PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Aviation Industry in Need of College Men, Says Vaughan General Manager of Company Advises Seniors To Make Decision Early "Practically every division of the aviation industry is badly in need of college trained men, intelligent enough and ambitious enough to expand that training by working experiences," according to Guy W. Vaughan, the vice-president and general manager of the Wright Aeronautical Corporation. A large number of young college men have come to Vaughan with a degree. They have frequently injured him what he do with their young charges angering them. "How to make the best use of the intelligent and enthusiastic man who is growing in his degrees of the country has proved to be one of the real problems of the United States," she adds, "dreeds of students, looking forward to graduation and their emergence into the world of commerce, have made swiftly growing business of flying and have made up their minds to take on a new kind of other band, aviation has a tremendous need for eager, trained, and youthful minds to take up its multitude." Vaughn Outlines Industry Vaughn Outlines Industry Mr. Vaughan has outlined a general primer of the industry as it applies to the collegiate in search of a job. "It is something of a mistake," says Mr. Vaughan, "to regard aviation as one industry, a coherent whole. The industry is in fact a group of many industries which are world apart in all except their planes and their airplanes, to operate them and to keep them in the air." "A list of these various sub-industries is quite lengthy. In the aviation business we design, manufacture, and sell equipment; design, manufacture, and sell aircraft; at a fixed basis for training or for local taxi services; operate airplanes over scheduled routes carrying mail and passengers; operate commercial airlines; pilot plots; manufacture and sell aircrafts or permitton flats and sprue lumber or linen fabric or any of the hundreds of aeronautical accessories; teach students to fly, in large open spaces. "The student should make up bh mind as quickly as possible which place interests him, and train him cooperatively for that purpose." He must drift into the aviation business, for in that case we may find a graduate mechanical enriches operating a mail route when he should be designated enriches, or a first class sales manager, to collect the luggage out of surrey forest. There is hardly any division of the aviation industry, from metallurgy to test-plotting, which cannot be trained for to some extent in a role that requires knowledge of practical experience before he is ready to slip into a big job. There are very few short cuts in aviation training, and there is little need of engineering, or business administration, or accounting, we usually put him in a pair of overalls in the service shop and let him spend three or four hours with his equipment and uninteresting job. It is a greasy job, with monotonous labor, but it serves two purposes; we find out if our candidate really needs knowledge of business, and we teach him what the inside of an engine looks like. Answers College Men's Questions "The most frequent question asked by college men is this, 'Must I be equipped with an essential to a place in the aviation industry, but it is highly desirable. I would like for every man in my company to have a pilotship in the air. This apples particularly to all men having anything to do with airplane or engine sales. It would be foolish for a motor truck driver to work behind a car or deer behind a fine pair of bays horses. It is almost equally foolish for an airplane salesman to point out the virtues of his product from the ground, few hours of flying things that prevents can never teach. treside, as quickly as possible, what phase of the industry is inter- ting to you. Learn everything from books or from experienced men in it. And, finally, do not scr术 to start in some very low job, know what to do, learn, and to avoid those later mis­ takes which come to every man, no matter how intelligent he may be, but most importantly working experience to back him up." Jolting of Street Car Results in Novel Plan St. Louis — (UP) The jolting of the street cars that a young St. Louis student lives in has resulted in a novel plan providing comfortable transportation for othercomfortable cars. The company advertises for motorists who are willing to take one or more persons and from work even if they are locked and when an applicant is found who lives in the same neighborhood, the card of introduction to the motorist. The Mutual Introductory Association offices were opened by the couple in May 1970. The office is a ride to and from work in an auto-mobility may do so by registering at the parking garage. The car owner receives no fee the first week, but at the end of the week (for example on Friday) they wish to continue the arrangement. They may make a private agreement During the first week of business 100 auto owners registered with the association and 85 persons desiring to become passengers have become mem Teachers of Education To Hold Meeting Friday Teachers of education, representing various institutions of the state will hold a meeting with the superintendent of Education in Topека, for the consideration of reinforcement in course development. There is a probability that the decision reached will result in some reinforcement in the sequence of course delivery. Dean R. A., Schweiger, of the University, will speak to mcrowr before meeting at St. Joseph, Mo., on the topic of "Guidance as a Phase of El How Shall State Dispose Of Bootlegger's Truck Topken, Dec. 6—(UP) - What can the state do with the bootlegger's track when the bootlegger isn't there? That is the question perplexing William A. Smith, attorney general. The truck in question was captured in Staffordshire but the owner captured. It was turned over to the state department and now is used in handing flower bulbs, waste paper, and boxes at the state house grounds. Smith has decided the state will constrain flowers as long as the owner remains unknown. Oxford teams will consist of Richard Ackland, member of a parliamentary family, Bernard McKenna, is youngest son, William Dipock, oarsman, auctions, and chemist. The Oxonium system of installment buying. Touch Typewriting Read the Kansan Want Ads Enroll with us and let our trained teachers help you over the difficult places in learning touch typing. Special afternoon classes for University Specials for Saturday $10 Dogget & Randal Cold Cream $60 Dogget & Randal Cold Cream 35 Dogget & Randal Cold Cream 15 Toothpaste 10 Ipanau Toothpaste 5 Foofan's Toothpaste 4 Playing Cards (Mohawk) Bill Folds (Big Assortment) 25% off .50 Lownie Chocolates 29c .40 per lb. Horseback Drops 23c Many other specials for Saturday Come in if you only look Rankin's Drug Store "Handy for Students' Tombstone, Once the Toughest, Gayest Town of the West, Now Is a Dusty, Empty, Silent Village The duty village has lost it courthouse, a courthouse that for almost a half century stood for the majority of Cochise county law. A mayor who was elected in 2013 Bibес, the copper queen, became county seat at a recent election and many believe that Tombstone is headed for membership in the "ghost town" of Reno. The scene of glamorous stories, the state for spectacular killings, the fortune and often life on the turn of a wheel, Tombstone apparently became the A few silver mines, working feebly with the aid of pumps where underground waters have flooded rich shafts and tunnels are about 100 feet deep. It was of the flooding of the mines that brought the first inklings of disaster to the town. But five hundred persons now live where not so many houses exist and have been bloomed with a population of 20,000. Tombstone, however, will cling to a glorious tradition to the last. Fiction and history have combined to write her name in such colorful forms that passing time will not erase it. Tumbetone, Ariz., 23. 5 (UP)—Tombstone, once Arizona's metropolis, and known as the "toughest" town in the young and roaring west. Scene of Many Wars Like Lincoln, New Mexico, Tombstone was the seat of cattle wars, personal conflicts, drunkens forays Jayhawks Flown Tombstone, perhaps, seeing the writing on the wall, kicked up her boots last summer in a thundering rush what fate and the future may hold. George F. Weida, Ph.D. '88, is professor of chemistry at William Jewell diege, Liberty, Mo. and hollows, as the pioneer element good or bad, forged out the structure of the western country. Root hill, a private cemetery for early-day sheriff, tells a story in itself. At one time Root hill contained more graves than the civil burial ground and many other artifacts that the sword wife of a police officer sheriff was about three months. Charles A, Harkness, Jr, Ph.C, 23, was forced to leave the pharmacy in at Hays because of ill health of the pharmacy and abib farming at Greenleaf. Gene Mason, Ph. G., '26, is now selling Jenny Wren flour in three state West now - Wyoming, Colorado, and Nexico. His headquarters are at Jersey City. Alex T. Bailey, superintendent of general station of the Commonwealth Shipson company, speaking to students at the Armour Institute of Technology at Chicago, emphasized the fact that he was the principal fundamental unit of his utility business. The Women's Athletic Association of the University of Oregon uninched to big annual membership drive recently. Only those who have received 100 points in intramural competition can become members. One hundred points are allowed for mukkah or 75 for a second, and 50 for a third. Metropolis for a Week The Metropolis spent the west come back to Tombstone for a week. Streets rebounded again with merrymaking. The bird cage opera house, where many of America's famous performers began their cocoons, was filled with Poker chips rattled in the old saloon where Faro Neal dealt her game and the cowboys and minors supplied the players. Corrish where the Carps and the Clantons settled an ancient fuel and six men met death, a group renamed the gun fight under the direction of two old men who witten Many of the west's early celebrities, now pillars in established communities, lived again with the ghosts of Cochise and Gerinoim, war chiefs Read the Kansan Want Ads It was a great week for Tombstone, Tombstone dolted up for a beated fling at youth and made the most of it. Labor Economics Class Takes Trip to Kansas City The class in labor economics in the School of Business will make a field trip to Kansas City tomorrow. Visit the KSU Manufacturing Company, Cook Paint and Varnish Company, Products Company, Sheffield School, Sheffield The schedule was arranged through the courtesy of the Chamber of Commerce of Kansas City. Dean F. T. Gunn will conduct a class which will include 40 students. Owing to a general lack of student interest in the Washburn Review, a student publication at Washburn College, members of the student body were asked what could be done to stimulate interest in student publications. The Patee TOADAY - May McAvoy and Conrad Nuage in an action drama, "Caught In 'The Fog'." Also, "A Bad Day," by Roberto Pellegrini. News, Help and Review. TOMORROW—Wally Wales in a startling drama entitled, "Ace of Action". Also comedy and news. It Is Your Party If You Do Not Have a Date You Are Welcome to Come As a Stag TONIGHT Nine - One SOPHOMORE HOP Union Memorial Building Dates Stags One-Fifty One-Fifty Emporia Is Entertaining "Boy Who Made Good" Hear GEORGE E. LEE and His Recording Orchestra Bambusler Wm. S. Calberton who spoke in conversation yesterday morning, was entertained in Emperor his boyhood house, last night. Friends who know him only as Billy Colbertson without the formality of "ambassador" tacked on the front, honored him at a bounty at his hotel, William Allen White, editor of Knots Korner Gazzette, introduced him. Ambassador Colbertson is a regenerated voter in Kempa and is on campus every year. He is a graduate of the Emporia high school and of the Colbe Since leaving Emperor Haile has been an attorney for the Federal Trade Commission, member and chairman of the Judicial Council's mission, advisor to the state department in the Arms Conference of 1921, and now ambassador to Chile. Milkmaid Avery Train Wreck Cascade, Moor, — (UP) — What might have been a wreck with serious consequence was inverted by the presence of mind of a milk mound. Helen Morton, 12, happened to glance across the Missouri river and see a landslide tumbling down the banks of two tracks. A freight train was doomed and the girl abandoned her herd and summoned her father. Together they rowed across the river and flagged them over in just time to prevent a wreck. Mid-Year GRADUATES A large manufacturer of high grade fire brick has an opening for two or three college men—in both sales and Production work. Do an interaction with the potential opportunity for young men. If interested, write for more details. A. P. Green Fire Brick Co. Mexico, Missouri SUITINGS AND TOPCOATINGS — $35 and up Try our remodeling and repair department. We also clean and press. SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917-May-6 "University Administration" Dean E. B. Stouffer is to tell the Students' Society at the Unitarian Church, 12th and Vermont streets, Sunday at 7:30, how the University is run. Come and learn about it. "The Bishop of London Assails the Devil and Hell Idea" This will be the subject of the minister's discourse Sunday at 11 o'clock. Priced At A Saving $1.25 - $1.95 - $1.45 Just received a big shipment of fancy patterned broadcloth shirts with collars attached. Whether you wish to lay in a supply for yourself or to select them as presents, you'll find patterns and colors to suit every taste. See them tomorrow. Gift of Comfort .. and of Distinction What better gift could one possibly give than comfort—month after month of it? Especially when coupled with such colorful beauty as in these Glover Pajamas of ours. . . They're very new—and very modern—these Pajamas for lounge wear as well as for sleep. Styled with the swank of a European watering place. Tailored to rival your day clothes. And far more comfortable, through the perfected Adjusto-hand waist, exclusive with Glover . . . Here's the gift of the year-for yourself or for another. See our special display this week! Patterns for every taste—and prices for every purse. HOUK AND GREEN CLOTHING CO.