These Prots. Can Cook Nearly 150-people turned out last |: night to eat their fill of the cooking |. of Prof. Guy Smith and drink Prof. |, F. O. Russell’s coffee. Everyone, | whether they ate or not, applauded the various numbers of the program. The community recreation class used last night’s activities as a lab- oratory for working out their recrea- tional theories. Members of the class put on a skit entitled “The Cup of Youth,” based upon the idea of the} fountain of youth. There were ex- hibitions of hair stretching, inchem- Hey Look***” pinchem, and doughnut dunking by members of the group. Ernie Fisher, archery instructor, was master of ceremonies, and led the group singing. Dr. F. C. Allen acted in the variety show presented limmediately after the steak fry. -~ More T Than 300 RY Attend Picnic |’ More than 300 persons of all ages played and lunched at the annual Summer Session picnic sponsored by the recreation office, held last night in the quadrangle adjacent to Rob- inson gymnasium. The event sig- naled the start of the summer’s rec- reation program, directed by Dr. F. C. Allen, basketball coach. Events began at 5 o’clock in the af- ternoon, with the assemblage en- gaging in loop tennis, shuffleboard, badminton, goal-hi; and children playing on teeter-totters, in sand piles, monkey mazes and swings. The University band, directed by Russell Wiley, offered a varied musical fare, supplemented by community sing- ing, the performance of Haskell In- dians who danced and boxed, and movies shown publicly for the first time of the University’s basketball team in action against Indiana, Southern California, and Rice last winter. = At 6 o'clock the picnic took on added attraction when food was mentioned and “players” settled down to satisfying the appetites they | had built up. :