WEDNESDAY NOV 8 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREL Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society Betty Coulson, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 Sophomore women who as freshmen were on the Dean's honor roll were entertained at tea by co-hostesses, Mrs. Dearle Malott and members of Mortar board, honorary society for women, at the Malott residence between 3:30 and 5 p.m. yesterday. Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser of women, was an honorary assistant. The eight Mortar Board members who served were: Betty Jane Boddington, c'40; president; Ruth Olive Brown, c'40; Jamson Jamison, b'40; Velma Wilson, c'40; Eva Ruth Meinke, fa'40; Maurine Gray, c'40; Maurine Mong, c'40; and Eddie Parks, c'40. International Officer Visits Mrs. J. H. Weiner of Los Angeles, Gamma Phi Beta international chairman of inspection, is in Lawrence visiting Stoma chapter. Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the engagement of Bill Kuchs, c'10; to Carolyn Bell, c'12. An informal dinner will be given in her honor tonight at the chapter house. In the evening she will be entertained with a small reception at the home of Mrs. Weaver Hutton Jr. Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity, announces the formal initiation of Ralph Malott, c'42; Joe Sectile, c'11; Richard Scott, c'40; and George Wiznesnackus, c'41. Kappa Sigs Attend Meeting Eight active members attended the monthly alumni meeting of Kappa Sigma fraternity in the building, Kansas City, Monday night. Joe Brimer of Alpha Omega chapter at William Jewell College was initiated at the meeting. Those who made the trip were Dick Hansen, c'40; Roger Ludeman c'42; Wayne Clover, b'40; Howard Rankin, c'42; Frank Baugartner c'42; Bill Murfin, c'42; Fred Murfur c'41; and Jason Yordy. c'42. Theta Mothers Meet Members of the Kansas City club of Kappa Alpha Theta mothers met for luncheon at the chapter house here Monday. Mrs. Dene Malot and Miss Elizabeth Megular, adviser of women, were guests. This Business Never Stops Reported hour dances last night included: Chi Omega - Delta Upsilon; Alpha Delta Pi - Deltau Tau Delta; Gamma Pi Beta -sigma Chi; Kapua Alpha Theta -Pi Kappa Alpha -Kappa Kappa Gamma -Sigma Alma Epsilon; Alpha Chi Omega -Phi Gamma Delta. Louise Rayl, c'42, was a luncheon guest yesterday at the Gamma Phi Beta house. Mr. A. R. Current of Tulsa and Dorothy Burkhead, c'43, luncheon guests yesterday at the Chi Omega house. Luncheon guests yesterday at the Kappa Alpha Theta house were: Kay Stinson, c'42; Jean Ebert, c'42; Ruth Inkens, c'42; Jane Geiger, c'40; Betty Rogers, c'40; and Leone Hoffman, c'40. Marcel Dupré, internationally known French organist, his wife, and his daughter were guests of the faculty of the School of Fine Arts at a lunchroom given in the Old English room of the Memorial Union building at noon yesterday. In the heyday of Corinth, Greece, the city's 20,000 freemen were estimated to possess 460,000 slaves. Phi Sigma Initiates 12 New Members Twelve pledges were imitated in Phi Sigma, honorary biological science fraternity, recently. They included Isabelle Baird, gr; Leo Franklin, assistant instructor of botany; Herbert Humphreys, instructor of psychology; Leo Hellmer, assistant instructor of psychology Russell Jeffords, assistant geology surveyor; Frank Kahns, assistant instructor of biology, assistant instructor of entomology; Louis Kutius gr; Louis Lipovsky, c'40; Tyson Mallen, gr; Curtis Packard, gr; and Harold Smollin, gr. The fraternity meets monthly and has a guest speaker who is an authority in one of the various fields of biological sciences. Officers of the organization are: Robert Lommasson, assistant instructor in botany, president; Clarence Brumback, gr, vice-president; Gerald B. Peez, assistant instructor of physiology, secretary; and James M. Sprague, assistant instructor of zoology, treasurer. Dexter To Discuss Sharecroppers Dr. Royal N Chapman, dean of the graduate school at the University of Minnesota, spoke at the initiation concerning the pineapple industry. Conditions of sharecroppers in Arkansas will be the subject of a movie and a discussion led by Dr Robert C. Dexter of Boston with Y.M. and Y.W. committees at 4:30 this afternoon at Henville house. What's Happening This Week Doctor Dexter also will speak at a luncheon today in the cafeteria of the Memorial Union building. Those attending the luncheon will be students invited by the Rev H. Lee Jones, pastor of the Unifarian church, who is sponsoring Doctor Dexter's appearance in Lawrence. Doctor Dexter will speak to several political science classes, this morning. Italy Warns Russia To Stay Out of Balkans, Danube Basi Rome, Nov. 7, —(UP)—Holy bluntly wryred Russia today to stay out of the Balkans and the Dumbe basin because the European powers unwieldy enabled Premier Benito Mussolini's invasion "a guardian of peace" there. On the Campus: The warning was served by the journalist Virginio Gayda, frequently mouthpiece for Musolini, in the Giornale d'Italia and constituted the sharpest pronouncement thus far on Italy's attitude toward Russia and the new Soviet-German working agreement. TODAY: — Housemothers meeting from 3 to 4 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union, United Delta Phi Mu meeting in the office. THURSDAY—Freshman Y.M.C.A. meeting in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building at 4:30 p.m. Owl Society meeting in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building at 7:30 p.m. Freshmen election all day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. FRIDAY—Puff Faint Prom at 9 p.m. in the Memorial Union building. SATURDAY—ARMADIA Day at 10 a.m. Kansas-Nebraska game at Lincoln. SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY The University of Buffalo A four year curriculum completed in three calendar years, by means of the quarter plan. Four quarters of eleven weeks each, to the The University of Buffalo THE SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY 25 Goodrich Street - - - Buffalo, New York The dental and medical schools are closely affiliated, instruction in the basic medical sciences being under the supervision of the medical faculty. Clinical practice of dentistry, in addition to academic teaching, is an estimate association with the clinics of several hospitals. Periods of internship in two general and one children's hospital during the senior year, offering unique clinical observation, diagnosis, and training of dental conditions. Next regular session will start the first week in July, 1940. For further information address---employment for all youth from 15 to 25 is three and a half years. Tufty Scholastic Stress Practice Teachers Picnic and Dance Practice teachers and supervisors of Oread Training School held their annual steak fry and dance last night at Holcom's grove. Committees in charge of the picnic were: Joy Lawson, c'40; Jeanette Singleton, c'40; Mary Fee, instructor in education; Gilbert Ulmer, assistant professor of education; Gordon Field, ed'40; and Ruth Litench, gr. The dance committee was composed of Charles Toberen, f'40, and Eubah Lindner, dr. Fr. O. Russell, principal of the school, was in charge of the publicity. Delays Entrance---employment for all youth from 15 to 25 is three and a half years. Tufty Scholastic Stress (Continued from page one) (Continued from page one) to Panama, the neutrality act would prevent Americans serving as officers or crew aboard the vessels. Should the vessels be sumk while flying the Panamanian flag, he said, there could be no international episode as to ship, crew or cargo. He said that the United States Maritime commission will not issue a final decision on the question until tomorrow. But he defended legitimacy of the proposed transfer under the rule of laws, arguing that the plans were based on the promise that the United States would not become involved in the European war. Washington, Nov. 7. —(UP)—John M. Franklin, president of the United States Lines, tonight said that there is no "subterfuge" in his proposal to transfer eight company vessels to the Panama flag, an action defended by President Roosevelt as being "unacceptable" and held up Secretary of State Cordell Hull to violate the spirit of the new law. KFKU RADIO SCHEDULE 2:30 French Lesson. 2:44 Campus News Flashes. 6:15 "A Doctor Looks at Education." Mervin T. Sudler, M.D. 6:00 Westminster A. Cappella Choir, D. M. Swarthout, direc- LOST: Camel hair coat Thursday night at Jayhawk Cafe. Reward Bill Reed, phone 721, 1439 Tennessee WANT ADS LOST: Grey, belless overcant, leather gloves and a blue scarf in pockets. Left in Union Building Cafeteria, Tuesday, October 31. Reward. Don Mitchell, phone 525-400. Take four to Lincoln Saturday morning, return Sunday afternoon. Phone 110, ask for John Bondeson. —41. LOST: At football game Friday, a green Dobbs hat with initials S.N. on inside band. Reward. Return to Stew McLeed, 1621 Edgehill Road. —40 LOST: Ladies white gold swiss wrist watch at a rally Thursday evening. Reward. Phone 1185. Alice Boylan. —40. CALL Bob Ramsay to fire your furnace full or time during vacation. Phone 3002 or 177. -35 Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 2—(UP)—A national survey of town and country boys conducted by the University of Tennessee disclosed that three out of four want to change places. Town and Country Boys Want To Trade Places Now It's For--employment for all youth from 15 to 25 is three and a half years. Tufty Scholastic Stress RENT A for your Week-end Reading 15c for 5 days THE BOOK NOOK RENT A BOOK For--- ARROW TIES 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 "The town boys want to go to the farm, and the farm boys to town," Dr Fred Smith, University of Tennessee denn, found. "Both are insecure." "They say the schools have netted to train them for effective occupations or to tell them what the world is really like. They say there is a soulless industry driving them from the door of employment replacing them by machines—which is probably true. Smith said that modern youth bhaths its wiring on an unfixed course, having fallen heir to a "malaikat" social order" for which it lacked the right to complain. "The normal period of homemaking has been pushed back later and later in life. Filty per cent of young people who get married under 21 live with the parents of one or the other. They have come to doubt the efficacy of religion and matches find harder and harder to draw them in." Agnostic Trends "The opportunities for the youth who knows where he is going are as great as they have ever been in our history," he said. "But the chances of the undereased, nolce-do-well youth are greater kohl than ever." Smith explained that 28 per cent of all persons between the ages of 16 and 25 never have been permanently employed. For forty-five per cent of employees, he said they are one year or more after leaving school. The average length of time of un This is one you've just got to have—unless you are a bookish fellow given to staying indoors. The "watch-case" on this pipe keeps the wind from tearing into the pipe-bowl and enigrating it. You've never swept out your years) from burning. The slotted grill controls the draft perfectly, and tucks back sideways for easy access. You can climb up the truss as a watch and tight as a clam-mer, and covered covers look like the Gay Ninja outfit that's come through our doors in many years--you'll agree as soon as you see them. The Laundry Case That's Just Right Weaver's KAYWOODIE COMPANY Rockefeller Center, New York and London NOTIONS 89c Fillers 19c The schools, he declared, have failed to provide youth with important guidance. "In our high and elementary schools we are putting the emphasis on college preparatory work, but most of our youth don't go to college. We never-emphasize the levels of higher education and are not spending enough money on vocational training. FIRST FLOOR "Reading and writing and eiphering are not enough. The school must team youth to do better the things they are going to have to do anyway." Smith advocated federal aid to education as a means of consolidating educational opportunities between "wetly shoesy students with fewer chil- lar and poorer section with the most children to educate." Muraly Rivalry He described youth as unfixed, economically insecure, "Thumbling its way east and west, north and south across the country looking for jobs taking low pay, working long hours with tenure very unaintent." "A majority of these young people, he added, "have to contribute toward support of their parents, in a world machines are replacing hands." Out of this picture of stern competition and unemployment, Smith nevertheless holds out hope for a better-ordered, more equitable society, guided by more purposeful direction on the part of the managers of society. Postpone I.S.A. Dance Until Nov. 24 The second Independent Student Association varity which was scheduled to be Nov. 11 has been postponed until Nov. 24, David Whitney, c'42, general manager of the association said yesterday. The dance Nov. 24 will be a Hobe Variety and dancers are expected to come dressed in tucky clothes. The show is scheduled by Glyde Boyam's band, will play. W.S.G.A. Approves Smoking Restriction To Seven Buildings when riding a bike--or On the home stretch of the smoking reform, the W.S.G.A. council voted last night to allow women students to smoke in seven Campus buildings, as designated by the joint Committees which met yesterday. Fresh Arc 4th Graders "We strongly recommend the use of sand urns in the approved locations" the Council said regarding the disposal of cigarette stubs. The women also discussed plans to re-inagerate the "point system," but no definite action was taken. Under the point system women would be limited to a certain number of offices in Campus groups, determined by the honor which accompanies the office and the amount of time required to carry out its duties. Kent, O. (U.P.) - College freshmen are four friends in English and punctuation, Dr. W. I. Garnett, professor of English at Kent State University, announced after a survey of three mid-western teachers' colleges. just leisure-campus wear Sport jacket or a wool sweater is the smart thing to wear with colorful slacks. - Added accessories of Delite Sport Hat and Bestemin Sports Shoes add to the collage. ◊ Come in — Browse around — see our new Happy Partnership "Did you ever think of how thankful we should be that we are living in times when everything has been invented for our convenience? We have cars, lights, telephones --- really thousands of things which operate by merely pushing a button or lifting a handle. And it's so easy to get all of these things. The newspaper has become the medium through which we buyers and sellers can get together. The Daily Kansan tells us where to buy, what to buy, and when to buy. It's a happy partnership!" Call K.U.66 for a KANSAN ad-taker!