PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANS AN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, SEPT. 29, 1940 KFKU To Bow For 16th Year Tomorrow KFKU will open its sixteenth year of broadcast tomorrow at 6 p.m. with a special musical broadcast. Because of the world baseball series the first part of the week, KFKU will not utilize its regular afternoon period. Starting Monday, Oct. 7, however, the regular broadcasting schedule will be 3 to 3:30 in the afternoon and 6 to 6:30 in the evening with a University of Kansas Round Table every Thursday from 9:30 to 10 p.m. Miss Mildred Seaman, program director for KFKU, has announced a widely varied educational program for the University station this year. For the first time programs are being directed to the classroom in cooperation with the Lawrence Public Schools. These will be in the form of two weekly programs of stories, one directed to the primary grade children and one to the intermediate. Stories will be told by faculty members from the Lawrence public schools and the University of Kansas. The agenda for this program is being worked out in cooperation with a special advisory committee. Book Club Program The English department will sponsor a program called "The Book Club Program," to be presented regularly on Tuesday at 3:15 p.m.-the time that many Kansas book clubs are actually in session so that these programs may be used as a basis for the club discussions. The program will be presented by different faculty members under the direction of Professor John E. Hankins. One of the most popular programs for the past year which is to continue is "Your Health," a series of discussions about health problems which confront the individual and the community and some important problems concerning preventive medicine. The discussions will be heard regularly on Monday evenings at 6. They are presented in cooperation with the University of Kansas School of Medicine under the direction of Dr. Hugh Dwyer and the American Medical Association. What the Editors Say. What the Editors Say Another new program."What the Editors Say"—has been planned, to consist of editorials on timely topics taken from some of the outstanding newspapers in the country. The editorials will be read and discussed in both their pro and con aspects. The material will be presented by the Department of Journalism with Professor Siegfried Mickelson in charge. Other programs will include a series of debates, the University of Kansas Round Table, French and Spanish lessons, book review by Helen Rhodia Hoopes, of the Department of English, requested readings by Robert Calderwood of the department of speech and dramatic art, programs by all University musical groups. Thursday is Guest Night At Men's Co-op Dorms The three mans dormitories: Carruth, Templin and Battenfeld halls has designated Thursday as guest night, it was announced yesterday. Following a recent election of officers, self-supporting men students living in the halls now are organized to carry on social and athletic programs. Seek Applicants For Civil Service Applications for participation in the competitive examinations for a city planner, plant pathologists and a junior engineer will be received until Oct. 24, the United States Civil Service Commission of Washington, D.C., announced yesterday. The job of city planner with the National Capital Park and Planning Commission pays $3,800 a year. Applicants must have completed a four-year college course in architecture, civil engineering, landscape architecture, or city planning. They must also have had professional city planning experience. The plant pathologist will receive $3,800 per year. Also needed are an associate plant pathologist at $3,200, an assistant at $2,600, an associate plant geneticist at $3,200, and an assistant at $2,600. Employment is in the bureau of plant industry in the Department of Agriculture. Appropriate college study and experience is necessary. The junior engineer must have completed a four-year course in engineering at a recognized college. He will receive $2,000 per year. Additional information may be secured from the secretary of the board of U.S. Civil Service examiners at the post office. Claude Arnett, m'43, was the winner of the Johnson Award of $50 given to the first-year Phi Chi student in the School of Medicine who makes the highest scholastic average. The award, has been given for the last 15 years by Dr. C. B. Johnson, of Eudora, a member of Phi Chi, medical fraternity. In making the presentation, Dr. Johnson said that he hoped the recipient might some day be able to help other students in medicine. TO OPEN CLINIC- Claude Arnett Wins Johnson Award (continued from page one) ing the University of Kansas Hospitals. The new building will give the hospital about three times more space than it had before. The lower floor houses a kitchen serving the entire hospital, and a cafeteria for staff members and nurses. The next two floors contain 85 examining rooms, labeled according to the medical departments. The corridors from the waiting rooms, off of which the doors open into private examining rooms. Has Lecture Rooms For Medics In each unit of rooms there is a lecture room for the medical students. Also a few beds are available for those who become ill during examination and need temporary relief. The top floor of the clinic forms an auditorium, where the students receive lectures. The new clinic is to be operated on a budget of $20,000 a year. The value of the hospital and medical school now stands at about two million dollars, nearly half of which has been gained in the last five years. Children Pavilion Cost $121,000 The children's pavilion, opened a year ago, was built with $121,000 secured from gifts and the PWA. The connecting corridor, X-ray department, and cancer clinic were completed two years ago at a cost of $100,000. The Eaton ward for Negroes was opened a year ago at a cost of $160,000. The Hixon research laboratory was completed more than a year ago at a cost of $170,000. The new warehouse and power plant cost $80,000. Dr. H. R. Wahl, dean of the Kansas University medical school, said that the entire staff would be invited to take part in a ceremony in TO TURN A BOTTLENECK INTO AN OPEN DOOR- SHEAFFER'S MH To acquire an education now, and to apply it later, the one working tool you need daily, hourly, is a pen. To have less than the finest is to strain your effort through a bottleneck. 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