WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Watkins Hall Holds Open House And Dessert For Faculty Watkins hall had its annual fall open house dance Nov. 4 and a faculty dessert Nov. 8. Guests at the dance included: Gaylord Tffele, Harold Biggs, Terry Neal, Dean Melkus, Wayne Knowles, Barney Vachal, Stacy Balafas, Herbert Taylor, James Lovett, Blaine Hardesty, Donald Little, Harry Nelson, William Smell, Tom Foster, Don Dortor. Philip Hahn, Lyle Anderson, Prentis Kidd, Du Wayne Englert, Robert Perrill, Richard Cummings, Joe Winters, Eugene Bird, Jack Transue, Eldon Clark, John Mann, E. J. Sarcione, Vernon Diel, Duane L. Krug, Graham Frevert. David Moore, Ekharde Wicher, Gregory Fisk, Thomas H. Shannon, Rodger Vaughan, Jack Pickering, Kenneth Reed, George Williams, Donald Trent, Charles Costello, Richard King, Warren Finley, Glen Wilson, Ervin David. Jean Richter, Ronald Sammons, Rex Ehling, George Sheldon, Paul Bird, David Webber, William Enoch, Tommy Cartright, Douglas Cooley, Scott Ninger, George Taylor, Walter Lewin, Kenneth Moore, Thane Robinson. Robert Geiger, Norman Ellis, Charles Stubbiefield, Jerry Morris, Basil Marhofer, Wesley Peters, Norman Bell, Bill Patterson, Charles Hawkins, James Underwood, Younis Dabagh. Harold Rinier, Kenneth Hoffman, Calvin Engelman, John Perry, Donald Bush, Festus Liverett, and Charles Bovle. Guests at the faculty dessert were: Mr. and Mrs. Lester Laird, Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Burzle, Mr. David Boulton, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Kleinberg, Mr. and Mrs. John Handy, Miss Christine Oertel, Miss Loda Newcomb, Mrs. Ruth McNair. Monchonsia Hall Celebrates With Indian Summer Dance Miss Martha Faragher, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Horowitz, Mr. and Mrs. Monchonsia hall held its annual Indian Summer dance Nov. 10. Chaperons were Mrs. Jeter, Mrs Leone Wenzel, Mrs. Treva Brown and Mrs. John Kelley. Guests were: Arthur Schaaff, Robert Mitchell, Leon Lee, Thomas Schoech, Charles Stewart, Samuel Caldwell, Philip Pledged, Paul Hand, George Mayberry, Richard Sheldon, Curtis Tefinger, Joseph Fink, Eugene Rinker, Maurice Murphy, Alfred Russell, Douglas Lyle, George Berry, William Schwarz, Sidney Gottesmann, Clyde Burns, Phillip Taylor, Ralph Burgess, Leo Conner, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Spiegel, and Miss Barbara Lux. Engineerettes Study Bridge Engineerettes, wives of engineering students, had the second in a series of bridge lessons for members Monday. Terryl Francis, college senior, who taught a bridge class for Student Union activities the past spring, is instructor. Coffee Honors Burgoyne An informal coffee was given Tuesday for James Burgyeu, director of Student Union activities, by the student members of S. U. A. Mr. Burgyeu is the first faculty director of the group. A. J. Mix, Miss Mattie Crumrine, Miss Martha Trate, Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose Saricks, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rodgers-and Deborah Ann, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Wolfe. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Clark, Miss Nellie Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Carey, Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Mirsky, and Miss Margaret Anderson. Open House More than 190 persons attended. University officials present were Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Donald K. Alderson, Miss Margaret Habein, and Miss Martha Peterson. Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity held its first annual open house Sunday. The house at 1134 Mississippi street was recently purchased and decorated. Percy H. Lee, a provincial polemarch of the fraternity, and members of the Kansas City alumni were also present. Miss Marie Hicks, housemother; Earl Burton, polemarch; Charles Ross; William Ferguson; and Ambrose Jackson were in the receiving line. The Kappa Mothers' club also participated. Earl Burton and Charles Ross won first prize for the best decorated room. Phi Gamma Delta Has Fiji Island Party Phi Gamma Delta fraternity went cannibalistic Nov. 11 with its annual Fiji island party. The Phi Gams were host to about 80 guests including visitors from the University of Oklahoma Phi Gam chapter. Decorations and costumes of sarongs, grass skirts, and cannibal wigs added to the South Sea island effect. Harlan Livingood provided the music, and doughnuts and cider were served. Chaperons were Mrs. W. Shaw, Mrs. F. DeLozier, Mrs. J. R. Scott, Mrs. K. Whyte, and Mrs. C. A. Thomas. Templin Honors Housemother Templin hall gave a tea Sunday in honor of its housemother, Mrs. Lela Whiteford. Mrs. Wayne F. Shaw of Lawrence and Miss Jean Francisco, proctor of Carruth hall, poured. by L. RON HUBBARD $4.00 Rhode Island is the nation's most densely populated state, with an average of 728 persons per square mile. Second is New Jersey, with 643 to the square mile. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 DIANETICS HIXON STUDIO - 721 Mass. Thompson-Swinton Exchange Vows Mrs. James Thompson, Bluefield, W. Va., announces the recent marriage of her daughter, Grace Luclie, to Mr. Lee Vertis Swinton, son of Mrs. Vera Swinton of Coffeeville. The bride, a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, did her graduate work at the University. Lincoln College University, Jefferson City, Mo. Mr. Swinton is a second year law student and a member of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity. Woman Gives Up To Birds Memphis, Tennessee. (U.R.)—Mrs. W. L. Tackette tried the old southern custom of putting cotton on the screens to keep flies out but gave up in disgust. Not that it didn't work. It was just that sparrows kept filching the cotton for their nests. Getting A Second Wife Is Easiest In US Los Angeles—(U.P.)—Americans may be able to have only one spouse at one time but they marry more often than persons in countries where polygamy is legal, the American Institute of Family Relations has reported. The institute estimated that in countries where plural marriages are legal, about one in 20 husbands has two or more wives. In the United States, one in six persons re-marry after divorce. Differences in marital habits probably are caused by the fact that in polygamous nations only the rich can afford more than one wife, while in the U.S. multiple marriages occur in all walks of life, the report said. Regional consultant Dr. Paul H. Landis said his studies showed that divorced persons have a better chance of marriage than other Americans, possibly because many divorce their mate to marry someone else. Once-married couples, however, have a better chance for economic and emotional success than twice-married couples, he said. "The once-married couples are better off economically, both in terms of annual income and in increase of income with years married, than those who are in their second or subsequent marriages," he said. The study indicated a once-married woman also has more children than one who has been married two times or more.