SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7. 1934 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE VOLUME XXXII Pajama-Clac Will Be F At Annu Free Movies V South Park for Those erly Ch. An escort of motor, the University band wi cision of nightshift-e in their winding marcel to the chapel. They morrow night in the naiural nightshift parade. All men students are the memorial Union b'clock, and at 7.15 thursday through a lane torches. The parade down Indiana street t and then cast to Massey. Then in a snake dance to All Men Can T "It is thought by ma rade is for Freshmen c is like it understood that he was the chairman of the trai d said today. The "bying K-men and Ku-Ku route out all sacklers. At South Park a h running saves boxes and pa c past week, will be read ed. Wilson (Hona) cheerleader, and his as in some rousing yells t is a bit of athletics, Coach and Jack rice, C 36. Merchants to Pro through the course Chamber of Confidence will be treate cider and apples. Aft er the Dickinson, to the Dickinson, Varson theaters free of charp theater, because of the ing there, will not be raders. At the Dick be a cheerleader on t students in singing the It is very essent preserved throughout order that the program time for the 9 o'clock Lindenbaum. No rai1 stores will be permit and Ku-Ku's, who are parade will be on her marchers. Student Recita Piano and Voice Are Arts Prog The weekly Fine held this afternoon in auditorium at 3.30 as was follows: Piano Theme and Variation Theme and Variatio George T9 voice Bist due bei niir ... The Sandman, (from and Gretel) ... and Gretel) Keith D. Piano: Sonata, Op. 21, No. 2 First Movement Willis Q. Voice: Phyllis Has Such C Grace arr. b Mildred He Piano: Cinder in G minor First Movement Carolyn P (Orchestral parts or by Howard C) Address Bacteri Professionals N. P. Sh Downs were the gues Bacteriology hall yesterday. Both talk about their expire on a trip to the oratory in Indiana, spoke about the soicia oratory while Professe a talk about its indust Educational G Phi Delta Kappa, fraternity, elected off at a special meeting Those elected are: pre- st vice; president,显 tret-retuerer, Garli J. W.Tewell to the club dressed the meeting School District in K Hill Society Call K.U. 25 Before 1230 p.m. University Women's Tea The first fall tee of the University Women's club was held Thursday afternoon in Myers Hall. The receiving line was composed of Mrs. E. H. Lind-ward, a classmate of Dr. Richard Board. The room was decorated with fall flowers in yellow and lavender. Miss Maribirc Moore, accompanied by George Trovillo, fa35, sang a group of five numbers. The tea table, over which Mrs H. P. C. Hudy and Mrs George Trovillon sang their own songs, samovars, trays and candlesticks, and autumn flowers in a brass bowl. Mrs. E. D. Kinney, chairman of the tea committee, was assisted by the following sub-chairman: Mrs. F. E. Kesson, M. C. Young, and Mrs. R. H. Wheeler. Beta Freshman Party Beta Theta Pi entertained with their annual Freshman party at the chapel house yesterday. Red Black Jacket performed in the music the movie for dancing. Chapels will be Mrs. Rachel Butler, Mrs. Nina Oren, Mrs. J. H. K. Creamer and Ms. Eli- Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Hartman of Norris, Teen, announce the birth, October 3, of a daughter, to whom they have given the name, Laura Joan. Mrs. Hartman is the president of the United States of the University. Mrs. Hartman was Miss Fiorenza Scott of Ransom. The Mu Phi Epilion alumnae association will meet Monday evening at the home of Miss Edna Hopkins. Miss Hopkins is a member of Caddwell will be the assistant hostesses. Thea Epsilon, Baptist church sorority, will give its second rush tea sun-Tuesday afternoon, at 4 o'clock, at the hone of Rev. C, W. Thomas. Miss Florene Briscoe, c36, will have charge of arrangements. Lieutnant Clair Wood, c'32, of Los Angeles is a weekend guest at the Theta Tau house. Mr. Wood is flying through in his plane on his way to New York. He was Honor Man at the University two years ago. Sigma Kappa held open house Friday evening. Dee Shoit and his orchestra from Topeka furnished the music for dancing. Mrs. J. M. Gilbert Mrs. Fred Cutter, and Mrs. C. H. Robinson were chaperons. The Pt Bla Phi sorsity entertained alumni, mothers and housemasters at a tea yesterday afternoon from 2:30 t 5 o'clock at the chapter house. Gamma Phi Beta held open house Friday evening. Red Blackburn and his orchestra furnished the music for dine-in performances at Parrosa, and Mrs. Ralph Boldwin. Weekend guests at the Sigma Kappa house will be Virginia Reckleton Frances Jordon, Lloyd Richards, all of Kansas City, Mo; Dorothy Zimmerman, Kansas City, and Mildred DeWeere, gr. M. Jess Nicholson, Philip Nicholson of Ellis and Betty Nicholson, fa35, and Mary, p37, will be dinner guests at the Sigma Nu house today. Delta Zeta held open house Friday evening at the chapter house. Hurley Kalor and his orchestra from Kansas City furnished the music for dancing. Mrs. Anna Winsor and Mrs. Rice and Mrs. Nauman were chaperons. The Sigma Nu fraternity will entertain about seventy guests at a buffet supper at the house this evening. Mrs. Fitzgerald, Mrs. J. B. Terry will be the chapens. Pi Beta Phi held open house Friday evening. Bill Hibbs and his orchestra played for dancing. Mrs. Jane MacLean was chapernor. Alpha Delta Pi will have as dinner guests today James May, m/37, and William Martin, both of Kansas City. Carson Brown, c/37, and Norman Brown, c/37. Weekend guests of Gamma Phi Beta include Mary Markham, Parsian; Janepe, Poole, Leavenworth, Kansas; Karen Moe, and Loctite Wagner, Eudora. Margaret Kleppar of Boulder, Colo, is a weekend guest at the Pi Beta Phi house. Kappa. Kappa Gamma has as weekend guests Dorothy Chelle, Virginia McGavie, Betty Cole McCune, Susanne Calloway and Judith Harris, all of Kansas City, and Margaret Geis of Salina. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Mr. Nelson and Mr. Beckwith were dinner guests at the Alpha Kappa Ps The Faculty Women's club held a picnic at State Lake Saturday. There were about fifty members present. house Thursday evening. Mr. Nelson and Mr. Beckwith are new inst- uctors in the School of Business. Helen Black, c'35, and Carolyn Brink c'36, will be dinner guests at the FiDi Delta Thea house today. Mrs. Dingman of Independence will be a dinner guest at the Phi Cumma Delta house today. Alpha Xi Delta held initiation services last night for Louise Coutant, Icel, and Lerine Lydon c.38. William Mustard, 62, g.23, of Chapman visited this week with his son Thomas Mustard, 135. men to leave," says Dr. Taylor, "My own boys were too frightened to talk ven had they been able to speak the dialect." Philip Nicholson of Ellis is a weekend guest at the Phi Delta Theta house Taylor Meets Adventure In Philippine Exploration On leaving the host the Moros went down the beach a short distance from Dr. Taylor's party, to plantation owned by an Englishman. During the night he murdered the owner, clapped his body against the sea, Dr. Taylor was a member of the constabular party that later captured two of the murders. Thereafter he was forbidden to go collecting in dangerous country without a body-vest. He was arrested to take along three of these soldiers on his next expedition. Of the five natives who accompanied him on the later expedition, not a one of them could swim. The greatest danger of the trips among the islands was the rough water that might be encountered. Many times the boat was nearly swamped by waves, and at such times the natives of the party were badly injured. They made up 55 islands, some of which were not inhabited, without serious mitigation. (Continued from page 1) Dr. Taylor also collected specimens on Palawan, an island directly north of Borneo. Here he counseled a more experienced veterinarian. The native poison traps throughout the forest to protect themselves from wild animals and hostile humans. Great care had to be taken that memodon could be captured by the traps. The interior of the southern part of the island was unexplored, and was inhabited by unfriendly triemen. Dr. Taylor could not get carriers to assist with capturing the mecodon, and was forced to abandon the war. In Mindanao, another of the Philippine group of islands, Dr. Taylor found a people who either do not know of, or care about, money. Here his purchases were made with rice and cigarettes, coins being entirely worthless and hardly recognizable. Dr. Taylor received what he believes to be the worst fright of his life. "One of the new species which I describe," said Dr. Taylor, "is the Philippinotus lanai (a species of a bat), named after Dr. H. H. Lane of the zoology department. Another is a small rat found in the island of Bursaung. It is also a new genus, but its characters are different. My own experience of same island I found a species of ribbing frog, which one might call a living fossil. "I was collecting at night," says Dr. Taylor, "about eight kilometers from the shore, when I came upon a fallen tree trunk. I was overgrown with parasitic fungi, and I was calmly 'picking' frogs from the growth on the log, when suddenly the most shrill, penetrating, cold-blooded shriek I ever heard rent the air. The sound came from directly behind the tree, but from four feet apart, it petrified with force. As I stood there waiting for something terrible to happen, another shriek issued from behind the log. I knew that it could not be human, for the natives there do not understand what happened at night. I had about given myself up, when a herd of deer suddenly escaped into the forest, and I knew then that I had been frightened by the 'fear cry' of their leader. It was necessary that I had continued before I could continue my collecting. Dr. Taylor is the author of the following well-known books pertaining to animal life of the Philippines: "A Monograph on the Lizards of the Philippines"; "Monograph on Snakes"; and "A Monograph on the Amphibians of the Philippines." College fashions as revealed by a questionnaire published in the August issue of Harper's Bazaar are like unto the fashions from Maine to California, the average American college girl brightens her hair with a necklace of at other institutions of learning. Prof. Allen Crownon of the department of speech and dramatic art has been unable to meet his class since Thursday. He was forced to return Monday. Magazine Surveys Show Oldities in Apparel At Girls' Colleges At Wellesley, if one is in the know, one wears eur muffs and no hat in winter. The thing at Smith is a string of pearls with a sweater and a ribbon or bandeau around the hair. Coeds at the University of Alabama wear a sort of stock sock with an elastic band that wraps around the neck. The thing to wear is a short tread skirt, sweater buttoned on backwards, and fat heeded shoes. Bright shawls like those of Czechoslovakian immigrants adorn the heads of Vassar students who go in for shirts in warm weather, skirts in cold, and hares legs until the snow flies. Only on week-ends when the department for sports is full, students campus garb and smooth waves miraculously appear on feminine heads. The argot of the various campuses is as different as the fashions. Soft crushable hats are "jam-ons" to coords in Iowa state, and to Smith students socks are "footwear." At Florida State University, students wear "clothes" while the University of Oregon women call them "droops." Recalling some of the fashions peculiar to the campus at Syracuse, the Syracuse Daily Orange suggests the popularity of white shoes all winter, kiki shoes in spring, and pajamas patls, flannel nightgowns and pajamas in air-cooled derms, and the *ack of interest in heaped-toe-nails*. Choir To Hold Wiener Roast The Westminster A Capella chair will have a wiener roast Tuesday evening at Valleyview, the home of Dean and Mrs. D. M. Swarthowt. J. T. Craig, gr., was recently elected president of the choir, and Corinne Dick, gr., was chosen secretary-treasurer. Associated Press to Meet John A. Montgomery, '20, business manager of the Marshall County News of Marsville, visited on the Hill today. Kansas Section Will Convene With Newspaper Roundtable Members of the Kansas Association Press will hold their semi-annual business meeting in conjunction with the annual newspaper roundtables to be held at the University Nov. 16-17, Prof. L. N. Flint, of the department of Journalism, at the University. Decision for holding the meeting came from Oscar Staifer, publisher of the Arkansas City Traveler, chairman of the association. The meeting is a semi-annual procedure of the press association which is ordinarily held in The newspaper men will be guests of the University at th Kansas-Nebraska game, November 17. The library will be open again Sunday afternoon it was announced today. The policy of holding the library open on Sundays will probably continue it was made. At the Churches First Presbyterian church, Ninth and Vermont street—8:45 a.m., Church school; 11:00 a.m., Worship service. Sermon theme "Our Religion's Contribution to Society." 7:30 p.m., Westminster student forum for University students meets at Westminster hall, 1221 Oread street. Immanuel Lutheran Church, Torch and Kentucky street—10 a.m., Sunday school and Bible class: 10:40 a.m. Prepary service: 11 a.m. Divine service with celebration of Holy communion. Subject of the sermon will be: "No Man can Enserve Two Masters." 5:38 p.m. Lunch fellowship, 9 a.m. Discussion hour. 10 a.m. How I Got Our Bible, and "The Christian and the Intoxicants." Trinity Episcopal Church, Tenth and Vermont streets--8 a.m. Holy communion; 9:45 a.m. Church school; 11 a.m. Holy communion and sermon. First Baptist Church, Eighth and Kentucky streets—9:45 a.m. Church school; 10:30 a.m. Morning worship. The pastor will speak on "We Would See Jesus." 5 p.m., Senior young people's cabinet meeting at the church, 6:30 p.m. Senior B.Y.P.U. Subject discussed will be: "Fundamentals of the New Religion." First Christian Church, Tenth and Kentucky street: - 045-8 a.m., Church school: 10:30 a.m. Worship. Sermon: Fifty Years of Witnessing "6 p.m. Saturday, 12:30 p.m. Evening all young people: 7:45 p.m. Evening worship. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 1208 Massachusetts street—10 a.m., Sunday school; 11 a.m., Sunday service. Subject: "Unreality." Unitarian Church, Twelfth and Vermont streets—10 a.m., Discussion classes for young men and women; 11 a.m. Church service; Sermon subject: "The Church Speaks to the Present." 6 p.m. Prometheus club supper-meeting; 8 p.m. Prometheus club will speak on "The New Deal." Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont street, near 9:43, a-much school; 11 a.m. Morning worship. Scrip- nion subject: "The Finality of Chri- stianism" anity." 6:39 p.m. Fireside forum sup- 7 p.m. Fireside forum. Subject: "English and American Educational Institutions." First Methodist Episcopal Church Tenth and Vermont street; 9:45 a.m. Rally day; Sunday school; 10:50 a.m. Morning worship. The sermon will be: "The Perils of Freedom"; 6:30 p.m. Wesley Foundation League; Subject: "Is Conscience a Safe Guide"; 7:30 p.m. Tenth and Vermont street; Subject: "Great American Folklore." Trinity Luthers Church, Thirtenth and New Hampshire- 9:30 a.m., radio service over WREN; 9:45 a.m., Rally day exercise in the Sunday school; 10:45 a.m. call to worship on the tower chimes; 11 a.m., Worship service. Subject: "The World is Waiting for the Sun" students and buffet buchen; 7 p.m., Student discussion group, "Current Events Night." Second Church of Christ, Scientist, 8351; Massachusetts street - 9:45 p.m. Sunday school: 11 a.m., Sunday service. Lesson subject: "Unruliaity." START RIGHT KEEP YOUR NOTES WHERE YOU CAN FIND THEM Card Index File Letter Index File Favorite File Record Chest File Strong Box Ask about our red pressboard folders with 2000 sheet capacity. 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