PAGE.TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 194 Official Bulletin Archery club practice 5-6:45 to night. Meeting at 6:45. All members and prospective members. April 6.1948 Alpha Kappa Psi, 4 today, Myers hall. Y. M.C.A. Cabinet, 5 today, Mission room, Myers hall. Student Court will not meet today as previously announced. Scarab tonight, 7:15, room 205 Maryn. Bacteriology club, 7:30 tonight 501 Snow. Dr. Jacob Kleinberg speaker. Election. A. W.S. House of Representatives, 7 tonight, 105 Green. Nominations for new officers. Registration today and tomorrow for English Proficiency examination, 1 p.m. April 10. Students in College register at College office, 229 Frank Strong. Students in School of Education register in Education office, 103 Fraser. University Art club, 7:30 tonight 315 Frank Strong. Swordmen, 7:30 tonight, 110 Robinson. All interested in fencing. Regular meeting, A.S.C., 7:15 tonight, Pine room, Union. Scabbard and Blade, 4:30 today 105 Military Science bldg. Future Business Leaders of America, 5 today, room 6, Frank Strong Annex D. Entomology club, 4 today, 301 Snow. Tau Gym dance group schedules for Wednesday: Waltz, 4-5:45; Hello Kansas, 12-1 (noon); Chinese 5-6 Today's schedule: Primitive, 4:45-5:45; Balinese, 7:15-8:15; Nonsense 8:15-8:45; Gavotte & Jig, 8:15-8:45; Spanish, 8:45-9.15. Undergraduate Physics club, 5 p.m. tomorrow, 210 Blake. Movies. K. U. Dames, 8 p.m. tomorrow Lindley Auditorium. Independent Men's Party primary election, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Kansas room, Memorial Union. Russian Club, 4 p.m. tomorrow 402 Fraser. Mrs. Soloveitchik, speaker. Announcements committee, 7 p.m tomorrow. Union Activities office. International club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Henley House. All members. Campus Christian Missionary Fellowship, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Myers hall. Independent Men's and Women's parties banquet, 6 p.m. tomorrow, Kansas room, Memorial Union. Call Roger Davis, 965, today for reservations. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m. tomorrow, 113 Frank Strong. Business School Association will present following movies at 4 p.m. Thursday, 417 Snow. "The Telephone Hour," "Modern Coal Mining" and "Let's Go America." General Semantics club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 111 Frank Strong instead of tonight. Snaw Zoology club Thursday, 206 Snow. Young Republican club, 7 p.m. Thursday, recreation room, Union. Boys' State Alumni, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Pine room, Memorial Union. Negro Students' Association, 7:15 p. m. Thursday, Myers hall auditorium. A. S.M.E. 7:30 p. m. Thursday, 9 Frank Strong, Mr. Otto of Lorenzi of Combustion Engineering Corporation, speaker. Tickets for I.S.A. sponsored student-faculty parties being held Friday may be picked up at booths in Frank Strong rotunda and Union Lounge today and Wednesday. No charge. University Daily Kansan Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Wednesdays. Entered as second classination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. A. S.C. spring election for class officers and Student Council representatives will be April 15. All party and non-affiliated petitions must be in to Sue Webster by midnight, April 9. Tau Beta Pi initiation banquet, 6:45 p. m., April 12, Kansas room. Actives wishing to attend sign in Engineering Library before 5 p. m. Thursday. Applications now open for positions of editor and business manager of Student Directory. Address letters containing qualifications, classification, and previous experience to Betsey Sheidley, Gower Place, by April 19. Education Group To Confer Here The Kansas Adult Education association will hold its annual conference at the University April 15. The community conference is "Community Cooperation." Alice V. Myers, president of the Missouri Valley Adult Education association, Drake university, will speak at the luncheon. Speakers at the morning session will be Arthur Todd, Parkville. Mo.; John Warren Day, Topeka; and Jim Yount, Kansas City, Kan. The following speakers will appear at the general session in Myers hall: Floyd Black, Topeka; George Hedrick, Lawrence; Ray Janeway, assistant director of Watson library; and Lucile Larsen, Shawnee. North Carolina is one of America's progressive states. It produces a large variety of agricultural products, including peaches, pears and grapes. It produces a large amount of minerals, among which are gold, silver and copper. the career of Dick Bibler, University Daily Kansan staff artist, is a center-spread feature in the April issue of Quill magazine. Career Of Bibler Featured In Quill The article tells of the creation of Bibler's "Little Man on Campus" cartoon and his rise to fame as the nation's foremost collegiate cartoonist. Gordon A. Sabine, assistant professor of journalism at the University now on leave at the University of Minnesota, wrote the article. It is illustrated with a picture of Bibler at work, two of the "Little Man" cartoons, and a picture of Professor Sabine. Alpha Phi Omega Will Help Washburn The University chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will aid in reorganizing the chapter at Washburn university sometime this spring, Clarence Atkins, president, announced today. Local members of the fraternity will initiate and install officers, Atkins said. The Beta Tau chapter at Washburn was inactivated during World War II and has only recently begun to reorganize. Regular meeting of the University chapter will be held Thursday. Plans for a softball team this spring are to be discussed. All members and pledges are urged to attend. 75 Will Meet Here For Adult Education At least 75 persons are expected to attend the annual meeting of the Kansas Adult Education association, to be held at the University April 15. The main speaker will be Alice Myers of Drake university. Miss Myers is president of the Missouri Valley and Iowa State Adult Education association. Smooth Taste, Good Health tell you why LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK is your best buy! "Wearin' these costumes may lose us our reputations!" Besides Jayhawks, KU's Dyche Museum Has 24,763 Bird Skins And Skeletons. Dyche museum boasts one of the largest bird collections in existence. "Only California, Michigan, Harvard, and Yale universities can match our collections," Dale M. Arvey, instructor in zoology said. A total of 24,763 bird skins and skeletons ranging in size from humming birds to ostriches are filed in the museum catalog. Several private collections in repository at the museum $ ^{\textcircled{1}} $ swell the number past 30,000. The first entry in the catalog was made April 15, 1889, when a western evening grosbeak from Loveland, Colo., was registered. Collections were made earlier but were never listed. Birds From Many Places "Birds from all over the world are found in the museum but we specialize in those from Kansas," Mr. Arvey explained. "The museum contains what is believed to be the best collection of bird bones in the world," he said. The use of dermestid beetles, which can clean skeletons in 48 hours, have helped make the collection possible. Most of the collection was received as gifts and by trading with other universities and private collectors. Only rare or hard-to-get birds are bought, he said. Collection Will Grow. With Years. Mr. Arvey predicted that the size of the collection would double within ten years. The museum's three collectors will soon be devoting more time to birds. They are now studying mammals. An increase interest in the field will also hav its effect. The largest private collection held at the museum is owned by Alexander Wetmore, '12. Dr. Wetmore now secretary of Smithsonian Institute, has more than 4,000 specimens at Dyche museum. More than 335,000 children between 5 and 19 years of age in the United States are so handicapped that they need special education, according to the National Society for Crippled Children and Adults. FINE WATCH REPAIR- Electronically Checked. Samples 7101/2 Mass. Phone 368 Executive Positions in Retailing AWAIT TRAINED MEN AND WOMEN Attractive, responsible positions in stores or in teaching await the graduates of foremost School of Retailing. Careers in buying, advertising, personnel, management, fashion and specialized fields beckon to college-trained men and women of varied talents. 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