UESDAY. MAY 24. 1928 --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society DOROTHY DHAHN 3, 28; Society Editio Before 5 p.m. pam. K.U.I. 21 aft. 5 ppm. 270. KU.) --supper Saturday: Janie Bunce, c49 Elizabeth Hamner Nancy Kesler, fa49 Mary Gieral, c49 Courtney Gurney, c49 Jane Everet, c38 Mary Alice Livingston, c18 Wingarret Ridley, c39 Bell Coulson, c49 Deneise Lemonie, c49 Phyllis Wetherill, c39 Francine Zentmeyer, c49 George Mossman, c49 Gene Buchanan, I40 Mrs. Gene Buchanan Hillary Buchanan, Mo. Howard Sayles, Kansas City, Mo. Neil Rayburn, Kansas City, Mo. The patronesses of Delta Sigma Theta entertained Sunday morning with their annual breakfast honoring the seniors of the sorority at the home of Mrs. John Clarke. A short program preceded the breakfast with Mrs. Hardiman, president of the patronesses, acting as toastmistress. The program: "Thumbnail Sketches of the Sorority," Dorothea Nofes, c39; a talk, "The Sorority Today," Elizabeth Hardiman, "Greeting" by the seniors, Eileen Hardiman, c38, and Edna Nofes, c38; and musical selections by the Delta trio, Sammy Hall, c39; Ethel Hardiman; and Mary Fishback. The guests were: Ethelby Hardman, c. 38 Sarah Coulson, c. 38 Margaret Louse Garrett, c. 39 Orelia Robinson, c. 39 Margaret Rudley, b. 39 Bella Wilton, b. 39 Samuah Love, b. 39 Dunrotha Notles, c. 39 Betty Low Promelli, c. 40 JoAnn Lemmons, c. 41 Mary Fishbark, c. 44 JoAnna Young, c. 44 Lillian French, f. 44 Becca Newman, s. 50 Alice Clarke, '30 High school senior girls present: Helen Salibury Saulie Perrison Helen Harvey Rose Newman Betty Moore Earth Wagner Lala Belle McFall Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity entertained the following at a buffet Alpha Omicron Pi entertained with a dinner Sunday in honor of the seniors who are leaving the organi- Sigma Chi fraternity honored the following seniors with a dinner last evening. Allene Kidner, fc 38 Dorelle Wyrick, c³⁸ Mara Hedges, fc 38 Marlene Longbeam, c³⁸ Nami Longbeam, c³⁸ Additional guests were: Mr. Elynn Dawes, Lawrence Mr. Laurel Lawson, Dr. Gail McChure, Mr. Francis Lawrence, Mr. Fashion Kwan, Kansas City, Mo. Janet Turner, Kansas City, Mo. Iewell Potts, Haltie Alpha Delta Pi honored the following seniors with a formal dinner Sunday. Keith Swainch, c'38 Howard Glijp, b'38 Stephen Fitzgerald, c'38 Charles Hall, b'38 Marry McCardland, b'38 Homer Riley, b'18 Homer Riley, b'18 Don Dicter, c'38 Ninon Siewen, c'38 Joseph L. 178 Forrest Horace, ed'38 Mary Tales, c'38 Mary Ruth Main, c'38 Curtume High, c'40 Harris Hunt, c'41 Harriet Dunnine, c'42 Alice, c'43 Mia Rose Romer, c'45 Helen Myers, c'47 Dinner guests at the Chi Omega house Sunday were: Anthony Onofrio, c£40 Wendy Hammons, c£8 Dan Rulle, c£9 Mr. and Mrs. Geo. O. Foster, Lawrence Mrs. C. E. Roberts, Portland, O. O. Max Temple, Kannah City, Mo. Betty Maharishi Kamia City, Mo. Jin Postma, c£8 Alpha Sigma Nu, honorary physical education sorority, announces the initiation of Alice Paden, ed39 and D. J. Willett, ed39. A banquet at Evans' Hearth last evening preceded the initiation ceremonies. The following members were also pres- ent Miss Ruth Hoover Nina Elizabeth Babel Bamel Rowland Marie Rice, Rowland, Katherine Culver, edd, 38 Catherine Dulce, edd, 38 Watkins hall entertained the foli lowing at dinner burgundy: Marvin Goebel, c'39 Irvin Beagle, e'unc Revlin Gore, c'41 Gerald Foulie, c'40 Mrs. George Michalopoulus, c'38 ~ to Larry Coyle, who is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity and is now Randolph field, Texas. Alpha Delta Pi announces the engagement of Caroline Perrill, fa'unel, Guests at the Chi Omega house ver the weekend were: Yvonne White, Bonner Springs Richey Fay McReidy, Kansas City Fern Forman, Kansas City, Mo. . The K. U. Dames will conclude the year with installation of new officers at their last meeting tonight at 8 o'clock in the lounge in Frank强 Hall. Hostesses for the evening are Mrs Leonard Wolfe, Mrs. George F Church, Mrs. Roland Rogers and Mrs. James Gough. Alpha Omicron Ii announces the engagement and marriage of Vada Lanternan, fs, to Tom Mooney of Elmhurst and student at the university last year. --the delta Tau party Friday night. For some reason or other, he thought he had the ability of feeding a line. But if he only knew Just in the case that his best friends won't tell him, we wish to say that he is beautiful and beautiful "your luxious lips," etc., don't go with most girls. Alpha Delta Pi announces the engagement of Mary Thies, c38, tGeorge Jewell, c38, who is a member of the Delta Chi fraternity. Delta Sigma Theta announces the initiation of Betty Lou Pennell, c'40 Luciretta Smith, c'40; and Lutisha Lewis. c'40 ∞ Mrs. L. M. Metzler was a dinner guest at Watkins hall Saturday. ∞ Dr. Thomas Fitzgerald, resident physician of Watkins Memorial hospital, and Mrs. Fitzgerald announces the birth of a daughter born Saturday, May 21, at St. Joseph's hospital in Kansas City, Mo. Phi Gamma Delta fraternity had the following guests for dinner Sunday: Juliet Trembley, cuml Helen Foreshaw, c45 Mary Berry, c38 Margaret Spong, c38 Dorothy Jones, c44 Continued from page 1 On the Shin-the delta Tau party Friday night. For some reason or other, he thought he had the ability of feeding a line. But if he only knew Just in the case that his best friends won't tell him, we wish to say that he is beautiful and beautiful "your luxious lips," etc., don't go with most girls. Kirk Owen, Phi Psi basketball player, must have the habit of sleeping in the library during study hours. It would make no difference to us, but since we heard one of the librarians complain about his snoring it is only fair to let him finish and finals are starting Wednesday. John Williams gets today's ticket to the Granada theater to see "Yellow Jack", starring Robert Montgomery and Virginia Bruce. Bill Granger, general cut-up from the Acacia house, experienced an odd sensation the day after the Acacia's Founder's Day banquet. I seems that he smoked his first cigar and died, and as it no doubt no aounding result, he smoked two more the next morning. Toward lunch time, this freshman from Connecticut began to notice a very unnatural feeling in his stomach. After interrupting his noon meal to go upaliens, he got as far as the steps, when he had to sit down to eat his lunch, for about 10 minutes. Possibly when he gets a little older the effect won't be quite so hard. Plans for the tenth annual "straw berry breakfast" of the Y.W.C.A. are underway. This breakfast had its origin 10 years ago when Miss Marie Rusk, then secretary of the committee, was a member who were back for Commencement over to Henley house for breakfast. Tenth Strawberry Breakfast Will Be Held June 6 The breakfast has become a custom, and each year it is held on the morning of Commencement. This year it will be served at 7:45 o'clock on June 6. About 300 letters have been sent out to those who served on the cabinet of the Y.W. C.A. since 1913. Mildered LeSeur, Mrs. W. J. Baumgartner, and Mrs. F. B. Davis will be hostesses. Mrs. Henrietta Stewart will be toastmasters. The attire for the breakfast attendee will be read and those present at the breakfast will be introduced. Tickets are on sale for 35 cents. Reservations should be made by June 3. Grasshoppers Menace Crops Washington, May 23—(UP)—A large number of insects which survived the warm winter have begun to inflict heavy damage upon early crops, reports to the Department of Agriculture indicate. Warm Winter Allows Many Harmful Insects To Survive "The vanguard of the 1938 army of insect pests, advancing with warm weather, have brought widespread destruction to vegetation and a threat of more to come," an Insect Pest Survey bulletin said. Despite millions of dollars spent every year in fighting plant pests they cause damage estimated at $500,000,000. Grasshoppers, Mormon erickets, chinch bugs and bollworms create a major portion of the damage. Armyworms and cutworms made an early appearance in the lower Mississippi valley, injuring several crops, notably oats and alfalfa. Cutworms also have been especially destructive in the Delta. mississippi Delta Invaded Winter survival of the corn ear worm was greater than last year in New Jersey, Virginia, Ohio and Texas. For the first time on record this worm lived through the winter in Kansas and Utah. The eastern tent caterpillar, out in large numbers, has started to skeletonize foliage from New Hampshire to South Carolina and westward to Tennessee. The tent caterpillar is one of the things in Georgia and Mississippi. A plague of cankerworms was reported from the Middle Atlantic states, from Ohio and from Mississippi. The coddling moth, No. 1 insect enemy of the apple, has appeared in Indiana, and the Mexican bean beetle has appeared earlier than ever before in Virginia. May beetles have aerially injured pecan buds in Georgia and have been found as far north as LaFayette, Ind. In injury from grubs of the beetle, Tennessee and Kentucky, Tennessee and Georgia. Vegetable Weevil Spreads The vegetable weevil was reported more numerous than usual in Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. A new infestation of the weevil was reported proving unusually destructive in Southern California. Grasshoppers, delayed by the spring cold snap, were reported catching in unusually large numbers in Texas, Utah, Colorado, Oklahoma. In New Jersey and Wisconsin, rious damage, however, is expected this summer in the G-eat Plains. The hessian fly was reported in Kansas, Indiana and Pennsylvania and the chinch bug in Indiana, Illinois and Missouri. Mormon cricket eggs have hatched throughout Montana. The cotton boll weevil and the cotton leaf worm have made unusually early appearances. The pea phidid were reported numerous along the Pacific coast, especially in Oregon and California. The University of Pennsylvania crew led Princeton and Columbia throughout the entire 13-4-mile race and came in first by two boat lengths. "Spee" Spencer, coxswain of the vires, helped the team hold and held the pace until the final dash when he raised it to 35. Proud of their stamina, the Quaker showed the crowd that they still had some "stuff" left after the race was ever; rowing back to the boathouse, the crew heated to 39 for a short, quick sprint. Quaker oarsmen won the coveted Childs Cup Rezatta last Saturday. What's Doing in Sports At Other Schools By Dole Heckendorn A goal by a Syracuse lacrosse man was nullified last week because a referee declared that the scorer had stepped into illegal territory just before snapping the ball into the net. But a newspaper photograph the next day showed that the shot, in split-section action, had been made just before the player went out of bounds. Syracuse lost the game 5-4. first riding exhibition Sunday. The Boilermakers' Riding Club was organized last fall and this is the first of its kind. It has given, "Gykhanna," merely the Hindu way of saying "games on horseback" was the title of the show. In addition to mounted tricks, riding, and a jumping exhibition, several "horse" games were played. Sports writer George Mask at induction meeting Alex Kolzun, Spartan footballer. Kolzun a short but chunk backfield man, weighing 152 pounds, comes from a Detroit suburb where, says Maskin, he learned to take a lot of punishment and yet come back for more. Detroit sports writers failed to note Kohlskäjn's high school achievements, but in the Spartan spring football program, they would become one of Coach Bachman's first string men next fall. A photograph at Syracuse University has proved conclusively that not all referees are right. Purdue equestrians presented their first riding exhibition, Sunday. Will College students who plan to enroll in the summer session please register their names as soon as possible in the College office, 121 Frank Strong hall. This will enable us to bring your transcripts up to date and complete summer session enrollment. NOTICE PAUL B. LAWSON, Dean Stepp left last week for Poland. With the aid of an interpreter, he will spend the summer training coaches and swimmers for the Polish government. Last year he was invited over by their National Athletic Association and spent his time organizing the water boys. This season he will spend more time in actual swimming instruction. In about 10 years the Poles may figure prominently in the world water sports, because Coach Steub becoming swimming conscious." Howie Stepp, Princeton swimming coach, can't speak Polish now, but he'll soon learn. Oklahoma Woman, 108. Clings to Corncob Pipe Durant, Okla. May 23—(UP)—Mrs.贝丽 Airington lighted her pipe today. She said she felt tired after a one hundred and eighth birthday. "Yes, I still smoke my pipe," Mrs. Airington said, "I've done it since I was a girl. I also have a clay pipe. I smoke it and this one daily." Mrs. Arrington was born on April 3, 1830, in Kentucky, but she doesn't remember the town or county. NATIONAL ARROW WEEK May 23rd to May 28th This is the week when we put on one of the most fascinating shirt events of the year. We stock up with all the newest Arrow Shirt designs. New Building-shell mades the orchestra or band, when on the stage, sound queer because a great deal of the music is lost among the curtains and backdrops. ARROW Besides shirt, this *Arrow* Style Festival also features new Arrow ties, underwear and handkerchiefs. ARROW SHIRTS, $2 up Ties, $1-$1.50 Handkerchiefs, 25e up Ugly undershirts, 50e up See Windows A building with practice rooms ams a small auditorium for broadcasting and recitals, designed well acoustically, would help not only the School of Fine Arts, but the University, for the broadcasts from a good studio would make the band sound nearly as good as it really does, and that would give the University a boost in the favor of the listeners. Continued from page 1 But the music departments aren't all the School of Fine Arts that needs a new building. The painting and drawing classes need it just as badly. A fine arts building would do away with the classes in painting and drawing in the hall on the third floor of east Frank Strong hall where they're held now because of insufficient room. It would have a room for student exhibitions, which now must be hung in the halls or class rooms. The departments of design and commercial art are crowded almost as badly. They are partially moved into the west wing hall of Mrs. Stover's Bungalow Candies Always a Big Double Show Just One More Day Fresh Every Week All Shows 15c PATEE "WE DELIVER" MIDWAY CAFE 1031 Mass. Phone 708 AND WEDNESDAY 2 Knockout First Run Pictures "The Devil in His Eyes---- A Wallop in His Fists---- And Heaven in His Arms! No. 2 "The Kid Comes Back" WAYNE MORRIS JUNE TRAVIS Learn the Low-Down on the Most Ruthless Racket That Ruthenized a Notion! 'Paid to Dance' Don Terry Jacqueline Wells Frank Strong. All the art departments are crowded on one floor of the building, and even have to share with musicians and several classes. Also—Golf Mistakes - News Moving the School of Fine Arts out of Frank强 Hall would solve some other problems, too. It would give the School of Business all the room it needs, and eliminate the necessity for a business building. It could also give the departments of physiology and psychology and the School of Medicine badly needed room. Always the Best DICKINSON Shows 3-7-9 25c Til 7 Thrill to Their Pledge . . . Their Quest . . . Their Courage! "Four Men and A Prayer" LORETTA YOUNG RICHARD GREEN - Last Times Today! TOMORROW! The RITZ BROTHERS KENTUCKY MOONSHINE A 20th Century Fox A Three-Ritz Ruckus in the Corn Liker Country . . . A Coast-to-Coast Hiccup on a Network of Loaths! TONY MARTIN MURTERIA WEAVER SIMON MUMERVILLE SIMON CARRADINE WALLY NICKSON Directed by Daniel Bullen* Darryl F. Zinn* in charge of production SUNDAY! KATHARINE HEPBURN CARY GRANT "HOLIDAY" Western Electric telephones are made to work together One reason you hear CLEARLY... Whether you're talking across the street or to San Francisco, it doesn't "just happen" that you hear clearly and easily over the telephone. One reason you can do it: Western Electric telephones, precision manufactured for the entire country. You might say they're "tuned" to each other, somewhat like radios to a broadcasting station. Southwestern Bell Telephone Company If telephones and equipment weren't uniform, voices might not be clear. It would be vastly more difficult for us to give you the good service at low cost that you have come to expect. Shows 2:30-7-9 25c 'til 7 Just One More Day TODAY AND WEDNESDAY "Men in White" "Poseur and now Sidney Howard's Startling Stage Ploy!" X-TRA World's Most Famous Babies "QUINTUPLAND" As They Are Today in DIONNE QUINTUPLETS QUINTUPLAND - ALSO - Color Cartoon - News In Their First Big Musical Comedy THURSDAY 3 Days LAUREL AND HARDY "Swiss Miss" SUNDAY "The Adventures Of Robinhood" All in Groupe New Technicolor The Finest Entertainment Ever Made Hurry! 15c Till 7:00 Hurry! Then 20c So-Long Blues!—Varsity-ize! Last Chance to See---- --- THE WORLD'S NEWEST DELIGHT! DEANNA DURBIN Adolphe Menjou Leoppold Stokowski Added NEWEST NEWS AND 'POPEYE' WEDNESDAY Bargain 10c Till 7:00 Nite! Then 15c "LLOYD'S of LONDON" Tyrone Power Freddie Bartholemew Madeline Caroll AND A Real G-Man Mystery "Federal Bullets"