FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1941. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Both have give you and siende uptionsiversity a*s* taken in tents in t tutmas tatmas $t uled $181.8 $399.9 in coe n87. executive se County T association my app and faculty tited in t they are bo preference nappenings on the hill Fill Peck, college freshman, has an elected captain of the freshn class women's basketball team ich was organized recently. Don Keplinger, college sophomore, is released yesterday from Watts Memorial hospital where he had confined since Saturday cause of an infected foot. Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Tau, honry engineering fraternities, are skiing plans for a joint banquet be held at the Eldridge hotel out March 14. Jean Dunning, national officer of alpha Omicron Pi sorority, examined the rush week at DePaul university to the Women's Pan-helic council Monday afternoon. Hill soriors are planning new rules to vern next year's annual chase. The University band will play a concert at Topeka March 25 on a program sponsored by the Topeka ons Club. Ed Scott, business junior, is back the Hill this week after spending most of last week at his home Topeka because of a flu attack. Larry Johnston, business senior, currently engaged in the Hercu- can task of compiling a complete of statistics and summaries of very Jayhawk basketball game for the records of the sports publicity department of the news bureau. last year he prepared a similar role of all Jayhawk football games. material for these tables is gleaned on old issues of the Kansan. Mary Lou Oliver, graduate of '39 and now teaching the schools at armer, visited Lillian Fisher, college senior, last weekend. Professors are really getting ritzay. W. Storer, associate professor of physics, attended one of his astronomy classes last week in full dress fire. He went to a party after the class. Dr. F. C. Allen spoke Wednesday the fiftieth anniversary celebration of the Chillicothe Business Colle. Jack Grogan, Kansas City, Mo., nouncer for radio station WHB, is a guest of Alpha Tau Omega ternity Tuesday. E. F. Engel, professor of German so is retiring next year, has a 9:30 ass in German II which is comprised of exactly the same students so were in his German I class last nester. This is the first time that s has ever happened during his years of teaching. Dr. and Mrs. Mendell Shimberg, avenworth, visited their son, mcs Shimburg, college freshman, sesday afternoon. poz In Kansas City Karl Klooz, bursar, was in Kan- City yesterday afternoon on siness for the University. Join Our RENTAL LIBRARY The new books you have been wanting to read are here, 15c for 5 days THE BOOK NOOK 021 Mass. Tel. 666 YMCA-YWCA Entertain Lawrence Young People Square dances and all the paraphernalia of an old-time barn dance will entertain 25 unemployed Lawrence boys and girls at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Plymouth Congregational church. This will be the third recreational evening of this kind sponsored by the recreation committee of the Y.M.C.A.-Y.W.C.A. The committee plans to interest the group in archery, baseball, picnics, hikes, dances, and man yother forms of entertainment, said John Moore, executive secretary of the Y.M.C.A Margaret June Gray, college senior, is chairman of the recreation committee. Other members are Carl Unruh, sophomore engineer; Glen Perkins, college freshman; and Jackie Spencer, college junior. 29 C.A.A. Students On Secondary List The University CAA program will be well under way within a few days. Registration of students is now completed, and authorities in Washington will send their approval soon. The list of secondary flying students includes: Jack Bauman, John Burge, John Chalfant, Paul Conway, Leonard Dickey, Galen Fields, Charles Grutzmacher, Robert Haynes, Raymond Herschman, Maurice Hill, Howard Kenton, Horace Lamberton, Warren Livelengo, Dale Leuhring, Randel Matthews, Mary McIntire, Welman Nusbaum, Howard Palmer, Charles O'Bryon, Leon Pierson, William Pierson, Lloyd Purcell, Charles Razak, Robetrick Scott, Earl Snowden, William Snyder, Stanley Stauffer, Robert Stoland, and John Stratton. Some night flying is being done with the aid of flares. Engineering Professor To Talk With Radio Men S. E. Clements, professor of electrical engineering, is in Kansas City, Mo., today to meet with members of the Institute of Radio Engineers. The group will make plans for organizing a Kansas City section of the institute. 'Jay Talk' Debut Set For March 11 March 11 has been set as the publication date for the first issue of the Independent Students' Association Jay Talk, bi-weekly independent newspaper. The publications committee met yesterday to work out plans for the first mimeographed copies, and Bill Hogle business senior, was named business manager by Fred Robertson, I.S.A. president. The committee discussed the problem of distribution and decided to give the paper free of charge to all members of the LSA. Tentative plans were to distribute the papers at a meeting of the association. Members of the publication committee are Robertson, Hogle, Joy Miller, college freshman; Orville Kretmeier, business junior; Mary McDonald, college freshman; Dorothy Gear, college junior; Dorothy Harkness, college freshman; and John Conard, college sophomore. To Dicuss Careers, Marriage Sunday Night "A Career, Marriage, or Both" will be the subject of a panel discussion in the third of a series of lectures on marriage sponsored by the Fireside Forum of the Plymouth Congregational church at 7 o'clock Sunday evening. Under the general heading of "Personal Relations and the Family," the speakers will be Miss Marian Lowe, head medical social worker at Bell Memorial hospital in Kansas City; Mrs. L. Merle Rymph, general secretary of the Kansas Conference of Congregational churches; and Mrs. Joseph F. King. Read the Kansan. To Abolish Profit From Book Exchange ★★★★ The Executive Council of the Women's Self-Governing Association unanimously agreed to abolish the profit method of operation of the book exchange at their meeting in the union building last night, and at the same time again refused to take any action to investigate the merits of a combined student council. The resolution adopted by the council was merely a general statement of policy. It directed the manager of the book exchange, with the advice of the faculty advisory committee, to determine the best method of operating the exchange on a non-profit basis. The profit which has not already been invested in scholarships, will be retained for use as working capital for buying books. The resolution provided that the manager is to regulate prices so that this present fund does not vary more than $500 either way from its present figure. Former profits already invested in the scholarship fund will be unaffected by the change. The resolution was drawn up and presented to the council by a committee which investigated the present operations of the exchange. Jean Robertson, college senior; Jeanne Moyer, fine arts junior; and Mary Louise Baker, college junior, were members of the committee. No mention of the previously tabled M.S.C. resolution to set up a joint committee to investigate the merits of a combined council was made by the women legislators. Cosmopolitan Club Initiates New Members Tonight James Hamilton, college sophomore, will review the book "Union Now" at the meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club at 7:30 o'clock tonight. New members will be initiated. SOCIETY— (continued from page two) MILLER HALL . . . ... dinner guest last night was Esther Twente, assistant professor of sociology. DELTA UPSILON... the Kansan. They will make their home in San Diego where Decker is sports editor for the Tribune. DELTA CHI... ... dinner guests last night were Betty Jeanne Hess, Georgianne Theis, Bill Farmer, Jim Burge, Hilden Gibson, and John Meteaill, Little River, Wyo. DELTA TAU DELTA . . . DELTA CHI . . . . guest this weekend is Major C. E. Grutzmacher, Onega. ... announces the pledging of Bob Burchinal, Formoso, and Warren Thomas Hartford. CHI OMEGA . . . ... entertained the Delta Gamma colony at dinner last night. ... luncheon guests yesterday were Peggy Roberts, Betty Roberts, Barbara Barber, Virginia Bantleon, Jeanne Sunderland. TEMPLIN HALL . . . ... luncheon guest yesterday was Mrs. John Ames, Topeka ... dinner guests last night were Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Ulmer; Mr. and mrs. Fred S. Montgomery. ALPHA-CHI OMEGA .. ALIHA-CHI OMEGA . . . announce the pledging of Betty Ann Davis, Lawrence. ROCK CHALK CO-OP... ROCK CHALK CO-OP . . . . . dinner guest last night was Miss Patty Cook.