MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1930 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 。 Underwood and Garvens to Broadcast Tonight Skilton, Hoopes, Calderwood Moore, and Quartet on Week's Program 4. A quartet composed of Meribah Moore, Irene Phebeady, E B. Bayles of the faculty, and J. E Hume of Law-enforcement evening over KRKU Tuesday evening. Tonight KFKU will broadcast from 6:45 until 7:30. Prof. Henry Wren will perform on piano and violin facades" on the chemistry table of talks Prof. Roy Underwood has arranged the following musical program which will involve a concert by a pianist and Otto Garvey, cellist. The program will be : piano solo *Pollonarie in C sharp mirror* (Chopin) solo and piano, *Sonata in A major* (Boehmer) piano solo, *Consonation* (in Beethoven) piano solo, *Consonation* in E major* (Gallivant) Cake- ballerini piano solo, *Orchestra of Orpheus and Euridice* (Gluck) *Salarello* (Van Goena) piano solo *(Dansse Nogé) Dansse Nogé* (Cyril Scott). A musical program arranged by Mi Miribah Moore will follow. The program will be as follows: Quartet "Flow Gently Sweet Awtet" (Spillman the Cauld Blast) "Mendelssohn, word by Burns"; Bartolone song, "Recessional" (De Koven); Quartet, "Sweet and Low" (Barnby), by Tennyson). Duets for soprano and contralto, "April Batten" (Baten); Quartet, "Sailling (Marks). From 4.00 until 4.30 Tuesday, Prot. C. S. Killman will give an illustrated lecture, "Edward MacDowell, American Composer," At 6 o'clock the following Sky Tightly? will be "We Know the World Is Round." The Campus calendar by H. R. H. the Mt. Oread correspondent, and a speech *Moore Tonight* by Prof. Helen Booth at noon the morning of 11:00 to 11:30 morning the M. Ort correspondent, and speech "Powers Tonight" by Prof. Helen Cahill. By Prof. Helen Cahill we start the day morning from 11:00 to 11:30. On Thursday from 11:00 to 11:30, Prof. Helen Cahill leads on "Voice and Meaning" and Prof. H. B. Chubb will give a talk "Interpretation of International Affairs". Prof. D. A. Krohn will discuss "Methods of Travel in the Orient" at 10:00 a'clock Friday. This will be the first session of this week through the Orient." "Landscape" will be the topic of the speech to be given Friday. F. Smith on the Friday programs. The University of Kansas vs. Oklahoma, Dad's Day football game will be broadcast Saturday at 1:45. A special program consisting of the first School of Fine Arts all-musical Vasper will be given Sunday, Nov. 18. OWL SOCIETY STARTS SALE OF TICKETS FOR DAD'S DAY The Owl Society has taken over the ticket sale for the Dad's Day banquet. They are offering the challenge trophy and give all guests and also give three prizes to the individuals making the most sales. First prize is a ticket for and transportation to the Missouri game at Columbia and other two prizes are tickets to the game. Pajamas Banned for Church Wear Members of the Owl Society will go to every house during morn­tide today to help them with a challenge which turns the tickets will be turned over to some one in the house. Pajamas Banned for Church Wear Truro (Cornwell), Eng., Nov. 5, 1986. The congregation denounced an "disguising" the conduct of worship and called the catholic dress in beach pavilions. Want Ads LOST: Acacia pin at Union nunning Saturday night. Call 355. -54 BROAD VIEW NINN has one apartment, and one large south room for rent.quiet, ideal place for artists, musicians or research workers. Call 1467. 343 TYPING WANTED--Any kind of class papers, neatly and correctly done per thousand words. Reference if phone 1880 W. 645 Main street. ROOM for boys: South Exposure- large, warm and nicely ventilated. Will rent as single or double. Location 949 Ohio Street. Phone 2889 - 54. Society Theta Tau entertained at a Homecoming party at the chapter house. Now they are in the office. A. M. Ocklerbald and Prof. and Mrs. R. W. Lawrence, Hayhurst Kahler and --son, George Gard, Chester Brewer, Mr. Bruce Krohn, Dana Bowers, Blake Bolton Jones, Virginia, Virginia, Hoytney McGrew, Claridene Stone, Mr. David Sprague, Marissa Holmes, Hardine Norton, Louise Postwellshire, Bertha White, Mary Whitali, Mrs. and Mr. C. W. Lowder, W. B. Brown, John S. Brunet Out of town guests were: Margaret McClymond and Jaminin Hobert, Tookepk; Maurine Pearces, Olivia; Mary Kearney, Katherine Ellen, Mildred M. Reardon, Marion Milson, Edouah Rosell, Eloise K. U, Dames will give a supper for their husbands and families, Wednesday, Nov. 10, at EIH Hall. 725 Vermont Ave. at 10am or by cocktail on a clock followed by games of bridge and dancing. Reservations should be made to C. N. Oust, 8 o'clock this evening. Miss Elizabeth Churchill of Halington was a guest at Theta Phi Alphon house this week-end. Guests at Delta, Zeta house this week-end-eend were Mary Ellen Souls and Marjorie McClennins, Alpha Phi, at Washburn College, Topeca. Mes. T. D. Pruence entertained with an informal dance Saturday at her home, among the guests were: M. A. J. Mix, Prof. and Mrs. A. J. Mix, Prof. and Mrs. T. E. Arkinki Prof. and Mrs. K. Lan-der Prof. and G. N. Cohen, Prof. and Mrs. H. R. De Silva A tea was given at Walkins hall yesterday for alumnies and guests of the house. Helen Belle, Vivien Körhanser and Marion Mackenzie, Men Jennie Wormer was hostess. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fenberg enlistment suites at a bridge party Sat. June 17, 2004 at Vaughn, Billions Williams, Ela Baker Jane St. Clare, Alfred Larson, Richard Hunt Sunday dinner guests at Acea fraternity were Bert Sharp, Wichita; Fritz Amos, Humboldt; and Benny Coffin, Kansas City. Scarab, professional architectural internity, announces the initiation of Faurie F. McManus, of Lawrence. Sunday dinner guests at Delta Upnation feature Jennifer Gregg, Bregg Reward, Milded, Midget Mr. Herin, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs Naker, Wichita, and E. R. Hinker Guests at the Alpha Xi Delta house this week—end were Ena Heple, Winfield; Iona Pierce, St. Francis; Jeanne Dole, St. Luke's; John Furstenberg, St. John; St. Margaret Curley Yankee, St. Joseph, Mo.; Bobby Neely, Mrs. Winkler, St. Charles; Gabrielle Govee, Genevieve Hebir, Charlotte Biglow, Evelyn Gerard, City City, and Mr. Kidd, Mc. and Mr. Duaye, Dave Duaye, Genevieve Hebir, Garderer; Lillian Woodruff, Clyde Kathryn Kearn, Jolie, Zimmerman Kimley, Arm Ameng, Tullar, Marin Kimley, Arm Ameng, Tullar, Kimley, Richmond, Mo.; Elaine Hendel, Cert绳锁 Clack, Angelainger, Richmond, Lois Sichoba, Lincoln, Nebr. Sunday dinner guests at Sigma Kappa socrory were Martha Jane Doha, Kansas City, Mrs H. S. Dickey, and Mrs M. G. Hobley, Sylvan Groves. Sunday guests at Delta Sigma Lambda house were R. C. Bump and John Baum, Jr. Miss Ella Baker, B.S.30, spent the week-end as the guest of Mary Louis Ferberg and Miss Tess Vaughn. Homecoming guests at Phil Alpha Hall, 1326 South Grand Ave, Robert Kane, Ellis Clark, James Ralph Hodges, Dick Mermis, James Gilmore, Stephen Church, Daniel Miller, Mark Wardt Accacia fraternity held its annual pig roast dinner for its alumni, Saturday night. Approximately eight-five attended the dinner. Mr. H. W. Underwood of Camden, 4. J. was a week-end guest at Phi Cappa Pai house. Guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house were William Anthony, Bruce Bennigan, Michael Butler, Alain Batty, Wilt Brown, Jenton Bunjo, Brown Jack, Wilburn W. McCleming Childs, B. U. Church, Merrill Chessell, C. R. Bickham, Richard Grisham, Lealio Davis, Henry Dodderley, Duffy Fountain Founder Richard Grisham, David King, Judd John, David Judd, J. C. Jippe, Walter Lemon, Robert Lemon, Frank Lenaski, Donald Schofeld, Fraser Vickel, E. Willa Miss Charlene House, Miss Isabel Parker, and Basta Ross were week-end guests of Kappa Alpha Theta house. Art Exhibits Featured By Painting Department Vedder Memorial Exhibition Is Most Important of Year The departments of painting and design are featuring interesting exhibits this month. The art exhibit, according to Prof. Bloch Bloch, will be the most important event for the year. It includes the Eibu Vedder Memorial exhibition, circulated throughout the country. This collection, now on display at Spooner-Tayer Museum, includes paintings by the late Eibu Vedder, American artist of the nineteenth cent Eilhu Vedder, painter, sculptor, illustrator, writer, and a member of the National Academy of Design died in Rome in 2016. He was most honoreably mention at the Paris expoion in 1889. Vedder was also a member of American artists, mural painters, and sculptors. He is represented at the Metropolitan museum of Art in New York by two paintings, "The Pleiades," and "Afri-ta" The exhibition of contemporary prints, sponsored by the American Federation of Arts, will continue to be one of the chief features in the department of design until Nov. 21. This exhibition is open from 30 to 30, west administration building. The exhibit cases in room 210 show photographs of various types of work, paintings, and sculptures. There are also photographs of four small sculptures by Bernard Frazier, Jillian Aikman, and ado Taft, the sculptor, in Chicago, and of wall decorations by Marjorie Whitney, instructor in the department. The exhibition also contains graphs of books, lettered, bound in microcue, and tooled in gold by Clara Martinez and Margaret Parry instructors in design. In the corridor of third floor, west of designs, most of which are for tex- Administration building is a showing tile. The Industrial commission of the Y. W. C. A. will have a special speaker at Horsley House Wednesday at a supper in the hotel's courtyard, a garment worker from Kansas City will talk on her work in the factory and a last summer for factory girls. The talk will be of special interest to those mentoring in economics and sociology, and the industrial groups in the cities. The committee asks those who plan to attend the supper and host Miss Hale to make a presentation at Horsley house by Tuesday evening. Is Your Watch Insured Against Loss by Theft Without Extra Cost? Ask Us. F. H. ROBERTS Jeweler 833 Mass. St. What is Your Opinion? AN_INVITATION ABOUT--- The "Apostles" Concert Course Big Six Mix-Up New "Cribbing" Rule Wednesday Nite Dances In view of recent charges hurled hither and thither by various colleges in the Big Six, we might very profitably derive some benefit by inviting student, faculty, and outside opinion on the general subject of intercollegiate athletics. With this as a premise, the Kansas asks its readers to write briefly and intelligently their opinions on college athletics, as now played. Such points as these might be considered: (1) What is the purpose of athletics? (2) How permanent do you suspect our present attitude to be? (3) Do intercollegiate athletics, as now played, tend to disrupt or to unify college life? (4) What should be the alumni concern in the teams? (5) Is recruiting from high schools ethical? From other colleges? How much is it practiced? How far should it be practiced? (6) What effect do the reputations of athletic teams have on prospective students, parents of students, donors of gifts, and the general public? (7) What specific changes in the present system might be considered with some justification. The Kansas invites all sorts of comment on these and other questions. Letters must be signed, though the name of the author will not be used if so desired; and the Kansas reserves the right to condense any letter if necessary. ABOUT--- Rallies Committee of 31 Organized Cheering Fraternity Taxation Varsity Dance Schedule The Campus Opinion Column in the University Daily Kansan is meant primarily for student use. There is hardly a day goes by but what you hear, see, or read something on which you have a definite opinion. Write it out and send it in! Your name must be on it when it reaches the Kansan — But your name will not be printed with the article if you make such a request. Mail all comments to--- Editor, University Daily Kansan.