WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1941. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS ave from four PAGE THREE Kansas, province from five chapters suri, and for the "Woman" al lyric college ne Cow- ch sup- wills written dees, de- Univer- Gamma ase Sat- business Gam- ance are s. Fred arynell , Miss ocking, West, Idwin, Cast, Doro- dwin, May Bet- Engine Council To Formulate Exhibition Plans Plans for the Engineering Exposition, to be held here April 18-19, will shift into high gear tomorrow when the Engineering Council meets to discuss committees, finances, and other matters concerning the show. A faculty committee has been appointed, consisting of George Beal, professor of architecture and chairman of the committee; V. P. Hessler, professor electrical engineering; F. A. Russell, professor of civil engineering; J. O. Jones, professor of applied mechanics, and F. L. Brown, professor of applied mechanics. In addition to the various departments of the School of Engineering, the departments of mathematics and military science will be represented. They will both be given space in Marvin hall for their exhibits. The exhibition will occupy four campus buildings-Marvin hall, Haworth hall, Bailey laboratory, and engineering laboratories in back or Marvin hall. A competitive angle is added to the exhibition by the awarding of a silver loving cup by Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, to the department having the best exhibit, and a photography contest, details of which have not yet been released. Because the exhibitin is being given a year ahead of schedule, the Men's Student Council has cut the budget for the show from $250 to $250. The ekposition, originally scheduled for 1942, is being given this year in connection with the Kansas Relays April 18-19, and during the Seventy-fifth Anniversary Celebration in June. The show is designed to show the practical work of the engineers, but many stunts and feature shows are guaranteed to interest spectators. Via The Silver Screen--dinner plans last night brought men from Delta Upsilon to Battenfeld, Templin, and Carruth halls for dinner. To Reenact City's Big Day Picture Will Last For 35 Minutes University students have a treat in store for them when they view a reenactment of the world premiere of "Dark Command," held in Lawrence last April. However, the reenactment will not be literal but via technicolor and black and white film provided by Republic studios and Lawrence cameramen. With 35 minutes of premiere activity to be shown, the audience will view a throng of an estimated 40,000 to 80,000 people (as variedly estimated by every guesspert.) Remembering the rush for the special train, most of the audience will blush, for they will see their own mad scramblings. Memorable For Four The two-mile long parade of humanity down Massachusetts street to exhibit the celebrities was the longest Lawrence has ever seen. For four University students it was a memorable occasion. Dick Mize, '40, and Virgina Ford, education senior, were winners in the contest for the honor of accompanying the stars. Kay O'Sullivan, college sophomore, and Ivan Cain, '40, were runnersup. Mize teamed with Wendy Barrie, Miss Ford with John Wayne, Cain with Ona Munson, and Miss O'Sullivan with Walter Pidgeon. Gene Autry, with his 10-gallon sombrero and boots, added to the festivities as a special guest. 2-Mile Long Parade The pictures will be shown tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday at Jayhawker theater with Thompson Holtz of station WREN acting as commentator. Special equipment will be used to project the 16-millimeter film to full size on the Jayhawker screen. IVAN CAIN, KAY O'SULLIVAN, VIRGINIA FQRD. AND DICK MIZE ... their big day in pictures Dodge City Alumni Plant Two Trees Dodge City alumni of the University had a tree planting ceremony last Friday when they planted two silver spruce trees on the senior high school grounds. Each person participating in the project threw in one shovelful of dirt after the tree was in place. The farthest western city to report on its tree planting activities was St. Francis, where four poplars were planted in the city park. The trees form a background for some low-growing evergreen shrubs planted several years ago. Thompson Able to Leave Bed For Short Time Each Day Marvin Thompson, college freshman, who received severe burns several weeks ago and has been receiving treatment at Watkins Memorial hospital, is now able to be up and out of bed for a short time every day. Easy on you and your budget, too! ADDITIONAL SOCIETY-dinner plans last night brought men from Delta Upsilon to Battenfeld, Templin, and Carruth halls for dinner. ST. JOSEPH ___ $1.50 KANSAS CITY ___ .65 TOPEKA ___ .55 DENVER ___ 9.35 SALT LAKE CITY 18.35 LOS ANGELES ___ 26.75 Make that Spring Vacation trip by UNION PACIFIC SUPER-COACH! You'll travel in style for less per mile, going places by luxurious Super-Coach! Wide roomy lounge chairs .individual reading lights and ash trays .perfected year-round air-conditioning every detail designed for your personal riding pleasure, at less than half the cost of driving! Union Bus Depot 638 Mass. Phone 707 (continued from page two) to Sam Sifers, 40, Phil Delta Theta, from Kansas City, Mo. Zibby Pears, college junior from Kansas City, Mo., hung the pin of Al Becker, former student, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, from Kansas City, Kan. ... dinner guest last night was John Anderson. MILLER HALL . . . . . will hold an hour dance to- morrow night from 7 to 8 o'clock. At this meeting the group will also elect officers. JAYHAWK CO-OP . . . EXCHANGE . . . UNIVERSITY CLUB . . . . will hold initiation at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon for Virginia Gray, Dorothy Schroeter, and Mrs. D. Gagliardo. Mrs. Gagliardo, who is widely-known as a writer, will become an associate member. ... will have an informal dinner at 6:30 tonight in their clubrooms at the Union building. Dr. Andre Baude, a French medical officer, will speak on life in a German prison camp and his escape to America. . . . dinner guests last night were Kay Thompson, John Conard, Earl O'Connor, and Julius Gibson. ... Tuesday night dinner guests were Harold Hagy, Carroll Clawson, Marshall Butler, and Walter Hinshaw. THETA SIGMA PHI . . . ROCK CHALK CO-OP . . RICKER HALL . . . ... dinner guest last night was Bob Straughn, Topeka. Here's the refreshing treat you really go for... delicious DOUBLEMINT GUM Right in step with campus life—that's DOUBLEMINT GUM. Plenty of refreshing flavor. Swell fun to chew every day. And DOUBLEMINT fits all occasions-"bull sessions," after class, during gym. 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