7. 12, 1941. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12, 1941. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS h P PAGE THREE few point- save buck buck home;ely get in named alibis the house n't be hard ms of me- Before inger over all those cases. When sets out (reee) s who do are times. What wolf screen door er date is. 3. rm orantiation men's g skin. can be r. aration osor eless, am. died the american g for nics. ILLING today! oilet goods (9¢ jars) Mullen Rides Gravy Train in Draft Camp C. H. Mullen, former president of M.S.C., who was drafted this summer, is doing all right for himself under the guiding hand of Uncle Sam. Already a first class private after only four months of service, Mullen was recently selected from the thousands of men at Ft. Snelling, Minn., to represent the typical army draftee in a football party of Harold Stassen, governor of Minnesota. The governor decided to take a soldier, a sailor, and a marine with him to the Minnesota-Northwestern game. one of the big contests two weeks ago. Mullen was chosen as the soldier by the commanding officer at Fort Snelling, when he saw references that Mullen had submitted in his application for an Officer's Training course. These recommendations came from Chancellor Deane W. Mallot, Dr. Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, and from Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the alumni association. The application for Officers' Training will be considered by an army board within a few weeks. If accepted, Mullen will go into training somewhere in the East, and will eventually receive a commission as a second lieutenant in the regular C. B. MULLEN Eastwood and Kalin Invited to Speak At Concordia Meet army. Raymond Eastwood, associate professor of drawing and painting, and Victor Kalin, art student, have been invited to speak in Concordia Monday. These two artists will address a group of people interested in art who will converge in a meeting celebrating National Art Week. Kalin will be remembered as winner of a five hundred dollar prize last year for his painting, "Typical Zeigfield Girl." At present, he is stationed with the 19th Signal Corps at Fort Smelling. Service Men Polish Cups—Not Apples Alpha Phi Omega, men's honorary service fraternity, will hold an open meeting at 9 o'clock tonight in the Pine Room of the Memorial Union building. Members of the fraternity have recently completed the project of polishing the cup trophies in the men's lounge at the Union building. They are now starting to take magazines from the Union to the patients in the hospital. Civil Engineers Seek E.B. Black Their President E. B. Black, e'06, g'24, senior member of the Black and Veatch engineering firm in Kansas City, has been made the official nominee for president of the American Society of Civil Engineers for 1942. He was the unanimous choice of the Board of Direction. For a time last spring Black was a consultant on water supply and water distribution problems for troop-housing, powder factories, ordnance plants, and other facilities for the War Department. During 1917-18 he served in the Air Corps, Aircraft production, and then as chief engineer in the construction division of the U.S. Army. Black is a member of the American Institute of Construction Engineers, The American Society of Civil Engineers, the Kansas City Engineers Club, American and New England Water Works Association and the Kansas Engineering Society. In 1928 and 1929 he was president of the Alumni Association. In 1932 he was elected a director of the American Society of Civil Engineers representing District 16 (Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, and approximately the western half of Missouri). Final Days Arrive To Get Directories Students who have not yet obtained their directories should call for them at the Registrar's office this week, Rowland Raup, editor, said today. Distribution of the directories is creating a problem in the office. Raup stated, and advised that students get theirs as soon as possible. Chambers Will Play At Scotch Varsity The regular Scotch Varsity will be held tonight, Keith Spalding, chairman of the Student Union Activities Board, announced today. Russ Chambers' band will play for the hour dance, which will take place in the Memorial Union ballroom from 7 to 8 p.m. Admission will be free to dates and 11 cents to stags. The 200 stag limit will be enforced. BUCK TEETH HELP---- (continued from page two) for home—pretending a broken leg or some such handicap to guarantee a slow pace, all the while keeping an eagle eye on the time. She should watch out for this. If everything goes as planned, she should reach the steps just in time to dash through the door hollering her thanks for a delightful evening—which wasn't. And Lastly—Onions As a last resort a girl may eat onions—preferably big, fat, green ones. When possible she should exhale lustily in her date's direction to sidetrack him. She should beware of such trickery as accepting gum or partaking of any food that might remove her delightful aroma. If this onion safeguard appears to have weakened she must acquire a sudden urge for a hamburger "with" in order to rally her forces. Her cause is a lost one if her date's olfactory nerves are insensitive at the moment. She will either have to suffer the consequences or bite him All girls should give these helpful hints a fair trial. One of them is bound to work, and she can see for herself that it is a cinch to avoid a good night clinic. Dr. Harold J. Hoflich, assistant professor of economics at Kent State University is serving as economic analyst with the U.S. treasury department during a year's leave of absence. Pi Lambda Theta Will Initiate 19 at Banquet The Founder's Day Banquet to be given by Pi Lambda Theta at 5:30 o'clock tomorrow evening at Evans Hearth will feature the conferring of the key to 19 initiates. G. B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, will speak on "Today's Challenge to the Women Teachers of America." Miss Doretha Weingartner, of the Lawrence city schools, will give a brief resume of the action taken at the bi-annual council in Excelsior Springs, Mo., last July. Those being initiated for membership in Pi Lambda Theta are: Mary Austin, June Cochren, Letha Jean Curtis, Janice Gartrell, Melva A. Good, Marjorie Houston, Helen E. Houston Pauline Kallaras, Virginia Laughiin, Lois Ann Lehman, Jessie McClune, Betty Jean Moore, Helen K. Moore, Marjorie Mossman, Muriel Olson, Dorothy M. Pollock, Mary Ellen Roach, Nadine E. Schuerman, and W. Elizabeth Meuschke Stevens. Those attending from the city schools will be: Miss Edith Beach, Mrs. Clarine Beyer, Rachel Gard, Yetieve Guldner, Martha Rayhill, Alice Schwartz, Dorthea Weingartner, and Winnie Macon. Members of the University faculty will be Misses Kathleen Doering, associate professor of Enology; Maude Ellsworth, instructor in education; Mary Fee, education instructor at University high school; Ruth Kenney, secretary of the correspondence study bureau; Ruth Litchen, instructor in education at University high school; and Beulah Morrison, professor of psychology. WILDCAT-JAYHAWK VARSITY DANCE After the game... MATT BETTON His Clarinet — His Orchestra — Featuring the Novachord 75c Plus Tax DATE or STAG SATURDAY, NOV.15, 8:30-11:30 MEMORIAL UNION BALLROOM DON'T MISS THIS VARSITY!