Page 5 All The Comforts Of Home All the comforts of home and the household duties that go with it are enjoyed by the members of a laboratory course in Home Management. The classroom for the five-week course is a gray shingled nine-room house at 700 West 16th St. Enrollment in Home Management is required of all women majoring in home economics education, dietetics, and home economics. The course provides the six women living there with a chance to learn how to manage a home using their own ideas. They perform the jobs necessary to keep a household running. Within a year, four different groups live in the home management house. Each woman performs one household duty a week such as hostess and manager, cleaner, waitress and cook's assistant, and head cook. The course is designed to help the students learn how to budget their time and do their work efficiently. The house was built in 1927 for the Home Management class. The downstairs rooms are furnished with mahogany furniture and decorated in pleasing colors. The home economics department supplies the funds for furnishings and equipment and the student fees pay for minor replacements, food, repair, magazines and books. The six women and their adviser, Miss Frieda Sloop, assistant professor of home economics, also have a television set and radio-phonograph which are gifts of the University Home Economics club. HOME MANAGEMENT LESSON—Jerre Lynn Smetzer, Lawrence senior, is one of the home economics majors who stayed in the Home Management house last year. (Photo Bureau photo) KU Artists Display Work In Exhibition Art work by two students and two faculty members is on display in the 27th annual American Graphic Arts and Drawing Exhibition in Wichita Jan. 12-31. The four pieces of art are a woodcut, "White Egret," by Gary Dierking, Topeka senior; an intaglio, "The Sultan," by Judith Temple, Lawrence senior; a drawing, "Supplication," by Robert Green, associate professor of painting; and a woodcut, "Holy Family," by John Talleur, instructor of drawing and painting. Official Bulletin Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results 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 Bullets to the Daily Kansan Nectices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Ph. D. German reading examination, 9-11 a.m. Saturday, 314 Fraser Books Only students who registered Jan. 11 are eligible to take the examination. TODAY Poetry Hour, 4 p.m. Music and Browsing Room, Kansas Union. Prof. Merrell Clubb, English department, will read poetry of Geoffrey Chaucer. Debate staff meeting, 5 p.m. 118 Strong. Debate team meeting, 7:15 p.m. 134 Square Conference Public lecture, Thomas Hart Benton. 7:30 p.m., Kansas University, Spoon- nard College, Club. seedy instruction Organization, 7:50 pm Danforth Chapel. Everyone well informed. FRIDAY Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Episcopal Anselm's Breakfast Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St Chapel, Canterbury House follows. *Museum of Art record concert*, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., Faure "Ballade for Piano and Orchestra" and Chausson "Poem for Orchestra" and Orchestra." Franck "Symphony in d minor." Sacrament of confession 5 p.m., St. Anselin's Chapel, Canterbury House. SATURDAY Thursday, Jan. 16, 1958 University Daily Kansan Museum of Art record concert. 3 p.m. Saint Saens "Violin Concerto No. 3 in b minor." Ravel Zitague. Roussel Mouliner No. 4. "Roussel 'S Suite in F" Inflation Hurts Panhandler MILWAUKEE, Wis. —(UP) Panhandler J. C. Cook, 51, was arrested yesterday after he raised $7.69 by asking passbys for 25 cents for coffee because "prices have gone up." 6 Of 10 Students Like Final Change The change in final week from Thursday through Wednesday to Monday through Saturday is a good move, according to 6 of 10 students interviewed by The Daily Kansan Wednesday. Five of the six said it is goods because it provides a weekend to prepare for the tests and one said it is good because it keeps us on our normal weekly schedule. Three students said it was not good to change because the break on Sunday provided relaxation and study time in the middle of the week, which is more important than before the tests begin. One student voiced no opinion. The question asked was, "What are the advantages of changing final examination week from Thursday through Wednesday to Monday through Saturday?" All students in the poll have taken exams under the former system. Helen Glaze, St. Louis, Mo. sophomore—"There is no advantage. Under the former system you had a study break in the middle of the tests." Richard McClain, Hutchinson senior—"The change is good because we are used to working on a weekly schedule and this will keep us on that schedule." John Fowler, Kansas City, Mo. juniior—"It makes no difference. It's six of one and half a dozen of another." Kathy IIupp, Wichita sophomore — "It is good because it gives you a weekend to study for the tests." Joan Staggs, Wichita sophomore— "You have the weekend to prepare for the finals. In the past you sometimes finished classes one afternoon and began finals the next morning." C. L. Foster, Kingsville, Tex. junior—"It was better when there was a break in the middle of the test schedule. It will get pretty tiresome taking them for a week straight." Some Water Does Wonders SUNCHON, KOREA —(UP)— Waldo Smith of Meno Park, Calif. was handed a surprising testimonial to the quality of his work as a sanitation adviser with the American aid mission. A Korean woman told Smith that she had seven daughters in succession, but after drinking water from a cleaned-up well, produced her first son. Kay Prothman, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore—"It is a good idea because you have the weekend to study for the exams." Beverly Sargent, Great Bend sophomore—"Now you can study for the tests beforehand because you have no classes just before them." Phillip Bouldin, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore—"It is good to have the weekend to prepare for the tests." Jay Mellies, Morganville sophomore—"There is no advantage. The former schedule was better because it allowed a break in the test schedule." Practice Debate Entered By KU Five teams of the KU debate squad will debate in a practice tournament at William Jewell College. Liberty, Mo., Saturday. Vince Riley, Ottawa senior and Neal Logan, Garden City junior; Arly Allen, Lawrence sophomore, and Allen Hickey, Liberal junior, will represent the experienced division. Frank Nall, Bethel freshman, and Charles Fishel, Lawrence sophomore; Kim Heller, Fargo, N. D., and Larry Jones, St. John, freshmen; James Wood, Ft. Riley, and Kenneth Megill, Independence, freshmen, will represent the beginners division. Trophies or awards will not be given at the tourney, but certificates will be presented to undefeated teams and to individual debaters receiving three or four ratings of superior. The question of debate will be "Resolved: That the requirement of membership in a labor organization as a condition of employment should be illegal." Phil, Tompkins, instructor of speech, and James Rever, assistant instructor, will accompany the teams.