FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Over a hundred guests, members of the Women's Guild of the Presbyterian church, were entertained at a tea yesterday at the home of Mrs. E. H. Lindley. Mrs. A. B. Mitchell was chairman of the entertainment committee. Mrs. J. W. O'Bryan, Mrs. Dolph Simons, Mrs. Richard Jackman, Mrs. Mitchell, and Mildred DeWeese, c34, presented the musical program, Mrs. T. H. Aszman presided at the tea table. The color scheme was in yellow and white. Alpha Tau Omega entertained last night with a dinner and an hour dance. The guests were Helen Black, c'url, Mary Nicholson, p. Shirley Jones, c'c3, Meredith Flink, c'44, Mary Ruth Pyle, c'4, Genevieve Horn, c'url, Etheer Genevieve, Mary Frances Schultz, c'5, Betty Williams, c'37, and Jozmerman, c'36. Other guests at the house yesterday were Jane Dounelly, Eleanor Davison, and Ben Benton. Gamma Phi Beta celebrated its Founders' day with a banquet last night. Talks were given by the following class representatives: Chanlaine Armstrong, senior; Virginia Post, junior; Dorothy Harrington, sophomore, and Virginia Burgess, freshman. Guests were Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, Helen and Dorothy Kinney, Betty Watermulder and Maxine Yost. Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity entertained the following guests last night at dinner, which was followed by an hour of dancing: Margaret Rand, Caroline Smith, Jane Warren, Marlyn Keysay, Jane Gray, Dorothy Foster, Jeanne Berry, Ruth Michael, Randolf Bundy. The R.O.T.C. will hold its annual fall formal Military Ball tonight from 9 to 12 o'clock in the Memorial Union building. Bill Phipps orchestra will play for the dance. Phi Chi, professional medical fraternity, will entertain with its annual "professional" party tomorrow night from 9 to 12 oclock at the chapter house. Mrs. W. L. Hale, housemother, Mrs. Gertrude Pearson, and Mrs. Margaret Speelman will act as chaperons. Dinner guests at the Phi Gamma Delta house last night were Laura Lukens, c'35, Isabel Tuke, fa'34, Isabelle Perry, c'uncl, and Edythe Muveyhill, c'34. Dean and Mrs. Henry Werner, Professor O. O. Stoland, and Stuart Landrum, c37, were dinner guests of Phi Kappa Pai last night. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brinker, of Wichita, were luncheon guests at the Chi Omega house yesterday. HASKELL MEETS GRINNELL HE TOMORROW AFTERNOON Officials are: Captain Gammell of Brown, referee; George Gardner, of Southwestern, umpire; and R. E. Peters, of Wisconsin, head linesman. The Haskell team will meet Grimell tomorrow afternoon at 2 p.m. on the Haskell field. Governor Alfred M. Lannard has said there have been invited to attend the game. During the half, Jim Thorpe and John Levi will give a kicking and passing exhibition. Thorpe was a former football star at Carlslea, and one of the world's most outstanding athletes. Levi holds the distinction of having thrown the longest completed forward pass in the history of football. Graduates Visit Professor Hay Leslie Sechrist, '32, David Dutton, '31, and Paul White, '30, all engineering graduates, were visitors of Professor E.D. Hay, of the mechanical department recently. Mr. Sechrist is teaching school this year and Mr. White is working for the Bailey Meter company in Kansas City. 18 Esr-Segert, Edgar Hailburyton, first American to be taken captive during the World War, whose famous "Shoot and be damned" expression when faced by German inquisitors made him a national hero, has found a job. He was now working as a nurse for Henry Ford at Dercort, and went to work immediately, after months of idleness. To Observe Armistice Day Promethean Club Members Will Present Play Tomorrow Night First Yank Captured Gets a Job An Armsite Day celebration will be held Saturday evening at the Liberty Memorial High School where the Law-ence Council on International Relations will present a program of music and drama. The program will include readings musical selections, and singing. Herbert L. Huffman, minister of the Friendship church and temporary chairman of the National Council on International Relations, will describe the purpose of the Council. "The Boy Comes Back" by A. A. Milne, english playy, will be presented by the Promethean Club of the Unitarian church. David Gibson, capp. who played in Mary Rose last week with the Kansas Players, will take the leading role of the soldier who comes home after the war. Iowa State Hard at Work The meeting will begin at 8 p.m. promptly. Seouts' Reports Give Cyclones Healthy Respect for Wildcats Ames, lown, Nov. 10—(Special)—Disturbed by scouts' reports of the power Kansas State showed in holding Michigan State to a scoreless tie last week, the Cyclones have been working hard this week to master Wildcat offensive and defensive formations, in preparation for Saturday's game. In Tuesday's practice they became familiar with Kansas State states and defense in dummy scrimmage, and last night spent an hour in full-speed scrimmage against a picked freshman team using Kansas State formations. Every Cyclone except Donald Theophilus, fullback, who has been out with an injured leg for three weeks, was in suit Tuesday evening. Harold Miller Gate were limping from minor leg injuries suffered in the Iowa game. Chi Alpha, new ministerial fraternity, held its second meeting at 7:30 last night at the home of Frank Roark, 824 Ark kanes street. ECOND CHI ALPHA MEETING CONSISTS OF BOOK REVIEW Freshman Law Students Soon to Open Annual Trial of Practice Court Cases The meeting consisted of a book review by Frank Rearick, Chaplin of Chi Alpha, who reviewed McAfee's book on, "Ministerial Ebias." Chi Alpha will hold its next meeting at Westminster hall at 8:30 next Thursday night. By William Bolton, c35 The fresh law student will soon embark on their annual term of court, during which time eleven realistic cases will be tried before a court of justice. The bench will be pursued of two upperclass honor students and one member of the law faculty. If a student has made the honor roll twice he is eligible to sit as the chief justice. The freshman class has been divided into law firms of two students each. Counsells for the defendant and for the plaintiff in each case after getting the facts, the judge, the case, prepare briefs and submit cases to the clerk of the court. A. G. Gilland, 125. The following week the case is brought to court and argued orally by the counsels. The next week the court renders its decision in a written opinion prepared and read by the chief justice of the United States district court, the cases being tried on the basis of law rather than the factual evidence. After the decision has been handed down, the attorneys will be graded on the basis of the brief and oral argument given a point for winning the case. The first case is on the docker for its hearing Nov. 13 at 2:30 p.m., and is on the action of John Stone vs. Charles Young, concerning a minor and his liability on a contract in which his age has been misrepresented. The judges sitting on the case will be T.E.Atkinson, professor of law, Paul V. Smith, '14, and Herbert N.Hyland, '15. The counsel for the plaintiff will be the law firm of Boyce and Brown, the attorneys being Robert Boyre, Uncle, and B.G.Brown, '136. Counsel for the defense is the firm of Theis and Slocum, represented by F.G. Theis, '136, and Kenneth Slocum, '136. By William Bolton. e'35 The trials are to be held in the court room of Green hall and the public is welcome under the same restrictions as a real court. George Snyder, the campus traffic officer, will act as bailiff. VETERANS OF U. S. BATTLES PRESENT SOUVENIR DISPLAY An interesting Armistice Day display has been placed in the window of the Douglas County Republic, by the Alford-Chark Post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. These souvenirs have been gathered from every battle field since the United States has fought, from the Spanish American War to the World War. Especially interesting are the three war zone maps which show the entire Western Front positions the Allies held against the opposing forces. These maps were drafted by Major L. B. Roberts, who was attached to the A.E.F. mapping division during the war and a student at the University in 1910. After the war he presented these maps to Professor J. O. Jones, who, in turn, turned them over to the Post to add to their war souvenir collection. ANCIENT PRINTING EXHIBITS SHOWN AT SOCIETY MEETING Professor M. W. Sterling, who is an honorary member, brought to the meeting a very old edition of a Greek gram-mer. An ancient original block of cuniform writing dating back to the time of Nebacadnezer and a facsimile of the famous 24-line Gutenberg bible which was printed on the first Gutenberg press were used for illustration by Dr. Dains in his speech to Eta Sigma Phi, honorary degree recipient. He also regular monthly meeting last night Dains spoke of how knowledge has come down the ages through printing. The second of the faculty recitals at the School of Fine Arts will be Monday evening in the central Administration auditorium at 8 o'clock. Karl Kuesterstein, violinist, and Ruth Curtch, pianist, will appear in a joint concert with Dean D. M. Swarthout as accompanist. Karl Kueisterlein, Violist, and Ruff Orcutt, Pianist, to Appear Mr. Kuersteiner has studied under Seveik, Sametini, Cecar Thompson, and Leopold Auer. At the Ithacan Conservatory of Music, he was winner of the gold medal for distinguished violin playing. He came to the University in 1925 as professor of violin and director of the University Symphony orchestra. Next Recital to Be Monday Ruth Orcutt, assistant professor of piano, came to the University in 1928 after studying under such men as Percy Grainger, Rudolf Ganz, Edward Collins, and Ernest Kroger. At Chicago she was winner of the Mason and Hamlin Grand Piano over many contestants. She has appeared as soloist with both the St. Louis Symphony and the Chicago Symphony orchestras. The program: Miss Orcutt; "Scotch Dances" (Beethoven-Bison), "Rondo in g major" (Beethoven), "Lilacs" (Rachmaninoff), "The Round of Ariel" (Pick-Margangialli), "Colonial Song" (Grainger), "Mandolinata" (Saint-Saens), "Hungarian Rhapsody No. VIII" (Liszt). Mr Kuersteiner: "Chanson Louis XIII and Pavane" (Cunier-Kreisler, "Motturuno" (Respight - Kuersteiner); "Menuttu" (Grainer), "Symphonie Epagnole—Allegro moderate, Andante, Rondo") (Lalo). KANSAS DEBATERS TO MEET NEBRASKA SQUAG TONIGHT Phil Bramwell, c36, and Lyman Field, c36, will represent the University of Kansas in a debate tonight on the question, Resolved: "That the United States should adopt the essential features of the British system of radio control and operation." Both Mr. Field and Mr. Bramwell are experienced orators. They were entered in the oratorical contest of the Kansas last year's freshman oratorical contest. They will uphold the negative side of the topic against the University of Virginia at Lincoln. It will be a node-channel broadcast to be broadcast over radio station KEOR. Send the Daily Kansan home. Rent one of these NEW BOOKS 10c for 3 days Little Man What Now, Stan Fallata Marie Antoinette, Stefan Zuewig Umnoral, Jack Woodford Women Without Love, R. 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