MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Phone K.U.376 Classified Ads Indian Coins Are Now Being Displayed In Museum Of Art **forms:** Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be processed during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office by the courier. Journal information bldg, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five day days days 25 words or less ...35c 65c 90c Additional words ...1c 2c 3c FOR SALE SILVERSMITHING equipment for use in handerskates classes. Half price. Good condition. Call Nona Prettyman, 981. not there leave message. UNDERWOOD portable Champion school equipment, addition used only one excellent price; $50.00. Phone 1847 after 5 p.m. NASCH 600; 4 door sedan. New '49 motor. 5,000 miles. Weather-eye heater. Nice finish. seat covers. Must sell the car. MOTOROLA Auto Radios: A few 1994 models left at sharply reduced prices. carry on these. B. F. Goodrich Store, Mass. NEW 1950 Kelvinator refrigerators. Extra trade仁旧 in during carload sale. $5.00 deliveries. Pay as low as $8.00 monthly. SAVE 25% at B. F. Goodrich on new original equipment tires slightly blemished, all popular sizes available, also available in white sidewalls. quantity not listed at B. F. Goodrich Store, 929 Mass. RIDERS WANTED: K.C. to Lawrence and return Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Arrive Lawrence 8:00. Leave Lawrence w/We-4170 after 6 p.m. Anz Rd. Red Hills. TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED—K.C. to Lawrence and return Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Arrive 8:00, return 4 or 5. Box 4. Kansan Office. WANTED SIX MORE BOYS to eat good home cooked meals, family style from 5 to 7 Monday through Friday. 1745 Ohio Phone 16763. 20 BUSINESS SERVICE TPING. Paper papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 TYPING: Call Haze Stanley, 2865M for prompt experienced service; 820% Manage THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Outlet overhaul, engine tune-up, box and mirror painting used 217 E.17th. Phone 785 or 1821R. tJAYHAWKERS; Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field Their needs are met and they have everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. t MISCELLANEOUS DANCE at the Skyline Club every Wednesday Nite. 8-10 p.m. Music by Jim Selldens Combo. Fine food, pleasant atmosphere. Cover 25c. 23 MATHEMATICS: Do you find it a little complicated about now? See the phone number. Call for an appointment 2278W, or if you pass there, come in and arrange for a time. FOR RENT VERY ATTRACTIVE efficiency apartment. Excellent location. $30 per month Call 3588J. Suitable for couple or 2 students. 25 ONE PRIVATE and one double room for a party. The private room is fully padded, bricked right. Ph. 2296J. BLACK COCKER spaniel, male. Vicinity 1019 Kentucky. Thursday morning. Age one year, named Gus. Reward $250. WWW.COCKER.COM 419. GET THE cocker raincoat? Will exchange with person who took mine by mistake February 12 in College Inn. Call 24983. Foreign Study Plan Conference In N.Y. Dr. J. A. Burzle, associate professor of German, recently attended the annual meeting of the American Council of Junior Year Abroad in New York City. Student exchange plans and developments in the Fulbright program were also discussed. Dr. Burzle said the council is concerned with enabling students to spend the junior year studying abroad. Full credit will be given by their home universities for the years work. At present there are 38 institutions which allow students to study under this plan, including the University. Countries now complying with the plan are: France, Switzerland, Italy and Mexico. grain were also discussed. The conference was held under the auspices of the Institute of International education. Coins of the Indian states, including those of the old Mughals and Turkish sultans who once ruled India, are being exhibited in the University Museum of Art during February. Mughal and sultan coins are thick, irregular and copper, with the exception of the last Shah Alam II coin, which is silver and is the size of a U.S. silver dollar. An Indian temple coin is also displayed. One of the older coins is from the ancient state, Antialcidas (Greek in India), which is a tarnished square, copper coin, dated about 125 B.C. The picture of a man running through a jungle is engraved on a copper coin from Vasudeva. a Hindu state of 87 A. D. Coins from the Hyderbad state (1700) include a silver one with the engraving of a temple, an irregular 1825 copper piece, a dime-size-silver piece, and a dime-size copper coin with a hole in the middle. The smallest coin is from the 20th century Travancore state. It is one-half the size of a dime and bears the engraving of an eight-point star. Coins from the former French India, which were minted in France under the rule of Napoleon III, and coins of the former Dutch India and Portuguese India are displayed. The collection includes money dating from 1791 to 1943, which show changes in designs of the British Indian价. The价 is worth about one-half cent. was made with a tiger engraved on the back. Money coined under King George V, the British ruler, bears the head of the king. Coin of King George VI's reign as also exhibited. They bear the head of the ruler and these words, "George VI, King, Emporer." From 1946 to 1947 the last coinage On January 26, 1950, "Mother India" threw aside the British crown and returned to the home rule of her people. They are divided into Pakistan, (Moslem Northwest and Northeast India), and the Government of India (the Hindu state). The coins were collected in 1944 and 1945 by Allison Chandler, advertising manager of the Ottawa Herald, Ottawa, and submitted to the museum for display. Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers Major Bill Reynolds, Oregon '40 Pilot-Professor, U.S. Air Force! Bill was an all-round athlete. He chose football as his favorite sport, made the varsity teams at Pomona Junior College and also at the University of Oregon. A Theta Chi, Bill enjoyed campus social life. Found that it eased the pressure of rugged athletics and his heavy study schedule in Personnel Management. Upon graduation, Bill chose a future in the Air Force. He "few" his first Link trainer as an Aviation Cadet in 1940. By March, 1941, he had won his pilot wings. The 1st Observation Squadron, Fort Riley, Kansas was Lieutenant Reynolds' first assignment. While there he met the future Mrs. Reynolds. They married a year later and now have two fine sons. The Squadron moved to Panama, then to the Pacific. Bill advanced from pilot to operations officer to squadron commander. He came home a Major and qualified for a Regular Commission. Recently commended for peacetime work — organizing and improving instruction techniques—Major Reynolds, a "Pilot-Professor", looks forward to a long and gainful career in the U. S. Air Force. If you are single, between the ages of 20 and $26\frac{1}{2}$, with at least two years of college, consider the many career opportunities as a pilot or navigator in the U. S. Air Force. Procurement Teams are visiting many colleges and universities to explain these career opportunities. Watch for them. You may also get full details at your nearest Air Force Base or U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Recruiting Station, or by writing to the Chief of Staff, U. S. Air Force, Att: Aviation Cadet Branch, Washington 25, D. C. U. S. AIR FORCE ONLY THE BEST CAN BE AVIATION CADETS!