THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1940. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Westminster Choir To Give Annual Sing The mid-winter concert by the Westminster A Cappella Choir of 70 voices under the direction of Dean D. M. Swarthow will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the First Presbyterian church. Fresh from its recent appearance in Kansas City with the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Karl Krueger, the choir will offer three of the best known numbers from F. Mellius Christiansen: "Lost in the Night," "Beautiful Saviour," and "Wake Awake." Other select rions will be heard from Healey Wintan, Edward Elgar, Van Denman Thompson, Rachmaninoff, Tschaikowsky, and Tschesnokof. Special numbers on the evening's program will include a violin solo by Waldamar Geltch, professor of violin, accompanied by Allie Merle Conger, associate professor of piano, and a vocal solo by Minerva Davis, fa'42, mezzo-soprano. The concert will be open to the public. A free-will offering will be taken. Tomorrow Authorized Parties-whole business may be a lot of fun, but it has no particular importance or inner significance in a small Yale in a very large world." Pi Kappa Alpha, dance at chapter house, 12 p.m. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, dance at Union building, 12 p.m. Watkins hall, dance at the hall, 12 p.m. Wesley Foundation, skating party at the church and rink, 12 p.m. Fireside Forum, dance and penny carnival at the Congregational church at 12 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 10, 1940 Phi Gamma Delta, dance at chapter house, 12 p.m. Elizabeth Meguiar, Adviser of Women for the joint committee student affairs Christian Church Forum, skating party at the rink. 12 p.m. I. S.A., dance at the Union ballroom, 12 p.m. According to various government reports, about 15 per cent of the 1659.000.000 eggs produced in New York State in 1938 were used on oms for eating and hatching. Society---whole business may be a lot of fun, but it has no particular importance or inner significance in a small Yale in a very large world." (Continued from page two) that Mary Fay Murphy, a student here last semester, has been pledged to Alpha Phi sorority at Washburn college. Corbin Hall will hold open house tonight from 7 to 8 o'clock. Rev. and Mrs. John E. Bowers of the Episcopal church were dinner guests at the Pi Beta Phi sorority last night. New Hostess at Memorial Union Brooks Brothers To Face Charques New Hostess at Memorial Union Marie Brown, graduate student in the department of mathematics, will replace Mrs. Eunice Roller as morning hostess of the Memorial Union Lounge. Mrs. Roller has gone to Kansas City where her husband is a student in medical school. Aaron Brooks, 24, and Gaylord Brooks, 20, waived preliminary hearings in justice court yesterday and will be bound over to answer their charges of burglary before Judge Hugh Means in the regular May term of court. Aaron Brooks faces second degree burglary charges and is accused of robbing the Deluxe cafe, while his cousin Gaylord Brooks is charged with first degree burglary in connection with a robbery at the Lawrence Country club Sunday night. Both were unable to make their bonds and were committed to jail. INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY PORTRAIT of a satisfied customer Fraternities May— 740 Vermont (Continued from page 2) leap most humily at election to as good a fraternity or society as they can get at Yale. Phone 432 This contradictory attitude is best typified by the News, campus daily, four of whose editors are fraternity members. On the day after the fraternity elections last fall, the paper feebly philosophized in an editorial "Wiser on the Morrow Morm: The Of greater eminence than the fraternities are the six secret senior societies: Skull and Bones, Scroll and Key, Wolf's Head, Elihu, Berzelius, and Book and Snake. These are the societies that go in for a lot of abracadabra and meet in windowless crypts. For MORNING News and FOREIGN News Subscribe--- THE KANSAS CITY STAR Headquarters Rexall Drug Store PHON 17 H. L. Nevin Distributor 13 papers - 15c per week 847 Mass. St. Every public telephone is YOUR telephone . . . and there are more than half a million of them! You'll find them in stores, eating places, gas stations along the highways—in all kinds of public places convenient for your use. Nowhere else in the world is the distribution of telephones so general. And nowhere else can you get such fast, accurate, and friendly service at such low cost. Why not telephone home often? Rates to most points are lowest any night after 7 P.M. and all day Sunday.