Here on the Hill---- an account of Mt. Oread Society PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUES., DEC. 17, 1940 Students To Enjoy Quiet Evening At Home Tonight A combination of the full weekend, the cold weather, and belated studying will all unite to keep University students, for the most part successfully, close to their rooms. The remaining three nights of this week before vacation are scheduled for bigger and better things, with a midweek tomorrow night, buffets Thursday, and four fraternity parties Friday night. Tonight, however, whether in preparedness or self defense, there will be not much activity on the Hill tonight. DELTA CHI . . . ... guests are Charles Honig, national field secretary, and Arthur Wade of Toronto, Ont. ... gave a dinner Saturday night in honor of Dr. J. Christie Wilson, recently returned from Tabriz, Iran. Guests were David McCreath, Oscar Brownlee, Dr. Raymond Wheeler, Bernard Frazier, Dr. Theodore Aszman, Hugh Grutzmazher, and Brice Caruth of Kansas City, Mo. CORBIN HALL . . . ... dinner guests Sunday were Vera May Werfelman of Kansas City, Mo.; Eva Ruth Meinke of Loring, Ruth Burdord, Corinne Solt, Elosie Tchantz, and Arthur Thomas. CHI OMEGA . . . ... luncheon guests yesterday were Mary Noll and Betty Copp. PHI BETA PI . . . ... announces the initiation of the following men: Walter Kilfer, Stanley Vandervelde, Don McCoy, Bob Hagin, Fred Dietrich, Ray Phelps, Charles Stevenson, Giles Freman, Frank Martin, Harold Low, Bill Slentz, Winston Miller, Ed Jones, Jim Van Biber, Bill Anderson, Sanford Carlson, George Chaney. ALPHA DELTA PI . . . ... Sunday dinner guests were Mrs. K. W. Pringle of Wichita; Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Dilley of Kansas City, Mo.; Tommy Carman of Topeka; Willard Burton, Larry Boggs, John Craner, Ed Vaughn. GAMMA PHI BETA... ... entertained the members of the active and Lawrence alumnae chapters last night at the annual Christmas party in the chapter house. Mrs. M. H. Linscott, director of province three, was also a guest. DINNER GUEST . . . ... at the A.K. Psi house Sunday was Jeannie Metz of New York. MRS. E. H. LINDLEY . . . . has left for Richmond, Ind., for a short visit with her brother, before going to Washington, D.C., to spend the holidays with her son, Ernest K. Lindley and family. She expects to be gone about a month. Chicness---- This dress, in black and sequined sleeves, is the type that makes an 18-year-old feel like 25. But definitely fancy! ALPHA TAU OMEGA . . . ... announces the election of the following officers: President, Dick Westfall; vicepresident, Don Williams; treasurer, Max Howard; secretary, Vincent Trump; historian, Jean LePage; master of ceremonies, Stan Porter; sergeat-at-arms, LeRoy Veith; reporter, Fred Rhoades; freshman king, Pat Nieman. GUEST LIST . . . ... at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Christmas buffet supper Sunday evening included the following: Miriam Bartlett, Virginia Houston, Rita Lemoine, Carolyn Sloan, Jean Hinshaw, Miriam Jessen, Virginia Gear, Evelyn Schroeder, Jean Egbert, Mary Burchfield, Blanche Van Camp, Teddy Comley, Dorothy Jean Harvey, Lois Howell, Elizabeth Pears. Becky Trembly, Marjorie Owen, Wilma Eminer, Barbara Barber, Mary Ewers, Anne Bradford, Joy Webster, Georgia Ann Utterback, Shirley Wasson, Eva Magill, Betty Lou Hancock, Jane Granger, Marjorie McKay, Jane Veatch, Sally Connell. Annette Woods, Billie Jarbose, Margarette Parcher, Chestie Wilson, Peggy Roberts, Harriet Hutchinson, Peggy Benson, Don Moehler, Howard Rankin, Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, DE LUXE CAFE Our 22nd year in serving K. U. Students. 711 Mass. St. Mrs. Jane MacLean and Mrs. Alma Sutherland. GUEST LIST . . . ... for the joint Christmas party given by Templin hall and Carruth hall Friday night included the following: Dorothy Maye, Allice Russell, Jean Moore, Molly Mullen, Betty Ann Leasure, Pauline Moore, Mary Ann Hannum, Fern Meuschke, Betty Meuschke, Dorothy Nelson, Jean Shelton, Erma Lee Wallace, Nadine Schuerman, Dorothy Gardiner, Louise Trautwein, Beatrice Witt, Caroline Annabell Wilson, Nadine Hunt, Peggy Osmond, Gayle Warren, Norma Jean Young, Virginia Griswold, Joanne Johnson, Phyllis Wherry, Dorothy Burkhead, Virginia Porter, Edith Omlstead, Doris Wood of Kansas City, Mo.; Frieda Hardeman of Leavenworth; Jeanne Hollis of Overbrook. DEAN AND MRS. . . . . F. J. Moreau entertained the freshmen law students at a buffet supper at their home Sunday evening. (continued to page three) BOOKS For Christmas A check list for your convenience Kenneth Roberts—Oliver Wiswell. Wolfe-You Can't Go Home Again $3.00 Hemingway—For Whom the Bell Fedorova - The Family. $2.50 Douglas - Invitation to Live. Tolls. $2.75 Cather—Sapphire and the Slave Girl, $2.50 $2.50 Millay—Make Bright the Arrows. Fishback—Time for a Quick One. $0.00 $1.75 Time for a Quick One. $2.99 Nash—The Face Is Familiar. $2.50 Don Marquis-archy and mehitabel. Ferguson — Our Southwest. $3.50 Kansas. A Guide to the Sunflower Allen Nevins—John D. Rocke 65-50 Van Paasen—Days of Our Years. New ed. $3.50 Summer. $3.50 Henry J. Allen—Venezuela. $2.50 Miniature Camara Work—Mor gan & Lester. $1.98 New ed. $3.50 Phaidon Press books. $3.00 Oxford and Cambridge Bibles and Audubon's America —ed by Pottett. $6.00. Modern Library complete. 95c A wide selection of reprints of the best books of past publishings seasons. 69c - $4.95 Come in and see them. Childrens Books - Dictionaryies Cook Books THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. St. Phone 666 --the holiday effect is even more were installed in the tower and colored with lamp dye to produce the color effects. Spreading Panorama Dyche Tower Spreads Christmas Cheer The vespers are over, but each evening throughout the Christmas season Dyche tower, illuminated with floodlights and equipped with amplifiers, will carry on with tableau and music. Each night it can be both seen and hear for a distance of two miles in every direction. This year, nature has cooperated in providing Christmas decorations. The campus, dazzling with snow and sparkling with ice-spangled trees, resembles a greeting card even in broad daylight. At night, with the lighted tower and musical broadcasts, the holiday effect is even more pronounced. Four floodlights were installed in the tower and colored with lamp dye to pro- Although the lighted tower it the Although the lighted tower it the best tableau on the campus, especially when viewed from between the ice-laden cedar trees on the lawn in front of Fraser Hall, the effect of music and color from within the tower is well worth the cold and the climb. The music is produced in a room on the second floor of the museum and transcribed from records and radio broadcasts. In the tower the projectors scatter the music to the winds. Fitted with Blue Grass Flower Mist, Blue Grass Dusting Powder and a cake of Hand Soap. $4.25 Boxed for Giving Lovely sheer hose make a delightful gift for any girl. No-Mend hose come in two and three thread and the latest popular hosiery colors. Fit the foot size as well as the proportions of the leg. $1.15 pair