FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1944 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE RAM isas Rour ag." Spea rne Smi ttie Crun Maude I UNRRAI Rob today d participate ef and Ro in. In that An illion dolla will on pot." illetin changes i esent terr semeste brado. LETIN . 8 Journal publication. on for the people will ab at the evening a interested to attend President roll nce reading for case conference room 21 Tuesday 0. The dose Jesse Jose of English ansan ANSAS c, $1.75 c, Kansas ol year I University class mattte f March Five Independent Houses Join To Give Formal Dance Saturday The women living in houses at 1216, 1244, 1245, and 1332 Louisiana and 1234 Oread will give a formal dance in the Kansas room tomorrow from 9 to $ \cdot _{12} $ m. A Leap Year's dance will be given by the Catholic Student organization in Robinson gym, Saturday. Women are to ask and escort their dates to it. Both men and women stags will be allowed. The dance is for both Catholic and non-Catholic students. Battenfeld Hall—Lf. William Kiene, Cook Field, Calif., was a guest yesterday. Jay James met informally in the English room of the Memorial Union Wednesday afternoon at 4:30, their regular meeting time. Refreshments were served. Jose Portuguez, of Puerto Rico, is a new resident. Alpha Chi Omega—The Rev. Harold Barr was a dinner guest last night. After dinner he gave a short talk. Alpha Delta Pi had an hour dance with PT-3, Wednesday night. Frederick Opel, of Leavenworth, was a dinner guest. Miller Hall—Mr. W. E. Jones, of Garden City; Ruth Payne, and Donna Jean Morris were dinner guests last night. Kappa Alpha Theta dinner guest last night was Miss Dessa Bush. Phi Kappa Psi—Dean Simms of Baxter Springs was a guest yesterday. Chi Omega—Mrs. C. V. Rice of Kansas City was a luncheon guest yesterday. Harmon Co-op dinner guests last night were the Rev. Homer Jack of the Unitarian church, and Lennie Moe. Phi Beta Pi guests yesterday were Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Kirk of Pleasanton. Delta Gamma—Betty Frank Carey and the Rev. Edwin F. Price were dinner guests last night. Sigma Kappa dinner guests last night were Dr. and Mrs. Calvin VanderWerf. Naval Rivalry In Bouts Tonight Machinist's mates and electrician's mates will pair off with V-12's in Hoch Auditorium at 7:30 tonight in a 13-bottle boxing match open to the public. The army has been asked to attend as special guests, manager Chief Yeoman Starkey declared. All of the boys lack experience in the ring, although some of the V-12's did receive their initial baptism against Haskell a few weeks ago. These bouts are to be used as a basis for determining the Navy fighters to meet Haskell in a return bout in the near future. The bouts, three two-minute rounds each, will be referred by Lt. (jg) Joe Zeller, athletic officer of the ship. 175 Ib. class—Bloom (MM & EM) vs. Kelleher (V-12). The fighters: Lucero (MM & EM) vs. Scalzo (N-12). 160 lb. class—Bauer (MM & EM) vs. Sloan (V-12). Coeds to Entertain At Canteen Dance 165 lb. class — Templel (MM & EM) vs. Bergin (V-12). The weekly Union Canteen dance sponsored by the Union building activities committee will be held from 3 to 5 Saturday afternoon ni the Union lounge. All civilian and service men with activity tickets will be admitted free. Benestante (MM & EM) vs. Moon (V-12). Five Groups Will Perform In Lecture Series in State Kyle (MM & EM) vs. Stubbs (V-12). 155 lb, class—Harvey (MM & EM) vs. Billingsley (V-12). Music will be furnished over the public address system. University women have been invited to help entertain the men. 145 lb. class — Redinger (MM & EM) vs. Hill, H. (V-12). Huff (MM & EM) vs. Hoover, H. Within the next six weeks, five different groups composing a lecture series will give a combined minimum' of 60 performances, Guy V. Keeler, assistant director of the extension division has announced. The groups are sent out through the extension division. Program will be given before Kansas high schools and colleges. Speaking or performing in the series are Robert Briggs, artist; Eldwin Sawhill and Susan Conrad, clay modelers; the Foster quartet of Chicago; the Ethel Hanley Marionette company; and Vernon Peterson, Du Pont research chemist. 135 lb. class — Marceaux (MM & EM) vs. Toomey (V-12). (V-12). Marque (MM & EM) vs. Hunter (V-12). Fisherman (MM & EM) vs Witherspoon (V-12). 125 lb. class- Olin (MM & EM) vs. Harrison (V-12). Modern Asia to Meet Monday The Modern Asia history class taught by Dr. W. W. Davis, who is in the hospital recovering from an appendectomy, will meet at 8:30 a.m. Monday for the final examination assignment, the College office announced today. Vespers Sunday In Majority Year Since Inception Twenty-one years ago the All Musical Vespers were begun at the University. Dean D. M. Swarthout presented the first Vespers program Nov. 11, 1923 in Fraser Chapel in the nature of an experiment, because he had had many suggestions for this sort of musical program. Sunday, the all-musical Vespers will be held for the third time this year with the same type of music that has made them popular for so long. The University A Capella Choir will sing four numbers, "Art Thou With Me" (Bach chorale), "Come Shepherds, Follow Me" (John Bennet), "The Blue Bird" (C. V. Stanford), and "Hosanna" (Christiansen). The Vespers will be conducted at 4 p.m. in Hooch auditorium. The Women's Glee Club will sing three choral numbers, one of which will be "Praise Ye the Lord in Heaven" (Arensky) with Lucile Wagner accompanying on the organ. The string quartet of Waldemar Geltch, Eugene Niniger, Barbara Huls, and D. M. Swarthout will play the "Scherzo in E Minor" (Mendelsohn). Barbara Huls, as violin soloist with the University Symphony Orchestra, will play "Adagio" from "Concerto in G Minor" (Bruch). Prof. G. Criss Simpson will play Authorized Parties Navy PT4, 1245 West Campus, dance at the PT, 9 to 12 m. Saturday. Feb. 19— Houses at 1216, 1332, 1244, and 1245 Louisiana and 1234 Oread, formal dance in the Kansas room, 9 to 12 m. Delta Sigma Theta, carnival at Erickson hall, 7 to 12 m. ISA dance in the Union lounge, 9 to 12 m. Corbin hall, dance at the hall, 9 to 12 m. Pharmacy School, formal dinner dance, 7:30 to 12 m., Haskell cafeteria. Kappa Alpha Theta, buffett supper and hour dance, chapter house, 6 to 9 p.m. Elizabeth Meguiar, Adviser to Women. Delta Tau Deltawinter formal chapter house, 9 to 12 m. University Catholic organization, dance in Robinson Gymnasium, 9 to 12 m. Postwar Housing Is Topic Over KFKU Roundtable Postwar Housing will be discussed over University of Kansas Roundtable on KFKU at 9:30 tonight. The speakers will be Ulysses Rible, associate professor of architecture; Verner F. Smith, associate professor of architecture; and George Docking. the "Prelude" from the "First Symphony" by Vierne. Johann Strauss' waltz, "Tales From the Vienna Woods" will close the Vespers. The trainees are being prepared to do tool planning and some engineering drafting on B-29 planes, he explained. They will be assigned to work according to aptitudes demonstrated in the training course and according to their own preferences. Boeing Officials Find Training Satisfactory Reporting that he found everything "quite satisfactory," Russell Mosser, educational director of Boeing Airplane Company in Wichita, spent yesterday at the University checking the progress of the area-nautical training program. Twenty-five of the 59 women who are training will be employed by Boeing at the end of the course, said Mr. Mosser. Mr. Mosser told Guy V. Keeler, director of the ESTW program that J. E. Schaefer, general manager and vice-president of Boeing, is also well satisfied with the training which is being given future Boeing workers. Of the 75 women trained in the first group to receive instruction here, 70 are still with Boeing in Wichita. Mr. Mosser said the record was considered very remarkable in the light of customary wartime turn-overs. Mr. Mosser, himself is an alumnus, having received his A.B. degree in economics in February, 1940. At present he is working on his master's degree from the University. While attending school here, he worked in the extension division, served on the Men's Student Council and was elected to Phi Delta Kappa and Phi Beta Kappa.