WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1944 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 675 Hour Dances Will Be Given Tonight; One Party Authorized for Weekend Moiliffe hall and Sigma Kappa are having hour dances this evening for PT 3 and the naval aviation cadets. The only party scheduled for the weekend so far is the Catholic Student's Organization party Saturday night in the Kansan room from 9 p.m. to 12 m. Wager Hall—Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Hyde of Courtland, Kan., were visitors. Mr. Hyde has just returned from Alaska, where he has been a constructor on the Yukon highway. Delta Tau Delta-An installation of officers was held Monday. Jolliffe Hall-An hour dance for PT3 will be given from 7 to 8 tonight. Phi Kappa Psi—Robert Bellamy, who is stationed with the Marines at Quantico, Va., was a visitor Monday. Theta Tau entertained Prof. E. D. Hay, Bruce Wells, David Larsell, Don Cantrell, Bill McCord, Keith Zarker, Charles Ise, Floyd Davis, Ralph Olsen and Rod Weltmer at a dinner at the Hearth last night. Sigma Kappa will have an hour dance tonight with the Naval Aviation cadets. Alpha Chi Omega entertained the Delta Gamma and Chi Omega pledge classes yesterday afternoon. Pi Kappa Alpha guest last Wednesday was Grant Hunter, former member who visited the chapter on his way to report for active duty as a pharmacist mate. Pi Beta Phi dinner guest last night was Ruth Wright of Topeka. Triangle —Glen Sankey, chapter member last year and now a member of V-5. was a guest yesterday. Alpha Omicron Pi guest this week is Mrs. W. V. Gentry of Neodasha. Sigma Chi guests last Monday were Mr. F. L. Brady and his two husks, Leo and Taylor. All are former members of the chapter. Taylor is now a lieutenant in the army air corps. ISA 'Jayhawk Stomp' Free to Service Men The "Jayhawk Stomp", the first Independent. Student Association dance of the new year, will be held in the Union Lounge following the Kansas-Nebraska Basketball game Saturday night. Allowing the coeds to take advantage of leap year opportunities, John Sells, ISA president, stated that ISA women will act as hostesses for men in uniform at the dance. The ASTP band, led by Pvt. W. D. Geeding, former trumpet man with Claude Thornhill, will play for the dance, which will be to servicement and ISA members. University Club·Dance Will Be Given Friday Night An informal dance will be given at 9 o'clock Friday night by the University club at the club rooms. Music will be furnished by the Holyfield orchestra. Reservations should be made by Thursday, the chairman has announced. Mr. and Mrs. Madison Coombs and Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Hough will be hosts. Vespers to Be Given Sunday Mu Phi Epsilon Members A vespers program will be given at 4 Sunday afternoon in Fraser hall by Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary music society. The public is invited, said Justine Peterson, president. Performers will be members of the local chapter. Women Lead Utah Honor Roll More women than men are on the honor roll at the University of Utah. Women Lead Utah Honor Roll Witherup-Allen Announce Betrothal Mr. and Mrs. David Ray Witherup have announced the engagement of their daughter, Alliere Virginia, a graduate in 1942, to Lt. Harold Keith Allen of Lawrence, a student in 1939-43. The wedding will take place in California the last of this month. While at the University, Miss Witherup was a member of Alpha Delta Pl sorority. Lt. Allen belonged to Scabbard and Blade, honorary military fraternity. Tell Ertls Announce Birth of Baby Son Prof. and Mrs. Tell Ertl, 1608 Edgehill road, announce the birth of a son at 10:45 last night at Lawrence Memorial hospital. The baby, weighing six pounds six and one-half ounces, has not yet been named. The Ertls have two daughters, Buff, 4, and Jill, 2. Professor Ertl is assistant dean of the School of Engineering and a member of the mining and metallurgical faculty. Students Will Give Recital Tomorrow A group of six students in the School of Fine Arts will present a student recital at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon in Fraser theater. Katharine Kufahl will open the program with two voice solos. "Chinoise" (Manning) and "The Fisher's Widow" (Edwards). Dorothy Nicholson will sing "I Heard a Blackbird In A Tree" (Arlen). Chopin's two etudes, "A Flat, op. 25" and "C minor, op. 10" will be played by Frances Gulick. Evelyn Treger will sing "Il Bacio" (Arditti; "Vittoria Vittoria mi core" (Carissimi) will be James T.Getty's voice solo. Donald Wyman will conclude the recital with a piano solo, "The Great Gate of Kiev" (Moussorgsky). The latest placement by the Teachers Appointment Bureau is that of Mrs. Bernice Zeurcher Thompson to the teaching staff of the high school of Kanapolis, Kans., Prof. H. E. Chandler, secretary of the Bureau, announced Mrs. Thompson received her B. M. E. from the University in 1942 and will teach music and English. Teachers Bureau Appoints Thompson to Konapolis Talks Will Be Made By Belgian Journalist "America Through Belgian Eyes" will be the subject of Madame Barzin, Belgian political writer and lecturer, when she talks to members of the Business and Professional Women's Club Friday evening. The meeting will be at 8 at the Hearth. Saturday she will speak on "Belgium and the Four Freedoms" at a meeting of the American Association of University Women at 2:15 pm, at the Heath. A luncheon will be held for Madame Barzin at 1 o'clock. Reservations can be made by anyone interested. At a coffee given by the YWCA at Henley house from 4:30 to 5:30 Friday afternoon she will speak on Belgium relief. Madame Barzin is making a midwestern lecture tour under the auspices of the Belgian Information center of New York City. 6 Women Pledged By Theta Sigma Phi Members of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalism sorority, pledged six women last night in a candle-lighted ceremony held in the Sky room of the Journalism building. Pledges are: Paula Reeve, Anne Louise Rossman, and Wilma Tippin. College seniors, and Ruth Tippin, Jeanne Shoemaker, and Jacqueline Nodler, College juniors. Joy Miller, president, officiated in the ceremony, assisted by Betty Lou Perkins, vice president. WAC Will Give Talks To Women Students Lt. Betty Veach, WAC, is making a series of talks at the organized houses on joining the WAC's after graduating. Lieutenant Veach is a former Kansas City University student and is now stationed at the State house in Topeka. The schedule for her talks is as follows: Gamma Pi Beta, Jan. 12; Delta Gamma, Jan. 13; Kappa Alpha Theta, Jan. 14; Jolliffe hall, Jan. 20; Miller hall and Watkins hall, Jan. 25; Alpha Omicron Pi, Jan. 26; Pi Beta Pi, Jan. 27; Alpha Chi Omega, Feb. 2; Alpha Delta Pi, Feb. 3; Sigma Kappa, Feb. 8; and Chi Omega, Feb. 9. Robert F. Pugh, Jr., College freshman from Lawrence, has been notified by the Seventh Service Command at Omaha that he will be called into service about Jan. 20. After being graduated from high school last spring, he enlisted in the army air corps reserve. Robert Pugh to Go to Army The reserve reading room in the library at the University of Southern California has been closed to civilian students. Military trainees will use the room for study. Trainees Use Reserve Room Aeronautical Engineers Hope for New Building A dream that the University of Kansas may someday become the center of Aeronautical Engineering has been realized on blueprints. But whether that dream will materialize after the war is over will depend upon financial support and administration approval, said Dean J. O. Jones, head of the School of Engineering and Architecture. The aeronautical building of tomorrow, for which plans have already been drawn up, would be located on the southern edge of the campus, behind Marvin hall. The approximate cost would be $200,000. It would take up about 150 feet of ground in each direction, although the total floor space would be considerably smaller than this. Would Have Airplanes, Shore The building would be large enough to house three airplanes, class rooms, a draft room, a shop for tearing down and assembling motors, eight test cells, and a wind tunnel for the measuring of temperature, pressure, and humidity. Not only aeronautical, but also physiology and medical students would be able to use the wind tunnel for experiments. New Land Would Suffice ASC MAKES---- Also under consideration by the School of Engineering and Architecture is the construction of new shops south of the new Mineral Resources building, and the renovation of the Fowler shops to accommodate the journalism department, which would also cost around two hundred thousand dollars. There are also plans fro an addition to the library. These three were listed as pressing building needs by Chancellor Deane W. Malotl in his annual report to the Governor and the Board or Regents last month. New Leland Would Suffice. The eight and one-half tract of land south of the campus which has been condemned by the Board of Regents for University use, would provide the site for one or more of the proposed post-war constructions. (continued from page one) Members of the charter committee are Jill Peck, chairman; Hope Crittenden, Clarence Engle, Virginia Schaefer, and Jack Button. Crittenden to Rule on Smoking The smoking committee, which determines the buildings in which students may smoke and enforces the smoking regulations, is headed by Hope Crittenden. New "No Smoking" signs are being placed in the buildings in places where students should not smoke. Other members of the committee are June Mack, Patricia Scherrer, Dorothy Bowersock, and Gene Kittle. Members of the Finance committee, which draws up the budget and considers all appropriations before they are presented to the Council, are Reed Whetstone, chairman; Mary Martha Hudelson, Thornton McClanahan, Betty Felt, and Peggy Davis. Krehbiel to Supervise Cheering Thornton McClanahan is chairman of the auditing committee, which approves all budgets and contracts of any student organizations or publications and receives their financial reports at the end of the year. Other members are Janet Marvin, Doris Bixby, Mary Olive Marshall, and John Blocker, professor of economics, the faculty member appointed by the Chancellor to sit with the committee. Krembler to Supervise Cheering Ruth Krebblair was appointed chairman of the traditions committee, whose duties are to promote school spirit and supervise the cheerleaders and their selection. Thad Marsh, Gone Kittle, Mary Martha Hudelson, and Charlotte Price will assist her. The public relations committee, whose duties are to promote cordial relations with the various groups and interests with which the ASC has contact, and to act as a publicity agent for the Council, consists of Mary Morrill, chairman; Virginia Rader, Ruth Krebhiel, John Sells, and Charlotte Price. Janet Marvin is chairman of the publications committee and will be assisted by Virginia Schaefer and Dick Miller. Faculty Committees Appointed These appointments will become effective immediately. Faculty Committees Appointed Council members appointed to sit on faculty committees are as follows: (continued from page one) Council members who will sit on the Memorial Union operating committee are Grace Curry, Dick Miller, Thornton McClanahan, Doris Bixby, Peggy Davis, Jill Peck, Clarence Engle, and John Sells. The University Senate committees on convocations and lectures—Jill Peck and Thornton McClanahan; the extra-curricular Calendar committee—Dick Miller and Doris Bixby; the Commencement committee—Ralph May and Ruth Krehbiel; the committee on Freshman Week—Rosemary Harding and Mary Olive Marshall. Jean Moore Instructor RYTHER, DAVIDSON--- Would You Like To Learn How To Fence? Other speakers will be W. E. Long, director of the Kansas Industrial Development Commission, who will talk on community and rural post-war plans; and Ralph W. Keller, secretary of the Minnesota Editorial Association, who will describe the rapidly changing national advertising picture for community newspapers. The banquet Friday evening will be given by the Topeka Chamber of Commerce. Gov. and Mrs. Andrew W. Schoepel will be guests. The first true newspaper published in England appeared in August, 1642. Then call me at 205. Results guaranteed. Ten easy lessons or five hard ones. FOR THE BEST FOOD Come to MOM'S CAFE 914 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 356