Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 14, 1959 KU Engineering Exposition Sounds Gun for Relays Manufacturing miniature Jayhawks, changing sound into color automatic welding and the Kansas Relays will keep KU students and visitors busy this weekend. Friday will mark the 34th Annual Kansas Relays and the 39th Annual Engineering Exposition. Both will continue through Saturday. Opening ceremonies for the relays will be at 1:25 p.m. Friday in Memorial Stadium. Relays Queen Nancy O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill., junior, will reign over the marathon at the Relays Friday and Saturday, with Carol Earls. University of Missouri soph- omore, who represents the Big Eight schools. The Relays dance will begin at 9 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union ballroom where Les Brown and his "Band of Renown" will play. Tickets are $2.50 per couple. Parade Downtown The downtown parade of floats will start at 10 a.m. Saturday, an hour after the track and field events begin. The track events will feature five decathlon contests and four high school and junior college preliminaries. Relays finals will be held Friday and Saturday afternoons for all classes—university, college, junior college and high school. Two Exposition Themes The Relays will resume Saturday at 1:25 p.m. with opening ceremonies. The University one mile relay, starting at 4:30 p.m., will climax the events. The Engineering Exposition will open Friday with two themes, "New Horizons in Manufacturing" and a new concept of "Sound and Color," and a total of 14 displays. "Rather than concentrate on one special display, all of our laboratories will give demonstrations of various manufacturing processes," Paul G. Hausman, associate professor of engineering manufacturing proceses, said. The electrical engineering display, under Bernard Halliwell, Lawrence senior, will "feed" sound from a record or tape through an amplifier. Myron Bernitz, Eudora senior and publicity chairman for the Engineering Exposition, said many engineering novelties will be presented at the exposition. Correction The story quoted Black as si An article in the Thursday, April 9 issue of the Daily Kansan quoting Jack Black, Pratt senior, should have read, "(Jim) Disque (Lawrence, senior) has missed three of the (student health) committee (hospital) staff meetings. He attended all the other dinner meetings. He didn't attend the special committee meetings that were held at the first of the year." The story quoted Black as saying: "The AGI delegate to my committee (Disque) did not attend a meeting all year." KUOK Adds Kappa Sigma Kappa Sigma fraternity is the second fraternity to subscribe to the program services of KUOK, campus radio station. The first one was Delta Sigma Phi. - Portraits - Weddings - Engagements - Application Photos by photography DON CRAWFORD - BOB BLANK 721 Mass. V1 3-0330 filter system, and amplidyne, which will break the sound into frequencies. The different frequencies will produce various colored lights—thus the display's title, "Sound and Color." Displays Mentioned Some of the displays are: Plastics laboratory, a demonstration of the physical properties and uses of plastics; welding laboratory, a demonstration of an automatic welding machine; and the machine tool laboratory, which features a demonstration of the use of an automatic tracer contour milling machine. The milling machine will produce miniature Jayhawks that can be fixed to license plates. Location and information concerning the displays will be found in guide pamphlets which will be given out at the entrance to Marvin Hall. VOTE RICK BARNES SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT New Ideas Efficient Reliable VI 3-2091 813 Mass. Also in Gray or White Top styles of the season...sparked with a 2 eyelet tie or slip-on casual...you'll be amazed at so much style at such a low price. Official Bulletin 9. 95 to 10.95 Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material in bag. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Employment Opportunities available for men. Contact office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong. Part-time and some full-time work. Cheerleader practices, April 14, 16, 21, 23. 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101. Tryouts, April 28 & 30, 7:30 p.m., Robinson Gym, Room 101. Everyday: 4:15 p.m. Elves and the Shoemaker, Experimental Theatre. TODAY Business Placement Bureau. 214 Strong Hall. Dick Brooks, Southwestern Investment Co. Careers in Finance John R. Kemp, President of Purchasing, Production and Accounting. Zoology Club, 7:30 p.m., home of Dr J. Weir, 2040 Louisiana. Discussion: Chapters 12 and 13 of Charles Darwin's "The Origin of Species." TOMORROW The Undergraduate Psychology Club, 7:30 p.m., Room 37. Strong Hall. Dr. Whittington from Watkins Hospital will speak on electroencephalography. Teachers Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailey. Charles L. Stuart. Clay Center. Business Placement Bureau. 214 Strong Hall. Johnson, William Voloker & Scalp. Le circle français, a quatre heures, dans le musique fraser. Aline Roux, danse et musique. Mathematics Colloquium, 4:15 p.m. 203 Strong Hall. The Relation Between the Area of a Surface and the Integral of a Curve on a Surface at the surface. Raymond Rishel, Brown Univ. Lutheran Gamma Delta, Pastor Brittie Chapel services in Danfort, 5-2-50 Tuesday Lutheran Student Association, noon, West Alcove, Union Cafeteria. Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m. and Holy Communion, 7:00 a.m. with the Eucharist. Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 11th and Kentucky. Quill Club, 7:30 p.m., Oread Room, Union Tau Beta Pi, 11 p.m., 201 Electrical Engineering Labs. Election of members. Faculty Forum, noon. English Room of Union, Sen. Denale, Huls. *Enactments* We require a B.S. or an advanced degree in mathematics or the physical sciences. Experience in your university's computing facility is highly desirable. SPACE TECHNOLOGY Offers work of the future ...today! Computer programmers & applied mathematicians High speed digital computers and expanding computing systems require individuals with more than the usual amount of interest and ability in the fields of Applied Mathematics and related computer programming. Our Computation and Data Reduction Center in Southern California is one of the largest and most advanced facilities in the nation. Three of the largest and most modern high-speed digital computers (IBM 709,704,and UNIVAC 1103A) are utilized in the support of Systems Engineering for the Air Force Ballistic Missile Program and space flight studies. Contact your placement office for an application, or send any inquiries to Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. to the attention of Mr. Gerald Backer. Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. P.O.Box 95004, Los Angeles 45, California