WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4. 1839 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREA Here on the Hill-an account of Mt. Oread Society Ardath Cauble, c'39, Society Editor Col. and Mrs. J. H. Dunkel of Topea announce the marriage of their daughter, Elizabeth Dunkel, to Dr. Howard Leigh MacCurdy, of Bronxville, N. Y., on Wednesday, Dec. 28, 1938 in Topea before 5 p.m. call KU-26; after 5, 2702-K3 The Rev. A. Walton Hoth, pastor of the Potwin Presbyterian church, performed the ceremony at 6 p.m. in front of a fireplace decorated with poinsettias and lighted by candles in candelabra at each side. The music was an organ arrangement of "Meditation" from "Thais." Only members of the families were present. The bride wore a dinner dress of plum and fuchsia creef, fashioned with a high Empire waistline, and carried a bouquet of orchids. She was attended by her sister, Catherine Dunkel, who wore a sapphire-bluff chiffon dinner dress, and carried a bouquet of gardenias. Doctor MacCurdy chose Robert Haig, of New York City, to be the best man. Mrs. MacCurdy has been a member of the faculty of the University of Kansas for the past 12 years. She will leave her position as assistant professor of women's physi- ology at the end of the semester. Doctor MacCurdy teaches physical education in the secondary schools in Yonkers, N. Y., and has charge of a physical capacity testing program for boys which he originated at Bronx Community High School for Bronsville, and Mrs. MacCurdy will join him there for permanent residence soon. Mr. and Mrs. Homer C. Bastian of Topeka announce the engagement of their daughter, Berdan, to Maurice L. Breidental, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice L. Breidental of Kansas City, Kan., and the marriage will take place in the early spring. Miss Bastian attended the University, where she was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Mr. Breidenthal, a graduate of the University, is a member of Phi Delta Theta. We hope that you will consider the importance of selecting with your reading needs in mind, and we extend a cordial imitation out to you in and around that any GREETINGS for 1939 Our rental library offers the new fiction and non-fiction for your week-end reading, and we have a large selection of fiction, biography and poetry from which to buy for your permanent library. Come in and see us soon. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 The annual-thimble party of the University Women's Club will be tomorrow afternoon in the Men's lounge of Memorial Union. Prof. Calderwood will give a short program of readings, after which tea will be served. Members who wish to bring their sewing are invited to do so. Mrs. J. P. Jensen is general chairman of the tea. Phi Kappa Psi fraternity amounts the pledging of Bob White, eng' imel. Phi Kappa Psi announces the pledging of Robert White, e' uncl. Phi Kappa Psi fraternity announces the election of the officers for the coming semester; Fen Durand, c'39; vice-president, Lester Combs, c'39; taursee; John Kline, b'40; corres. sec., Bill Gray, c'41; recording sec., Jack Cadden, eng'41 historian, Lamar Wylan, wl'41; bus. coordinator, Grove Lun, bus 40; door-keeper, Don Powell, c'41; pan-Hellenic Representative, Bill Gray, c'41. Gamma Phibeta announces the marriage of Juile Heimbier c,39; to Morton Jones, b'39. The couple was married Lee. 28. They plan to remain in school. Jones is a member of Sigma Chi. A majority of St. Lawrence University students favor subsidization of athletes. Sixty-four years ago Roanoke College board for $6.50 a month. Will Discuss Plan To Train Flyers Prof. E. D. Hay, instructor of mechanical engineering at the University, plans to inform military officials of the facilities available at the University for the training of army aviators, which would be in cooperation with the President to provide a corps of 2000 men. In addition, the University has a 100-foot wind tunnel in which several hundred tests of scale models have been conducted. If the classes were much enlarged, additional instruction would be required. Laboratory facilities would accommodate a considerably greater number of students. The University already offers a complete course in aeronautics with adequate laboratory facilities for the design, construction, and engine construction. If any action were taken the University would supplement the already existing courses with meteorology and aerial navigation. Y Constitution To Be Discussed The newly revised constitution of the Y.W.C.A. will be considered at the cabinet meeting tonight when it meets at Henley house from 8 to 9 p.m. The Y.W.C.A. cabinet will pass on the constitution before it is given to the organization members for ratification. The Williams College news bureau in one football weekend, despatched stores totaling more than 21,000 words. Edpic Parks, c'40, president of the W.Y.C.A., will read the constitution. Elizabeth Barclay, c'40, will have charge of the worship service at the meeting and Mary June Gray will report on the regional news letter. Reverend Jones To Speak On Experimental School The Rev. H. Lee Jones, of the Unitarian church, will discuss the experimental school, Commonwealth College, in Reno, Ark., at the W.Y.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. Current Action Commission when it meets this afternoon at 4:30 in Henley house. Commonwealth College is located in the heart of the sharecropper district and many of the farmers are attending the school. The school is known as an experimental college in co-operative living and education. Rev. Jones was located in the college for a year and has found a number of interesting aspects of education there. A New Instructor Appointed Dean Frank T. Stockton has announced the appointment of John A. Loftus, now a graduate student and assistant instructor in the department of political economy at Johns Hopkins University, as institute administrator and investments in the School of Business next semester. Chiapusso to Write for Etude Jan Chiapuso, professor of piano has been asked by Dr. James Francis Cooke, president of the Music Department and editor of "The Eute," to contribute a "Master Lesson" to that publication. Professor Chiapuso will submit a "Master Lesson" on Heller's arrangement of "The Trout" by Schubert. Twelve medica men are held in readiness at all Harvard home football games to aid injured players. Rothschild's South Dakota State College students eat on an average of 100 ice cream cones daily. The Colgate University senior class presidential election was won by a single-vote margin. Announces, with pride, to Lawrence women the opening of an exclusive shop in the Eldridge Hotel. Represented by Sally Jo Demsey Aileen Herndon You are cordially invited to come in and see our collection of dresses, coats, suits, sportswear and accessories. Spooner-Theaye museum is showing for the month of January an exhibition of 21 oil paintings by Maurice Braun. The group is hung in the south gallery on the second floor. Mr. Brau, who makes his home in Point Loma, Califf, was born in Hungary, but received a large part of his training in New York. For his exceptional work in marines and landscapes, he has received the Navy Medal for Service and Design for 1900, and the California Popular Prize for 1934. California, Iowa Debate Team Foes The group is comprised of four marine studies, several views of the San Diego waterfront, five colorful mountain landscapes and a number of still lifes and flower-pieced. The collection is predominantly California. The University debate team will meet as fess next week the University of California and the Iowa State College debaters. The latter debate will be held Jan. 11, before the Lions' Club. Taking the affirmative side, the University team will debate. Resolved: That the United States must form an alliance with Great Britain. The place of the University of California-KU. debate, to be hold Jan. 10, has not yet been determined. The Kansas debaters will take the negative of the question. Respondents are encouraged to form an alliance to protect their mutual interests against the aggressions of foreign nations. The personnel of the University debate team has not yet been choic sen, Prof. E. C. Bushler, of the speech department, said yesterday. Gould, Veteran Explorer, Here In March One of the leading American geologists and a veteran explorer of polar regions will speak at the University next March 31, when the Kansas Academy of Science meets on the Campus. He is Dr. Lawrence McKinley Gould, second in command in the Byrd Anartic expedition of 1928-30, geographer for the Putnam Arctic expedition in 1927 and assistant director for the Michigan Greenland expedition in 1926. Doctor Gould is professor of geology and geography at Carleton College, Northfield, Mim. Dr. W, H. Schoweh, associate professor of geology at the University, is president of the Kansas academy this year. S-A-L-E Obercoats and Suits By Hickey-Freeman and Griffon $25.00 Suits and Coats Now 1875 $29.50 Suits and Coats Now 2175 $35.00 Suits and, Coats Now 2625 $45.00 Suits and Coats Now 2975 $55.00 Suits and Coats Now 3900 $65.00 Suits and Coats Now 4600 Also SALE of Men's Robes and Radio Jackets Also SALE of Leather Jackets and Mackinaws We Maintain Our Own Alteration Department Dance with JOY at the SOPH HOP Jimmy Joy and his orchestra FRIDAY NIGHT -- 9 to 1 a.m. Featuring as entertainers: Ken Nealy, Bonnie Parsons, "Cub" Higgins, Guy McComas, Vernon Baty $1.75 Advance $2.00 Gate