RY3,19 I THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1944 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS n Voter Speakers and Prg The Free Community by Esthe en: Tune cords Lisz were the music to 3:30 to 5:30 the music iniding. The by Mari- of *Ferde suite*" will the mem-ogram. Re- will be dis- Kansan ANSAS ISE ROSSMAN RANCES ABTS RUTH TIPPF A GUNSOLYF NODER LODDER, A LEE OXLEY JANE JONEES BOR BOCK MIDENDEON SHOEAKER LOU PERKINS TH KREHBIEL ociation Nation ncee, $1.50 kansas, Kansas, cold year ex- d university class mutter office at of March 3. PAGE THREE raphs ographs er made finished 1 Mass. BABLES clothing hone 675 Six Parties and Dinner Dances Are Authorized for Weekend All parties authorized for this weekend will be on Saturday night. The University Band and Orchestra are giving a formal dinner dance at Haskell cafeteria. Campus House will have a party at the house. Two Navy V-12 units, PT5 and PT6, will have dances at the PTs. Nu Sigma Nu, medical fraternity, has engaged the Eldridge hotel ballroom for its dance. The Phi Psi dinner dance will begin at the Hearth and then move to the Kansas room. Phi Kappa Psi—Red Ellis of Baxter Springs, a member of the chapter here last year, now a bombardier in the Army air corps, is a visitor this week. Chi Omega dinner guests last night were Mrs. Merl Smith, Mrs. O. M. Montgomery, and Mrs. G. O. Pollock. all of Kansas City, Mo. and Mrs. J. M. Porter of Lawrence Gamma Phi Beta — Lt. Dean Ostrum from Ft. Benning, Ga., was a dinner guest last night. Kappa Kappa Gamma luncheon guests yesterday was Mrs. H. Sheldon, Kansas City, Mo. Phi Gamma Delta guests this week are Pvt. Jack Grant and Cadet Wilbur Shanks, former chapter members. Hopkins Hall elected officers at a house meeting last night. They are Kaye Smith, president; Viola Moffatt vice-president; and Evelyne Roeber, reporter. Jollife Hall had an hour dance for PTs 5 and 6 last night. Miss Barbara Jewett Will Discuss Therapy Miss Barbara Jewett, instructor in design, will talk on occupational therapy at a joint meeting of the Psychology club and Psi Chi, national honorary psychology fraternity, at 4:30 p.m. Monday, in room 21 of Frank Strong hall. Miss Jewett, who instructs in occupational therapy, will give an account of actual cases treated by these methods. After the program, the Psychology club will hold an election of officers. All students interested in psychology are invited to attend this first meeting of the club, R. H. Wheeler, professor of psychology, announced. E. D. Hay Will Have Guests E. D. Hay, professor of mechanical engineering, and his wife will have their daughter and grandson, Mrs. Charles Hazen and Charles S., Jr., of Helena, Mont., as guests for two months. Authorized Parties Saturday, Feb. 5— V-12 unit, PT6, party at 1425 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 institute, from 9:45 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 Psi, dinner at 6:30 at the Hearth, dance in Kansas room from 9 p.m. to 12 m. Elizabeth Meguiar. Adviser to Women. YWCA Party to Fete Personnel Director Miss Olive Walser, national personnel director of the YWCA, will be honored with a coffee at 4:30 Friday afternoon at Henley house. Miss Walser will come from New York to interview seniors about the possibility of professional work with the YWCA after graduation This is another in a series of coffees that the YWCA has given for prominent women visiting the campus. The last was for Mme. Betty Barzin, Belgian political writer and lecturer. Jay Janes Pledge 9 After Rush Tea Nine pledges were elected after the rush tea given by the Jay Janes yesterday, Margaret Lillard, president of the organization said. The four independent students living outside of organized houses elected are: Delores Sulzman, Dora Ann Brown, Mildred Hack, and Betty Ann Ball. Five girls elected from organized houses are: Elizabeth Baker, Chi Omega; Ruth Stollard, A O Pi; Bobette Sellers, A D Pi; Frances Morrill, Kappa; and Mary Turkington, Miller. Dr. H. H. Lane, professor of zoology and director of the Dyche Museum of Natural History, will speak to Colloquy classes on "Heredity" tomorrow morning. Pledging for the new members will be at 4:30 Wednesday in the Pine room of the Memorial Union. Lane to Address Colloquy Classes BUY U.S. WAR BONDS Students Present Midwinter Concert In Fraser Theater Advanced students in the School of Fine Arts gave their first of two midwinter concerts last night in Fraser theater. The program was made up entirely of piano, violin, and vocal numbers. Suzanne Schmidt opened the recital with a voice solo, "My Heart Is Weary," (A. Goring Thomas). Doris Turney played a violin number, "Valse Caprice" by Wieniawski. Leona Moreland sang "Immer Leiser Wird Mein Schummer" (Brahms), The "Etude in C Minor" (Chopin) was played by Margaret Thougrass, "O Sleep, Why Dost Thou Leave Me" (Handel) was sung by Patricia McMahon. Handel's "Care Selve" was sung by Jeanette Coons. Anne Krehbiel, pianist, played "Prelude and Fugue in E Minor" (Mendelssohn). Elaine Talley sang "Ombra Leggiera" from "Dinorah" (Meyerbeer). Emadee Gregory played the piano solo, "Barcarolle" (Chopin). Barbara Huls, violinist, played "Mazurka" (Zarzycki). "Non Mi Dir, Bell' Idol Mio" from "Don Giovanni" was sung by Ruth Russell. Lucile Rothenberger played Rubinstein's "Staccato Etude." A violin solo, "Serenade Meian-cholique" (Tschaikowsky) was played by Helen Pierson. Evelyn Mercer sang "Aufenhalt" (Schubert). Chopin's "Prelude in G," "Prelude in F," and "Nocturne, Op. 37, No. 2" were played by Allen Rogers. Nadyne Brewer sang "Mon Coeur S'ouure A Toi Voix" (Saint-Saens). The program was closed with Geogjia Weirnich's piano solo, "Taren-tella" (Liszt). The second of the midwinter recitals will be Feb. 16. Students of piano, voice, violin, cello, and harp will furnish the program. The musicians are students of Ruth Orcutt, Alice Moncrieff, Waldemar Geltch, Meribah Moore, D. M. Swarthout, Jan Chiapusso, Joseph Wilkins, and Carl A. Preyer. the alumnae of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary music sorority, will meet at 8 p.m. today at the home of Mrs. Clifton Calvin, 1504 Crescent road. Mrs. Maurice Clarkson and Miss Kate Caldwell will be assisting hostesses. Davis Recovering From Flu Mu Phi Epsilon Will Meet Today W. W. Davis, professor of history who is ill with influenza in the Lawrence Memorial hospital has been reported to be improving. Professor Davis has been absent from his classes for three weeks. He is expected to return soon, however. CLAPPER AND WHITE--to make your throat and shoulders lovely, too (continued from page one) alism student. It is not known just what comment the chancellor then made. "Of course, we had fun together, but we were unable to play the social game for various reasons." Mrs. Clapper once said. "We were married, and that was uncommon in the University in those days. In fact, there were only four married couples in the whole institution then." Spoke at Celebration in 1941 Left School to Join Star After three years at the University, Clapper quit school in 1916 to accept a position as reporter for the Kansas City Star. Later he went to the United Press bureau in Chicago, rising rapidly and moving from Chicago to Milwaukee, St. Paul, New York, and finally to Washington, D.C. There he was chief political writer from 1923 to 1928 and manager of the Washington bureau from 1929 to 1934. His comments became so popular that he soon had a wide following, and in 1936 he joined the Scripps-Howard newspapers as a syndicated columnist. In 1938, Clapper was elected national honorary president of Sigma Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity. In 1941, when Mr. Flint retired from his position as head of department of journalism, Clapper was the main speaker at a banquet celebrating the occasion. He flew here from Washington and returned by sleeper plane, his total time allotment in the Middlewest being limited to less than nine hours. Lt. Richard Trecee a Visitor Here Lt. Richard Trecee, a K.U. graduate in 1941, is now visiting in Lawrence on a 30-day leave of absence, after 16 months of service in the southwest Pacific area. Lt. Trecee is the son of Dr. and Mrs. E. L. Trecee, 1635 Mississippi. T. J. Carter to Speak At Medical Meeting Capt. Thomas J. Carter, a graduate in '24 who is in charge of the division of preventive medicine of the bureau of medicine and surgery of the navy department in Washington, D.C., will speak at a mass meeting of social hygiene at Edison hall in Kansas City, Mo., at 8 p.m. today, which is Hygiene Day in that city. Home Economics Tea Public His mother, Mrs. W. J. Carter, and a sister, Mrs. J. W. Canavan of 215 W. Twenty-third street, will attend the meeting and bring Captain Carter back to Lawrence with them. He will visit here until Saturday, when he leaves for Washington. After receiving his bachelor of arts degree at the University, Captain Carter attended Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, where he was graduated in 1927. Later he received his master of arts and doctor of philosophy degrees from John Hopkins University. All students and faculty have been invited to the social hour from 3:30 to 5, in Fraser hall, tomorrow afternoon. Members of the home economics department will serve the tea. BUY U.S. WAR BONDS New Fiction and Non-Fiction Rental Library. 15c----5 days Greeting Cards for all occasions Poetry, Art, Music, Philosophy Complete Modern Library, 95c-$1.45 THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 LUCIEN LELONG translates Face Powder into fashion news with a superfine, satin-clinging powder to beautify face, throat, shoulders. And what with the winter's low-cut fashions, that's real beauty excitement! - In flattering skin-tone shades, #2 Plus Ton