L 13, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1948 PAGE THREE Art ed . 'Grandma otion to- ter-Thayer' n 1966 at man show York art known as attative of primitive Head e Class FREE ONS TED HEEF free nylons the Seal TWINS cli- Sean You Bury? No. 2388649 rtisers. E! 95 Social Circle Shoots The Moon With More Parties And Buffets Theta Tau Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, recently elected Dudley Hanstine, regent; William Bergman, vice-regent; and Robert Greenwell, secretary. DU Dinner Guests Dinner guests at Delta Upson April 8 were Cathy Brode, Mignon Morton, Isabel Faurot, Martin Marshall, and Bette Joe Jones. DU Informal Party Guests at a Delta Upsilon informal party, held in the chapter house April 10, were Doreen Wallace, Mary Bovard, Connie Markley, Joan Shindling, Joan Sanders, Sue Ashby, Marilyn Barnum, Glendale Jones, Mary Ann Suderman, Sara Webb, Betty Fordemwalt, Mignon Morton. Jane Tippin, Barbara Montalo, Marilyn Swenson, Sally Shepard, Jeanne Aldridge, Peggy Sue Cloyd, Bernardine Reed, Lou Henry, Jackie Simpson, Betty Jo Jones, Jeanie Kahn, Joan Happy, Rayma Hotchkiss, Jane Stroup, Claudia Anderson, Marie Schumacher, Kathleen Graff. Barbara Creel, Rosette Snow, Georgette Spears, Louise DeLay, Diana Howell, Delores Warren, Nancy Davis, Marilyn Lundy, Nancy Watson, Flora Lee Pringle, Sara Strickland, Susan Manoville, Susan Woodward, Delores Collins, Pat River, Veverly Pocock, Marjorie Goldsworthy, Charlotte Rheams, and Marilyn Brown. Exchange Dinner Triangle Elects Triangle fraternity had an exchange dinner with the Delta Delta Delta sorority April 8. The active members of the Triangle fraternity recently elected new officers for the coming year. Gamma Delta Those elected were Charles Thomas, president; Alan Furnish, vice-president; Kenneth Philo, recording secretary; Charles D. Cain, corresponding secretary; Richard Hartzler, chapter editor; John Hoffman, librarian; and James Deveney, sergeant-at-arms. Gamma Delta, Lutheran fraternity, announces the initiation of George Hursig and Arthur Upton, Kansas City; Graham Frevert, Holyrood; Donald Keller, Herington; Myra Petrowsky, Preston; Donald Quade, Hunter; Raymond Schimmel, Lawrence; and Virginia Zabel, Atchison. - * * Delta Sigma Entertains Delta Sigma Phi entertained the pledge class and new initiates of Alpha Omicron Pi at a picnic April 8. Pi KA Initiates P1 Kappa Alpha held a formal initiation ceremony for eight men Sunday morning at the chapter house. Those initiated were Leland Dagleigh, Charles S. Busby, Luis Silks, and Robert Brownlee, Kansas City, Mo.; Charles Shanahan and James Shanahan, Overland Park; Ruel Raines, Mission; and William Burcham, Lawrence. E. H. Taylor, professor of zoology was a guest at the initiation dinner Jolliffe will hold an open hour dance from 7 to 8 p. m. tomorrow. Sigma Nu fraternity held its 51st annual Parent's Day Open House Sunday at the chapter house. The Jolliffe Hour Dance Sigma Nu Parent's Day 2 8 0 0 ror Fast Friendly Service Call UNION CAB CO. event was also the 25th anniversary of the purchase of Governor Stubbs' estate by Sigma Nu in 1923. Activities of the day included tours of the five-floor house and 33-acre estate, and a buffet dinner. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. J. E Hirleman, Wichita; Mr. and Mrs. F. E Clingan, Salina; Mr. and Mrs C. R. Coffee, Brewster; Mr. and Mrs H. C. DeLongy, Parsons; Mr. and Mrs R. W. Berry, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. Rober Romig, Hutchinson; Mr. and Mrs. Phil Hawkins, Olathe; Mr. and Mrs. John Duffy, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Rickets, Topea; Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Rickets, Topea; Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Buffer, St. Louis, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Raidt, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs R. K. Grubb, Independence; Mr. and Mrs John Minor, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs D. G. Hodges, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs E. L. Holtgrewe, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs O. A. Ramseyer, Kansas City. Mr. and Mrs. Will Edman, Great Bend; Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Foster, Bartlesville, Okla.; Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Beeman, Russell; Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Combs, Independence, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Binnicker, Kansas City; Mrs. and Mrs. C. T. Collins, Bellevue; Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Beels, Overland Park; Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Gillespie, Wichita; Dr. O. C. McCanless, Marian. Mrs. Frank Malone, Wichita; Mr. and Mrs. Gus Benz, Salina; W. H. Bentley, Great Bend; Mrs. R. E. Learned, Lawrence; C. G. Balloun, Russell; D. D. Haynes, Russell; Mrs. J. E. Wolfe, Wichita; Mrs. H. L. Talley, Kansas City; Miss Norma Kennedy, Kansas City; Miss Joan Larson, Salina; Robert Dougherty, Kansas City; Peggy Wolfe; Margaret Harness; Mary Belle Pollock; Gloria Hill; Arnold Englund, and Marie Touhey. Phi Gam Buffet The annual Phi Gamma Delta "Sister and Daughter Buffet" was held Sunday afternoon at the chapter house. Those attending were Carolyn Carmane, Sara Diane Stryker, Corinne Temple, Harriet Waddell, Elizabeth Shears, Marilyn Smith, Barbara Nash, Helen Joan Puckett, Mary Ann Suderman, Jane Wilcox, Barbara Burkholder, Joanne Amick, Nancy Kastman, Edith Carey, Beth Russell, Carolyn Nigg, Mary Margaret Hughes, Patricia Cook, Dorothea Louise Thomas, Carolyn Campbell, Celeste Beesley, Ann Stanton, Marilyn Sweet, Nancy Wilkinson, Joan Gardner, Nancy Love and Margaret Foster. Charleston, S. C.—(UP) — Mrs. Thomas J. Tobias held out her hand for a left turn and got a fist full of orchids. Mrs. Tobias' accurate hand signals were spotted by Charleston Junior of Commerce representatives in a traffic safety campaign and she won the orchids as safest driver of the week. Orchids For Woman Driver Two University fine arts students have been commissioned to submit murals for the clubhouse of the Clay Center country club this year. Fine Arts Students To Submit Murals Billy J. Lekay, junior from Neodesha, will paint the scene of the Winkler Mill on Fancy creek. This is his second straight year to receive the assignment. Arthur D. Moore, sophomore from St. Joseph, Mo., will submit a sketch of the Mose Yunkin house near Wakefield. The murals are part of a 10 year program in which University students may submit sketches. English Teachers Attend Conference Four faculty members represented the University at a conference of the Kansas College Teachers of English April 9 and 10 at Winfield. They were Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, instructor in English; M. D. Clubb, professor; W. D. Paden, and Rav B. West, associate professors. All four representatives spoke to the conference April 9. Mrs. Calderwood spoke on "Proficiency Examinations on English," and led a discussion after her talk. Professor Clubb spoke on "Pre-professional Training." Professor Paden talked on "Preparation for Graduate School," and Professor West discussed the writers conference coming to the University this summer. the theme of the conference was "What should constitute an English major." Women Journalists Attend Press Lunch Three Lawrence women were guests of honor at the Theta Sigma Phi "Ladies of the Press Juncheon" April 10. They were Mrs. Edwin F. Ables of the Lawrence Outlook, Mrs. Ruth Love and Mrs. Katherine Stevens of the Lawrence Journal World. Marian Minor, retiring president of the honorary journalism sorority, introduced the new officers. They are Lois Lauer, president; Elizabeth Berry, vice-president; Anna Mary Murphy, secretary; and Dorothy James, treasurer. Alumnae present were Mrs. L. N. Flint, Grace Mulinberg, Mrs. Becky Vallette Bright, Mrs. Anne Young Russell, and Mrs. Jack Happy, sponsor. The luncheon observed national Theta Sigma Phi "Matrix Milestone" week. Rice At Weddings Wasteful Columbus, Ohio—(UP)—Catholics in the Columbus diocese have been reminded that the custom of throwing rice at weddings is wasteful. In a letter to pastors, Bishop Michael J. Ready referred to the practice as "sinfully wasteful to indulge today" when "food is so much needed by millions of suffering people." Mattress Special 210 Coil Innerspring Was your slumber restful last night? FRANK'S FURNITURE COMPANY 834 Mass. Phone 834 Here's A New One: By Using Snails Scientists Can Locate Ground Water Snails play an important part in locating ground water, according to A. B. Leonard, associate professor of zoology. FREE DELIVERY By classifying snails and other mollusks according to the different ice ages during the periods in which they evolved, scientists can determine sources of ground water, he explained. Snails have lived for millions of years. There are now more than 200 kinds in Kansas and approximately 100,000 in the world, Professor Leonard said. Most of Professor Leonard's collection is from Kansas, but he has He has collected more than 100,000 mollusks since 1941, most of them snails and clams. He devotes about six months every three years to field trips, which he often makes with the Geological Survey. specimens from the entire Midwest. Many of these mollusks lived in the Pleistocene age, and Professor Leonard is attempting to relate the period with the others through his study of the mollusks. Professor Leonard has written approximately 200 scientific research papers on mollusks. He hopes to discover what brings about the great variation in their size and number. GI Bill Covers Foreign Summer School Delays in subsistence payments and tuition fees will be lessened if the veterans choose schools approved by the V.A. and served by an attache of uttermann office. Veterans may attend summer schools under the G.I. bill in foreign countries if they meet certain requirements and pay their transportation fees. Information concerning foreign schools approved by the V.A. may be obtained at the regional office in Kansas City or from the director of registration and research, vocational rehabilitation and education service, veterans' administration, Washington 25. D.C. To qualify for training abroad the veteran must first secure a letter of acceptance from the school he plans to attend. The institution must be approved by he V.A. Then a supplemental certificate of eligibility must be obtained by the V.A. regional office.