ARY 4,1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1944 PAGE THREE RAM inas Rour Agricultu ix, Doug W. C. Borg wrence h Heck, Dou Maude I Cattie Cru s must taile of their oivor bacteriolog Prof. N the departay. The record care or all major San Diego Harris, stat. training stat. ,, has been Calif. ONDS — Kansan of KANSAS SAS OUISE ROSSMAIR FRANCES ABT ... RUTH TIPPER GUNNELLOY GUNNELLOY UELINE NODLER NODLEAR LAO LEX ONYE JANE JONES BOB BOCI SCHMITTER SHIMKHE MODEMAN Y LOU PERKIN RUTH KREHBIE ssociation association ee Nation advance, $1.50 conduct, Kansas school year e and Universi d class matte post office ct of March DS 66 sses Fitted, ICAL CO Phone 42 quick Service ographs notographs ever made be finished UDIO 721 Mass. UABLES Clothing N'S Phone 67 University Band and Orchestra Will Have Formal Dinner Dance The University Band and Orchestra will have their winter formal dinner dance tomorrow evening at the Haskell cafeteria. The party will last from 8:15 to 12 m. Five other dances will be given by organized houses and V-12 units. Sigma Nu has elected the following officers Bob Stewart, commander; Frank Gruden, lieutenant commander; Ronald Sohn, chaplin, and Bill Lee, sentinel. Guests this week were Lt. Dean G. Ostrum, commander of the chapter last year and now stationed with the army at Ft. Benning, Ga., and Darrel Havener, former chapter member. Kappa Kappa Gamma dinner guests last night were Lt. Max Ko-cour of New Jersey, Lt. Bob Markey, stationed with the army air corps at Garden City, Bud Eisen-hower, and Jim Conard. Pi Beta Phi-Miss Margaret Anderson and Miss Ruth Litchen were Sinner guests last night. Kappa Alpha Theta dinner guests last night were Prof. and Mrs. H. B. Chubb, Dean and Mrs. D. M. Swarthout, Mr. and Mrs. K. W. Davidson, Prof. and Mrs. Karl Mattern, Miss Ruth K. McNair, Miss Beulah Morrison, Miss Viola Anderson; Miss Edna Hill, Miss Lalia Walling, Miss Jean Ogilbee, Miss Marjorie Whitney, Miss Irene Peabody, Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, and Miss Barbara Jewett. Mrs. J. W. Thompson and Miss Mary Thompson of Waterville, will be guests this weekend. Chi Omega—Mrs. R. G. Nichols, Isabel Newismer, Doris Cohn, and Marilyn Eckert, all of Topeka were guests' last night. Phi Beta Pi—Lt. Bruce Brower of Dayton, Ohio, was a dinner guest last night. Delta Gamma—Janetle Coons was a dinner guest last night. Sigma Kappa pledge class had an hour dance with the pledge class of Delta Tau Delta last night. Kappa Sigma has announced the initiation of James Kyle, Goodland, Merle Baker, Fredonia; and Kenneth Carder. Fredonia. Alpha Chi Omega—Lt. Betty Veach, of the WAC's, was a dinner guest Wednesday night. Alpha Delta Pi has announced the pledging of Mary Jane Holfman and Melba DeArmond of Kansas City, Mo. Lt. Betty Veach of the WAC's was a dinner guest last night. Another Union canteen dance will be held Saturday afternoon from 3 to 5 in the Union Lounge of the Union building. All servicemen and civilians with activity tickets will be admitted free. Co-eds Will Entertain Servicemen Saturday Music will be furnished by the public address system. The dance is being sponsored by the Union building activities committee. All University women are invited to help entertain the men. The committee planning the dance includes: Helen Gardner, chairman; Ann Zimmerman, Eugenia Hepworth, Edith MarieDarby, Katherine Foster, Marilyn Maloney, Mary Nettles, and Jane Atwood. Ensign Duncan J. McGregor, a graduate in 1943 who recently completed a five-month course in navy communication at Harvard University, has arrived in Lawrence to spend his two-week leave with his parents, the Rev. and Mrs. D. E. McGregor, 1009 Connecticut street. McGregor Is Home on Furlough Hann to Speak To Church Forum Arthur J. Hann of Topeka will address the afternoon meeting of the young people's forum at the First Christian church Sunday on the subject "Sizzle or Fizzle." Communion will be held in the regular morning services followed by a sermon entitled "A Young Man's Way." The sermon at the Trinity Lutheran church will be "Christ's Leadership Is the World's Greatest Challenge." In the afternoon, there will be a social hour, a fellowship lunch, and a study period. "The Epistle to the Romans" will be discussed. The First Methodist church student class will discuss "Disciplines of Religious Living." The sermon in the morning worship service will be "The Lord's Prayer in a Warring World." At the Wesley Foundation Fellowship, Mrs. Thomas Pearson will review "The Apostle" by Sholem Asch. "Donations to a World Blood Bank" will be the title of the sermon at the First Presbyterian church. Mt. Tats Kushida, Counselor to War Relocation Authorities, will speak to the Westminster Vesper Club. The servicemen student class of the First Baptist church will discuss "Freedom from Want." "The Anvil Wears Out the Hammer" is the subject of the morning sermon. Ed Zimmerman will lead the discussion on "Luxuries a Christian Cannot Afford" at the young people's meeting. The subject of the sermon at the Unitarian church will be "Obey That Impulse." Church of St. John the Evangelist will have masses at 6:30, 8, 10, and 11:30 a.m. Novena for the armed forces is held each Thursday at 7:45 p.m. The young people will have charge of the morning worship service at the Plymouth* Congregational church. Authorized Parties Saturday, Feb. 5— V-12 unit, PT6, party at 1423 Tenn., from 9 p.m. to 12 m. Campus House, party at 1245 Oread, from 7:30 p.m. to 12 m. University Band and Orchestra, formal dinner dance, Haskell cafeteria, from 8:15 p.m. to 12 m. Nu Sigma Nu, dance at Eldridge hotel, 9 p.m. to 12 m. V=12 unit, PT5, dance at Templin Hall, 9 p.m. to 12 m. Phi Kappa Fsi, dinner at 6:30 at the Hearth, dance in Kansas area from 9 p.m. to 12 m. Phi Kappa Psi, dinner at 6:30 at the Hearth, dance in Kansas room from 9 p.m. to 12 m. Elizabeth Megular. Adviser to Women. Yazza-Mann Vows Read Here Tuesday The marriage of Miss Delores Yazza, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pahhee Yazza of Lawrence, to Pvt. R. Keith Mann took place Tuesday evening at the Baptist church in Lawrence. Mann is the son of Mrs. and Mrs. C. J. Mann of Lawrence. Evelyn Cooper, College sophomore was maid of honor. Betty Keiffer and Betty Van Liew lit the candles. Frank Stannard was best man Harry Johnson and Calvin Dresser were ushers. All three are sophomores in the School of Engineering and Architecture. Pvt. Mann attended the University before entering service. After a short furlough, he will return to Bard College, Annandale-on-the-Hudson, N. Y., where he is stationed in the AST. Mrs. Mann attended the Lawrence Business College. She will remain in Lawrence for the present. Newell Jenkins Visits KU On Leave From Camp Butner Lt. Newell Jenkins, a student last year, visited friends in Lawrence this week during a 15-day leave from Camp Butner, N. C., where he is stationed with the infantry. Lieutenant Jenkins was commissioned in September after attending Officers Candidate School at Ft. Benning, Ga. He entered the service in June. 1943. At the University last year, Lt. Jenkins, a resident of Battenfeld hall, was president of Sachem, president of Student Union Activities, and secretary of the Men's Student Council. Adelane's To speed that cupid's arrow on its way . . . and to help it pierce her heart, send your Valentine something soft, feminine and lovely! SWEATERS SKIRTS DRESSES SLACK SUITS Give Her Something Femine! Pan-Hellenic Advised To Limit Spiking, Do More Entertaining Recommending five major changes in sorority rushing rules including no spiking on the day of teas, and an increase in the amount each sorority can spend during rush week, Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, Mrs. Peggy Warrier, and Mrs. Jeanne Thompson from the Lawrence Pan-Hellenic organization attended a meeting yesterday afternoon of the University Pan-Hellenic Council. Changes Benefit Both Parties Mrs. Lawson, chairman of the rush rules committee of the city council, outlined the five changes as follows: (1) No spiking should be allowed on the first day of rush week as has been the practice and spiking on the second day should be binding both to the rushee and to the sorority, (2) each sorority should be allowed to have two large parties in a town during the summer instead of one. At parties of under 12 persons one thing other than a drink should be allowed to be served instead of a drink only as stated in the present rules, (3) Each sorority should be allowed to spend $125 instead of the present limit of $90 during rush week, (4) rule 9, forbidding alumnae to contact rushees during rush week, should govern only Lawrence alumnae and visiting alumnae in Lawrence for rush week, (5) Pan-Hellenic should establish a penalty for each violation, and penalties should be printed in the rush book. In explaining the proposed changes the delegation from the city council pointed out that, at present, the spiking system is unfair to both rushee and sorority because of the legality of "bumping" as late as the last day of rush week. They proposed two summer parties so that a sorority would be able Three Faculty Members Attend Wichita Meeting V. P. Hessler, professor of electrical engineering, presided over a sectional meeting on electrical subjects yesterday. The Friendly Fashion Store J. O. Jones, acting dean and professor in the School of Engineering, will talk on "Water as a State Resources" at the 36th annual convention of the Kansas Engineering society in Wichita today. His speech will be given at the section meeting on sanitary and water resources, which will be presided over by Ogden S. Jones of the geology water laboratory. Action to Be Taken in April Chicago, (INS)—American education "has grown flabby" in the last ten years and has fallen far short of doing its duty for the war emergency, President Franklin D. Snyder of Northwestern University charged yesterday. Education Grown Flabby, Franklin D. Snyder Says "We have extended the elective system so widely that essentials in war have been left out," Dr. Snyder told the alumni association in Chicago. "It is rather shocking when we realize how lacking our system has been when the test of war comes." to become better acquainted with rushes before rush week. The suggestion for the increased amount of rush week expenses was suggested because of rising prices. The delegation said the change regarding alumnae was suggested because it is unfair to penalize a sorority for something which an alumna in another town has done without the sorority's knowledge. The University Pan-Hellenic is now considering the changes, according to Doris Dunkley, president, but will take no definite action until the April meeting. Lets Not Forget VALENTINE For Those in the SERVICE A Small Gift A Card From Home Or Better Yet A WAR BOND Visit Our'Service Men Canteen