Thursday, Oct. 2, 1958 University Daily Kansan Page 3 4 Union Vandals Will Go to Court Four youths arrested in the Kansas Union Tuesday night on charges of vandalism will appear before Probate Judge Charles Rankin Saturday morning, Frank R. Burge, director of the Kansas Union, said today. The youths, all juveniles, have been released in custody of their parents. They are accused of smearing mustard and catsup over a booth in the Hawk's Nest, throwing things in the Hawk's Nest, strewing the contents of an ash tray over the Music Room floor and breaking the ash tray. Union managers stopped the destructive spree, which was reported to them by some University students. The students had tried unsuccessfully to stop it. "The matter is in the hands of Judge Rankin, who will act positively in the best interests of the youths." Mr. Burge said. Mr. Burge said it is the responsibility of University students to stop vandalism on the campus. "We all have an investment in the University," he said. If You Have a Gripe Air It At Contest Students with solutions to campus problems will have a chance to air their views Oct.22 at the annual Campus Problems Speaking Contest. The competition, in its 34th year, is sponsored by the Speech and Drama Department. Students entered in the contest will give five-minute try-out speeches at 4 or 7:30 p.m. Oct. 20. The eight final contestants named will be given seven minutes to present their arguments to win the annual trophy. E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, and Brad Lashbrook, graduate assistant in speech, are in charge of the affair. All undergraduate students are eligible for the contest and need not have experience in public speaking. Most winners in past years have not been debaters, Prof. Buehler said. Prof. Buehler, who founded the contest here in 1925, said about 40 or 50 entrants are expected to present their opinions on anything from parking to white shirt seating problems. Finalists will be selected, in part, for their diversity of subject matter, he said. Participants must file with Prof Buehler or Lashbrook by noon, Oct 20. A panel of five judges will hear the orators. Official Bulletin TODAY 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 to Kansan. Only Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. KU Amateur Radio Operator Club. $80 per hour. 10 hours invited. Organizational meeting with invited. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship presents "Core of Christianity." Paul Little is the speaker. 7:30 p.m., Parlor A in Union. Methodist students "Looking Toward Marriage" class at Student Center, 7:00 P.M. Christian Science campus organization, with Chapel Families and friends, welcome. International Club will hold its first meeting of the Board of Directors in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Chancellor Franklin D. Bornstein will lead the Memberships will be sold at the door. University Women's Club tea. 2-5-pm. In Chancellor's Residence, Llanc Lac. *Poetry Hour* at 4 p.m. Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, assistant professor of English in the School of Music in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. Der deutsche Verein tritt sich um 5 YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any doctor or prescrip- tion must be checked. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 Kuku Club, 6:30 p.m., Pine Room of Union. Important short meeting to discuss plans for parents day. Attendance for new pledges required. Member Best Western Motels On U. S. Highways 40-59 & K-10 just off of west Lawrence Turnpike interchange on way to business district. Uhr Donnerstag in 402 Fraser. Lichtbilder der Stadt Berlin werden gezeigt sein. Wir beleten Allen Erfrischungen und Gemuetlheit an. 1703 WEST 6TH MR. & MRS. GENE SWEENEY VI 3-0131 Freshman Pep Club, 5:00 p.m., Union Ballroom. Announcements of officers and membership cards will be distributed. Sponsors will student body president. John Downing Air-Conditioned, Phones, TV Free Coffee, Free Swimming Spending 8 to 12 weeks in hospitals from New York to Hawaii this summer, 135 occupational therapy majors earned college credits and also gained experience for their future jobs. The University students worked beside registered occupational therapists under a program headed at KU by Leland Miller. They became familiar with professional aspects of their field and were able to help others through their summer work. KU Therapy Students Gain Credits, Job Experience The national training program is divided into five phases—psychiatrics; pediatrics; tuberculosis; physical disabilities; and general medicine and surgery. "Each phase requires a different type of therapy which the student must learn to apply." Mr. Miller said. "For example, in tuberculosis, the patient is given something to help him accept the long rest period. In pediatrics, the therapist must adapt play activities to a short attention span. In physical disability, we are interested in combating diseases which result in loss of power, such as polio." "The students are allowed to pick their own affiliation locations. We make every effort to place them in the hospital which is their first choice," he said. "They get subsistence pay in some hospitals, but others, including the KU Medical Center, pay nothing." "This is a wide-open field," he 'Wide-Open Field' The students have definite reasons for choosing and enjoying their field. continued. "A qualified student going out now can find about 500 job opportunities from which to choose. The work offers good money plus the satisfaction that you are helping others." In each of the five affiliations, the student is graded on a national scale. The total grade from the affiliations is counted as $20\%$ of the student's grade on the national registry examination given by the American Occupational Therapy Assn., a branch of the American Medical Assn. The remaining $80\%$ comes from a national exam, which if passed, allows the student to practice as a registered therapist. "An occupational therapist must have a liking and an understanding of people and must like the medical situation," said Lee Ann Myers, Rochester, Minn., junior. "He must understand that even saying 'Hi' or standing beside a patient can help, especially in psychiatric cases when even the least bit of attention counts." 4-Year Course Courses at KU include crafts, theory, psychology, science, and liberal arts courses. The O. T. curriculum at KU includes three years on the Lawrence campus as a student in the School of Fine Arts, one semester at the Medical Center in Kansas City and another semester of clinical work in registered hospitals. In the application of occupational The counseling services of the Guidance Bureau are available to students free of charge. These services include counseling on personal, educational and vocational problems. Grease Job $1 Brake Adi. 98c Muffers and Tallpipes Installer Free 1 qt. oil free with oil & filter change PAGES SINCLAIR SERVICE 6th & Vt. 10-40 CLUB 1310 W. 6th VI 3-9795 TACOS Special 6 for $1 From 8 p.m. till 11:30 p.m. Every Evening The two fastest deodorants in the world! Old Spice Stick Deodorant is built for speed. Plastic case is applicator. Nothing to take out, no push-up, push-back. Just remove cap and apply. Prefer a spray? Old Spice Spray Deodorant dries twice as fast as other sprays! Choose stick or spray...if it's Old Spice, it's the fastest, cleanest, easiest deodorant you can use. Each 100 plus tax by SHULTON therapy, the physician handling the case tells the therapist what he desires as an end result from the therapy. It is then up to the therapist to draw upon his knowledge to find a treatment which will produce this result. It is considered as a medical prescription to help the patient recover from disease or injury. "This country is becoming rehabilitation minded." Mr. Miller said. "Employers want to put workers back on the job, and with the population becoming older, there is more need for rehabilitation so that more can live independently." Thrifty, Mun, Thrifty STANDARD from LEONARD'S 9th & Miss. It's the greatest! New bulky pullover with roll collar by TOWNE AND KING, LTD. A favorite on Continental ski slopes, the collar does it! Just try this sweater on and every mirror will say "buy it!" When you feel its heft, you'll take its pure wool, wide- ribbed warmth for granted. Contrasting trim on collar and cuffs. Sizes 38-46... $14.95