WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1935 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Before 5 p.m. call KU. 25, between 7:30 and 9 10:30 call 720083 Nelson-Youmans Engagement p. m. call 2702K3. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Fredrick Nelson of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Ruth, to William Thomas Youmans of Topeka, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lynn Youmans of Osawatime. The marriage will take place this spring. Miss Nelson is a graduate of Leland Stanford University where she was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Mr. Youmans of the University of Kansas, where he was a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Gamma Phi Bla announces the engagement of Mary Alice Lincoct, c. 36 to Bryne Shaw of Galveston, Mr.Shaw attended school at Boulder, Colo., where he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Trovolio entertained with an informal reception at their home Monday night honoring Mr. Trovolio, who was the man who gave his senior socialite that night. About fifty guests, including members of the Fine Arts School and faculty, were present. Among the out-of-town guests here to attend Mr. Trovill's recital were: Mrs. and Mrs. George C. Trovill and J. E. P. Cox, of Augustine, III; Miss Helen Eales, Galesburg, III; Mrs. Bress Strange, London, Eng.; Mrs. Amie M. P. Bundy, Topek; Mrs. George Barbsee, Miss Lucy Parrott, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Gilmore, and Mrs. J. L. Harrington, all of Kansas City, Mo. The marriage of Miss Helen Marr dougher of Mr. and Mrs, A. J. Goddard of Baxter Springs, and Mr. Robert Nelson Ives, son of Mr. and Mrs, Nelor Ives of Tepeca, will take place Sunday afternoon at the Ives home. The local chapter of Kappa KappaGamma will be hostess this week-end to the convention of the Zeta province of Kappa KappaGamma. Miss Marion Henry, national field secretary of the society, will arrive Friday for the conference, which days next will visit the fond chairman.vention will begin Friday morning and will end with a banquet at the Hotel Eldridge Saturday night. Mr. Ives is a graduate of the University and is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. He and his wife will be at home on a farm near Topola. At a meeting last night, Sigma Nu elected the following officers: Norbert ☆ ☆ ☆ Anushchev, c38, commander; Clarence Kelley, koul'el, lieutenant commander; Robert Reeder, c38, recorder; Richard Mason, b38, truman; Charles Bishop, c38, chiplin; Robert Caroy, c37, regen; Robert Frye, c38, sergeant; Ursache Bruner, c38, sergeant. Kappa Alpha Theta will entertain with a formal reception at the chapter house tonight honoring Emma Joe Swaney, fa35, who is giving her senior recital tonight. The reception will be held after the recital. ☆ ☆ ☆ Denne W. Malott, assistant dean of the Graduate School of Business Administration at Harvard, was a guest dinner at the Beta Theta Pi house last night. The members of Beta Theta night will give a dance Saturday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Nichols in Kansas City, Mo. ☆ ☆ ★ Dinner guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house last night were Mr. and Mrs. M. N, Overall and Mr. A. M, Preston, all of Coldwell. Miss Wanstaff, Miss Olive Torreguez, and Mrs. A, J. Mix were luncheon guests at the Alpina Omicron Pi house yesterday. ☆ ☆ ☆ The K. U. Dames will entertain guests at an evening bridge party tonight at the home of Ms. Byron Walters, 742 Indiana St. Wilma Watt, c'uml, and Nadine Barka, c'38, were dinner guests at the Sigma Kappa house last night. Olive Pearl Haro, c28, and Gretchen pecman, c37, were dinner guests at he Alpha Chi Omega house last night. Alpha Gamma Delta announces the pledging of Ruth Neis, c38. Drawings Are Exhibited aining Department Sponsors Collection by Famous International Artists Under the sponsorship of the department of painting of the School of Fine Arts an international exhibition of drawings in black and white will be shown in the south gallery of Thayer Museum, the first half of the month of April. This collection of drawings made by famous European and American soub- PHONE K.U. 66 CLASSIFIED ADS FURNISHED APTS. PHONE K.U. 65 MISCELLANEOUS LEAVING FOR CHICAGO Wednesday before Easter. Will take 2 students to share expenses. Call Sam 1514W. -133 INVESTIGATE OUR NEW PLANS of teacher placement. Lent year we reported over six hundred vacancies in Kansas and nearby states. One plan has no registration, fee, National Teachers' Exchange, Favetwelve, Arkansas. -124 In hurry for that dry cleaning? Let us demonstrate the work and service we can give with our new Synthetic Spas Lawrence Stainless Steel, phone 342-769-1015. Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass. TAXI TAXI FOR RENT. Modern bungalow, partially furnished. Automatic gas furnace garage. Convenient to University. Call 26230R. -134 K E Y S for any lock. Night Inch & padlocks in stock. Door closers repaired. Rutter's Repair Shop 1014 Mass. St. Ph. 31 OFFICE SUPPLIES LOOSE LEAF FILLERS GREETING CARDS KEELER'S BOOK STORE BOOKS WALL PAPER PICTURE FRAMING Recent compilations show that 36 graduates of the University of Kansas School of Business are now connected with various phases of public service. Seventeen are now serving as accountants, while four have joined the Kansas Emergency Relief committee. Others are employed by such agencies as the state treasurer's office, the regional home owners' loan bank, the regional intermediate credit bank, and the Kansas income tax department. Still others are working in or out of Washington for the Public Work Administration, the NIA and the treasury department. In addition, Voris Morrison, former instructor in accounting and economics is auditor for the entire KERC, with three members of the School of Business faculty, L. T. Tupy, D. J. Twidwelliate and G. M. Leavin, on leave this year to serve with the new Navy department the State Planning board, and the KERC, respectively. Nine persons holding advanced degrees in economics and business have hold responsible positions with the KERC, the Illinois State Tax Commission, the NRA, the AAA, and the Kansas Labor Commission, and similar former students who have not fully completed their education. These are employed by the Kansas State Finance board, the Kansas Blue-Sky Department and the KERC. tors and painters comes to the University through the cooperation of the American College Art Association of which the department of painting is a member. Artists participating in this exhibition have been selected from this country, France, Italy, Germany, England, France, Mexico, Germany, Italy, Russia, and Japan. LOST: Alpha Delta Pi pin, probably on campus. Reward. Call Dorothy Miller, 290. Most of the drawings are merely unfinished, hasty sketches, studies and memoranda, which serve the artist as notes and compositional aids in the building up of a finished work, and from this point of view they are of the greatest interest to the observer. From such, often hasty and extremely fragmentary beginnings as these the greatest works of art have been produced. LOST AND FOUND Graduates in Public Service Thirty-Six Former Students Employed at Government Positions Girls, your formal dresses take on a new look when cleaned in our new Synthetic Dry Cleaning System. One trial will convince you. Lawrence Stear Laundry, Phone 383. BRAIDS, CURLS, etc., for sale, or made to order of your own hair. Remington typewriter for sale, Mrs. Sunder, 1316 Tom, Phone 2183J. -135 FOR SALE-1301 2-door Ford Sedan in perfect mechanical condition; new 17-plate battery, guaranteed 2 years; front and recently overhauled, tires good; car has gone less than 30,000 miles and has best of care. Code price, $196. Best cash offer above that takes it; otherwise it will be traded in. Address box 7, c/o University Daily Kansan, or inquire at Kansan Business Office. FOR SALE Twenty-five words or less: one insertion, 25c three insertions, 50c; six insertions, 75c, contract rates, not more than 25 words, $2 per month flat. Accepted subject to approval at the Kansan Business Office. CLEANERS LOST; Red Parker Duofold fountain pen. Between Tether Museum and Oread High. Finder please notify Avis McBride, Phone 860. -133 Keep those flannel suits and trousers looking just right with our Synthetic Dry Cleaning. Lawrence Steam Laundry, Phone 383. We Call and Deliver KFKU Today 2.30 p.m. Studies of Living Things "How Living Things Maintain Health" Dr. Ernest E. Parker 2:45 p.m. Campus News Notes, Prof. W. A. Dill. 6:30 p.m. Highlights of the first national Band Festival, Russell L. Wiley, band conductor. 6:15 p.m. Musical program arranged by Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, associate professor of voice. FAMOUS TIGHT-ROPE WALKER TO PERFORM HERE SATURDAY Bunny Dryden, world famous tight-rope walker, will stage three performances over a building on Massachusetts street next Saturday. He will carry Jimine Gillipie on his back on one of his journeys across the suspended wire. Gillipie is from Reserve. He weighs about 100 pounds and is a 5 feet 4 inch allure. Dryden is in Lawrence visiting Jim Polkinghorn, c37, who is his cousin. Dryden lives in Texas and performed at the world fair in Chicago in 1933. At that time he amazed the crowds by journeying across from the east tower of the famous "sky ride" to the west tower on an inch and a half cable, 685 feet in the air. The distance from the two towers was 1,850 feet and Dryden completed the feat in two hours and forty-five minutes. Saturday, he will walk a wire forty feet in the air with the pavement as a net. He will walk blind-folded, skip rope, turn summersaults, do hand-stands, balance on a chair and perform many other sensational feats. Eighty students who are being trained as teachers in Workers' Education will leave today for Topoka, where they will learn about instruction of instruction by entering the field. Economists Will Meet To Talk Over Conditions Eighty Students in Training The institute is under the direction of Hans Hoiberg, assistant supervisor of workers' education for the K.E.B.C. the students, largely unemployed teachers from the rural sections of Kansas, have just completed a six-day period of in-service instruction at time they have received instruction in current social problems. Attend Final Instruction Session at Topeka This Week Kansas Professors Among Those Who Will Go to Discussions During the school of instruction, Dean Stockton lectured on the "Employers' Approach to Labor Problems," and Professor Gagliardo of the department of economics lecture on the "Government Applications to Labor Problems." Each teacher will be required to set up his own classes for farmers and laborers, being allowed payment for a weekly maximum of seven and one-half hours for this work is to come out of the federal funds for workers' education. The Mid-West Economic Conference, the second annual meeting sponsored by the Mid-West Economic Society, will convene in Kansas City, Mt. beginning tomorrow. Leading economists from all surrounding states will attend and take part in the conference, a day-day conference, all meetings of which will be held in the Hotel President. The Mid-west Economic Conference is affiliated with the American Economic Association, but due to the fact that all meetings of this society are held in New York City, making it impossible for all who desire to attend, the Mid-West Society was formed two years ago holding its meetings in the central states. The first conference was held last year in Chingo. A number of the members of the faculty of the University will take part in the meetings this year and other members of the faculty and student body of the University are expected to attend. No formal speeches will be given, but talks will be given by the various leaders in the different discussion groups. John Ise, professor of economics, will act as chairman of the discussion on "A National Policy of Land Utilization" to be held at 8:30 p.m. on Thursday. Leaders in the Friday discussions include Dr. D.J. Peck in the discussion on "Current Problems and Imp利亚" to be held at 9:30 a.m. and Prof. Domenee Gagliardo in "A Social Security Program" at 2 p.m. Dean Frank T. Stockton of the School of Business will act as chairman of the group discussion "The Implications of Economic Planning" held on Saturday morning with Prof. B. P. Beckwith as a leader in the same discussion. Prof. D. J. Trevitaldo is one of the leaders in the discussion on "Economic Integration Program," the alternate discussion to be held on Saturday morning at 9 a.m. A limcheon on Saturday will conclude the meetings. Students of the University are welcome at all meetings. FACULTY MEMBERS INCLUDED AMONG FAMOUS YOUNG ME? A new publication called "Young Men in America," which includes several men on the University faculty, has just been put on the market. This book is much like the familiar "Who's Who" except for the fact that most of the men included in it are between the ages of 25 and 35. Educators, newspaper men, authors, actors, and business men form the greater part of the list. The following men of the University faculty are included in the directory: Domenico Giagliardi, professor of economics; Robert Taft, associate professor of chemistry; W. E. Sandelius, associate professor of physics; Jerome Carruth, W. Roland Maddox, instructor in political science; and Alfred M. Lee, assistant professor of journalism. MOORE'S TABLE OF KANSAS ROCKS PUBLISHED BY SURVEY The Kansas Geological Survey has just recently published a table on "Rock Formations of Kansas," by Dr. R. C. Moore, state geologist. The purpose of the table was not only to give in tabular form rock formations which outcrop in various parts of the state but to show also those which do not crop up are encountered in deep wells. The Hunton, Viola, and Arnibuck ("Silliceous") limestone and the St. Peter sand, prolific producers of oil and gas, are the main feature of western Kansas, are included in those rocks which are found in deep wells, and thus were included in Dr. Moore's study. Change Law Requirements Grades Must Be Higher But Fewer Hours Required for Graduation The faculty voted to reduce the number of hours required for graduation from 86 to 82, the first year course comprising 30 hours the second year, 28, and the third year, 24. No second or third year student will be permitted to take more than 14 hours of work each semester. The grade requirement for graduation from the School of Law has been changed to a C average by the School of Law faculty. Previously, candidates required to obtain a B or C grade required to obtain a C or better in three-fourths of their hours. SERVING THE NATION FOR 96 YEARS 20 E. 9th St. Phone 120 Lawrence, Kan. The 88 hours previously required for graduation has long been considered by the faculty to be too heavy a load. Even the reduction to 82 hours is a requirement. Students must attend school of the country, some requiring only 72 hours. The pre-law entrance requirement is 90 hours of college credit with an average grade of C (plus 1.1). Read the Kansan Want Ads. Spooner-Thayer Displays Drawings Spooner-Thayer is exhibiting a collection of drawings lent by the College Art Association for this week only. They are done in pen, pencil, and crayon and are all originals. A catalogue containing a list of the pictures says that some were originally intended as blueprints to larger works and others as memoranda for paintings. Some seek to createmeaning for paintings. Many seem to createmeaning to realize the value of such work. There are 100 pictures in all, including one by Percy Crosby, the famous cartoonist. "It will be home as soon as I will!" Railway Express will get it there quickly and safely — and economically. Send your baggage, trunks, personal belongings home from college this sure, easy way. Pick up and delivery service in all important cities and towns without extra charge. Telephone your local Railway Express Agent for service or information. The best there is in transportation RAILWAY EXPRESS AGENCY INC. NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE It's Got Everything We're speaking about our new SYNTHETIC DRY CLEANING SYSTEM. Once more we have spent a lot of money to give the Faculty and Students of K. U. the very latest and best in cleaning service. Three years ago we installed the last word, at that time in classroom instruction. Now, we are discarding all that for a new Synthetic System which is installed and ready to serve you. Synthetic cleaning gives a quality we have never been able to equal before. It leaves colors bright, and the garments soft and fresh. It is especially fine for kitchens and fireplaces WE GUILD NTEE THEM TO BE ABSOLUTELY ODORLESS when we return them to you. Our service will be much faster too. May we have an opportunity to demonstrate? LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY 10th & N. H. Phone 383