University Daily Kansan Wednesday. March 2.1955 Initiations, Pledgings Keep Hill Humming Kappa Alpha Theta social sorority announces the pinning of Betty Lu Gard, education senior, to Jim Dunco, engineering senior and a member of Alpha Tau Omega social fraternity. --sophomore, historian; Kathy Hancock, education junior, song leader; Mary Ann Wells, college sophomore, relays; Sue Ann Miller, fine arts junior, and Suzanne Rewarts, college junior, homecoming cochairmen. Miss Gard is from Hutchinson and Duncan is from Kansas City Kan. Douthart hall announces the pinning of Wanda Welliever, college freshman, to Bob Kimball, college sophomore. Kimball is a member of Lambda Chi Alpha social fraternity and is from Kansas City, Mo. Miss Wellei-ee is from Oberlin. Attendants were Pat McClaskey college freshman; Rita Shoup, college sophomore; Barbara Pietler, education sophomore, and Carol Schatzel, college senior. The pledge class of Lambda Chi Alpha social fraternity recently elected Bill Lehnoff, engineering freshman, president. Other officers are Charles Franz, engineering freshman, vice president; Al Callaway, college junior, secretary. Keith Kuhlman, engineering freshman, treasurer; Bob Dunn, first year architecture, social chairman; Willis Armstrong, fine arts sophomore, sergeant at arms, and John Fields, first year law, song leader. Kappa Alpha Theta social sorority announces the initiation of 25 girls. They are Barbara Anderson, Virginia Bartlett, Doris Bonnell, Judy Cotton, Nancy Darnell, Kathy Eisenbige, Migi Finney, Carol Gibbs, Barbara Gilmore, Nancy Here, Janie Heyle, Marilyn Moore, Marilyn McDonald, Laddie Martin, Pat Mockler, Nancy Simone, Judy Tiderman, and Lettie Torchia, college sophomores. Edwina Frohwerk, Janet Pugh and Diana Rhohedes, fine arts sophomores; Carol Sue Cook, Joan Collemann, and Mary Kay Woodward college juniors. Jody Curtis, college sophomore was honor initiate. Dean and Mrs. Lawrence C Woodruff were guests of the Graduate club at its social Sunday evening at the Henley house. The hostesses were Eleanor Var Der Muelen, graduate student from Holland, and Elizabeth M. Bluett special student from Australia. Alpha Chi Omega social sorority announces the initiation of nineteen girls. They are Phyllis Adams, college junior; Barbara Butler, Gloria Gorman, Joan Holmes, Pamela Hutchinson, June Maune, Donna McNett, Judy Nichols, Jane Pecinsovsky, Lou Ann Pendergast, Grace Rose, Lou Reitz, Mary Ann Scrampin, Marge Wille, Barbara Yennie, college sophomores. Ellen Meador, fine arts sophomore; Marcia Mills, Jane Ratcliff, and Jan Williams, education juniors. Pamela Hutchinson was the honor initiate. . . . Kappa Kappa Gamma social sorority has elected Sue Summerville fine arts junior, president. Other officers are Henrietta Montgomery, fine arts junior, vice president; Mary Jo Huyck, education junior, recording secretary; Mary Lundteigen, education junior, pledge trainer; Alice Burton, college junior, corresponding secretary. Carol Saunders, college junior; house chairman; Collette Peterman; college sophomore, treasurer; Karen Hansen, college junior, scholarship; Teresa Hoffman, education junior; social; Jackie Jaquiss, fine arts sophomore, membership. Nancy Bowman, college sophomore, efficiency; Joan Dixon, college sophomore, activities; Jani Ijams, college sophomore, AWS; Marion McCoy, journalism junior; Key correspondent; Janet Dodge, college sophomore, registrar; Carol Education, education junior, marshall. Lorie Dudley, college sophomore, assistant rush; Mary Jane Conklin, college sophomore, assistant pledge; Sara Widick, fine arts sophomore, intramurals; Joan Dixon, college sophomore, Rock Chalk chairman. Marianne Anderson, college Marion McCoy, rush book; Sara Widick, rush book assistant; Marianne Anderson, personnel member at large, and Sue Ann Miller, assistant treasurer. Kappa Alpha Theta social sor- city pledge class officers for the spring semester are Doris Bonnell, college sophomore, president; Janet Pugh, fine arts sophomore, vice president; Nancy Simone, college sophomore, secretary; Mary Kay Woodward, college junior, treasurer, and Judy Cotton, college sophomore, parliamentarian. Kappa Alpha Theta social sorority officers for the spring semester are Pete Doty, education junior, president; Marcia Muehlbach, education junior, vice president; Pauly Palmer, college junior, treasurer; Bev Brand, education junior, corresponding secretary. Pat Tucker, college sophomore, recording secretary; Jane Henry, college junior, scholarship chairman; Kaye Weigand, education junior, house manager. Margaret Campbell, college junior, social chairman; Judy Fincke college junior, rush chairman; Doris Bonnell, college sophomore, deputy rush chairman. Carol Cook, college junior, song leader; Diana Rhana, fine arts sophomore, and Virginia Bartlett, college sophomore, editors. Kappa Kappa Gamma social sorority announces the pledging of Senate Mayes, college sophomore, from Kansas City, Mo. Gamma Phi Beta social sorority announces the appointment of Sarlene Hovey, college sophomore, is assistant to the first vice president. Other officers are Sue Ann Harmon, college sophomore, assistant to the second vice president; Glenna Richards, college sophomore, assistant corresponding secretary; Gretchen Youse, college sophomore, assistant treasurer. Jane Hornaman, college junior, and Fredrica Volland, education junior, membership co-chairmen; Mary Sue Glanville, education sophomore, intramurals manager; Barbara Binginer, education junior, AWS House alternate. Ann Kelly, journalism junior, publicity chairman; Janis Johanson, journalism junior, Crescent correspondent; Nancy Squyres, college sophomore, skit chairman; Isabel Bolin, fine arts sophomore, historian; Judith Campbell, education junior, librarian. Those initiated were Richard J Conklin, and Kenneth L. Clark, engineering sophomores; Jaul J. Harpel, Ronald R. Frevert, and Rex H Blumberg, engineering juniors. Marilyn Underwood, college junior, song leader; Janis Johanson, Founders' day chairman; Ann Williams, engineering junior, initiation chairman; Isabel Bolin, YWCA representative; Janis Johnson, publications; Earlene Hovey, camp chairman, and Mary Sue Glanville, magazine chairman. Nick Classen, Warren Chinn, engineering freshman; John Dierking, college sophomore; Larry Ball, engineering sophomore, and Jim Durner, second year architect. Theta Tau, national engineering fraternity, recently initiated five members and pledged two members. Recently initiated into Sigma Phi Epsilon social fraternity were Ferol Gehring, Willard Jordan, Jim Wallace, Dick West, college freshmen. Those pledged were John M. Dealy, engineering freshman, and Ronald K. Kendrick, engineering junior. Ronald E. Evans, engineering senior, was recently elected president of Sigma Nu social fraternity. Other new officers are Paul D. U.S. Career Girls Termed "Too Bossy" New York (U.P.)—American career girls are too bossy, said a successful feminine executive from France. By UNITED PRESS After watching some top flight career women in action here, Nicole Milinaire, television producer, mother of four children and a lively, curvaceous blonde, left yesterday for France a little disillusioned. At the age of 33, her own amazing career qualifies Nicole to judge just how much tension and unsmilling hard work goes into an executive's job. "They dress well." Nicole said of American career women, "but they don't smile much." "I big mistake," said the producer, who occasionally has trouble with English, "to think French women don't understand business. The big difference between us is that American women are good business-women and they look it. Married at 17, a member of the French resistance during the war jailed briefly by the Gestapo and finally separated from her husband after the war. Nicole had started her own fabric business when she abandoned it to work with TV. "In France, we are good businesswomen, but we try to look soft and gentle . . . how you say? Like a home wife. But we know very well what we want." "I am a woman and I intend to stay a woman," she said firmly. "Here the women give orders to the men when they work. Not in France. You suggest something in such a way that a man does it, but you let him think he had a chance to make up his own mind." Now she has full producer's credit on the Sherlock Holmes TV series, which is filmed in London and Paris. "I stand in front of my hotel waiting for a taxi today," she said, "and when one pulls up I step to get in and a man runs in front of me. Then I pull up. I only pick it. Next time I be with a man who also wants a taxi, I'm going to rush for it too. But this is very bad thing for men. The effect of our female aggressiveness in business is telling on the men, Nicole added sadly. "You work too hard here at making money. In France, when you have money enough, you stop working. Here you see a man who is 50 and a millionaire and he still works. You don't know why." "Everybody competes so much in business. Your women should be more content to work hard at jobs to make the man above them look good. Then women show the men that having a good time is important too. Unshelled nuts keep better than those shelled, and unsalted keep better than those salted. All nuts keep better at low temperature, so it's a good idea to refrigerate them rather than store them on a kitchen shelf. When baking fish, use a moderate oven and cook until the flesh flakes easily with a fork. Avoid high heat or long cooking. In baking yeast breads, let the dough "rest" about 10 minutes before molding. Dough which has set briefly results in better shaped rolls and loaves. Johnson, college sophomore, vice president; Roger A. Collins, college junior, recorder; Donald E. Lumpkin, college sophomore, treasurer; William R. Lindsay, college sophomore, executive officer. William Toking, college sophomore, chaplain; Bob Roberts, college freshman, reporter; Donald J. Raidt, college sophomore, alumni contact officer; John G. Ziegler, college junior, marshall; William H. Oliver, college sophomore, sentinel. Leo Gey LeSage, engineering sohomore, historian, and Robert D. Wilber, college sophomore, house manager. Sigma Phi Epsilon social fraternity, announces the pledging of Phil Elison, college freshman, from Oklahoma City. Do KU Co-eds Follow Fashion Mags? Well- Do college girls wear clothes which have been pictured in Mademoiselle, Harper's Bazaar, or any of the other fashion magazines? By JANE PECINOVSKY Many co-eds scan the pages of these magazines, deciding whether or not they like a particular fashion. Exclamations of "Oh, that's cute!" are frequently heard, but how often do KU girls purchase the clothes they have seen advertised? Here are the opinions of several girls on this campus: Sue Reeder, college freshman: "Most girls read the magazines to get ideas, but they don't actually buy the advertised fashions. Usually the clothes are too extreme for our age." Mary Lue Wickersham, journalism junior: "I think many girls get useful ideas pertaining to accessories from these fashion magazines, but as for clothes, they seem to follow the campus trends." Ellen Meador, fine arts sophomore; "Fashion magazines influence our choice of clothes. I think. Our clothes do not usually show the radical changes that the magazines do, however; and it usually takes at least a year for "fads" to become popular here after they are first advertised in the magazines. Bermuda shorts, for example, were advertised two years ago, and this is the first season they have been standard campus wear here." Pat Pierson, education junior: "I think that the majority of KU girls wear styles that they have seen modeled or actually worn by someone else on the campus. As for fashion magazines, who has time to read them?" Ellen Proudfit, college freshman; "Whether or not a girl wears a fashion she has seen in a magazine depends greatly on the occasion. To a formal dance or party, she may wear a dress she has seen advertised; however, her financial status usually figures in her decision." Alberta Johnson, education senior; "I believe KU girls look through the magazines, and eventually wear the advertised fashions, but not until they have seen someone else on this campus wearing them. Kansas tends to be conservative and pays less attention to magazine fashions than does the East." Janet Pugh, fine arts sophomore: "I think the girls occasionally do buy fashions they have seen advertised, especially if they can be bought at a local store and are within a moderate price range." Karen Hilmer, journalism senior: "Girls look in the magazines to get ideas about the current fashions, but a magazine like Harper's doesn't cater to the college girls as much as it does to women in the professions—the clothes are too extreme. The girls on this campus seem to all share the same opinion—fashion in the magazines are usually too extreme and too expensive for wear in Kansas. Casual dress is the key note of fashion in the Middle West, and the KU girls usually follow that trend. 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