi Alpha when at the University. Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be emailed to you during the hours 10 a.m., to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer- torial press office. Journalism blge, not later than 45 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c FOR SALE BUICK Special. A-1 condition. Must cell. 1131 Kg. After 5:00. TYPEWRITER, Sir. Corona portable Like new. See at 1230 Tenn. (rear) REFREGIRATOR- Kelivinator; large size enrity. $35.00 Mrs. Scries, $255.00 ; SWEET cider and apples for sale. Law- nance cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Pent Phone 3231 LIKE new Deitzen National 12-piece drawing set. Original price $27.50. Will sacrifice for $17.50 or best offer. 1110 New Hampshire, Phone 2638 R. CONVERTIBLE, 1948 Bulk Clos. Extra; radio, heater, back-up lights, under coating, white sidewall tires. Top and cap are designed to condition. Call 3579- J, morning only. FOR SALE, 1947 6-cylinder Oldsmobile nomical to operate. Call 715 or 240-8790. TYPEWRITER supplies! All top grade bond paper, onion skin, and carbon pa- tition material. Choose quality typewriter ribbons to fit any type- er. STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE. HEATH'S Chem-Formulator with the proper elements and an inorganic foramen will simulate real-world chemical items. Just turn the wheel and write the information on a card at the UNION BOOK STORE. SCHAUM'S "Outline of College Physics" on this book is now here! These books will give you the help you want in making an A." See your STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE. IATHER brief cases and notebooks for yourself or as a gift, in many styles and sizes. We range. Drop in and them! A wide price range. STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE. BUSINESS opportunity near Lawrence Help-your-self laundry 15 miles from Lawrence. Includes 4 room modern apt See at Lawrence upstairs apt. or photo Perry 55. MOTOROLA Portable Radios as low as $17.95, battery (convertible to) 110 volt. EASY TERMS. B. F. Goodrich Co., 929 Mass. St. Oct. 20 WANT ride to and from St. Joseph or want from Lawrence on week ends. Call 3121N. TRANSPORTATION WANTED -Ride to St. Joseph, Mo. Fri days anytime at 3:00 p.m. Call 1745 FLY and take advantage of reduced fares easy connections, good accommodations also Giessem at First National Bank for reservation and information Tele phone no. 312-849-1600 RIDES—Leaving for Wichita every week between 3-4 p.m. Friday. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 p.m. on Thursday and Tuesday. Harry Shultz 3101J. BUSINESS SERVICE VHSI typing: experienced, prompt, accr eate service. Call 1859 J. Hazel Stanley. TYPING: Thesis, reports, term papers, letters, etc. Call Mrs. Blachy, 24468. TYPING: Thesis; term papers, reports, etc. Prompt service. Mrs. Wilde, 1126 Tenn. entrance, 2nd floor, Apt. 4, Phone 3028M. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED TO RENT—garage within 5 hours. Kentucky St. Caf. 3104M after .729 m. 1800 W. 26th Ave. CAN you write lyrics and song poems? I need someone to collaborate with song writing. If interested phone Rodger Vaughan at 3551. SUBSCRIBE to TIME magazine! Eight months for $3.00 to students and faculty. Read TIME for the news you can't afford to miss STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE. LADIES tailoring and alterations. Con- tents. 90% . 305% Massachusetts. Phone 1377, 6 D.A.R. AFRICAN violet sale. Strong lily plants in bloom, 1315 N. H. Phone 021-648-7899 JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant visit and surprise your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff is very friendly, fun, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tf TO subscribe to the Kansas City Star, call 58c per week Round Corner Drug 801-896- 7284. BENT A typewriter and start the new year with higher grades. Only $1 a week or a month for portable and standard machine. STUDENT UNION BOOKSTORE. FOR RENT NICE comfortable room for boy. Large closet. Near campus. 1131 Ohio. 9 WANT a young couple to share a completely furnished 7 room house located in Bristol. Divide rent and bills. Average about $45.00. Phone 223 after 6 p.m. VACANCY for two men students. Single beds, $20.00 and one man in basement room with cooking privileges, stool, lavatory and shower $15. 1244 Ls. 12 FHIRE rooms modern, newly decorated unfurnished. $30 plus utilities. Same furnished $40 plus utilities. Four miles in country on rock road. 712 N 13. 6 £8W 3 room house close to K.U. Ideal location for diverse university people. Gs. after 2 p.m., 3048MJ. NICE comfortable room for boy. Newly decorated, large closet. Near campus and playground. RED cashmere cardigan sweater. Saturday morning in vicinity of Strong Hall. Finder please turn sweater in at Kansan office. Liberal reward. 9 LOST TAN billbill with AXO crest. Please re- transcribe your instructions to Gladhart, 1235 Tenn. Phone 2675MJ. 13 BILFOLD containing drivers license and papers. Reward. Call Klausmier Miller GARAGE wanted, near 11th and Ohio. Ms. Scrrows 2554W. 10 WANTED FOUR car owners wanted to form car pool from Topeka. Classes Mon. through Fri 8-5. Those interested as riders wanted also. See Kansan office. TONIGHT and FRIDAY Everyone's Favorite Brought Back by Popular Demand! Shown 7:00 and 9:55 - Disney Cartoon "TRAILER HORN" AND· Late World News—Ski Riders - Edgar Kennedy in "HOT FOOT" Boxoffice Open 6:30 Show Starts at 7:00 Phone 260 Phone 260 1/2 mile west on hi-way 59 Lawrence DRIVE - IN Theatre Stories On Roosevelt Deem Health Necessary Washington—(U.P.)The evidence now almost complete shows that the voters should demand a certificate of reasonably good health of their Presidents and of men who aspire to that office. The late President Roosevelt now has shown up in another book in the image of a dying man in 1944 as he sought and won the presidency a fourth time. There were rumors scorned as "ugly" during that campaign about Mr. Roosevelt's health. Democratic party leaders beat them down. The White House denied them. But the weight of evidence over the years has by now become convincing. Mr. Roosevelt was in no condition in the latter months of his third term to aspire to the responsibilities of a fourth. The evidence is in, too, that some of those around the President were aware of that fact. It seems reasonable, therefore, to believe that there was connivance among some of the politicians promoting the fourth term to hide from the voters information which might have shaken their confidence in their commander-in-chief. Whether that adds to fraud upon the public which honest men would scorn or falls within the limits of the fair game of politics will be for the public itself to determine. If the voters were grossly imposed upon, it will be up to the voters to protect themselves against more of the same. Phone 10 For Sho Time —plus— Late News Events Popeye Cartoon "GYM JAM" Phone 132 For Sho Time Ends Tonite A Daring Love Story "OUT CRY" Adm. 25c—60c FRIDAY—SATURDAY Adm. 14c-45c Whip Wilson "ARIZONA TERRITORY" "DELIGHTFULLY DANGEROUS" co-feature Jane Powell Ralph Bellamy Ch. 14 "SIR GALAHAD" Late News Events That Mr. Roosevelt was a dying man when he sought the fourth term and that some of his associates knew it is set out in "The Man of Independence,"a biography of President Truman by Jonathan Daniels. The shockingly bald revelations of Daniels' book are supported by earlier reports on Roosevelt. In that year White House Private Secretary Grace Tully writes in her book that she became "seriously alarmed." In "You're The Boss," Edward J. Flynn writes of Roosevelt that in April, 1944, prior to his fourth nomination: "He seemed to procrastinate and to lack power to make decisions . . . however, once more as in 1940 the group surrounding him were pressing him to undertake another campaign." Americans own three-fourths of the world's automobiles. If mistakes were made at Yalta by a man beaten down by work and responsibility, perhaps a certificate of health would have protected the living from the errors of the dead. The movie that's getting all the raves in Lawrence !! Feature Times 1:32-3;30-5;28-7;26-9;24 - ALSO - Comedy Latest News STARTS SUNDAY (Prevue Sat. Owl 11:15) Three Great Words . . . Singing! Dancing! Romancing! ★ KEENAN WYNN • GALE ROBBINS GLORIA DE HAVEN Shows Continuous —Open 12:45—