Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 18, 1957 Next Geophysical Talk Thursday Geography and its relationship to economy will be discussed by Dr. Charles F. Colby, professor emeritus of geography at the University of Chicago, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Bailey Auditorium. Dr. Colby's lecture is one of a series sponsored by Sigma Xi, national honorary science fraternity, in connection with the International Geophysical Year. Dr. Colby will analyze the variations which nature has established or combined into the environments around. He will explain how the world acts upon environments and how, in doing so, its economy goes forward. 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 duty. Only Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. In speaking of man's urgent need for water, Dr. Colby will explain how atomic energy can be used for power to convert sea water to fresh water. Official Bulletin Mathematical Colloquium, 4 p.m., 217 Strong Hall. Speaker: Dr. Annette Sinclair Harvard University. "A General Solution" A Class of Approximation Theorems. TODAY Undergraduate mathematics seminar, 4 p.m., 203 Strong. Speaker: Dean G. Uli- ner, M.D. This session will be the Calculus." All interested students are invited to attend these weekly meetings. Coffee Hour, 4 p.m., Music Room, 6 p.m. Thou? A Christian Scientist Answers" KU Engineerettes, 8 p.m., Kansas Power and Light Building, 700 Massachusetts. Speaker: Mrs. Julia Springer, home economist, will give a demonstration in food preparation, emphasizing the use of herbs and spices. TUESDAY Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m., Danforth Chapel, Holy Communion, 7 a.m. catereria, north end. Rabbi Myron Meyer Collegiate Council for United Nations, Coffee Hour 4 a.p. Music Room. Stud- dioskilled by the Rev. M. C. Allen. Skating Club. Roger Williams Fellowship coffee hour. Born in 1852. A member of "The Mortality Fireside" a series of female firefighter training camps. All-student forum, 5:30 p.m. cafeteria, math end Myron Meyer. "What We do" Belinda Belle. Alpha Phi Omega, 7:30 p.m., Parlor A, Student Union. All persons who have had any experience in Scouting are welcome. Bring a friend. Law Wives game night, 7:30 p.m., Student Union. WEDNESDAY Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m., Danforth Chapel, Holy Communion, 7 a.m., followed by breakfast at the Canterbury inn. Innerer's class will not meet until Feb. 27. Faculty Forum, noon, cafeteria, north end. Dr. M. H. Scharlemann. Coffee Hour, 4 p.m. Music Room, Studium Sociale, 10 a.m. The "Religious Faith of a Philosopher." Kuku Club meeting, 5 p.m., Student Union. All student forum, 5:30 p.m. cafeteria, nath end. The Rev. John H. Rosebaugh. nath end. The Rev. John H. Rosebaugh. Panel discussion, 8 p.m. Bailey Auditorium. "Is Religion the Answer?" THURSDAY Faculty Forum, noon, cafeteria, north end. The Rev, Theodore Gill. All-student forum, 5:30 p.m., cafeteria, north end. Phi Delta Kappa, 6 p.m., Kansas Room. Student Union. Joint meeting with Pi Lambda Theta. Your wife (or sweetheart) is invited to attend with you. Make reservations by Wednesday noon. Dinner will be $1.50 a plate. KU Young Democrats meeting, 7:30 p.m., 105 Green Hall. Rep. Dale Saffels, assistant minority leader, speaker. Scarab Officers Elected Scarab, professional architecture fraternity, has elected Jerry Eaton, Lawrence junior, president; Robert Simpson, Newton senior, vice president; Bruce Taber, Liberal senior, secretary; Douglas Smith, Topeka senior, treasurer, and Horst Engel, Overland Park senior, pledge trainer. It was an American naval explorer, Lt. Charles Wilkes, who in 1840 first recognized that Antarctica probably was a great continent. BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 Acceptance A Must, H.S. Girls Told Outlining the basic concepts of leadership, Miss Emily. Taylor, dean of women, told the senior girls here for High School Leadership Day Saturday that the first principle of being a leader involved acceptance by others. The authority to lead comes from the members of the group, Miss Taylor said. The leader must also remember that each person is different and should not expect the same kind of He must watch that certain people do not dominate, try to bring shy people out and keep the group from wandering from its purpose, Miss Taylor continued. participation, from all the members, she said. In the afternoon members of the Mortar Board led discussions on University organizations and roles the girls could play in leadership at KU. After Miss Taylor's address, the girls discussed techniques of leadership. KU students Jan Cameron, Clay Center freshman, gave a humorous reading on the advantages of attending KU. Karlann Ison, Overland Park freshman, and Patricia Ryan, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, did an interpretative dance of "Shotgun Boogie." Entertainment was provided by Engineering Group Elects Officers Other performers were Phi Delta's singing five: Wally Strauch, Elmhurst, Ill., baritone, and Jim Suderman, Newton, bass, both juniors; Dan Casson, second tenor, and John Casson, first tenor, Topea sophomores and Howard Hammond, Glen Falls, N.Y., freshman, first tenor. Robert Parker, Lawrence senior, has been elected president of Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity. Other officers elected were Phillip Rein, Hillsboro junior, vice president; Daniel Kratzer, Kansas City, Kan., junior, recording secretary; Robert Love, Springfield, Mo.; senior, corresponding secretary; Richard Butler, Lawrence senior, treasurer, and Harold Rock, Hope junior, historian. Pointillism is a method of painting in which the colors are applied in dots on a white ground according to a systematic plan. JET ENGINE FRONTIER New "high-road" to in Florida Heralding important things to come, work was begun in late summer, 1956, on a wide access road in a remote section of Palm Beach County, Florida. At the end of that road, situated northwest of West Palm Beach, a 500,000-square-foot plant destined to be the newest addition to Pratt & Whitney Aircraft engineering facilities is already well under construction. Here, engineers and scientists will soon be hard at work dealing with new and increasingly complex problems relating to advanced jet aircraft engines. Working in close coordination with men at other P & W A establishments — particularly the company's multi-million-dollar Andrew Willgoos Turbine Laboratory in Connecticut— this newest section of the Pratt & Whitney Aircraft team will face a challenging assignment. They, too, will be concerned with design, testing and development of highly advanced, extremely powerful jet engines which will join a family already including J-57 and J-75 turbojets, currently playing important roles in the growing military and commercial air power of the United States. The engineering graduate who begins his career at this Florida facility will have the rare opportunity of keeping pace with its anticipated growth. In an organization renowned for development engineering superiority, he will gain invaluable experience working on vital, long-range projects that are a challenge to the imagination. 25 w World's foremost designer and builder of aircraft engines TIRE Two the imme 1231 TICK steam about Call Nation erian Phon ROO furni Adja doub FRA' betw Stror Frate 7370. PRATT & WHITNEY AIRCRAFT DIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATION EAST HARTFORD 8, CONNECTICUT ---