Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 18, 195 Alumni's Cards On Display Greeting cards designed by former KU students now employed by Hallmark Cards highlight this month's displays of art in Strong Hall. The exhibit is in the west half of the third floor hall. Pictures of 12 former students and examples of their work are shown. Kansas Negroes who have contributed a better inter-racial understanding are featured in a display in the Kansas Room of Watson Library in observance of National Brotherhood Week. In the picture, Jay Fisher, Marion senior (left) and Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design, examine the contemporary greeting card exhibit. The display uses the Kansas motto, "To the Stars through Difficulties," to epitomize the story of Kansans' struggle to achieve brotherhood. Short biographies, pictures and achievements of four KU Distinguished Service Award winners are shown. Kansas Room Display Honors State's Negroes Examples of various fields of design taught at the University are always on display. A pamphlet, printed in Lawrence on Sept. 25, 1867, urges that Negroes be given the right to vote. A 1957 report from the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy is also shown. The Distinguished Service Award is given to outstanding alumni by the Alumni Assn. Negro winners honored in the display are Wendell Green, presiding judge of Cook County Court in Chicago; Etta Moten Barnett, concert singer, motion picture and musical drama star; Dr. M. O. Bousfield, member of health and education boards in Chicago and Bishop John Gregg world traveler, teacher and missionary. Exhibits are from the departments of jewelry, weaving, commercial art, design, nature drawing and museum study, interior design, fashion and cartooning. Student creations are shown most of the time. Guest shows, such as the present Hallmark display, also are given. the display are: Dowdal Davis, late Kansas City publisher and police board commissioner and the Rev. Vernie Clinch, O.S.B., teacher at St. Benedict's College, Atchison. A reprint from the American Medical Asso. Journal features Dr. S. H. Thompson, co-founder of Douglas Hospital, Kansas City, Kan., the first Negro hospital west of the Mississippi. A book by Lawrence author Blossom Ewing Randall, which explains differences in skin color to children, is in the display. Other KU graduates honored by The displays are changed at least once a month. Space is assigned to various instructors to present the best examples of work in their classes. Exhibits range from beginning classes to graduate work. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results Books by Langston Hughes make a separate exhibit in the Kansas Room. Ship Shape Nautical Blouson in DRIP-DRY cotton broadcloth: white with red or black trim ___ $4 Touch system or hunt-and-peck-- Results are perfect with EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper Whatever your typing talents, you can turn out neat, clean-looking work the first time, with Eaton's Corräsable Bond Paper. Reason why: Corräsable has a special surface--it erases without a trace.Just the flick of an ordinary pencil eraser and typographical errors disappear.No smears, no smudges. Saves time, temper and money! Corrasable is available in several weights — from onionskin to heavy bond. In handy 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. A fine quality paper for all your typed assignments. Only Eaton makes erasable Corrasable. EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON PAPER CORPORATION PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS 55th LS .