Here on the Hill--- an Account of Mt. Oread Society PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUES., MARCH 4, 1941 Good For What Ails You-- Some Posies On a Silly Hat Comes spring, then comes the time that your permanent looks like nothing human, your figure has spread five pounds in the wrong direction, and all your clothes look like sackcloth and ashes. Comes spring, then comes the time your professors stop liking you, the library looks like the Black Hole of Calcutta and you eat strawberry ice cream cones in lieu of sulphur and molasses. This is the time, too, that smart little girls hit their papas for some new clothes, preferably of the beau-catching variety. To catch yourself a beau this year remember: To catch yourself a bead this year remember to hang any size or shape, will get everybody's approval. That bangs, any size or shape, will get everybody's approval. That you may either dress yourself in navy blue and brass buttons, or go civilian with a silly hat and a wacky print dress. siny hat and a wacky print dress. That you can wear any color this spring and get away with it, but that cool crisp greens that make you feel like a salad or a swimming pool are top flight. Veils are better than ever, especially when hitched up with a baby straw set plunk on top of your head. That South American styles and colors are way out in front, but if you want to get a little closer to home, you can't do better than the North American Indian, God rest his soul. Indian blues, reds, and yellows are striking and colorful, and don't get on your nerves after three weeks of hanging in your closet. That upon looking at the picture from 10 feet back, skirts are slimmer, shoulders are softer and less squared, and the Dolman sleeve, the droopy old thing, is back. That five years ago no self-respecting woman would have tried it, but today you can wear an entire ensemble of one color, and be just as good Schiaperelli as the Duchess of You-Know-What. Beige is good for this if you don't mind being mistaken for part of a neutral background or a subtle piece of enemy camouflage. That not to knit in these perilous times is a social faux paus, and what every American home needs these days is a good, substantial copy of Stirling Hayden, lately of Virginia, and a six foot, four inch cuties with allure. Ping Pong Players Drop First Match The University ping pong teams lost their first intercollegiate match last Sunday afternoon to Kansas State by a score of 6-3. - Men who played the first four positions were Joe Davison, Charles Ham, Bud Heiberg, and Perry Peterson. Women occupying first and second places are Olivia Cole and Ellen Irwin. Winning singles matches were played by Ellen Irwin, Bud Helberg, and Perry Petterson. Joe Davison, Charles Ham, and Olivia Cole were defeated. Doubles teams of Davison and Heiberg, Ham and Peterson, and Irwin and Cole, suffered three defeats. The next match will be a triangular affair in Topeka Sunday with the Topeka Table Tennis Association and the Manhattan city team BEAT OKLAHOMA!! Who Was That Woman I Seen You With? Sunday Doings--weekend guests were Mrs. E. G. Siden, Minneapolis; Mrs. Walter Last Sunday, the first in March, a blowsy day not conducive to study, found the following people doing the following things: SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON . . . ... dinner guests Sunday night were Barbara Benton, Margaret Butler, Caroline Sloan, Eleanor Allen, Mary Burchfield, Teddy Comley, Georgia Ann Utterback, Barbara Barber, Wilma Miner, Beck Trembley. ... Priscilla Adams, Marjorie McKay, Betty Baker, Lois Howell, Miraim Bartlett, Billie Jarboe, Nancy Carey, Shirley Kernodle, Katie Hall, Dorothy Harvey, Margorie Martin, Mr. and Mrs. G. K. Hamilton of Kansas City. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Musser of Kansas City, Mo.; Betty Liemert, Don Ebling, Marjorie Siegrist, Jack Minor, Miriam Jesson, Dottie Dunham, Topeka, Mrs. H. C. Lyons of Kansas City, and Mr. and Mrs. William Oliver of Kansas City. DELTA PHI SIGMA . . . ... Congregational sorority, held a formal initiation last evening at Evans Hearth. The following girls were initiated: Dorothy Stump, Maxine Butts, Kay Smithmeyer, Betty Jean Hicks, Sylvia Steeper, June King, Betty Kopp, Marilyn Wheatley, and Gloria Burr. ...guest this week is Sarah Kenvon, Topeka. 1234 OREAD ... JAYHAWK CO-OP . . . ... Sunday dinner guests were Mr. and Mrs. William K. Walker, Miss Ruth Orcutt, and Fred Robertson. ... Sunday dinner guests were Joe Laird, Bill Reece, Jim Dr. and Mrs. R. A. West of Wichita, and Gilbert Sollenberger. GAMMA PHI BETA . . . ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . . dinner guests Sunday were Corinne Nichols, Baker University, Mr and Mrs. H. S. Allen, Kansas City Mo. Crary, McPherson, and Ruth Crary, Reading. DELTA UPSILON . . . ... initiate in addition to the list of initiates announced in the Sunday Kansan is Phil Russell, who was also initiated Sunday. ... from Maine to California will be displayed at the Geographis Garb show Thursday night, March 13, in the Memorial Union Ballroom, sponsored by the Independent Student Association. FASHION FADS . . . Women's styles as worn in different parts of this nation will be modeled, according to Mary Gene Hull I.S.A. social chairman. The committee in charge of arrangements includes Mary Gene Hull, Claudine Scott, Jane Lorrimer, Dorothy May, Helen Figley, Mary Frances Fitzpatrick, and Betty Thomas. . . . dinner guests Sunday were: Molly Mullen; Betty McCullough and Barbara Mullen, Marion; Jane Fifield, Lueille Jenkins, and Mrs. Paul Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo.; Maxine Sutton, Manhattan; Bernard A. Barnhill, Paola; Alice Russell and Jeanne Moyer. TEMPLIN HALL . . . ... dinner guests Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph D. Morse, Green Rapids, Mich. PHI GAMMA DELTA . . . ... announces the pledging of Clay Duncan, Jr. Kansas City, Mo. DELTA CHI... --- Duncan, JJ, Kansas City, Mo. ... dinner guests Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Victor Larson, Kansas City. Mo; Miss Virginia Innis, Nevada. Mo; Dr. and Mrs. H. J. Lind, Kansas City, Kan.; W. W. Woods, New York; Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Duncan, Kansas City, Mo.; Dr. and Mrs. Wheeler, and daughter, Lawrence; Herb Finnell, Kansas City, Mo.; Lieutenant Adrian Sherman, Ft. Sill, Okla.; Lieutenant John Cooper, Ft. Riley; and Loren Peterman, Chicago. All that can possibly be said about this is "Boy Meets Girl." ... dinner guests Friday evening were Mrs. Ralph Singleton, New Haven, and Mrs. Mary Berger, Washington, D.C. ... guests Sunday were Mrs. Rowena Logue and son, Richard, Tulsa; Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Woodman, daughter and son, Marjorie and Richard, Overland Park; and Mr. and Mrs. Marcel Pugh, Eureka. ACACIA... ALPHA TAU OMEGA . . . ... Sunday dinner guest was Mrs. Howard Hull, Quivera. ... Sunday dinner guests were: Leva Lash, Nel McDonald, John Laidig, Raymond York, Mary Lou Noble and Wendell Wendstrand. MILLER HALL . . . JUNIOR WOMEN . . ... will be entertained at a tea given in the Men's Lounge of the Memorial Union building from 3 to 5.30 p.m., Thursday, March 6, under the auspices of the University Women's club. ... over night guests last night were Mrs. Ben. O. Evans and Marjorie Stevens, both of Independence. PHI KAFPA PSI . . . WAGER HALL . . . ... Sunday dinner guest was Howard Snyder. KAPPA SIGMA .. . . . Mrs. C. D. Wilson, housemother, entertained the Mothers' club with a tea at the chapter house yesterday afternoon. SIGMA PHI EPSILON . . . ... dinner guests Sunday were Judge and Mrs. Earl W. Frost, Kansas City, Mo. Judge Frost is the newly-elected grand marshal of the national fraternity. ... John Foust, Karl and Hal Rupenthal, Harold Edwards, and Bob Cowgill visited the chapter at Man (continued to use three). (continued to page three) DE LUXE CAFE Our 22nd year in serving K.U. Students 711 Mass. St. Born For Your Basque Dresses itted to your torso . . . bursts out in rippling fullness from hip to hem. Satin-edged bodice is of soft rayon crepe. Crisp rayon taffeta skirt "whooshes" flirtatious [v as you walk] 1y as you walk. Navy and White Sizes 32 to 38 $2.98 100 De Fo 10