e o t s I n e ? s K I, m s l l e" e y o m r- ALPHA GAMMA DELTA ALPHA GAMMA DELTA To break ground for new house on Sunday. Ground breaking slated for Sunday Ground-breaking ceremonies for the new Epsilon Beta chapter of Alpha Gamma Delta social sorority will be held Sunday afternoon at 2005 Stewart Ave. The $335,000 French provincial house will be opened in September and will house 76 girls. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will participate in the afternoon ceremonies which will be led by Mrs. Kenneth R. Blodgett of Hutchinson, president of the chapter house corporation. A reception for parents and guests of Alpha Gamma Delta members is planned afterward in the Kansas Union. The first floor of the two-story house will contain a gallery, formal and informal living rooms, dining room, kitchen, housemother's and guest rooms. Girls' rooms will occupy the second floor with laundry facilities and storage room in the basement. The exterior will be of rose-colored face brick and a shake-shingle mansard roof. Guests at the ceremony will be Mrs. Howard E. Jackson Jr., Cedar Rapids, Iowa, representing the Grand Council of Alpha Gamma Delta International Fraternity; Rev. William J. Moore, dean of the school of religion; Miss Gwynn Jennings, Bartiesville Okla., junior, chapter president; Mrs. A. L. Selig, Houston, Tex., treasurer of the house corporation, and Jack R. Bradley, representing Kiene and Bradley Architects and Engineers of Topeka, who designed the house. Emotional wreck The KU Pershing Rifle exhibition drill team left for Washington, D.C. Wednesday to represent the states of Kansas, Oklahoma, Colorado and Missouri in the Cherry Blossom Festival Parade. SUTTON, England —(UPI)—William Queen was fined $28 Wednesday when he pleaded guilty to reckless driving last January. He said he was driving with his fiance, kissed her and "let my emotions run away with me" causing the car to jump a curb. Rifle group to Capital AWS approval possible Tuesday These men will march in the parade and participate in a drill with other drill teams. They will return Sunday. The Associated Women Students senate will hopefully end discussion Tuesday on the resolutions passed by the regulations convention before Spring break, according to Ann Petterson, Shawnee Mission senior and retiring AWS president. THE AWS SENATE began discussion of the resolutions Tuesday before vacation. This week's meeting was cancelled due to Centennial events. Senate approval is the first stage of three before the resolutions become university policy. The version approved by the Senate will be submitted by a committee of three or four to the Council on Student Affairs. This council will then make a recommendation to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, whose approval makes the resolutions rules. Both the old and the new senates will consider the resolutions at the next senate meeting. A two thirds vote is necessary for approval. Kathy Beagle, Boulder, Colo., junior and regulations convention committee chairman, said the senate's power of approval means it can modify the resolutions. The senate is discussing the rationale behind the resolutions. Carolyn Hoke, Prairie Village senior and convention chairman, said, "The senate is trying to consider all sides of the question and set up the most workable regulations." Miss Hoke said the purpose of the many approvals is to provide a meeting ground for the students, represented by AWS, and other people interested. Daily Kansan Thursday, April 14, 1966 3 SUA Hyde Park Forum... Every THURSDAY from 3:00-5:00 in the TRAIL ROOM of the KANSAS UNION Buy Your Tickets at the Union Main Lobby for the INTERNATIONAL BANQUET Sunday, April 17, 5:30 P.M. SCHEHARAZADE & PRESENTATION at the Union Ball Room