KU Homecoming queens live across nation By JOHN BOYER Football Homecoming festivities are a tradition at KU. Included is the election of a queen to reign over the football week-end. All the former women who have reigned at a Homecoming take a back seat to the reigning Miss of the present one. However, let's trod into the past and see what has become of some of the "dethroned" royalty. LUCY TREES, Chi Omega, 1933, married Richard A. Gentry (Washburn, '35) and they now have three children: Gayle Ann, Gilbert and Darrell Richard. Gentry is a partner in H. P. Gott Manufacturing Co., Winfield, Kan. Mrs. Gentry is executive vice-president of Trees' Oil Co., Winfield, Kan. The 1943 Homecoming saw Heloise Hillbrand, Kappa Kappa Gamma, reigning. After graduating she married Max G. Kocour. The couple and their two children, Ruth Anne and Mary Camille, live in Winnetka, Ill. Betty Davis, Kappa Alpha Theta, 1955, has since married Dr. Fredric D. Thompson. The Thompson's, including two children, Frank and Daniel, reside in Raleigh, N.C. Dr. Thompson is resident physician at Duke University. THE 1963 QUEEN, Karen Vice, Sigma Chi Omega, St. John, Kan., is unmarried. She is presently a social worker in Tulsa, Okla. Martha "Muff" Yankey, Kappa Kappa Gamma, last year's queen is employed by the First National City Bank of New York, working in public relations. She is not married. These girls, like all the others who have represented KU's beauty at Homecoming, had their bit of splendor; their moment to remember. We remember them now. 14 Daily Kansan Friday, November 4, 1966 When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansan Classifieds. YOUR FAVORITE BOOKSTORE IS ALWAYS THE BEST PLACE TO BUY FOR SERVICE AND DEPENDABILITY. KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE Fight textbook squint. Get a Tensor $ ^{ \circ} $ high-intensity lamp. Want a clean, white, bright light? Want to see words etched on the page sharp and clear? Want to come away from those heavy assignments without squinting and eyestrain? Want a lamp that gets in close without getting in your way? Want to burn the midnight oil without burning up your roommate? Want a concentrated light that lets you concentrate? Then what you need is a Tensor high-intensity lamp. What do you mean you can't afford our $12.95 or $14.95 or $17.50 or $19.95 prices? Didn't you know you can get a Tensor for $9.95? So stop squinting. Get a Tensor high-intensity lamp. And who knows, your grades might even get a little better this term. tensor It helps you see better. Newsweek 52 weeks for only $4.50 DID YOU MISS THESE NEWSWEEK STORIES??? BRITAIN'S WITH-ITH SOCIETY. Are they "switched-on" or just "a coffin of tarted-up people?" THE DRAFT, 1966. Who's going, what they face, how they feel about it. LSD AND THE MIND DRUGS. A trip with the acid heads and an appraisal of the perils. POP...IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING. "The greatest pop-art object in the world is the planet Earth." WHAT ROLE FOR THE EDUCATED WOMAN?" Sex prejudice is the only prejudice now considered socially acceptable." THE LITTLE MAGAZINES OF THE NEW LEFT. Youth, militancy, energy and naïveté provide the bounce. BLACK POWER. How deep the split in the civil rights movement? AUTO RACING. The Year of the Ford. VIETNAM. The polls and the war. SCIENCE. Shattering the antimatter mirror. On and on it goes, week after week—page after page of reward- ing reading like this. Start enjoy- ing it now. Special Offer for Students Only: 52 weeks for only $4.50 Name Address City State Zip I am a member of the faculty. I will take advantage of your special educator's rate: 3 years for $14. Same refund guarantee. Newsweek, 6SA21 117 East Third Street, Dayton, Ohio 45402 BRING THIS COUPON TO THE BOOKSTORE FOR SPECIAL CAMPUS RATE I want Newsweek to keep me in the know for the next 52 weeks for $4.50 with the understanding that you guarantee full satisfaction or a prompt refund on any unfulfilled portion of my subscription after three issues. This offer: $4.50 — less than £9 a copy Regular subscription: $9.00 — less than 18¢ a copy ---