PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1941. Here on the Hill - - dance floor to see what B and his band from Silo Tech had to offer. Pandemonium Reigns; Victory Ball Climaxes A history-making weekend was climaxed last night by an all school let-down Varsity. Ecittement reached its height as Matt Betton and his boys gave out with their hottest jive for an even hotter crowd of jubilant Jayhawkers. A few Wildcats also attended. It was the Wildeat-Jayhawker Varsity in the Union Ballroom and K.U. students, not celebrating elsewhere, jammed the home floor to see what Betton $ ^{ \circ} $ GAMMA PHI BETA . . . dinner guests Thursday were Dr. and Mrs. Woodruff, Mrs. Jacobson, Miss Maude Elliott, Miss Barbara Bridges, Miss Barnes, Mrs. Dixon, and Mr. and Mrs. Marston McCluggage. DELTA GAMMA . . . weekend guests were Gwen Jones, Hutchinson; Martha Dee Benson, Beverlee McEntire, Kansas City, Mo.; Dorothy Dickason, Great Bend. SIGMA CHI .. SIGMA CHI ... dinner guests Thursday were Reverend Azman, Mary Ruth Fogel, and Doctor R. M. Dreyer. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA KAPPA KAPPA GAMES ...weekend guests were Jo Ann Schmidt, Joan Hogue, Polly Rickabaugh, Margaret Stevick, Judy Joues, Jean Wedell, all of Manhattan; Renetta Wertq, Betty Ely, Dorothy J. Adams, Wanda Carter, Ada L. Hillbrand, Heloise Hillbrand, and Mary Anderson, all of Wichita. Workshop Will Give Free Show Two plays in the modern manner, the first campus offering of the newly organized Dramatic Workshop, will be presented free of charge at 8:20 Thursday night in Green theater. "Clipped," a modern one-act comedy, will have a cast including Helen Pepperel, Leslie Briedenthal, George Grinnod, and Mary Morison. Mary Kirby, college senior, is directing the production. The second play, "Land's End," is a modern one-act drama. The cast will include Vincent Trump, Mary Morison, Max Webster, and David Evans, Sylvia Steeper is director. Joe Nelson is production manager of the two plays. Education Professors Speak J. W. Twente, professor of education, and F. O. Russell, associate professor of education, left this morning for Pratt, Kans., where they will discuss the cooperative study of the secondary school standards. DE LUXE CAFE Our 23rd Year in Serving K. U, Students. 711 Mass. It leads for Fall—the "casual look" in daytime clothes. Impressively smart, casually tailored shirt-waist dress in herrignbone-weave wool . . . perfect for campus wear. Convertible neckline, button flap patch pockets. Scholars Hold First Colloquium Summerfield scholars held their first colloquium of the year last night at the Colonial tea room. The University High School held a steak fry and a faculty meeting in Brown's grove yesterday. University High Picnics happenings on the hill PERFECTION . . . Leo Smith, 1322 Ohio, wanted very much to be a physical wreck Wednesday morning, for he was to report for his draft examination. Having observed "morning-after" addicts from behind his desk in the library, Leo did what he could Tuesday night to develop cirrhosis of the liver, and sat through several movies trying to ruin his weak eyes. Smitty interrupted the orgy long enough Wednesday morning to take the examination, found himself still classified in class A1, (perfect physical condition.) Mary Pace, college freshman, who has been a pneumonia patient at Watkins Memorial hospital, left today for her home in Parsons, where she will remain while convalescing. Joy Miller, Miller hall, is wearing a splint on one of her fingers today, after getting it caught in a car door during the torchlight parade last night. is something we all seek to attain. For 20 years Williams Perfection Grade meats have been the choice of HOTELS, CLUBS, RESTAURANTS and INSTITUTES. Williams Meat Co. 20 Kansas Ave., Kansas City Dr. Beatrice Lins of the Watkins Memorial hospital staff has returned from the University of Minnesota where she has been attending a course on "Sulfanilamide Therapy." Dean Reece "Tells All About Powder, Paint Dean J. Allen Reese, of the School of Pharmacy, blasted several cosmetic fallacies in an interview Friday concerning his recent radio talk on cosmetics. Dr. Reese said that cosmetics have been used since the days when all human beings were naked, hairy semi-simian savages; and as far back as history extends, the women, and many of the men, too, used hair dyes, face powders, rouge, eye-brow and eyelid darkeners, lipsticks, lotions, and practically every preparation in use today, in- cluding face creams. There are several things to beware of in using cosmetics, said Dr. Reese. Freckle removing cream must remove the cells containing the pigment to be effective. Bleaching preparations are not so strong, but the most drastic In answer to the question concerning the advisability of using all-purpose cream, Dr. Reese said that he believed the claims of "all-purpose" creams to be illigical and contradictory. Cream cannot open the pores of the skin, a process which is necessary for thorough cleansing, and close the pores as astringents do, at the same time. He expressed the opinion that true cold cream probably comes the closest to an all-purpose cream. Shows Essential Differences He explained the essential differences between cleansing tissue, and vanishing cream. Cleansing cream, Dr. Reese pointed out, leads all other creams in sales volume and really should be called "liquefying" cream since it is used to form an oil of high viscosity, capable of cleansing a surface without leaving it greasy. Dr. Reese asserted that tissue cream really should be called "tub-ricating cream" and that vanishing cream is unusual in that it consists of suspensions of stearic acid in a stearate soap. Vanishing cream, he added, contains a high percentage of water and the foundation variety usually contains a small proportion of a powder, such as zinc oxide which remains on the skin after the cream has disappeared. No True All-Purpose Cream creams of this kind have been outlawed in most states. In reply to a query concerning astringents, Dr. Reese stated that a mild form is harmless since it tends to correct excessive oiliness and perspiration. The interview concluded with Dr. Reese pointing out that persons having an allergy for face powder are merely so for one or more of the ingredients in this product. New under-arm Cream Deodorant safely Stops Perspiration 1. Does not dresses or men's shirts. Does not irritate skin 2. No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving. 3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Removes odor from perspiration. 4. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream 5. Attrid has been awarded the Approval ScalefooftheAmerican Institute of Laundering for being harmless to fabrics. Arrid is the LARGEST SELLING DEODORANT. Try a jar today! At all stores selling toilet goods (also in 10¢ and 59¢ jars) 39¢ ajar Blue Grass Enjoy after-bath freshness with Blue Grass Flower Mist and Dusting Powder. Weaver BLUE GRASS FLOWER MIST...1.25 BLUE GRASS DUSTING POWDER...1.50 Prices subject to Federal and Local taxes. Say "HELLO" to the PARTY SEASON WITH YOUR FORMAL ATTIRE CLEANED THE CORRECT WAY FOR---- DELUXE DRY-CLEANING By a Dependable Firm CALL---- INDEPENDENT Laundry & Dry Cleaners DAY. Phone 432 740 Vt.