FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1943 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREED Informal Mixer To Start Weekend The sun shone brightly today, at times, on the slippery ice walks—and hopes are high for a spring weekend since the welcomed season will officially start Sunday. night the chief event seems to be the Cooperative houses room. The party will be informal, a mixer. music $ ^{ \circ} $ Tonight the chief event seen dance in the Kansas room. The and guests will dance to music from a nickelodian. Most of the Phi Delts will leave town tonight to attend their Founder's Day banquet in Kansas City. Since there is some doubt in the minds of girls planning to attend the Hobnail Hop as to the proper apparel—they will feel quite inconspicuous if they wear a suit or afternoon dress. The Intra-fraternity Council dance also tomorrow night will be in the Union lounge. ALPHA KAPPA PSI . . . . J. Wolfe Rogers was a dinner guest Thursday. PHI BETA PI . . . ... has announced the pledging of John Sawatzky, Newton. PHI DELTA THETA . . . PHI DELTA THETA . . . guests yesterday were Milo Johnson and Wilbur Meeker, members of Phi Delta Theta at Kansas State. They are on their way to attend the Founder's Day banquet in Kansas City. PHI GAMMA DELTA . . . ... Ensign Paul Digle of Atchison, was a guest Wednesday and yesterday. He is on his way to Ottuma, Iowa, where he is stationed. ☆ DELTA GAMMA . . . ☆ DELTA GAMMA . . . dinner guests yesterday were Mrs. H. P. Lowenstein, Kansas City, and her son, Henry Lowenstein, third class petty officer in the quartermaster corps of the US navy. PHI CHI . . . PHI CHI . . . . Dr. and Mrs. Parke Woodard, Gust Nelson, and Lyle Wonderlich were dinner guests yesterday. . Doctor Doctor Woodard as guest speaker talked on personalities in medical history and their part in developing our modern civilization. WESTMINSTER HALL . . . . . WESTMINSTER HALL . . . . . . gave a house party Monday evening in honor of Sarah Harvey's birthday. .. Ruth Stoll, Kansas City, will be a guest this weekend. CHI OMEGA . . . ... guest for dinner last night was the Rev. C. Fosberg Hughes. DELTA TAU DELTA . . . Jane McFarland and Bob Weaver, Kansas City, were guests Wednesday afternoon. DELTA TAU DELTA . . . WATKINS HALL . . . Betty Lee Kalis was a dinner guest last' night. ... entertained with an hour dance last night. ... CORBIN HALL . . . PHI KAPPA PSI . . . Pvt. Ralph Dockstader, member of Phi Kappa Psi from Beloit, was a dinner guest last night. Pvt. Dockstader who has been at Leavenworth is going to an aviation administration school in Florida soon. ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . . . Miss Claire Newton, Wellington, and Betty Slater, Kansas City, Mo., are weekend guests. ALPHA TAU OMEGA . . . ALPHA TAU Omega . . . ... the annual Founder's day banquet of Alpha Tau Omega will be held at Bellerive hotel, Kansas City, tonight. ... Doris Turney was a dinner guest Thursday night, ALPHA DELTA PI . . ... Marjorie Bond, Dodge City, was an overnight guest Thursday. ☆ ALPHA DELTA PI . . . ALPHA CHI SIGMA . . . .. dinner guests Thursday were Bob Taft, Judson Goodrich, and Joe Svoboda. BATTENFELD HALL . . . . . . dinner guests Thursday were Lloyd Crow and Ronald Bouware. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA . . . ... entertained with a buffet supper last night. Guests included Prof. and Mrs. G. V. Smith, Prof. and Mrs. W. C. McNown, Mr. and Mrs. M. V. McBeth, Mrs. O. W. Maloney, V. and Mrs. T. D. Prentice, Mrs. Thelma Hale Peake, and Mrs. E. M. Paxton, all of Lawrence. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON . . . . . Bill Kern '42 of the naval air corps is a weekend guest. KAPPA ALPHA THETA . . . KAPPA ALPHA THETA . . . . . Mrs. Glenn Sommers, Newton, is a weekend guest. PI BETA PHI . . . Mr. and Mrs, Hilden Gibson were dinner guests last night. Jean Butterworth was a luncheon guest Wednesday. SIGMA NU . . . ... Ray Mann, Olathe, was a house- guest this week. ✩ ...dinner guests last night were Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Sullivan and Jane Sullivan of Shawnee, and Mr. and Mrs. Morris N. Brown of Norton. . . has announced the pledging of Alice Marie Hayes of Lawrence. Square Dancing Offered Tomorrow In Robinson Gym SIGMA KAPPA. . . Frat Council Will Give Dance In Union The Inter-fraternity Council will have a dance in the lounge of the Union building, tomorrow night from 9 o'clock until 12, Bill Cole, president of the council, said today. Matt Betton of Manhattan and his orchestra will play. Men of the fraternities are invited. Thirteen date and five stag bids have been issued to the fraternities which are members of the council, Cole said. University Club Smoker Postponed The' University Club Smoker scheduled for Saturday, March 20, is to be indefinitely postponed, Prof. H.B. Chubb announced. Square dancing open to the public will be offered by the physical education department between 8 and 9:30 tomorrow night in Robinson gymnasium, Miss Ruth Hoover, assistant professor of physical education, said today. Previous dances have been successful, Miss Hoover said, with about 60 or 65 persons attending. The usual half-hour of instruction will begin at 8 o'clock. Persons who wish to attend may go either as dates, or alone. Riding Club Will Be Sponsored By Union Students interested in horseback riding will meet in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building at 4:30 Tuesday afternoon to organize a riding club, Eugenia Hepworth, vicepresident of the Student Union Activities board, said today. Gayle Mott of the KU stables has promised to organize and supervise moonlight rides and overnight rides later in the spring. The cost will be 50 cents a ride. The new club is an organized Student Union activity and is open to anyone who is interested. Interested students who cannot attend the meeting Tuesday afternoon have been asked by Miss Hepworth to call Jane Priest or Patricia Williams for further information. Women Joining WAACS May Attend Women interested in joining the WAACs may get application blanks and explanatory literature at a meeting at 7 o'clock this evening in the office of the Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. C. E. Daniels, war service chairman of the VFW Auxiliary will be in charge. The President has authorized the expansion of the women's army auxiliary corps from the original 150,000 to 375,000, and women are now being actively recruited. Dean J. W. Twente, of the School of Education, has been nominated as one of the 14 candidates for the board of directors of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Of the 14 nominees, the seven receiving the highest number of votes will be elected to the position. Dean Twente Named As Board Candidate; Stockton's Term Ends Dean F. T. Stockton, of the School of Business, whose term is now expiring, has for three years been a member of the board; and since August has been chairman of the war industries planning board, which was established to care for problems growing out of the establishment of the Sunflower Ordnance Works. Our 24th Year in Serving K. U. Students DE LUXE CAFE 711 Mass. Actress Warns Girls To Choose A Profession Hollywood, (INS)—Betty Hutton is the champion working girl of the screen and she's happy about it. Betty believes that every girl should think of the future in other than matrimonial terms. Bv JOHN TODD Just as Joan Crawford was once the Horatio Alger-type of "girl who makes good," so Miss Hutton portrays gals who get "By the time a boy is 16, he is pretty definite about what he is going to do," she said. "Ask a girl of 16 what she looks forward to and she either coyly mentions marriage or looks dumb. their hands chapped, but win the hero in the end. Betty is frankly campaigning for careers for women! "That's all wrong. Every girl should have an occupation or profession." Actress Chose Her Vocation Early Miss Hutton hasn't forgotten her own childhood, which saw her going to work as singer with a dance band at the age of 14. She wanted to be an actress, or a singer and she took the shortest path between two points. "If I had my way," Miss Hutton said, "which of course I don't, I would make it imperative that every girl choose a vocation and master it. "What the world needs is women who are not entirely dependent upon marriage as a solution of all their troubles." Everyone Works in Wartime "Even a girl with a marvelous education doesn't know exactly what's going to happen to her life. The debacle of war was completely unexpected." "Nobody thought anything about the ex-corporal who rose to power in Germany until it was too late to do something about it. Rich girls, poor girls, middle class girls all had to go to work. Jay Janes Announce Initiations Jay Janes announce that the following girls will be initiated at the annual dinner to be given in the Memorial Union building at 5:30 next Monday evening: Georgia Wiggins, Mildred Whitted, Jean Boardman, Mary Christiansen, Catherine Brown, Peggy Davis, Alice Goff, Betty Gsell, Florence Harris, Mary Martha Hudleston, Ruth Kelley, Mary Marshall, Ruth Krehbiel, Janet Marvin. Kremeler, Phyllis Riggs, Ruth Schaffer, Helen Marie Thompson, Marjorie Thies, Mary B. Todd, Virginia Rader, Emma Lou Niedermeyer, Phyllis Wickert, Nancy Jane Fetersen, Mackey, Nancy and Claire Oliver. Miss Dulaney Resigns Position Miss Opal Dulaney, secretary to the Rev. Harold G. Barr and office secretary at Myers hall, has resigned her position. Miss Dulaney left yesterday for California to live. Miss Dulaney Resigns Position Permanents - Manicures Complete Service "We are individual stylists" Anne Stone, Owner 927 1/2 Mass. Phone 458 Nu-Vogue Beauty Shoppe Birth of Daughter Mr. and Mrs. John Laidig of New York City, have announced the birth of Judith Jane March 8. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, March 19 Mrs. Laidig was formerly Miss Esther Tippin '41. Mr. Laidig, engineering '41, is working for Bell Telephone laboratory of New York City. Saturday, March 20 Phi Chi, Informal dance. House, 9 p.m. to 12 m. The Cooperative houses, dance Kansas room, 9 to 12 m. Engineering School Council, danced in Hoch auditorium, 9 p.m. to 12 m. Intra-Fraternity Council, dance Union lounge, 9 to 12 p.m. ELIZABETH MEGUIAR Adviser of Women. Students Invest In Bonds — BUY U.S. WAR BONDS — — BUY U.S. WAR BONDS — — BUY U.S. WAR BONDS — Sophomores at Mundelein college are investing proceeds of their co- tillion in war bonds. CHEN YU Long-Lasting Nail Lacquer An American Product Made in U.S.A.4 the smartest idea ever your nails made gorgeous with the highly lustrous colors of fine lacquers. Beautiful beyond description and lasting beyond all need they keep their astonishing luster 'til the last. Breath-taking shades—and with each there comes a bottle of Hi-Luster LACQUEROL base. 75¢