THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill--- What's Happening This Week: on account of Mt. Oread Society Betty Coulson, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 Most thumbed through volumes wherever women congregate are the national periodicals, Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, and Mademoisse. In the last two weeks feminine chatter has turned to women's hazing methods over the country as illustrated in Madomoisse: At Sweet Briar the greenest class is subjected to a three weeks period of persecution. At the end of the period come "Freshman-Sophomore Day," and at 6 a.m. freshmen must ap pear wearing a dress backwards, placard with name on it tie into pigtails and parted in the middle. They carry towels to kneel upon and washcloths to swipe the wimps off their faces. "Goon Day" at Duke finds freshmen in bighigh caps with their ears pruturing, above-the-knee, tight skirts, black knee-length stockings and white high-heeled shoes. All noses must be vibrant redounged. At Skidmore, "Freshman-Sophomore Day" brings out the Hitler in every sophromore, and freshmen have 21 "musts" to remember all day. The class of '40 at Connecticut College for Women, reports Mademoiselle, would like to drop the whole business of initiation. One senior remembers only too well the day she had to wear a beard on her chin, a lamp shade on her head, and long red stockings on her legs. Mrs. B, H. Day, president, took charge of the ceremony. Her assistants included: Mrs. J, G. Claypool; Mrs. J, G. Claypool, Mrs. H Hilyard, Mrs. W. F. Jack, Mrs. R. E Whita, Mrs. C, MacFarlane, Mj. H, Lathrop, and Mrs. W, J. McKnight. K. U. Dames Initiate Thirdly-two new members were initiated into K. U. Dames, organization for wives of students, in the club where Proud Stall高劳快捷 Tuesday night. After the initiation services, refreshments were served by the following hostesses: Mrs. C, H. Brown Mrs. V, H. Hilary, Mrs. A, L. Nichols, Mrs. M. E. McGaugh, and Mrs. D. H. Humphrey. The serving group of the K. U Dames will meet at the home of Mrs. McCarter, 746 Maine, this afternoon. Phi Chi Delta Pledges 20 Phi Chi Delta, Presbyterian sorority,锁定了20 new members at an initiation ceremony Tuesday evening at Westminster Foundation. The pledging ceremony was preceded by a hamburger fry in the yard of the Foundation. Emily Yount, c'40, and Ether Tippin, c'41 program chairmen of the Phi Chi Chua, were in charge of the meeting. Ruth Yeomans, c'41, president, presided at the initiation. The new members are: Grace Oislen, c'40; Maxine Walker, c'43; Nina Wilson, c'43; Mary Lou Noble, c'43; Sela Paulk, c'41; Mary Schultes, c'43; Rosemary Reigin, c'43; Elemon Grider, c'33; Peggy Osmond, c'43; Mary-nell Dyell, c'42; Marie Burlow, c'43; Jenn Lee Azman, c'42; Alberto May- rison, c'43; James Gibson, c'42; Juanna Hall, c'42; Ruth Moritz, c'43; Phyllis Whrerry, c'43; Jean Edmiston, c'43; and Florence Har- liss, c'43. The Counsellors' tea and style show scheduled for yesterday afternoon has been postponed to Oct. 24 according to Maurine Gray, chairman of the federation of counsellors ACO's and Gamma Phi's Exchange First of the sorority exchange dinners sponsored by the Women's Pan Hellenic council will be that of Alpha Chi Omega-Gamma Phi Beta tonight. Ten girls from each house will change eating places for this evening. Alpha Tau Omega fraternity announces the pledging of Fred Roads, ph'43. Hubert T. Lattimore is visiting at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house this week. He flew from Denver yesterday. Watkins hall will hold openhouse tonight from 7 to 8. Clyde Bysom's "Jayawkers" will play. Hood To Give Lecture Manley Hood, '29, will give an illustrated lecture on "Wind Tunnel Studies at Langley Field" to a joint meeting of the members of the A.S.C.E. and A.S.M.E. in room 206, Marvin hall, Thursday night at 7:30. Small parachutes, placed in a junken trap in the side of the fuselage, are used to pull some of the smaller planes out of a spin. I₃ the African termitariums the queen lays about 40,000 eggs a day. Malott To Speak At 'Y' Banquet ★ Sarolena Sherman Will Give Baton Twirling Exhibition; Tickets Ready Chancelor Deane W. Malott will be the principal speaker at the Y.M.C.A. banquet next Tuesday. The banquet will start at 6 o'clock and the meal and program are in charge of the membership committee. The program will be divided into three parts. In addition to the address by Chancellor Malott, there will be three student toasts, given by Keith Schuerman, b'40; Eden Wiles, b'40; and Don Hayman, b'40. Saraile Sheerman, new drum major of the exhibition of baton twirling. Eugene Nininger, fa'42, will lead the group singing. Tickets may be obtained from any of the seven members of the membership committee, the 25 cabinet members, or from the secretary in the F.M.C.A. office in the sub-basement of the Union building. Members of the membership committee from whom tickets may be purchased are Keith Neith, c42; Laurence Nelson, c41; George Kortney, c42; Earl Emaney, b41; John McClellan, b41; Michel, c42; and Ernie Klea, c41. Horr Displays Botanu Collection A collection of particularly interesting botany material is now or display in the lounge of the Memorial Union building. The display, which was made by Dr. Worthie Horr of the botany department, includes a primitive piece of wood found in Meade county. The piece of wood is estimated to be 1-500,000 years old. Mrs. J. Plumly Critically Burned A piece of wood almost completely destroyed by a fungus growth is also on display. The piece of wood was taken from a floor of a high school building five years after construction. It is placed in the plant and the Venus Fly Trap, are in the collection. The plants are called carnivorous plants because of their peculiar structure which enables them to trap and digest insects. Mes. J. Plumly, whose husband was assistant basketball coach at the University several years ago, was critically burned in her home St. Joseph, Mo., Monday. Dr. R.A. Schwegler, Jr., of Lawrence was called to attend her. At present she is reported resting easily and has not had an injury occurred when a hot water heater in her home exploded. Donald Hatch, 30, was one of the co-designers for the most popular house in the New York World Market "Town of Tomorrow" exhibit. On the Campus: Dean E. B. Stouffer of the Graduate School of the University of Kansas will leave for Chicago Saturday to attend a meeting of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. The design polled 16.9 per cent of the votes cast in a two-day poll conducted by the Architectural Forum magazine. Leichershau, Eng., (UP) -Monks at St. Bernard's Monastery, Charnwood Forest, Leicestershire, were proud of their brethren. That was before the crisis. Now they are cleanshaven. They found that beards and gas masks didn't go well together. Stouffer to Chicago Grad Designs Popular House War Costs Monks' Beards WANT ADS FOUND: Zipper key folder containing 5 keys. Owner may have some by calling at KANSAN office this ad. id. R.W.R. on R.W.R. - - - - captain for the University five, but one of the best centers in the Missouri Valley. He scored 183 points in 18 games in this year, an average of 10.7 points per game. In one game he tallied 21 points. On the basketball diamond he was as equally accustomed to winning 7 games, winning all 7, allowing only 28 hits in these 63 innings, and striking out 77 men. TODAY— Parking commission meeting, Pine room, 3 p.m.; W.C.A. Freshman commission, Henley house, 430 p.m.; Scabbard and Blade meet FRIDAY: I.S.A. Vance dances, Memorial Union ballroom, 9-12 p.m.; M.W. Jones dances, Memorial Union ballroom, 8:30 p.m.; Elena reunion pitcher, Hurley house, 4:30 p.m.; Elena reunion pitcher, Hurley house, 5 p.m. SATURDAY—Football team plays Colorado State at Ft Collins Former Jayhawker Great Aiding 'Phoo' This Year By Clint Kanaga, c'42 Aiding Coach "Pho" Allen this year in grooming his basketball squad for freshman and varsity competition is Ernest "Dutch" Ubra-lab, captain of Coach Allen's 1921 University basketball team. "Dutch," a Lawrence boy was one if the finest all-around athletes in the Missouri Valley for a period of three years. His years of competition were in 1917, 20, and 21 when he served during the World War. After the war was over, he returned to K. U. for his last two years of college. His actual athletic accomplishments are close to being tops. For three years "Dutch" was a regular on the dawhawk court to duet. Shifted to the outfield in his last year of competition, he played in every minute of every game and compiled a batting average of .343, second highest on the Jayhawker outfit. He was selected in the All-Missouri Valley all-star nine. "Dutch" is now attending the University in the role of a student again, working on his Masters degree. Before coming here this year, "Dutch" was head basketball and track coach at Salina high school. He left Salina with a fine coaching record. In 1932, 33, '34 his Salina cagers won their district regional and went to the state championship at Topeka. In 1937, "Dutch's" mile record of 3.26.9. Incidentally this time was the best time of any high school team in the United States for 1937. Bill Reid, a University sophomore on that relay team anchored the team with a running start in the fast time of 49.4. "Dutch" also had two other brothers who attended the University and were fine athletes. The early Pennsylvania Dutch settlers did not permit themselves the luxury of pictures and rugs in their homes. Classified People You need a haircut, a good shampoo. You need to have a new key made for the one you lost. You want to Know the best place to get your camera film developed. You're not satisfied with the place where you eat at present. You want to pick up an extra book-end. Little things are continually coming up. And the answers are already prepared for YOU in the classified columns of the KANSAN. Read it regularly. It's there for your convenience. And if you want to advertise, and pay LESS THAN YOU THINK, call K.U. 66 right now. Convenient rates to your measure. Expect 3-Power European Meet ★ Germany, Italy and Russia Plan To Hold Urgent Consultation Tomorrow Berlin, Oct. 11.—UPF — Well-informer Nazi numbers titlz moment expected urgent consultations between Germany, Italy and Soviet Russia would begin Friday to decide the three powers' future policy in the event, as seems most likely, that Prime Minister Neville Chamberlandtomorrow rejects Fuehrer Adolf Hitler's peace proposals. The consultations, according to Nazi sources, are expected to last at most 48 hours and probably will be followed by announcement of what are described as "decisions of far-reaching importance." German quarters said after Premier Edouard Dalalier's radio talk of last night there remains only Chamberlain's speech to indicate the cause of the conflict to continue the conflict. Still hopping for peace, a foreign office cpokeeman insisted today that Daabler's promulgation of French slam did not differ fundamentally from the content of Hitler's Reichs- land of terror. The goal of guaranteed security was identical with that of Germany. Apparently in a last-moment effort to keep open the door for negotiation, the German press and responsible Nazi quarters minimized the firmness of Daladier's radio talk which, it was contended here, was intended mainly for "internal consumption." The Hamburger Fremdenblatt, for the instance, insists Dahlagier gave "no concrete answer" to Hitler's proposals and that therefore his declaration should not be regarded as constituting a final French re- journal of place magisteries Nazis continue to suggest there is little sympathy for the war among the French people. As the crucial point in Hitler's peace offensive is reached, neutral observers detected energetic resumption of German propaganda efforts to wean France away from Britain. Der Angriff this afternoon published a front page cartoon illustrating a story which has been circulated assiduously for several days—how French pollin in the maginot line are hoisting placards for the German troops inscribed "Don't Shoot Here, We're over there in the next pillbox." Daladier's address yesterday, rebuffing overtures for peace on Hitler's terms, was said to have left the situation unchanged. Chamberlin's speech to the British House of Commons tomorrow will mark the crux of the campaign to end the war, the spokesman declared. Ample ground for negotiations was laid to remain, since Germany has assured France and Britain repeat it, has no war claims against them. The name "Chicago" comes from the Indian language and means "wild onion." Foreign office officials pointed out that Hitler has reiterated that Germany has no intentions of attacking France and has given up any claims for缸娶ishment of the Versailles Treaty as it applied to the Allies. Illustrated: Germany even won't so far as to discard certain complaints against France in order to create a spirit of neighborliness, it was said. But if Britain and France choose to continue the war, Germany will not be found wanting, the spokesman said. the popular SADDLE STITCH SUIT in 3 button Single Breasted Model Styled by FELLOW FASHIONS Campus Clothes for the Campus Man . . . . Found in--- TAKE IN the "Hill" activities in a suit that will gain the approval of your most "Clothes Concious" friends. Found in--- * © New Colors * © Exclusive Patterns * © University Styled Models COME IN — SEE THEM NOW! On The Hill It's Flats Cleverly designed and created for the most exacting coed. So comfortable, and yet so smart, for school and sportswear. - Brown and White - Natural - Brown $3.95 to $5.00 Every size — 3 to 9 — AAA to B Royal College Shop 837-39 Mass.