L 7, 1948 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7,1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS aster, $4.50 a semester enceance, Kap- University, sunday, Sept. 17. periods, Sept. 17. Lawrence, 1879. PAGE THREE Spring Weather Inspires Parties, Dances, Hayrides Alpha Chi Omega held a hayridepicnic April 3. The guests were: Ruell Reddock, Lawrence Haden, John Polson, Robert Elliott, Richard Stoffer, Robert Coshow, Leslie Philblad, Robert Southern, Arnspiger, William Brooks, Sam Peacock, Tom Gallagher, Al Miller, Robert Tempter, John Mack, James Townsend, Jack Parker, Reid Faulks, Edward Weltner, Donald Millikan, Harold Kaufman, Jordon Halnes, Robert Blincoe, Dick Haggard. Alpha Chi Hayride Maurice Martin, Edward Green, Sam McCamant, Dale Marshall, George McCarthy, James Sanders, Jack Stevens, James Bennett, Jack Steinle, Robert Wiedemann, William Hall, Don Jarrett, Don Wade, James Cavanah, John Haddock, Verne Stevenson, Bob Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bledsoe and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Link. * * "April Showers" was the theme of the Sigma Kappa spring formal on April 3. Sigma Kappa Dance The guests were: Harold Vagtborg, Charles Lindberg, Charles Crowley, Dale Hanes, Bill Paxton, Clifford DeLude, Richard Randall, Jack Dalton, James G. Mason, Jack Wilson, Dargan Montgomery, Arthur Riordan, William Akright, Frank Chandler Boucher, Delmas Richards, Bryce Logan, A B. Davis, Chester Dillon, Joseph Crawford, Alan Pickering, Todd Johnson, Harold Koch, Kenneth Duane Olson, Perry Wilcox, Eileen Deutschman, Charles Inderwiesen, John Wileox, Emerson Shields, James Hosman, Warren Rugan, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Reardon, John Reber, James Baker, Robert J. Cooper, Benjamin Craig, Dikran Milton, John Farrell, Joseph Eugene Caldarara, Billie Dunn, Shirley Sparling, Bill Stanton, Martha Dorothy Belle Hogan, Milton Waller, Mr. and Mrs. Don Stockdale, Forest Gifford, Lewis Bales, Newell Jenkins, Robert Gray, William Burchan, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hubbell, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eugene Rudd, Bernard Sherman, Bernard Nordling, Wood Runyan, Ann Clifford, Bruce Pennington, Wallace Benjamin Foster, Virginia Clough, Fred Fendorf, and Irvin Messer. Chaperones were: Col. and Mrs. John Alfrey, Prof. and Mrs. Albert Palmerlee, Mrs. Gertrude Stuart, Mrs. Nelle Hopkins, and Mrs. Mary Younkman. TKE Elects Tau Kappa Epsilon announces the election of the following officers: Ralph Brock, president; Clarence Jenkins, vice-president; James Haslings, pledge trainer; Frank Limbocker, scholarship chairman; Charles Dutton, secretary; Perry Wilcox, treasurer; Robert Newman, historian; and Harlan Burns, sergeant-at-arms. * * Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Delta Pi held its annual Black Diamond dinner-dance at the chapter house April 3. The house was decorated on a French night-club theme. Guests were Robert Cauble, James Goulder, Bud Hinkle, Gerald Lucas, Melvin Rice, Wade Stinson, Robert Kroesch, Richard Jukes, William Pringle, David Burns, Robert Myers, William Hausler, Jack Armel, Peter Stubbs, Lawrence Nelson, Charles Dutton, Logan Holtgrewe, James Pedersen. James Fleming, Dwight Hause, Marion Sumner, Winn Seroy, Sewell Wilson, Duane Kraft, John Hall, Ernest Friesen, James Lammons, Richard Hite, Charles Howard, Reginald Cook, Charles Kopper, Richard Altman, Fred Apt, Charles Apt, Ronald Hill, Ray Cune, John Seanston, Rodney Armstrong, Jack Comstock, Joseph Bates, Calvin Briney, Jack Scott, Ernest Myer, Frank Sloan, Tom Rea. Jack Pumphrey, Don Meacham Philip Taylor, William Fisher, Philip Fee, Mark Lee, Eleanor Campbell, Mary Peet, and Mr. and Mrs. Victor Chesky. Chaperoncs were Mrs. O. L. Horner, Mrs. Wilma Hooper, Mrs. F. A. Benson, and Mrs. R. H. Wilson. Kappa Phi Kappa Phi, Methodist women's sorority, will give a party for Wesley Foundation at 8 p. m. Friday in Ecke hall. Acacia Dance 心 心 心 Members of Acacia fraternity entertained the following guests at an informal dance in the Kansas room of the Union April 3: Patricia Waits, Helen Galbraith. Maxine Lindley, Claire Elizabeth White, Josephine Skitton, Helen Manka, Diane Johnson, Charlene Oliver, Rosalie McCrea, Billie Burttscher, Lee Foster, Mary Alice Lobaugh, Barbara Richard, Jo Ann Spauling, Jeanine Welsh, Mary Jean Robbins, Charlene Jarrett, Shirley Chenoweth, Doroth Colb, Betty Jean Anderson, Joyce Burns, Lois Pester, Shirley Schreiber, Evelyn Skomberg, and Marilyn Riffer. Chaperones were Prof. and Mrs. Arvid Jacobson, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stubeck, Miss Irene Cebula, and Jess McNish. Gamma Alpha Chi Initiation Sixteen women were initiated into Gamma Alpha Chi, women's advertising sorority at 4 p. m. Sunday in the English room of the Union. Women initiated were: Betty Berry, Marilyn Steinert, Elizabeth McCleary, Alison Jones, Eleena O'Connor, Janet Taylor, Jo Hurting, Ruth Crayton, Sally Rowe, Eleanor Bradford, Joan Degenhardt, Mary Lou Foley, Anna Hemphil, Jeanne Gorbutt Bowman, JoAnn Spalding, and Joan Manners. New officers were elected after the initiation. They are: Sally Rowe, president; Joan Degenhardt, vicepresident; Betty Berry, recording secretary; Elizabeth McCleary, corresponding secretary; Anna Hemphill, treasurer; Mary Lou Foley, editor; Eleanor Bradford, notifications chairman; Marilyn Steinert, rush chairman. A list was made of all seniors and their job qualifications. This list will be sent in to national headquarters for job placements for the members. Daughter Born Theodore Price, '44, and his wife the former Frances Butterfield, '42, announce the birth of a daughter, Julia Hortense, March 30 at Charleston, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. Price live in South Charleston, where Mr. Price is employed. Library Receives 2,500 New Books Approximately 2.500 new volumes were received by Watson library in the first quarter of this year. New books received last week include: "Devilbirds: The Story of United States Marine Corps Aviation in World War II," by John A. DeChant; "American Dreams, a Study of American Utopias," by Vernon Louis Parrington; "The Pearl," by John Steinbeck, a story of a discovery of wealth which brings tragedy instead of the expected happiness; "The Horn and the Roses," by Ira Jan Wallach, a novel based on the life of Peter-Paul Rubens; "The Ideas of March," by Thornton Wilder, a modern novel about one scandalous episode in the last days of the Roman empire. Other new books include: "The Story of Scrap," by Edwin Charles Barringer; "The Faith of a Liberal," by Morris R. Cohen; "Greek Plays in Modern Translation," by Dudley Fitts; "Wild Mammals of Virginia," by Charles Overton Hardley; "Patterns of Union-Management Relations," by Frederick Harris Harbison; "Danger from the East," by Richard Edward Lauterbach; "Jack London; "Labor Relations and Human Relations," by Ben Morris Selekman; "Dragon Harvest," by Upton Sinclair; "Educational Guidance," by Ruth May. Strang; and "Letter from Grosvenor Square," by John Gilbert Winant. Polls Open Until 5 Today For Independent Women Call K. U. 251 With Your News Polls will be open until 5 p.m. today for the Independent Women Students political party's primary election. The polls are in the Union and in basement of Frank Strong hall. Activity tickets must be presented for identification at the polls. All independent women are automatically members of I.W.S. and eligible to vote. Nominees for the general election April 15 will be selected at the primary. AWS Outlines Future Plans Future activities of the Associated Women Students were outlined by former and by newly elected officers of the A.W.S. senate recently. A one day high school leadership meeting will be held next year, with an outstanding boy and girl from each high school in the state attending. Students will be selected by their own high school officials. The senate said that next year the A.W.S. will work with and promote projects for other University groups instead of competing with them. The A.W.S. will also have a speakers group to visit various women's organized houses and promote the activities of other groups. A careers conference will be held next year similar to the cultural conference "Blueprinting Tomorrow" held in February. Senate members suggested that the women's organized houses select alternate A.W.S. representatives. The members urged that alternates attend the house of representatives meeting even when the regular representatives are present. They also urged the houses to send qualified women as representatives. Women In Journalism Guests At Press Luncheon Lawrence professional women in journalism and alumnae will be guests at the "Ladies of the Press Luncheon" at 1 p.m. Saturday in the English room of the Union. The luncheon is in conjunction with national Theta Sigma Phi "Matrix Milestone" week. Anna Mary Murphy, Dorothy James, and Elizabeth Berry will receive the pledging service at 5:15 p.m. tomorrow in the sky parlor of the Journalism building. Takes Job On Saipan Warren H. Littlejohn, '40, has resigned as managing editor of New Day, Kansas City, Mo., to work on the civilian directory on the island of Saipan in the Marianas. Rose's Rancho DANCING Open 12 a.m. - 12 p.m. JUDY BOND BLOUSES Prettily frilled and ruffled or practical and tailored. $4.95 up The Palace 843 Massachusetts Keep your figure as attractive as a precious jewel with Perma-Lift. A miracle happens at the base of the bra cups where an exclusive cushion inset gently supports your bosom—never loses its uplift no matter how often you wash it—no matter how long you wear it. Buy Perma-Lift; just the bra for you. PERMA·LIFT In white or nude—Cotton and nylon. Sizes 32 to 36 A-B-C cups. BRASSIERES THE LIFT THAT NEVER LETS YOU DOWN Another Hickory Success COTTONS 1.50 to 2.50 NYLONS 2.50 CORSETS, SECOND FLOOR 1