THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1934 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Hill Society I holds Buffet Supper The advisory board and cabinet of the Y.W.C.A. entertained with a buffer supper last night at the home of Mrs. R. C. Rankin. After the supper, Frances Ballard, c/34, read a few poems, Heilbrunn Healing, our reading, and Amie Marie Tempkins played several selections on the piano. The following persons were present: Mrs. Charlotte Walker, Mrs. Howard Parker, Mrs. Dora Byrant, Dean Agnes Husband, Mrs. Maude Elliott, Miss Mabel Ellipt, Miss Rosemary Ketcham, Mrs. J. S. Daniels, Mrs. H. B. Latimer, Frances Ballard, Charline Armstrong, Emily Lord, Annie Marie Tompkins, Barbara Pendleton, Edna Turrell, Elanor Frowe, Mabel Eden Martha, Martha Rowe, Anne McCoy, Mace McCoy, Betty Aml Snaufer, Vyonda Helfinstine, Helen Kucs, Ann Kell, Caroline Stockwell, Cora Rardon, and Carolyn Harper. To Hold Parties The following fraternities will hold formal spring parties Friday night; Kappa Eta Kappa, at the Colonial; Theta Tau, at the Country Club; Acacia, at the chapter house; and Phi Delta Theta, at the Union building. Delta Chi will hold its spring party Saturday night at the chapter house. Prof. Walderam Geltch left Tuesday night for Pittsburgh, Kan., where he acted as judge in a tri-state music contest, which included Kansas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. Prof. Carl Preyer left last night for Pittsburgh where he will judge the piano contest. --by the University Women's club in Kansas City. The subject of Professor Wheeler's speech was "New Developments in Psychology" Wesley Foundation of the Methodist church will entertain students and their friends with a hike tomorrow evening. The group will leave the church at 5:30 o'clock, and will go to the George Maffett farms. George Allen, c'35, and Pauline Cox, c'35, are in charge of arrangements. The Westminster student group will hold a picnic at Lake Lake Saturday afternoon. The group will leave Westminster Hall at 3 o'clock. Myrora Lorimer, c'35, is in charge of the arrangements. ☆ ☆ ☆ Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalism sorority, will hold initiation services tonight for the following pledges: Lena Wyatt, c'35; Iris Olson, c'35; Virginia Post, c'35; and Lorence Miller, c'35. ☆ ☆ ☆ The Inter-racial group of W.Y.C.W. will meet tonight at 7 o'clock at Henley house. The Rev. J. F. King of the Congregational church will review Eugene O'Neill's play, "Days Without End." Frank Naylor, c'35, was recently elected historian and Walter Eeverly, b'uncl, was appointed comprtroller of Sigma Phi Epilation. Elmer Humphrey, c'37, was a dinner guest at the Phi Gamma Delta house Wednesday evening. Glenn Fulton of Kansas City was a guest of his brother Vernon Fulton, e 36. Tuesday evening at the Kappa Eta Kappa house. Dinner guests at the Phi Gamma Delta house this evening will be Miss Agnes Husband and Miss Irene Peabody. Virginia Team, c'35, has recently been elected rush captain of Kappa Alpha Theta. Wheeler Speaks in Kansas City Wheeler Speaks in Kansas City Professor Raymond H. Wheeler, head of the department of Psychology, was the speaker last night at a dinner given Student Specials DOROTHY PERKINS Combination Offer $1.00 Face Powder $1.00 Week-end Treatment Set Both for $1 25c Cashmere Bouquet Fine Soap. 10c 3 or 27c KODAKS and Kodak Films We Deliver Order RANKIN'S Drug Store Across from Courthouse Phone 678 Hodge Podge By Howard Turtle, c34 --- A practical joker has again been carrying on activities at the Phi Delk house. This time he took the watering hose from the front lawn, surreptitiously ran it up along the east wall of the building, and stuck its nozzle into the sleeping porch through a window. Far after midnight Tuesday night, when everyone on the sleeping porch snored deep slumber, gallons of water began spraying in on the beds and spurting into the faces of the sleepers. It was a few seconds until anyone could rouse himself to a realization of what horse-play was going on, and several more seconds until anybody could grope in the dark, find the nozzle of the hose, and shove it back out of the window. By that time everything was, of course, thoroughly drenched, and any sleeping which was done for the rest of the night was done in doden sheets and blankets. Manuel Edquist says that for a long time he lay quiet in the deluge, peacefully dreaming that ie was raining. Carl Eil Bushey, c36, musician in the Bill Phipps stables, has three hobbies—playing ping-pong in the Union building, raising goats, and raising canaries. He explains that one of his canaries is probably the loudest warbler in all Lawrence, and declares that the reason for the bird's extraordinary ability is that he taught it to sing by playing his saxophone in the bird's car. Andy Squires, the trumpet player who last night put on "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" amid such bilarity in the Union Memorial ballroom, is from the University of Missouri where he 'led a band of his own last semester. Bob Armstrong, 'c36, put boarders at the Tennessee club into galaxies of laughter the other day when, upon sitting down to the dinner table he drawled: "I used to enjoy eating—but now I'm getting sort of used to it." Kansas Science Academy Holds Meeting in Wichita Dr. Raymond Moore, State Geologist, to Give Main Lecture The sixty-sixth annual meeting of the Kansas Academy of Science will be held in Wichita, April 26-28. The feature presentation of the meeting will be an address, "A Boat Trip Through the Grand Canyon of Colorado," a lecture illustrated with colored lantern slides and motion pictures by Dr. Raymond C. Moore, state geologist, and professor at the University. General papers will be read by J. C. Bates, assistant instructor of botany, on the subject, "Studies on the Effects of Some Alkaloids on Aspergillus," and W. J. Baumpartner, professor of zoology at the University on "Additional Studies of Living Tissues." Papers on biology will be read by F. C. Sauer, assistant instructor of anatomy, who will read a paper on "A Method for the Study of Living Cells, and Some Observations on the Structure of Cytoplasm." "A Device for Simultaneous Washing of Cytological or Histological Material," will be given by V. S. Gentry, assistant instructor of zoology, and "Some Newer Interpretations of Protozoan Behavior" by A. W. McCullough, gr. Papers on biology will be read by W. C. Stevens, professor of botany, on the subject, "Biology and Structure of Dianthera Americana." Papers will also be read by R. L. Dill, c34, Kathryn Taggart, c43, Kathryn Staley, gr M. W. Maybury, instructor of botany, Rufus Thomson, c43, J.O. Jobe, gr. Chemistry papers will be read by Robert Taft, professor of chemistry, on "The Detection of Electrode Reactions by Means of the Haring Cell"; by F. B. Dunis, professor of chemistry, on "Some Derivatives of Salicyle Aldehyde"; also papers on "Victoria BX as Internal indicator in Ceriometry"; by Prof. Mary Elvira Weeks, of the chemistry department here, and "Gold Prospects in Kansas"; by E. D. Kinemy, associate professor of chemistry. Bert A. Nash, associate professor of education, will read a paper "Psychology and Mental Hygiene in Kansas." Papers in entomology will be read by H. B. Hungerford, professor of entomology, Milton Sanderson, gr. L. S. Henderson, gr. melvin Griffith, c'43, W. S. Wagner, c'43; and W. F. Harms, gr. DATE OF ARRIVAL OF EARLY FLOWERS NOTED BY BOTANISTS With one hundred forty-five different species of flowers in bloom up to date, and ninety-five or more species blooming every day, the botanists participate in the annual flower contest report that their spring task of noting first flower faces is becoming extremely difficult. Each year members of the botany department note the first flowers of each species in order that they may keep a permanent record for the department. This year viollets were discovered early in February and flags were seen April 17. Recent discoveries are: mulberry, columbine, and double flowering crub as well as late varieties of violets, yellow clover and bedstraw. An accidental revolver shot that coursed through the upper part of his leg deadened the main nerve and may end the football career of Marcellus "Boz" Graham, University of Oklahoma freshman fullback. Graham is convalescing in Oklahoma City ho gital. 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