0, 194 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS IONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1949 PAGE SEVEN o bu wit vuisin dail mouse e car hoo urtue impso ears on only two wrence before re next cted by fashing the court were ree- dispose natura- l bloo kow owners aral gag Pro. concerne- er gag. low th a Official Bulletin Oct.10,1949 nouncements for official bulletin are submitted at Public Relations office, 222A Strong hall. Deadline on date of publication, 9:30 a.m. No announcements taken by phone. Announcements run for three consecutive days. Mathematical colloquium, 5 today. 03 Strong hall. Dr. I. N. Herstein, Characterization of Some Algereras." I. S.A. Council representatives, 7:30 to night, Pine room, Union. I.S.A. executive meeting, 7:30 to night, Pine room, Union. Actor's lab. 1-act play tryouts, little Theater, Green hall, 5 p.m. today for "Soap Operas"; 7 tonight and 4 p.m. Tuesday for "Portrait of A Madonna." Tryouts not limited to University players; everyone welcome. Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. Tuesday, Textile lab, Fraser hall. Miss Alberta arlson, speaker. Froshhawk meeting, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, 206强 hall. Physical Therapy club, 7:15 p. m. Tuesday, Fraser hall. Projection room. Public meeting. Forensic league, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, Little Theater Green hall. Bacteriology club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 502 Snow hall. Dr. Jarvis, "Opportunities in the Field of Bacteriology." Square Dance club, first meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Recreation room, Union. Anyone interested in square dancing or learning to square dance is invited. Anyone interested in writing for national I. S. A magazine call Ruth Keller, 355. Short stories, feature articles, cartoons, poetry, news stories. Deadline October 15. Occupational Therapy club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Art Education room, Strong hall. All occupational therapy students invited. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Sigma Gamma Epsilon, annual fall smoker, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Pine room, Union. Phone K.U.376 terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be processed during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Office, Journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the law before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates Bricklayers meeting, 7:15 Tuesday, Carruth hall. In early Greek boxing and wrestling even the breaking of bones was egal, with only biting prohibited. One day Three days Five 5 words or less ...35c 65c 90c additional words ...1c 2c 3c FOR SALE WEET CIDER and applies for sale. Vinegar brand. 14 Penn. Phone 335- 1948 MERCURY: 4-dr sedam, perfect condition, low mileage, has had excellent care. Radio and heater, 1212 Ohio St. Ph 164M. FITTY personal Christmas cards with your own name imprinted, for only $1.00. Just 2c each. Choice of ten styles. Call Dale Fields. 1235 Oread. Ph. 2988. 12 325 LA SALLE sport coupe. New tires. collision condition. Phone 15717 Mcallen. Call 800-642-4111. 935 OLDS 2-door door, good tires, in Miami. 75% of $200 worth of Mass 86M after 3:30 p.m. MUST SELL: " 49 Stude Rigal-Rega Wearjacket. Caps 49 Wearjacket. Caps Wearjacket. Caps 49 Wearjacket. Caps Wearjacket. Caps 49 Wearjacket. Caps Wearjacket. Caps 49 Wearjacket. Caps Wearjacket. Caps 49 Wearjacket. Caps Wearjacket. Caps 49 Wearjacket. Caps Wearjacket. Caps 49 Wearjacket. Caps 942 FORD 5-passenger coupe, priced to eat; a real bargain, in very good condi- tion; looks good inside and out. Good phone. Phone: 718-2280 or 552. a2iHAP transportation buy a jeep Good running condition. Priced to sell May be seen at 1745 Ohio Ph. 1676J. 10 GERMAN Praktiflex 35mm, camera with built in range finder, f.2.8 lens, shutter speed to 500th of sec. Also G.E. Light source to 250W between 5 and 10 m.daily. NEW 1950 Motorola Television sets on display at B. F. Goodrich, 929 Mass. St. As shown as $19.95 plus tax. $10.00 down delivery--small monthly payments. 19 USTRATED? Don't blow your brains ut. Buy a camera and shoot your head T. Hank Brown's Camera Shop, 846 Mass. 13 BUSINESS SERVICE YPING: Quick service, low rates. Cal Mari; Dierlater, 2748, 1424 Ky. YPING: Call Hazel Stanley 286M for prompt experience. $200 Mass. FOR NEAT, accurate typing of themes, mpr papers, and thesis call an experi- enced typist. One block from campus. Call 2278M. 11 NOW OPEN for business, the new Topps Cleaners and Self Service Laundry. Let us help you make a real saving on cleaning bills. 1455-1047 Mass. Phone 243. 10 SAEFFER FINELINE Ball point pens able, no refilling, a constant source of ink at your finger tips. Try one now! Student Union Book Store. 8 MRS JOHNSON: coats, suits, and dresses for you. Beautiful restyling, careful alterations. Tel. 1186. Address, 438 Cloe St. 10 YPING- Thesis, term papers, reports, Mrs. Sheechan, Mrs. Sheechan, Vernmont, Ptch. 1168R. G DONE: Prompt attention, attentive work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. tf RADIO SERVICE: Newest G.E. test equipment enables us to give faster, more accurate service on all A.M. or F.M. radios and television receiver at lowest price and delivery Newest 138. Bowman Radio and Electric Newest 128. Vermont 11-2 FURNITURE upholstered and repaired. Upholstered and Upholstered. 1803 Mass. Phone 1502. 11-2- THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body shop maintenance, body repair services 1017 E. I. 149, Phone 789 or 14821, JTAHWAKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one owner is the same as their owners and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop 1213 Conn. St. Ph. 418. LOST SISLER, et al "General Chemistry on D. S. Robb, 1135 Maule, or call 3083. 15 IN 310 FRASER; Brown striped Shaffer fountain pen. Initiated E. A. M. Mc. Reward. Call Esther McKinney. Phone 900. 11 PAIR OF GLASSES with clear plastic rims, week before last. No case. Finder please contact Gladys Miller, Burr Oak Kansas. PAIR OF rimless glasses. Gold frame. I or between Frank Strong and Union i Marvin Grove. Write to J. B. Laughlin 296 Oakloake, Kans. 11 BLUE CIGARETTE case and lighter with Cigarette Case call Bee Bell, Larissa, 1544, $5.00 Reward. MAN'S GREY windbreaker zipper jacket September, Sept. 18. Finder call Johnson at johnson@nissan.com NIGHT RIDE wanted to Sunflower. Any- after 10:30 p.m., Box 3, Kansan店 TRANSPORTATION COUPLE want ride to Kansas City late afternoon afternoon. 11 Phone 360-1621 or Laptop for Lakshmi. A GARAGE for one car during the month of December, January and February. A close to Corbin hall as possible. Marie Labsob. Phone 8601 HALLOWEEN party? See Kirkpatrick for masks, hats, horns, jack-o-lanterns, and party favors. Kirkpatrick Sport Shop. 715 Mass. Ph. 1018. 28 WOULD YOU like to reduce your living expenses? Move into and share our six room apt. Private residence, bath, phone, bathroom. Call Jones. 325223. bjtween 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. SHARE ROOM with graduate student, modern residence, good location. Daily room service. $3.50 per week (each). 306 W. 12th. 13 MISCELLANEOUS FOUR COLORS in one pencil! The penel for every use is the Norma four color penel. Come in and see if you don't know how to bind your pens or a kind. Student, Union Book Store, 8. FOR RENT EXPERT SLIP cover, drapery, and dec- lutter. 130 lb. 24"x36" Phone 41916RF, Murray, 1154 East 15th. Phone 41916RF MOVE CLOSER to school. Why support Reginaid and the Rapid (?) Transit? Vacancy for one boy at 329 Ohio. Two tracks from Green hall, 1339 Ohio, phi. TWO APARTMENTS, close to college for 3 boys, $13 each, 1 apt. close to college 2 boys, $16 each; 1 double room, 1 room shared. Ph. 2082. 12 STUDENTS: Nice clean beds, close to bath. Large study room with desk and flourens. Home bookshelves $15 per Home bookshelves if reserved. 10 per meal. 1213 Ohio Ph. 3609. _little Man On Campus By Bibler "I hate to break a date, Worthal, but I can't go out tonight— I've got to go to a drailled oe study hall." Greeks Work Overtime To Impress Rushees Bv TOM McGRAW "This is the oldest and darkest closet west of the Mississippi." If you have ever been a rushee of any of the University's 35 Greek social societies, you may have heard the rush chairman say something similar to this. One of the major ways rushees have of distinguishing between the various groups is the houses One of the many groups is the houses, and the Greeks are quick to point out each feature of their house which sets it off from the others. For instance, the members of Beta Theta Pi are proud that their home was built in the 1870's by Judge John Usher who at that time was the only living member of President Lincoln's cabinet. The girls at the Alpha Delta Pi house say that their home was built up around a historic winding stairway which was the only part of a former house to survive a fire and a wrecking crew. The Alpha Chi Omega's claim that they bought their property from the same Governor Stubbs in 1920. * Sigma Nu men are not hesitant in mentioning the fact that their house was once owned by a former governor of Kansas, Roscoe Stubbs, and that one night in 1910 Pres. Theodore Roosevelt slept there. The crest of the hill upon which sit the Sigma Kappa, Phi Delta Theta, and Phi Gamma Delta houses was the location of the once-famous old Jim Lane fort and its surrounding network of trenches. Members of Sigma Chi say that in 1903 their chapter had the first fraternity housemother in the U. S. Her name was Mrs. Virginia C. Petty. Delta Delta Delta is proud that the first governor of Kansas, Charles Robinson, once lived on the property where the sorority house now stands. Sigma Phi Epsilon maintains that its chapter house is the newest and most modern fraternity house in the country. Men of Sigma Pi say they have the newest annex on the hill Men of Lamda Chi Alpha point with pride at the eight fireplaces and the two-feet-thick walls of their house. Members of Kappa Sigma claim that their house is one of the largest fraternity houses in the state of Kansas. The Gamma Phi Betas say that an alumnus of theirs, Mrs. Martin Dickinson, was the first woman west of the Mississippi river to receive the Order of the Coif. The men of Triangle say that when their house was opened by the Kappa Alpha Thetas and when Mrs. L. C. Woodruff lived there, caller Dean Woodruff was frequent Delta Gamma women say that theirs is the most used back door and the least used front door of any sorority's on the campus. A former owner of the Tau Kappa Epsilon house used to manufacture a certain liquid substance from corn, and then store it in the numerous, now-walled-in caverns in his basement. Alpha Omicron Pi members hold that their male serenaders are protected from the icy winds because their house is U-shaped. More than 1,000 different species of trees and shrubs landscape the Phi Kappa house, and its members say that they are the only fraternity at the University to have a fish pond and a sunken garden. The members of both Alpha Kappa Lamda and Phi Kappa Sigma are proud of the amount and quality of work done in the traditionally old Lawrence houses. Alpha Tau Omega tells its prospective members that it is the only fraternity whose house uses the study and sleeping suite of rooms. The Delta Tau Deltas say that their house was built with the idea in mind of it facing Missouri street, but that Missouri street "stopped" when it got to 11th street. Consequently the Delts use their back door. Men of Acacia say that their house still has its old water source, a 40-foot deep well in the basement. a no-see-down well in the basement. Yes, there even seems to be a "pent house" on the campus. At least that is what the Theta Phi Alphas claim about a certain room on top of their house. Another old Lawrence house is owned by the Pi Kappa Alphas. They say that it dates back to the post Civil war days and that it was headquarters for runaway slaves. According to the Delta Upsilons, their chapter room was carved NROTC To Give Tests Dec.3 The annual competitive tests to select approximately 2,000 applicants for the N.R.O.T.C. college program will be held Saturday, Dec. 3, Capt. W. R. Terrell, professor of naval science, announced Wednesday Applications must be filed before Saturday, Nov. 12. All male high school seniors and graduates between the ages of 17 and 21 are eligible. Applicants must meet physical and mental standards and successfully pass an aptitude test. The N.R.O.T.C. program will offer a four-year, government-sponsored, college education at one of the 52 colleges and universities throughout the country which have Naval Reserve Officer Training units. Applicants receiving satisfactory marks on the aptitude test will be interviewed and given physical examinations. State selection committees will review the cases to select outstanding candidates. Students from each state and territory compete among themselves for the quota of naval scholarships assigned to that area. Successful candidates are permitted to indicate the colleges they wish to attend and will be recommended to the college of their choice subject to quota limitations. Final enrollment in all cases will be subject to acceptance by the colleges to which they are recommended. Under the N.R.O.T.C. program, the navy department bears the expense of tuition, books, and the normal fees required by the school. In addition, the student is provided with $50 a month living allowance. The student may take any course leading to a bachelor of science or higher degree, but must include in his curriculum certain prescribed naval subjects. Approximately six* fraternities and two sororites got their start at the University in the Phi Kappa Tau house, say its members. In return for the scholarship, the student is obliged to participate in naval drills and cruises, and, if qualified upon graduation, must accept a commission in the regular navy or marine corps. After two years of active duty, he may elect to transfer to the appropriate reserve corps and return to civilian life; or he may request retention in the regular service and, if selected, make the navy or marine corps his career. Students enrolled in this program will be deferred from induction under the selective service act pending completion of their academic course. There are 132 students who are members of the N.R.O.T.C. unit at the University who are receiving this scholarship. These students are pursuing various college courses leading to engineering, arts, science and other degrees. Students selected for the program take only one naval science course per semester. out of solid limestone, so they say there is little danger of their house sliding downhill. The Kappa Alpha Theta sun porch is the largest at the University, its members say, and the members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon say that their tennis court is the only hard surfaced fraternity court at K. U. Some say it is the size that counts, others say it is the location, but the Delta Chi's think that their colonial-style house is a rushing point in itself. One of the Chi Omegas' best points is their proximity to the campus. The Kappa Kappa Gammas would like for anyone to show them a better skiing slope on the campus than the one that starts on their property and winds down their property to Tennessee street. The oldest sorority house on the campus which was built as a sorority home is now occupied by the Pi Beta Phi's. In addition, they claim to be the first sorority at the University, being founded in 1873. The oldest fraternity house that was built for that purpose is owned by Phi Kappa Psi men.