FRIDAY, MARCH 8. 1935 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Before 5 p.m. call KU. 25, between 7:30 and 9 p.m. call CJL"293K. University Women's Club Entertains at Ten The University Women's club entertained about 150 guests at the House Mother's Tea yesterday afternoon in Meyers hall. Pussy willows, ferns and spring flowers were used as decorations in the room where Mrs. E. H. Lindley and other officers of the club received the guests. Prof. Robert Calderwood read two selections from Irish writers: "The Workhouse Ward," by Lady Gregory, and "The Hannv Prince" by Oscar Wilde. Snapdragons in glass bowls were useo on the tea table where Mrs. E. A. White, Mrs. H. E. Chandler, Mrs. W. C. Stevens, and Mrs. Caroline Spangler presided. Mrs. A. H. Slass was in charge of the arrangements for the tea, assisted by Mrs. E. D. Hay, Mrs. R. D. O'Leary, and Mrs. C. V. Kent. Guests at the Phi Kappa Psi hour dance last night included Betty Hans, Alice Team, Virginia Team, Peggy Anne Landon, Sally Jane Martin, Shirley Kroh, Josephine Burrows, Lucy Lee Hawk, Bob Schwartz, Betty Eidson, Martin Jane Shaffer, Toddy Haines, Marie Forbes. ☆ ☆ ☆ Phi Kappa Psi Holds Hour Dance Dinner guests at the Sigma Alpha Episcopus house last night were Prof. and Mrs. Henry Werner Warford, Prof. and Mrs. H. B. Chubb; Joice Brille; cunegy; Fergus Laura Jane Lalmer; Leah Kech; Laura Jane Lalmer; C51; and Betty Hogues, C33. Theta Sigma Phi, national journalism sorority, held initiation last night for the following: Carolyn Harper, c;35; Catherine Penner, c;36; Elena Winningham, c;37; Emily Markham, c;35; Margaret Boast, c;36; and Rosemary Fisher, c;36; Louise Moore, Martha Nuzman, Caroline Brink, Betty Ann Stuart, Elizabeth Breet Fret, Jerry Gau, Virginia Banfield, Rach De Weses, Lois Woods, Grace Meyers, Jogan Kankowsky, Bett Hamilton, Peggy Spicer, Sarah Nell Pickell, Helen Lockhart, Alone Compton, Nancy Newlin, and Catherine Hartley. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The annual Men's Penhellenic dance will be held tomorrow night in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building from 9 until 12. Red Blackburn and his orchestra will furnish the music for dancing. Guests for dinner at the Alpha Delta Pi house last night were Harriet Harrison, c'35; Virginia Post, c'35; Lois Lippitt, c'35; Gertrude Tuxson, c'unel; and Easher Silman, c'35. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Dinner guests at the Delta Tau Delt house last night were Mr. and Mrs John Blocker of Lawrence and Howe Gardner, b'36. Eleanor Troup, c'uncl, Daisy Hoffman, c'38, and Betty Jane Campbell, c'37, were dinner guests at the Sigma Nu house last night. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mr. and Mrs. Morle Teagarden were dinner guests at the Pi Kappa Alpha house last night. Jack Miller, c'38, and August Anne- berg, fa'36, were dinner guests at the Delta Sigma Lambda house Wednesday evening. Mr. D. R. Prior was a guest Wednesday night at the Phi Gamma Delta house ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will entertain Sunday evening with a buffet supper at the chapter house. ☆ ☆ ☆ Dinner guests at the Delta Chi house last night were Mr. and Mrs. Poco Frazier and Wallace Lane, gr. Alpha Gamma Delta held pledging services last night for Grace Adele Pearson, c'38, of Olathe. ☆ ☆ ☆ Bill Asher, c'38, was a dinner guest at the Phi Gamma Delta house last night. ☆ ☆ ☆ Alpha Gamma Delta will entertain tonight with a buffet supper, followed by dancing. Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lindley were dinner guests at the Beta Theta Pi house last night. ☆ ☆ ☆ Dorothy Bangs, c36, was a luncheon guest at the Pi Beta Phi house yesterday. Prof. Michael J. Jucius was a dinner guest at the Alpha Kappa Psi house last night. Pauline Rawlings, c38, was a dinner guest at the Pi Beta Phi house last night. ☆ ☆ ☆ Bob Wagner, c'36, was a guest for dinner at the Kappa Sigma house last night To Broadcast Regularly Radio Club Short Wave Station Begins Schedule This Week Fred Gemmil, c37, announced in a meeting of the Radio Club recently in Marvin Hall that the short wave station YWAYB, operating on 80 meters will begin a regular operating schedule this week. Plans for a program for this semester were introduced to the members by the president. Included in the plans are a field day to be staged in conjunction with Engineers Day, which is held sometime during April. --the station handled over 1,000 messages Messages were sent free of charge between Lawrence and Fort Riley. Officers are making arrangements for the members on field day to be equipped with portable transmitters and receiving sets for the purpose of contacting each other and the base staff. The personnel involved in portable outfit will be located in the foothills surrounding Lawrence at various points. --the station handled over 1,000 messages Messages were sent free of charge between Lawrence and Fort Riley. Each member of the club will operate W9YAB on a regular schedule in the day time, the station not operating at night. It is hoped that this station will be able to contact other college short wave stations throughout America and keep the flow of messages of amateurs moving steadily from coast to coast. WVYAB broadcasted in the past only during the summer. Students were never able to find time to operate it during the school year. In one month PHONE K.U.66 1014 Mass. St. PHONE K.U.66 CLASSIFIED ADS KEYS for any lock. LOST AND FOUND WILL PERSON who found Ogden and Webster French Grammar, again please inform Miss Altaffer at 568 where the book was left so she may get it. \h LIBERAL REWARD paid by Mary Liston, 1134 Mississippi for the return of a watch valued as a gift which can never be replaced. Will the finder please consider? -112 WANTED: Girl roommate, to share small apartment. Nicely furnished. Modern conveniences, good location for hill or town. $7.50 per month. Phone 1313J. 1319 Vermont. —109 LOST: Mottled black and pearl Pencil penic, somewhere between Brick's Cafe and K. U. Library. Reward. Call 837. —111. MISCELLANEOUS FURNISHED APTS. Results of the experiment will be written up by Professor Engel including details of the presentation of the subjects and replies given by the students. KEYS for any lock. Night latch & padlocks in stock. Door closers repaired. Rutter's Repair Shop 14 More St. Fb Of the five students who received a certificate one is an engineer, three hold regular jobs, and all have had computer training. The only but none, have had German, before. OFFICE SUPPLIES LOOSE LEAF FILLERS GREETING CARDS The article was originally presented as a paper before last year's meeting of the American Chemical Society at Cleveland. Its object was to present the modern viewpoint of the degree of dissociation of electrolytes. BOOKS WALL PAPER PICTURE FRAMING Prof. E. F. Engel, who conducted these lessons, offered the certificates at the beginning of the broadcast this year in order to determine whether or not there was a demand for system- study by radio. Approximately 40 students indicated their interest in this form of study. PROFESSORS OF CHEMISTRY WRITE MAGAZINE ARTICLES TAXI KEELER'S BOOK STORE Prof. A. W. Davidson of the department of chemistry is the author of an article, "Solution of Electrolytes," published in Science in 1964 and the "Journal of Chemical Education." Award Radio Certificate Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S - 920-22 Mass. Five Certificates of Achievement for listening to every broadcast of the elementary German lessons over station KFKU and sending in replies to all the questions asked are being marked today to G. W. Bowers, Linchwood; Irene and Ag-tera Brown; Phaoil; LaMoto Grover, Topkai; and P. M. Rogers, Kansas City, Ma The recent "Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science" contained three articles by members of the chemistry faculty. One was written jointly by J. Marvin Caldwell, a graduate, and Prof. Elvira Weeks of the department of chemistry. Professors Selma Gettlik Kallis and E. D. Kinney, both of the department of chemistry, wrote the other two. 14th & Tenn. TAXI Phone 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 Kansas Business Office. CLEANERS AT YOUR SERVICE Phone We Call and Deliver In the Sport-Light Five Complete German Lessons Given Over Air by Engel BvEd Delicious Chocolate Fudge Sundae 15c UNION FOUNTAIN --of Sub-basement Memorial Union A SWANKY BOX Decidedly Different NOTE PAPER SYMPHONY PROGRAM TO GO ON AIR OVER STATION KFKU A special concert by the K.U. Symphony orchestra will be broadcast from station FKPU on Sunday, March 31, from 4 to 5 o'clock. In order to pre-roadcast it, the FKPU will not broadcast the all-American program on Sunday, March 10. Prof. Karl O. Kuersteiner will direct the orchestra. Last year the symphony orchestra's concert was a presentation George Gershwin's Rhapodic in Blue. Makes An Appreciated 50c GIFT SPOONER-THAYER DISPLAYS ODD COLLECTION OF FLASKS Spooner-Thayer museum is exhibiting a collection of 18th and 19th century glass flasks whose shapes are extremely odd and the coloring, which has been both brown in and laid on, is striking. The collection is made mostly from factories in Bristol and Nailsea. The collection is a private one, loaned to the museum by Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Burnap of Kansas City, Mo. It will be returned to them in March. Relief Workers Do Landscaping For the past few days relief workers have been doing landscaping behind the machine shop building on the slope as far west as the gymnasium. Rocks and brush have been removed and the slope leveled and smoothed. Trees and shrubs will be planted. 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