Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 17, 1959 Brushing And Shampooing Will Save Hair From March Winds By LORENA BARLOW The March wind that's been blowing in gale proportions isn't doing your hair any good. The dust and dirt carried by the wind stick like glue to your hair and it takes a combination of faithfu brushing and frequent shampooing to take care of this problem. Don't be afraid of washing your hair too often. If it is done properly, with care and an amorous itch, it won't dull film of dirt and oil, it won't hurt your hair. By brushing your hair vigorously before you wash it you'll remove the loose hair and dust and distribute the natural oil. Rinse your hair thoroughly with clear water before you apply the shampoo. This removes even more loose hair and dries it according to directions on the container and remember to massage your hair and scalp as you shampoo. If your problem is dry hair try a hot oil treatment just before shampooing your hair. Soak your hair with warm oil and wrap a towel around your head. Leave it on for two or three hours while you study. If you can't spare that much time and your scalp soot it all on the roof and apply the cream oil at the room. of your hair. Wrap your head in a towel which has been wrung out in hot water and leave it on until the towel cools. Wring the towel out again in hot water and repeat the process for a half hour. Then wash your hair. It takes time, but pays off in beauty. Brushing is excellent for all types of hair. It equalizes the flow of natural oil from the scalp and carries it down the length of the hair to the brittle, dry ends. After you've brushed the front and sides, lean over and give the back of your hair a good brushing too. When you're reading that text book in the evening put your fingers to work massaging your scalp. Push it around and stir up the circulation. Five or ten minutes of massaging in addition to regular brushing, will wonders for your hair New Star Jumps Into Hollywood Hollywood- (U.R.) - Hollywood has its Liz Taylors, Barbara Paytons and Shelley Winters and now another "problem" star is stirring the cinema city. This star was sent around the country by 20th Century Fox studio. But he ran down the halls of the Waldorf-Astoria . . . he sat in the lap of a glamour girl . . . he up-staged everybody . . . he snubbed Gene Tierney and Gregory Peck. He made an hors d'oeuvre out of a carpet, and devoured the script for his television show. He also coured unchaperoned, with a pretty brunette, Loretta North. And Miss North announces she'll never play nursemaid to a 10-month-old kangaroo again. The four-footed (if five if you count his big tail) thespian is Joey, presented with fanfare by Australia to the Washington, D.C., zoo. Miss North thinks the fact Fox recently made "Kangaroo" in Australia has something to do with this, too. Anyway, for three weeks Miss North hauled Joey 40,000 miles to 2 cities to appear on 32 radio shows and 50 television programs. "He's a big ham. . . . he loved it," she said today. "He sat right up when the cameras were on him. But he's temperamental. After a while when I'd pick him up he'd kick." Joey dined at the Waldorf, hopped around cocktail parties and a special "hopover" party in Chicago, drank milk four times a day and belched frequently. He slept in a leather pouch that he thinks is his mother, and as an actor he should see his analyst about that. He can't be housebroken, either. Joey exercised by hopping down hotel corridors, to the consternation of inebriated lumbermen at a convention in Milwaukee. One man arrived at the kangaroo's Hollywood hotel room door with his wife in toow to prove he really had seen one. "The Sydney, Australia, papers made a big fuss about it," said Miss North. "You'd think the Americans had poisoned her or something." New Pledges Sigma Alpha Iota; Gloria Baker, Mary Cinzceli, Norma Davison, Jeannine DeGroot, Mary Lou Eklund, Pat Erickson, Phyllis Hormel, Carleen Mears, Janice Meisher, Nannette Pittman, Gretta Beetz, Eula Skillman, Mary Beth Staley, Paula Stonum, Delores Stitriesek, Judith Tate, Joyce Wellborn, Norma Birzer, Kay Newman, Carol Lee Swanson and Rosanne Drake. Sigma Nu: Ben Graybill, Don Johnston, Con Spainhour, and Bill Moon. Lambda Chi Alpha: Delbert Howerton. Triangle: Clark C. Anderson, James W. Birkherd, Robert Q. Lewis and Donald D. Berlin. WAC Offers College Women Commissions College women now have the opportunity, during a limited period, to apply for officers commissions in the United States Army, Fifth Army Headquarters recently announced. A distinguished, always interesting career awaits the woman with a college degree who selects this field of endeavor. said Armv officials. Between now and April 1, eligible graduates are invited by the Army to make application. Application forms may be obtained upon request from the Commanding General, Fifth Army, 1660 Fast Hyde Park boulevard, Chicago 15. Ill. It is not necessary for the prospective woman Army officer to have any particular type of degree. The Army is seeking those individuals who are versatile and have varied interests. As officers they will be interested in educating multitude of interesting assignments in the course of their careers. No prior military training is needed. Applicants are required to be at least 21 but not more than 27 years of age, U.S. citizens, unmarried, with no dependents under 18, of good moral character and no subversive organization affiliation and physically fit. Accepted applicants will be commissioned second lieutenants in the WAC section of the Organized Reserve Corps and assigned to Fort Tri-Delta Elects Endacott President Lee, Va., for a basic training course. Upon successful completion of this course they will be eligible to apply for a second lieutenant's commission in the Women's Army Corps of the Regular army. While in training at Fort Lee they receive the regular pay and allowances of a second lieutenant, amounting to approximately $315, plus medical and dental services. Grace Endacott, fine arts junior, was recently installed as president of Delta Delta Delta. Travel Service THE Other officers are Mary Middle- kauff, vice-president; Lynne Mc- Millan, corresponding secretary; Pat Gardenhire, recording secretary; Shirley Wilkie, treasurer; Betty Lou Collins, marshal; Marguerite Terry, chaplain; Kay Roberts, scholarship chairman; Barbara Tucker, social chairman; Mary Jane Brown, librarian. FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th Floor Margaret Barr, historian; Anne Bonecutter, house president; Sue Quinn, activities chairman; Patty Vance, publicity; Mary Gayle Love-less, song leader; Patty Garrett, intramurals; Jeanne Anderson, alumnae recorder; Pat Grady, sponsors chairman; Mary Sue Crum, fraternity education chairman, and Georgiann Earlywine, panhellenic representative. The alumnae advisor is Mrs. Frank McDonald. Mathematical Colloquium, 5 today 203 Strong hall, T. Vijayaraghaven speaker. Official Bulletin Today Tuesday Sachem, 7 p.m. Wednesday, 228 Strong, final election of members. Home Ec. Club meeting, 4 p.m. Tuesday, Clothing Lab, Fraser. Plymouth All Student Council, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Pine Room. Lenten Services, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Lawrence City church, 8th and Vermont, sponsored by Immanuel Lutheran church, Your Man Tel. 30 8th & Mass. William G. Clugston, writer from Topeka, speaker and open discussion, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, 207 New Journalism building, sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi and Socialist Study club. Public invited. Wednesdav Mathematical Colloquium, 5 p.m. Wednesday, 203 Strong hall, "Fractional Parts of Powers of Numbers" I." KU Young Democrat, 7:30 Wednesday, 106 Green, Carl Rice, National committeeman from Kansas, sponsor of incoming Democratic convention. . . . has a used car priced for you. Chess Club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, 111 Strong. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph.1000 1 William Landess, business junior, and George Michael, college sophomore, attended the provincial conference of Delta Upsilon fraternity March 7 and 8 at the University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Landess and Michael joined delegates from 13 other schools in province V of the fraternity and participated in discussions on fraternity management. Eight Presidents — Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, W. H. Harrison, Tyler, Taylor and Wilson were Virginians by birth. 5 British Universities Will Offer Summer Program For Students Five of Britain's leading universities are offering places to advanced American students in this year's summer school program. The courses are offered in subjects for which the universities concerned are recognized authorities. The specific courses and the universities at which they are being offered are Shakespeare and Elizabethan Drama at the University of Birmingham; Problems of Britain's Economic Recovery at the University of London; Education in England at the University of Nottingham, Britain and the Modern World at the University of Oxford, and Life, Literature and Politics in Contemporary Britain at the University of St. Andrews. New Initiates Gamma Phi Beta; Claire Ensign, Joyce Ristine, JoAnne Anderson, Verna Knorp, Mariane Asbell and Carolyn West. Alpha Delta Sigma: Dave Arthurs, Elbert Spivey, Max Urban, Ted Barbera, John Pattison, Bill Taggart, Arthur Wahlstedt, Tom Breckenridge, John Pearce and John Crawford. Alpha Omicron Pi; Patricia Blanks, Norma Bradly, Danna Denning, Barbara Kesner, and Barbara Trotter. Phi Delta Theta; Charles Appling, Richard Jones, Hugh Buchanan, Tom Rythner, Dick Smith, Louis Phillips, Roger Heiskell, Darrel Fanestil, Terry Carle, Gad Smith, Ed Miller, Dwayne Houtz, Bill Pulliam, Jack Dicus, Jack Frost, Bob Galliant, L. A. Hollinger, Harlan Parkinson, Bob Forsyth, Jerry Lewis, Pete Rush, Larry Greiner, Tom Lyons, Dale Scheideman, Dave Platter and Hall Kendig. Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Wayne E. Bates, Girard Michel Bourez, Charles K. Bogue, Delmar M. Berry, Darrrell Bush, Randall K. Graber, Edward H. Haynes, John Imbrie, Bernard Lewis, Robert McCrae, Noye Johnson, Charles C. Schnetzler, George R. Stocker, Jerry O. Armstrong, Mahlon Ball, Marvin L. Converse, Alan L. Coxen, Jerry Hodgden, John Mann, Keith Macivor, William C. Pearl, and John S. Porter. Sigma Nu: Bob Asmann, Lester Bixler, Donald Bouska, Hugh Cox, Ron Evans, Phil Hahn, Harold Kennedy, Gary Irish, Jerry Ivie, Bob Kennedy, Joe Kosar, Dan Lindsay, Dick Loley, Larry O'Brien, Kenny Reid, Ludwig Smith, Jim Swords, Paul Walter and Dan Young. The courses will begin in the first or second week of July and run for six weeks The courses are intended chiefly for teachers, post-graduate students, and other qualified men and women, but are also open to undergraduate students in their senior year. By arrangement with the student's own university, the courses can be credit-earning. The cost, including tuition, meals, and residence, ranges from $168 to $201.60. A limited number of tourist passages from $160 to $170 each way are available. White-Star line for American students attending the courses. An anonymous British donor has provided a number of free trans-Atlantic passages for students attending the summer sessions. In addition, the participating universities are offering a limited number of grants to cover part of the accommodation and tuition fees. The awards will be open to veterans and non-veterans alike, but only well-qualified students who need such aid and could not attend summer school in Britain without it should apply. Applications for admittance should be made to The Institute of International Education. 2 West 45th street, New York 19, N.Y. American Samoa consists of the islands of Tutuilla Aunun'n, Ofu, Olosega, and Ta'w, the Manus Islands, and the uninhabited coral atoll of Rose island. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lindley's Kansas Cleaners WHERE QUALITY IS FIRST Ladies' Plain Dresses Men's Suits 5 89c You Can Have the Best at a Low Cost Economical — Cash and Carry — 12 E.8th Shakespeare scribed— There 's not a minute of our lives should stretch without some pleasure Anthony and Cleopatra A minute's enough to stop at the familiar red cooler for a Coke. Pleasure? Certainly ... and refreshing, too. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY t