28,1946 MARCH 28.1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE age; able a last started wrencre all the wrencre- veter are uee-ced at some (of our inflower, compact, just need into award to a there are year or sing four evident, I additions may be may be ke bar- not as d have s comricts of scale).eed and meeting e lawns with the e being Village II are there are niningsles would ever, we out oat walls argundy window ills, and I can on a ad sun- at, sad- believe in with a very ust ex- ving a we do or the quar- ARTEL 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 motive from bearing housing age. highest man foraws that complete,interest ough, is the sub picture, resente reme tainse in cas fin-raining g sen which at two you have cats by Daily. and let of the V. ASLEY - More s were 5,600 age of Spring is here and the weekend is crowded with social events so cramming for midsemester examinations will have to be postponed un- he might better, have navy jumps, will give a dance, bars to mime, in Friday, in the galleyroom of the Militarv Science building. Warren Saylor's band will play for the dance and competitive skirts will be given during inter- mission by each PT house. A prize will be awarded the winning skit. T. R. Brayman, PT 10, is chairman of the dance committee. Chaperones will be Comm, and Mrs. R. J. Baum and Lt. and Mrs. J. P. Eppes. Also on Friday the Osage County club will give an informal dance, 8 p.m. to midnight, in the Kansas room of the Union. Saturday night is "the big night" for the engineers who will give their annual Hob Nail Hop in the ballroom of Military Science. Johnny Coon and his band will play for the semi-formal dance which is closed for engineers and Engineering Queen will reign over the dance. A sure sign of spring is the hayrack ride to be given by the Nu Sigma Nu 7:30 to midnight, Saturday. Alt Pledges Phi Delt Phi Delta Theta announces the pledging of Michael Alt, Topeka. Sig Ep's Announce Pledging Sigma Phi Epsilon has announced the pledging of Bruce Hoad. Kanna Phi Meeting Friday "All the World's a Camera" will be the subject of the Kappa Phi program, 7 p.m. to 8, in the First Methodist church. Janet Barker is chairman of the program and she will be assisted by Bettie and Ethel Swart, Mary Ellen Rohl, Maxine Bell, Mary Lou Davis, Joyce Durill, Martha Hyde, June Peterson, Carole Ruhlen, Meredith Heinsohn, Lee Von Achen, Beverly Stember, and Rita Wicklin. Installation for recently elected officers will be held at the meeting. Corbin Hall Entertains Mary Lou York, Osawatomie, was a guest Monday and Tuesday at Corbin hall. Weekend guests included Jean Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Gates, Mrs. Murrel Harman, and Miss Leola Harman, all of Kansas City, Mo.; and Elaine Ferguson and Dixie Williams, Sterling. 16 Pledge Sigma Nu Sigma Nu announces the pledging of Richard Brown, Robert Berry, Joseph Shephard, Robert Williamson, Richard Dalrymple, Howard Perry, Noel Nystrom, Richard Hodges, Robert Dawson, Donald Burton, William Pattison, Robert Combs, Thomas Miller, J. C. Halliburton, Charles Replogle, and Robert Seaman. Exchange Dinners Another in a series of exchange dinners will be held tonight among the women's organized houses. Members of Pi Beta Phi and Corbin hall will go to Alpha Chi Omega; Alpha Delta Pi and Tipperary hall to Alpha Omicron Pi; Alpha Omicron Pi and Locksley hall and Alpha Delta Pi; Sleepy Hollow hall and Kappa Kappa Gamma to Delta Gamma. Jolliffe hall and Sigma Kappa to Chi Omega; Foster hall and Kappa Alpha Theta to Gamma Phi Beta; Ricker hall and Gamma Phi Beta to Kappa Alpha Theta; Delta Gamma to Kappa Kappa Gamma; Chi Omega and Miller hall to Sigma Kappa; Watkins hall and Alpha Chi Omega to Pi Beta Phi; Alpha Chi Omega to Corbin hall. 'Bowery Brawl' Is Sig Ep Favorite Gamma Phi Beta to Foster hall; Chi Omega to Jolliffe hall; Alpha Delta Pi to Locksley hall; Sigma Kappa to Miller hall; Kappa Alpha Theta to Ricker hall; Gamma to Sleepy Hollow hall; Alpha Omicron Pi to Tippier hall; Pi Beta Phi to Watkins hall. A. T. O.'s Pledge Seven Alpha Tau Omega announces the pledging of Theodore Dover, Nashville; Lowell Case, Independence; Grant Miller, Iola; Richard Cory, Eudora, Joseph DeLapp, Evanston, Ill.; Robert Gordon, Independence; and Chester Dillon, Downs. HARRY HUGHES The Sigma Phi Epsilon social calendar is highlighted in the fall by the Bowery Brawl, a costume affair in the setting of the gay '90's. Other Sig Ep parties include the Black and White winter formal, and the annual spring Golden Heart ball, where reproductions of sorority pins are used as decorations. Sigma Phi Epsilon was founded at the University of Richmond in the fall of 1901 and includes 84 chapters and over 30,000 members. This fraternity was a charter member of the National Interfraternity council. The Sig Ep chapter at the University recently became active following a three year war-time absence from the campus. Plans are being made by the chapter to build or purchase a chapter house for next year. Kansas Gamma chapter was formed at the University of Kansas in April, 1923. Two of the charter members of the chapter were Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post, and Dr. James Naismith, inventor of basketball. The fraternity pin is heart-shaped, enclosed by pearls. The colors are red and violet, and the flowers are roses and violets. Other members of the active chapter are Robert Barnes, Ralph Coldren, William Burt, Karl Kappelman, Lindley Hines, Thomas Harkness, Howard James, Irvin Hayden, Daniel Coats, Clarence Jarrell, William Ogg, and Charles Boisvert. Chapter officers are Harry Hughes, president; Glenn Kappelman, vicepresident; Jean Fisher, comptroller; Leroy Krug, historian; and William Feeney, secretary. Pledges are: Edward Beasley, Arthur Ruppenthal, Kenneth Peters, Bruce Hoad, Larry Baker, Victor White. Idaho Falls. (UP)—Colin Mackenzie put up a sign in a cafe yesterday. It read: Wants Farm Girl With Churn; Object: Matrimony "Will marry any farmer's daughter who has a cow and can make butter." Navy infantry drills have been moved from the drill hall to the drill field south of Robinson gymnasium, it was announced today. Drills are held at 4:30 p.m. Tuesdays and 10 a.m. saturday. Navy Moves to Drill Field "Ive tried everything else to get butter," Mackenzie said. "Maybe this will work." It was signed "Desperate." 'This Dress? It's Just an Old Sack, And She Isn't Kidding, Either New York, (UP)—Eastern women are putting on the feed bag these days, and it has nothing to do with eating their dinners. It's an old idea they've picked up It's an old idea they've picked up from their Southern cousins and now, in the best rural tradition, women in the Greater New York area are bustling around in home-made dresses which only a few weeks before served as wrappers for some cow's favorite breakfast food. E. S. Halstead and Co., Manhattan manufacturers of the feed bags, find that it's impossible to meet the constantly growing demand. Vice-Pres. Harold C. Halstead said, "We turn out 200,000 bags a month, or approximately 2,400,000 a year, and it doesn't even half-way supply the demand." Each bag represents about a yard and half of printed cloth and Halstead estimated that it took approximately three bags to make a woman's dress with two doing the job for the younger girls. This means that roughly 800,000 dresses a year come up the feed bag route. 11 Faculty Members Attend Science Meeting The Halstead bags are made of cotton fabric. Each one has a definite colorful pattern. Prof. A. J. Mix, Prof. Worthie Horr, Prof. M. W. Mayberry, and Ronald Mac Gregor, graduate student, of the botany department, and Prof. O. O. Stoland of the physiology department will attend the meeting Thursday through Saturday. Prof. H. B. Hungerford and Prof. Ray Beamer of the entomology department left Monday for St. Louis. Prof. Donald F. Farner, Prof. E. R. Hall. Prof. Mary Larson, Mrs. Ruth McNair and Miss Dorothea Franzen of the zoology department, and Prof. Joao Moojen from the University of Rio De Janerio, Brazil, and Prof. Manuel Maldonado from the Polytechnic Institute of Mexico City, visiting professors, expect to attend the meeting Friady and Saturday. "We generally go to the dress shops to get our color schemes," Halstead said, "and we put them out with almost every imaginable combination. Flower designs go over great, and so do some of the solid colors." It has long been the custom in the rural South for women to use flour sacks to make their own underclothes, especially pants. "But they're using our sacks for complete dresses." Halstead said, "and the demand isn't centered in any one spot. We can sell them from coast to coast. Women in New York state buy just about as many as women in any other section. I Eleven University faculty and staff members are attending the meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in St. Louis this week. 30 Boys To Take Summerfield Finals Allotments to scholars guarantee their expenses for eight semesters of study at the University. The scholarships are maintained from a fund provided by a graduate, Solon E. Summerfield, New York, N.Y. About 30 high school seniors of the 183, who took the preliminary examination for the University Summerfield scholarships yesterday, will be chosen to take the final examination here, April 29 and 30. From those, about 15 will be chosen as Summerfield scholars. The Halstead company doesn't sell direct to the consumer. They sell to a wholesale feed house, which in turn sells to a retailer, and then the women grab them. The bags are also favorite material for homemade bedspreads or curtains. guess they world buy more, if they had more use for feed." Halstead said that his firm probably is the only one in the country turning out the feed bag motifs. Sherwood Gives Paper On Streptococcal Infections Prof. Noble P. Sherwood presented a paper on experimental streptoccal infections in the C-A membrane of the embryonic chick to the University of Kansas Medical society at its meeting in Kansas City, Monday. The paper reported on the experiments on streptococcal infections being conducted by Professor Sherwood, Dean H. R. Wahl, and Pref. T. R. Hamilton of the University of Kansas Hospitals, and Miss Katherine Coldglazier. How Overland Greyhound will deliver When Overland Greyhound's postwar program is completed, new luxurious Super-Coaches and more frequent schedules will actually deliver more scenic miles per dollar. You will relax in the comfort of cushioned, reclining chairs and enjoy pleasant sight-seeing travel at fares near prewar levels. Then—you will get more out of travel by Greyhound—more convenience, more comfort and bus travel more attractive than ever before. UNION BUS DEPOT 638 MASS. PHONE 707 NEW . . . Table-Model Radios Three Styles Now in Stock $2250 Also... AC-DC BATTERY RADIOS Leatherette Case STARLING FURNITURE COMPANY 928 MASS. PHONE 1192