1949 HURSDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1949 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE ELEVEN in music the river eat school. Daily Kansan Classified Ads olden bugs... te ... asure ALTY] ex. $ 2 Phone K.U.376 ) Pipe & $2 York 21 E CIF RIAR erms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted theft of the understanding that the bill will be presented during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (ex- cept Saturday) or brought to the Univer- sal office for delivery. Journal, biography, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. 6 R.P.M. VICTROLA. Has own speaker, and volume controls, dark brown earpiece, and productive qualities (musically speak- ed). Will sell for $39.95; $10.00 lower available at retail. Call Bob Foster 4546 betw and 6 and 7 day or leave message to call. Classified words One day Three days Five days 5 words or less...33c 65c 90c additional words ...1c 2c 3c Classified Advertising Rates NOTOROLA Portable Television with big seven inch screen for $139.95 plus iPx Ask for free trial in your home. Just Phone 21. B. F. Goodrich, 292 Mass. HRISTMAS cards for sale, 2 to 8 cents each. Excellent quality. Many styles to elect from. Also stationery. Order Call Mrs Shields, phone 1601-11-11 35 LA SALLE sport coupe. New tires excellent condition. Call 648 in the afternoon or 1571 after 6 o'clock. 24 RUCK, light pick-up. Excellent for wn running, must sell soon. Call evens "Bill," "1916 Louisiana, Ph.2339. 21 Cleveland and Vinegar company 810 phone 335. 21 OTOROLA Portable Radios. Now as widely known, the 925 and 1170 are $2.00 down. $5.00 monthly. 11-7 BUSINESS SERVICE ATHEMATICS getting a bit thick! Tacney F. Dougherty, 1203 Oread. F. Friday YPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 286M for ormpt experienced service. 820% Mass. 90% WING. FLACES? Then let the First car travel headaches. Call Miss Giesse- s, 347-821-2900. at 30 for pln information. 20 (OP WHILE you wash) Bendix does the k whirl down, have the fun Lunada. 21 Drip 28 Drink 18 Fun Maternal. Varyed: 7 20 in 6:00. 20 FING: Thesis, term papers, reports, journals, presentations. Ms. Sho- 1089. Vermont. Ph. 1168R. Miller, M. HEN WE FINISH your prints, brother, ly are really finished. Hank Brown, 2013 FIPING DONE. Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel 418 or long to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Missing tf BRINITURE upholstered and repaired man-made Furniture and Upholstering DIO SERVICE: Newest G.E. test equipment enables us to give faster, more accurate service on all A.M. or F.M. dos and television receiver at lowest fees. Free pickup and delivery. Ph. 312. Bowman Radio and Electric. 11-2 OROUGH on the auto check, easy or G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body fender repair, auto painting used by Hawkers. SAVE! AWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant and visit your "Jayhawk" pet air needs are our business. Our one-to-pet shop is putting for nothing with the Athens Pet and Gift Shop Conn. St. Ph. 418. tt MISCELLANEOUS VE SPACE for a few more regular orders. Home cooked meals 50c. Immediate service. 1213 Ohio Parking students and custainers. If interested in partici- ing in exploration of Arizona Super- vision schools, please contact low student Christmas vacation leave dress at Kansan office. Box 10. 25 STUDENTS: Come to the dance at F.W. restaurant this Saturday nite at New Hampshire in downtown france. 21 V STUDENT wishing to contract for college of saleing concessions during ness at the intramural field may condena Bross, 295; or Miss Staple, 306. VE YOU tried our special chicken ck and shrimp dinners? Come out. at the restaurant at Tate, 1481 W. 7th, Ph. 30890 24 LLOWEEN party? See Kirkpatrick for kcs, bats, horns, jack-o-lanterns, and charmer. Sport Shop, 706. P. 1018. TRANSPORTATION CRS WANTED: Leaving for Wilicha ry Friday at 4 p.m. Returning San- evening. Please call between 7-8 Harry Shultz. Ph. 3101J. 20 LOST 1K RIMMED glasses in brown case 2M please leave me at Kansan office. 22 YOU find the yellow sweater I $\gamma$ the rain coat of stadium Please call 298518 Known striped Shafee pen bein howell's Annex and Alpha Om Ph. Name Ardryce Wilson in gold, as a keepsake. Reward. Phone O'TONE brown sweater. F. S. an- nce Call $335W. E SLIDE RULE marked Larry Asel. $341W. FOR RENT THE WOMAN'S CLUB has three large, very private quiet rooms with spacious closets. All redecorated and well-furnished. Phone 209. 27 NICE LIGHT southwest room, steam heat, adjoining bath, second floor private entrance, reasonable rent. Ph. 38398. 21 ROOM FOR RENT: Three blocks from campus, double or single. Ample closet space. Charming lofts. 1145 West Hill Parkway, 10839M. WANTED The Danish people are poor by our standards, Dr John Ise, professor of economics, told the International club Wednesday night. RIDE FOR 8 a.m. class on Wed. and Thu. Box 4 at Kansan office. C.K. Box 4 at Kansan office. "Their wages are half as high as ours, he said, "and the cost of living is about the same as in the United States. However, the Danes do not have the luxuries we have in this country, and consequently do not spend as much money." Denmark Has Few Luxuries Dr. Ise was one of three American professors on the faculty of the Midwest seminar which was held at Coenhagen the past summer. He said the people were "friendly, sympathetic, kindly, and modest." "The people have a great regard for beauty, especially in regards to their cities and homes," Dr. Ise said. "The social democracy in the United States is better than that of Denmark. Ours was founded on frontier equality; theirs came from feudalism, and contains various levels of social importance." He found the cities of Denmark attractive and well-planned, and found no slums resembling those in the United States. Maps Of Home Provided By Texans Calvin C. Glover, fine arts senior sang two numbers and a short musical quiz was given. Weslaco, Tex. — (U.P.) — Winter tourists in the Lower Río Grande valley needn't feel homesick. They always can drop in at the Weslaco Chamber of Commerce and look at the hometown map. Manager Dave Moore constructed a huge map of the United States, Mexico and Canada. Every state on the map has a gaping hole from which protudes a fistfruit of its maps. Moore conceived the idea of a nation-wide map service after tourists kept dropping in and asking for maps of Iowa, Michigan, Canada and other northerly sections. Her Mind Finally Made Up Sterling, Mass. — (U.P.) — When he fell 18 feet from a ladder while picking apples, Clarence Buttrick escaped without a scratch. He's 91 years old. Portland, Me. — (U.P)—Mrs. Alice Patriquin, who would have observed her golden wedding anniversary next January, has sued for divorce on grounds of desertion. He's 91, But He's Tough Red cedar wood is used most commonly in making lead pencils. Book Found In Holy Land Reveals Noah's Early Life Chicago—(U.P.)A lost book of Biblical literature revealing details of the early life of Noah for the first time has been found in an ancient cave in the holy land. Dr. John C. Trever, head of the English Bible department of the International Council on Religious education, said the manuscript was the "lost book of Lamech") which scholars found mentioned in later writings but had given up hope of finding. The book was found in the spring of 1947. Trever said the book probably was composed about the first or second century B.C. by a pseudonymous writer similar to the other writers of apochryphal literature of that period. The apochryphal or "unauthenticated" books were rejected by the council that met to determine the contents of the old testament about 90 A.D. So far, only a small part has been translated, the series of passages related to the birth of Noah. Researchers will need "years" to unravel it completely, Trever said. It is written in Aramaic, the complex native language of Christ. The document and other treasures apparently were brought to the cave by a sect of people who believed themselves the "true children of Israel," Trever said, and hid their documents possibly fearing they would be destroyed by some enemy. The findings include a scroll of the book of Isaiah which predates by more than 1,000 years the "Leningrad Codex." The Codex, a copy of the "prophets" written in 916 A.D. and now in the Leningrad museum, previously was the oldest Hebrew document known to exist. The writings were found by a goat herd boy with a wandering tribe of Bedouins, Trever said. The boy found the cave when he chased a runaway goat up the side of a cliff beside the dead sea south of Jericho, he said. Elder tribesmen took the scrolls to Bethlehem to sell to a moslem merchant. Later they fell into the hands of a Syrian archbishop and Trever, then acting director of the American Schools of Oriental Research in Jerusalem, was called in. Trever thought at first they were forgeries. "It seemed fantastic that they could have survived more than two thousand years." Then because of the inaccessibility of the cave, archeologists had trouble finding it again. The excavation was not completed until the cave was re-discovered by Arab legions under Capt. Akash Bev. "It probably had not been visited by man since the parchments were hidden by the original owners." Trever said. Fragments of other documents are parts of the books of Genesis, Leviticus, Deuteronomy and Judges; a commentary on the book of Habbakus; part of the book of Daniel which mentions the episode of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego; a religious song of thanksgiving; and a writing telling of "the war of the children of light against the children of darkness." JOIN OUR RENTAL LIBRARY The new books you have been wanting to read are H E R E ! 15c for 5 days The Book Nook LOS ANGELES, PHILADELPHIA Fiction • Poetry Drama Non-Fiction Children's Books and Rental Library College Daze Staff Chosen Staff members for College Daze were announced Tuesday by Edith Malott, College senior and the producer. The members are: Marjorie Crane, College junior, and Mary Witcher, College senior, secretaries to the producer; Jerome F. Mandl, education junior, music director; Mozelle Davis, College freshman, secretary to the music director; William Hatch, fine arts senior, set designer; Barbara Boling, fine arts sophomore, costume director and designer; Shirley Grounds, College sophomore, and Emalou Watkins, fine arts sophomore, costume designers; Sue Ihinger, College sophomore, wardrobe mistress; Ruth Hurwitz, College junior, wardrobe assistant. Sally Garland, College sophmore, make up director; Gloria C. Horn, College senior, make up assistant; Donald Yelton, business senior, stage manager; Janet Coulter, College freshman, assistant stage manager; Frances Hoyt, College freshman, property manager; James E. Crates, engineering freshman, property assistant; Helen Boese, fine arts freshman, properties committee; William Akright, engineering senior, lighting director; Curtis Coffey, business junior, business director; Dean Johnson, College senior, and Robert Orr, business junior, ticket sales and assistant; Byron Werges, business senior, advertising; Robert Geis, business senior, programs; Barbara Ramsay, College senior, program editor; John V. Brown, College freshman ushers; Patricia Brown, College sophomore, script secretary. Dog Is 'Trigger-Happy' Remains of a prehistoric flying reptile with a wing-spread of 18 feet have been discovered in Kansas. Graham, Tex. —(U.P.)—John Schlittler, 16, was shot by his dog. A gun was lying across a chair as Schlittler prepared to go hunting. The dog sniffed at the weapon and then stuck a paw in the trigger grip. When the smoke cleared, Schlittler had a gunshot wound in his right arm. The dog was under the bed. 10 Students Given Beats Ten journalism seniors, enrolled in Reporting of Public Affairs, have been assigned to cover news beats during the next three months on four newspapers. The newspapers co-operating with the University in this program are the Lawrence Journal-World, the Kansas City Kansan, the Ottawa Herald, and the Topeka Daily Capital. Each student will work about four hours a week on one of them. This type of laboratory practice was begun in 1941 on the Lawrence Journal-World. Students participating are: Richard D. Barton, Richard B. Pryce, and Marvin L. Rowlands Jr., Lawrence Journal world; John E. Riley and James W. Scott, Kansas City Kansan; Leaford D. Miller and Robert D. Snail, Ottawa Herald; and Stella N. Gabrielson, Douglas Jennings, and Royal D. Mullen, Topeka Daily Capital. PORTRAITS That Personal Gift From You. Park Hetzell IIII ENLARGE 'EM We Small prints make better enlargements Enlarging from any size negatives. 4 x 5...20 5 x 7...35 8 x 10...75 1107 Mass.