SUNDAY, APRIL 28, 1940. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Spring Dances— (Continued from page 2) raine Peacock, c'42, Jeanne Knight, c'41, Susie Lowderman, c'42, Jean Bailey, c'43, Jean Brownlee, c'43. Juney, c'43, Joan Brownlee, c'45 Gagty Pat Hennessee, fa'42, Margar- Replogle, c'43, Bette Baker, c'43, Adelyn Cast, b'41, Alain Ealconer, Joan Taggert, c'43, Janis Welch, c'43, Ethelyne Burns, fa'40, Jean Parrie, Cecil King, c'41, Leona Hoffman, c'40, Dorothy Lemert, c'43, Shirley Rubie, c'41, Muriel Henry, ph., Martha Jane Green, c'43, Tilda Am Fowler, c'40, Martha Markwell, Alys McGill, Georgie Ann Theiss, fa'43, Muriel Osgood, c'une, Virginia Walters, c'41, Erma Wahl, Patty Bigelow, c'43, Mary Case, Springfield, Mo., Louise Holland, Holland, Marjorie Sutherland, Marion Holt, Mary Katherine Brewer, all of Kansas City, Mo., Rose Beatty, Katherine Schaible, Virginia Donlon, and Coris Shull all of Kansa- s City, Kan. The chaperones were Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Mrs. L. C. Harris, Mrs. Eva Oakes, and Mrs. James M. Hook. 1 1 1 1 sigma Kappa The Sigma Kappa's used white, silver, and lavender to carry out their grape arbor theme at their spring formal at the chapter house last night. The ballroom was a profusion of bunches of grapes and green leaves. Mrs. C. S. Miller, Mrs. Ed Charles, and Mrs. C. A. Thomas acted as chaperones. Alpha Kappa Psi Dancing to the music of Pat Lofus and his Aristocrats the Alpha Kappa Psi fraternity held its annual semi-formal party at the chapter house last night. The party room was decorated with willow branches and Japanese lanterns in all the colors of the rainbow. Guests were: Norma McCieland, Lawrence, Claudine Scott, Topeka, Jone Koenig, Kansas City, Marian Hodges, Lawrence, Betty Stewart, Vivian Rice, Theron King, and La Vera Modine, all of Manhattan, Mr. and Mrs. Vance Birch of Kansas City, and Glenn Russell, Wichita, Maxine Atchison, Kansas City. Marian Springer, c'40, Maxine Patterson, c'40, Helen Pierce, b'40, Georgia Mae Landrith, c'42, Margaree Murray, c'42, Eva Teagarden, f'43 Mary Jane Perkins, c'40, Mildred Ellsworth, b'41, Bertha Scott, b'40 Ida Anderson, c'43, Winfried Hoverstock, c'40, Mary McLeod, b'41, Bentrice Witt, c'40, Doris Nelson, fa'40 Bernice Zucherch, c'41, Kathleen Burner, c'40, Maribelle McClolland, c'42. Evelyn Gunn, c'43. Professor and Mrs. John Blucker, and Professor and Mrs. Leslie Waters were chaperones at the dance. W.A.A. Play Day— (Continued from page two) (Continued from page two) following activities: folk dancing, oley ball, center basketball, track, and overtake. Points are based on winnings in activities in the morning activities, relays, and the challenge hour. Four members of Tau Sigma presented an original dance in the afternoon. They were: Miriam Bartlett, fa'42, Mary Bitzer, fa'43, Ruth Mary Nelson, ed'40, and Marjorie Siegrist, c'41. Liberty Memorial high school had the largest representation with 25 present. Thirty-five University women assisted Miss Evelyn Kinney, who was in charge of Play Day plans. One Hundred and twenty persons were present at a luncheon this noon in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building. Important Bills To Come Before M.S.C. Monday Two important bills will have their final readings and be voted on tomorrow night at the regular meeting of the Men's Student Council, President C. H. Mullen announced yesterday. A bill recommending that $550 be granted for the improvement of the intramural fields south of Robinson gymnasium and $250 to go toward the University dormitory project is one of the two important measures. It had its first reading at the last meeting and was given an okay by the Central committee on student activities at its meeting Monday. Mullen expected that the bill would go through at the men's meeting, but before the money is granted it would have to be approved by the W.S.G.A. Tuesday night. The other legislation concerns the abolition of the student dance manager. At the meeting last Monday the Council passed a resolution that would do away with the manager and put the handling of varieties in the hands of a committee. Inasmuch as the Pachacamac party has not yet put in a protest to the student election for presidency of the M.S.C. in which Bill Farmer nosed out Bob McKay in a recount vote, Mullen intimated that the final count would stand. Actors to Get Awards Tomorrow Student dramatists and speakers will be honored at the annual Speech Arts, banquet at Evans Hearth at 6 o'clock tomorrow night. The department of speech and dramatic arts will be hosts to majors in the department, National Collegiate Players and pledges, Dramatics club, Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debating fraternity, the debate squad and all winners of local contests. Churches Open Festival— (Continued from page one) the band will play, the Men's Glee Club will sing, and the audience will sing "America" and close the program with the "Crimson and Blue." A varied program of entertainment and an address by Chancellor Deane W. Malott will follow the annual School of Fine Arts banquet, to be served at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building. Tickets for the banquet are for sale at seventy cents in the Fine Arts business office in Frank Strong hall. The same evening, at 8:20, Evelyn Swarthout, concert pianist, will appear on the Young American Artist program in Hoch auditorium. Miss Swarthout, daughter of Dean Swarthout, will include in her program "Toccato in C Major" (Bach-Buson), "Sonata, Op. 22" (Schumann), "Fifth Sonata" (Seriabin), "Three Etudes" (Debussy), and "Fantasia Baetica" (de Falla). Richard Crooks, Metropolitan opera company tenor star, will present a concert in Hoch Wednesday evening; his program is one scheduled to replace that of Lawrence Tibbett, originally scheduled but unable to appear because of illness. The final three nights of the music week will see the Pro Arte String quartet of Brussels, Belgium in a series of concerts. The quartet was brought to the University through the cooperation of Mrs. Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge, University donor in Cambridge, Mass. Theologian To Give— Your Palm Beach Suit Should be ready for that emergency. (Continued from page one) by various dignitaries of the state, it is thought. Present plans of the committee shape the service much as in former years, with the two exercises occurring on Sunday and Monday nights. Both services will be held in Memorial stadium, to which graduates will march down the hill from Frank Strong hall, unless bad weather forces them to sit in Hoch auditorium. In such case, attendance will be limited to graduates and their families, instead of to the open public, because of limited seating facilities. Not even faculty members and other students will be allowed entrance. WE can make them have that new look. We'll appreciate the opportunity to demonstrate "We clean everything you wear but your shoes" Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners "We clean everything you wear but your shoes" 10th at N. H. St. Phone 383 Chas. E. Louk Phone 205 Spanish Club To Hold Banquet "Senores y senoritas" will celebrate Cervantes Day, an annual festive occasion in memory of the great Spanish writer tomorrow night with an open meeting, banquet, and series of talks sponsored by the department of Spanish. The open meeting will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock for the Kansas chapter of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish, with four instructors, three of whom are from neighboring colleges, as guest speakers. They are: Miss Patricia Cook, K.U.; Dr. Dwight Bolinger, Washburn College; Dr. Samuel Wopy, University of Wichita; and Dr. Eliza Perez, Baker University. At 5:30 p.m. the "Banquete y Tertuli" will be held in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building, with specialty acts featuring songs, recitals, and comedy sketches as an added attraction. Park College, Parkville, Mo. Mount St. Scholastica College, Atchison, Kansas City, Kansas, Junior College, and the Baker University conservatory have entered skirts for the banquet. Participating high shcools will include Faseo, Kansas City, Mo., Wichita North, Wichita; and Shawnee Mission, Merriam, Kan. For MOTHER'S DAY Sunday, May 12 We suggest: Llewellyn—How Green Was My Valley. $2.75 My Valley. $2.75 Carr—Mother of the Smiths. $2.50 $2.50 Gibron—The Prophet. $2.50 Kent—World Famous Walsh—World's Great Catholic Poetry. $1.69 Hill—World's Great Religious Poetry $1.69 Poetry. $1.69 Brooks—Flowering of New England. $1.49 Brooks—Flowering of New England. $1.49 Ruth Wimb. Lee—Sandy: England. $11.99 Ruth Webb Lee—Sandwich Glass. $10.00 Glass. $10.00 A subscription to American Home; House and Garden; Good House- keeping; McCalls; Readers Digest; Life or Time. Aplets (specially boxed) 50 cents Mother's Day cards. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel.-666 RANKIN'S 1101 Mass. Phone 678 SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. Record Hits of the Week I'll Never Smile Again The Rumba Jumps ... Glenn Miller Gloomy Sunday Don't Fall Asleep ... Artie Shaw Dinab Singin' The Blues ... Lional Hampton I'm Gettin' Sentimental Over You Coquette ... Ink Spots