Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 14,1957 RUTH RONEY ELIZABETH TITSWORTH GERI ANN LILEY Diamonds To Three Students Mr. and Mrs. Roland E. Roney of Lawrence announce the engagement of their daughter, Ruth, to John Irby Hughes, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. Q. Hughes of Lawrence. Miss Roney is a senior in the College and is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Hughes is a senior in the College and is a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. An early June wedding is planned. Mr. and Mrs. George A. Titsworth of Green Ridge, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Elizabeth Louise, to John A. DeHoff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer DeHoff of Leavenworth. Miss Titsworth is a graduate student in the School of Business. She received her B.S. degree from Missouri Valley College in Marshall, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Liley of Osakalea, Iowa, announce the engagement of their daughter, Geri Ann, to Nelson Alan Perkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil J. Perkins of Kansas City, Mo. An August wedding is planned Miss Liley is a senior in the school of education and is a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Mr. Perkins is a KU graduate and is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. Two Houses Initiate Pledges Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity recently initiated 21 pledges. The new initiates are Scott Stanley and John Kennedy, Kansas City, Kan.; Wendell Koerner, Jefferson City, Mo.; Arthur Scott, Pittsburg; Bruce Wingerd, Marion; James Dover, Neodesha; Howard Barnum, Kansas City, Mo.; David Hall, Wichita; Robert Westfall, Bethe; Bill Cronin, Kirkwood, Mo.; Edward Cavanagh, Great Bend; William Jungmann, Topeka; Joseph Eichhorn, Charles Roberman and Dale Flory, Lawrence. All are freshmen. Weldon Fate, Kansas City, Mo.; Bill Albright, Buhler, Larry Barcus and Warren Degoler, Kansas City, Kan., all are sophomores. Roger Gramly, Caney junior. Chi Omega initiation of 17 pledges. Chi Omega Chi Omega sorority announces the The initiates are Jayne Allen, Topeka; Roberta Belt, Coffeyville; Pat Adam, Donna Nelson, Carol Caully, Kansas City, Kan.; Nancy Bigham, Bethel; Barbara Everley, Eudora; Toni Ernst, Batavia, Ill.; Nancy Harbes, Topeka; Marilyn Honderick, La Crosse; Kala Mays, Lyons; Linda Mistler, Leavenworth; Pat Swanson, Newton; Pat Warren, Wichita and Barbara Wurst, Russell. All are sophomores. Marilyn MacIntire, Oregon, Mo. and Ann Jeffries, Kansas City, Kan., juniors. Miss Swanson was honor initiate and Miss Harbes was chosen best pledge. Hatched in, mid-ocean, baby eels will migrate up streams of the East Coast. Thousands of them work their way up rivers, creeks, and brooks, to find fresh-water homes. List New Pledges Affiliates Kappa Eta Kappa Käppa Eta Kappa professional engineering fraternity, announces the pledging of Albert Decker, Westphalia, Bernard Decker, Westphalia, James Smith, Kansas City, Mo. sophomores; Robert Martinek, Silver Lake, William. Merryfield, Lawrence, Ralph Reiser, Lawrence, and Kenneth Steiner, Independence, Mo., juniors. --match, which make a very smart costume for campus or dressy affairs. Delta Delta Delta Delta Delta Delta social sorority announces the affiliation of Carol Cope, Kansas City, Mo., junior and Donna Watts, Kansas City, Mo., junior with Theta Omega chapter. Both Miss Cope and Miss Watts were formerly affiliated with the Delta Delta Delta sorority chapter at Baker University. TURNERS 700 Maine St. (Between Ala. & Maine on 7th St.) Phone VI 3-4755 PRICES GOOD THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY Holy Brand SUGAR 10 Ibs. .. 89c Sally Ann BREAD 2 16 oz. Loaves 25c 2 King Size 35c Loaves Every Day Low Price Snow Crop Frozen PEAS 2 pkgs. __ 27c Whole Sun Frozen ORANGE JUICE 6 oz. can 10c Limit 3 Cans Pilsbury or Ballard BISCUITS 10c 10c GROUND BEEF 4 lbs. $1.00 Old Fashioned (Mustard Free) FRANKFURTERS 3 lbs. 89c Raths Mulberry SLICED BACON lb. 35c Shurfine (Special Deal) SHORTENING 3 lb. can 79c Choice Tasty CHUCK ROAST lb. 29c Berry Hill Frozen STRAWBERRIES 5 pkgs. 98c Santa Rosa Crushed PINEAPPLE 2 no. 303 cans 45c Vanilla - Strawberry - Chocolate FROZEN DESSERT ½ gal. 59c Folgers - Hills - Butternut COFFEE with $5 or more purchase lb. 75c New Styles, Colors Featured For Spring Winter wool skirts and sweaters will soon be packed in mothballs and the new spring fashions will appear on campus. Blouses Are More Feminine Blouses Are More Feminine For a comfortable and chic spring look, blouses have changed from the man-tailored style to a softer and more feminine cut. The collar is looser, in the Italian manner, and sleeves have been cut shorter and rolled to just above the elbow. Fabrics are also more sheer and delicate. Heavier cottons have been taken over by more light-weight materials such as gingham, dacron and cotton mixtures, and pure silk, for dressier wear with suits. With these smart blouses one will find matched slim ivy-league cotton skirts. Besides looking neat, straight skirts are also much cooler than full petticoats. Full skirts are not done away with, but they are trimmed down to a loosely plucked or flared cut. For very early spring there are blouse and skirt ensembles of lightweight wool flannel with matching cardigan sweaters. Date dresses also come with cardigans trimmed to Traditional spring colors are still pastels. But to add to the pale blues, pinks, yellows, beiges and greens are bright Chinese blues and reds, combined with softer tones in prints. The new colors are certainly a transition from the more subdued tones of winter clothes. New Colors In Fashion Most maps of Yemen show a short northern border with Saudi Arabia and none on the east where the Yemen plateau merges with the Arabian "Empty Quarter." To the south, Yemen claims land as far as the Gulf of Aden, in effect ignoring the existence of the British Aden Protectorate. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 More than 50% of college men earn at least half their way through school FALSE TRUE False. While 71% earn part or all of their expenses, the breakdown is: 17% earn nothing; 25% earn less than 1/4; 20% earn 1/4 to 1/4; 14% earn 1/4 to 1/4; 24% earn 3/4 to all. - College men usually marry college women TRUE FALSE False. They might like to, but there are just so many more college men than college women that they can't. However, it is true that college girls usually marry college men. The vital part of Jockey underwear lasts longer than the rest of the garment TRUE FALSE True. The waistband is usually the weak point of most underwear, but Jockey developed a special, long-wearing, heat-resistant elastic (with U.S. Rubber and the American Institute of Laundering) that actually outwears the garment itself.