WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1944 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THREE 13, 1944 baker y Meet t profes- a guest alpha Chi utry frae chap- nee street. james Kenneth Kenneth Howard ge Hiatt, Charley y John- James Af- mansan KANSAS SUTH TIPPIN HEI GORRILL SULZMAN MINE SCOTT JUNE Craig YETTE YOUNG UL HUDSON association association. artising by 420 Madi- Nov. 1 to $1.85 plus $0.44 to July $1.24 tax and Lawrence, the school Uni- amination at office at March 3, ED D. Throat the 302 ice 3200 CAL ient ne 425 ABLES thing Phone 67 ACY 11 Mass. Only ISA Christmas Party Saturday May Become Annual Event The Independent Student associations semi-formal dance Saturday night will be among the numerous Christmas parties planned for the coming weekend. The party will be held in the Union lounge. "Plans are being made by the ISA council to make this party an annual affair if this first one draws a large enough crowd," said Don Alderson, president of the ISA. Music for the evening will be furnished by the Wyandotte high school dance band from Kansas City, Kan. This band has made previous appearance on the campus. Jack Nichols, new business manager for the association, has announced that the party was included in the regular ISA membership fee, but that non members will be admitted at the usual rates. Other members of the ISA council who are in charge of planning entertainment for the four hundred ISA members and their friends, include Ann Scipes, vice-president; Emily Hollis, secretary, Dick Hartzell, publicity chairman, and Pat Graham and Muriel Meineke, representatives at large. Kansan Board Elects New Members, Staff Three new members were elected to the Kansan Board, official governing body of the Daily Kansan, and new staff members were chosen at a meeting of the board yesterday afternoon in the Journalism building. The three new board members are Charles Moffett, College sophomore; Kelma Smith, College senior and Joan Veatch, College junior. Staff members for the Daily Kansan for the next eight weeks will be aprothe McGill, College senior; editor-in-chief; Dolores Sulzman, College junior, managing editor; and Mary Louise Rowsey, College senior, assistant managing editor. The new members of the staff will take their positions after the Christmas holidays and will work a week with former staff members before assuming the full responsibility of their duties. Coed Breaks Ankle In Sledding Accident A sledding accident Sunday night resulted in a broken ankle for Martha Lou Little, College junior and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. She was confined to Watkins Memorial hospital, after X-rays showed a bone fractured in her right ankle. According to hospital reports today, her condition is satisfactory and she may be released within several days. Miss Little's mother arrived last night from Salina. Calendars Are Sold This Week On Campus Two thousand 1945 K.U. calendars will be distributed today and tomorrow in booths set up in Marvin Hall, Frank Strong hall, Fraser hall, Memorial Union building, and downtown stores, Beverly Bohan, Sklar, has announced. Calendars were distributed to faculty members yesterday and calendars will be sold to former students through the alumni office. Provisions have been made forailing the calendars to any part ofe United States on the payment ofa extra charge at the booths at high the calendars will be sold. Theice of the calendars will be theme as in former years. production of ration-free children'spes made from bacon rind hasen authorized and will get under within the next month. Campus Society Phi Gamma Delta - Pvt. Roy Twist of Meade, was a weekend guest. Locksley Hall—Mrs. D. M. Cloud Kansas City, Mo., was a guest Friday. Kappa Sigma — Recently elected officers are Roland Pettig, president; Fred Daneke, secretary and treasurer; John Herrinmich, pledge trainer; David Ballard, master of ceremonies; and Ted Muselwitz, guard. Lee Ethride has been elected president of the pledge class. Miller Hall - Marlahe Woodward was a dinner guest Tuesday. Gloria Schmittendorf was a dinner guest Sunday and Iona Hodeman was a guest Saturday. Edwin Gray, Jose Portuguez Ben Nichols, James Mundell, and O. T. Hayward were recently initiated into the house. Alpha Delta Pi—Dinner guests Tuesday were Mary Alice Pringle, Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. Fred Carman, El Paso, Texas, both former chapter members. John Moore Co-op—Fred S. Montgomery, Prof. Hilden Gibson, Dean Henry Werner, and George Docking vere dinner guests Tuesday. Jelliffe Hall—Earl Barney was a dinner guest Tuesday. Kappa Alpha Theta—Mary Katherine Sims was a luncheon guest yesterday. Pi Beta Fhl—Mrs. A. H. Bruggemann, Lincoln, Nebr., Iota Province President, was a guest of the chapter for several days. A formal dinner was given in her honor at the chapter house last night. Lawrence alumnae present were Mrs. Mike Getto, Mrs. Ed Simmons, Mrs. F. Warner, and Mrs. R. M. Fitzpatrick. Foster Hall—Guests at a Christmas formal party Saturday night were Amos Wilson, Liberty, Mo., Don Harling, Tonganoxie, Dick Williams, Parkville, Dwight Ling, Camp Gruber, Okla, Dean Styer, Ed Wells, Kenneth Knuth, Joe Wampler, Jack Reid, Keith Bradley, Melvin Adams, Eugene Arnold, Edgar Thom a.s. Jerry Harp, Lawrence Litwin, Tom Steinle, Arlie Leising, Jack Kemp, Richard Fricker, Jack Kennedy, Milton Peerson, Bob Kirk, Ray Mann, Olathe, and Van Lattner, Olathe. Canton Police Sales of Bolts The O.P.A. rules forbid a dealer to require a customer to buy a war bond in order to get cigarettes. Chaperones for the party were Mrs. George Foster, Miss Marie Miller, and Mrs. A. G. Roche, housemother. Cannot Force Sales of Bonds Rosemary Farney Weds Theodore Bean At Muskogee, Okla. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Farney, of Kiowa, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Rosemary, to Pvt. Theodore Bean, formerly of Hammond, Ind., now of Camp Gruber, Okla. The wedding took place in the chapel of the First Methodist church of Muskogee, Okla., at 8:30 Saturday evening, Dec. 2. Dr. Leland Clegg read the service. Preceding the ceremony Miss Reva Brown sang "Because" and "Ich Liebe Dich." Following the service the bridal party and wedding guests were entertained by Pvt. and Mrs. G. N. Pendleton. Among the guests were the Misses Peggy Lou Robinson. Ramona Conway, Beth Reimer, June Ehrart, and Catherine Gobert, all from the University of Kansas; Cpl. and Mrs. Bill Teafattiller; T-5 and Mrs. Roy Weissborn Sgt. Durwood Sanderson; and Pvt. and Mrs. Pendleton. The bride wore a powder blue suit with brown accessories. She carried a white ivory covered Bible and wore an orchid corsage. Miss Alice Bossi, business senior and maid of honor, wore a grey dress with a corsage of red rose buds. Ptc. William E. Bishop, of Camp Gruber, served as best man. Mrs. Bean has returned to the University where she is a senior in the College after spending a short time with her husband in Muskogee. Extension Division to Have Christmas Dinner Tomorrow Members of the extension division will have a Christmas dinner, at 6 p.m. tomorrow in Myers hall. Including guests, approximately 70 persons will be present, Miss Ruth Kenney, secretary of the bureau of correspondence study, estimated. After the dinner, games and Christmas carols will conclude the program. A. A.U.W. Groups to Meet Two groups of the American Association of University Women will meet this week. The Recent Graduate book review group will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the home of Dorothy Hagland, 600 Indiana. Mildred Hershey will review "Sep-Cather. mira and the Slave Girl," by Willa The writing group of the A.A.U.W. will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ralph Ring, 1245 Louisiana. Like K.U. the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia has a dean of student affairs. He is Dr. Arnold K. Henry. Penn Has Student Affairs Dean Merry Chirstmas to All The Rapid Transit Co. Your Local Bus Service Eldridge Writes Text For Use in Sociology A new sociology book is being written by Prof. Seba Eldridge, of the sociology department, in collaboration with several other college faculty members. The treatise deals with the fundamentals of sociology, Professor Eldridge said, and will be used as a textbook. Professor Eldridge is acting as general supervisor. His collaborators in the inquiry and actual writing are Prof. Noel Gist and Prof. Brawton Berry, University of Missouri; Prof. Carl M. Rosenquist, University of Texas; Prof. Harold A. Gibbard, Brown University; and Dr. Loren Eiseley, a former faculty member of the sociology department at the University, now at Oberlin college. Professor Eldridge said the book should be completed by next summer. It will be published by the Thomas Y. Crowell company, for whom Prof. Eldridge has been educational adviser for some time. The book, tentatively called "The Social Situation," will take the situational approach to the subject, dealing with eight distinct phases. More emphasis will be given to organized civic and commercial work in which sociology students will be interested after graduation, Prof. Eldridge说.The plan is to stress the solution of specific problems by having students use it as a text. Foods Class Will Hold Tea In Fraser Tomorrow Afternoon The weekly tea of the Foods III class will be held from 3:30 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the dining room of the department of home economics in Fraser hall, Miss Edna Hill, professor of home economics has announced, Mrs. Anne Detlor, student in the class, will be the hostess. Each week three organized houses are invited to attend the tea as guests of the Foods III class. This plan will be continued until all of the houses have been invited. All faculty members and students are invited to the tea Thursday, Miss Hill said. No successor to A. D. Schick, former campus policeman, who resigned last week after working for the University for seven years, has been found. No Cop for Campus Yet Union Plans Midweek And Canteen Dance The Canteen dance Saturday afternoon will be sponsored by the Delta Gamma and Alpha Delta Fi sororities. These dances for servicemen enrolled at the University are a project of the Student Union activities committee. The dance will be from 3 to 5 p.m. in the men's lounge, Jane Atwood, social chairman of the Union, announced. The Union committee has also completed plans for a New Year's party to be held December 30 in Hoch auditorium. A regular midweek dance has been scheduled for tonight from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in the men's lounge. The Navy V-12 band under the direction of Don Cousins will play for the dance as usual. ASTRP Enlistments Will Close This Month Enlistments in the Army Specialized Training Reserve program, for college training with all expenses furnished, are scheduled to close Dec. 31, Major Homer C. Merrick, commanding officer of the Kansas recruiting district has announced. Boys between 17 years and 17 years, 9 months of age, who have completed high school or will graduate before March 1, 1945, are eligible to apply for the training. No further collegiate training work will be offered by the army according to present plans. BUY U.S. WAR BONDS GIVE HER A SWEATER Any gal will tell you that HIS NIBBS station wagon sweaters are ultra acceptable. We 'em in--- Lorkspur Cherry Yellow Aqua Wood Fuschia Chartreuse Blue Black Sizes 34 to 40 $7.98 Weaver's