Figure 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 9, 1957 6 To Wichita Meeting On Social Work Six University staff members are participating in the 58th annual meeting of the Kansas Conference of Social Work which began in Wichita Sunday and will last through Wednesday. B. W. Tucker, executive director of the Kansas Council for Children and Youth, will preside at the general sessions as president of the conference. Edward H. Tuttle, director of the department of social services at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, will serve as a panelist discussing "A Foundation and a Framework—the Conference Platform." He will also act as moderator in a section meeting on "Resources and Referrals—a Medium to Conservation." Mr. Tuttle is chairman of the National Conference Liaison Committee. Miss Esther Twente, professor of social work, will act as a panelist in a discussion of Integration of Religion and Social Work." Joseph F. Meisels, assistant professor of social work, will take part in a group discussion on "Social Research—a Community's Experiment in Getting Agencies to Pull Together." Foreign Show Tryouts Set Tryouts to determine what countries will present the program at the International Festival will be held at 7:15 p. m. Wednesday in the Student Union Ballroom. Rahim Ola Ojikutu, Nigerian special student and president of the club, said he expects approximately 40 of the 52 countries represented in the International Club to try out for the program. "I imagine most of the countries will present short plays or songs depicting the life in their country," he said. "We have about one and one-half hours to present the program." The 52 countries have been divided into seven major groups. A committee chairman, one representing each group, will select the countries he thinks can present the best possible program. Rehearsals for the program are scheduled for April 21 and 25. Thirteen resident hall counseling positions with pay ranging from $135 to $337.50 for the 1957-58 school term are available to qualified junior, senior and graduate men. 13 Counseler Jobs Open For 1957-58 The basis for selection will be a written application, recommendations and personal interviews. Application blanks may be obtained in 228 Strong Hall and should be filed by May 1. Qualification is based on scholarship, leadership in group activities, counseling experience and participation in student government programs in resident halls. Telfel Supervises Press Workshop For the sixth straight year Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, supervised the newspaper section of the ninth annual Interscholastic Press Workshop at the Headliner Week of Lincoln University's journalism department Wednesday through Saturday in Jefferson City, Mo. The workshop included instruction sections in the yearbook and photography. Lee S. Cole, instructor in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information from 1945 to 1950 and now associate professor and acting chairman of the journalism department at Lincoln, was in charge of the workshop. If all the coins in circulation in the country were divided equally among the population, each person would have $11.36 in copper and silver. At the final session, Russel Paul Brotsman, associate professor of social work, will present the incoming president elected at the conference. Donald Pilcher, assistant director of the Bureau of Child Research, is program committee chairman of the meeting. Last Chance For Safety Course The last chance to enroll in the first phase of a water safety instructor course will be 8 p. m. Wednesday in 204 Robinson Gym. Phase one began Monday and is now required as part of the water safety course. To be eligible for the course students must now be a senior lifesaver or have been a water safety instructor. There will be five more meetings of the class, the last on Friday, April 19. The second phase will begin Monday, April 22. Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni Assn. and L. Worth Seagondollar, associate professor of physics, left Monday for Emporia, the first stop on a 3-day schedule of alumni meetings and talks at high schools and junior colleges. Two Begin 3-Day Tour They also attended an alumni meeting in McPherson Monday night. Today, Mr. Seagondollar spoke to students of McPherson Junior College at 11 a.m. and 1:15 p.m. He and Mr. Ellsworth will attend an alumni meeting at 6:30 p. m. in Manhattan. Mr. Seagondollar will speak to Clay Center High School-students at 10 a. m. and at Washington High School at 3 p. m. Wednesday. Both men will attend alumni meetings at Clay Center at noon and at Washington at 6:30 p. m. Wednesday. Collister To Speak At Ames Edward Gordon Collister, director of the Bureau of Guidance, will speak to the Iowa Personnel and Guidance Assn. at its spring meeting Friday at Iowa State College in Ames. He will speak on "Recent Research Developments as Related to Guidance." Looking for variations, comparing them and trying to explain them are the three major areas in the study of genetic variation as outlined by Genetics Study Told Three To Study At Illinois Hospital Fred E. Samson, assistant professor of physiology, and two students, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis R. Dahl, will spend the summer studying at the Illinois State Research Hospital, Galesburg, Ill. They will study the changes in cellular integrity in the brain after a period of insulin shock, a treatment used in psychiatric hospitals. Dr. Harold Himwich, a world authority in this area of research, will supervise the work. Dahl is a first-year student in the School of Medicine from Colby. Mrs. Dahl is a Chickasha, Okla graduate student in physiology. '47 Class To Plan Reunion The reunion planning committee of the class of 1947 will meet at 3 p. m. Sunday in the Oread Room, Student Union to discuss plans for the 10-year reunion to be held June 2. Dr. Forbes W. Robertson of the Institute of Animal Genetics, Edinburgh, Scotland, in Snow Hall Mondav. In his lecture, "A Comparative Approach to Genetic Variation," Dr. Robertson pointed out the need for modern geneticists to use both the mathematical and biological approaches in their studies. "Mathematical Geneticists have given us a basis for speculation on possible variation, telling us where to look and helping us compare our findings," Dr. Robertson said. "But we must go beyond statistical analysis and go into the biological reasons for the variations. Professor Joins Research Committee Clayton Crosier, associate professor of civil engineering, has been appointed to membership on the research committee of the American Concrete Institute. For several years Prof. Crosier has been engaged in research on various lightweight concretes. At present, with the State Geological Survey, he is investigating the properties of cellular ultralight-weight concrete, using Kansas pozolanic volcanic ashes and clays. EASY CONTEST RULES FIRST PRIZE Trip around the world in 79 days NEXT 50 PRIZES Polaroid "Highlander" Land cameras 1. Finish the limerick about whichever L&M pack suits you best. 2. Send your last line with the wrapper or box from the L&M pack you prefer (a facsimile will do) . . . along with your name and address, to L&M, P. O. Box 1635, New York 46, N. Y. 3. Contest restricted to college students. Entries must be postmarked no later than midnight, April 30, 1957. (Contest void wherever illegal) is ©1957, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co 4. 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