MONDAY, OCTOBER 2.1950 PAGE SEVEN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS suryiza areedi- Extension To Sponsor Traffic School state A school in traffic safety education will be sponsored by the University Extension Saturday, in the Union. any men illins here gen- veto empower the highway patrol has not been able to attend council meetings. The schools are being held so that the safety council members could meet and discuss their problems. This meeting will be one of two traffic schools held in the state during the week of October 7-14, which has been proclaimed state traffic safety week by Governor Carlson The other meeting will be at Ft Havs state college, Saturday, Oct. 14 The idea behind the conference relates back to safety councils set up by the highway patrol in various communities. Because of a shortage The program will start at 8 a.m. with registration in the Union Frank T. Stockton, dean of the Extension, will speak. At 10 a.m. Group meetings will discuss bicycle clubs under the leadership of Paul O. Dedmon, field manager for the Bicycle Institute of America. Mr. Dedmon is a leading authority on bicycle safety in America. From 11 until noon a general session will be held to hear group reports. The meeting will conclude with a luncheon. In the afternoon the delegates will attend the football game between the University of Kansas and the University of Colorado. Dean Stockton said that these sessions are open to the public and anyone interested in safety may attend. Inter-Fraternity Chairmen Chosen Professor Gets $15,300 Grant Three Inter-Fraternity council chairmen were appointed Monday at a meeting of the council. They are Joseph Wimsatt, College junior; publicity; Neil Lilley, College junior; social; and Ward Weaver, business senior. rushing. Plans for the new school term will be formulated at the next meeting of the council Monday, Oct. 9, in 206 Strong hall. Mr. Peterson is investigating the ability of the hypothyroid animal to reproduce, and Mr. Grunt is experimenting with the effects of the male hormone on male reproductive behavior. Dr. William C. Young, professor of anatomy, has received a research grant of $15,300 from the United States Public Health service. The grant will be used to support experiments with the effects of endocrine secretions on small animals. Dr. Young is studying the relationship between thyroid activity and male reproductive behavior. Mr. Ford is investigating the functional capacity of the corpus luteum during the period of sexual maturation, and Mrs. Brown is continuing earlier experiments on the use of iodine in blood as a measure of thyroid activity. Assisting Dr. Young on the project are Roy Peterson, Jerome Grunt, Don Ford, and Mrs. Mina MacNair Brown, graduate research assistants, and Mrs. Joanne Comer, technical assistant. High School Conference Hears Overbrook Editor Mrs. Comer checks the records of the experiments and helps care for the animals. The Lawrence regional meeting of the Kansas Council of Teachers of Journalism joined the earlier Wibiae group in approving a state- A school paper can perform a service to the community as well as to the school, Dwight Payton, editor, The Overbrook Citizen, told high school journalism students Sept. 30. Bill Morey, journalism teacher at Liberty Memorial high school in Lawrence, presided over the teacher round-table. Discussion included yearbooks, mimeographed papers, and printed papers. included in the conference were student round - tables, teacher round tables and a business meeting of the Kansas Council Teachers Journalism. Mr. Payton spoke in the morning general assembly of the northeast and east Kansas session of the high school regional journalism conferences. He cited his principal's assis- tion to her newbook's winning of the national award for civic improvement as an example of community service. Selected students from the various high schools presided over the student round-tables. They also reported their discussions at the afternoon general assembly. Round-tables included reporting, business and advertising management, editing, feature writing, and editing mimeographed papers, sports writing and editing, reporting and typography, and printing and engravings. The link between parents and the school is the school paper, he added, and that link can be strengthened by working in townpeople's named in stories and by avoiding injurious gossip. Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, presided over the general sessions of the conference. He said attendance at the two regional meetings thus far has already exceeded the average when only one conference was held for the entire state. meeting of the organization in Hutchinson in February. Hays and Garden City groups must approve the motion before it can take effect, ay, Pine room, Union. Official Bulletin Monday Vacancy for All Student Council in District IV; must be filled by a man. Opening for Representative-at-large: must be filled by a woman. Organizations desiring All Student Council appropriations must obtain application blanks from Joe Wimsatt. 1120 W. 11th, by today. Mathematical collocquium, 5 p.m. today, 203 Strong. Prof. Vidar M. Wolontis, "Cesaro Summability of Fourier Integrals." I.S.A. Council. 7:15 p.m. today, Pine Room, Union. All Ward meeting, 7:30 p.m. today, Kansas Room, Union. Physical Therapy club, 7:30 today. East room. Union. Tau Sigma tryouts for all students, male or female, interested in interpretive dancing, 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Robinson gym, women's side. W.Y.C.W. Executive Board, 4 p.m. today, Kansas Room, Union. Art Education club coffee, 4 p.m. Tuesday, 332 Strong. Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Pine Room, Union. All members attend. Tau Sigma meeting, 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Robinson gym. Fencing club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 101 Robinson gym. Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, 4 p.m. Wednes- the University chapter of the Le Cerule Francais, 7.30 p.m. m.mercredi, 113 Strong. Tous ceux qui s'interessent au français sont invites. Phi Sigma, noon, Tuesday, 301 Snow. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Gorilla Captured By Use Of Tiny Garter Snake Chicago, Oct. 2—(U.P.) A tiny garter snake made a monkey out of Bushman, the mightiest gorilla in captivity. The two-foot-long reptile drove the cringing giant back into his cage at Lincoln park zoo yesterday after he escaped, roamed the monkey house for almost three hours and threatened to break out and panic throngs of Sunday picnickers. The snake succeeded after Bushman's attendants, 50 heavily armed police, two alligators and a feast of fruit and peanuts failed to get the 550-pound monster back into his quarters. Zoo Director R. Marlin Perkins ordered the snake turned loose in the same room with the gorilla because the big ape has a great fear of reptiles. When attendants shoved the snake under the door of the room, Bushman backed away, grunting in fear. Then he turned and padded swiftly down a corridor and into his cage, uttering plaintive noises. Robinson was nearby when Bushman lumbered out of his massive steel and glass cage through an unlocked door and went down a corridor. Keeper Eddie Robinson nursed a bitten right forearm—the only casualty. Robinson, who has tended the gorilla since the beast was a baby, walked up to Bushman, took him by the arm, and said soothingly: "Come on, Bushman, let's go in." Bushman waded and pawed through pots and pans for a time, setting up a clatter which frightened monkeys, baboons, and smaller apes and turned the building into a chattering madhouse. Attendants had chased out visitors and barred outside doors of the monkey house. Robinson heaped Bushman's favorite foods—avocados, watermelon, cantaloupe, grapes, and peanuts—in his cage, but the gorilla didn't succumb to the bait. Robinson got two baby alligators, and shoved them at the gorilla through a window. The finicky, temperamental gorilla retreated and entered his cage, but walked out again before attendants could slam the door. Then Zoo Foreman Lear Grimmer thought of the garter snake, and the gorilla decided he'd had enough of freedom and reptiles. Phone 10 For Sho Time Today and Thurs. "PETTY GIRL" Plus: Late News Color Cartoon "Scarlet Pumpernickel" "PETTY GIRL" Robert Joan Cummings Caulfield Phone 132 For Sho Time TODAY and TUES. Cary Grant "Destination Tokyo" and Dennis Morgan "God Is My Co-Pilot" —Plus— Late News Events Color Cartoon "Pike in a Dolphin" "Pigs in a Polka" Daily Kansan Classified Ads Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered within 48 hours or during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Press office. Journal bigd, not later than 30 a.m. the day before publication date. Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c FOR SALE WE NOW HAVE plenty of plastic practice golf balls, cheap used golf clubs, tennis rackets, and tennis balls. Kirkpatrick Sport Shop, 715 Mass. Phone 1018. KENT mechanical Engineering handbook user. Reasonably priced. $429.98. 429.98 UX—same as new. Size 38. $20. White inner jacket. size 37. $15. See at 128. $40. $50. $60. $70. $80. $90. OTOROLA Portable Radios as low as 27.95, battery (convertible to) 110 volt. ASY TERMS. B. F. Goodrich Co., 929 Mass. St. Oct. 20 WANTED FOUR car owners wanted to form car pool from Topeka. Classes Mon. through Fri 8-5. Those interested as riders wanted+ also. See Kannan office. 6 FVPISTS to type from dictations or recordings. See Dr. Lee, 5-a Sunnyside, Thursday or Friday morning from 10 to 2 GIRLS to board at 707 west 12th. Home cooked meals. Call 964. 2 MISCELLANEOUS LADIES tailoring and alterations. Con- tains 150% Mussachusetts. Fiat 157. 6. D.A.R. AFRICAN violet sale. Strong study plants in bloom. 1315 N. H. Phone WANT social science teacher with previous civil service experience. Call 304. 827-691-5821. FREE! Handy Scholastic Calendar September 1950 to June 1951. Fits your 3 ring notebook. Space to plan for each day. Student Union Bookstore. 2 JIAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop service includes dog and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop 1218 Comm. phone 418, ti TO subscribe to the Kansas City Star, call SSC per week. Round Corner Drug 401 800-253-7647 RENT A typewriter and start the new year with higher grades. Only $1 a week or $25 a month for portable and standard books. STUDENT UNION BOOKSTORE. TRANSPORTATION RIDERS wanted to and from Kansas City Mo. on the week ends. Leave 9:00 Sat. and return for 8:00 class Mon. morning. Call 375OR. RIDERS: from vicinity of Merriam to township, twenty 50* Nash. Call eve- lations HR: 2573. BUSINESS SERVICE RADIO SERVICE — Newest G. E. test equipment enables us to give faster more accurate service on all A.M. or F.M. radios and television to the telecom network and delivery. Phone 138. Bowman Radio and Electric. New location. 826 Vermont. 2 ENDS TONITE Randolph Scott "The Nevadan" TUES. WED. WYMAN · NIVEN VICTOR MOORE · WAYNE MORRIS Always a Color Cartoon! Boxoffice Open 6:30 Show Starts at 7:00 Just Drive-in You'll Love It! Just Drive-in You'll Love It! Phone 260 Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre 1/2 mi. west on hi-way 59 TYPING. Thesis term papers, reports. Phone. Phone; Mrs Wilde, 118f Phone. Phone; 3288M. FOR RENT THREE rooms modern, newly decorated unfurnished. $30 plus utilities. Same furnished $40 plus utilities. Four miles in country on rock road. 712 N.13 6 BOARD AND ROOM. $45.00 per month. Phone 2353J. 3 TWO ROOMS and kitchen for rent. Furnished or unfurnished. For colored coupe. Call 1961M after 5:00 p.m. Room #20, two bedrooms, single bed $20 and two rooms in basement room with cooking privilege, stool, lavatory, and shower $15. 124 Louisiana 2 NEW 3 room house close to K.U. Idea in the heart of university diversity. People after 2 p.m. 3048M. Ch 5. ROOMS for boys near campus and cafe. More per month. Student landlord. 1359 Ohio Eugene Field's centennial is being observed by a display in the lobby of the reference room of Watson library. Field, poet and journalist, was born Sept. 2, 1850. His well known poems, "Little Boy Blue" and "Suppose," are samples of his poetry on display. Poem Display In Library His "Primer," which was his first book and which was published in 1882, and "Eugene Field's Creative Years" by Charles H. Dennis are also on exhibit. It usually takes a month before student interest is exhausted and a new idea is set up, said Mrs. Coleman. Mrs. Dorothy Coleman, reference librarian, says the displays are commemorative of historical events and persons. Instructors often request a particular subject to be exhibited. In the past people have loaned special publications or hobbies to be shown. The original staff at K.U. according to the first catalog, consisted of three professors, a lecturer on hygiene, and a janitor. NOW SHOWING A Picture With The Great Achievements in Art, Beauty, Romance and Action!! Feature Times 1:32-3:30-5:28 7:26-9:04 - ALSO - Comedy Late News - SOON * "Three Little Words" Shows Continuous Open 12:45