,1942 FRIDAY, APRIL 24.1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE d ka at the Wash- ences of also of here in there was a mercer of and mining 'Teke's' To Install Alpha Phi Chapter Tomorrow BY JOHN CONARD Eta Colony of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity tomorrow will be Alpha Phi chapter, authorized, approved, and installed. Lyle Straight, national secretary for the fraternity is in Lawrence today checking the Eta colony records and noting objectives attained. He will officiate at the installation tomorrow afternoon and grant the charter. $ \textcircled{*} $ The Kansas City graduate club of TKE will be here tomorrow and will receive its charter in a joint ceremony with the University undergraduate chapter. It will be known after its chartering as the Kansas City TKE graduate chapter, as graduate chapters are named according to locality rather than by Greek letters. Alpha Phi is the forty-fifth chapter to be chartered by Tau Kappa Epsilon. Chapters range from Newampshire to Washington, but have heaviest concentration in the Midwest. Initiation team for tomorrow's installation will be composed of members from Alpha Lambda chapter at Kansas State, the Kansas City graduate chapter, the Sunflower graduate chapter, and the adviser for Alpha Upsilon chapter at Hays. Mr. Straight installed Alpha Upsilon chapter at Fort Hays Kansas State College last Saturday, and the Sunflower graduate chapter at Manhattan on Wednesday. Eta colony was organized at the University in the spring of 1940 with 54 members, and the colony moved into the house formerly occupied by Acacia fraternity at 1541 Tennessee St., in the fall of 1940. Four pledges, the first under the newly-chartered chapter, will be initiated Saturday afternoon. They are Don Surles, college freshman; Gordon Parker, college freshman; Bill Wyatt, college junior; and Henry Comstock, junior engineer. Ceremonies will be completed tomorrow night with a banquet and dance at the fraternity house. Announcements to Printers; to be Ready Second Week in May Class roll for all schools, names or class officers, names of seniors on committees, and all other necessary information has been sent to the printers of the senior class announcements. Howard Rankin, president of the class, announced today. The announcements should be ready for seniors by the end of the second week in May, Rankin said. Fred Robertson, chairman of the announcement committee, urges all seniors who wish to order announcements to do so immediately. Orders are being taken at the business office now, and Monday will be the last chance for seniors to purchase them. The announcements are to be paid for when ordered. Three types of announcements are being offered this year at three prices. Leather-bound are forty cents; cardboard-bound, twenty-five cents; and sheet announcements, ten cents. Additional Society-national honorary society for French students, announces the election and initiation into the society of Marjorie Mossman, college senior, and Merle Simmons, graduate student. The election and initiation was held Tuesday. TAU KAPPA EPSILON . TAU KATTA ELSILON weekend guest was Lyle S. Straight of Bloomington, Ill., grand secretary of the fraternity. ... is holding national installation for the local chapter this week. MILLER HALL. ...guests this week are Mrs. W. True Poorman of Wichita and Miss Phyllis Scott of Topeka. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB . . . ...held election of officers yesterday. New president is Phyllis Wherby; vice-president, Joan Taggart; secretary, Barbara Koch; treasurer, Nana Mae Hartley; social chairman, Jan Granger. At the meeting, Mrs. Loren T. Feber of St. Louis spoke on dress designing. JAY COED CO-OP . . . ... Leora Adams was a dinner guest last night. Fraternity Sing To Be Sunday The annual inter-fraternity sing, sponsored by Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity, will be presented Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock in Hoch auditorium. ★ PI DELTA PHI . . . ...dinner guests last night were Miss Ruth Vandenberg, secretary to the dean of School of Fine Arts, Miss Meribah Moore, associate professor of voice, Miss Marjorie H. Cook, of the secretarial training department, and Jules Saut. DELTA GAMMA . . . --- Something to Watch For--- Eight fraternities are entered in the contest, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Chi, and Sigma Nu. Winners last year were Sigma Chi, Phi Delta Theta, and Phi Gamma Delta. Originally entered in this year's contest, Phi Gamma Delta has withdrawn, Herb Mueller, chairman of the sing committee, announced today. In 1918, the Student Army Training Corps established these barracks on Mississippi Street where the Memorial Stadium now stands. Approximately 3000 men were housed in these barracks. The members of SATC reserved army uniforms, equipment, board, University tuitions Master of ceremonies James Barton, instructor of speech, will present the groups in the order which will be determined immediately before the contest begins. The prizes, a plaque for first place and silver and gold trophies for second and third place, will be awarded by judges to be named at the sing. Each group will sing the Alma Mater, one of its fraternal songs, and a song of its own choice. While judges are selecting the winners, members of Phi Mu Alpha will present instrumental numbers. Zilch Award Dinner Big Bang of Season Eighty-five journalists and friends attended the Second Annual Elmer A. Zilch Dinner Tuesday night in the Kansas room. Skits and impersonations of faculty members kept the audience occupied until the arrival of Zilch, famous discoverer of --- Do You Know Where This Is? type lice and patron saint of journalism. Zilch spoke briefly of the ravages of war in the East, and thrilled the crowd with his account of the escape from the jungles of Borneo, where he was lost for some days. New A.A.U.W. Officers Elected at Conference This placque is behind Blake hall near the Nurses' home right here on the campus. It is reported in authentic circles that plans are under way for the Third Annual Zilch dinner, to be held in the spring of 1943. Adviser of Men Attends Two National Conferences and fees and what was more important to a good many was the traditional $30 a month from Uncle Sam. Miss Helen Wagstaff, secretary of the bureau of general information at the University extension division, was elected to the position of first vice-president of the Kansas state division of the American Association of University Women at the sectional conference which met in Oklahoma City. Mrs. G. R. Myers of Dodge City was elected secretary-treasurer of the Kansas division. On leaving Urbana, Dean Werner will go to Cleveland, Ohio, for the National Conference of Foreign Student Advisers, sponsored by the Institute of International Education in New York. The conference is scheduled for Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of next week. Dean Henry Werner, adviser of men, has left for the annual conference of the National Association of Deans and Advisers, held this weekend in Urbana, Ill. A recent survey reveals there are 14 honorary and recognition sociocities in the United States. The Woman You Want to Be Margery Wilson's Complete Book of Charm. $2.95 THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 - BROWN and WHITE! - BLUE and WHITE! - BLACK and WHITE! Your adored "specc" in the new best spring versions! "BOOMPS" or OPEN TOES...high or mid way heels! Having them is easy, at 5. 00 Haynes and Keene