MAY 8,1946 --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE By MARTHA JEWETT, Society Editor Harman Gives Formal Spring weather is here at last, and maybe it will stay for a while. The sun is inviting us to play tennis and loaf, and professors are inviting us to crack a book and study a little. The big question of the moment is whether to follow the weather man or your conscience. "Country gardens" was the theme for the spring formal dance held at Harman.go-op Friday night. Guests included Darrrell Wright, Victor, Votaw, Russell Bozarth, Charles Dillon, Robert Dreizler, Francis Krohn, Dexter Welton, Warren Shaw, L. D. Postletwaihe, John Awald, Charles Crowley, Clarence Erickson, Jr., Eugene Petesch, Richard Olmstead, Robert Kenogi, John Exley, John Harbaugh, Marvin Wray, and Robert McGinness Chaperones were Mrs. A. R. McAdoo and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Montgomery. Visit at Miller Hall D.U. Has Buffet Dinner Sunday dinner guests at-Miller hall were Charles Ecklund, Mrs. Iva Rothenberger, Donald Thompson, Charles Chitty, Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Montgomery, Cpl. Hal Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wegscheider and son, Charles. Guests at Locksley Sunday guests at Locksley hall were Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Unruh, Pratt; Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Wellborn, Lois Wellborn, all of Lyndon, and Bill Brazier, Kansas City, Kan. Guests at the Delta Upsilon buffet dinner Friday night was Jo Anne Beyerley, Virginia Fopman, Norma Wittaker, Joe Lee Abbot, Jo Anne Gardner, Bonnie Chestnut, Neva Jean Unrush, Mary Jane Waggoner, Barbara Gibson, Marylyn Maloney, Jeanne McGrew. Jo Anne Grant, Patricia Ferguson, Mary Longenacker, Geraldy St. John, Silizabeth McCleary, Sue Newcomer, Barbara Hume, Alice Goldsworthy, Mary Morrill, Ruth Payne, Mary Miller, Guenivere Goerz, Sara Jayne scott, Martha Lou Little, Ruth Granger, Joanne Johnson, Dorothy Jean Safford, Sally Houck, Mr. and Mrs. George Keene, Mr. and Mrs. James McIntire, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baer. Tekes Have Tavern Party Roulette tables, bars, and a fifteen-minute floor highlighted the Teke Tavern party, annual spring formal of Tau Kappa Epsilon Friday night. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Jim Logan, Kansas City, Mo., Prof. and Mrs. J. A. Burzle, Alma Robison, Glenda Leuhring, Barbara Olson, Arlene Nickels, Lyn Spencer, Betty Bradford, B. Ann Brown, Eloise Hodgson, Mila Williams, Helen Lucas, Yvonne Smith, Betty Rae Thomas, Nancy Goering, Betty Gillip, Barbara Day, LaVaughn Hodgson. Virginia Cassell, Marylyn Smith Patricia Walsh, Donna McChesney Lois Linck, Harriett Harlow, Bebe Horine, Mary Jane Holzman, Judith Tihen, Betty Clason, Manhattan, Ann Boles, Emporia, Barbara Vanderpool, Wellington, Doris Kingsbury, Grenola, and Ellen Louise Hart, Kansas City, Mo. ATO Casino Party A Traditional Event BRUCE COFFIN * * * A traditional Casino party highlights the social activities of Alpha Tau Omega. The ATO's own all of their own gambling tables for the Casino party and huge poker hands and die adorn the walls and ceilings of the house as decorations for the party. Other social features include the Christmas formal, Founder's Day banquet, monthly buffet suppers, and formal Freshman and Christmas dinners. Alpha Tau Omega was founded Sept. 11, 1865, at Virginia Military Institute. It now includes 95 chapters and has over 44,000 members. Kansas Gamma Mu chapter was founded in the fall of 1901 by 12 students of the University. One of the founders was George J. Hood, who is now a professor in the School of Engineering and Architecture. The ATO's became active again this year after a three-year war time absence from the campus. All but two members of the present Gamma Mu chapter were in the military service. The chapter house, 1536 Tennessee, is the newest on the campus. The fraternity pin is the maltese cross. Colors are blue and gold, and the official flower is the rose. Chapter officers are Bruce Coffin, president; Jean LePage, vice-president; Robert Oberhelman, treasurer; Bill Sims, secretary; George Latham, historian; John Randall, usher; and John Hayne, sergee-at-arms. Other members of the active chapter are Charles Arthur, William Arthur, Ferril Brown, Fred Coulson, Richard Haggard, Howard Hull, Max Howard, James Norman, Kenneth Pringle, Stanley Sterp, Allan Stutz, Don Thompson, Joseph Langworthy, and William Wood. Pledges are Charles Botordf, Jack Brown, Lowell Case, Arthur Clevenger, Rip Collins, Chester Dillon, Richard Cory, Jack Forbes, Robert Gordon, William Halsey, William Holloway, Hubert Johnson, Frank Palmer, Kenneth Richardson, Otto Rueschoff, and William Walker. Sunday dinner guests of Chi Omega were Donald Schriber, Robert Reigle, and William Bright. Guests of Chi O. Visiting Therapeutist Studies at K.U. Miss Jean Secord, of the occupational therapy staff at the Canadian Workmen's Compensation clinic, Toronto, Ontario, recently arrived at the University as exchange occupational therapy fellow to study the training program for occupational therapy students. Mrs. Deane W. Malott, president; Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, vice-president; Mrs. Henry Shenk, recording secretary; Mrs. Leslie L. Waters, corresponding secretary; Mrs. J. D. Stranathan, treasurer; Mrs. Fred S. Montgomery, publicity chairman; Mrs. George B. Smith, social chairman; Mrs. Leland J. Pritchard, program chairman; Mrs. R. M. Davis, finance chairman; Mrs. W. H. Shoemaker, newcomers chairman; and Miss Maude Elliott, Miss Ruth Kenney, and Mrs. George Beal, members at large. Miss Nancie B. Greenman, University occupational therapy instructor, is the exchange fellow observing the classes at the Canadian clinic which specializes in orthopedic cases. The University Women's club elected the following officers at its meeting Wednesday: Miss Secord, a graduate of the University of Toronto, spent the past month at the St. Louis School of Occupational Therapy, St. Louis, and will return to Canada when she completes her work here. The club will meet June 1 with a picnic for the members and their husbands and families in Fowler Grove. These exchange fellowships are sponsored by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis to promote better relations between occupational therapists in Canada and the United States and to exchange ideas. Carter's Stationery for FOUNTAIN PENS Guests of Alpha Chi Mrs. Malott Heads University Women Sunday dinner guests of Alpha Chi Omega were Mrs. Hade Gupton, Greensburg; Mrs. Marjorie Theis Dodds, Miss Evelyn Taylor, both of Kansas City, Mo.; Miss Donna Lee Oliver and Miss Martha Haines, both of Kansas City, Kan., and Paul Luckenbill and Frank Curry. The Louisiana Purchase nearly doubled the area of the United States. Eversharps Parkers Watermans Esterbrooks and Sheaffer Fineline Pencils Letters of introduction will be sent to new students next fall, containing information about the various religious groups and where they meet, it was decided. Religious Council To Give Materials To Danforth as Needed Money with which to purchase materials as they are needed will be the Student Religious council's gift to Danforth chapel, members of the council decided at a meeting Thursday. This gift is to be made from voluntary collections taken at the various Sunday night group meetings. A committee was appointed to make further plans for Religious Emphasis Week, with Edgar Thomas as chairman and Frances Hadley, Caroline Morriss, Jean Johnson, and Roberta Jacobus as assistants. Approval was given plans to hold union meetings this summer led by Charles Dillon. College sophomore. James Crook was chosen chairman of a speakers bureau. A religious activities committee was selected, consisting of Charles Dillon, chairman and vice-president of the organization, Naomi Norquest, and Martha Beth Dawes. A ways and means committee was chosen, headed by Margaret Gruenthal, secretary-treasurer, Marjean Carr, and Harold Timmerman. Alaska has 94,000 square miles of potential farming and grazing land. The physical therapy club had a picnic Thursday at Clinton park. Guests were Catherine Chester, Lilah Rausch, Shirley Eigner, Virginia Amenda, Lillian Simmons, Barbara Artz, Janet Barr, Jean Purdue, Winifred Curtis, and Mabel Thorp. 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