THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1907 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society M. JEAN CASKY, Society Editor Before 5, pmt call KU; 21 after 7, pmt call KZ21 --pha Theta sorority house were; Corbin hall will hold open house this evening from 7 until 8 o'clock. ★ ★ ★ Alpha Omicron Pi will entertain the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity with an hour dance this evening. The Delta Chi fraternity will entertain the pledges of the Chi Omega sorority with an hour dance and buffet supper tonight. Weekend guests at the Chi Omega sorority house were: Jean Underwood, Manhattan Constance Rutherford, Leaven- burgh Dignon Celeste Jane Throckmorton, Manhutton Jean Woods, Overland Park Eleanor Schalter, Leavenworth Dorothy Ann Uhl, Manhattan Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Charles. M., E. E. Swafford, Fort Scott Jane Lieseberg, Manhattan Walsh Wamban, Manhattan Elizabeth Covey, Manhattan Marcele Freible, Manhattan Marcie Diller, Kansas City Diller Miller, Kansas City Marjorie McKay, El Dorado El Dorado Miller, Kansas City M., Mrs. J. M. Bckley, E- M., Mrs. J. M. Bckley, E- Eduv Mavis Burlin, Topoca Hilda Brown, Birmingham, Miss. Jane Auld, Manhattan Betty Hand, Topoka Manhattan Manahan Aileen Nothaway, Manhattan Joan Nothaway, Manhattan Jean Buchanan, Manhattan Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Slentz, Mary Jean Lindgren, Wichita Elizabethtown Carry, Wichita Owen, W. Lewis, Milford Pearson, Oakley Al Gallup, bumel. Mrs. M. Wrs. Le Shoffer, Burling Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Quiring, McPheron Mrs. O. Nuttitt, Bur Loren Stentz, Great Bend Paul Hill, Redlands, Calif. Dr. and Ms. Oakley, Oakley Hoyle, Hayes Jane Culbertson, Manhattan Bibel Simmons, Manhattan Bibel Simmons, Manhattan Fay Ann Dale, Manhattan Eleanor Uhl, Manhattan Ruth Esther Purdie, Kathy Esther Purdie, Manhattan Henry Morrison, Great Bend Mrs. A. M. Hannah, Kansas City, Fern Formen, '37, Kansas City, Mo Garce Tope, Kansas City, Mo. Suzanne Engleman, 37, Kansas City, Mo. Weekend guests at the Kappa Al ☆ ☆ ☆ Dorothy Kennedy, Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Nesbitt, Bur lington Mrs. Jerome Dyer, Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. chissoe Mrs. M. B. D. Blaney, Kansas City Dorothy Snyder, Winfield Mary Nicholson, Ells Eliza Zion Shearer, Kansas City Crisp Gilson, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harris, Ottawa Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harris, Jr. Chanute Babie Eaton, Trentlew City Mr. and Mrs. R. J. DeMotte, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Hughes, Kansas City Mr, and Mrs, J. A. Mose, Abilen mr, and Mrs. H. T. Dean, Topea mr, and Mrs, L. C. Stoickey, Ot tawu Charles Forbes, Kansas City Bill Foster, Kansas City Benny Bidgen, Manhattan Bettie Blackman, Manhattan Dr. and Mrs. William Bowen, Dr. and Mrs. William Bowen, The following were weekend guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house. Janee Gardar, Manhattan Louis Burrell, Fort Scott Mary Eliah, Edstrom, Kansas City Ruth Peterson, Hutchinson Lillian Pherson, Hutchinson Katie Koehler, Manhattan Jeann Pennwell, Manhattan Jeanne Marie Downey, Kansas City Ma Joan Heyhurn, Fort Scott Usesliden Susan, Fort Scott Eduh Burns, Muhammad Bush, Wendy Burr, Mary Eleanor Haskins, Kingman Mary Jane Doyle, Kingman Mrs. Chester Shore, Augusta Mrs. O. T. Sturley, Wellington Mrs. Hemlock Heimbrook, Kansas City, Mo. Harriet Sheldon, Kansas City, Mo. Mrs. Herbert Cowles, Kansas City, Mo Mr. and Mrs. William Busse, Kan- Olive Jagger, Kansas City, Mo. Margaret Zurn, Kansas City, Ma. Dorothy Birt, Kirk, Kansas City. Mo. Chorten Lathop, Kansas City. Mr. and Mrs. William Norris, Salline The following were dinner guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house last Sunday; Phone K. U. 6 6 Mr. and Mrs. K. K. Gaylord, At chison Mary Louise Black, Manhattan Franklin Emerson, Manhattan John Rhodes, Manhattan m. sed, Ms. K. G. Kaplan, A1 Shampoos ... 25e up Finger Waves ... 25d (drived) Oil Permancals ... $2.50 up Phone 95 - 321 Miss, St. Luncheon guests at the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house Wednesday were Elizabeth Hannah, c39; and Luella DeForest, c41. TYPEWRITER=New- and second-hand Underwood Portables; Reconditioned standard typewriters of all makes. Call Jon Salty, Delta Chi, 864. -13. TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. William F. Andersen, T. D. Jones, assistant professor of design, and Mrs. Jones, will be honour guests at a tea to be given by Miss Rosemary Ketcham, professor of design, Saturday afternoon from 3 to 6 o'clock at her home on Straford road. Chi - Omega sorority entertained Phi Delta Theta fraternity with an hour dance Tuesday evening at its chapter house. Mary Lou Borders, f'a'29, Pi Beta Phi, was a luncheon guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house yesterday. Practice teachers at the Oread Training School, students, and their parents were entertained at the Oread High home tea held in the Memorial Union ballroom yesterday for Mrs. B. Anderson and Mrs. Paul Cannedy pooled. After a short musical program teachers and parents were given the opportunity to meet informally. The teachers and parents also interested in the training school. Jane Blaney, c'40, was a lunchroom guest at the Chi Omega sorority house Monday noon. CLASSIFIED ADS Read the Kansan for all news and happenings on the Hill. WAVO BEAUTY SHOP SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dricl Oil - Dreena - Fitch Shampoo and End Curls $1.00, $6.00, Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.06, $1.50 up, complete MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 732½ Mass. Phone: 2333 732 1/2 Mass. Phone 2353 Phone K. U. 6 6 REWARD for return of Shearer greet mottled fountain pen. Morrison M. Thompson inscribed on barrel. Call 2184. - 1858. WAVE, new styles, any style %y dyed Marion Rice Dance Stun- tern. Learn modern ballroom danc- ing; perform choreography; Waleh, Fox Trot, and Tango. Teach both men and women. IVAS BEAUTY SHOP 941½ Mass. St. Phone 532 Next door Keeler Book Store Marion Rice Dance Studio Rumsey-Allison Flower Shop ----------------------------------------------------------than ever, he seches, puzzled, among the maze of drawers for one on which there is a "T"...(he's looking for Mark Twain, and doesn't know yet that he will be referred to for C. Clemmens) TAX I Call 2-800 UNION CAB CO. "Originators of 15c Cab" HANSMOPO and WAVE. 34c dries Economy oils on other beauty END CURLS, 18u. in, upiure 7 Experience operators I VAS BEAUTY SHOP 941/1' St. Mass. Phone 333 Twenty-five words or less one insertion, 21c three insertions, 56c six insertions, 75c two contract rates, not more than 21 words, $2 per month flat. Payable in advance and not accepted subject to approval at the KANSAI Business Office. Next door Kecler Book Store $ 2 2 7 \frac {1}{2} $ Massachusetts, over River City, Chester County. --than ever, he seches, puzzled, among the maze of drawers for one on which there is a "T"...(he's looking for Mark Twain, and doesn't know yet that he will be referred to for C. Clemmens) Mysteries of Classifying Library Books Are Revealed By John Bondeson. c'unel When do john dothenex, e chir Who is a student approaches the general department library and requests a book by title or author, he does not understand why the librarian sends him to the catalog to find the call number. To most students, "call number" hasn't the slightest meaning, and he goes across the desk in if a "call number" is the product of a gay weekend. "Over there," says the librarian, pointing in an eager direction, "is the catalog. Find the drawer marked with the first letter of your author's last name. Look up the book there, copy down the number you find in the upper left-hand corner of the card on a call slip provided for that book. And no, there's not a desk. We can't locate the book until we have the call number." So the squelcheed one turns and walks outward, until he is confronted by a large snake that turns two corners, and contains more than 800 drawers. More bewildered The Roving Reporter With the first class party of the season coming up Friday night, the question of sending his date a coraose has puzzled many a possessor of a slim pocketbook. But Campus Republicans who hauws away the Alpha Chi garbage Saturday morning won't have flowers to deck his Sunday dinner table. In other words, the boys say no more polices and coagements at the Freshman Frole will be as secreta republican voters on election day. By Harry Hill, c'40 Worthy of notice for its simplicity is the reply of Harold Haney, c'41, treasurer of the freshman class. "It ain't worth it." The question: "Understanding that the Men's Student Council has urged abolition of corages for all class parties, are you going to send your date a corage Friday night?" Rox Paul, cuncel: "I'm not send-a corage. I'd rather buy a bed in my dorm, its not being done anymore?" Fred Fearle, c38, and George Goal, c39. Jayshawk baskets, made a joint statement, to wit: "Tell her that flowers will come, flowers we'll send, corages." The King of Swing to play at the Freshman Frolic, Friday evening. "No," declared Keith Blum, cured," my house voted against it, so I couldn't." The Phi Gam's mean it this time, too. Walter Griffin, c# 41, said, "What, with a $15 orchestra? I don't think it's necessary." The boy hit the nail right on the head. The last feminine opinion is perhaps the most logical answer of all. Carolyn Alkrei, c'40, says, "I don't think girls should expect corsages. We can appreciate the fact that some boys can't afford them, and, therefore, think they should be cut out entirely." Ye Shimster is the object of an extermination campaign started by the Pi Phi's. This much was gleaned from the tone of the answer of Denny "Legs" Lemoir, c. 40. She was asked if she wanted a corsage to wear at her wedding, "No, I don't think it's necessary. Say, are you Don Havys?" Flovd Ray and His 18 Entertainers "No," said Jack Cogrove, b'39. "I wouldn't if I had the money, and if I had the money, I wouldn't. Besides, she has a cold and doesn't smell." No doubt she uses Lifebuoy. The only double answer came from John Green, c40, who had an excuse. "If I do, it won't be because of the party. It's her birthday." It looks like a flowerless Freshman Frolic Friday. Use Dewey Decimal System After several hours, it may be the next day before he finally finds what he wants) he proudly bears a call slip to the attendant for his book. He asks if anyone will disappear through one of three doors, returning later, either with the coveted volume, or with a good story about where he may find it. For the benefit of those students who are offended because they are requested to find the call number, an attempt is made, herewith, to explain the reason. In the first place, there are so many different subjects about which books have been written that some form of classification is absolutely necessary in order to have something besides chasms. In view of this fact, several decades ago, one Mellvil H. Dewey evolved a scheme for the use of decimals. His system was dubbed the Dewey decimal system. Dewey divided all books into nine or ten general groups, and assigned to each group a number between 100 and 1000. As his system is carried out, 100 of philosophy are numbered between 100 and 199. Between 200 and 299 WHERE SUMMER SPENDS WINTER THE GREATER DICKINSON TODAY Shorts - The Best Comedy - Cartoon - Musical - Musical - Fox Movieson News. Showing 3 - 7 - 10-25 '11' 7 then 10-35 are books on religions. Anything in the 300's is concerned with economics in one form or another. Similarly there are group on grammar (of all languages), sciences, practical arts, and history, biography, and travel and history. SUNDAY Large Groups Are Subdivided It's Parlor, Bedlam and Bats in the Belfry!!! "MERRY GO ROUND OF 1938" BERT LAHR JIMMY SAVO BILLY HOUSE MISCHA AUER BE MOVIE WISE AND DICKINSONIZE Each of these larger groups is subdivided into smaller ones. For instance: all of the 629's are books on electricity, 621 is the Dewey number, and so on. Each of them is divided, there's where the decimal comes in) 621.384 is the number for books on radio. Television books are numbered 621.384. Another example; music books are numbered in the 780s. 780.92 is the number for biographies of musicians. Among the 781's will be found musical scores, as well as works that opera, oratories, folk-songs, and other組es are kept together. Saves Time and Trouble As the Dewey system takes care only of the general classification, the library uses an additional numbering system to classify the authors of books already located on one section. Thus, all the books on child-role-choice books are listed in A to Z, according to the author's last name. If there happen to be books by several different authors whose last names begin with the same letter, they are place in order alphabetically, through the elasticity of the system devised by Charles Cutter, and called the literary system. Many *times*, the distinction between two classes of books is so fine that decimals may run to five or six places, with only the last number different. Thus, one might see two 2.547.048, as these; as these: 3.247.048, 3.247.649. It it weren't for the Dewey and Wake Up and Live! Why Pay More? The Show Value of Lawrence 2 Grand HITS 10c TO ALL LAST TIMES TODAY One of the truly great love stories of all times in glorious new color. With First Run Murder Mystery! "RAMONA" Loretta Don YOUNG AMECHE AND First Run Murder Mystery RICHARD CORTEZ SALLY EILERS "Talk of the Devil" FRIDAY And Saturday The loveliest young adventures that ever lifted a diamond. The gayest adventurer that ever stopped a heart. "Dangerously Yours" A First Run Hits — No. 1 — CESAR ROMERO PHYLLES BROOKS Alan Dinehart - Jane Darwell No.2 Ace of Action Stars BUCK JONES "Law For Tombstone" Also—3 Stooges Comedy SUNDAY! America's New Sweetheart DEANNA DURBIN "Three Smart Girls" AND "Charlie Chan on Broadway With Warner Oland Cutter (or some other system) of book classification, librarians might be forced to spend all day ferreting out a requested volume. (Some Hill folklore make that it usually takes many years to know the intricacies involved in book classification, most people marvel at the ease with which one acquainted with the systems, can direct them to the book they desire, or walk to the spot in the stacks, and pull it out among hundreds of other volumes. Rightist Insurgent Plot Is Crimped When Police Soize Ampunition Paris, Nov. 17. —(UP)—Discovery of enough high explosives to blow up one-fourth of Paris, and serve "fortresses" crammed with machine guns and hand grendashes, appred a nation-wide roundup of France's "hooded men," allegedly organizing for a eightth revolution. Authorities charged that the hooded terrorists, named "Les Chagourlards," received support from their insurgents and other allies' recruiters. The terrorists were said by police to have been recruited from impatient partisans of several rightist organizations. TODAY ENDS SATURDAY PATEE WEEK 10c 'Til 7 DAYS Then 15c "Hollywood Roundup" 2 BIG HITS Hollywood's Hardest Ridin' Toughest Fightin' Aca BUCK JONES "Sing Me a Love Song" —— AND —— Lyrics - Laughter Lunatics - Love JAMES MELTON PATRICIA ELLIS HUGH HERBERT ZASU PITTS ALLEN JENKINS WALTER CATLETT ALSO Serial - Cartoon NOW! ENDS SATURDAY It's Got Plenty of Yumph! He Played the Blonde Market and Financed Gold-Diggers! — LOOK — The One and Only CHARLIE McCARTHY IN 'The Necking Party' of Course EDGAR BERGEN Is Showing the Little Fellow Around! ALSO Hal Lefoy and His Gang in a knockout Musical Revue. Novelty, "Roping Them Alive. Latest News Events SUNDAY SUNDAY It's All in Fun! BETTE DAVIS LESLIE HOWARD "IT'S LOVE I'M AFTER" — Our Treat — TURKEY NIGHT 5 15 lb. Turkeys From the Stage TUESDAY NITE at 9