PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1949 Official Bulletin Tuesday, Dec. 6 --records for the various wells in the field. All Student Council vacancies due to resignations of Richard Menuet from District II and James Dawson, freshman representative. Linn County club, 5 p.m. today 205 Fraser hall. Joint meeting of Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy and Pre-nursing room, 7:30 tonight, Kansas room, Union. Miss Alma Jackson, K.U. Medical center, will speak on relationship of three fields in hospital work. Square dancing; refreshments. L. S.A. Ward Z. 7 tonight, East ballroom, Union, Election. Phil Sigma meeting, 7:30 tonight. 101 Snow hall. Initiation of new members. K. U. Republican club, 7:30 to night, Strong auditorium. K.U.-Oklaahoma A. and M. football films Public invited; no admission charge El Ateneo se reunirá el miercoles, 7 de diciembre, a las eisas y media de la noce. Se presentara una programa de navidad; la pinata, un comedia y muchas canciones. Que venan todos los membros. Fencing club, 7.30 tenight, Robinson gym. La reunion de Noel du Cercle Français aura lieu mardi le décembre a sept heures et demie dans la salle 131 Strong. Home Economics club, 7:30 pm Thursday, 110 Fraser hall. Representative from Donnelly Garment company, manufacturers of Nelly Don dresses, will speak on current fashions and new fabrics. Guests invited; refreshments. K. U. Amateur Radio club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, E.E. Lab. Slides of western United States will be shown. All interested are invited. K.U. Young Democrats, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 106 Green hall. Ken Anderson, Kansas Representative, Emporia, guest speaker. Subject, "The Importance of Young People in Politics." All interested people in vited. Jefferson county club, 5 pn Thursday, 119 Fraser hall. Plans for Christmas dance in Oksaloosa will be made. All Jefferson county students invited. Brown county club, statewide activities, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, East room, Union. Annual Wesley foundation Christmas banquet, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11. Few tickets still available. Get them from a cabinet member or call Dick Krimminger, 1654-W. Important meeting of all students from Area 2 (Montana, Wyoming, North and South Dakota, Utah, Idaho and New Mexico). 1 p.m. Wednesday center lower balcony, Hoch auditorium. Newspaper correspondents to be elected; plans for recreation. All former German students, who would like to sing in choir for German department Nativity play, are invited to rehearsal. 5 today. 306 Fraser hall. K. U. Dames, 8 p.m. Wednesday 417 Snow hall. Mrs. Margaret King will speak on child psychology. Religions Are Alike Chakravarty Says Fundamentally all religions are alike in that they believe in the brotherhood of man, Sailendra K. Chakravarty, graduate student in geology, told 25 persons at the Canterbury club Sunday evening. Chakravarty from Calcutta, India believes the differences in religions lie in the variety of interpretation. Chakravarty also gave a brief sketch of religious life in India today. During the business meeting Margaret Cool, College sophomore was elected secretary. Plans were made for carolling on Dec. 18. May 4. 1607 was the date of the first permanent English settlement in North America. Construction Of New State Buildings Will Get Underway By Spring Topeka, Kan.—(U.P.)—Hurrying along a $5,629,744 building program at Kansas institutions, Charles Marshall, state architect, has said that all major projects will be under contract by next spring. Construction already has started on four projects in a list of 24 at the ten institutions under jurisdiction of the state board of social welfare. Art Martin, state institutional director, said the whole building program, brought to realization by 1949 legislative appropriations, should be complete in a little more than two years. Marshall said the war-delayed construction at mental hospitals, industrial schools, the state orphans home, a children's training school and the Kansas tuberculosis sanitarium is being pushed in all stages from drawing board to actual building. "Some Kansans mistakenly believe the long-awaited building program is still all in the future," Martin added. "It's under way right now and the construction stage will be reached on all major phases by next summer." Vocational Guidance Expert Talks To B'nii B'rth Hillel Leon Bernstein, vocational guidance expert of K. C. Mo., spoke recently to the Binaal Birth Halli联会 in partnership with the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity. Mr. Bernstein held an informal discussion with about 30 members of the group. He was chiefly concerned with advising the group on alternate fields which they may enter if they cannot find a position in their chosen profession. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $2 a semester, $4.50 a year, in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage) Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, Universities and Colleges entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1900, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. In some instances, private architects are being used to prepare plans for buildings at the various institutions as the regular force in the state architect's office has all the work it can now handle. The first structure to be completed in the program will be the $560,000 infirmary building at the Winfield State Training school. It will accommodate approximately 300 patients. Also under construction are a $100.00 food preparation building at the Larned Mental hospital, a $55-596 water treatment plant at the Norton sanatorium and a staff cottage costing $12.200 at Norton. Music Clinic Starts Dec. 8 Two biddings are scheduled this month: A $225,000 employees building at Winfield on Dec. 13, a $350,-000 administration building and auditorium at Larned on Dec. 21. Contracted last month was the $242,500 administration building and kitchen for the Boys Industrial school at Topeka. The fifth annual Midwestern Music clinic for elementary and secondary school music supervisors will be held Thursday through Saturday, at the University. E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education, and Russell Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, are co-directors of the clinic. E. A. McFarland, manager of the bureau of instruction, is clinic coordinator. Concerts, clinics, demonstrations, and conferences will round out the program of the clinic. The sponsors are the School of Fine Arts and the School of Education. The clinic has the endorsement of the Kansas State High School Activities association. The University concert course recital by Clifford Curtzon, English pianist, Thursday, will be complimentary to the visiting music educators. Another scheduled event of the clinic is the fine arts convocation lecture by Felix Labunski. Moreau Speaks To Nurses Club Nurses are seldom sued. F. J Moreau, dean of the School of Law told members of the Registered Nurses club Monday. "It is either because nurses are never careless, or are too poor to be sued." Dean Moreau commented. In discussing medical law before the group, Dean Moreau reviewed recent cases which illustrate application of law to professional nursing. He quoted decisions that established precedent in civil lawsuits brought by patients against hospitals and nurses, and pointed out that negligence of one nurse often results in many being held liable in the eyes of the law. Following Dean Moreau's talk the nurses sang Christmas carols and served refreshments. Fulbright Program To Be Discussed A conference for the Fulbright program advisors of Kansas colleges will be held Thursday at the University, Dr. L.C. Woodruff, dean of men, announced Monday. Dean Woodruff and Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, both members of the K. U. committee, will be hosts at a luncheon for the visiting educators. The business session will be held in the afternoon. David Wodlinger, director of the Fulbright division of the Institute of International Education, will conduct the meeting. Mr. Wodlinger will clarify the duties of the local school committees in screening candidates, and will outline the future scholarship programs. The institute acts for the United States state department in administering the foreign study provisions of the Fulbright law. Under it the proceeds from the sales of war surplus equipment to foreign nations are devoted to the financing of scholarships for American students in those nations. Pittsburgh, Pa. — (U.P.) Everett Frisbie, 31, lost his job as a variety store Santa Claus because, the employer said, "he had the saddest eyes of any Santa Claus in the world." Santa Needs Bright Eyes - Dancing For An Enjoyable Come To The Stable! Cold Drinks Afternoon or Evening - Sandwiches 1401 W. 7th Chicken, Steak and Shrimp Dinners. THE STABLE Open Every Day and Evening Petroleum Engineering Students Inspect Wabaunsee County Oil Field Operations Oil field operations and equipment at the new Davis ranch oil field in Wabaunsee county were inspected by 15 petroleum engineering students from the University, Dec. 3. Charles F. Weinaug, associate professor of petroleum engineering, and Ellis L. Anders, assistant professor of petroleum engineering, accompanied the students who are enrolled in Oil Field Development Methods class. The group inspected a modern rotary drilling rig which was being erected and another rig drilling a well. A pumping unit and tanks for collecting and measuring oil were also visited by the students. George Hickok, geologist for the Carter Oil company, explained the duties of a geologist in a field such as the Davis ranch field, and he showed the students copies of electrical drilling time and sample Clifford Curzon Will Play Thursday Clifford Curzon, English pianist, will be the third attraction on the University Concert course. The program will be at 8:20 p.m. Thursday in Hoch auditorium. Mr. Curzon received his early training at the London Royal academy where he won all the prizes open to pianists. His teachers have included Tobias Matthay, Katherine Goodson, Arthur Schnabel, and Nadia Boulanger. Mr. Curzon was known in Europe when he made his American debut in a Town Hall recital in New York in 1939. A concert tour of the United States was postponed by the war and was not resumed until 1948. The Davis ranch field, discovered in April, 1949, in the eastern Flint hills region of Wabaunsee county, is the first important field in the area. There are now eight producing wells there. W. S. Stovall, district petroleum engineer for the Carter Oil company, guided the students around the field. After the tour representatives of the company took the group to dinner in Topeka. - The American Institute for Foreign Professional Education in foreign countries. FOR A CAREER ABROAD... ★ Area Studies - Principles and Practices of Foreign Trade. Export-import procedures, finance, accounting, marketing, administrative economics, industrial relations - Arena Studies Latin America and the Far East Modern Languages A European Language Spanish, Portuguese, French Applications now being accepted for February 1950 semester AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR FOREIGN TRADE OCEAN William L. Schurz, President Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, Arizona FRESH and the best... 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