Here on the Hill---- an Account of Mt. Oread Society PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WED., FEB. 26, 1941. Midweek Jive Tonight To Feature Bysom Hepcats Another dose of midweek habit-forming when taken regularly, will be dished out tonight to all dance fiends. As usual there will be rug-cutting and slow-dreamy walking, jive and lullaby numbers. But Clyde Bysom's boys promise some boogy-woogy rhythm if Hill dancers will be sweet and turn out in goodly numbers at the Union ballroom tonight. Other than that, campus social life is taking it easy at present. PI KAPPA ALPHA... ... dinner guests yesterday evening were Jackson Dean and Paul Litky, Tulsa; Tom Bowlus, Joplin, Mo. Bruce Cottier, and Bernard Treevy, St. Joseph, Mo.; Mrs. Libby Reeder, Independence, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Campbell, Independence, Kan.; and Frank Perkins, Baxter Spring; 'ALPHA TAU OMEGA . . . ... guests at dinner yesterday were PART I - THE HOP MaleModes By Phil McCarthy We went to the Hop with the idea of making some sort of a "Ten Best-Dressed Hill Men" selection, but after looking around decided that the list would have to be so much longer than that, that it would never fit into this column. Yes, the boys really outdid themselves sartorially for the occasion . . . even if they weren't able to slink about in midriff formals. PART II - SPORT COATS Of interest to 99.99 per cent of us is the current sport trend. A few points you might want to remember in the selection of your new one could be listed generally as: 1. They're still baggy. 2. They're even longer. 3. Natural tan goes with almost anything. 4 Four pockets with flaps look good. 5. A single vent in back is preferred 6. Solid colors are best-sellers. (That is, assuming that spring will arrive sometime.) Boiled down to the essentials, the favorite outfit will probably include a white double-breasted shawl-collar coat with four buttons (bottom one to button), midnight blue trousers with one stripe, soft pleated shirt with attached collar, and a burgundy or blue matched set including tie, handkerchief, cummerbund and flower. Neat lookin' outfit, we presume. Must borrow one . . . Well, enough of this idle chatter. Gotta' rush off to press our five-year-old cords. Bill Ratliff, Manhattan; Dr. C. L. Gilles, Ed Dennis, Jack Grogan, Martha Logan, and Georgia Ann Shilling, all of Kansas City, Mo. CHI OMEGA . . . . . luncheon guest yesterday was Virginia Coffman. . will entertain the Delta Gamma colony at dinner tomorrow night. ALPHA TAU OMEGA . . . . . . will hold a buffet supper at 6 to- morrow night. ... is made by Mrs. E Trekell, Wellington, of the engagement and approaching marriage of her daughter, Dorothy Lenore Trekell, '38, to James Howard Taggart, also of Wellington. The wedding will take place at 10 a.m. March 10 in the First Presbyterian church there. KAPPA ALPHA THETA . . . ... entertained Mary Shaver, Manhattan, last night at dinner. She is a member of Pi Beta Phi at Kansas State College. ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . . . . . dinner guests last night were Mr. and Mrs. J. Allen Taylor, Kansas City, Kan.; and Ed Silsbee, New York. ... business sorority, entertained the national vice-president, Miss Jesse Cleveland, Chicago, Monday. She PHI CHI THETA . . . was here to examine the local chapter. . . . Officers gave a luncheon Monday in the Union building for Miss Cleveland. A tea was given in the afternoon to which all members and alumni were invited. Monday evening Miss Cleveland was guest of honor at a dinner at the Colonial Tea Room. MILLER HALL . . . ... dinner guest last night was Marjorie Houston. BATTENFELD HALL . . . ..diner guest last night was Carl Wasson, Madison. SIGMA NU . . . --professional music fraternity held an hour dance Monday night. . . will hold a buffet supper at 6 tomorrow night. JOURNALISM DINNER . . . ... held in honor of Elmer A. Zilch, inventor of the Zilch Zippy Linotype, and general man-about-the-press, will be at 6 o'clock Friday night in the Kansas room of the Union building. . . will feature a faculty stunt, and student acts. PHI MU ALPHA . . . ALPHA OMICRON PI . . . . . . will entertain Mrs. Gladys Misko, district superintendent, and Mrs. Ruth Schmelkin, national represent- Miami, Fla., Feb. 26-(UP)—In a studio carefully shuttered so that the waving palm fronds cannot be seen and the clicking of golf balls cannot be heard, a corps of 900 cartoonists is hard at work completing the first feature length cartoon drama. The Fleischer studios here keep their $1,000,000 plant tightly enclosed because they have found the tropic somnolence of Miami is the squat building was shuttered and chief enemy of speed. Thus soon after it was built the sprawling, all lighting inside now is artificial. The cartoon drama will be a technicolored departure from everything heretofore accomplished in the feature length cartoon field. It is neither fantasy nor fable but Film Full-Length Cartoon Co-op Men Will Make Well-Trained Husbands By SARALENA SHERMAN When I first arrived, a jumble of introductions were thrown at me. I learned that one man was a barber, another a laundryman, and still another a snake-classifier in Snow hall. Of course, they all go to school on the side. $ ^{*} $ As a recent dinner guest at a cooperative hall, I was amazed by the domestic genius of the rougher sex. I was told that the dishes of blue, orange, green and rust were made by NYA workers in Hays. The furniture was also made under the NYA program. Then it was time to dine on the food prepared by masculine labor. Tacked on one of the cupboards are some rules. One rule says that all dishes must be scraped clean and that servers must help the scrapers until the dessert is ready to be served. It also states that all spoons must be removed from sugar bowls. After dinner I was caught between two jam sessions. In one It may not look like it now, but someday weather will come when print dresses like these will be in demand. At left, a tailored number with double-breasted effect. At right, the dress you'll wear when you feel frilly and domestic. The old saying that "the best way to a man's heart is through his stomach," is evidently true. The cooking crew is expert and also popular. Being aware of the fact that the modern woman is not as capable along these lines as mother used to be probably adds zest to these manly efforts of food preparation. Snow, But Not Forever---room and behind large double doors a group of three, one at the piano, one on a guitar and one with a clarinet jazzed in competition with the recorded music from the other side of the doors. During the dinner, there was an explanation of the system of shifts for cooking breakfast, lunch, and dinner, scrubbing, dusting and cleaning rooms. Then I took a tour of the hall and saw everything from the showers to the potato bin. When I left the old mansion and walked down the long brick walk, I knew that about fifty women were going to get some capable husbands someday. I liked looking into the refrigerator and into the store room with all the supplies. ative, both from Lincoln, Neb., from this afternoon until Friday. Friday night they will hold a midnight spread. DELTA UPSILON . . . . . . entertained Shirley Henry, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Gill and Minona Gill, Wichita; Olive Joggerst, and Rosemary Utterback at dinner last Sunday. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA . . . ... dinner guests yesterday evening were Judge and Mrs. Hugo T. Wedd, Topeka. JAYHAWKER- The third issue of the Jayhawker magazine, which was issued last Monday, is still being distributed, Betty Coulson, college senior and editor of the publication, said today. The magazine will be given out at the W.S.G.A. book exchange in the sub-basement of the Memorial Union building between 1:30 and 4:30 each afternoon this week, except Friday at which time subscribers may get them at the Jayhawker office. DE LUXE CAFE K. U. Students Our 22nd year in serving 711 Mass. St. The story is told entirely from the viewpoint of the insects. People who do appear in the field appear only as the insects see them. rather is the story of the fight for life of a community of personalized insects who live in a weedy patch just 45 inches from Broadway surrounded by the cement-and-steel world created by the menace they fear most of all—the human race. sp To