. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 8. 1932 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS . . PAGE THREE Hill Society Call K. U.-25 Before 12:30 p. m. MacDowell to Initiate Twenty-five Tonight The MacDowell fine arts fraternity will initiate 23 new members at a meeting to be held at 8.15 p.m. tonight in the rest room of Central Administration building. The founding of the organization will be celebrated. the new members to be initiated are: Rolla Nuckles, c23; Williams Brennan, c24; William Morrison, M姬姿 Stacy, fa32; Hermine Stover, fa32; Gene Schulz, fa14; uncle Niedow, fa34; Ray Miller, c43; Ruh贝重, fa39; Luey Barley, h8; Helen C. Pauline Durrett, fa'34; Carol Higgins, fa'33; Inez Simmons, fa'36; Edith Anne Hopingjarer, fa'37; Katherine Watt, fa'33; Richard Wuff, fa'34; Clemens Wolf, fa'34; John Clay, fa'34; Chevy White, fa'33; Raymond Meyn, fa'35; Herbert Cowell, e'uncel, and Hugh Hiatt, e'34. Four sororites will entertain with annual formal parties tomorrow night from 9 until 12 o'clock. The Alpha Xi Delta and Gamma Phi Beta parties will be held at the chapter houses. Turney Gibson and his orchestra will furnish the music at the Alpha Xi Delta party. The Gamma Phi Beta party, "Polly Party" given by the actives for the pledges. Bill Phipps and his band will play. Four Sororities to Have Annual Parties Tomorrow Kappa Phi to Hold Initiation Services Alpha Chi Omega will have a party at the Eldredge hotel, with Louis Siebers and his band furnishing the music Barney Sciefold and his band will play for the Pi Beta Phi dance at Ecke's hall. Initiation services for Kappa Phi will be held tomorrow at 5:15 o'clock at the First Methodist church. The institutes will be Caryl Anderson, c36; Craig Anderson, c36; Caryle Cox, c4; Margaret Cowles, c35; Pauline Cox, c4; Bonnie Jean Daniela, c36; Sarah Mace Dosser, c35; Lorene Fairbairn, c36; Helen Gardner, c36; Virginia Hostford, c36; Carol Pearson, c34; Lois Pearson, c34; Hazel Shoemaker, c36; Cuthil Sheoemaker, c36; Warner, c34; Margarey Wolf, c36 Elects Officers Following the services the woman will attend the Wesley Foundation banquet. Betty Cox, c'36, was elected president of the Freshman Commission o Fraser Theater 8:15 Mon-Tue-Wed W. S. G. A. Presents The Musical Comedy MAID IN Hollywood SINGING DANCING COMEDY 50c Admission 50c TICKETS at GREEN HALL Phone K. U. 174 the W. Y. C. A. yesterday afternoon the Other officers chosen were: Virginia Brengle, c36, vice-president Laurine Lainville, c98, secretary; and Alison Gallup, Renee Roberts, remarks were served, and Alice Gallup fa33, was in charge. Alpha Omicron Pi to Observe Founders Day Founder's Day of the Phi chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi will be celebrated by a formal dinner tonight at the college center. The color scheme will carry out the sorority colors and flowers. The table centerpiece will be red roses and red peony. Guests will be Mrs. A. J. Mix, adviser and patroness; Frances Thompson and Avis Stoops of Eudora. Beta Gamma Sigma Holden Initiation Fred O. Kiel, b'23, was initiated has night into Bata Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity, at a banquet held in the Hotel Wood. Frank T. Stockton, dean of the School of Business, was elected to represent the fraternity at the national convention to be held at Lexington, Ky., next April. Earl H. Woodford, b'33, presided at the dinner. Mrs. K. L. K Landes and Mrs. T. E. Akinson entertained with a bridge luncheon yesterday afternoon at the Manor. Appropriate Christmas decorations were used. Mrs. W. B. Downs, F. C. Hwaini received high prizes. There is to be a Christmas party for all University young people given at the First Baptist church at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening. The church will have a fireworks show in front of Christmas wreaths. The entertainment will consist of games. Dinner guests at the Delta Tau Dell house tonight will be Janice Poole, grie- la Lavern Wright, ed 32; Margaret Keller, c 36; Shirley Jones, c 42; Betty Scaley, c 48; Bilen Shimmer, funnel; Jane Surface, c 301; and Elizabeth Craner, c 34. Alpha Gamma Delta entertained these luncheon guests at the chapter house today. Miss Margaret Gaffrean, Kansas City, Mo. Helen Heaton, ff33, Dorothy Teiglegraeber, c36, and Eugenia Chancelor, fa'ulc. The Lawrence League of Women Voters entertained with a lunchmeet at 1 p. m. today at the Episcopal parish park, 103 Vermont street, Mrs. Charles M. Baker was chairman of the committee in charge. The Inter-Racial group of the W. Y. C. A. will meet this evening from 7 to 8 o'clock at Henley house. Dorice and her family will be present. 'until' will lead the discussion. Nancy Drake, c'36, was elected president of the joint finance-membership committee of the YWCA. yesterday Nancy Drake, c'35, was elected social chairman. Beta Theta Pt. entertained as dinner guests Tuesday evening Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lindley and Miss Alice Winston, assistant professor of English. Dinner guests at the Chi Delta Sigma house tonight are Paul Wilbert, c: 69; Henry Price, c: 69; William Cody, c: 69; and Scherel Waltquist, c: 69. Mrs. John Leep of Kansas City, Kan, is visiting her daughter, Louise Leep, cunel, at the Alpha Gamma Delta house. Miss Margaret Fifield was a dinner guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house last night. Theta Phi Alpha will entertain Pi Kappa Alpha with an hour dance tonight at the chapter house. Eather Farney, c36, and Elizabeth Pickell of Kansas City, Mo., were dinner guests at Corbin hall last night. Alpha Omicron Pi held initiation services this afternoon for Marie Nedwed, fa35. VISITORS SPEND MORE TIME SEEING SPOONER-THAYER NOW For years past Dyche museum has been visited by hundreds of persons every week, but particularly on Sunday. Last Sunday proved to be noteworthy. The building was for numerous persons had not yet heard of the closing of the building. According to Walter Branson, junior of Spooner-Thayer museum, peruse the history of the museum a much longer time there than they usually did, since they had all afternoon to see the one building, where they got two museums to examine. Students Voice Views on Closing Hour Rules the opinions of many would favor the abolition of the *cloning rule*, but think that some such rule should be imposed, though it might be a bit more lenient." (Continued from page 1) Russell Beatie, c38—"There certainly should not be a set time at which girls should be in. I am in favor of doing away with the rule." Gunnar Myland, c'35." The closing hour of 10:30 is ridiculous. There is no such rule for the boys, why should there be one for the girls?" Al Metall, c. 38" I do not think that a closing hour should be done away with entirely, but it certainly should include a time of more freedom for the women students. "Should Abolish Rule" H. Steele, c356 "It makes no difference to me whether the rule is Kept or not. However, I am confident that if the rule was done away with, hours if the rule was done away with," Don Reed, d'curel "I believe that the 10:30 closing hour should be done at home with a girl and an girl with common sense will be at home at a reasonable hour." Charles McCamish, 'e'unel.' The rule should be abolished. There is no such rule governing the men, why, then, where there be one governing the women?" Loren Muench, c36—"The women of the University are of an age when they should begin to think for themselves. They should be as when they should be home." A professor of the University, who did not care to give his name for publication had this to say about the closing rule: "There most certainly should be a closing hour: I believe that such rules are necessary to be done about the ruling, I am in favor of setting a later hour ruler than abolishing it altogether." Naismith Presents Trophy Professor Gives Athletic Award to Women of Ontario High School Dr. James Naismith, professor of physical education, recently gave to the high school at Almonte, Ont., a women's trophy for interclass athletic competition. This is the high school in Naismith attended when a youth Dr. Naimish visited his high school mather last year. At that time a new high school and gymnasium he undertook construction the year he presented to the men a trophy for interclass athletic competition similar to the one he gave the women Among the outstanding alumni of this high school are: Dr. Naismith, the inventor of basketball, R. Tate McKenzie, who recently resigned as director of athletics at the University of Port-au-Prince at the Benin Muno University at the Californian Institute of Technology and W. C. McDonald, noted Canadian minister. EXHIBIT OF LITHOGRAPHS AND PAPERS AT SPOONER-THAYER Miss Minnie Museum, curator, Spooner-Thayer Museum, has announced several new exhibits of Polish and Austrian lithographs and Christmas papers of original design, which are to be exhibited at the museum for the next few days. The new exhibits are now on the lower floor, but, according to Miss Moodie, they may be moved from there to some other place in the museum. For the four boys who went to Kansa City with him after his lecture in the University auditorium Tuesday night, it was not difficult to see why Bill Hard has become such an excellent reporter. In the first place the man is genial—he puts one at ease immediately. You feel that here is a man who would be in love with some of your pet beliefs and theories. William Hard Demonstrates Ability As Reporter on Midnight Auto Ride Outside of his ability to make himself liked, Mr. Hard showed himself to his young friends as a skillful interviewer. With a few simple load questions he answered himself everything he wanted to know about the University, the state, the Middle-West. Everything seemed to interest him—the kind of stone used in University buildings, the origin of dents in school, Dr. Brinkley (for whom, Mr. Hard said, William Allen White would have had to do a terrific lot of explaining)—the accepted predecessor of Missouri, of Arkansas, and so on. And then when the talk shifted to national and international questions Mr Hard showed another quality of the excellent reporter; that is, the ability to translate seemingly complex things into a simple idea, and to express these Explaining his view of the Hilderites he made his conception exceedingly clear by comparing them to the Kt Klux Klan. The Klan claims to be 100 per cent American, Hilderites claim that he was a conspiracy theorist made the practical move of switching up the popular idea of resentment toward other nations and extreme nationalism, and have appointed themselves the torchbearers of that view. He is therefore an expert in his geniality, his erudition, his intenseness, made one forget Mr. Hardy's extremely small physical stature, and realize only that here was a man who --the handsome dove-gray kind that O. O. McIntyre speaks about... Is To Be Found at the The Perfect Gift In Hotel Eldridge --the handsome dove-gray kind that O. O. McIntyre speaks about... TRAVEL BY RAIL FOR LESS Topeka ... 75c Kansas City ... $1.10 Only for tickets made in stores or on schedule Week End Special ROUND TRIP TO ONE WAY TO Topeka . . . $1.20 Kansas City . . . $1.80 Tickets on sale daily--Return limit 100. Rooms honored on either of the 3 lines. ROUND TRIP TO Kansas City... $1.00 Kansas City $1.90 Tickets honored in chair cars and coaches only. Tickets not honored in all other areas on Sunday and Sunday foreron. Return trip to be commenced before midnight Sunday. Same line as above with directions. Phone 76 TICKETS AT Phone 32 He gave away the key to himself as he left the young men in Kansas City. In all sincerity he said, "Thank you, boys, for a most charming evening." But it was Mr. Hard who made the evening 'charming'. North Truro, Mass. (U. P.)—Highland light, for many years a kerosene beacon, is now the most powerful light on the Atlantic coast. Electrification has doubled its power, with present visibility of 40 miles. Phone 76 INSTRUCTIONS given on all wind instruments. Also trumpet improvising. Call 1460 for appointment. 1460 Ohio. Want Ads LOST: An oxford gray overcast on the Kappa Kappa Gamma party Saturday night. Please call Dick Wells, phone 285. 1100 Indiana. Respond. -- 68 HAIR, CUTS, 2C5; Fisch, chapman, 2C5; massage, 2C5. Scucguest contest this week. Prizes for customers. Shines by K. U. Barber Shop. Tidy-16, Hamm. FOR RENT. Reasonable. Newly painted apartment, close to Campus. Also rooms for boys; and guest room at all times. For information, call 1127-698. LOST. Small gold torch-shaped pin in or about Fraser or Library. Finder please call Ruth Hardace, phone 860. ... TYPING: Notebooks, themes, reports, stories, and plays; correct spelling and English. *185* per thousand words. Phone 1817R. Lucille Willis. —68. AUTO DOOR glass, $1.50; windshields, $2.50. Radiators repaired; new and used installed. All work guaranteed. Auto Wrecking and Junk Co. 9th & Delaware. Phone 954. -75. DARK BLUE overcast exchanged in Hygiene class, Wednesday afternoon. Call Paul Newton at 2886. —65. SPATS $1.00 $1.00 YOUR FOLKS WOULD LIKE ANYTHING YOU GAVE THEM FOR And another warm idea—Big, Wooly, Sheep-slippers They'll keep your feet warm during a long seige of study. Christmas because it came from you But why don't you give them something that they will enjoy over a long period of time — Something almost like a daily letter from you — A record of your temporary home, the University? SEND THE DAILY KANSAN HOME SEND THE DAILY KANSAN HOME SEND THE DAILY KANSAN HOME SEND THE DAILY KANSAN HOME SEND THE DAILY KANSAN HOME SEND THE DAILY KANSAN HOME SEND THE DAILY KANSAN HOME SEND THE DAILY KANSAN HOME SEND THE DAILY KANSAN HOME Quite Likely They Will Read It With Even More Interest Than You Do. We'll mail it for you every day, direct to your folks, at no extra charge. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN