WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1949 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS HWNEDUQOND PAGE THREE Socially Speaking Phi Kappa Exchange Dinner Phi Kappa held an exchange dinner Tuesday with Delta Delta Delta T Kappa Alpha Initiates Pi Kappa Alpha announces the initiation of the following men in ceremonies held Sunday: James Bradley, Greensburg; James Stinson, Jack Weller, Frank McSpadden and Alvin R. Bouchard, Kansas City, Mo; George Youngstrom, Binghamton, N.Y.; Bill Price, and Robert Sydney, Anthony; Roger Tuttle, Kansas City, Kan.; Charles Stark, Wichita; Ted Barbera, Lyons; and Jimmie Grey, and Norman Scott, Caberal. ☆ ☆ ☆ olliffe Hall Open House Jollife Hall Open House The girls of Jollife hall entertained with an open house Feb. 18. chaperones were: Mrs. Eliza- Kite, Jollife hall housemother, Miss Wealthy Babcock, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jochim. - * Pi Kappa Alpha Dinner The new initiates and the pledge class of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity entertained at a dinner party Feb. 23. Lambda Chi Alpha Exchange Dinner Lambda Chi Alpha will have an exchange dinner with Gamma Phi Jeta Thursday. Corbin Hour Dance - * * Corbin Hour Dance The members of Corbin hall will entertain with an informal hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. tonight. Sigma Kappa Guest Mario Rivera, Pre-med student from Costa Rica. was a dinner guest to Sigma Kappa Feb. 27 at the chapter house. Following the dinner Mr. rivera spoke on college life and social customs in his country. * * Kappa Sigma Honor Housemother The members of Kappa Sigma principally paid honor to their house- mower, Mrs. Onita S. Miller, on eb. 24 by giving her a pearl Kappa sigma mother's pin. The presentation was made by Richard Harris, President of the local chapter. A missing line was formed as a climax to the ceremony. anna Sigma Pledges Kappa Sigma Fides Kappa Sigma fraternity announces the pledging of Robert Talbert of Kansas City, Mo. omega Psi Phi Initiates Michele F. J. Baskett, College junior and Roy E. Crouch, College sophohore, were initiated at a dinner given by Omega Fsi Phi, national social fraternity, Feb. 26 in the English room of the Union. Lindsey, Thayer, In Red Cross Drive Robert Thayer, engineering junior, and Nancy Lindsey, College freshman, have been appointed student representatives for the Red Cross drive, Henry Shenk, chairman of the drive for the University, said today. The quota for the University has been set at $1,350. The entire quota for Douglas county is $11,534. Thayer and Miss Lindsey will visit organized houses during March and explain Red Cross services. Faculty members and University employees will be contacted by mail. Weddings And Engagements Higgins-Casterline Pinning Mr. and Mrs. Robert Higgins of Cardiff-by-the-Sea, Calif., announce the pinning of their daughter Wilda to Paul Casterline, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Casterline of Dodge City. Miss Higgins is a sophomore attending Pamona college at Claremont, Calif. Mr. Casterline is a sophomore in the College and is a member of Kappa Sigma social fraternity. Music Staff Gains Honor Three members of the music faculty have been honored by receiving chairmanships in the Music Teachers National association. D. M. Swarthout, dean, School of Fine Arts, has been made a permanent member of the M.T.N.A. executive committee in recognition of his service as national secretary and president of the organization. James Nickerson, assistant professor of music education, has been appointed head of the committee on audio-visual instruction in music. Professor Nickerson was a speaker at the annual convention of the Music Teachers National association and National Association of Schools of Music in December. E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education, has been appointed head of the psychology of music committee. A summer meeting of the Music Teachers National association will be held from Aug. 17 to Aug. 20, in San Francisco, Calif. The state of Maryland produces more tomatoes than any other state in the Union, its production being approximately 35 per cent of the nation's tomato crop. OU Sponsors Male Fashion Show And the women voted solid for sequenced ties and berets and polka-dotted suspenders and garters. A one-piece suit to take the place of traditional slacks and shirts aroused negative emotions among males in the audience. The university's first male fashion show, sponsored by a campus art group, was a success, from the top of a sequined beret to the bottom of a male rose-satin robe. Norman, Okla.—(U.P.)—Women-tested fashions for men are the last stitch at the University of Oklahoma. Corbin Hour Dance Corbin hall will hold an open house hour dance at 7 tonight. Another ah-some item was a combination of black vest and coat with checked trousers for semi-formal evening wear. The biggest hit of the show was a tarong for men. The tarong is a scarf-like tie which merely slips under the collar and is fastened to small hooks on either side. Expert Radio Service Beaman's Radio 1200 N.Y. Phone 140 A special collection on the theme of "color to bring out the best and peast in men" displayed a Picasso pink sweater with a plunging neckline and a cloth-of-gold sports shirt with three-quarter sleeves. HURRY LAST - DAY The rose robe -colored after the American beauty—was lined with gray satin and matched with pajamas of the same material. in Technicolor Phone 10 VARSITY THUR-FRI-SAT Dennis Morgan Dorothy Malone TODAY and THURSDAY They're all having a gay old time in the "Flaming Youth" Days 12-39c "BUGGS BUNNY" Cartoon & NEWS ONE SUNDAY AFTERNOON - Janis Paige - Don De Fore Life Story of Tchaikowsky WHIPLASH DANE CLARK ALEXIS SMITH THRILL TO THE MUSIC HE WROTE...to the LOVE HE KNEWI Frank SUNDSTROM Audrey LONG SIR CEDRIC HARDWICKE MIKHAI RASUMY No Advance in Prices New Observation Room Permits Child Scrutiny At KU Nursery An observation room with one-way vision has been added to the University nursery school, 1100 Missouri street. The room is now available for use of parents with children enrolled in the school as well as any University student who wishes to observe the children at work and play. Ranging in age from 21/2 to 5 years, the 30 youngsters attending the nursery school are children of Uni- versity students, faculty members, and other Lawrence residents. Mrs. Luella Foster, instructor in child development, directs the school which is a part of the home econ- oms department. "The observation room enables outsiders to see and hear all that happens without overcrowding the playrooms." Mrs. Foster said. "The children behave more naturally when strangers are not present," she added. The activities of the children include outdoor and indoor play, story telling periods, art work, music, dramatics, and rest periods. Younger children attend in the mornings and older children in the afternoons. The school's capacity will at present allow six more enrollees. Miss Ruth McNeilly, a newcomer to the faculty the past semester, is head teacher of the nursery school. In August she obtained her master's degree in child development at the University of Iowa. Two assistants are employed to help Miss McNeilly conduct activities at the school. Invents Quick Flat-Fixer Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers. Weirton, West Va.—(UP)—Bre-changing is not the strenuous task once presented by detachable wheel rims, but a local inventor, Walter E. Schultz, wants to trim still more of the hard work connected with the job. He has invented a hub-emerging wheel shot mounted on a string tube to support the weight of a wheel and tire and simultaneously adjust it on the hub bolts. Are You One Who Forgot? Be One Who Remembered! --with University of Kansas Concert Course Extra Attraction COMING Thomas Wilfred in Lecture Recital with THE CLAVILUX or Color Organ A New Frontier in Art Dramatic and Challenging Recital in Ever-changing, Moving Color. An evening of such unusual beauty that it must be seen to be appreciated. HOCH AUDITORIUM Monday Evening, March 14, 8:20 o'clock Popular Prices—Seats now on sale at $1.00 plus usual tax at KU School of Fine Arts Office, Bell Music Company, Round Corner Drug Company. D.M. Swarthout, Mgr.