TUESDAY, MAY 16. 1933 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Call K. U.-25 Before 12:30 p.m. Sirma Nu Has Mother's Day Guests Sigma Nu entertained the following guests at a Mother's day dinner Sunday: Mrs. V. L, Wulf, Mr. and Mrs. J. F, Jlood, Mr. and Mrs. O. Anschulz, Mr. and Mrs. H. L, Hurst and son, Mrs. and Mrs. E. P, Strawn, Mr. and Mrs. E. Newcomer, Kansas City; Mo.; M. and Mrs. Clarence Craig and son of Joplin, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. Don Eleman, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. P. A Pfeiffer, Mrs. M. C. Taylor, Mrs. P. J. Donnelly, Parsons. Dr. and Mrs. C. J. Gray and son Horton; Mrs. P. H. Mason, Gardner; Dr. and Mrs. E. N. Robertson and Concordia; Mrs. E. H. Sanders, Goodland; Mrs. R. D. Payne, Lansing; Mrs. W. L. Payne, Dr. and Mrs. L. H. Frikar; and Mrs. J. B. Mack, Professor and Mrs. J. J. Wheeler, Lawrence; Charles Boice and Ralph Young, Kansas City, Mo.; and Russell Young, Columbus. The Triangle fraternity was hos Sunday to the following guests at the chapter's annual Mother's Day banquet: Mrs. M. M. French, Mr. Stanley French, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Pugh, Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Schreer, Ms. Lorraine Schere, Mrs. Mable Cheney, Mrs. Michael Hirsch, Mrs. A. Beijes, and Mrs. I. M. Herndon Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Wright, Mrs. N. G Tathwell, Mrs. R. C. Davis and Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Barber, of Kansas City, Mo. Triangle Has Annual Mother's Day Banquet Mr. M. V. Craig, Mrs. Taylor Cut-lip, and Mrs. Charles Dills, Mressr. Mc and Mrs. I. T. Poteet and Miss Natalie Young of Hildale; Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Barries and E. Kuh, Lea- burge; C. J. Ashley, burge; Mrs. Katherine Wolgast and Mrs. R. E. Page, Ottawa; and Mrs. E. B. Gift of Fayette, Mo. Sigma Phi Epsilon Entertains Mothers Sigma Phi Epsilon entertained with a Mother's Day banquet Sunday at the chapter house. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Coleman, Margaret Coleman, Robert Coleman, Mrs. Helen Mack, and Lawrence Platt of Junction City;Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Yailor, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Allen, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Botsford, Jeanne Botsford, Horace Botsford, Russell Schell, Louise Stucke, Anita Boshell, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Geary, Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Fritch of Cushing Okla.; Mr. and Mrs. Owen L. Corbin, Mr. Keith F. Wright, Merriam Vernon S. Roberts of Miami, Okla.; Mr and Mrs. J. F. Kell and Mrs. J. B. Bolton, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Murphy of Overland Park; and Don M Lathrom of Waverly. Chi Delta Sigma Gives Spring Formal Out-of-town guests included: Truitt Sauerberl, Harvey Fulllen, and Luse Latimer of Independence, Mo; Sheldon Farrell, H. A. Reed, M.E. Morgan, Ruby Jacobs, Vivian Brown, and Dove McCleary of Lincoln; Kiaerstie of Linwood; Katharin Sherard of Bethany; and K. Lvis and Betty Buchanan of Kansas City, Kan. Chi Delta Sigma entertained witt. the chapter's annual spring formal at the Lawrence Country club Saturday evening. Louis Kuhn and his hand wrote, and Mrs R. H. Wheeler and Mrs. Mary Glimore Allen were chaperons. Kappa Alpha Theta announces the engagement of Charlene Rouse, a former student at the University of Kansas, to Bill Norton of Kansas City, Mo. Engagement Announced Henry Halstead, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Rand, Ed Duff, Hazel Brues, Les Jenkins, Jimmie Middleton, Denny Donaldson, Gene Morgan, Sam Taylor, Carroll Tolpmann, "31, Chuck Gentry, Robert Sweeney, Michael Hurwitz, Dave Lischock, and Russel Chevere will dinner guests at the Delta Upson house Saturday evening. Miss. Sidney R. Stanford, Epillon province president, has been a guest at the Alpha Delta Pi house for the past few days. She left yesterday to attend the Kansas City celebration of the annual banquet last night at the Brookside hotel. Iris Olson, c$3, accompanied Mrs. Stanford. Theta Tau entertained at dinner Sunday for: Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Dewyer, Mrs. M. L. Brawner, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Elliot, Evelyn Darrah, and Ralph Hill of Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. H. Hirst of Highland Park; B. H. Stark and Carolyn Stark of Topeka; and Donald Gentry of Manhattan. Sigma Eta Chi, Congregational sorority, entertained at the last meeting of the year in the chapter room Sunday, with a tea for the mothers of the members of the organization and their guests. A strong trio played two numbers, and Mrs. L. Curtis Guise talked on "The Women of India." The Student Walther league held election of officers at the regular business meeting on Sunday evening. The following officers were elected for the coming year: president, Karl Grother, secretary, Christoph Fischer, c35; corresponding secretary, Freda Schaeffer, c34; treasurer, Dorothea Sanders, b'sp. The members of the University mathematics faculty and their wives were entertained at dinner Saturday night by Professor and Mrs. U. G. Mitchell. Professor and Mrs. W. H. Stratton and Professor Daugherty of Manhattan and Professor and Mrs. W. H. Garrett of Baldwin were also guests. Acacia held its annual Founder's day banquet Sunday at the chapter house. The guests included N. C. Lindstrom, T. C. Rythr, Dr. O. D. Steuart, O. M. C. Rythr, Dr. C. Sluse, Dr. P. N. Sherwood, and Dr. R. H. Schweiger all of Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. Louis LaCoss who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. A. LaCoss of Lawrence, returned to their home in St. Louis yesterday. Mr. LaCoss, who was graduated from the University in 1811, is city editor of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The alumnae club of Mu Phi Epsilon will entertain with a picnic supper for the active members at 6 o'clock this evening at the home of Mrs. F. E. Kester, 1612 Louisiana street. Helen Frederick of Ottawa, a former student, was a guest of Genevieve Noyes, fa33, at the Alpha Delta Pi house last weekend. Dinner guests Sunday at the Delta Zeta house were Mr. and Mrs. Noble C. Dunn, of Arkansas City. Alpha Gamma Delta announces the pledging of Laura Alice Cunningham, c'uncl., of Lawrence. KFKU At 9:45 this evening the Athletic Question Box under the direction of Professor E. R. Elbel will be broadcast over KFKU. Wednesday at 2:30 p. m., W. K. Cornell, instructor of romance languages, will broadcast the Elementary French Lesson, At 2:45 p. m. K. U. News Notes, prepared by the K. U. News Bureau under the direction of Professor W. A. Dill, will be given by Charles A. Dearle, professor of psychology, will describe some typical problem cases at 9:45 p. m. over KFKU. The last program to be broadcast tomorrow will be a musical program arranged by Miss Ruth Oreult, assistant professor of piano. On Other Hills A student problem survey, made recently by a business psychology class of the University of Montana, showed that the highest rated problems of students consisted of the utilization of study time, writing of examinations, and the selecting of a vocation. Thirty per cent of the students tested had problems of great intensity, or numerous ones. The establishment of a research foundation at the University of Utah for the purpose of studying the coa resources of that state is in the form of a proposal which will be presented before the Board of Regents soon. Under the proposal, the development of smokeless fuels and valuable by-products from the resources will be studied. For one meal the students of the University of Wisconsin will go on breadline rations for the purpose of raising funds for a scholarship fund of summer school workers of that university. The financial difference between their usual menu and that of breadline rations will be donated to the cause. Hello and Smile week at the University of Southern California, an annual campus tradition sponsored by Blue Dey, national honorary service group, will be held on the campus start Monday. The purpose of the week is to foster better feelings and friendship among students on the campus. A University Fresh Air camp, taking care of 400 under-privileged boys from Detroit and Ann Arbor, has for 12 years been successfully supported by students and faculty of Ann Arbor. Funds are contributed by university organizations and by selling tags on a designated "Tag Day." BFLOW ZERO do ourselfs and not have somebody else find out what fools we've been. Besides, any man with a son like you want to be able to turn over the clock and clean up. I don't even want you to guess that there's a mess until I get it fixed up. Then I can tell you and you can help, but if you perish, perhaps, but if you ever have the sort of a son you should have—such a son as you are to me—you'll get the idea that the admiration and protection dad has taught to be worthy of them. "You'll be in soon. For the second time I'm going to steer you away from Kampfest. It's going to break your heart and mine, too. But you're not sure how we feel about this reason is that we we're Belkmans, and the breed doesn't show hurts or affections much. It feels a lot, though, and so if the doctors are wrong and you have to get your explanation this way, please believe that I'm hurting you so I can have a chance to wash the clothes I've been doing and by doing so keep your respect. "And above all, you must realize this: that an old man has a devil of a time playing up to what a father of a son like you should be. I'm so proud of you it keeps me awake nights. Good luck; God bless you. (Continued from page two) John blinked his eyes and cleared his throat with a brave long hurry. Harrington paused. His voice had shaken a truffle on the hot "Till . . . ILL . . . " he began. "I guess I will be d—d—weekly." is voce had "But you should have heard him cheer, clear across the Atlantic, when I told him what the afternoon papers were reporting on our arrests roasting forced gordon to confess. "And he said for you to stay right there in Kampfest and run the Job and that he was coming to ask for a chance to help—that's just what he said: to ask for a chance to help—as fast as boats and trains can bring him. Says that he fits it as aiddle and had already hooked passage two times, but that they held their hand. You can use your own judgment, of course, but I don't know as I'd make any important changes until he gets here." John reached out for Ellen's hand. "How long will it take him?" he asked, commending to smile. "Why, not long; ten days, say." - "Ten days!' Don't you call that long? '... What's that?"—learning closer to the 'phone as the wire went bad for a moment. "Oh . . . the job! Sure, the job can play along for them all." There are other things up here, Harrington, so important that they make the job look like a joke. . . And ten days? Man, for these other things, ten days is ages. . . and ages ITHE END.1 + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + GENERAL STUFF c+9 c+9 c+9 c+9 c+9 c+9 c+9 c+9 c+9 If there's an automobile accident every 57 seconds and only one death every 25 minutes, the average driver has an allowance of about 26 accidents. Check up and see how many more you have to go before you're plunking a harp—or hauling ashes. Loveolier college students with serious, house-keeping needs need not off marriage because of a lack of cash. A man in New Mexico recently paid his marriage fees with two bags of peanuts. If a college diploma isn't as good in a trade as two bags of peanuts then "Rasputin at the Patee is good, not only from a standpoint of drama, but because it presents the incidents preceding the Russian revolution as they are supposed to have happened. Barrum's law that there is a sucker born every minute holds as well in a pink marble palace as it does out in the tall corn. Rasputin, being familiar with the law, makes the most of it. In his lust for power he wrecks the lives of numerous individuals besides being a large contributor to the fall of the old Russian regime. Modern Library 210 of the World's Greatest Books 95 cents a copy Smartly bound in linen, these books are ideal to slip into your pocket for during leisure moments. Come in and eee them. The Book Nook 1021 Mass. — Tel. 666 some changes should be made. Ask any senior if we're not right. "The Story of Temple Drake" at the Dickinson concerts a big event in the life of a little girl with a "Bad Streak" in her. Mariam Hopkins is the exotic erotic and Quixotic lead. She has a soft Southern accent and comes of an Italian heritage. But where of them are patient enough to contend with the bad streak. She gets into trouble with a gangster and kills him, but everything turns out all right. The bog moment at the local playhouse came when Temple's lover, a young lawyer, calls her to the stand to give testimony that will ruin her. With tears in his eyes he says, in a quarering baritone, "Temple, remember that though a woman, you are still a Drake." A nurse, being largely college-colleged folk, hands and hands the scene much better than the director had planned. Sleeper Is Uninjured Hiwatha, —(UP) —When John Davis, 14, walked in his sleep and fell downstairs, he escaped without injury. But when his father, fearful that something bad would happen to rescue him, the father fell downstairs and received several minor bruises. 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