va r at then were used then Page 5 Summer Session Kansan East Stadium Tickets Going Cheap Persons who will be content to sit on the east side of Memorial Stadium will be able to buy a season ticket at a discount for the coming football season. A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg, KU athletic director, announced recently that fans will be able to obtain season tickets for the east side of the stadium for $15, which is $5 cheaper than tickets for the west side. open end (south end) of the horseshoe. Lonborg explained the move as a "merchandising move." "We have sold season tickets on the east side in the past but at the same prices as for everywhere else. The tickets will be for seats between the south 40-yard line and the "The west side is preferred, of course, because the sun is at the spectators' back. With this in mind we decided to offer the seats in the east side area at a dollar less per ticket ($3 each for the five home games)." The KU student section will begin at the south 40-yard line and move north from there, Lonborg said. "There are some fine seats on the east side and we think a lot of people will welcome the chance to get them at a lower price," he said. Interest in KU football seems to be high and orders for tickets already are coming in. Orders sent now will be processed and then filled before the season's start. Religious Books Gift to Library Fred A. Reece of Pratt has given to the University Library his private collection of more than 500 books on the religions of the world and the history of religion. He also has made a cash gift of $200 to the KU Endowment Assn. for the future purchase of similar books, especially those with a rationalistic approach to the subject. A long-time Linotype operator for the Pratt Daily Tribune, Mr. Reece has been known as a student of books on religion and philosophy and is widely recognized for his learned and skeptical point of view. Robert Vosner, director of libraries at KU, described Mr. Reece's gift as "extremely useful and generous." Student Interning In Personnel Work Joseph F. Harkins of Ottawa has begun a 5-week internship in personnel administration in the office of Charles A. Harkness III, KU personnel director. Harkins, who has completed the junior year at KU, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Harkins of Ottawa. The length summer for Harkins is possible only because the KU calendar sets the opening of the fall semester a week later than in recent years. This may become the busiest summer vet in the life of the 1956 graduate of Ottawa High School. He will work two and a half weeks in the KU personnel office, then spend 12 weeks at Quantico, Va., where he will be enrolled in the Marine Corps Platoon Leader course, and then return to Lawrence for two and a half more weeks of internship. Upon completion of that assignment, he will begin the first class of his senior year. Individual Sports Entries Are Sought Summer session students interested in individual sports still may enroll, through Tuesday, June 23, at the intramural office, 107 Robinson. There they may sign for tennis, horseshoes, golf, handball and badminton. Arrangements for softball have been completed and play is ready to begin. KU Teacher in England Dr. E. Grey Dimond, chairman of the department of medicine in the School of Medicine, is serving a month-and-a-half visiting professorship to Aug. 1 in the Institute of Cardiology at the University of London, England. Butter made from the milk of zebus is not sold locally. The search for hidden wealth in the earth's crust in Kansas, which more and more is becoming the combined effort of geologist and geophysicist, will be aided by a basic reference just published by the State Geological Survey here. Survey Reference Will Aid Search for Earth's Wealth "Symposium on Geophysics in Kansas," edited by William W. Hambleton, contains, in its 375 pages, 25 papers dealing with the Kansas crust and especially with seismic, magnetic, gravity, and other geophysical studies in the state. A volume of special significance in commemorating the activities of the International Geophysical Year, the symposium will be a useful guide to "future geophysical studies that may enhance our knowledge of the earth's crust or aid our search for fuels and other raw materials beneath the earth's surface." A foreword by Wallace Pratt, internationally known petroleum geologist and author, sets the tone of the symposium. Pratt refers to achievements of geophysics in Kansas, the relationship of geology to geophysics, and the role of geophysics in changing "some of our ways of thought." The first paper in the symposium concerns the geologic framework of Kansas as a guide to geophysicists, and different phases of geophysics and geophysical exploration are treated in subsequent papers. All of Kansas is represented. Some of the studies are of specific areas, as the zinc-lead district of southeastern Kansas, Rose Dome of Woodson County, the salt beds of south-central Kansas, and the Pratt Anticline of Pratt County. Others are case histories of specific oil pools in central and western Kansas. Representatives from elementary schools in 10 Kansas communities are attending the Elementary Principals' Workshop here. "How the elementary principal may discharge his responsibility for the improvement of instruction in his building" is the theme of the meeting, which will run through June 26. School Officials Attend Course Special workshop consultants are Dr. Paul E. Blackwood, specialist in elementary science, Office of Education, Washington, D.C., and Dr. Madison Brewer, chairman of the department of elementary education at the University of Nebraska. The workshop, planned to benefit elementary principals or those who expect to become elementary principals, is sponsored by the KU School of Education and University Extension. Friday, June 19. 1959 Dr. Cloy S. Hobson, professor of education, is workshop coordinator. He is being assisted by Drs. John H. Nicholson and Robert W. Rideway, both associate professors in the School of Education. Eliminated in Tourney CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — (UPI) — Judy Kimball of Kansas University was eliminated Wednesday in the quarter-finals of the National Women's Collegiate Golf Tournament. She was defeated 5 and 4 by Julie Hull of Purdue. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Awwww Double Dare You To Buy LEONARD'S Standard Gas 9th & Indiana Printers Threaten Walkout at Star William Ratchford, secretary-treasurer of Local No. 80, International Typographical Union (ITU), said the union's bargaining committee has recommended that a late offer by the newspaper be rejected. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) Walkout at the Kansas City Star was threatened yesterday as some 400 printers scheduled a strike vote. A meeting of the approximately 400 Star printers as well as members of the local work who at the Kansas City Kansan and for many job shops in the area was scheduled for 5 p.m. CST. Ratchford said that means the first night shift for the Times, the morning edition of the Star, will not report for work. He said a strike vote will be taken. Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad Indications were strong that the paper will be out of publication for some time if a strike begins. Negotiations have been underway for several weeks for a new contract. The old contract expired last Sept. 30. The main issue is job security including health and life insurance. The Place With Individual Patios For Memorable Gifts for FATHER'S DAY Give Jewelry DAUGHTER: No, But He Drives A Bee Line to Dixon's $ ^{*} $ Mother: Can He Walk A Straight Line? - The Drive-In at 2500 W. 6th —