MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1949 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Medical Students To Serve In Small Kansas Towns University of Kansas senior medical students will spend 11 weeks an observer in the office of a general practitioner in a Kansas town of under 2,500 population. The plan that will be put into operation in March. The fundamental purpose, said Franklin D. Murphy, dean of the School of Medicine, is to acquaint students with the problems of general practice in a rural area, but it is hoped that the experience will eventually cause young doctors to settle in small towns. There will be 20 students in the first training group, who will be assigned to a physician whose practice is basically rural. Students will work with the physician, sit in an observer when patients are in the office, and accompany the physician on his calls. The physician will act, in effect, as a personal instructor. The student does not practice medicine. He assists the physician. The doctor will provide expenses of room and board for his student. At the end of the period the physician will make a written report to the school concerning the student's interest and potential capabilities. The dean emphasized that the program is strictly a training course to be followed by the regular period of internship. Dr. Murphy said he believed that training will be valuable to students who go into specialized fields or general practice in urban areas as well as to those who prefer small-town practice. Thirty-nine physicians chosen by the curriculum committee of the medical school will participate. They are: Dr. Conrad Barnes, Seneca; Dr. Marshall Brewer, Ulysses; Dr. E.C. Bryan, Erie; Dr. F.H. Buckmaster, Elkart; Dr. George E. Burket, Jr, Kingman; Dr. A.W. Butcher, Wakefield; Dr. Gordon Claypool, Howard; Dr. Thomas Dechito, Westmorland; Dr. Hamer Foutz, Minneapolis; Dr. Mary Glassen, Phillipsburg, Dr. C.V. Haggman, Scandia; Dr.C.W. Haines, Haven; Dr. Victor H. Hildyday, Baldwin; Dr G.H. Jackman, Cimarron; Dr. William R. Kenoyer, Hugoton; Dr.O.W Longwood, Stafford; Dr. Ellis B. Mc- Mortar Board To Give $500 National Mortar Board's annual $500 fellowship contest for active members of the organization is being sponsored again this year. The award is to be used either the year following graduation or the next year for graduate study. Any active Mortar Board who can qualify as a candidate for the master's or the doctor's degree is eligible. Applications must be submitted by December 15. Knight, Alma; Dr. Charles Montgory, Hoxie. Dr. Benjamin Morris, Quinter; Dr.C.M. Nelson, Oberlin; Dr.William A. Nixon, Macksville; Dr.H.S.O'Donnell, Ellsworth; Dr.H.P. Palmer, Scott City; Dr.Dean Parker, Ness City; Dr.Cecil Petterson, Syracuse; Dr.Edward Petterson, Plainville; Dr.Carl Plowman, Jewelry; Dr.A.K. Ratzlaff, Goessel; Dr.Fried Schank, Burlingame; Dr.H.R. Snook, McClouth; Dr.H.L. Songer, Lincoln; Dr.Edward F. Steichen, Lenora; Dr.Byron Walters, Marquette. Dr. T.J. Walz, St. Francis; Dr. LJ. Waxse, Oswego; Dr. Randal Weed, Humboldt; Dr R.E. White, Garnett; and Dr. Homer J. Williams Osage City. Hamburger is so called because it originated in Hamburg, Germany. Mrs. Hamilton J. Stevens, Pasadena, Calif., who is chairman of the fellowship committee, has announced that all applications will be judged by her committee and by three deans of women at institutions which have chapters of Mortar Board. Daily Kansan Classified Ads The winner will be announced in May, 1950. Phone K.U.376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly, in 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journal bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the next day. Classified Advertising Rates Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five days 25 words or less ...35c 65c 90c Additional words ...35c 2c 3c FOR SALE TUXEDO: $38, splendid condition, price $25.00 Call at 2145 Vermont St. Cobble Creek, CA 95018 IMPORTED Mexican purses, ladies' and men's bifolds, earrings or what do you want? See or call Eddie Bale, Phone 730.1127 Ohio. DRIVE IN for Underwood's Pasteurized Milk 15c a quart. At the sign of the Flying Red Horse on West 7th at the edge of town. 1 MAN'S Tuxedo for sale—size 38. Phone 29 3433M FOR SALE: Latest Sunbeam Shavemaster Razor. A gift but now have two. Cost $22.50; sell for $14.00—Call 2374-W after 5 p.m. 28 BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 2865M for prompt experienced. $201.9M for TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 TYPING DONE. Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. tf THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body and fender repair, auto painting with our 1821R t-shirt JAYHAWKERS: 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 pet shop has everything for you. Pet & Gift Shop, 1218 Copp, St., Ph. 418. LOST MAROON COAT switched at volley ball games. Nov. 16. Robinson gym. Coat made for zip-in lining, I have yours. Call Mona Milliken, 3585. 29 GLASSINE envelope containing "K-card, card, other valuable papers, on campus homecoming Saturday. Finder please contact Irven Hayden, Sunflower or K-30 DIEFZGEN drawing instruments in Mar- bard Bradley, 3213W. Reward, please call DIEFZ Bradley, 3213W. Reward, LOST or STRAYED. Brown leather zipper notebook. Need class notes desperately. Will pay $5.00 for contents. No questions asked. Phone 3907 3001 Price. WANTED TO BUY Old Navajo Blankets and Indian Curios. Write description of what you have. PAT READ, INDIAN TRADER, 908 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kans. FUNFURNISHED 2 or 3-room apartment in modern home. Rooms may be small. Very little or no cooking. Address Box ZO, Dally Kansan. tf FRIDAY, one pair of horn-rimmed glasses North of Oread hall belonging to Peggy. Call at Kansan office and pay for ad. 29 FOUND WANTED WANTEO RIDERS: Leaving for Wichita north noon. Box Address 4, Dall Kansan. ROOM FOR RENT. Large room suitable for 2 or 3 men with private bath and continuous hot water. Close to University and bus. 30 TRANSPORTATION 2 APARTMENTS for boys, $13 per boy, sleeping rooms 1140 La. Two double- sleeping rooms 1140 La. FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS DID DOU SEE the accident at 8th and Mass. on November 3 in which a new, blue Lincoln Cosmopolitan was involved? Please call Mrs. A. B. Ewing. 1592. 2 DRIVE IN for Underwood's delicious Eggnog, 60c a quart. At the sign of the Flying Red Horse on West 7th at the edge of town. 1 DO YOUR Christmas shopping on the Hill at the Y.W.C.A. bizarre, Dec. 2nd and 3rd, at Henley House, 1236 Oread. Open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Cast Of 12 Chosen For One Act Play Twelve students have been chosen for the cast of "The Long Christmas Dinner" a one-act play by Thornton Wilder, which will be given in December in the Little theater in Green ball. They are Thomas Shay, graduate student; Sheila Wilder, College senior; Twila Wagner, education senior; Bettie Sage and Wilson O'Connell, College juniors; Sally Cross and William Means, College sophomores; Marese Ball, Mary Beth Moore, Donald Lee Stone and Kathleen Cale, College freshmen, and Ernest Coombs, fine arts special student. New Mexico Checks Lottery Complaint Santa Fe, N.M. — (U.P.)—Jose Arnijo, district attorney, said recently he is “checking into the law” in regard to a complaint that the New Mexico “bank night” law is being used to “legalize” a lottery in Las Vegas. Mr. Armijo would make no further comment on the complaint that a city-wide lottery is being conducted in Las Vegas under sanction of a new law allowing motion picture theaters to use "bank night" as an advertising stunt. Will Harrison, Santa Fe political columnist, wrote yesterday that the Las Vegas lottery is being conducted not only by three movie theaters, but also by two drug stores, a liquor store, a grocery, a restaurant, and a brewery, each with a bottling works, a dairy, a dry cleaner, a coal vard, and three other firms. The bank night law passed by the 1949 legislature, exempls motion picture theaters from the state's strict lottery laws if they "offer prizes of cash or merchandise for advertising purposes in connection with such business (moyés) for the purpose of stimulating business." Persons are given a chance on a new automobile and a 75 dollars weekly cash prize for the 50-cent firm. The drawing is held at a theater. Sigma Delta Chi Elects Carl Kesler Dallas, Tex.—(U.P.) Sigma Delta Chi, national journalistic fraternity, elected Carl R. Kesler, state editor of the Chicago Daily News, as national president at its four-day national convention which ended Nov. 19. Mr. Kesler succeeds Neal Van Sooy, editor of the Santa Paula (Calif.) Chronicle. Mr. Ansoy was the executive counsel of the fraternity. Grove Patterson, editor-in-chief, of the Toledo, Ohio, Blade, was elected honorary president succeeding Douglas Southall Freeman of The Richmond News-Leader of Richmond, Va. The group will hold its 1950 national convention in Miami, Fla. The terrier tugged Leblanc's wallet out of his hip pocket and dashed away. Leblanc called police, who finally found the dog in his hideout under a porch. The wallet was recovered in a hole. Fitchburg, Mass. — (U.P.)—A tan terrier nuzzled up to Lionel Leblanc as he sat on the steps of a building reading a newspaper. Doa Is Merely 'Monev-Mad' Also in the hole were eight pennies, two nickels and a quarter. Milwaukee- (U.P.) — Mrs. Frances Sweet was puzzled when her automatic washer splashed soap suds over her basement floor, even though she had the lid down. When she lifted the lid, a very clean pigeon emerged. Pigeon Washes In Laundry Read the Daily Kansan daily. University Student In 1866 Was John Brown's Neighbor Mrs. Joseph Newlin, a student in 1866, remembers Quantrill's raid on Lawrence and that she prayed for John Brown the night before he was to be hanged. Mrs. Newlin, 98, of Whittier, Calif., enrolled in the first class of the University in September, 1866. She is the only living woman who attended the first class. Until she became confined to her home four years ago. Mrs. Newlin traveled widely. In 1927 she toured Europe, and later, the Hawaiian islands. She had her first airplane ride a few years ago. Mrs. Newlin is the daughter of Kansas pioneers who were neighbors of John Brown at Ossawatonie in her childhood. Her father and John Brown had a burning zeal to free the slaves. Mrs. Newlin's father was a conductor on the "Underground Railway," which smuggled the slaves from the South to the North. One of Mrs. Newlin's brothers was named after Brown's son, Fred, who stayed in his father's home the night before he was killed by anti-free state raiders. The family moved to Lawrence and Mrs. Newlin enrolled at the University. She was married in DRIVE-IN THEATRE CLOSED The amateur sailor has a 50 cent book on navigation to guide him on the roundabout course to Anchorage, Alaska. Between them and voyage's end stretches 15,000 miles of water. They expect the trip to take nine months. Skipper of the craft is Warren C. Christianson, 29-year-old University of Minnesota Law School graduate, who constructed the schooner at a cost of 6,000 dollars while going to college and working part-time as a river barge hand. Mr. Christianson said they would stop at St. Louis, New Orleans, Havana, Port au Prince, the Virgin islands, Trinidad, and Caracas, Venezuela, before passing through the Panama canal. They hope to drink coconut milk on some Caribbean isle on Christmas day. Sailing up the Pacific coast, they plan visits at Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle. Mr. Christianson estimated they would reach Anchorage sometime between next June and September. With him are his wife, Faith, 27; Richard Richards, 27, of Winchester, Ky., a self-styled adventurer; and William Keller, 25, a Nevada, Mo. newspaper man. Also aboard are the dog and cat, pets of the Christiansons. They set sail from Minneapolis in the "tantalus," a home-made, 47-foot, two-masted schooner equipped with an auxiliary engine and an 8 dollar war surplus sextant. He plans to set up a law practice in Alaska. His two crew members intend to return to Minneapolis by plane. "I feel like Columbus must Watch Our Ads FOR BIG HITS to come to our screen when we re-open FRIDAY Minneapolis—(U.P.)—Four adventurous voyagers, a German shepherd dog and an alley cat named "ID" are cruising down the Mississippi river, bound for Alaska. College Inn Cafe 14th and Tenn. Amateur Sailors Begin Long Trip To Alaska Via The Mississippi The native Kansan still sees well enough to read, sew, visit with friends, and work at tatting. Mrs. Newlin recalls that when she joined a woman's club in 1876 in Lawrence, women sedately read papers they had prepared. Woman's sphere was restricted then, and the club members did not take any active part in community affairs. Pleasures considered harmless today were taboo in church circles in early Kansas, and Mrs. Newlin said that she was not allowed to play cards or dance. Girls never went out unchaperoned and always rode in side saddles when riding horses. Girls from "nice homes" found little employment open to them. Teaching was almost the only "respectable profession" women could enter. CHILI HOMEMADE AND DINNERS 1870 and at 21 was left a widow with a baby daughter. Four years later she married Mr. Newlin. He died in 1919. They had two children, Myrtle and Ernest, both are dead. BAKED BEANS BARBECUED SANDWICHES AND DINNERS Doris Vesco, Owner Open 6 a.m. - 1 a.m. She's A Lady Stonecutter have felt," said Mr. Christianson, "because any ocean trip is uncharted if you haven't been over it before." Milton, Mass.—(U.P.)G l a d y s Morse's unusual job is operating a stone cutting plant. She took over after her father's death and for years has successfully managed the industry in a rambling, red wooden building in nearby Roxbury. Phone 10 for Sho Time NOW ends WEDNESDAY - plus - Late News Events Color Cartoon - Bugs Bunny "Frigid Hare" - and - Musical - Frankie Carle Phone 132 for Sho Time Today, Tuesday James Stewart "YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU." and Joe Kirkwood COUNTER PUNCH Late News - Football Special