WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1984 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Call K.U. 25 Before 12:30 p.m. Konna Phi Kappa Phi Installs Officers Kappa Phi, Methodist sorority, recently installed the following officers: president, Josephine Lee, c3; v5; president, Mary McCoy, t3; t2 treasurer, Namiol Grewicz; corresponding secretary, Freeda Brooks, edl; counsel; recording secretary, Frances Smith, b3; 55; program chairman, Clindure Reynolds, fa3; 34; secretary, Nicole Mackenzie, c3; 37; berachib, Beuthlin Prinze, c3; social Virginia Hardesty, c3; 77; and Berna Brown, c3; historian, Bonnie Jean Daniels, c3; c6; custodian, Virginia Hosebrook, c3; chaplain, Anna Welch, c3; art, Harriet Daniels, f5. The marriage of Helen Yancey of Enid, Ohla., to Clark Sherwood of Hutchinson has been announced. The ceremony took place Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. Sherwood's parents,Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Sherwood. Yanev-Sherwood Mr. Sherwood received his A.B. in 1928 from the University where he was a member of Phi Gamma Delta. The couple will make their home in Wichita. Phi Kappa Psi entertained with an hour dance at the chapter house last night. The following were present Betty Heaten, Caroline Bliss, Nadine Truxall, Loyce Hopp, Eleanor Nolan, Joe Burrow, Mary Frances Schultz, Genevieve Horn, Jean Beckner, Dennis DeLano, Ruth Armstrong, Barbara Everham, Connie Ellis, Martha Jane Shaffer, Helen Black, Betty Burke, Alverta Chaney, Marylin Keysay, Mary K. Dougherty, Loberta Brabant, Jane Allen, Marin Fegan, Gery Gaut, Betty Hamilton, and Shirley Kroh. The Phi Chi medical fraternity held its annual Founder's Day banquet Monday night on the Roof Garden of the Ambassador hotel in Kansas City. The local chapter was well represented along with the chapter at Rosedale and alumni of Kansas City. Prof. Karl Mattern spoke before the Round Table club on the subject, "The Painting of Winslow Homer, American Painter," in Spooner Thayer museum yesterday afternoon. Recent guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house include Senator and Mrs. R. C Russell of Great Bend, Elizabeth Post "33, Great Bend; and Hannabelle Walker, St. Joseph, Mo. Margaret Woodbury, c33, sails today on the M. V. Saturnia, from Commonwealth Harbor in Boston, for a three months' tour of Europe. ☆ ☆ ☆ Dinner guests last night at the Pi Beta Pi house were Prof. and Mrs Héryn Werner, and Major and Mrs W. C. Keenig. Karl Leidig, Lenora, who graduated from the School of Business the first semester, visited in Lawrence over the weekend. ☆ ☆ ☆ Gamma Phi Beta announces the engagement of Nadine Meyn, fa'umel, to Raymond Meyn, c'35, Sigma Chi. you like beautiful lines -2- Group Movement -: Dance Creations —Then Save a Date for next Monday Night Prof. and Mrs. John Ise and John and Charles Ise were dinner guests at the Delta Zeta house last night. Jannette Kygger of Elk City, a student here last semester, is visiting at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Alpha Xi Delta entertained Sigma Alpha Epsilon with an hour of dancing last night from 7 to 8. Kappa Eta Kappa announces the pledging of Vernon Fulton and Walter Kinksick, e'umcl. Engineers to Hold Display Committees Are Appointed for Several Departments Preparations for the engineering expo to be held April 20 and 21 are progressing rapidly. Committees for the various departments are being selected and duties assigned to the members. Those appointed to serve on committees in the department of civil engineering are: hydraulics laboratory Prof. J. O. Jones, Carl Kindwaert, Ted Downs, Howard Pankratz; highway engineering, Prof. W. C. McNown, Mark Sykes, A. J. Bassil; sanitary engineering, Prof Earnest Boyce, Dan Fulmer Robert Lingo; railway engineering Prof. F. A. Russell, Dan KimW, K. Cwyat; laboratory engineering, Prof. W. C McNown, Prof. A. M. Ockerblad, John Herdon, G. F. France, Charles Haggen aeronautical engineering, James Mandiger; construction engineering Prof. F. A. Russell, Prof. H. A. Rice, Mary Heter, Ed Hardeman, William Carter; Committees from the various other departments will be announced the latter part of this week. COSMOPOLITAN CLUE HEARS ALUMNI LECTURE ON ORIENT Miss Naomi Light, an alumna of the University of Kansas, spoke about India at the Cosmopolitan Club meeting at 4:30 Sunday afternoon in the Women's rest room in the Administration building She related her experiences in the Orient, particularly on India, a land of Houdini's and mystic performances. She taught English at the university, harvaging and of the good school system. Miss Light has been teaching in different places in India. In 1930 she taught economics at the Women's College at Karachi. Later she taught English at the women's college in Simla, the summer capital of India. She is now on a lecture tour mostly on this section of the country. Scarcely a fortnight passes but that mail is received here bearing Yale, Harvard, Princeton postmarks. Letters from Lawrence men . . away at schools . . writing us for smart things to wear. The men who leave Lawrence to study, seldom leave us for style. Our college section is showing now the first signs of spring in Suits and Topcoats. College men write home for other things than money. The Suits $21.50 to $45 The O'coats $17.50 to $30 Balance Your Reading with the world's Greatest Books. 225 titles in THE MODERN LIBRARY at 95c The three glass cases are to contain examples of Czecho-Slavian pearant arts brought from Czecho-Slovakia by Miss Rosemary Ketcham, professor of design, who spent two summers in Pratt, England. In the exhibition will be costumes, one of which is very rare and is at least 100 years old. 1021 Mass. THE BOOK NOOK Tel. 666 Sooner Score Is Bettered Old Records Reveal Jayhawk Trimmings Exceeding Oklahoma Recent Victory Plans Made for Exhibition Unusual Display From Czecho-Slovakia Open to Public During March The department of design is arranging a Czecho-Slovakian exhibition which will be open to the students of the University and to the public beginning Friday and continuing through the month of March. That 68-to-21 score that Oklahoma piled up against Kansas State the other night, set the Kansas sports editor searching the Jayhawkey records, and he found one to equal it, or perhaps to better it. This costume was made on the border between Moravia and Bohemia where the finest costumes of Czecho-Slovakia are made. It is exactly like one in the industrial arts museum at Prague. There will also be many pieces of embroidery, wool hangings, ribbons, bits of lace, decorated Easter eggs, children's books, pieces of pottery and dolls showing the different types of costumes. Color etchings are already arranged on the walls of room 320 Administration building. They represent the work of the three foremost etchers of Prague; J. C. Vondrure, T. F. Simon, and Jaroslav Stretti-zampont. Back in 1913, the second game bet w een Kansas and Washington University, then a member of the old Missouri Valley conference, resulted in a score of 68 to 8—an even more one-sided score than that by which Oklahoma recently won. Almost as good was the record of Kansas against Ottawa in 1988, when Kansas won 66 to 22; or the 1010 game against Drake, won by Kansas, 62 to 33. In contrast with the games in which Kansas piled up high scores, was the 14-4 victory over Lawrence Y.M.C.A. in 1898, when basketball was young in the Missouri Valley. The lowest score of a Kansas opponent, according to the Kansas records, was the 3 points William Jellowell scored against the Jahwahkers 19, also in 1899. The least points ever scored by Kansas was 5 points in a game lost to the Kansas City Y.M.C.A., still in the 1899 records. An invitation from the National Association of Basketball Coaches to take the Kansas basketball team to Atlanta, Ga., March 29, 30, and 31, to play demonstration games with Pittsburgh, Kentucky, and Illinois Wesleyan, has been directed by Dr. P. C. Allen, coach, and director of athletics at the University of Kansas. ALLEN DECLINES INVITATION TO PLAY GAMES IN GEORGIA "The boys have had a long, hard season and now want time for their lessons, and for other sports. Besides, it would be necessary to get permission from the Big Six conference. All together, it did not seem advisable," said Doctor Allen. Doctor Allen is a member of the executive board of the association, and will attend. KFKU Thursday 2:30 p.m. Special German program. 2:45 p.m. "The Language and Process of Creation." Slang and corrupted Speech of the American Hobo and Criminal, Prof. Robert Calderwood. 6:00 p.m. Sixty-ninth Athletic Question Box, Prof. E. R. Elbel. Send the Kansan home. 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