PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1950 Official Bulletin Tau Sigma, 7:30 p.m. today. Regular meeting. Sasnak, 7:30 p.m. today, Robinson Mirror room, election of officers. 1. Stateswomen, 7:15 p.m. Wednesda y, East room, Memorial Uni or Election of officers. For Girls' Stat alumnae. Fencing club, 7:30 p.m. today Robinson Forensic League, 7.39 p.m., today. Pine room, Memorial Union. A.W.S. house of representatives, 4 p.m. today, Carruth hall. Engineers Wives, 7:36 p.m. today Kansas room, Memorial Union. Y. W.C.A. house representatives, of alternates, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Henley house. - Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m. today English room, Memorial Union, Dr Clarenze Grothaus on "Puzzles." Open meeting. Le Cècle Francais se recuira jeudi a sept heures et demie, 113 Strong. M. Mahieu montrera des projections de Paris. Delta Sigma Pi business meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Recreation room, Memorial Union. Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. Wednesday, Fraser hall dining room. Quill club, 7:30 p.m. today. Sturgeon home, 708 Mississippi. Sigma Tau, 7 p.m. today, 426 Lindley hall. Election of members, refreshments. Young Republicans club 7:30 p.m. today, 195 Green hall. Mark Bennett, speaker, refreshments. Wilson County club, 7:30 p.m Wednesday, 119强火厅 Society of American Military engineers, 5 p.m. Wednesday, 115 Military Science building. Engineers, in advanced course of three R.O.T.C.'s or with commissions, eligible. ISA. 510 Scholarship board, student Union Activities, 4 p.m. Wednesday, East room, Memorial Union. Junior inter-Dorm council, 5 p.m. today. Carruth hall. Jay Jones, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Memorial Union. Industrial Design club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Memorial Union. Discuss engineering exposition and field trip. Canterbury club holy communion 7 am. Thursday, Trinity church Rides to early classes. YMCA Elects 1951 Officers John Stutz, Topeka, executive director of the Kansas League of Municipalities, and four city clerks met here Thursday with an official of the bureau to plan the school. The city clerks were Joe M. Kincaid; Junction City; R. E. Boxberger; Russell; Miss Kiley; Lee Peck, Greensburg; and Haywood C. Fisher, Lawrence. Other new officers are Donovan Hull, College sophomore, vice-president; J Fred Willhamson, engineer-infirmary, secretary; and Jack Howard, business An institute for city clerks will be held at the University, Dr. Ethan P. Allen, director of the Bureau of Government Research, said today. The tentative dates are Thursday and Friday, Nov. 16 and 17. Claude "Bud" Moore, College junior, has been elected president of the Y.M.C.A. for 1950 and 1951. Newly elected members of the Y.M.C.A. advisory board are the Rev. Dale Turner, minister of the Lawrence Congregational church; M. N. Penny, head of the Penny Construction company; Clayton Crosier, assistant professor of civil engineering; and Fred Montgomery, director of visual instruction. School For City Clerks The United States Atomic Energy commission is offering graduate fellowships in radiological physics. These fellowships are open to qualified students' working for a bachelor's degree in physics, chemistry, or engineering. Dr. Allen, who will be chairman of the planning committee, said that possible subjects for instruction include public relations, budgeting, accounting reporting, election administration, registration procedure, handling of mail, and the filing and keeping of city records. US Atomic Energy Offers Two Awards The Y.M.C.A. advisory board and cabinet will be installed Tuesday, March 28, in Danforth chapel. The work will be carried out either at the University of Rochester, Rochester, N.Y., or the Oak Ridge National laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The annual basic salary is $1,500. Applications which must be received by Monday. March 20, are available at 127 Lindley hall. Indiana Man Claims Record Call K.U. 251 With Your News. Indianapolis, Ind.—(U.P.) A Hoosier claims a record for having accumulated the most state fair prize ribbons. J. L. Oliver, 62, Indianapolis, has enough ribbons to make a blanket and sofa cushions. He won them, mostly blue ones, showing poultry. A Newari woman of Nepal, India can get a divorce whenever she wants by placing a betel-nut under her husband's pillow. Graduate coffee, 7 p.m. Thursday, Henley house. For all graduate students. Osteopath Turns Veterinarian To Save 14 Sick Sheep Valued At $20 A Head Washington—(U.P.)—If you have a sick sheep in the back lot, call "Doc" Fuller in Bloomington, Ill. Dr. W. S. Fuller is no veterinary. He's an osteopath. But being a son of the soil, and a big-game hunter besides, he knows almost as much about animals as he does about humans. His recent experience with ewes and rams on his farm outside Bloomington is interesting. But first, a little background on the doctor, "Doc" Fuller was in the midst of a pre-medical course at the University of Illinois when World War I broke out. Upon his return he entered an osteopathy college in Chicago and upon graduation moved to Bloomington with total assets "a wife, two children and $9,000 in debts." Along about 1947, he sold his apartment building and was about to move to Idaho and retire when: By 1933 he "got ambitious" and opened his own private hospital, but was burned out of business six years later by fire. He re-built the place and made it into an apartment house, with just one corner of the building for an office. Along about then he became a big-game hunter and stalked mountain lions in Utah and antelope in Colorado, and moose, caribou, mountain sheep, goats, and grizzlies in the far reaches of the Yukon. "Along came my wife with her brakes and non-skid chains on. We headed west all right, but got only 19 miles from Bloomington where we bought a farm. I built a ranch house on a hilltop and bought an old red school house which I made into an office. I haven't retired yet." Now for the sheep business in the Doc's own words. "I had a lot of good grass in these hills, which are 130 acres in extent." he said. "So I bought 600 head of sheep out of Montana to eat up the grass. They did well until I turned them in to eat the fodder from my corn. The corn borers had been in it and, as a result, there were many stalks down as well as frail stalks which broke easily as the sheep moved through the field. "They got more coral than they should have had. One morning I went out to look over the flock before taking care of a flock of people in my office down the road and discovered I had trouble." "There were 14 groaning sheep on their backs with the hooves pointed up. OFFICIAL K. U. RINGS SENIORS ONLY Your University seal, sunflowers and degree on one side; Jayhawk, sunflowers and graduation year on opposite side. Top set with beautiful ruby stone. MAN'S RING $27.50 LADY'S RING $21.50 Plus 20% Federal, 2% State tax Business Office has limited supply on hand now. The worst case of multiple bellyache I ever saw." He put in an urgent call for a veterinary, who gave his colleague the bad news that he had foundered sheep on his hands. There was nothing to do but hope and pray that some of the sheep would pull through. "Not much chance, though," the vet said. Sheep, at the time, were worth about $20 a head on the open market. "So," said "Doc" Fuller, "I paid off the vet and concluded I had little to lose and much possibly to gain if I treated those sheep my way. I gave them the old osteopathic treatment, rubbing their bellies and their spines. They seemed to enjoy it. I worked on them all day long and, treated each sheep four times. I went to bed and said my prayers. "Next morning, all 14 were up and kicking again. Maybe it was my treatment; maybe it wasn't. Anyhow, I figured I made $280 that day." Read about the K. U. administration in the third issue of the Jayhawker annual which will be out around April 1. AHIT! That's what a meal at DUCK'S will make with you— Bring the family or join the gang tonight for a delicious Sea Food dinner. DUCK'S TAVERN You'll Enjoy The pleasing atmosphere and outstanding food at— 821 Vermont Spots Before The Eyes? You Got 'em - We Cure 'em —a pretty unpleasant condition—but easy to cure! Just send your spotted clothes along to us—we'll return them in a jiffy—clean and bright as new! ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners FOR SALE Easy, fast, neat, clear writing on a new Royal or Smith-Corona Portable typewriter. See them today at STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE