Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Sept. 22, 1955 Pledges Elect The Delta Gamma social sorority pledge class has elected officers. They are Sue Sedgwick, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore; president; Barbara Messer, Olathe sophomore, secretary; Carolyn Bailey, Osage City sophomore, treasurer, and Carolyn Nixon, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, social chairman. Mary Lou Leavitt, Prairie Village sophomore and Donna Seacat, Emporia sophomore, junior Panhellenic representatives; Carolyn Condron, Topeka junior, song leader; Nana Morgan, Wichita sophomore, publicity, and Merrilyn Muir, Hutchinson sophomore and Bonnie Golden, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, pledge scrapbook. The Kappa Alpha Theta social sorority pledge class has elected officers. They are Joanne Beal, Lawrence sophomore, president; Susan Frederick, Kirkwood, Mo. sophomore, vice-president; Jean Kinser, Newton sophomore, secretary; Lynn Gerlach, Topeka sophomore, treasurer; Judy Junction City sophomore, Junior Panhellenic representative; Linda Lemmon, Salina sophomore, AWS representative, and Jane Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, social chairman. On The Hill Gamma Phi Beta social sorority announces the pinning of Shirley Lytle, Wheaton, Ill. senior, to Norman Cappas, a 1955 graduate and member of Phi Gamma Delta social fraternity. Capps is from Topeka and is now attending the American Institute for Foreign Trade at Phoenix, Ariz. The pinning was announced by Lynne Logan, Nevada, Mo. senior, and Merrilyn Coleman, Frankfort junior. Other attendants were Sara Allen, Topeka senior, and Nancy Squyres, Wakeeeney junior. Evans is also a member of Phi Becta Pi medical fraternity. Theta Tan, national professional engineering fraternity, will hold a speaker at 7:30 p.m. today at the chapter house, 1602 Louisiana Street, for all new engineering students. Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering will be the speaker for the evening. Delta Gamma social sorority and Delta Upsilon social fraternity held a watermelon feed at Clinton Park recently. Mrs. Glen L. Wigton chaperoned. Phone VI 3-1171 For Appointment Religious Notes Jewish students and faculty will observe the end of the High Holiday Season with Yom Kippur Eve services sponsored by the Hillel Counselorship at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Jewish Community Center, 1409 Tennessee St. George Axelrad, graduate student and Hillel president, will conduct the services. This is Hillel's first fall in its own quarters at the Jewish Community Center. 审 录 The Rev. Goodrich R. Fenner, Episcopal Bishop of the Diocese of Kansas, will speak at the annual fall bishop's dinner for Episcopal faculty and students at 6 p.m. Sunday in the ballroom of the Student Union. Faculty and student reservations may be made by calling the Canterbury House, 1341 West Campus Rd. The Liahona Fellowship of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints will hold a fellowship service at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Danforth Chapel. The theme will center on the experience of Moses at the burning bush. James Van Artsdalen, graduate student and technical assistant in electrical engineering, is planning the service. The worship service will be held at 11 a.m. Sunday for the congregation of the Latter Day Saint Church. R. Edwin Browne, pastor of the student group, will speak on "The Kingdom of God—Now." Bermuda Shorts On The Golf Course Too? Unless you happen to be one of the several thousand sun-blackened golf enthusiasts in the United States, you may not have noticed the trend, but golf is undergoing a "foreward" (if you'll pardon the pun) look, which is concrete testimony that Ivy League fashions are winning new converts in locales other than the campus. By BOB BRUCE Leading the movement for the two "C's" on the fairway—comfort and coolness—are, if you couldn't guess, Bermuda shorts. The majority of the fabrics being worn are not flannel and tweeds, but lighter weight cloth such as garbardine and cotton. Almost as important as the Bermudas are the two-tone moccasin-toed shoes and the plaid and white golfer's cap. If the habitual golfer, often a fugitive from household chores, desires some combination other than plaid and white, he can always rely on the mellow combination of pink and black. Quite a gaudy evolution, don't you agree, from the days of the Big Depression when the standard country club apparel was drab herringbone knickers with matching "duffer" caps? Today's connoisseur of fine golfing wear should be able to select from almost any style he chooses, but if he happens to be from the southern part of the United States, he might deem it appropriate to sport Confederate Bermudas pa- Freddie Voiland, Gamma Phi Beta and Don Everett, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Getting Pinned? FOR PHOTO COVERAGE PHONE Bob Blank AT Hixon Studio VI 3-0330 triotically decorated with Rebel flags on the pockets. NIGHT PHONE VI 3-7993 Open Thursdays 'Till 8:30 835 Mass. VI 3-4833 However, it is doubtful whether the "foreward" look will sweep the country overnight—that is, unless the country's No. 1 amateur, President Eisenhower, abandons his slacks and white golfer's cap for Bermudas. Just think of it—secret service men in argyles and scotch plaids. Wash white nylons separately, because they tend to "steal" dye from colored articles. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results.