APRIL 11, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE A Calendar of Campus Events Tonight: Kappa Phi, party, Ecke hall. Ku Ku club dance, Union ballroom. 9 p.m. to midnight. saturday: Gamma Phi Beta, dance, Kansas 3 p.m. to midnight. Sigma Nu, dance, chapter house, to 8 p.m. Varsity dance, Military Science building, 9 p.m. to midnight. --a dance in the Kansas room of the Union has been planned for May 21. The committee in charge of arrangements is Rosemary Ballinger, Mariane Carey, Jean Pflots, Lee Sears, and Jean Runnels. SOCIALLY SPEAKING Delta Gamma Entertains A coffee in honor of their notecalumna, Mrs. Ruth Bryan Rohde was given by the Delta Gamma sorority Tuesday night. Guests included members of the faculty, representatives from the organized houses, and Delta Gamma alumnae from Kansas City, Topeka, and Lawrence. Phi Beta Pi Initiates Phi Beta Pi announces initiation of Joseph Wells, Donald Duche, Robert Cook, Marion Bills, Darwin Lankin, Glen McCray, John Buess, and Howard Pyle. K.U. Dames See Play 'Poor Man, Rich Man' "Poor Man, Rich Man," a comedy of two domineering wives and their husbands who wanted to be boss, was given at the K.U. Dames meeting Wednesday. H. C. Brockman, dramatics instructor, and four students from Liberty Memorial High school presented the play. A committee appointed to plan next week's bridge meeting includes Marjorie Reeve, Betty Hall, Jean Jammels, and Camille Gudger. Mrs. Kellogg D. McClelland, who received her master's degree, from the University in 1910, is beginning her second semester as a French instructor at the Galesburg division of the University of Illinois. Mrs. McClelland Joins Illinois Staff Mrs. McClelland did graduate work in French and Spanish at the Universities of Chicago, Grenoble and Paris. She taught at Washburn college; Hiram college; Ohio; Knox college, Galesburg, Ill.; and Montana State college before joining the University of Illinois faculty. Lois Beth Wins Scholarship Award Lois Carolyn Beth, daughter of Elmer F. Beth, journalism professor, has recently been awarded a certificate of merit as runner-up for a college scholarship offered annually by a national soft-drink company. She will receive a $50 award when she enters college next fall. Lois is a senior at University High school, and plans to attend the University after her graduation. The two four year scholarships granted in Kansas were won by Lee H. Reiff, Newton High school, and Elizabeth A. Thackrey, Manhattan High school. Joan Woodward, Keith Wilson, and Sue Webster left Wednesday for Urbana, Ill., where they will attend a meeting of University union activity committees. Miss Hermina Zipple, director of union activities, accompanied the group. They will return Saturday. 3 Go To Meeting In Urbana Fite To Speak Monday Wads Fite will speak on "Shock Waves" at the physics colloquium at 5 p.m. Monday in 203 Blake hall. Fite is a. College senior majoring in physics. COED'S CORNER 'Betty' Soukup Pounds Typewriter, Dances, Is In Honorary Groups The 5-foot 2-inch blue-eyed brunette who pounds the typewriter for L. L. Waters in the Bureau of Business Research is Betty Soukup. On the diploma she will earn in August, it will read "Elizabeth Rose Soukup" but she has been "Betty" to her friends since she was five years old. Betty, who is what is generally termed a "whiz" in the School of Business, says that she came to college to get an education, period, but she has managed to pack quite a number of activities into her college life. Holds Honorary Offices make lots of money travel Besides filling her spare hours with secretarial work for Professor Waters, Betty tz vice-president of Phi Chi Theta, business sorority, a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity, and a aide of Pi Lambda Theta, honorary education fraternity. She is secretary and scholarship chairman of Miller hall. Her name has been on the dean's honor roll one year and the School of Business honor roll two years. "I'm going to teach high school students the typewriter keyboard and how to make 'chicken tracks.'" Betty said when asked about her plans for the future. She is getting in experience on the "chicken tracks" this semester by practice teaching shorthand at University high school. Taught Country School Betty laughed when she recalled her former experience in teaching. "I taught a one-room rural school a year before coming to college. It was a lark. I think I'll like high school even better, though," she said. Betty frowned when she admitted she had no particular hobby. "Hobbies take time, and that is just what most of us don't have," she declared. "I'd rather dance than anything; I guess that's the closest thing to a hobby that I have. Riding horseback and playing cards run a close second with me. second with him "One thing I'd like to do when I make lots of money teaching, is travel. I've never done much of it, but like everyone else, I'm sure I'd enjoy it," said Betty. "About the only experience I get traveling now is riding back and forth from home in Wilson, Kansas." As for the vague, distant ambition held by every senior who chooses a practical profession, Betty said that her secret ambition has always been to go into foreign service. Read the Daily Kansan daily. Who said GOOD blades have to be high priced? Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty Across from BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS- Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only JBE AN EARLY BIRD On these fine spring mornings have your crowning glory shampooed, set, and dried. Make an 8 a.m. Appointment and go to your 9 a.m. class with your TRAILING TRESSES TRIM Appointments 8 a.m.-6 p.m. An Invitation to Our Classmates and Teammates TO VISIT US GWEN HARGER and OWEN PECK SATURDAY, APRIL 12 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. X-Ray Fittings, Music—all day at the OTTO FISCHER Walk-Over Shoe Shop 813 Mass.