3, 1946 APRIL 9.1946 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE beauty. Me will be love- any The favorite pastime of the week will be concerned with all thoseandelions. Organized houses are planning "digs" followed by buffet suppers and picnics for the diggers. the annual Dandelion Day tomorrow is full of fun and food for allwho participate. The Serenaderswill play for a street dance followingthe digging. Theta Tau Initiates to rea- way of will stand and com- tents and done the Uni- tory in inspiring emulate mission as a ily dis- Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, held initiation services Sunday for Richard Nelson, Robert Kunkle, Lawrence Guy, and Kenneth Borene. Harman Dinner Guests Sunday dinner guests at Harman co-op were Wallace Desterhaw, Robert Koenig, Clarence Erickson, Charles Crowley, Dexter Welton, Theron Brayman, and Robert McGinness. Guests at Ricker with its and mu nulation in peace Sunday dinner guests at Ricker hall were Mr. and Mrs. Homer McCalla and Sylvia McCalla, Independence, Kan.; Miriam Hastings, Howard Hastings, Kelly Cuellar, and Robert Bryan, all of Chickasha, Okla. *** Phi Delt Gives Formal Phi Delta Theta entertained with "Dream Girl" formal dance Friday night in the Crystal room of the Hotel Eldridge. Guests were Marjorie Darby, Eleanor Churchill, Alberta Schnitzler, Catherine Piller, Virginia Rogers, Geraldine Powers, Patricia Penney, Jo Ellen Shirley, Mary Ann McLure, Joan Joseph, Imogen Billings, Georgia Lee Westmoreland, Mary Morrill, Sarah Scott, Patricia Cheney, Dorothy Feldkamp. Sally Blake, LaJuan Braden, Eloise dodgson, Nancy Miller, Elizabeth Sifers, Mary Morris, Carol Mayer, Nancy Goering, Elizabeth Priest, Gloria Hill, Barbara Olson, Carolyn Campbell, Mary Valentine, Irishee Shull, Mary White, Josephine Rome, Barbara Neely, Sue Crabb, Mary Lou Sampson, Virginia Urban, Joan Woodward, Alice Shankland. Jane Hayes, Rosemary Gaines, Mary Zeller, Ella Louise Barbee, Virginia Joseph, Nancy Huelings, Mary Mayle Marsh, Sarah Smart, Beverly Fox, Gerale Kreider, Shirley Otter, Mary Katherine Paige, Patricia Walsh, Margaret Eberhardt, Jane Miller, Marilyn Watkins, Barbara Gibson, Mary Swanson, Janet Taylor. Mary Varner, Irene Sewell, Ruthanne Betlock, Mary Lice Alice White, Edith Marie Darby, Barbara Breed, Mrs. William Martindell, Mrs. E. M. Boddington, Mrs. Forest Wilson, Mrs. James Waugh, Mrs. Stephenall, Mrs. William Barber, Mrs. Martin Hatfield, Mrs. H. L. Kauffman Diane Durham, Jeanne Forney, Jay McPherson, Virginia Britton, Clark Rhoden, Fred Merrill, Clint Kanaga, Arthur Stevens, Pat Munger, all of Kansas City, Mo.; Elizabeth Chubb, Dorothy Erwin, and William Martin, all of Topeka. Mrs. Edward Harry, Manhattan; Shirley Pflumm, Kansas City, Kan.; Barbara Hall, Dodge City; Norma Mendenhall, Emporia; Marjorie Tibbetts, Pueblo, Colo.; and Jeanne Chambers, Iola. Chaperones were Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. Andrew McKay, and Miss Veta Lear. Ipha Delt Guests B. Betty Isern and Mary Simpson were weekend guests of Alpha Delta S. Sunday dinner guests included Mrs. H. L. shipman, Lily Rose Lions, Mrs. Bess Mears, Mrs. Richard Jensen, and Mrs. Lucile Yates Brown, all of Kansas City, Mo.: Mrs. Iris Sellers, and Miss Vada Rankin, Paula; Mayme Coals and Betty Waugh, Iola. --now to Stay Out of the Hospital Entertains S.K. Seniors Mrs. W. J. Keeler entertained with a buffet supper at her home Sunday night in honor of the graduating seniors of Sigma Kappa. Those present were Marian Thomson, Betty Jeanite Whitney, Mavis Lukert, Sheila Guise, LaJune Dunn, Maurine Breitenbach, and Betty Wahlstedt. Phi Kappa fraternity gave a picnic TELL ME, DOCTOR Picnic at Lone Star . By R. I. CANUTESON, M.D. (Director, University Health Service) (Director, University Health Service) A hundred and fifty years ago small pox in epidemic extent was common. It was almost a rarity to see a face unmarked by small pox scars. It was long known that cowpox an animal disease not unlike smallpox in humans—could be spread from cows or horses to humans Edward Jenner, small town English physician, wondered if cowpox a relatively harmless infection—would protect humans against smallpox. On May 14, 1796, he took some matter from a cowpox sore on the hand of a dairy maid and rubbed it into scratches on the arm of a healthy 10-year-old boy. A cowpox sore developed and then healed. Two months later Jenner tried unsuccessfully to infect the boy with smallpox. Thus was born scientific vaccination against smallpox. Today smallpox vaccine is produced under strictest precautions and包aged in individual sterile doses. Pressed into the skin—the scratch method is absolote—it produces in the person who does not have immunity to smallpox a pustule less than dime-size, which heals in three to four weeks leaving a faint scar the diameter of a lead penil. In the immune or partially immune person the reaction varies from a tiny pimple-like eruption lasting a few days to a slightly larger cluster of pimples disappearing without scar in two weeks. Preferred site of vaccination is on the upper arm. Here healing is rapid, the chance of bruising is minimum and normal activities are not hindered. Vanity sometimes demands vaccination on the thigh—a procedure entirely without merit. Bruising is more frequent, healing is slower and the scar is larger and no more apt to remain concealed. To assure against smallpox, vaccination should be given in infancy, again when the child starts to school, and then at five-year intervals. If immunity persists, there will be no response to re-vaccination; if immunity has waned re-vaccination again establishes protection. Where vaccination is compulsory, smallpox has disappeared. Kansas, without compulsory vaccination, averages about 25 cases a year. The last major epidemic occurred in 1922. Smallpox kills only a few of its victims, but it scars them all. Smallpox is preventable by harmless vaccination. Protection is yours for the asking. at Lone Star lake Sunday. Guests were Billie Jean Burtscher, Marylee Masterson, Bonnie Marlott, Colleen Jones, Twyla Talent, Maybeile St. Lawrence, Mary Ethel Moore, Donna Lou Kelly, Vera Hodges, Maurine Breitenbach Margurite Kerschen, Evelyn Kerschen, Jill Patchen, Laura Schmid, Deloris Ferrall, Betty Sookup, Mari-Smith, Mary Sookmidt, Jane Kandel Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Svoboda, and Mr. and Mrs. O H. Correa. HELLO FOLKS! I was driving a taxi for 12. Now for 3-200. I still work on commission. I will appreciate my old customers and want many new ones. Hours 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. Thank you, Little Bill. -3- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schaefer, and Rev. Richard Schaeffer were dinner guests Saturday at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. James Metcalf is visiting at the chapter house this week. S.A.E. Guests VETERAN WANTS roommate, 16E3 Kentucky 1706R. -1 LOST—Gold plated identification bracelet. Reward. Irene Marshall, phone 3338. -3- CAN TAKE passengers to Wichita or Wellington. Leaving after classes Wednesday noon, April 17, See Mrs. C. A. Balcock K.U. Registra'n Office.-3- WANT ADS LOST—Brown Sheaffer pen in vicinity of Robinson gym on Monday, 8th April. Pen has Bruce Miller inscribed on it. Finder please bring to Kansan office. -1- WANTED—Navy officers uniforms blues, grays, and whites. Also white and gray shirts. Call Alvy or Chalu- pnik, 3386, PT 6. -32 HELP WANTED—For summer, 2 waiters-wages plus room, board. Tips are good! Mo. Yacht Club, Lake Latawana. Phone Lone Jack 317. -6-LOST—GREEN Shaerfe pencil between Green Hall and Frank Strong. Has name on it-Carl T. Campbell. Please return to the Kansan office. 10- LOST—Ring with blue rectangular stone in Fraser or Union washroom Friday. Reward. Call Etatne Boney K.U. 20 or 2958. -10- LOST—Four keys fastened together by a screw, onsite on campus. Reward. Please return to Kansan office. -10- FOR RENT—Nice and clean sleeping room and study for 3 men students at 1541 Kentucky. -10-LOST: Parker life-time fountain WILL GIRL who borrowed Shaeffer crest pencil to sign Jayhawker identification card at Union Book Exchange please return same to Kansan Office. -4-5-8 —green in color, transparent, showing yellow ringlets. Clip does not hug the pen (reason it slipped out of the pocket). It has sentimental values. Return to Kansan office. -9- LOST: Yellow raincoat which was hanging up on second floor of Union building. Please leave at the Kansan office. -9- LOST: Gold top, dark brown shaft Eversharp pen. Name engraved is Irene Bell. Please turn in to Kansan office. -9- LOST—Cameo set out of a ring! Face of a lady! Lost between Robinson gym and Phi Psi house. Reward $5.00. Celeste Beesley, Pi Beta Phi. LOST—Parker 51 bluish gray pencil with silver top, somewhere on the campus Tuesday. Finder please leave pencil at the Daily Kansan office. LOST - Friday, a Sheaffer pen, black striped, somewhere on the campus. Reward. Please call 1769M. -8-LOST - Small black pocketbook at Jayhawker theater Friday night. Contents valuable to owner. Keep money and return purse and contents to Kansan office. No questions asked. -9- STOP at the Courthouse Lunch for good food. Open from 5:30 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. Across from the courthouse. AT YOUR MOVIES --- EXTRA—CARTOON and LATEST NEWS FRIDAY & SATURDAY Rollicking Comedy FRANCHOT SUSANNA TONE FOSTER Louise Allbritton &LUS! Cartoon: "DAFFY DOODLES" PATEE ENDS TODAY BOB HOPE - BETTY HUTTON "LETS FACE IT" WEDNESDAY — 4. DAYS Granada Her Beating Heart Told Her...This is It...The Romance Every Woman Hopes To Know! The Screen's Most Daring Love Story! JOAN FONTAINE ARTURO DE CORDOVA NOW ENDS WEDNESDAY CHRIST. "FRENCHMAN'S CREEK" ALSO: COLOR CARTOON: "Trial of M. Wolf." — NEWS VARSITY ROY ROGERS "Song of Arizona" and WARNER BAXTER "JUST BEFORE DAWN" -ENDS TONITE WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY ALAN LADD Shooting his way into trouble again with a gun in his fast—a dame in his arms—and a tough little mug in his hair!