Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Oct. 15, 1959 MRA Election Delaved a Week The election which is to decide whether men's dormitories will join the Men's Residence Assn. has been postponed until next Thursday. MRA organizing chairman Donald B. Mason, Prairie Village junior, said the elections, originally scheduled for tonight, were postponed because of "misconceptions" and "confusion" about the council's purpose. "Somehow, the word has gotten around that this is to be a politically affiliated organization—specifically to replace AGL." Mason said. AGL is the Allied Greek Independent political party. Mason continued: "This is not true. This is not a political organization. The MRA is a coordinating council for helping dormitory residents develop their full potential and to make possible the fulfillment of each student's interests." Mason said some students were worried about the power the coordinating council would hold over the dormitory councils of Carruth, Joseph R. Pearson, Templin, and Oread Halls. "The MRA will never have direct authority over any dormitory. It is a coordinating council. The only thing it will do is make suggestions, $ ^{b} $ Mason said. "We delayed the voting because we feel too many people have misconceptions of what we're trying to do," Mason said. "The men who understand what the MRA proposes to accomplish received the program very well in our first meeting Sunday evening." he said. Mason said the organizing council will make certain the MRA's purpose is understood by the dormitory residents. He said: "The dormitories will vote in turn on different days. This will give the organizing council a chance to hold a final meeting the night before each election to make sure the residents understand what they are voting for." Each dormitory will have its own polls. GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Execs Here For Institute Approximately 60 junior executives of savings and loan associations are on campus today for the 11th annual Savings and Loan Institute. Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad The Institute, held by the Kansas Savings and Loan League and University of Kansas Extension, will end Saturday. Bobby Goad, assistant football coach, addressed today's opening luncheon. Dean James R. Surface of the School of Business will deliver a closing speech Friday. A senior in the School of Business will be presented a $500 scholarship by the Institute following Dean Surface's speech. The following faculty will conduct classes: E. C. Buehler, professor of speech; Harold Orel, associate professor of English; and Harold C. Drogh, associate professor of business. f11l p.jkR fstl5:V asC 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 only by Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Petitions for freshman and foreign student elections should be returned to the Dean of Students' office by 5 p.m. tomorrow. Any petitions not in by that time will be due in the ASC office by noon. Saturday. This is the deadline. Fulbright Application Deadline is Tuesday. Turn in at 306. Fraser. TODAY German Club meets at 5 p.m. in 402 Fraser. The program will be on The Threepenny Opera Recordings of the music will be played Everyone welcome Poetry Hour, 4:00 p.m. Music and brainwriting Professor Quinn reading humane fiction Vox Populi, 7:30 p.m., Pine Room in Kansas Union. Christian Science Organization Meeting Students to participate in shape Faculty students and friends are invited. TOMORROW Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union, Dr James Seaver will speak on "Empire Exhibition" the Crypt of St Peter's in Rome." The public is invited Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Episcopal Evening Prayer Danforth Chapel. Newman Club Dual Mass, 6:30 a.m. Pho Kappa Theta hogue, for transport Epicopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m. breakfast following. Canterbury House. Young Republicans meeting, 10 a.m. Congressman Robert Griffin of Michigan; Congressman Robert Griffin of Michigan; Melvin Laird, Wisconsin; and Albert Gregory, Wisconsin; they will speak on A Better America. Art Education Club, meets at noon in the Hall of Art on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Program in Color in Guamala. Newman Club. 12:35 p.m., Room 205. Kansas Union, Daily Rosary. International Club. 7:30 p.m. Jawhawk Room, Kansas Union. "An Intimate Glimpse of Russia." panel discussion and film. All welcome. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 829 Middle School, 30 p.m. Bible study and re- freshment Great grief is a divine and terrible radiance which transfigures the wretched.—Victor Hugo. PAGE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. GREASE JOB -- $1 BRAKE ADJ. -- 98c Mufflers and Tallpipes Installed Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change "Why should a graduating engineer consider Emerson Electric?" That's what we recently asked our youngest engineers...men who graduated in the past 4 to 24 months. They were in your exact shoes not long ago, seeking important decisions. Here are their answers...reporting significant advantages that you should know and carefully consider. You'll enjoy every opportunity to produce right away. You'll get into the thick of important work, actual problems, gaining firsthand experience immediately. Engineering work begins at once...no weeks or months of orientation lectures, back-to-school textbook courses, non-technical or drawing board work. Career freedom allows you a wide choice of challenging work ... design, testing, liaison, stress analysis to mention a few ... anything an engineer could want. It's customary to follow your project from specs through production. Employee relations? You'll find none of the usual stratification between department heads, group leaders and their engineers. Formalities are non-existent. We work closely together and cooperate fully on an open-door, first-name basis. Size is right at Emerson. It's not so large that you get lost, yet certainly large enough to contend in the "big leagues" and to offer all the advantages of a big company. To illustrate the free hand given our young engineers, a May graduate already has developed two hardware components with excellent patent potential. New openings offer a future full of opportunities. Where do these openings come from? From the fact that Emerson is a dynamic growth company. Sales have advanced from $45 to $90-million annually in just four years. These advantages cover only a few of the many reasons why our young engineers believe Emerson offers more. *** Here, in brief, are examples of Emerson's diversification. Our Commercial Division, established in 1890, is the nation's leading and largest independent supplier of fractional horsepower motors. We manufacture a wide variety of fans, air conditioners, arc welders, bench saws, surface mounted and recessed lighting fixtures and a complete line of electric heat equipment. Our Electronics and Avionics Division, formed in 1940, is the world's leading developer and producer of active defense systems for strategic bombers... the B-52H and B-58. We are involved in radar development, parametric amplifiers, electronic scanning and complete radar fire control systems, servo devices, analog and digital computers, supersonic airframe structures, automatic test equipment for airborne electronic systems, missiles, rockets, launchers and mortar locators. **** Find out how you can go...and grow...with Emerson Electric. Meet Emerson's engineering representatives and discuss your future with them. If it is impossible to make a date, write immediately to Byron Johnston for full details. Sign up for your interview at the Engineering Placement Office. Don't put off your future . . do it today! EMERSON 8100 W. FLORISSANT ELECTRIC SAINT LOUIS 21, MO.