PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, SEPT. 20, 1951 Official Bulletin Thursday, Sept. 20, 1951 Engineerettes, 8 p.m. Monday. East room, Memorial Union. All wives of engineering students. Delta Sigma Pi business meeting 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Strong annex F, room 3. Christian Science organization, 7 p.m. Thursday, Danforth chapel Worship and business meeting. KuKu club, 7:30 tonight, Pine room, Memorial Union. Attendance required. Chess Club, 7:15 p.m. Friday Pine room, Memorial Union. Organizational meeting. American Society of Tool Engineers, 7 p.m. tonight, New Fowler shops. Smoker for engineering students, including freshmen. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship meets 7:30-8:30 tonight, 206 Strong hall. Bertil Peterson, speaker. Open to all. Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship missionary meeting Friday noon to 12:50 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome. 4-No Bridge club, 7:30 p.m. today. Memorial Union. All welcome. Lutheran Student Association Hillbilly party, 8 p.m. Friday, 13th and New Hampshire streets. F. A.C.T.S. meeting, 7:30 p.m. today, 210 Fraser hall. Everyone welcome. Mathematics collouquium, 5 p.m. Monday, 203 Strong hall. Prof. N. Arnazsaj, "Approximation Methods in Eigenvalue Problems." Gamna Delta hyavei, 7:30 p.m. Friday. All new Lutheran students invited. Immanuel Lutheran church, 17th and Vermont streets. The University Radio Players audition is 8 to 9:30 tonight. Open to all students. Each is required to be prepared with three minutes of narration, characterization, or dialogue, or a combination. Kansas University Disciple fellowship "Come to the Fair" mixer, 8 p.m. Friday. First Christian church, 1000 Kentucky street. All Christian church preference students invited. Kansas University Disciple Evening Fellowship picnic, 5:30 p.m. Sunday. Meet at Myers hall. Lutheran Student association, 6 p.m. Sunday, Trinity Lutheran church, cost supper and program. Pastor Frederick from Valley Falls, soaker. Faculty club football TV with refreshments, Saturday afternoon, clubhouse. All faculty. Gamma Delta (Lutheran Students-Mo. Symod) supper meeting, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Immuanuel Lutheran, 17th and Vermont. Rev. William Lieske of Topeka, speaker. Everyone invited. KU. Tables Tennis association at 7:39 tonight. English room of the Memorial Union. All interested invited Evelyn SwarthoutNamed Professor Miss Evelyn Swarthout, daughter of D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano, has been named assistant professor in the department of music at the American university, in Washington D.C. Miss Swarthout, a concert pianist, in private life is Mrs. Patrick Hayes, of Washington D.C. She was graduated from K.U. in 1932 and studied with Guy Maier. She was on the music staff of the British Broadcasting company and studied in Europe on the Kate Neal Kinley Memorial fellowship from the University of Illinois. She has played numerous concerts in the United States and in Europe. She conducts a musical quiz program on radio station WGMS and has been a soloist with the National Symphony orchestra. Put 'Em Away Shoes collect dust on the floor. Put them in reversible shoe boxes, or a shoe bag, and they're conveniently at hand and much more free of dust. Zoology Professor Returns From Snake-Collecting Trip By MARION KLIEWER A University zoology professor wound up his $ 1 \frac{1}{2} $ -month collecting expedition in Costa Rica just in time to get back for classes this fall. Dr. Edward H. Taylor, professor of zoology, returned by plane Sunday from Costa Rica where he had been studying amphibians and reptiles at the request of the University of Costa Rica. Dr. Taylor's expedition was a continuation of a study he began four years ago in Costa Rica. "At that time the University of Costa Rica invited me to make a herpetology study and prepare monographs on the animals I'd studied." Dr. Taylor explained. The first series of monographs have been published. They are a volume on snakes in that area. "Snakes are a definite hazard to labor in Costa Rica." Dr. Taylor said. "At least 28 poisonous species are known." In his two expeditions Dr. Taylor has found 132 species of snakes, frogs, salamanders, turtles, crocodiles, and lizards. Monographs will be prepared and published here in this country and then sent to Costa Rica for translation and publication. In all Dr. Taylor has collected about 5,000 specimens for the Museum of Natural History. Asked if he didn't find the Costa Rican jungles extremely hot, Dr. Taylor replied: "Strangely enough, Costa Rica is one of the coolest countries. It wasn't very often that I didn't have to wear my coat and sleep at night with blankets. The elevation, moisture, and nearness to the sea account for the cool climate." During his stay Dr. Taylor experienced the strangest earthquake Costa Rica had in the past 300 years. A church in Orosi which had stood for 350 years was completely destroyed. "In my 15 years of traveling, I've experienced a great many earthquakes, but never have I felt one where the shock was so violent and rapid," Dr. Taylor commented. with the new $4.50_{up}$ Arafold collar SHIRTS • TIES • SPORTS SHIRTS • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS SHOP AT CARL'S FOR YOUR ARROW PLAID SHIRTS Arrow White Shirts Arrow Ties Arrow Shorts Arrow Shirts Arrow T-Shirts and Arrow Undershirts Arrow T-Shirts Arrow Cord Shirts Arrow Hankercenters Arrow Formal Shirts Arrow Colored Shirts OTHER ARROW SPORTS SHIRTS 905 Arrow Points Arrow 'Gabanaro' Mass. St. Phone 905 813 Mass. Phone 259 180