23,1946 APRIL 23,1946 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS bbon PAGE THREE ed the today it of the lieberberg leader adjutant division Sie was beenecee miss the rts de- ws de- After a restful Easter vacation, attention will be turned to term papers, note books, and maybe a quiz or two. This Saturday night there will be the Juvenile Jump at the Military Science building, with a faculty-student skit program highlighting the entertainment. - * * D.U. Dinner Guests Dinner guests at Delta Upsilon before Easter vacation included Patricia Zachman, Sue Blessington, Mary Billings, Mary Morrill, Anne Scott, Barbara Gibson, and Mary Miller. Pledge Phi Chi Phi Chi medical fraternity has announced the pledging of Harold Smith, Lawrence; Russell Bridwell, Topeka; Jake Frazen, Hillsboro; Dewin Lewis, Dodge City, Robert L. Bower, Kansas City, Mo.; and Norman L. Martindale, Chanute. PT-8 Gives Party PT-8 entertained with an Easter party, April 12. The guests, who received baby chickens as favors, were Catherine Piller, Barbara Esmond, Marian Osmond, Mary Hottelzlaw. Mavis Luker, Ellen Small, Letha Nettle, Nathan, Gerald Fowers, Mila Williams, Wanda Lee Dumier, Norma Jeanne Revell, Joane Clough, Jane Williams, LeVerna Schultz, Virginia Osborne, Mary Katherine Johnson. Mary Branigan, Loree Lotis, Laura Griffith, Margaret Robinson, Mary Lou Bonjer, Helen Mather, Mary Breed, Ann Hisox, Elizabeth DeArmond, Patricia Washburn, Virginia Powell, Virginia Jose, Martha Jo Easter, Renee Jose, Martha Gretzer, Joann Ruese, Janet Taylor, Mary Katherine Booth, Elizabeth Young, Helen Miller, Elizabeth Sanden, Marjorie Peet, Patricia Vance, Janis Burkholder, Elizabeth Leighton, Marilyn Frizell, and Beverly Peslev. Chaperons were Capt. J. V. Peterson, Comdr, and Mrs. R. J. Baum and Lt. and Mrs. J. P. Epps. Sig Ep Guests The following were guests of Sigma Phi Epsilon on a hayrack ride and picnic April 13: Mary Peet, Kathleen Wiley, Josephine Hurst, Doris Jane Demaree, Marjorie Cochran, Louise Murray, S.K. Easter Dinner Guests at a Sigma Kappa formal Easter dinner April 16 were Wallace Desterhaft, Jack Staples, Robert Reed, Kenneth Maddux, Richard McWilliams, Franklin Palmer, Robert Sherrer, William Holloway, James Findley, Chandler Boucher, Robert Freeman, Kenneth Lewis, Donald Jarrett. William Quiring, John Wilcox, Richard Purcell, Fred Coulson, Loren Burch, James Hosman, William Passell, Warren Jackson, Raymond Schmidt, Robert Peniesti, Robert Coshaw, Greig Thomson, Harold Hanshaw. Kenneth Richardson, Robert Mickle, Richard Laub, Kenmeth Olson, Buford Tribble, Thomas Conly, Arnold Weyland, Richard Beach, Harry Lees, Edwin Marks, Burbine Edmondson, Mr. and Mrs. Rex TELL ME, DOCTOR How to Stay Out of the Hospital - By R. I. CANUTESON, M.D. (Director, University Health Service) The little things in life are responsible for many discomforts and aching feet are no exception. A weak arch or painful callous can change an entire personality. Commonest foot troubles are due to weak arches, either the longitudinal arch or the transverse arch which really isn't an arch at all; callouses or "stone bruises" on the bottom of the foot; and the ordinary corn. Many people come equipped with weak feet; others acquire flat painful arches from improperly fitted shoes, too high heels and aversion to exercising the feet. But no one is born with corn or callouses. They are the products of wearing shoes. As a rule, the first pair of shoes put on a child has the correct lines for the normal shape of his foot. By the time he is old enough to walk, shoe styles are based on the vague ideas of the designers rather than on human anatomy. The toes are crowded producing corn at points of pressure over the toe joints. The transverse arch is squeezed and rounded and callouses form. High heels cause the foot to "pronate" (turn inward), the long arch weakens, and body weight falls forward on the all ready pinched transverse arch. One of the most sensible fashions ever inaugurated was the wearing of low heels by women. As a result fewer college women than men have painful feet. One of the best things that has happened to many men was a pair of G.L shoes. A flat weak arch isn't improved by an arch support. Quite the contrary. Foot exercise is restricted and the arch becomes weaker. Feet don't become flat by walking on them — unless the load is too heavy. Weak feet, not result of congenital development, can be greatly relieved by the simple expedient of properly fitted shoes, foot exercises that can be done in the evening while you are studying, sometimes elevation of the inside of the heel, and walking with toes straight ahead or a little pigeon-toed. And the corns and callouses? Again properly fitted shoes, and relief of pressure by means of pads—not the all-purpose drugstore type—but pads fitted to your needs, and gradual removal of the thick skin that forms the corn or callous. So when the first hot summer days come and your dogs ache, heed their complaints. You can't be happy if your feet hurt. Morriss, and Mr. and Mrs. John Blair * * * Guests at Corbin hall April 14 were Helen Watts, Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Richert, Robert Richert, Max R. Streeet, Charles Pursell, Jay Whiteford, Marylee Masterson, Emalouise Britton, William Dosland, Mr. and Mrs. Ben McGraw, Thomas McGraw, Martha Jo Easter, Estelle Ruesler, and Katherine Black. Visit Corbin Expert Shoe Repairing SHOE REPAIR DEPARTMENT OUR NEW IN INSTANT SERVICE Royal College Shop A.A.U.W. To Have Fun Fest Tomorrow 837-39 MASSACHUSETTS A professional ballerina, a LatinAmerican song and dance trio of University students from Panama, games, square dancing, a floor show, and dancing will highlight the all-community Fun Fest tomorrow night at the Lawrence Community building. The fourth annual Fun Fest, sponsored by the Lawrence branch of the American Association of University Women as a benefit for civic projects will be held from 8 until 11 p.m. E. C. Buehler, speech professor, will be master of ceremonies for the floor show-and will award special prizes, which include nylon hose and home-baked cakes, to the winners of bridge and bingo games. Miss Joie Stapleton, assistant professor of physical education, is general chairman of the group. Gordon and Murray McCune, Tulsa, were recent guests of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Visit Sig Alph Orange seed contains enough oil to make commercial extraction profitable. Nurse Refresher Course KU.'s first refresher course for nurses began today and will continue through Thursday, conducted by the School of Medicine in Kansas City. More than 200 nurses were expected to enroll. The Erie canal was opened in 1825 Sunflower Dames Elect Mrs. Walter H. Lucas, Jr., was elected vice-president of the Sunflower K.U. Dames at a recent meeting, Mrs. Robert P. Hagen, president, has announced. The next meeting will be April 24, when a lecture on interior decorating will be given at 8 p.m., April 25, at the clubroom. 911 Mass. St. Students' Jewelry Store 42 Years it's great- it's true THE MAN'S MAGAZINE FOR MAY KING OF THE GAMBLERS Don't miss your copy — at your favorite newsstand today! It's a TRUE exclusive—in book-length to give you the whole story of the amazing, unique but perfectly real character who started riding a bicycle on a tight rope, who ended as the world's most famous chance-taker and gamester. Read Nicky Arnstein's own story, told by Nicky himself in TRUE, the Man's Magazine. Paul Gallico bets that 90 percent "of the guys I know hate the names they were stuck with!" But there's nothing to the job — and he shows you how to do it in the May True, the Man's Magazine. Don't miss this famous writer's "IVE HATED MY NAME" HOW TO NAME YOUR BOY by Paul Gallico DELUSIONS OF LANDIS That's the diagnosis of ex- Senator Happy Chandler's condition since he became "Czar" of the world of swat. Jonh Lardner — columnist and sportscaster and now analyst — sends one sizzling over the home plate in this issue of TRUE, the Man's Magazine. UNHAPPY CHANDLER by John Lordner 21 dead-1 clue At 1:07 a.m., Oct. 1, 1910, the 4-story fortress-like structure that housed the Los Angeles Times was reduced to a flaming inferno by two explosions and fire. William J. Burns' tracking down of the murderers is a crime classic—and every word is true. 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