22,1946 JANUARY 22,1946 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE d ring Charle tenr grade icle Zip zippers KKG stions. eather 0611 061231 041 1247 owner and ansan pen band lease e pen Name. ward. SOCIALLY SPEAKING Becky Vallette, Kansan Society Editor Wedeil Speaks Justice Hugo T. Wedell, president of the Memorial association, discussed plans of the memorial at an informal dinner meeting, sponsored by Sachem, at the Lawrence Country club Saturday night. Thirty-three students attended. *** Phi Psi's Give Pary Guests at the Phi Kappa Psi dinner dance Saturday were Dorothy Moffet, Mary Morrill, Alison Jones, Virginia Tolle, Mary Sanderson, Patricia Link, Regina McGeorge, Barbara Olson, Betty Brothers, Marjorie Pellock, Virginia Thompson, Wanda Fausett, Jean Ketzler, Joyce Mahin, Joanose Virginia, Joseph Frances McCleary, Patricia Riegle, Nancy Love, Arleen Feldkamp, Betty Lay, Doris Doane, Joanne Grant, Nancy Jackson, Jeanne Atkinson, Betty Gilpin, Shirley Leitch, Virginia Larsen, Bonnie Holden. Patricia Patchen, Marjorie Free, Frances Maloney, Jane Ferrell, Sue Newcomer, Nancy Stephan, Rose Nell Curtis, Marilyn Erway, Jo Ann McCrory, Shirley Oelschlaeger, Betty June Craig, Alice Louise Brown, Joanna Wagstaff, Doris Bixby, Lucille Craper, Helen Kittle, Jean Ketchum, Elizabeth Davis, Betty Bideau, Harriet Kroeker, Katherine Tukey, Evangeline Pratt, Peggy McGee, and Mrs. Wayne Johnson. Robertson-Doane Pinned Karpa Alpha Theta has announced the pinning of Doris Doane, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Doane, El Dorado, to Charles Robertson, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Robertson, Lawrence. Mrs. Clark Mandigo, who made the announcement at dinner Miss Donne's corsage was an orchid. Assisting in the ceremony was Martha Bonebrake, who received a gardenia corsage. Miss Doane is a sophomore in the College. A freshman in the College, Robertson is a member of Phi Kappa Psi. Pi Phi Entertains Mrs. Niles Colman, Greenwich, Calif., is a guest at the Pi Beta Phi House. Dinner guests Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Priest, Frank, Jr.. Mrs. Jessie Frye, all of Wichita. Bud Watkins, Salina, was a dinner guest Friday. Summers-McMillin Wed Elizabeth McMillin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. H. McMillin, Kansas City, and Sgt. Donald Summers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Summers, Kansas City, were married in the Grace and Holy Trinity cathedral, Kansas City, Thursday. A member of Sigma Kappa sorority, Mrs. Summers was a student at the University in 1945. Gates Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. Horace Gates, Kansas City, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy, to Harvey Lee Nichols, son of Mr. and Mrs. Shade B. Nichols, Knoxville, Tenn. OFFICIAL BULLETIN Catholic church choir will not rehearse tonight. University of Kansas Tuesday, Jan. 22 - * * Tau Sigma meeting, 7.30 tonight, Robinson gymnasium. Wear leotards. Bring $1.75 for dance sandals. Occupational Therapy club, 7:30 tenight, Pine room, Union. Initiation and installation of new officers. Independents Council meeting, 7 tonight, Union. All Student Council meeting, 7:15 tonight, Pine room, Union. Forensic league meeting, 7:30 to-night, East room, Union. The "Bitter Bird" offices in the Union Activities office will be open from 3:30 to 5 p.m. daily. Last meeting this semester of Pre- Nursing club, 6:15 p.m. Thursday, at the Hearth, will be a banquet honor- ing girls leaving for the hospital. ☆ ☆ ☆ A graduate of Kansas City Junior college, Miss Gates is a senior in the College. Before entering the service in 1942, Nichols attended the University of Tennessee. *** Sigma Chi Elects Newly elected officers of Sigma Chi fraternity are Lloyd Eisenhower, president; Robert Mallonee, vicepresident; John Patterson, secretary; John Jackson, treasurer; Myron Rake, historian; and Charles Banfield, tribune. *** Mr. and Mrs. Gerard J. Neuner, Kansas City, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Dorothey Camille, to Charles Moran Gudger II, son of Mrs. Pauline K. Gudger, Osawatomie. Gudger-Neuner Engaged TELL ME, DOCTOR--ness, inability to concentrate, loss of weight, indigestion, difficulty in getting to sleep, or other symptoms that may have an organic basis. Upon admission to the hospital, he immediately falls into a deep sleep from which, during the first two days, he barely can be aroused to take his food. Miss Neuner was graduated from Stephens college at Columbia, Mo., in 1942. She also attended the University of Missouri, and was affiliated with Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Gudger was a student at the University in 1941, majoring in chemistry. Although man was not born to be a nocturnal prowler, college students have established the firm conviction that the night was meant for—well, almost anything but sleep. Or How to Stay Out of the Hospital So classes are filled with student existing in a comatose (as in coma a state of profound insensibility) state between sleeping and waking. Complaints brought to the health service simmer down to plain ordinary fatigue—fatigue, not the result of too much work but of too little sleep. Sleep is necessary for the renovation of body tissues and the removal of the products of fatigue. The amount of sleep required varies with age. At the college age level a minimum of eight or nine hours of sleep is essential to maintain normal physical and mental efficiency. There is no evidence that the first hour of sleep is more beneficial than the third or fourth, but the first hour is deeper. One can become accustomed to sleeping in a boiler factory under are lights, but unusual extraneous lights and sounds disturb the depth of sleep without awakening the sleeper. Since sleep cannot be stored up like fat, spacing the sleep at regular intervals is important. Sleeping all during vacation does not eliminate the need for sleep in the next four months. Cat naps taken in class or whenever the student relaxes seem to reduce the need for sleep, but they do not substitute for regular prolonged sleep. The fatigue victim doesn't admit that he needs sleep. (That would make it too simple for the doctor.) Instead he complains of nervousness, inability to concentrate, loss of weight, indigestion, difficulty in getting to sleep, or other symptoms that may have an organic basis. Upon admission to the hospital, he immediately falls into a deep sleep from which, during the first two days, he barely can be aroused to take his food. Opening Night! January 24 in Fraser Theater Dramatic Workshop To Stage 4 All-Student Productions A regular checking and tuning will keep your car running longer . . . will insure safe driving. MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY Protect Your Car 609 MASS. Well Really, Roger— Providence, R.I. (UP)—To the other honors already lavished on Rhode Island's founder Roger Williams, the Brown University public bureau has added that of being America's earliest sports writer. The bureau claims that in his book "A Key To The Language of America," Williams describes an account of American Indians playing football. With finals coming on in their own sudden way, why not renovate your daily schedule. Eliminate the less essential activities and get eight hours of sleep at least six nights a week. Your new efficiency will surprise your instructors and you. Rubb L. Cannonston M.D. —Ralph I. Canuteson, M.D. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 For That Coke Date Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. --of a Girl Who Liver NOW ALL WEEK THE JERGENS • CHARLES WINNINGER The Racy Embracy Story and Yearned! Color Cartoon "THE GOOD EGG" Latest News Events SUNDAY ALL WEEK Whose Reluctant Now? Indianapolis, (UP)—Ralph Stafford of Indianapolis, a former carnival operator, has disposed of a bear, a badger and several monkeys, left over from his side show, but he is having trouble selling a one-year-old lion through the classified columns of an Indianapolis newspaper. He has had plenty of prospective buyers but all seem reluctant to decide the lion is just the kind of pet for which they are shopping. Kansas' record corn crop was harvested in 1889-273 million bushels. Birthstone Rings Garnet for January Jewelry and Gifts Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 NOW ENDS WEDNESDAY GRANADA WEDNESDAY It's a Dancing, Romancing, Entrancing Technicolor Musical! in TECHNICOLOR Fred Astaire "YOLANDA and the THIEF" Lucille BREMER THURSDAY—3 Days BOGIE and VAN ON ONE PROGRAM Frank MORGAN 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