Here on the Hill--- an account of Mt. Oread Society PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUN., JAN. 12, 1941 Social Life Slack With Only Four Parties Over Weekend A fairly quiet weekend testifies to the fact that approaching finals have successfully intimidated the Hill's social life. Friday night the members of Delta Upsilon went original with a party to end all parties, their theme being an amalgamation of the types of dances given by different organizations on the Hill. Bids were sent out in the form of rush letters and date cards. The same night the Alpha Chi's danced in the Memorial Union ballroom to the music of Clayton Harbur and his orchestra. Last night the Kappa Kappa Gamma's held their winter party in the ballroom with Clayton Harbur again in the bandstand. Corbin hall girls and their dates partied in their hall. Miss Johnson will have as some of her running mates Beck Trembly of Kappa Alpha Theta, Ada Lee Fuller of Gamma Pi Beta, Billie Giles of Pi Beta Phi, Mary Kathryn Brown of Chi Omega, and Alpha Chi /Omega's Mary Louise Stout. Among the first of the candidates for the honor of Valentine Queen is Helen Johnson, who has been submitted by Kappa Kappa Gamma as their entry. DELTA GAMMA . . . Other candidates for the honor of seeing her picture in Life are Dorothy Hendrickson of Watkins Hall, Terry Morgan of Alpha Micron Pi, Margaret Anne Summers of Sigma Kappa, Barbara Smith of Miller Hall, and Marilyn Duncan of Alpha Delta Pi. . colony will hold pledging services for three girls and eight patronesses at 6 tonight at the home of Vivian Brandt. guests of the colony this weekend are Betsy Tatlock, Betty Edington, Mrs. Arthur Black, and all the alumnus from Wichita. PHI DELTA THETA . . . . . week-end guests are Bob Maricle and Bob Dyster of Dodge City. PI BETA PHI . . . KAPFA SIGMA . . . ... weekend guest is Peg McCarty of Kansas City, Mo. ... dinner guests Thursday night were Clyde Smith and Jack Cosgrove. PHI GAMMA DELTA . . . ... dinner guest today will be Catherine Boyd. ALUMNAE . . . of Kappa Kappa Gamma were guests of the active chapter at a buffet supper Thursday night, following which they held their monthly meeting. Twenty - three alumnae were persent. MEMBERS OF . . . ... the University Women's club visited the various displays at the Spooner-Thayer museum Thursday afternoon. Mrs. T. D. Jones was general chairman. GAMMA=PHI BETA . . alumnae were entertained at the home of Helen Kinney, following a dinner at the chapter house where they were invited to meet Mrs. E. R. West. new province director. DELTA UPSILON . . . Be My Valentine? . . . guest list for their party Friday night includes the following: Peggy Pat Henessey, Barbara Barber, Margie Hagstrom, Georgiann Theis, Ruth Garvey, Martha Alice Horner, Margaret Replogle, Tommie Thompson, Martha Fairburn, Virginia Gear, Marjorie McKay, Winfred Hill, Olive Joggerst, Jean Stouffer, Muriel Henry, Annabel Fisher, Molly Tanner, Ruth Wright, Mary Ann Hannum, Dolly Newlin, Jane Stites, Mary K. Brown, Alice Raffington, Rosemary Utterback, Betty Kopp, Jean Ott. Betty Deal. From Kansas City, Mo., came Jean Williams, Gay Demmitt, Muriel Osgood, B. J. Boddington, Tildie Fowler, Erma Wall, Virginia Cushner, Pat Barret, and Katie O'Sullivan. Lorane Bartling and Mary Louise McMullus came from Wichita. ALPHA TAU OMEGA . . . ... held open house all day yesterday in their newly completed house. Students and faculty members were asked for afternoon and night, respectively. . . . alumnus club was entertained yesterday with a luncheon at the home of Mrs. E. E. Bayles. PI BETA PHI ... entertained the following at their winter formal last night: James Hughes, Eugene Nininger, Elden Beebe, James Johnson, Harold Edwards, Ralph Hoke, Dwight, Geiger, LeMooney Frederick, Don McCoy, Max Graves, Harrison Long of Kansas City, Bob Royer, Dean Gates, George Nafe, Arthur Thomas, Russell Miller, Floyd Frederick, Arthur Olsen, Marion Haynes, Bill Bass, Hugh Simonds of Topeka. CORBIN HALL Dick Kell, Harry Nelson, Herbert Cole, Glenn St. Aubyn, Dick Large, Bill Woolston, Bob King, Ralph Cottier of St. Joseph, Mo., Gene Feaster, Marshall Butler, Alex Golouge, George Dickson, John Foust, Loren Withers, Wray Strowig of Salina, Ralph Scamell, Warren Snyder, Dick Shaffer, Arthur Martens, Marmaduke Weltner, Harold Burns, Gerald Canatsey. Yale Wells of Kansas City, Al Ward. Tom Ells, Wayne Ulrickson, George Verhage, Jean Seymour of Kansas City, Warren Jones, Fred Robertson, Bob Hall, Merle Whitenack, Stan Patton, De Von Carlson, Max Miller, Earl Riddle, Bob Sullivan, Joe Engers. John McAllister, Fred Wallingford, Harold Fellows, Ernest Carreau. Bob Bellamy, Kenneth Peck and Bill Hale. Brent Campbell, Eloise Gasaway, Mrs. Ruth McNair, Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, and Miss Marie Miller. Clayton Harbur's band played. Another Setback For Play Flu Catches Speech Profs More troubles have beset members of the department of speech and drama. First they couldn't decide on a play. Now Professors Crafton and Calderwood have the influenza. open to all students in the University. Preliminary tryouts held Friday afternoon for the play "Cock Robin," a comedy mystery by Philip Barry and Elmer Rice, were presided over by Donald Dixon, speech instructor. Additional tryouts will be held in the little theatre of Green hall at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon. They are The play, which will be a Kansas Players production, will be presented Feb. 11 and will be directed by Professor Crafton. No rehearsals will be held during final examination week, but a double schedule will be in effect the week between semesters, with rehearsals during the day as well as in the evening. As Anniversary Activity Alumni To Plant Trees Believed to be the only collection of Misone's ni the United States, Oren Bingham, director of the photographic bureau said that the University was fortunate in getting these prints. No word of Misone's whereabouts has been heard since the invasion of Belgium and his former work may have been destroyed. Most of the prints are of his native country, Belgium, and France. His pictures are of a romantic type, beautiful rather than documentary as is the modern trend. Misone was called a revolutionary in 1895, but is now considered as violently reactionary as he was revolutionary then. He has criticized his adversaries by saying, "You have recognized that you are not capable of making a good landscape or a Using a unique technique Misonne has achieved his effects by working in foggy or rainy weather, photographing against the light and by using an oil process in printing. For more than 40 years he has been famous for his landscapes. In 1937 he inveted a superior printing process which he called "mediobrome" and most of the pictures in this collection are of this type. good portrait, and that is why you scorn these fields and why you photograph plates, forks, water faucets, etc." His last exhibit to appear at the University was in 1939 and was brought here by the University camera club. Jayhawker Theater To Show Rose Bowl Movies Tomorrow Pictures of the Rose Bowl football game between Stanford and Nebraska will be shown four days beginning Sunday at the Jayhawk theater. The film runs for 10 minutes and besides shots of the game, shows hands, cheering sections, views of the stadium. DE LUXE CAFE Our 22nd year in serving K.U. Students 711 Mass. St. Weaver's a bit of froth F For jaded mid-winter fashion appetites, we present our daintiest lingerie blouses. Made of gossamer batiste and exquisite lace, these blouses are sure to perk up your winter wardrobe. SECOND FLOOR moco awa tions and deno only part $1.98 to $3.98