Friday, Oct. 5, 1956 University Daily Kansan Page 7 A E T C T E B H B FOR OUR TEAM! o the Orange Bowl BEAT CU K.U. Probable Starters Name Wt. Po. Don Martin (212) LE Frank Gibson (215) LT Don Pfutzenreuter (159) LG Galen Wahlmeir (210) C Bob Kraus (212) RG Jim Hull (220) RT Bill Bell (199) RE Dave Preston (190) QB John Francisco (179) LH Charlie McCue (185) RH Homer Floyd (164) FB 13th and Oread LK JAYHAWK, KU Phone VI 3-0883 DANCE at the TEE PEE This Afternoon The Hilltoppers Tomorrow Beat Colorado GO JAYHAWKERS Enuf's Enuf... Let's Ruff the Buffs your camera shop BEAT COLORADO WE'RE BEHIND THE JAYHAWKS Mosser - Wolfe Inc. 1107 Massachusetts K. U. We're Rooting For "Ruff The Buffs" THE ROUND CORNER DRUG 801 Massachusetts GO JAYHAWKERS Golden Arrow to Dine & Dance Hickory Smoked B.B.-Q Delicious Fried Chicken Across the Bridge Private Parties 9th & Walnut Phone VI 3-9869 9:00 a.m. --- 12:00 p.m. Featuring SUNDAY — 8 p.m. "THE WHALERS" with "Eyes" – on the piano For The Finest In Football . . . it's Go K. U. beat C. U. K. U. For The Finest In Flowers...it's Owen's Flower Shop 15th & New York VI 3-6111 Students To See Prize Photos Fifty prize-winning photographs from the 11th annual National High School Photographic Contest are now on exhibition in the William Allen White Memorial Reading Room and Historical Center, Flint Hall. The exhibit, which includes the 16 major prize-winners plus a selection of pictures receiving honorable mention awards, will be shown through Oct. 13. High school journalists will see the exhibit when they assemble Oct. 13 for the 38th annual High School Journalism Conference at the University. The conference will include newspaper and yearbook roundtable discussions by high school students and advisers. KU Students Use 80,000 Books The book store has outgrown its quarters two times in the last 10 years. Last summer the book store's area was increased by one third to accommodate more text books. The enlarged area helps to eliminate congestion during the rush period. More than 12,000 persons passed through the book store during the three-day rush period at the start of school this fall. An average of 300 students enter the book store daily. Buying and selling about 80,000 text books makes up 65 per cent of the Student Union book store's business each year. J. J. Newcomb, store manager, said. The store, a private business, is operated only for students and faculty. The present book store was built in 1952 when the Student Union addition was constructed. Before that time, from 1946 to 1952, the book store occupied the space which is now the art and engineering supplies room. Japanese Students To Discuss Buddha The discussion, to be introduced with a filmstrip, will be moderated by Robert William Lewis Jr., Council Grove senior. Barbara Fields, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman, will lead the worship service. At an officers' meeting Thursday Phillip Friedeman, Great Bend sophomore, was selected head of the Workday for Christ project to be held Oct. 27. On this day students will work at odd jobs for money to be given to world missions. Hiroshi Shionozaki and Keishi Fukuma, graduate students from Japan, will be discussion leaders in a program on Buddhism at the United Student Fellowship supper meeting at 5.30 p. m. Sunday. The group will meet in the parish hall of Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Notre Dame Adds Nuclear Engineering SOUTH BEND, Ind.—(IP) -A new sequence of courses in nuclear engineering will be offered by Notre Dame's College of Engineering beginning this year. The courses are being added to the engineering curriculum because of the rapid development that has taken place in the application of nuclear fission to industrial uses. Intended primarily for mechanical engineering students, courses totaling 18 credit hours will be offered in chemical physics, modern physics and nuclear engineering. Math Club Sees Research Film The part mathematics play in research, especially nuclear research, was the theme of the film, "Oppenheimer Interview," shown at the Mathematics Club Thursday night in the Student Union. About 45 persons attended. Fians were made for an exhibition on science and Mathematics Day, Oct. 27.