Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 20. 1952 On the Hill By JEANNE FITZGERALD Kansan Society Editor The University Faculty club will hold a Thanksgiving dance at 8:30 p.m. Friday at the Faculty club. The faculty orchestra will play for the dance. Hosts and hostesses will be Mr. and Mrs. Carl Slough, chairmen, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Yoe, Mr. Clinton Warne, and Miss Katherine Mulky. Watkins hall held an exchange dinner-dance with Stephenson hall Tuesday night. Members of the women's scholarship committee were dinner guests of Watkins hall Sunday. Guests were Miss Elin Jorgensen, Miss Agnes Brady, Miss Florence Black, Miss Edna Hill, Miss Mary Peg Hardman, Miss Kathleen O'Donnell, and Miss Martha Peterson. * * Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Wolf will show slides and give a combined talk on their recent trip to Europe to members of the University Faculty club at 5 p.m. Sunday at the Faculty club. Mr. and Mrs. Wolf visited Italy, England, Switzerland, Germany, and France during their trip. Mrs. Wolf is an instructor in design and Mr. Wolf, a lawrence businessman, makes movies for the Centron Movie company. Hostess will be Miss Evelyn DeGraw. Theta Phi Alpha sorority was entertained at an hour dance by the Bogii fraternity Tuesday evening at the fraternity house. Chaperones were Mrs. Cauble and Mrs. Edward Dicks. ** Student Union Activities will hold its annual carnival from 8 p.m. to midnight Friday in the Military Science building. Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. William J. Sollner, Mr. and Mrs Graves T. Myers, and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hipp. ** * ** Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday in the Community building. Chaperones will be Mrs. Edward H. Turner, Mrs. Dana Anderson, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, and Mrs. L. L. Williams. *** Theta Phi Alpha sorority will give a Thanksgiving dinner party from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday at the chapter house. Dancing and cards will follow the dinner. Chaperones will be Mrs. Edward T. Dicks, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. Richard L. Blume, and A. Edwin B. Peet. Delta Upsilon fraternity will entertain Delta Delta Delta sorority with a dessert from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. today at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. James A. Toy Makers Predict More Christmas Toys New York—(U.P).-It looks as though there will be more toys than ever under the Christmas trees this December. Norman G. Wintermertal, president of the Toy Manufacturers of the U. S. A., predicts that the wholesale volume of toys turned out for the 1952 Yuletide season will approach $400,000,000. Production will be about 10 per cent above that in 1951. At the association's annual Christian preview, Wintermantel said western clothing and toys again will top the toy output of manufacturers. For neat looking shoulders, and real comfort, always get the left shoulder pad on your left shoulder, and the right one on your right. Here's a foolproof way, use snap-in shoulder pads, sewing eyes of snaps on one pad, ball part of snaps on the other pad. Hooke and Mrs. C.H. Wentworth Sigma Pi fraternity will entertain women from North College hall at an hour dance from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Friday at the chapter house. Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will give a party from 6 p.m. to midnight Saturday at Lone Star lake. Chaperones will be Mrs. Edna H. Stewart, Mrs. Frank M. Baird, Mrs. J. I. Holllingsworth, Mrs. Hazel H. Jenkins, Mrs. L. L. Williams, and Mrs. Fanny DeLozier. 串串串 The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity pledge class will give a formal dinner-dance from 7:30 p.m. to midnight Friday at the Castle Tea room. Chaperones will be Mrs. Thomas H. Stuart and Mrs. C. A. Thomas. ** Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity entertained Pi Beta Phi sorority at an hour dance at the fraternity house Tuesday night. Chaperones were Mrs. Dean Alt and Mrs. Harry M. Ryan. - * * The newly formed journalism students club held an informal party-meeting Wednesday night. The purpose of the meeting was to get students better acquainted with each other and with the journalism faculty and to choose a name for the club. Theta Tau, national professional engineering fraternity, announces the pledging of Paul Pankratz, engineering junior; Edward Peyton, engineering sophomore, and Dale Trott, engineering sophomore. Pledge class officers are James Rose, engineering freshman; captain, David Gray, engineering junior, lieutenant, and Kenneth White, engineering junior, recording secretary. NEED A LITTLE LIGHT on THE SUBJECT? Once again we have a variety of lamps for every purpose. See the DAZOR Floating lamps and fluorescent and incandescent desk lamps from $3.95 up For the new dance and party dresses, which may have decollete necklines, flowers are sometimes worn at the back, across a low neckline or unusual back treatment. Some flowers are worn around the wrist, on a glove, on a velvet evening bag, or around the upper part of the arm with sleeveless or short-sleeved dresses. Especially interesting are the chatelaine or twin corsages linked by dainty chains. Small flowers are sometimes attached to a narrow ribbon around the throat and may also be worn in various flattering ways to adorn the hair. The smallest flowers are worn as petaled earrings. Since sweaters, both cashmere and other dressy types, are in the news and are now worn for all occasions, corsages are being featured to give an "after five" or "party" look to them. Carter's Stationery Clusters of flowers are even being featured as shoe clips for opera pumps. The floral shoe clips are designed so that they may also be worn as scatter pins on a suit or coat and add a gay touch to gloves. A purse corsage is the answer to the woman who does not wish to transfer her corsage from her coat to her dress in cool weather. So many of the styles tend to be elegantly casual with necklines being the focal point. Both tight-fitting and exaggerated turtle necks, cowl, draped collars, shawl collars, horse collars, and other intriguing necklines may be adorned with crescent-shaped corsages or nosegays. 1025 Mass. According to a recent survey of college students, $37\frac{1}{2}$ per cent preferred to wear flowers in their hair, $30\frac{1}{2}$ per cent preferred to wear corsages on their shoulders, 12 per cent preferred the neckline, 10 per cent preferred the waistline, 8 per cent preferred the wrist, and 3 per cent liked to wear corsages but had no preference as to placement. Phone 1051 Most of the women liked unusual corsages. One of the best-liked corsages among the women surveyed was one of 15 red Garnette roses backed with ivy leaves and made in a three-pointed tailored style. Corsages Instead of Jewelry Decorate Necklines, Sleeves Corsage flowers are being featured like jewelry to adorn necklines, pushed up sleeves, and other details, according to the Florist Information council. Many women have discovered that corsages can be worn many times if they are placed in the refrigerator in the warmest part between wearings. It is wise to place any corsage SHOP BROWN'S FIRST A Fine and Varied Assortment of Men's Dress SLACKS In Flannel or Gabardine $5.98 up First Door South of Patee Theatre Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. in a corsage box or covered dish before refrigerating it. Waxy flowers, such as gardenias, stephanotis, and camellias, can be covered first with moist cotton. It is possible to keep orchids fresh longer by unwrapping florist's tape from their stems and placing the stem ends in fresh water. Dunk carnations, roses, and violets in cold water—flowers and all—then shake off the excess moisture before wrapping in tissue or placing in a box in the refrigerator. When women are living in a sorority house or dormitory and cannot keep their corsages in a refrigerator, they may place their corsages near a cool window (above the freezing point) when not wearing them. Corral bolts that have a way of straying everywhere from the closet floor to the wrong bureau drawer. Hang them on large cup hooks just inside your closet, or on the back of your clothes-closet door. them. The foliage of the corsages often expresses the season or holiday, such as colorful croton leaves in the fall, holly around Christmas time, and flocked leaves for both Christmas and New Year's. Red coleus leaves or red chenille fashioned like leaves are often used for Valentine's day. With the coming of warm weather, leaves with white markings, such as caladium, variegated ivy, and other variegated leaves, add a white touch. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Muss. On 45 Records Stan Kenton's CITY of GLASS 925 Mass. So You're Going to Missouri to the Game! Play it Smart-Make It a SAFE Trip BEFORE YOU GO — LET FRITZ CO. CHECK YOUR CAR — CHANGE YOUR OIL — AND FILL 'ER UP WITH PREMIUM GAS. PHONE 4 FRITZ CO. 8th and New Hampshire Downtown — Near Everything