Here on the Hill--- an Account of Mt. Oread Society PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WED., MARCH 11, 1941 It's Bysom's Night At Midweek The usual stag limit of 200 will be in effect, Carter Butler chairman of the Union activities committee, announced. Clyde Bysom's band will take its turn at the midweek bandstand tonight to give students a happy reason to get away from the books for an hour. . . . guest yesterday was Mrs. Carl V. Rite, Kansas City, Kan. If this semester goes into a social slump midway as last semester did, the number of stags tonight will fall far below the maximum mark. Last semester after the first gay days when . . . announces the election of the following officers: Muriel Henry, president; Dorothy Burkhead, vice president; Nancy Kerber, secretary; Virginia Gear, treasurer; Mary Kay Brown, rush chairman; Anna Jane Hoffman, house manager; Marjorie McKay, house president; Helen Kay Moore, pledge mother; Mary Ann Hannum, Eleusis editor. Wednesday night, attendance dwindled until only 96 stag tickets were sold during the quiz rush. CHI OMEGA . . . ALPHA DELTA PI . . . JAYHAWK CO-OP . . . guest Sunday was Justine Taylor, Topeka. TRIANGLE . . . . . . dinner guest Tuesday night was Forest Frease. entertained its Kansas City Mothere club with a luncheon Tuesday noon. Guests were Mrs. H. Morley, Mrs. C. W. Diether, Mrs. C. L. Stewart, Miss Catherine Stewart, Mrs. George Rick, Mrs. J. S. Stevenson, Mrs. J. L. Strandburt, Mrs. f. Pack, Mrs. W. C. Means, Mrs F. W. Toomey, Mrs N. Elhers, Mrs W. Voigtlander. PI LAMBDA THETA . . . national education sorority, will hold pledging services tomorrow for the following women: Mary Margaret Anderson, Alta Bingham, Gladys Bitter, Helen Cronemeyer, Edith K. Eberhardt, Polly Gowans, Margaret June Gray, Winifred Hill, Helen Huffman, Mabelle Irvin, Jean Klussman, Viola Knoche, Thelma Lehman, Jeanna Moyer, Loretta Osborn, Vivian Peabody, Mrs. Eloise H. Shields, Eleanor Swan, Beulah Talbot, Dorothy Weidmann. Miss Ruth Lichen will conduct the pledging. Initiation will be March 27 at Evans Hearth. ACACIA .. . . dinner guest last night was Hugh Sillin. SIGMA PHI EPSILON guests yesterday from the Oklahoma A. and M. chapter were Sam Sharp and Jack Emerson. THREE STUDENTS... ... attended the wedding of Dorothy Trekell, 78, and James Taggert, who was graduated from Washburn College in 1938, in Wellington last Saturday. Jean Trekelli, college freshman and sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Joan Taggert, college sophomore, was a bridesmaid and Robert Trekell, college senior and freshman medic, gave his sister away. Taggert was graduated from the Washburn School of Law and was admitted to the bar last summer. He is now in partnership with his father in Wellington. WESTMINSTER HALL . . ... guest last weekend was Sybile Oberholser, Kansas City, Kan. She is a former student of the University and is now in nurse's training in Kansas City. WATKINS HALL . . . dinner guest yesterday was Shirley Bartholemew. TAU KAPPA EPSILON . . . dinner guests last night were Mike Mcula and Howard Dunaway, Stillwater, Okla.; Dale Ayres, Sabetha; Bob Hill and Max Alderman, Ottawa. BATTENFELD HALL . . . ... guests Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Battenfeld, Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. Arthur J. Daniels and Barbara Daniels, and Elden Calhoun, also of Kansas City, Mo.; C. H. Mullen, Lee Huddleston. Mr. and Mrs. Battenfeld, endowers of the hall, presented a series of colored movies which they took in Europe last summer. . . . guest last weekend was Hoyt Baker, Peabody. ... guest last night was G. R Sewell, Sabetha. RICKER HALL . . . ... guests this week are Mrs. H. B. ♦ Stout, Anthony, and Bob Straughn, Topeka. MILLER HALL . . . ... dinner guests last night were ... Boylan and Mildred Smith. ... dinner guests Sunday were Mrs. W. H. Link, Topeka; Mrs. Albert Gorden, Windson, Ontario; and Lois Lee Allen. TEMPLIN HALL . . . ... for 20 men and women, greeks and independents, was held at Henley house last night. Sponsored by the Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A., a fellowship dinner is given every Tuesday evening. Margaret Learned, chairman of the personality and family commission, plans the meeting. MIXER . . . KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA . . . . . announces the election of the following officers: Jeanne Sunderland, president; Mary Beth Dodge, president of standards; Jane Barnes, scholarship chairman; Norma Tibbets, social chairman; Nancy Pra- This time we're going to take up some ways a fellow can dress to appear taller, shorter or thinner. For instance . . . MaleModes By Phil McCarthy Buy yourself a striped suit that's cut with a high waistline, and people will think you're as long-legged as a hurdler. See to it that the sleeves are tapered quite a bit and that they are short enough to reveal some shirt cuff. An unbroken vertical line where the coat ends and the trousers begin will help, too. Or if you don't like the idea of this suit, why don't you buy yourself a pair of cowboy boots? WANNA' LOOK TALLER? WANNA' LOOK SHORTER? If so, get a fully draped suit, preferably in a double-breasted model with a longer coat and lower waistline. Avoid small neat patterns; they "expand" you a lot. Stay away from stripes unless they are wide-spaced and pretty well subdued. WANNA' LOOK THINNER? If you happen to be carrying around a batch of excess weight and don't fancy the starvation diet methods, try some of these. Wear a suit with higher-notched lapels in fabrics that are solid in color or have a wide-spaced stripe. You too should stay away from those small patterns. Even go so far as to have your trousers finished without a cuff. SATISFIED AS YOU ARE? Well then, you've wasted some time reading this, haven't you? Philharmonic Will Play A Shorter Season The Philharmonic trustees have accepted recommendations of a special reorganization committee—recommendations which contemplate a radically reduced expenditure if the orchestra is to continue on a season shortened from the present 20 weeks to 12 and on a subscription concert series reduced from 10 pairs of subscription concerts to eight. The gods of harmony and of rhythm have smiled with favor upon the Kansas City Philharmonic. The orchestra will continue for another year. ther, pledge captain; Betty Lou Young, house president; Patty Bigelow, corresponding secretary; Virginia Houston, recording secretary; Lura Jane Smith, intramural mananger; Katherine Green, registrar; Betty Lou Young, marshall. ... luncheon guest yesterday was Suzanne Haskins. ... Sunday dinner guests were Tom Lillard, Tom Walton, Charles Rayl, Art Robinson, and Frank Bangs. DE LUXE CAFE Our 22nd year in serving K.U. Students 711 Mass. St. Tacoma, Wash.—(UP)—Miss Evelyn Appleton Lock is dieting. In 45 days she has reduced her weight from 166 pounds to 136. She says she will keep on dieting until she is down to 125. Twenty Apples A Day Makes Silhouette Shrink Her diet is a source of delight to Washington orchard owners and to the Surplus Marketing Administration, and a source of argument among physicians. $ ^{ \dagger} $ Her diet is a source of delight to Washington orchard owners and to the Surplus Marketing Administration, and a source of argument among physicians. Miss Lock is eating only apples—20 a day—with apple juice for a chaser. She got the idea in Yakima, Wash., when she visited there from her home in Indianapolis. Physicians are watching her diet with much interest. She reports she feels fine and that the apple juice put an end to the appetite she blames for her previous weigh. By way of precaution Miss Lock, 39, has a physical examination twice a week. Her blood pressure was between 170 and 180 at the start. It dropped to 120. Her pulse dropped from 86 to 72. Apple growers of Washington and the Surplus Marketing Administration aren't worried too much about the medical aspects. To them, struggling with an oversupply of apples, the diminishing Miss Lock looms larger and larger as an "angel." Mumert Describes University Design In 'Packaging Parade' The article describes the work that design students are doing in the field of packaging design under the supervision of T. D. Jones, assistant professor of design. It is entitled "Packaging Goes to College." The leading article in the Marcin issue of "Packaging Parade" a nationally circulated trade journal, was written by University student, Agnes Mumert, about the present work of the School of Fine Arts in the field of packaging design. Official Emblem ★★★★ For 75th Frank Cooper, author of the newspaper feature, "It Happened in Kansas," is the designer of the official emblem of the Seventy-fifth Anniversary celebration. Cooper is a graduate of the University. A large white "75" forms the background for a pictorial history of the development of the University from old North College to the present. At the top of the emblem, in bold-face type, stand the date "1886." the year of the founding of the University, and at the bottom, the date "1941." Minstrel Show Cast Includes Profs, Students The Old Time Minstrel Show which will be presented on the stage of the Jayhawker theater Thursday and Friday nights will have three University students and three faculty members in its cast of 79 people. University men taking part in the show are Lyle Armel, assistant secretary of the extension division; W. R. Maddox, assistant professor of political science; E. H. Taylor, professor of zoology; A. F. Gallup, special fine arts student; Bob Learned, education freshman; and Joe McAnarney, education senior. Tickets for the show may be reserved at the Round Corner drug store. 11 THE "GLOVE OF TOMORROW" NEWS—as the first robin is news. Lovely—as the first crocs is lovely. The new Lady Bacmo gives a miraculous illusion of tapering slenderness. It is svette as a pussy-willow, soft as a May breeze, all because seams have been removed. None at the base of the thumb...None at the back of the hand ...No contour break in the long, flowing line. Exciting shades to complement your Spring bib and tucker.