RY24,194 UESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THRE eave in Lincoln instation: "Le on Decem be dis v. 26, 1863. (2) — Mose says he now reach 1 produce 8,00 acre. Years of Russia in 1900 26. He wen go to study development and was in bean plan our News nsan back to the need them so 10 person gets two wings on his ester, $4.50 a o semester prence, Kan. e University sundays, Mondays sundays Sept. 17 t Lawrence 1879. Formal Dances Are Highlight of Weekend Social Calendar Dinner guests of Delta Chi Sunday were: Corrine Carter, Eva Zumbrunen, Helen Harkrader, Carol Ann Hastings, and Patty Kelly. Dinner Guests Pi Kappa Alpha Teke Party Pi Kappa Alpha elected James Bennett, engineering sophomore, as honor initiate of the fall pledge class. The selection was based on scholarship, activities, and sports. Harrisit Harlow, Jo Anne Hepworth, Ruth Henry, Barbara Hays, Kayma Hotchkiss, Lila Hyten, Agnes Husband, Nancy Jackson, Carrie Jacobson, Arleye Johnson, Nancy Johnson, Barbara Karges, Betty Martin, Marion McCullough. Other guests included: Mr. and Mrs.O.J.Bryan,Mr.and Mrs.William Nichols,Robert Thayer,James Davidson,Emilie Trickett,and Georgia Pepercorn. "Basin Street" party, the second of a series of three Teke Mardi Gras parties, was held Friday at the Tau Kappa Epsilon chapter house. Charles O'Connor's swing琴 played. Guests present were; Celeste Beasley, Rosalie Bishop, Bernice Brady, cathleen Brode, Nancy Cameron, Virginia Coppeed, Betty Crawford, Dolores Defries, Alice Degner, Eileen Deutschman, Pat Foncannon, Kathleen Graff. Elizabeth Anne McCleary, Norma Mendenhall, Charlotte Metcalfe, Shirley Ousley, Joan Schindling, Laise Springer, Marjorie Scidmore, Utty Jane Sims, Veda Nicholas, Nancy Smith, Dorothy Stevenson, Joanne Varnum, Louise Warner, and Pat Young. ATO Initiates The chaperones were: Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. J. A. Hooke, Miss Julia Willard, and Mrs. H. P. Ramage. Alpha Tau Omega held initiation ceremonies Sunday for the following: Arthur Smith, Bartlesville, Okla.; Max Teare, St. Joseph, Mo.; William Wilhelm, Independence; Lawrence Nieman, Newton; Richard Millikan, Kansas City; Donald Helm, Kansas City; Glen Tonger, Coffeeville; William Edwards, Salina; James Childers, Independene; Mo. Hubert Johnson, Harper; Charles Kendall, Concordia; Bryce Ehmeke, Independence, Mo.; David Nesser, Kansas City; Thomas Milligan, Stanberry, Mo.; Robert Schaefer, Kansas City, Mo.; and Joe Leevy, Coffeville. Arthur Smith was the honor initiate. Guests at the initiation dinner included: Dr. and Mrs. R. J. Milligan, Stanberry, Mo; Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Teare and Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Senor, K. Joseph, Mo; Mrs. Paul S. Kendall and Miss Marilyn Kendall, Concordia; Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Edwards, Salina; Mr. and Mrs. A. Layle Childers and Miss Retta Desmond, Independence, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. August Ehmke, Independence, Mo.; Mr. Stanley Nieman, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. R V Millikan, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. George Nesser, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Helm, Kansas City; Mr. Albert Rice, Kansas City; and Dr. and Mrs. Cecil G. Lalicker, Lawrence. Gwendolynne Jones won two pairs of nylon hose at a dinner-dance given by the American Institute of Chemical Engineers Feb. 21 in the Kansas room of the Union. She guessed correctly the time an alarm clock would ring during the evening. Chemical Engineers Charles Becker, Riley Dixon, and Dalton Eash did a skit. Judson Goodrich played a group of popular songs on the piano, and Ronald Reed, Eugene Sallee, and Carl Von Wadden sang in trio. John Ferris was toastmaster. Sig En Dinner Guests Chaperones were Prof. and Mrs. J. O. Maloney, Prof. and Mrs. Fred Kurata and Prof. S. A. Miller. O Sigma Phi Epsilon entertained with a buffet dinner Saturday afternoon. Guests included Mary Virginia Stout, Inez Hall, Ruth Routon, Sarah Strickland, Jean Gillie, Charlotte Reams, Arlene Johnson, Margaret Love, Ruth Clayton, and Suzie Curtis, a student at William Woods College. Delta Chi announces the pledging of Dave Fisher, Mt. Vernon, Iowa. Delta Chi Pledges Kappa Sig Dance Guests were: Mary Lind, Darlene Lygrisse, Grace Gwinner, Irene Cebula, Mary Jean Stewart, Betty Compton, Barbara Hume, Lila Hyten, Betty Hirleman, Billie Jane Alexander, Imogene Frack, Betty Greenwood, Martha Schenken. Kappa Sigma held its annual Black and White dinner-dance at the chapter house Saturday. Charlotte Metcalfe, Martha Gragg, Valerie Stagg, Doreen Wallace, Barbara Hays, Barbara Howard, Donna Harrison, Maxine Bunt, Barbara O'Neal, Janet Downs, Peggy Philblad, Betty Byam, Marcia Hail, Nancy Watson, Jickie Seaman, Margaret Dickinson. Nancy Bardnard, Helen Inso, Mary Kay Kottman, Marilyn Miller, Barbara Hohnson, Martha Lou Duncan, Betty Hamman, Mary Lou Martin, Merle Anders, Mary Lynn Hegarty, Annalou Pope, Mary Lou Stanley, Bernice Brady, Peggy Wolfe. Nanette Hyer, Martha Holman, Areta Hemphill, Katherine Hoag, Marcia Godding, Rita Hartwell, Ann Clifford, Patrice Kennedy, Marilyn Glover, Margaret Hanna. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Ward, Mr. and Tom Scott, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Inman, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Zimmerman, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Held, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Shaw, and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rankin. Kay O'Connor, Betty DeArmond, Joan Bushey, Irene Olson, Betty Ann Rolfs, Carol Winton, Elizabeth Ann Sifres, Naida Craig, Cleta Van is, Carolyn Camean, Barbara Rich- Marter, Mary Jo Myers, Anne Daus, Carolyn Carmean, Barbara Richard, Florence Robinson. Patricia Harrell, Virginia Gard, Marilyn Jones, Wilea Graham, Joyce Diat, Dorothy Hudson, Mary Lou Newman, Marcille Parker, Georgiann Dutton, Joan Tinnal, Evelyn Barncord, Billie Carter. Chaperones were Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. C. A. Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Inman. D U Formal Dance Delta Upsilon held a formal dance Feb. 21 in honor of visiting delegates who were here to attend the DU fifth provincial conference. Guests were: Eileen Horner, Mary Jean Peet, Ruth Walters, Mary Sudermann, Sara Webb, Joan Schindling, Kay Collins, Joan Sanders, Mary Lynn Trousdale, Harriet Harlow, Margaret Lutz. * * Joanne Hudson, Mary Margaree Moore, Sally Shephard, Joan Anderson, Diane Ferguson, Marilyn Swenson, Connie Markley, Louise Wells, Carol Buhler, Barbara Montaldo, Betty Fordemwalt, Lee Apt, Emily Stewart, Jo Stout. Norma Jean Guthrie, Ann Cowger, Louise Lambert, Gene Atkinson, Betty Armstrong, Patty Brubaker, Barbara Pack, Mary Sue Wymer, Patty Claryd, Mrs. Bailey Chaney, Mrs. Al Steinhauser, Mrs. Albert T- ler, Mrs. Alvin Voigt, Mrs. Charles Roberts. Carolyn Campbell, Peggy Sue Cloyd, Norma Mendenhal, Joan Vickers, Beth Holmlund, Doris Danielson, Barbara Creel, Alice Schoonover, Betty Hayward, Ann Prebble, Pat Barron, Mary Lou Peckenschneider, Kay Swenson, Pat Perkins. Ann Warner, Mary Bell Shephard, Marie Schumacher, Mary Lou Radar, Georgia Haun, Jeanne Kahn, Betty Schrier, Mary Ann Gear, Betsy McCune, Barbara Brown, Claudia Anderson, Josephine Stucky. Carolyn Coleman, Sally Stepper, Cathy Culley, Patricia Cook, Deleores Collins, Margaret Granger, Betty Webb, Jean Rose, Jackie Logan, Sue Jones, Joan Bigham, Glenda Lehrring, Bernadine Read, Juliette Williams. Brian Munro and Dick Hooker, Manitoba University; Jim Muleahy and Albert Jones, Chicago, Charles Roberts and Gordon Johnson, Nebraska; Jim Hardenbergh, Edward Lucas and Dallas Nelson, Missouri; John Morledge and John Phillips, Clerks in the correspondence study section of University Extension really appreciate the latest in filing inventions, a circular file. The office has two Cardineers which were obtained a year ago. Card Filing Is Fun For These Clerks The file is shaped like a wheel and stands vertically about three feet high. Arranged around the wheel are sections for the cards. When a clerk wants to look at a certain card or file a group of cards, she turns the wheel until she finds the section she wants. The remainder of the cards fall back on or down, and the spot is permanently marked until the clerk wants a new card. Modern Choir Rehearses Tonight The modern choir will hold a rehearsal and reorganization meeting at 8:30 p.m. today in 131 Frank Strong hall. The choir of approximately 40 voices will take part in "College Daze," all-student musical to be held May 6. The choir was organized in 1936 by Robertson and Donald Wood. '39, as an all-male chorus to sing in the jazz band concert presented at the University that year. Girls' voices were added gradually until 1942 when the choir became inactive. Jesse Stewart, College junior, will direct the choir with Ross Robertson, instructor of economics, as advisor. Haworth White, College senior, reorganized the choir in November, 1947, but the spring show is the first opportunity they have had for public appearance. De Paul Men Want Brains Plus Beauty Chicago, Ill.—(UP)—De Paul university men demanded brains as well as beauty in a contest to pick their dance queen, "Miss I. Q." The 55 entries in the contest represent the nine colleges of the university, and, as well as curves, complexions, and comeliness, all have intelligence quotients from 120 to 135 "She has to be able to cook and be interested in making a home, too," said Jack Berry, a member of the judging board. 'Oh Is That Sex?' Editor Exclaims Norman, Okla.—“Some of those gags must have had a double meaning I didn't catch,” editor Tony Hillerman commented after the board of regents charged his campus humor magazine with “over vulgar sexiness.” University of Oklahoma regents took interest in the magazine because of lampooning of the Oklahoma Daily, student newspaper, and also because of several jokes and cartoons. Milwaukee—(UP)—Television is going to have its drawbacks, bobbysoxers at Marquette university agree. Television May Hamper Night-Blooming Co-Eds "If you told your mother you were going to be in the library studying tonight, you had better not sit there. The television cameras are pointed right in your direction and she'll probably see you." One sweet thing was heard to say to another during a basketball game: Beloit. Wis., (UP)—James Drager took a puff on a cigaret and laid it in an ashtray. The next thing he knew he had been shot in the arm. The cigaret set off a bullet that was lying in the ashtray. Cigaret Fires Bullet Oklahoma; Don Frank and Ed Barrels, Iowa. Phillip Mayer, and Mach Heysinger, Iowa State; Wes Jung, John Conway and Mark Jung, Northwestern; Norman Osterdeg and Warren Carlson, Minnesota; Rick Wing, Wisconsin; and Robert Stauder and Daniel Stovkey. Illinois. Chaperones were Mrs. Charles Wentworth, Mrs. O. L. Horner, Mrs. J. A. Willard, Mrs. R. G. Roche; and Mrs. J. A. Hooke. Three Pieces Of Cake Meant Voodoo, But Sign Of Cross Overpowered It New Orleans—(UP)—A New Orleans housewife who found three pieces of cake under her doorstep didn't even look back. She went straight to St. Louis cemetery No. 2 and scratched a sign of the cross on the tomb of Marie Laveau. It was the only thing to do, she said. Her neighbors and certain police- men agreed. $ \textcircled{a} $ The cake meant voodo. The cake was gris-gris, or a manifestation of the kind of hocus-pocus bought by shaves from Africa. Police figured at once that since the housewife was a landlady, one of her tenants was trying to voodoo her because she had filed an eviction notice. Marie Lavenau practiced voodoo in the 1830s. But she was still a power in her tomb today, still able to overcome the power of a bona-fide gris-gris. A genuine gris-gris can be almost anything. It can be a hideous monster made from candle grease and match sticks, or pennies in a circle. But whatever form it takes, it bodes nothing but ill will for its victim, usually death. Voodoo does not always deal with death, however. Big, handsome, banana-colored Marie Laveau reportedly used it to round up a houseful of husbands. Harrisburg, Fa.—(UP) The young reporter stepped into the office and asked if there was anything doing, "Nothing, son," said the chief of police, "except there's a building on fire across the street." Nothing But A Fire, Son GALES GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE West Coast School Bars Discrimination Seattle—(UP)The University of Washington will bar new social or fraternal organizations from the campus if their constitutions contain racial or religious membership restrictions. Prof. Albert F. Miller, chairman of the faculty committee on student groups, said old groups on the campus with such restrictions in their constitutions will be "encouraged to remove them." Miller said the code was adopted when it was discovered a dental honorary fraternity seeking university recognition carried racial and religious restrictions in its constitution. 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