Halftime Rites To Be Colorful Halftime ceremonies at the Homecoming football game should be as colorful as ever this year. The event will feature the Homecoming queen and her attendants, the combined KU-MU bands. ROTC units, and University pep clubs. Festivities will begin with the bands giving a brief march exhibition. They will spell out "Hi Alum," then break into a "heart" formation. Three queen finalists will enter in convertibles at the east side of the stadium. Their escorts will be Lloyd Kirk, business junior; Gary Evans, engineering freshman, and S妻子, education senior. The queen's party will proceed around the track until it reaches the south goal line. ROTC units will form a corridor through which the queen's party will pass. As the candidates alight, a group of Jay Janes and Red Peppers in an "arrow" formation will pierce the "heart." Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and Gov. Edward F. Arn will greet the queen's party at the southern end of the heart. The two attendants' and the queen's names then will be announced over the public address system. Panhellenic Sets Workshop Dec.11 The annual Panhellenic workshop, featuring a banquet and philanthropic displays, was discussed at a meeting last night of the Panhellenic council. The dinner will be at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 11, in the Kansas room of the Union, and discussions will follow. Each sorority will present a display in the Union on the following morning. Jeannece Fischer, education senior, is chairman of the workshop. in other business, a Junior Panhellenic dance for all sorority pledge classes was announced to be held in February. Read the Want-Ad page daily. Use it whenever you need cash. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Nov. 18, 1953 -Kansan photo by Dean Evans JUST VISITING, FELLAS—While the Sigma Chis were guarding their newly-poured concrete tennis courts last night, they discovered this intruder getting too close to the courts. This Kansas version of Pogo was released this morning after the cement was dry. Men who participated in the capture were Phil Stiles, college freshman; Bob Sanders and Tom King, engineering freshmen, and John Redfearn, college freshman Doc Yak, With Pills, to Lead Rallies Dr. Yak, traditional Homecoming physician, will start off the big weekend at 9:45 a.m. Friday in front of the cast end of Strong hall. He will help instill some spirit into the student body by passing out Homecoming Pep pills. A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, athletic director, and a campus cop, will speak at the rally. Dr. Yak also will appear at a student-alumni pep rally at 8:30 pm. Friday in Hoch auditorium, between the freshman-varsity basketball game and the Homecoming Follies. Admission of 50 cents will be charged for the game and all will be admitted free for the rally and the Follies. An alumni rally will start 7:30 p.m. at the Town House Kansas City, Kan. A car rally to welcome the football team back from its Friday night stay in Topeka is scheduled for 11:15 a.m. Saturday at Sixth and Illinois streets. Women were permitted to enroll for the first time in the Yale University Graduate School in 1892 as candidates for the Ph.D. degree. The Yale School of Medicine first accepted women medical students in 1916 and every class since that time has included at least one distaff member. The giant Rouge plant of the Ford Motor company uses enough gas each day to supply a city of 1,500,000 population. Contributions to Chest Now Total over $2,000 Collections in the Campus Chest drive now total $2,015, Fred Heath, college sophomore and chairman of the collections committee said today. "Yesterday was very encouraging, with $469.10 being collected." he said. Late Wire News Washington — (U.P.)— Maj. Gen. Hugh M. Milton II, now head of Army Reserve and ROTC affairs, is expected to be named the new assistant secretary of the Army for manpower. Gen. Milton, a reserve officer, will replace James P. Mitchell, who was recently named secretary of labor. New York — (U.P.) — The 1954 March of Dimes put up its posters today with the picture of a four-year-old boy who has been crippled by infantile paralysis for all but four months of his life. Quito, Ecuador — (U.P.)— Mounted police used tear gas and "cavalry charges" yesterday to disperse crowds gathering outside the presidential palace to protest the forced suspension of the newspaper El Comercio. No casualties were reported. The boy, Delbert (Debby) Dainas of Gooding, Idaho, was stricken with polio on his first Thanksgiving eve. He has undergone treatment under sponsorship of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, ever since. The Foundation will seek $75-000,000 in contributions to provide care for victims of infantile paralysis and, more hopefully, to finance the gamma globulin and vaccine programs which hold promise of preventing the illness. The government forced El Comercio to close five days ago, after it had refused to publish a communique attacking the Ecuadorian press. The communique was distributed to newspapers throughout the country. but only two pro-government organs published it. “The drive already has gone over the previous totals collected in other Campus Chest drives.” Richard Smith, college junior, chairman of the Campus Chest Steering committee said. Totals of the amounts received in drives in past years are $1,254, in 1949; $849, in 1950; $1,766, in 1951; and $1,250, in 1952. Heath asked that all solicitors turn money collected in to him immediately after collection. Houses that have contributed and the average amount given per person: Phi Delta Theta, $1.17$; Sigma Chi, $1.09$; Kappa Kappa Gamma, $1.88$ ; Sigma Kappa, $52$; Gamma Phi Beta, $83$; Alpha Delta Pi, $49$; Corbin hall, $76$; North College, $91$; Delta Chi, $26$; Don-Henry Co-op, $99$; Phi Kappa Tau, $1.00$; Kappa Alpha Theta, $1.48$; Alpha Omicron $1.76$; Locksley hall, $55$; Hopkins, $1.43$; Rockdale Co-op, $79$. Pearson, 47; Sigma Nu, 51; Alpha Chi Omega, 52; Triangle, 71; Pi Kappa Alpha, 86; Alpha Epsilon Pi, 87; Sellars hall, 74; Pi Beta Phi, $1.08; Monchonsia hall, 57; Chi Omega, $1.45; Alpha Phi, $1.04; Theta Chi, 92; Delta Tau Delta, $1.07; Battenfeld hall, 11; Delta Gamma, 89; Lambda Chi Alpha, 32, and Alpha Tau Omega, $1.08. KU Entomologist To Lecture on Bees This is one of a series of exchange talks being sponsored by chapters of Sigma Xi at Kansas university and Kansas State uni-university and Kansas State college. Prof. E. H. Herrick, professor of zoology at Kansas State college will give a lecture here in February. Dr. Charles Michener, chairman of the department of entomology, will speak on "Social Behavior of Bees" at the regular meeting of Sigma Xi, national research society, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in room 210 Blaise hall. K.U. Christmas Cards Campanile Card- Campus Snow Scene Cards Photographic reproductions on ripple stock. 5c each-box of 16,75c--complete with matching envelopes. Campanile Engraved Stationery back in Stock - 98c Beautifully engraved on Velvatone Stock For discriminating senders 10c each -- $1.00 per dozen complete with matching envelopes