FRIDAY, JANUARY 19. 1834 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS * PAGE THREE Hill Society The Junior group of the American Association of University Women will meet Monday evening at 7:30 at the home of Grace Vernon, 1112 Tennessee. Kenneth Rockwell, gr, will review "Poems 1924-1933", by Archibald Mac-Leish, and one other book. Helen Whitney and Jean Makepeace will assist the hostess. Phi Mu Epsilon, honorary mathematics fraternity, initiated five new members last night at the Manor, followed by dinner and informal bridge. The new initiates are: Philip Ham- bleton, gr; Wray Hall, gr; Elizabeth Hinshaw, c'34; Frank Hoecker, gr; and Lucille Wilson, gr. The Freshman Commission will have an indoor picnic at Honey屋 house, Monday evening at 5 c'clock. Barbara Pendleton, c'37, and Inogene Beamer, c'37, are in charge of arrangements. All members expecting to attend are asked to turn in their names by tonight. The Pi Nu Epsilon fraternity held an initiation banquet Wednesday evening. The following members were initiated: Phil Hambleton, Wayne Hall, Frank Hoecker, graduates in physics; Lucille Wilson, graduate in mathematics; and Elizabeth Hinshaw, c34. Dinner guests at the Sigma Nu house last night were: Evelyn Farber, c'unch Bettie Gibson, fa'uncl; Grace Sullivan c'34; Helen Gumage, c'35; Marion Fegan, c'36; Charlotte Celixw, '35; and Connie Elliot, c'35. Dinner guests at the Chi Omega house last night were: Lena B, Funk, of Lawrence, and Margaret Utt, fa37 Mr. and Mrs. Brinker of Wigita were guests at the Chi Omega house Tuesday night. Dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house last night were: Dean Agnes Husband Miss Irene Peabody; Miss Marci Beaty; Jim Donahue, c37; John Anderle, c37; and Philip Ackerman, c37. Dinner guests at the Ph Gamma Delta house last night were Professor D. J. Teviotdale; Warner Pryor, of Council Bluffs, Iow; and George Clemens of Independence. Miss Lillabelle Stahl of Burlingame is a guest in Lawrence for the weekend Miss Stahl was graduated from the department of journalism in 1933. Dinner guests of Kappa Kappis Gamma last night were litle Henk Krug c'37; Mrs. D. R. McWilliams, Lawrence. and Lucille Stafford, Holywood. Delta Sigma Pi, business fraternity held a dinner meeting Tuesday night at the Colonial Tea room. Professor L. P Tupy was the speaker. Dean Agnes Husband and Miss Irena Peabody will entertain the W.S.G.A council with a tea at their home, Sunday at 4 p.m. Luncheon guests at the Sigma Nu house today were Miss Eloise Terry, and Mrs. V. T. Martin, both of Kansas City, Mo. Dean Agnes Husband will talk on Mexico at the D.A.R. meeting which will be held Saturday afternoon at 4. The Phi Chi medical fraternity announces the pledging of L. Edwin Ulry c'38, of St. Johns. Koppa Sigma announces the pledging of Richard Domester, c'37, of Scotia. New York. Isabelle Perry, c'uncel, was a dinner guest at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house last night. Frances Coon, '33, of Tulsa was a guest at the Pi Beta Phi house this week. Dean F. T. Stockton was a dinner guest at the Phi Kappa Psi house last night. Chi Omega announces the pledging of Margaret Utt, fa'37, of Salina. Labor Committee to Meet State Economists Will Discuss Vocational Adjustment for Unemployed A meeting of the Committee on Labor and Social Service of the Kansas Economic council, which will be held in Topeka this afternoon at the headquarters of the State Re-employment Service Commission, will be attended by Dean F. T. Stockton of the School of Business, Professor Carol D. Clark, of the Sociology department, and Professor H. F Holzlowel and Professor D. J. Teviotdale, both of the economics department The meeting is for the purpose of discussing problems of vocational readjustment for unemployed groups in certain sections of the state. The chairman of the committee is William Murphy, a professor in economics at Manhattan, who received his B.S. here in 1928, and an A.B. in 1931. For a year and a half he was statistician for the State Labor Commission. The meeting will also be attended by delegates from Manhattan and Washburn. KFKU Friday 6:00 p.m. Musical program arranged by Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, associate professor of voice. Saturday 6:00 p.m. Sports Review, Therci Graves. --of All Fall and Winter Stocks News From Home Medicine Lodge—(UP)—An association has been formed here to preserve the home of the late Mrs. Carry Nation as a memorial to the famous hatchet-carrying anti-liquor crusader. Samuel Griffon is president of the association. An option has been obtained upon the old Nation home. Kansas City, Mo—(UP)—The local Teachers' Credit Union, organized by teachers to lend money to teachers in emergencies, has just declared a 6½ per cent dividend. The union has lost no money since organization more than four years ago. Amounts up to $1,000 are loaned. The union has assets of $180,000. Columbia, Mo. — (UP) — Dr. Jacob Warshaw, chairman of the Spanish department of the University of Missouri, has been made a Knight of the Order of Isabella the Catholic by the Spanish decoration is awarded for service to Spain and Spanish Ideals. Doctor Warshaw is the author of several books. Kansas City, Mo.—(UP) —Mayor Bryce Smith addressed the Wentworth Academy cadets at Lexington and promised to do anything he could for any of them in Kansas City. Two days later Cadet Jack Blond and two other students were arrested here for speeding. They reminded the mayor of his promise. He secured their release. Manhattan. — (UP) - The 50 Kansas State College seniors completing the residence requirements for degrees this semester include John Sherman Biggs, civil engineering; and Walter Clare Hulbert, agricultural engineering, both Wichita; Leonard Rusco Adler, electrical engineering, Goddard; Clifford Jay Woodley, Tecumseh; and Herschel Weber, Novinger, Mo. Wichita. — (UP) — American college students are not "radicals" and persons have no right to term them so, say Tom Croft, president of the University of Wichita student council. He returned recently from the annual meeting of the National Student federation of America and reported no evidence of radicalism though schools in all parts of the country were represented. Ask for Historical Pictures Birthdays of Presidents Will Call for February Celebrations With the approach of February and its celebration of the birthdays of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, the bureau of visual instruction at the University of Kansas is receiving calls for pictures depicting the life and times of these two president. Included are "The Great Gatsby" and "American Photophys," a series of pictures on American historical subjects. The pictures have been planned by the Yale University press, under direction of members of the department of history and education at the eastern institution. When completed the series will contain 33 photoplays. Fifteen of these now are available. Included in the works are George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Columbus, James Madison, Andrew Johnson, Yorktown, Alexander Hamilton, Dixie, Wolfe and Montcalm, Peter Stuyvesant and others. Student tickets for the basketball season may now be obtained at the athletic office on presentation of student activity ticket and payment of $1.50. Faculty holders of activity books may obtain the season ticket for $2.50. Faculty members who do not hold a faculty activity book may buy the season ticket for $3.50 plus 35 cents tax. SEASON BASKETBALL TICKETS READY AT ATHLETIC OFFICE Season tickets cannot be obtained at the ticket booth at the auditorium, but the athletic office will remain open until game time. Single admissions, of course, can be had at the auditorium. Sigma Xi Initiates Seven Sigma Xi, honorary scientific society, held its January meeting last night in Blake hall. Initiation was held for the following new members: Robert L. Brigden, psychology; Ruth Cady, bac- cullum; David W. Eddings, Nora E. Nora E. Naea, Neil F. Shell, Lilly Somers, and Gilbert Ulmer, all from the department of mathematics. Send the Daily Kansan home. Ken Meuser, K. U. Alumnus, to Edit Young Republican Club Magazine Kenneth G. Meusner, '31, will edit The Young Republican, a new magazine for the Young Republican clubs of Kansas, which will make its initial appearance Jan. 29. The publication will contain sixteen pages of political comment by leading Republicans of the state, and greetings from the chairman of the Republican national committee, Everett G. Sanders, former vice president Charles Curtis. Among the editorial contributors are Governor Alf M. Landon, Senator Auther Capper, and a number of other prominent Republicans. The contributors, together with fifteen outstanding Kansas Republican editors will be presented in caricatures drawn by Carl Postlethwaite, of Mankato. The magazine will feature also photographs of officers and district chairmen of the Kansas Republican Clubs. Governor Landon's infant son, John Cobb Landon, will pose for a photographer as his contribution to the magazine. A picture of Ogden Mills will appear on the front cover. The first issue, to be known as the Kansas Day issue, will have its first distribution in Topeka on Kansas day. Meuser is managing editor of the Olathe Mirror. Meuser was president of the Men's Student Council in 1931; was a member of Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Delta Chiat, Schematic, the Athletic Board, Jayhawker Staff, Union Operating Committee, the Sour Owl Board, Kansas Relays Committee, Y.M.C.A., and was also president of the Owl Society. REMEMBER Made for you means just that when you get your clothes here. The most attractive spring patterns in all of the latest colorings and weaves at prices YOU can pay. Repairing, Remodeling, and Cleaning Department DeLuxe SCHULZ the TAILOR "Suiting you is my business" 917 Mass. Get in on the savings. You can afford at these prices. 3 HURRY January CLEARANCE Suits--Overcoats 10% off Save $5 to $10 The Gibbs Clothing Co. WHERE CASH BUYS MORE 811 Mass. St. Soon-she'll be looking for a Room to Rent TELL HER ABOUT YOURS The end of the semester will soon be here. Students will be changing. Some leaving, some returning and some wanting a different room for the next semester. If you have a room for rent, you can tell all the students with a small Want Ad in the Kansan. The cost is small, 25c for 1 time, 50c for 3 times, or 75c for 6 times. Don't let that room remain empty without trying to find an occupant. Don't gamble a semester's rent on a house sign or hope. If it can be rented, a Kansan Want Ad will find the student who wants it. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WANT ADS Phone K. U. 66 for any information about Want Ads