THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12. 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Call K. U.-25 before 12:30 p. m. Alpha Chi Omega will have its Founder's Day formal dinner this evening at 6 o'clock. The Omicron chapter from Basker with their house mother Helen will speak concerning founders day and Alice Denton will sing. Alpha Tau Omega will entertain the following at dinner and an hour of dancing tonight: Ruth Ester Purdy, Billie Tindal, Patricia O'Connell, Meredith Filkin, Polly Strandberg, Lucy Trees, Lillian Sands, Betty Williams, Mary Nicholson, Kathryn Springer. Decorations will consist of autumn leaves and orange tapers, with a large pumpkin filled with fruit as the centerpiece on the table. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Werner, Mr. am Mrs. E. C. Bucher, Mrs. Etta Corle, and Mrs. Eli Lwill be in the receiving line for open house at Corbin hall to- morrow night from 9 to 12 o'clock Louis Kuhn's orchestra will play. Miss Stella Searclub, regional secretary of the Y.W.C.A.C., and Catherine Villette, 73, president of the organization last year, will be guests of the cabinet at a dinner at Henley house tonight at 6 o'clock. Alpha Xi Delta will hold open house tomorrow night from 9 to 12 o'clock. Mrs. Gertrude Pearson will act as chaperon. Louis Kuhn's orchestra will furnish music. Alpha Gamma Delta will entertain Phi Delta Theta with an hour of dancing this evening from 7 to 8 o'clock. Dinner guests at the Phi Mu Alpha house last night were Dr and Mrs. John Thompson, Professor and Miss Taylor, Miss Taylor, of New York, and John Clement. Gamma Phi Beta will entertain Sigma Chi with an hour dance tonight from 7 to 8 o'clock Weekend guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house will be Janice Poole, c'31; of Parsons; Dorethy Donovon, c'33, and Charlene Lathrop, c'33, of Kansas City, Mo. Gamma Phi Beta will hold open house tomorrow night from 9 to 12 o'clock. Bill Phipps and his orchestra will play. Mrs. Ralph Baldwin will chaperone. Football Attendance Up Nation-Wide Increase in Patronage Seen After Early Season Gains Football is staging a recovery act after several lean years. Indications are that the 1933 season will be the best in point of patronage of the last four years. a nation-wide survey by the Associated Press of 32 representative schools shows the gain of 210,000 customers with the total for the like period in 1932 as 499,029 and for 1933, 705,889. Dr. Forrest C. Allen, athletic director here, has confirmed this report. More than 1000 season tickets have already been sold for this season besides 3000 student activity books. Dr. Allen expects the final sale of season tickets to be between 1,200 and 1,500 as orders for tickets are increasing daily. Yesterday he received an order for 16 tickets from J. Thornton Cooke, president of the Columbia Trust Company of Kansas City, Mo. schools reported a smaller attendance this year than last. Blocks of tickets will be sent to Manhattan, this week, for the Aggie game here Oct. 28; also to Columbia for the Missouri game on Thanksgiving day. Tickets will be sent to Ames Monday for the Iowa State game. Various factors enter into the increased attendance, such as good weather, lower admission prices, changes in coaches and better attractions. The increase has not been confirmed to any one section. Only four Starting Monday, tickets for any one of the remaining home games will go on sale at the athletic office, and purchases of season tickets after that date cannot be assured of getting places between the 40-yard lines. Wheeler Is Chemistry Speaker The Chemistry club will hold its weekly meeting at 4:30 this afternoon. Professor Raymond H. Wheeler of the psychology department will speak on "Suggested problems common to chemistry and psychology". 805-807 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas. 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