PAGE FOUR r r r r r SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1943 DELTA TAU DELTA... . . . Dave Rau and Jack Wheatcraft visited in Junction City during the week-end. week-end. ... Bob Jelenik, Dave Forbes, and Jay Colter went to their homes in Leavenworth during the week-end. ... Coler Hissim, Charles Peek, Ross Baker and Bob Bock spent the weekend in Wichita. . . . Charles Moffet spent the weekend in Kansas City. . . . Bob Bock went to the Topeka Army Air Base Thursday to take the tests for the Army Air Corps Reserve. . . Bob Moore, Delt from Wichita, was a guest Sunday. ☆ MILLER HALL . . . ... Mary Ann Berthelson and Donna Jean Stember spent the week-end in Tescott. ... Mary Steele and Virginia Markley spent the week-end with Maxine Jones at her home in Topeka. ... Kati Gorrill was a Saturday dinner guest of Dolores Sulzman. B. Bert Gensler, PT6, was a Sunday dinner guest of Johnnie May Mann. ... Anna Mae Young visited her sister in Kansas City over the weekend. ... Alice Margaret Geiger, Kansas City, was a week-end guest of Maxine Crawford. ... Dorothy Wiggins is visiting her sister, Georgia. TAU KAPPA EPSILON . . . ALPHA OMICRON PI . . . ... announces the pledging of Ed Sherwood, Garden City. ... Mrs. C. F. Sloan and daughters, Janet and Patty, were week-end guests. ... Phyllis Hamburg, Kansas City, was a week-end guest of Frances Hibbs. WAGER HALL... . . Rosalie Morton spent the week-end in Kansas City. ... Ruth Simmons visited in Topeka this week-end. ... Lois Ann McDowell, Topeka, and Mrs. Julia Brooks were week-end ... Glenda Luhing was a guest Saturday of Marguerite Kaaz. ☆ SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON ... ... week-end guests were Beachy Musser of Topeka, Keith Neville of Kansas City, Pinky Wallingford, Topeka, Sig Alphs, and Ray Helgeson, V-5, from Liberty, Mo. ☆ ... Barracks 1 is giving a party Saturday evening, August 21. CUTLER HOUSE... V-5, TEKE HOUSE . . . . Vera Jones of Iola was a weekend guest of Donna Claire Jackson. BATTENFELD HALL . . . Sunday dinner guest was Kati Gorrill. ... Hosea Harkness, Greenleaf, was a week-end guest of his brother, Charles. ... Homer Davis, navy air cadet, Liberty, Mo., was a week-end guest. ... Mrs. R. D. Montgomery, house- mother, spent the week-end visiting Mrs. Ed Curry in Kansas City. JOLLIFFE HALL . . . ☆ Mike Nichols, of Phillipsburg, was a week-end guest. ☆ ... week-end guests were John Davis, St. Joseph, Mo., and Dale Ewing. CARRUTH HALL . . . If You Are Hungry --music PATRIC KNOWLES ELYSE KNOX and JOHNNY LONG and His Orchestra Helen Young - Gene Williams The four Teens HOPKINS HALL ... Viola Richardson is spending the week with her parents in Cawker City. City. .Dorothy Dravis spent the week end at Chanute. ☆ COLUMN---music PATRIC KNOWLES ELYSE KNOX and JOHNNY LONG and His Orchestra Helen Young - Gene Williams The four Teens (continued from page two) seem to be winning all the games. Eddie Hansen, Kappa Sig graduate, and Max Kissell, former Phi Psi, are the high scoring couple. Their success is partly due to the K.U. spirit which followed them there via Bob Jenkins, Phi Mu, Dorman O' Leary, Phi Psi, Val Eschby, Battenfeld, Judd Townley, Beta, Kack Chaney, Bill Debus, Phi Delt, Bill Starr, D.U. and Jimmy Gunn who used to write this column. Come on home, Jimmy. (continued from page two) OUARTER MILLION---music PATRIC KNOWLES ELYSE KNOX and JOHNNY LONG and His Orchestra Helen Young - Gene Williams The four Teens (continued from page one) ductions, lectures, concerts, marionette shows, magicians, the Deep River Singers—a colored quartet, a French Army officer, a full-blood Indian artist, a specialist on the jungles of Yucatan with illustrated lecture in color, a specialist on aircraft construction, the director of a metropolitan zoo, bird imitators, a lecture on the history of light, and many others. A rolling stone gathers no moss. But then a stone that never goes anywhere will never gather anything else. It takes about 400,00 Nazi occupation troops in Norway to hold down that country's population of approximately 3,000,000 presons. Kauai, fourth in size of the Hawaiian Islands, has a beach whose sands when walked upon emit a barking sound. There Are Two Places to Eat MARRIOTT'S CAFE and HOME Open 5:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.Daily 832 Mass. K.U. Graduates Covered Crash A coincidence of interest to the University, and particularly to the Journalism department, is the fact that the two St. Louis afternoon papers on August 2 printed eye-witness accounts of the fatal glider crash of the afternoon before and both accounts were written by former K.U. men, now editorial staff writers on St. Louis dailies. It so happened that each of these men, Ferd Gottlieb, a member of the editorial page staff of the Post-Dispatch since 1932 and Ray Runnion, an editorial writer for the Star-Times, had gone that afternoon to Lambert Municipal airport, not as a newspaper man, but as a "dad" to show the sights to an air minded son. Each of these men is an ex-Kansan, each attended K.U., and each graduated with the class of 1921, stated Prof. L. N. Flint, to whom one of the newspapermen has written an account of how the story was covered. Another coincidence was that both accounts appeared headed by a small block in italics stating the account was by a member of the editorial staff and was an eye-witness report. In each case the wording was almost identical. Mr. Gottlieb, in writing to Professor Flint, said the crash was a horrifying thing to see. He sent Professor Flint copies of both the Post-Dispatch and the Star-Times with the accounts. It was the biggest local story for St. Louis since the 1927 tornado, he stated. William Daugherty, who graduated from the Journalism department in 1930, is also an editorial writer on the St. Louis Star-Times. ... Chuck Hunter, Army medical student, spent the week-end at his home in Topeka. NEW CLASS---music PATRIC KNOWLES ELYSE KNOX and JOHNNY LONG and His Orchestra Helen Young - Gene Williams The four Teens Sanitary Barber Shop (continued to page four) ment War Training Program, out of the U. S. Office of Education, Guy V. Keeler, of the extension division of the University, is director of the ESMWT program for Kansas and Western Missouri. 8 a.m. - 7 p.m. Nearly 100 young women who completed their training in the first aeronautical technicians program at the University, have returned to the factories of the companies on whose payrolls they were during their training period. Those who qualify as aeronautical technicians are employed in the engineering divisions of the plants where they assist the engineers in drafting, stress analysis, weight control, production planning, material control, and production illustration. Open Saturdays to 9:30 p.m. Salaries are $100 per month during the training period. The University is the only school in the country where the school of engineering is collaborating with two major aircraft companies in this type of program. The whole program has been worked out by the production training men of the airplane companies with the department of aeronautical engineering at the University, and was an outgrowth of several situations in which department heads in the plants had requested trained technicians for specific jobs. T. A. Custec, Prop. 838 Mass. .. Metz Wright, Army medical student from Salina, spent the week-end in Coffeyville. ... Barbara Briedenthal of Kansas City, Kans., a student at the University last year and member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, was a week-end visitor in Lawrence. BUY U.S. WAR BONDS 'Strictly Scuttlebutt' By Lt. (j.g.) C. V. McGuigan U.S.N.R. It isn't scuttlebutt—it's rain, and cool weather. That's the best news in recent weeks. The trainees love the cool weather, and the remark is often heard, "Gee, it's just like California weather." Do you mean the cool weather or the rain? The answer can be obtained from A. C. Tribe, of the 11th Division. And speaking of the 11th Division, it's farewell to a swell outfit, and the writer of this column couldn't be prejudiced—or could he? However, the 11th has set a fine record, and, being the first of the new divisions composed of only 125 men, they have followed the example set by the previous 200 men divisions very ably. Special congrats are in order on their part of the present war bond drive, as 91.2 percent of the 11th has more than 10 percent of their income allotted to the purchase of war bonds. Continuing our farewells, we say "Not good-by, but until we meet again," to Ensigns Kenton Collinson, W. E. Draper, and J. J. Sullivan, jr. All three leave in the very near future for further training in the Supply Corps, and a new assignment. All three will be missed at the school, by officers and trainees alike. Be seeing you next week, and look for the announcement of the promotion of one of our most able yeomen at this station. Nothing official yet, but darned good scuttlebutt. — BUY U.S. WAR BONDS — PSO THRU THURSDAY GRANADA In the Snow-Capped Topper of All Their Howling Hits! AND MARCH OF TIME "Bill Jack vs. Hitler" 50-SKATING BEAUTIES-50 Yanks in Sicily and Raising the Normandie, in Movietone News FRIDAY and SATURDAY "I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE" And "Man from Thunder River"