THURSDAY, MARCH 8.1934 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Women's Athletic Association Initiates The Women's Athletic Association held initiation yesterday afternoon for the following members: Marjorie Rowland, c'37; Ruth Learned, c'37; Barbara Pendleton, c'37; Mary Learned, c'37; Stella Cutip, c'35; Marjorie Gosper, c'35; Kathleen Keeshan, c'6; Vivian Andrews, c'36; Martha Dodge, c'36; Marian Fisher, e'unc; Mary Ellen Miller, c'37; and Alice Cosandier, c'35. After the initiation, plans were made for the annual high school play day sponsored by the group, which will be given April 13. Margaret Walker was elected manager of the play day festival to fill the position of Wanda Perris who was elected to this office last year but did not return to school. Mary Bes Doty will act as assistant. Mr. and Mrs. Laurence T. Greiner of Akron, Ohio, announce the birth of a son. Mrs. Greiner was formerly Sybil Shafer and was graduated from the University in 1928. She is a member of Sigma Kappa. Graduates Announce Birth of Son Alpha Chi Omega to Entertain Mr. Greiner, now director of advertising for the retail sales division of the Goodrich Tire and Rubber company, received a degree from the School of Business here also in 1928. Alpha Chi Omega will entertain with a banquet tonight for Lawrence alumnae. The guests will be: Dorothy Arnold, Mrs. John Blocker, Mrs. John Nelson, Miss Elizbeth Dinkle, Mrs. Helen Benson Hoover, Mrs. Geneva Cook Lupton, Mrs. Grace McDhimmey, Mrs. Rumble Maude, Mrs. Elizabeth Traett, Mrs. Craig C. Williams, Mrs. Dale Dixon, Persis Cook, and Dorothy Blinkeye. Sigma Delta Chi to Entertain sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalism fraternity, will entertain with a dinner tonight at the Manor in honor of C. G. Wellington, news editor of the Kansas City Times, who spoke at the department of journalism meeting this afternoon. Members of the fraternity and the faculty of the department of journalism will be present. K. U. Dames Meet The K.U., Dames met yesterday at the home of Mrs. U. G. Mitchell. The Mask and Scroll group presented the entertainment. Mrs. W. F. Harris reviewed the book, "Miss Bishop," by Bess Streeter Alrich. Mrs. Mitchell was assisted by Mrs. Wilbur Long, Mrs. Riley Woodson, Mrs. Jack Cundra, and Mrs. Robert Richardson. The University Club will hold an informal dinner Friday night at the club house. The program which will follow the dinner has been arranged by Dr. Lyle Powell. It will consist of a talk on aviation and some motion pictures. Dr. Henry Roe Cloud, previously scheduled to speak, has been called to Washington, D.C. The Junior Prom will be presented tomorrow night in the Memorial Union ballroom from 10 to 2. The following will comprise the receiving line: Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lindley, Miss Agnes Husband, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Werner, Prof. and Mrs. Earl D. Hay, Margaret McNown, fa'35, and John Rizley, e'35. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Esther Holcomb of Bucyrus has been a guest of her cousins, Mary Jane and Anna Lucille Nesslerode, for the past few days. A meeting of the Kappa chapter of Phi Sigma, graduate research fraternity, will be held tomorrow night at 7:30 for the election of new members. As the main speaker, Dr. W. H. Schoewe, professor of geology, will address the members on "The Development of Life Through the Geologic Ares." Dr. William L Burdick, vice president of the University and professor of law, will speak to the Merchants association tonight in St. Joseph, Mo. George Snyder, a student here last semester who has been visiting in Florida, will return to Lawrence for the weekend. ☆ ☆ ☆ Jean and Esther Coghill of Iola will be guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house Friday night. KFKU Thursday 6:00 p.m. Ninety-sixth Athletic Question Box, arranged by Prof. E. R. Elbel. 2. 30 p.m. Music appreciation perior with Prof. C.F. Sikilton. Friday 6:00 p.m. Banking Acts of 1933, L. D. Jennings, assistant professor of economics 6:15 p.m. Musical program arranged by H. C. Taylor, professor of piano. Students to Wrestling Meet A. A. U. Tourname Jimmy Cox and George Noland Enter A. A. U. Tournament Jimmy Cox, student and athletician for University teams, and George Noland, ed 35, have announced their entrance in the Missouri Valley A.A.U. wrestling tournament to be held in the Kansas State College gymnasium at Manhattan tomorrow and Saturday. Noland won the title in the 145-pound class of the Big Six meet held last week at Columbia. Team honors in the years that the meet has been held have been taken by Kansas State, the Wilder grapplers in Kansas City and once in Columbia. Eight classes are provided for in the meet, ranging from 114 pounds up. Three men who have won national championships of one sort or another have thus far been followed with seven Vallejo Valley AU. champion and former champions. Ex-national champions who have entered the meet are Guy Sappington, former Missouri University wrestler and national A.A.U. 145-pound title holder; Joe Fickel, Salina, former Kansas State wrestler who won the 135-pound Big Six title twice in the 1996, 2000, Bill Day-Salina, another former Kansas Stater who was national collegiate champion in the 145-pound class in 1931. The meet is not intercollegiate and wrestlers who enter are to go at their own expense and not the expense of the athletic association of the school they represent. CUNNINGHAM-VENZKIE RACE CWILL BE HEARD OVER MKM2 The Columbian Mile, feature race of the Knights of Columbus games at Madison Square Garden, will be described by Ted Husing over KMBC, March 17. at 9:30. Send the Daily Kansan home. Glenn Cunningham of Kansas and Gene Venkze, the Pennsylvania sophomore, will resume their rivalry to determine the country's foremost miler. Whether Bonthron of Princeton, who has divided the honors with Cunningham in their two previous races this season, will take part in the K. of C. meet has not yet been decided. Women Are Victorious In Second Rifle Match Beltz and Wyatt Fire Perfect Scores; Men's Team Loses With a score of 498, only four points less than perfect, the University women's rifle team came through with victories in all of its week-end matches. The men's team of the University lost to five opponents; one team is yet to be heard from. Mary Louis Beltz, fa 36, and Lena Wyatt, c35, fired perfect scores of 100, to top the local team's standings. Miss Beltz was at the top of the last week also with a 99, while Miss Wyatt bent her last weeks score by three points. Rowena Longshore, c34, and Margaret Hays, fa 35s, were next in line with a 99 each. Four women turned in scores of 98, only one of which could be counted as only the five high scores were used in last week's competition. Opponents of the women's team turned in the following scores: University of Maryland, 403; Kansas State College, 488; Pennsylvania State college, 488. The men's team encountered tough sledding in its second week of shooting, Robert H. Graves, c'uncl, headed the 10 high scores for the local team for the second straight time with a score of 357 out of a possible 400 points. Robert Nalee, captain, c'35, and Jay Wannake, c'34, were next in line with totals of 340 and 143, respectively. The total of the high 10 scores fired was 2333, a gain of nine points over last week's total. Following are the scores turned in by opponents of the men's team: University of Washington, 3727; Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 3716; North Dakota Aggies, 3655; Texas A. and M., 3651; University of Washington, St. Louis, 3535. Results from Lafayette college have not been received. Studies Engineering Set-Up Prof. Hendley, Columbia, Inspect Country's Colleges Prof. A. D. Henckelow, Columbia University, New York City, who has spent the past week in Lawrence studying the organization and conduct of the University, especially the School of Engineering and Architecture, left last right for Kansas State College. From there he will continue to Colorado. The University of Kansas is one of about 12 universities and colleges, including Purdue, University of Missouri, Missouri School of Mines, Michigan, Minnesota, Colorado University, Colorado Mines, Kansas State College, California Institute of Technology, University of Texas at Austin, which he is making a survey. He plans to visit several of the smaller schools en route. Professor Henckley said that he found the organization of the University very different from that of Columbia, but the situation governing the set-up of the two schools is also different and what proves satisfactory for one school would probably be unsatisfactory for the other. He believes more of the graduating engineers in the east last spring found employment in the field of engineering than the previous three or four years. ALLEN WILL, ATTEND MEETING OF COURT RULES COMMITTEE Dr. Allen will go to New York April 14 and 15 to attend a meeting of the National Basketball Rules Committee. He is chairman of the Committee on Research and Visual Investigation. The announcement of the meeting came from the National Basketball Rules Committee for the United States and Canada. Dr. Allen also is a representative of the Fifth Athletic district which includes Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, and the Dakotas. Send the Daily Kansan home. LET US CLEAN YOUR PARTY SLIPPERS Resilver - Regilt - Tint - Dye and Shine Medical Sorority Chartered Electric Shoe Shop Alpha Epsilon Iota, National Organization, Elects Officers The following pre-medic students became pledges of the re-chartered security: Esther Dosser, Alice Marie Good Shoe Repairing Alpha Epsilon Iota, a national sorority for medical students, has reorganized a chapter at the University of Kansas. The organization here will be known as Beta iota chapter of Alpha Epsilon Iota. At the meeting held recently in Fraser hall, plans were laid out and the following officers elected: President, Ruth Montgomery; vice-president, Mary Larson; recording secretary, Verna Hardin; corresponding secretary, Marie Wallace; c'35. 1017 Mass. Phone 686 Wallace, Ruth Montgomery, Verna Hardin, Louise Morly, Martha Schaplowsky, Letha Bunch, Mary Larson, Eleanor Henderson, Rozella Blood, H. Jane Mantzano, Rebecca Richardson, Ruth Page, Elizabeth Mertens, and Sadie Dio Giannelli. Dr. Florence Sheron served refreshments to the crowd. The following members were present from the School of Medicine at Kansas City; Miriam Dorothy Eubank, Hester Hayne, Pauline Longenecker, Ethel Watson, Carolyn Brown, and Dr. Lorraine Sherwood. Newton—(UP)—More than a ton of beef has been received by the poor commissioner, Mrs. Agnes Lundstrom, for distribution among needy families not on CWA relief rolls. Fountain Service - As you prefer it Your wishes at our fountain become orders to us. Your drink or bite to eat must be just right—and we want to have it right. And back of this is our insistence on serving you under the cleanest conditions. DELIVERIES JUST PHONE 238 RICKERD-STOWITS The Rexall Store Those penciled scrawls are a sign of jangled nerves If you're the stolid, phlegmatic sort of person who doesn't feel things very deeply, you'll probably never have to worry about nerves. But if you're high-strung, alive, sensitive—watch out. 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