University Dail / Kansan Page 4 Monday. Feb. 8, 1969 KU Asks KBI to Investigate $100 Student Loan Forgery University officials said last night the Kansas Bureau of Investigation has been called in to help solve a forged $100 student loan. David J. Draper, Newton sophomore, was the victim of the forgery. Herbert Weatherby, director of aids and awards, said the loan had been arranged by another man posing as Draper and presenting Draper's ID card. The loan was made more than a month ago, but the discrepancy was not discovered until the endowment office called upon Draper to collect on the short term loan. Weatherby said this was the first time such an occurrence had taken place. He said the KBI had been asked to help in checking the handwriting on the contract. "On short term loans, students come and go so fast that it is impossible to check references," Mr. Weatherby said. Radio Programs KUOK 4:00 Music in the Afternoon 6:00 News 6:05 Jayhawk Jump Time 7:00 News 7:05 Musical Pathways 7:30 Spotlight on Sports 7:40 Musical Pathways 8:00 News 8:05 Album Time 8:45 Melody Time 9:00 News 9:05 Music From Beyond the Heavens 10:00 Comment on the News 10:05 The Dave Butcher Show 11:55 News KANU 4:30 Jazz Cocktail 5:00 Bright Light G 7:00 Ballet Music "Giselle" by Adam 7:30 Keyboard Concert: Harpsichord, featuring Eta Schneider, Fernand Caratage and Marcelle Charbounnier 7:55 Name 8:00 Faculty Recital: Raymond Cerf, Violinist, and Roy Johnson. Pianist, in the Second Program of the Peethoven Cycle. 9:00 Starlight Symphony 10:00 News 10. 05 A Little Night Music; "Violin Concerto No. 4 in D Major" by Mozart Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. TOMORROW Ph.D. French Reading Examination, 9-11 a.m., Saturday, in 11 Fraser Hall. Turn in books and blue cards to Barbara Craig, 120 Fraser, by Thursday. Frank Creason, Supt. (Elem. only) Dist. 49, Overland Park, will interview in the Teachers Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailer Edwin Clark, Rowland School District, Edwin Clarke, Rowland School District, Teachers Appointment Bureau. 117 Barley. Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 and communion service breakfast, following Calvary Home. Newman Club Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church. Education Coffee. All graduate men in education and the School of Education faculty are invited to a get-acquainted coffee at 4:30 p.m. in Bailey Hall lounge. The history of the world is none other than the progress of the consciousness of freedom—Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. GREASE JOB .. $1 BRAKE ADJ. .. 98c Officers investigating last night's explosion found evidence that a bomb had been detonated in a street in a district which is largely industrial. Occupants of a nearby house were away at the time. However, a neighbor reported seeing four automobile containing four men speed away. Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed Free 300 gallons of gasoline free. 10 gallons drawn daily Weatherby said it was possible the same mistake might be made again in giving out a similar loan but cited the precautions that were usually taken against it. "We try to give the students as fast service as is possible. This forgery will not change our policy whatsoever." "The office only asks that an ID card be given for identification. We try to check the student and the picture on the card," he said. PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. Student radio station KUOK will go back on the air today at 4 p.m. The KU-K-State freshman basketball game will be broadcast live from Allen Field House at 6:30 tonight. KUOK Back on Air With Freshman Game LONDON — (UPI)— The British Admiralty got no takers on its offer to sell the battleship Vanguard until a letter signed "six young hopefuls" arrived, asking full particulars concerning tonnage and fire power and enclosing five pounds ($14) deposit to hold it for later purchase. In Way of Downpayment Therefore my age is as a lusty winter. Frosty, but kindly.—Shakespeare. Kansas City Police Investigate Another Bombing Incident KANSAS CITY, Mo. —(UPI)— An explosion heard over a wide area in this bomb-conscious city sent police racing into the east bottoms industrial district last night. Lt. Col. William Canaday, head of the police department's operations division, said the bomb apparently was the work of pranksters and "bears no similarity" to other recent incidents, including the bombing 10 days ago of a Jewish synagogue. Officers said the blast apparently resulted from a black powder bomb but the initial investigation disclosed no damage. No one was injured. Dick Ernsdorf studies a microwave site layout chart atop a mountain near Orting, in western Washington state. On assignments like this, he often carries $25,000 worth of equipment with him. Here, Dick checks line-of-sight with a distant repeater station by mirror-flashing and confirms reception by portable radio. Using this technique, reflections of the sun's rays can be seen as far as 50 miles. He wears two kinds of work togs For engineer Richard A. Ernsdorff, the "uniform of the day" changes frequently. A Monday might find him in a checkered wool shirt on a Washington or Idaho mountain top. Wednesday could be a collar-and-tie day. Dick is a transmission engineer with the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company in Seattle, Washington. He joined the company in June, 1956, after getting his B.S.E.E. degree from Washington State University. "I wanted to work in Washington," he says, "with an established, growing company where I could find a variety of engineering opportunities and could use some imagination in my work." Dick spent 21/2 years in rotational, on-the-job training, doing power and equipment engineering and "learning the business." Since April. 1959, he has worked with microwave radio relay systems in the Washington-Idaho area. When Dick breaks out his checkered shirt, he's headed for the mountains. He makes field studies involving microwave systems and SAGE radars and trouble-shoots any problem that arises. He also engineers "radar remoting" facilities which provide a vital communications link between radar sites and Air Force Operations. A current assignment is a new 11,000 mc radio route from central Washington into Canada, utilizing reflectors on mountains and repeaters (amplifiers) in valleys. It's a million-dollar-plus project. "I don't know where an engineer could find more interesting work," says Dick. Dick stops by the East Central Office building in Seattle to look at some microwave terminating equipment. It's involved in a 4000 megacycle radio relay system between Seattle and Portland, Oregon. You might also find an interesting, rewarding career with the Bell Telephone Companies. See the Bell interviewer when he visits your campus. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES In the Engineering Lab in downtown Seattle, Dick calibrates and aligns transmitting and receiving equipment prior to making a pathloss test of microwave circuits between Orting and Seattle. ---