PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, 11, SATURDAY, 2, 2018 Here on the Hill --officers elected Monday night are: president, Orville Wright; vice president, Phil Woolston; secretary, Glen Sewell; treasurer, Dewey George Nemec; social chairman, Harlan Cope; scholarship chairman, Dick Burdge; intramural chairman, Norman Fuller; publicity chairman, William Kiene. No Midweek Tonight; I.S.A. District Dances Members of the I.S.A. will combine pleasure with their business of electing officers this evening when they meet by districts to hold their elections and to dance. The time for the socializing and the politics is from 7 to 8 p.m. and the meeting places are—District 1, Corbin Hall; district 2, Memorial Union; and district 3, Miller Hall. Members of the I.S.A. are asked to go to the meeting places of their own districts. The midweek previously scheduled for tonight will not be held, it was announced today. BATTENFELD .. PHI DELTA THETA . . . PHI DELTA THIEF ... Jim Brier, Harry Colmery, and Bill Martin, Topeka, were dinner guests last night. ☆ MARRIAGES . . . ...former students of the University who were married during the Christmas holidays were: Maxine Miller, '41, Kansas City, Kan., and Sam Sifers', '40, Kansas City, Mo.; Leone Hoffman '40, Kansas City, Mo.; and Jack Parks, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Jane McCoy '40, Emporia, and William K. Waugh '49, Eskridge. DELTA GAMMA . . . . announces the engagement of Bernice Zuercher to Louis Thompson, class of '40. ... dinner guests Tuesday were Mr, and Mrs. W. W. Fuller, Kansas City, Mo.; Dr. R. N. Davis; and G. V. Funk. Great Bend. GAMMA PHI BETA... WATKINS HALL . . . announces the engagement of Rose Etta Carr to Clarke L. Calvin, Santa Monica, Calif. Calvin is a former student at the University. The marriage date has been set for early spring. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA . . . . ...luncheon guest yesterday was Katie Sewell. alumni, Ward Crowell, was a house guest last night. SIGMA CHI... PAN-HELLENIC. The Women's Pan-hellenic council met last night at the Chi Omega house for dinner and a business session. Rules for the next rushing season were discussed, and the present rules were revised. The next regular meeting will be the first Tuesday in February at the Delta Gamma house. DE LUXE CAFE Our 23rd Year in Serving K. U. Students 711 Mass. Play Bridge Finals Tomorrow Final round in the annual University bridge tournament will be played in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building at 7 p.m. tomorrow, Bob Hodgson, intramural chairman of the Student Union Activities committee, announced today. The 10 teams participating in the third round of the contest will be Bob Wellington and John Burns, Emmett Hook and Bill Buzick, Robert Voelker and Paul Diegel, Michel Nibertson and Jean Miller, Clarence Engle and Bill Jones, John Elden and Bob Van Doren, John Weatherwax and June Weatherwax, Clarence Miller and Alan Miller, Bill Pirnie and Vincent Trump, and Roscoe Hambric and Bob Hodgson. These teams also played in the second round of the tournament. Scores of the second and third rounds will be combined to obtain the final scores. Second round winners were Wellington and Burns, first place; Hambric and Hodgson, second; and Engle and Jones, third. U.S. Has Been 'Too Cocky' Says Landon Topека—(UP)—Former Gov. Alf. M. Landon, G.O.P. Presidential candidate in 1936, asserted last night that Americans "slowly" are coming to realize the extent of the war effort required of them although they still are too "cooky." He deplored what he called The country's lack of appreciation of the fact that tremendous effort must be put forth and many sacrifices must be made. "The President's speech and, even more than that, the orders he is issuing and the priorities that are being placed against consumers goods are beginning to jar the people into a sense of what this war means," he said. "There still hasn't been a united effort on the part of business and labor to work harmoniously. We've got to realize that the Germans are working 80 hours a week and we've got to match their production." Americans, he said, have been "too cocky and too ready to rest on the riches of our natural resources." A Draped Dinner Dress "Now we are faced with something of a new experience. We've got to work harder and work longer and make personal sacrifices. We must realize that the world war was a Sunday school picnic compared with this one." Carruth Hall held an election of officers last night. Dwayne Oglesby, college junior, was elected president, and Dick Mankin, engineering junior, was elected vice-president. A very simple but figure flattering gown with long sleeves and a square neckline. The dress is artfully draped across the front. Carruth Hall Elects Officers Sally Rand Ditches Fans for Wedding Veil Glendora, Calif.—(UP)—Sally Rand fanned away all the obstacles to her marriage to cowboy Turk Greenough, and bubbled with happiness after the ceremony, but she is going to spend her honeymoon in a thick coat of talcum powder at the Los Angeles Orpheum theater-alone except for a dim blue spotlight. While the bride entertains the customers for a week behind fans and bubbles, the groom will perform at a rodeo in Colorado Springs. Colo. "And then," reported Sally (who also looks beautiful in clothes), "we are going to heaven—" " "To our ranch," she said. "Heaven ranch at Red Bluff, Mont. It is a lovely, lovely place." Sally said she almost wished she'd been married there in the first place. There wouldn't have been so much excitement. As it was: She couldn't be married in Grace Episcopal Church, because the bishop said Greenough was a divorcee. Neither could the rector, the Rev. Henry S. Rubel, perform the ceremony. So the wedding took place next door, under auspices of the Rev. George W. Bunton, retired Methodist minister, who'd been functioning as a first aid instructor at a nearby C.C.C. camp. Canuteson Attends Health Meeting Sally arrived at her wedding nervous and 30 minutes late, but there was no doubt about the beauty of the 37-year-old bride, fully clothed. She wore a long-sleeved, high - necked, bustled, ground-sweeping frock of white wool, with pink rosebuds embroidered on it. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson attended the annual meeting of the American Student Health Association in New York City December 30 and 31. Dr. Canuteson was reelected secretary-treasurer of the association. Speakers at the meeting emphasized the part of college health services in national defense. One of the guest speakers was Col. L. M. Rountree, medical director of the selective service. Kansan Positions Open The business staff of the Kansas announced today that applications for the position of advertising manager would be taken Wednesday afternoon between two and four o'clock in the journalism building. This salaried position was formerly held by Jason Yordy. Farmer Named F.B.I. Agent By J. Edgar Hoover Bill Farmer, president of the Men's Student Council last year, has been appointed a special agent of the federal bureau of investigation. This information was recently received by Dean F. J. Moore in a letter from J. Edgar Hoover. Farmer was graduated and passed his Kansas bar examination last spring. University Women's Club Meet at Dyche Thursday The University Women's club will meet Thursday afternoon in the rotunda of the Dyche Museum of Natural History. Tea will be served promptly at 3 o'clock, after which Prof. H. H. Lane, director of the museum, will speak to the group. THE DOCTORS MAYO By H. B. Clapesattle $3.75 THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666