1948 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25; 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE e na- left the at the noticed name oopped he ran to the ed to minutes thing t Ads. Gamma Phi Beta Socially Speaking Gamma Phi Beta announces the appointment of the following officers: Elizabeth Evans, song leader; Gloria Horn, assistant librarian; Patricia McClure, and Ann Allen, assistant social chairmen. - * * Triangle Initiates Harman Co-op Elects Triangle fraternity announces the initiation of the following: Lawrence E. Hyde, James A. Deveney, Richard W. Hartzler, Kansas City, Mo; Elgin E. Thelen, William M. Joyce, Kansas City; Arthur B. Francis, Gary W. Robbins, Leavenworth; Charles D. Cain, Raytown, Mo.; and Kenneth W. Philo, Humansville, Mo. Recently elected officers of Harman Co-op are: Betty Jean Ratylaff, president; Doris Jean Meinecke, vice-president; Maxine McVicker, secretary; Diane Johnson, treasurer; Wilma Rose and Patricia Turpin, purchasing agents; Eleanor Anderson and Alita York, social chairman; Ruth Bertsch, song leader; Barbara Chapin, alumni secretary; Alita York, reporter. F. T. Club Elects The Physical Therapy club announces the election of the following officers: Betty Wickersham, president; Patti Norcross, vice-president; Connie Cultra, secretary; and Ed Norris, treasurer. Harman Co-op Guests Weekend guests at Harman Co-op were: Eleanor Turpin, Kansas City, Mo.; Marian Rose, Kansas City, Mo.; Jane Foster, Manhattan Mrs. Jo Ellen Waits, Nickerson; and Mrs. Helen Smith, Odessa, Texas. Kappa Sig Guests Dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house Sunday were Nancy Barnard, Shirley Gibbs, Martha Gragg, Patricia Ann Harrell, Martha Holman, Mary Jo Myers, Martha Sue Schenken, and Mary Jean Stewart. Templin Hall Elects Templin hall announces the election of the following officers: Virginia Scheuber, president; Rosemary Alderman, vice-president; Clara Jane Lutz, secretary; Joan Deeds, treasurer; Betty Hanson and Eleanor Bradford, social chairman; Betty Fordemwalt, house manager; Grace Vaniman, keeper of the archives; Ruth Dudley, song leader; Joan Grey, intramural manager; Lorita Higginbottom, scholarship chairman; Da Turpin, inter-dorm representative; Aileen Beal, new student counselor. SAE Tea Dance Sigma Alpha Epsilon entertained with a tea dance Feb. 21 at the chapter house. The guests included Ruth Walters, Carolyn Carmean, Dorothy Hudson, Joan Bigham, Marianne Gear, Mary Wilkins, Marion Nearing, Janet Malott, Rosemary Robison, Dorothy Feldamp, Beverly Braeckeveldt, Barbara Olson, Patricia Foncannon, Marianne Rogers, Joy Godbehere, Nina Green, Ann Allen. Edith Malott, Agnes Husband, Patricia Patten, Mary Riddle, Mary Jane Horton, Peggy Miller, Betty Bradford, Virginia Daniels, Barbara Felt, Mary Margaret Moore, Nanée Bell, Louise Warner, Guinevere Goerz, Kathleen Larson. Margaret Doll, Gloria Watson, Rita Hartwell, Virginia Daugherty, Mary Valentine, Jo Gray, Marcia Godding, Sally Steppe, Jane Keith, Shirley Kyle, Sydney Ashton, Judy Reese, and Betty Dunne. Mrs. Esther Reed, housemother, was the chaperone. Phi Kappa Sigma The Kansas colony of Phi Kappa Sigma, national social fraternity, announces the pledging of John B. Gosman, Kansas City, Mo.; Jerrold G. Norris, Council Grove; William A. Hutchings, Kansas City, Mo.; George J. Mastio, Independence, Mo.; Joseph R. Wells, Stambaugh, Mich.; Arnold J. Mitchell, Philadelphia; and Harlan D. Frazier, Girard. Youngsters Learn Social Life In University Nursery School The University school at 1100 Missouri street holds the youngest part of the student body. It is under the direction of the home economics department. Established during World War II under the Lanham bill to care for children of working mothers, the nursery was given to the home economics department for use as a laboratory at the end of the war. "The children learn social and emotional development through contacts with each other in play. No attempt is made to teach any academic work." Mrs. Robert Foster, director of the nursery school, explained. "The children learn social and emotional development through contacts with each other in play. No attempt is made to teach any academic work." Mrs. Robert Foster, director of the nursery school, explained. The children's ages range from $2^{\frac{1}{3}}$ to five years. School begins at 10:45 a.m. with inspection by the nurse, Mrs. Lois Smith, who isolates any child not feeling well. Free play until 11:30 a.m. is followed by a story hour. Eat All They Want "At lunch time table manners are taught. The children may eat all the food they want, because we feel normal appetites take care of their needs." Mrs. Foster continued. nooks, picture books, blocks, dolls modeling clay, and many other toys. All furniture is child-size and the entire house is decorated accordingly. The school day ends at 4 p. m. and each child takes home a "report card" which gives the amount of food eaten and length of nap taken. Home Ec Classes Help Eaen afternoon the children take a nap. At 2:30 p.m. they eat again. This is called "snack time" and each youngster also receives a tablespoon of cod-liver oil. Conferences with the children's parents are held every three months. A parents' meeting is given each month in Fraser hall. The nursery is equipped with outdoor play equipment, paints, story Alumni Association Receives $100 From Field Estate Mrs. Foster, a proud grandmother herself, took charge of the nursery school last year. Assisting her are two full-time employees, Mrs. Laurel Hodgden and Mrs. Marina Cassidia. Students from the Child Development II class work two hours a week and Child Development III students spend one day a week working in the nursery. The Alumni association received a $100 cheek recently from the estate of the late Mrs. Henrietta Dickson Field, a student in 1881. Mrs. Field stated in her will that the money was to be used by the association in any way they chose, according to Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni association. Mrs. Field died last year. Businessman To Speak On Labor, Management Checks James H. Hatch will speak to Delta Sigma Pi, business fraternity, at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow, in the recreation room of the Union. Mr. Hatch is the vice-president and production manager of the Union Wire Rope corporation of Kansas City, Mo. His topic will be "Do Present Labor Controls Balance Management Controls?" At the beginning of the 19th century 14 to 19 hours of work a day were common for women and children as well as men. GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE IN CASE YOU HAVEN'T GUESSED, (Many of you remember him from Palace Clothing THIS IS HOUSE Jay Janes Pledge 10 Women Today The Jay James will pledge ten new members at 5 p. m. today in Watkins hall. A. T. House is now manager of The Walker Shop, 813 Massachusetts, where exclusive brands and distinctive campus styles of shoes and related accessory lines are offered. He is anxious to serve old and new friends alike and invites each and everyone of you to stop in, if only to exchange pleasantries. He can give you a "fit" but you will like it. The new pledges are Zola Parke and Phyllis Debus, Corbin hall; Patricia Tomlinmison, Kappa Alpha Theta; Merle Collins, Monchonsia hall; Mildred Crandall and Ruth Keller, Jolliffe hall; Eason Bradford, Templin hall; Mary Lynn Trousdale, Delta Delta Delta; and Rachel Cooper and Nancy German, Alpha Delta Pt. Hens And Cows Don't Know About Fair Labor Practices Railroad workers achieved the eight-hour day in 1916, by an act of congress making it effective on railroads engaged in interstate commerce. Kansas City, Mo., - (UP) - The five-day, 40-hour week has new hit the farm. "Twenty-five years ago, hens laid an average of 80 eggs a year," a speaker told an agricultural forum audience here recently. "Today the hen averages 140 eggs a year." Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. Better feeds, feeding practices, farm sanitation and farm management have brought about the improvement, he said. Similarly, G. L. James, president of the Midwest Feed Manufacturers' association, said a dairy cow, averaging 180 pounds of butterfat a year 25 years ago, today yields up to 235 pounds annually. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY Crime Wave At All Time High!! $500.00 Household Theft Policy covering $100.00 Holdup away from premises now available for but $7.50 per year. Charlton Phone 689 Insurance Agency Across from Postoffice Artemis $ ^{*} $ grows daisies on a pretty petticoat Romantic as a sigh... the figure-flattering petticoat takes on a new tone. Artemis scatters daisies on Daisy White... Bur-Mil rayon crepe. 26-28-30 3. 98 New ballerina length gown 7.50 LINGERIE, MAIN FLOOR