$ 6 \mathrm {元} A^{1 9} $ TESTING—Dr.. Bruce Linton checks an image on one of the monitor screens in the control room of the new KU television studios in the basement of Hoch auditorium. Page 3 TV Cameras May Cover Class Work The television studio and equipment now ready for use in Hoch Auditorium for courses in TV could enable a class lecture to be televised. The equipment consists of a 2-camera television system and facilities for making sound films. The TV circuit is capable of sending to 50 television receivers. "It is possible that a lecture could originate in the studio and be sent to Hoch Auditorium or Strong Auditorium," Bruce A. Linton, associate professor of speech and journalism and coordinator for radio and television said. It would be difficult but not impossible to move the TV equipment to a specific event. Dr. Linton said. However, it would take 8 hours maintenance procedure to move it. With the equipment, television classes can provide professional instruction, he said. They can also help to familiarize students with television, serve as a graduate study and be used as a tool for teaching large classes. Just as The University Daily Kansas is the laboratory for the A BETTER LIFE is yourss with New England Life and the unexcelled contract, both liberal and flexible. You can change your plan as your needs change, for example. You can choose from 6 methods by which the money from a policy may be paid. FOR YOU — for your loved ones — this contract provides present day peace of mind and future financial security. Let me tell you more about it, won't you? TOM DOWNS NEW ENGLAND Mutual LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY BOSTON, MA 732 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. news-editorial sequence of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, it is hoped the television programs can become the laboratory in radio and television, Dr. Linton said. VI 3-1141 Lawrence Family spending for food increased about 25 per cent per household between 1948 and 1955, while retail food prices increased only 63 per cent, according to a national survey by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. IGY Lecture Set For Monday George P. Woollard, professor of geophysics and engineering geology at the University of Wisconsin, will speak on "implications of The International Geophysical Year" at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Bailey Hall Auditorium. Prof. Woollard is primarily interested in gravity and magnetic fields related to the structure of the earth. Prof. Woolard received his doctor's degree in structural geology from Princeton in 1937. Since 1947 he has been an associate in geophysics and oceanography at Woods Hole, Mass. He is a fellow of the Geological Society, belongs to the Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, the Geophysical Union, the Assn. of Petroleum Geologists, and a member of the Society for Exploration and Geophysics. Engineers To Hear Union President Joseph Amann, president of Engineers and Scientists of America Union, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Lindley Auditorium. His topic will be "Professional Engineering Unions." Mr. Amann represents the largest professional union in the United States. The lecture is sponsored by the University student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. The public is invited. Discussion Planned On Einstein Bust An informal discussion will be held in the Malott Science Library at 4 p.m. Thursday to express appreciation to the Endowment Assn. for a bust of Albert Einstein placed in the library. Max Dresden, professor of physics, will speak on the role of theoretical physics in the 20th century, and Edward Maser, director of the Art Museum, on the Jacob Epstein bust of Einstein. WATCH THAT NEW KIND OF FORD DEVOUR THE MILES! ... the same staying power that hustled the '57 FORD over 50,000 salt-encrusted miles at Bonneville in less than 20 days . . . at an average speed of more than 108 miles per hour! That's its new Thunderbird V-8 power! Action Test the new kind of FORD at MORGAN-MACK yourself. Feel the new solid, silent ride that stems from the all-new INNER FORD. Discover all the other reasons why FORD makes "luxury" a LOW-PRICED WORD! MORGAN-MACK Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence 714 Vermont Phone VI 3-3500 Wednesday, Feb. 27; 1857 University Daily Kansas Looking For A Mate? 2,000 Have Been Found At least one-fourth of the students on the campus are married. Two thousand students were married last year and the number has risen, said Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students. Dean Woodruff said no count has been made this year, but that in the past year the ratio of married students has risen along with total enrollment. The number of marriages is equally divided between graduates and undergraduates. "Married students do not exert a great deal of organized influence," Dean Woodruff said, "but many are active in numerous campus activities." "They don't need the organized activities necessary to the single student to keep them busy, they have their families and small groups of friends, as do young married people in any community." "Although married students have as many or more problems than single students they are somewhat better equipped to cope with them," Dean Woodruff said. "They have someone with whom they can discuss their problems and are able to arrive at a solution with less outside help." "Adequate housing is not much more of a problem in Lawrence than in other communities." Dean Woodruff said, "but the high rent still presents quite a problem. The construction of the new apartments for married students, which will accommodate 120 couples will help the situation considerably." The problem of taking care of the children of married students when both parents work or go to school is usually worked out independently by each couple. "Some leave their children with local nurseries," Dean Woodruff said, "and some have worked out a method of taking turns keeping the children whenever they have time." The Latin American Research Bureau says that only sugar now ranks above American tourists as a dollar producer. Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M.C.? BEAUTY CONTEST ELECT MISS GOP OF K.U. Young Republican members will elect Miss GOP of Kansas University at a meeting this Thursday. She will receive an all-expense-paid trip to the state convention, March 14-16, at Emporia to compete for Miss GOP of Kansas. The winner at Emporia will receive an all-expense-paid trip to Washington, D.C., to compete for Miss GOP at the National Convention of Young Republicans. David Teeple, consultant to the Senate Appropriations and Joint Congressional Atomic Committees, is being flown to Lawrence from Washington, D.C., especially for the meeting. Teeple is also contributing editor to the American Mercury Magazine and author of the book, "Atomic Energy, 1955." He will talk about atomic energy in national politics. PUBLIC WELCOME KU Collegiate Young Republican Meeting 7:30, Thursday, Feb.28 Bailey Auditorium