JANUARY 23,1946 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1946 PAGE THREE ental ring. arles e of ripppopeers KKG ions. other 131. SOCIALLY SPEAKING Becky Vallette, Kansan Society Editor --ber in designated cities. The sorority has a National Non-Partisan Council which suggests to congress and supports bills from which professional people can benefit. Headquarters are in Washington, D.C. Thomasina W. Johnson, an AKA attorney, is the official lobbyist. New courses, new teachers, new notebooks, pretty days, more parties, more sleep—they'll all come with the new semester. That is, if it ever comes! And, speaking of this new lease on campus life, several organized groups are looking ahead to the spring semester by choosing new officers. A. O. Pi Installs Officers Alpha Omicron Pi has announced the installation of Marguerita Kerschen, president; JoAnn Tindall, vice-president; Marilyn Voth, recording secretary; Beverly Rietz, treasurer; Carol Long, corresponding secretary; Helen Mater, rush captain; and Juanita Satterlee, social chairman. Pi Phi Chooses Officers Newly elected officers of Pi Beta Phi are Carol Mayer, president; Eugenia Hepworth, vice-president; Patricia Penney, corresponding secretary; Betty Lay, recording secretary; Mary Gayle Marsh, treasurer; Mary Longnecker, assistant treasurer; Jane Priest, pledge supervisor; Barbara Varner, rush captain; Marilyn Erway, assistant rush captain; Carolyn Campbell; Nancy Love, Adrienne Hiscox, censors; Frances Chubb, intramursals chairman; and Imogene Billings, song leader. Jayhawk Veterans Elect Included on the executive council are Patricia Williams, June Smalley, Miss Mayer, Miss Hepworth, Miss Priest, Miss Marsh, and Miss Chubb. Theta Celebrates Founder's Day Members of the Jayhawk Veterans organization elected the following officers at a recent meeting: Michael Kuklenski, president; Lawrence McDaniel, vice-president; George Parmele, secretary, and Richard Carmean, treasurer. Theta Celebrates Founder's Day Kappa Alpha Theta celebrated its 76th annual Founder's day, by having a desert Saturday. The Lawrence alumnae were guests. Indianapolis. (UP)—An Indianapolis firm is advertising a one-man portable elevator which it says will "elevate down as well as up." FRIDAY - SATURDAY "Texas Panhandle" and "Capt. Tugboat Annie" First Negro Sorority Has K.U. Chapter NADYNE BREWER ... Delta chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha was organized at the University Nov. 15, 1915, just 7 years after the founding of the national chapter in 1908 at Howard university in Wash., D. C. AKA, as the sorority is commonly called, was the first sorority among Negro women and now has 166 chapters with a combined membership of more than 10,000 members. The sorority has a quarterly publication known as the Ivy Leaf. Salmon pink and apple green are AKA colors; its flower is the tea rose. The pin is a green enamel ivy leaf, with gold letters, encircled with moulds. Formerly the chapter house was located at 1701 Ohio street. At present a house at 1731 Ohio street accommodates part of the members. Mrs. Mabel Pitts is housemother. Annual social activities include a spring party, a patron's party, a hitchiker's stamp for actives and pledges; and a Founder's day banquet which is celebrated with the graduate chapters of Lawrence, Topeka, Kansas City, and Kansas City. Mo. A meeting of the annual "boulue" governing body, is held in December in designated cities. The sorority has a National Non-Partisan Council which suggests to congress and supports bills from which professional people can benefit. Headquarters are in Washington, D.C. Thomasina W. Johnson, an AKA attorney, is the official lobbyist. New Orleans, La (U.P.)— Don't smoke on a dance floor. Don't draw caricatures on the tablecloth. What NOT to Do, By a Headwaiter Don't whistle or wave a knife at the waiter. Don't write phone numbers on the powder room wall, and don't order a zombie when you should be drinking something with less sting. Don't do any of that if you want to be Maurice Martelle's "ideal restaurant customer." Martelle, a local headwaiter, has been caterer and maitre d'hotel for years. "You'd be surprised if you knew what the waiter knows about you by the time you've finished your demi-tasse," said Martelle. Boston. (UP)—Here's a way to get around the "no dogs" signs in many apartment houses these days: So We Can't Keep Dogs Mrs. Sally Stearns of Boston has a pet raccoon which lives in her apartment. She picked up the animal several years ago on a Rhode Island highway. She says he has been the perfect pet ever since. Naydeh Brewer, a senior in the School of Fine Arts, is president of the local chapter. Other officers are Mary Jenkins, vice-president; Phyllis Jackson, recording secretary; Julia Richards, corresponding secretary; Ferne Carter, treasurer; Helen Pierson, guide; Ruth Whitley, sentinel; Bettylu Cespedes, dean of pledges; and Julia Fields, reporter. Pledges, known as Ivy Leaves, are Harlene Anderson, Maxine Flowers, Irene Mahone, Davida Jones, Wanda Tyler, Fannie Fisher, Josephine Giles, Mrs. Thelma Garner Hamilton, Dorothy Pearson, Lelia Strayhorn, Janice Green, Velma Love, Barbara Groves, Evelyn Swann, Marvelyn Swann, and Elizabeth Johnston. DRAMATIC WORKSHOP Productions ENTIRELY STUDENT PRODUCTION 2) "Thank You, Doctor" JANUARY 24,8 p.m. 3) "Happy Journey" FOUR PLAYS 1) "Too Much Business" 4) "Submerged" (Strictly V-12) FRASER THEATER AT THE HOSPITAL Theodore L. Williams, 1100 Indi- theodore L. Williams, 1100 Indi- Ada Koppe, 1522 Louisiana Charles Rockhold, 1407 Kentucky Mary Worrell, 1621 New Hampshire. Ada Kopke, 1232 Louisiana Admitted Monday Alfred G. Hoh, PT 8. Alfred G. Hoh, PT 8. Mary Asher, 1246 Oread. Joan Poorman, 1246 Oread. Mary Ashler, 1240 Oread. Joan Power, 1246 Oread. Dismissed Monday August Fleming, 1140 Mississippi. Evelyn Ford, 1325 Pennsylvania. Dismissed Tuesday Oval West, Lindley hall. Virgil Haney, Battenfeld. Franzena Jackson, 1236 Oread. Elizabeth Bradford, 1145 Louisi- Mary Hatch, Miller hall. Marjorie Austin, 1247 Tennessee. Marjorie Austin, 1247 Tennessee. Ralph Hedges, 1111 West Eleventh. Caroline Merritt, 1339 West Campus. Orain N. Carter, 1339 Ohio. Mary Jane Zollinger, Locksley hall. Beverly Baumer, 1200 Louisiana. Beverly Baumer, 1200 Louisiana Helen Sanders, 707 West Twelfth See Page 4 GRANADA Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 ENDS TONITE! It's a Dancing, Romancing, Entrancing Technicolor Musical! Fred Astaire "YOLANDA and the THIEF" in TECHNICOLOR Lucille BREMER Frank MORGAN THURSDAY—3 Days BOGIE and VAN ON ONE PROGRAM Humphrey BOGART Ann SHERIDAN "IT ALL CAME TRUE" 2 Giant Star Shows Van Johnson FAYE EMERSON "BORN FOR TROUBLE" Sat. Owl - Sunday ALL WEEK LOOK WHO'S BACK "What Next, Cpl. Hargrove" ROBERT WALKER Fibber McGee 'n' Molly Tops Fibber McGee n "Molly Tops New York. (UP)—The comedy, team of Fibber McGee and Molly was ranked today as America's top commercial radio program of 1845, according to the ninth annual poll of 1,100 newspapermen in de- throughout the country. A Man Without a Country The two also were voted the top ranking comedy team of the air. Adair, Ia. (UP)—J. H. Porter claims both Clay and Platt counties in Missouri as his birthplace. His parents' home was on the dividing line. Manilla. (UP)—A Filipino army officer described today how "merry-making" Japanese pushed 16 American soldiers into a sand pit and killed all with shots or bayonets. Mary Martin, 1737 Mississippi. Donald Fricker, 1408 Tennessee. Robert Light, 1025 West Hills. Lola Branit, 1339 West Campus. Betty Brothers, 2229 West Drive. Barbara Rivard, Corbin hall. Yearned! EXTRA Color Cartoon "THE GOOD EGG" Latest News Events ALL WEEK SUNDAY