UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SEPTEMBER 26,1946 PAGE SEVEN Veterans May Receive Credits For Service Ex-servicemen who have not received academic hours for their military duty may obtain information at the War Credits office, 121 Frank Strong hall. Every ex-G.I. is entitled to four freshman-sophomore hours for finishing basic training. Other credits will be determined on the basis of specialized training while in service. To obtain the hours for military training, ex-soldiers must bring with them form 100, separation qualification sheet, and ex-sailors must bring tissue sheet, and ex-sailors must bring form 553, notice of separation. K.U. Switchboard Handles Long Distance Calls K. U. now has direct long distance telephone connections through the University switchboard, Mrs. Mary Neustiffer, chief operator, said today. Four long distance lines make it possible for persons calling over K.U. extension numbers to place their calls through the K.U. operator rather than through the Lawrence exchange. Persons calling in from other cities also may have direct connections with K.U. offices by calling directly to the University switchboard. Mrs. Neistefter said. Churches Hold Receptions Student receptions will be held at the various churches at 8 p.m. Friday to welcome both old and new students. Men's SPORT COATS $13.75 Assorted Styles and Colors All Sizes the Friendly Store Middle-of-the Roader Comes From Russia To Teach At K.U. Students taking Russian this year will study under a woman who represents a rare medium from a land of extremes. Mrs. Samson Soloveitchik, who will teach Russian at the University, and her husband Dr. Soloveitchik, who teaches at Kansas City university, are "middle - of - the - roaders" from a land that is thought of only in terms of czarism and communism. The Soloveitchiks were Kerensky adherents. Dr. Soloveitchik remained in the Russian government as a judge in Odessa until 1921. At that time he deemed it advisable to make an immediate foreign journey—he had just learned that the political police had condemned him to death. The Soloveitchiks went to Vienna, Berlin, and Paris. They remained in Paris until two days before the German occupation in 1940 when they again fled for their political health, remembering that at that time Nazi Germany and Russia were allies. In October, 1940, they made their way through Spain and Portugal to the United States. Mrs. Soloveitchik is a graduate of the University of Odessa in Russia, and has a law degree. While in Germany and France she gave private lessons in Russian language and literature. Dr. Soloveitchik taught in the City College of New York and the navy language school at the University of Colorado before becoming associate professor of Russian at KCU. Mrs. Soloveitchik taught at the University of Colorado and accepted an appointment here when her husband went to Kansas City. Hospital Available For Free T.B. Tests X-ray tests for tuberculosis are easier than ever to take, now that the patients don't have to undress, Dr. R. I. Canuteson, director of the University health service, pointed out today. Watkins hospital facilities are available for free T.B. x-rays for staff and faculty members who have come here since September, 1945. These tests also are free to all campus food handlers, including organized house employees. Student Is Superintendent Arthur O. Chapman, zoology graduate student, is superintendent of the Sunday school of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. The school meets at 10:30 in Myers Hall. For Good, Low-Priced Meals Eat at Thompson's Cafe fragrance : : : one drop, it is said, will make you the most ravishing thing in life; COSMETIC DEPT. Store Hours 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. — Saturday 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Will Bo McMillin Save the Day? - Last season Coach-of-the-Year Bo McMillin led Indiana University to its first Big Ten football championship. Though the victim of a stunning upset in its first game last Saturday, will Indiana be the top team of the year? Win or lose, Bo won't have to worry about his job. For, at Indiana, he's something more than a football coach—he's an institution. Don't miss the fascinating story of this most colorful coach in today's Saturday Evening Post. The Missing Man of the Year by W. F. FOX, Jr., and ROBERT A. COOK