Page 5 Friday, Oct. 31, 1958 University Daily Kansan Enchanted Evening (Continued from Page 1) I knew they'd probably serve refreshments or something, so I decided to stay. Things Make Sense Someone said something about AWS. Then things began to make sense. It must be a meeting to cast a spell on the All Student Council. The witches began to dance around the room. I didn't know whether to laugh or run back home in terror. The witches were laughing at each other. There was cider in the punch bowl, so I staved. Some girls, rather ordinary looking with no masks, got up and threw their weight around with hula hoops. There was a little 3-year old girl there, too. I guess she was a freshman, on the gifted student program. She could hula better than any of the big girls. Then one of the assistant deans of women started talking to the witches, only she called them "housemothers." Then it all made sense. It was the AWS housemothers' party. Gets Funniest Prize Mrs. Mildred Dunivent from the Pi Phi house got the prize for being the funniest. She wore a big mask that she scrunched up all the time to scare the little gifted freshman. She carried a bag of apples, but she didn't pass them around. Her runnerup, Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough from the Theta house looked stunning with sequins and sombrero. Mrs. Hazel Carter from the Concordia house won the prize for being the gaudiest. She wore clashing shoes and socks, a red skirt, lavender turtle neck sweater, silver belt with a green bankie on it, and lots of big beads. Mrs. J. E. Stevens was voted most original. Her hairdo was half red, half white. I liked it. She wore a derby hat and one cowboy boot. Mrs. E. W. Wuthnow from the Tri Delt house ran behind her. She wore various plaids, purple, yellow, ribbons and pearls. Mrs. H. W. Jenkins from the Sig Alph house was the most original runner up. She looked lovely with her blacked-out teeth, heavy rouge, clashing sweater and skirt, beads and straw hat. I've decided that I want to be a housemother when I grow up. They all have so much fun—'specially when the other girls have to act like ladies. YOUR FRIEND FOR HOMECOMING of supplies for your homecoming decorations - Lumber - Cardboard 5'x10' - Paint - Chicken Wire - Paint Brushes - Nails Friend's Lumber Co. 1029 New Hampshire Fine Arts to Present 2 Programs Next Week The School of Fine Arts will present a recital and a concert in Swarthout Recital Hall next week. At 8 p.m., Monday, Janet Turk, pianist, will join the faculty recital series. At 8 p.m. Wednesday the Little Symphony Orchestra will present a concert, conducted by Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts. Mrs. Turk, assistant professor of piano, joined the faculty in 1946. Joined the faculty in 1946. Her program will be: the Beethoven Sonata "Quasi Una Fantasia," Opus 25, No. 1; the "Brahms Variations;" "Fugue on a Theme" by Handel; "The Fountain of the Aqua Paola and Scherzo," by Charles Griffes, and five excerpts from "Twelve Variations" by Beryl Rubinstein. Soloists with the Little Symphony Orchestra will be Kenneth Bloomquist, instructor in brass instruments, trumpet; Austin Ledwith, assistant professor of woodwind instruments, bassoon, and Karel Blass, assistant professor of string instruments, viola. The orchestra will play Arne's Overture to Comus; the Hayden "Clock" Symphony; "Il Campo di Fiori" by Kent Dennan; "Soliloquy No. 2 for Bassoon and Strings" by Bernard Rogers: Edmund Haines' "Poem for Viola and Chamber Orchestra"; and "Charleston Rhapsody" by Robert Russell Bennett. LA TROPICANA CLUB Mexican Food Served at 4 p.m. Favorite Beverages Sold 434 LOCUST ST. North Lawrence Under New Management FREE FILM For each roll of film you leave for fast processing, you receive another roll free. Offer good on 620, 120, 127, 153mm black and white film. 1-Day Photo-Finishing (Black & White Film) ★FAST Movie and 35mm Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) HIXON STUDIO DON CRAWFORD BOB BLANK 721 Mass. VI 3-0360 Ever meet a Doubting Thomas? A college senior once remarked to a Bell System interviewer: "A telephone career must be a mirage. I hear talk about fabulous training, fascinating work, grade-A job security, and rapid advancement in management. Sounds a bit too rosy. What's the real story?" The interviewer knew mere talk wouldn't sell a skeptic. So he showed him some "profiles" of recent college graduates who had enjoyed that fabulous training, had worked at intriguing jobs, and had won early management promotions. Our once-skeptical friend has been with the Bell System 3 years now—and is currently supervising the work of 55 people. We've converted a host of Doubting Thomases. Whether doubtful or not, you'll learn a lot about rewarding telephone careers by talking with the Bell System interviewer when he visits your campus. Also read the Bell Telephone booklet on file in your Placement Office, or write for "Challenge and Opportunity" to: College Employment Supervisor American Telephone and Telegraph Company 195 Broadway, New York 7. N.Y. HOLY SCRIPTURE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES