PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, SEPT. 26, 1941 Union Open House Promises Gaiety Tomorrow the Memorial Union building will open its doors to every student on the Hill. The Occasion will be the annual open house. The Jay Janes are to be the official hostesses of the evening and will conduct guests on a tour through the building. Free cokes will be served to everyone. For entertainment, bridge games and ping pong will be going on in the Kansas room. If you tire of bridge and ping pong, there will be a Varsity starting at 9 p.m. in the ball room to fill the rest of the evening. Music for the Varsity will be by Clayton Harbur and his band. TEMPLIN HALL . . . ... Dinner guests Thursday night were Don Humphreys, Bob White, Cecilia Gonzalves, and Frances Butterfield. PHI KAPPA PSI . . . ... had as dinner guests Thursday night Prof. Claude Baldwin, school of liberal arts, and Bill Cowley. PHI DELTA THETA . . . . . . entertained Bob LaGree and Howard Rankin at dinner last night, and later in the evening went to the Alpha Chi Omega house for an hour dance. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA . . . ... Mary Millsom was luncheon guest today. . . . Dinner guests last night were Mr. and Mrs. Rayl and Mrs. Shievel, Hutchinson, Kan. DELTA GAMMA.. . . . held an hour dance with Phi Psi pledge class Thursday night, and with the Kappa Sig's Tuesday night. SIGMA KAPPA .. . . . pipedes have elected officers of their class: president, Betty Myers; vice-president, Barbara Wykoff; secretary, Pat Scherrer; treasurer, Jerry Sidener; social chairman, Margaret Hall; assistant rush captain, Marjory May; Bundles for Britain chairman, June Jett. CHI OMEGA . . . pledge class elected officers Thursday. The officers are Allouise Brown, president; Diana Creighton, vice president; Donna Burkhead, secre- tary; Christine Turk, treasurer. KAPPA ALPHA THETA Juncheon guests Thursday were Mrs. Robert E. Kernodle of Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. Bert Rogers of Olathe, Kan.; and Mary Jean Miller. SIGMA CHI... ... Dinner guests Wednesday were Neil Campbell, Warren Schmidt, Newton, Mildred Hyer, and Mr. J. D. Simpson, of Leanto, Saskatchewan. CHI OMEGA . . . ... will have open house tomorrow (continued to page three) DE LUXE CAFE Our 23rd Year in Serving K. U. Students 711 Mass. Here you have the "must have's" for college. In the left hand corner is a light weight dressy jacket for those coolish fall afternoon coke dates. Below LET US AND AVOID CAR TROUBLES Complete service for your car with--- Cities Service Products Fritz Co. "She's a Beaut!" Washington, Sept. 26 — (UP) she's a beautiful* Phone 4 Thus Washington People Observe Wally Windsor With those words a Washington policeman seemed to sum up the opinion of hundreds of men, women, and children who saw the Duchess of Windsor. Virtually everyone who saw her claimed they could understand now why the Duke had given up the throne of a vast empire for her—"the woman I love." The Duchess is small and demure with deep, sparkling blue eyes and warm brown hair. Her complexion is fair and she is, of course, immaculately groomed. She does her hair with a center part with an upswing movement on either side with soft curls in back of the neckline. Newspaperwomen who gave a reception for the Duchess late yesterday were agreed that the Duchess doesn't photograph well—that she's much more attractive in person. If the Duchess wore lipstick it was so adrotty used that it could not be seen. The same goes for make-up. No red nail polish, just "naturally tinted" nails. Her voice is very sweet and she is vivacious in a natural manner. Both she and the Duke look younger than their pictures and the Duchess is much smaller than her pictures make her appear. At the reception she wore a pale blue blouse, with a high v-neck, and a narrow black skirt that reached just below the knees. Biege hose, black pumps, long black gloves half-way to the elbow, and a tiny velvet hat with a blue veil completed her outfit. That was one of four costumes she wore yesterday. She arrived at the railroad station in a severe black suit, relieved by gold buttons and velvet trim. For the visit to the White House to see President Roosevelt she changed to "Wallis" blue, and to evening clothes last night for the Embassy dinner. The Duchess shook hands with each member of the club and then she spoke briefly, but "off the record." She joined Mrs. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty, the club's president, at the tables where cocktails and tea were served. But the Duchess sipped only a glass of water. Among the guests were Mrs. Herman Rogers, in whose home near Tours, France, where the Windsors were married, and Mrs. Buchanan Merryman, the Duchess' "Aunt Bessie." Home Ec Department Entertains New Head The Duke called for his wife just before 6 p.m. Grasping her hands, he greeted her: "Cheerio, darling." The staff of the department of home economics will entertain informally with a tea for Edna A. Hill, new head of the department, from 3:30 to 5:30 this afternoon at the home management house. Boots and shoes left behind when German soldiers went to the front are being requisitioned to industrial, building, and farm workers.