194d 146 85 90 MAY 22,1946 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Now is the time for all good students to consider their grades, their folks' pocketbooks, and their teachers' nerves as they begin to prepare for those dreaded finals and then that trek homeward to a welcome summer vacation. Kappa Sigma held a spring formal at the Lawrence Country club on Friday night. The ballroom was decorated as a flower garden with roses and peonies. Guests were Virginia Okeson, Pearl Geiger, Winifred Hamilton, Carol Lembeck, Sue Blessington, Rebecca Vallette, Nancy Leathers, Elizabeth Priest, Gwen Harger, Helen Tindall, Jeanne Preston, Martha Gretzer, Mary Branigan, Betty Reed, Jean Beace. Guests of Kappa Sig's Marilyn Frizell, Josephine Byerly, Doris Neve, Alice Eskman, Patricia Southards, Mary Jean Hoffmann, Marge Stubbs, Elizabeth Shaw, Letha Sanford, Mary K. Paige, Dorothy Savage, Virginia Tolle, Elizabeth Prentice, Bobe Parker, Anabel Keeler, Betty Bradford. Alumni and guests present were Mr. and Mrs. Howard Engleman, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Zimmerman, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Hanson, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Roos, Mr. and Mrs. Weymouth Lowe, Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Bush, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Baumgartner. L. V. Anderson, John R. Cooper, Richard Eckel, William Pierson, Bernard Miller, Herbert Coles, Eugene M. Reinhardt, Stanley Hanson, Alice White, Mary Fountain, and Sara Webb, all of Kansas City. Eleanor Churchill, Bonnie Marlott, Maxine Lindley, Georgia Jane Sewell, Martha McLean, Patricia Ferguson, Norma Jean Lutz, Mary Jane Holzman, Norma Babs, Lou Don Minick, Mary Alford, Edna Hollis, Betty De Armond. Mr. and Mrs. Norman S. Hemphill, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Southern, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Jones, Lt. Howard Rankin, Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Harwood, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Haight. Chaperons were Mrs. Alice Vavra and Mrs. R. H. Wilson. *** After the dance, members of the chapter serenaded sororities on the campus. Phi Psi's Elect Phi Kappa Psi announces the election of the following officers for the fall semester: William Ellis, president; Clayton Kyle, vice-president; Roland Gidney, treasurer; Kenneth Olson, recording secretary; and Terry Herriot, corresponding secretary. Sigma Kappa Has Formal Sigma Kappa held its annual spring formal Saturday night at the chapter house. Lynn Craig and his "Skyliners" provided music for the dance. The house was decorated with spring flowers. John O'Brien, Franklin Palmer, William Quiring, Robert Reed, Cpl. Jack Staples, Robert Sherrer, Charles Brown, James Frame, Robert Bock, James Lynn, Warren Lomack, Kenneth Richardson, and William Holloway. Guests were John Wilcox, Gary McKee, Frederick Horton, Raymond Schmidt, Bud Julka, Lloyd Svoboda, Melvin McWilliams, William Passell, Warren Jackman, Donald Jarrett, William Olin, Loren Burch, Larry Manley. Edward Perry, George McCarthy, Richard MWilliams, Carl Thompson, James Hosman, Dean Bradley, Kenneth Lewis, Joe Cello, Arthur Clevenger, William Ogg, Kenneth Maddux, Robert Hield, Donald Alderson. Mr. and Mrs. D. D. E. Summers, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Blair, Kathleen Wright, Clara Lee Oxley, Leo Rush, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Thompson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Burkholder, Mrs. E. T. Guenther, and Mrs. Stewart Dunn. Chaperons were Mrs. Lena Horner, Mrs. Alice Vavra, Mrs. G. E. Miller, and Mrs. Mary Younkman. Tri Delta Has Dance "Delta Premier" was the theme of the Delta Delta spring formal Housemothers Club Continues Activities Sewing for Bundles for America, packing boxes for overseas, and doing work for the County Convalescent hospital has kept the University Housemothers club busy during the war years. Formal meetings of the club are held four times during the school year, but its work of helping the Red Cross and the needy at the hospital goes on all the time. The organization also gives a $50 scholarship to a needy student each year. This scholarship was established in 1923, and each year the scholarship commission chooses a person most worthy of this gift. The almost 30-year-old University House Mothers club is primarily a social group organized to provide a definite place in University society for the housemothers. Card parties, luncheons, and an annual picnic are on the calendar of events for them each year. First organized with about 30 members, the club soon grew until it could not hold meetings in the various organized houses. During the depression years when many of the houses had to close the membership dwindled, but now it is back to normal again. Guests were Wade Arthur, Charles Aylward, Charles Banfield, Richard Barton, William Bennett, Jack Brownell, Marshall Butler, Frank Campbell, Anderson Chandler, Lawrence Diehl, Malcomb Dryden, Everett Gille, John Kangs, Charles Hall, Donald Harris, Ralph Hedges. Mrs. Annie Pillsbury Young and Mrs. Gertrude Pearson were early president of the organization. Mrs. Ralph Baldwin has been president for several years, and has been re-elected for next year. Friday night in the crystal room of the Eldridge hotel. Lynn Craig's "Skyliners" played for the dance. Henry Logan, James Reed, Alan Smith, Glenn Stallard, Wayne Stallard, David Stimpson, Austin Turney, Thomas Warren, James Watt, Frank Wendlandt, Robert Williamson, Keith Wilson, David Cowley, and William Perkins. Chaperons were Dr. and Mrs. Donald C. Bordie, Dr. and Mrs. Theodore H. Aszman, Mr. and Mrs. Waldemar Geltch, Mr. and Mrs. Hovey Hanna, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Calvin, Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Haney, Mrs. C. W. Whipple, and Miss Marie Miller. INVESTIGATE SOUNDSCRIBER the Simplified Dictation System! Navy To Have Farewell Dance - SoundScriber is easy to use because both recorder and transcriber are fully electronic ; : : flip a switch and start talking. Plays back crystal-clear to your secretary. Flat, unbreakable plastic SoundScriber disc handles and files like a letter. No breakage or shaving. Full information is yours for the asking. The naval R.O.T.C. and V-12 units will give a formal farewell party Friday from 8:30 p.m. to midnight in the Military Science building. Invitations to the affair have been extended members of the faculty Frankie Masters and his orchestra will play for the dance. Norma Kennedy will sing and members of the navy unit will present a skit and other entertainment during the intermission. LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE Dinner For Miss Meguiar For Demonstration 738 MASS. Guests at a dinner Wednesday night at Watkins hall honoring Miss Elizabeth Meguiar were Dean and Mrs. Henry Werner, Mrs. Deane W. Malott, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Miss Edna Hill, Miss Marie Miller, Prof. C. P. Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Mix, Miss Beulah Morrison, Mrs. R. G. Roach, and Miss Julia Amida Willard. CALL The Physical Therapy club held its last business meeting with a picnic yesterday afternoon at Clinton park. The Pasadena Tournament of Roses was organized in 1890. Gives Picnic Meeting Wiley's 'Westerners,' Mattern's Caricatures, Ventriloquists Dummy' Entertain Carnival Cowboy music, caricatures, and ventriloquism entertained about 200 band and orchestra members and their dates at a carnival in the Military Science building Friday. "Find out what you really look like," was the sign over the booth where Karl Matter, associate professor of drawing and painting, drew caricatures. The post-war counterpart of the cowboy band that once entertained K.U. crowds appeared when Russell L. Wiley, band and orchestra director, dressed in cowboy regalia, and his 30-piece outfit, made up of members of the University band, played during intermission. The finale of the rodeo was Ben Shanklin's singing "Empty Saddles," as Mr. Wiley explained "the cowboy rides into the forest never to return and his lonely horse comes back to the corral." Alvin Haggard and Constance Cultra, as Frankie and Johnnie, the tap dance team, did "the most difficult steps ever attempted by man," as Frank Stalzer, pianist, played the wedding march. "Doc" Brown, ventriloquist, and his dummy, Dennis McGinnis, were featured at intermission. Playing all characters in a puppet show, "Your Neighbors and Mine," Mr. Brown led the actors through the plight of an inebriate returning home at 3 a.m. AT THE HOSPITAL Admitted Tuesday Kimberly Tuesday Robert Day, PT 9. Bonnie Brown, Corbin. Clarence Atkins, Spooner-Thayer, Frankie Freeman, 1011 Indiana. Frank Darden, PT 8. Carole Ruhlen, Watkins. Nelle Smallwood, Corbin. Tom Watkins, 1641 West Ninth. Jacqueline Woods, Corbin. Dismissed Tuesday Dismissed Tuesday James H. Haertel, PT 7. Mary E. Branigan, 1420 Ohio. Gordon White, Sunflower. Jack Gosnell, 1100 Indiana. William McDonald, 1408 Tennes- IT'S WARD'S For the Finest in CORSAGES CUT FLOWERS PLANTS FLOWERS BY WIRE ANYWHERE WARD'S FLOWERS 910 Mass. Phone 820 TWO BITS Buys you a copy of the outstanding souvenir booklet of the yearaR—— Little Man On Campus Now in BOOKLET FORM 32 pages of the light side of life as cartooned by BIBLER ON SALE THURSDAY