FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1927 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE THREE Kappa Eta Kappa National Meeting Held in Lawrence Professional Engineering Fraternity Delegates Are Entertained This Week Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity, is holding its national convention at the University of Kansas in the guest of the Delta chapter of Kansas. The convention opened yesterday, and will continue today and tomorrow. The meetings yesterday and today were taken up largely by committee and officer's reports, and tomorrow national officers will be elected and other national business will be attended to. There are chapters at Iowa, Minnesota, Winston and Kansas Universities and at Massachusetts University. The delegates have been sent. The national officers present are Prof. C. J. Lapp, instructor of physics at the University of Iowa, national president and Meridith Brewer, Boston Mass., national secretary-treasurer. Fraternity Founde datt town In an interview Professor Lapp explained that Kappa Eta Kappa was a social fraternity founded at the University of Iowa in 1922 with its membership made up entirely of electrical engineers. Scholarship is stressed above other things and to be able to meet these requirements must meet, aside from a good charge, high philanthropic requirements. In nearly every school where they have a chapter Kappa Eta Kappa leads the other engineering fraternities in scholarship. One of the pleasing things to Lapp is the fact that everywhere he has visited the university, he co-operated with the fraternity and co-operative with them in every undertaking. Banquet Given at Tea Room A banquet given for the visiting delegates and officers at the Thumbitt-bning. Prof. F, Ellis Johnson of the School of Engineering acted as tautmaster. Johnson assured the delegate that the faculty of the School of Engineering had highest respect for their chapter here. The annual spring party is to be given at the chapter house this evening from 9 until 1. The chaperones are Mrs. Deichert, house mother, Mrs. D. S. Carleton, Mrs. H. H. Lane, and Mrs. Leaverton. Announcements The University Women's Glee Club will hold a rehearsal Monday April 9, 4:30 in Marvin hall auditorium. All members will be present to be present for this rehearsal. The Newcomer's Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Frank Stockton, 1216 Louisiana street, April 21 at 3:04 elcock. It was previously announced that the meeting would be held at the home of Mrs. Bawson. The bus which will transport the men of the E, O, T, C unit to Kansas City Saturday will leave pomply at 5:30 p. m. All men who will perform in the bridge building and bugle and drum corps demonstration will report to the military department at this time, in complete uniform. Major J. R. Cygor Fine Arts Students Make Use of Varied Replies in Accepting Invitation to Annual Jamboree "Ary old glass today, lady?" **A** wheelbarrow full of old glass bottles, mugs, and various other vessels, surrounded by a group of students, appeared suddenly at the architecture department in the Engineer building. There was no time, while the architects tried to decide whether a glass barrage was about to begin or whether a novelty collection for Spoon-Thayer was being made up. No drastic steps being taken by the offensive, the shouting finally caused and matters were exasperated to the satisfaction of everybody. In response to the invitation sent them by the architects for the Jamboree taught their art student designs of furniture and decorations. It seemed to show greater personal interest in the affair to send a number of replies instead of one formal answer. The result of someone's invention was found in the wheel-barrow. Americans Are Charged With Offense to Chinese (United Press) Foking, April 8.—Mrs. Milford Mitchell of Pittsburgh, and William Burton, of Columbus, Ohio, have been charged by Chinese authorities, it was revealed today, with an offence for which the extreme penalty would be death, but for which the pensions will be increased to nerve fine and imprisonment. The charge formally laid against the Americans, who were arrested by Chinese police, allowed that they had been identified to subvert the government. Read—Kansan Want Ads! TAXI & STORAGE PINONE 12 Hunsinger's 920-220 Mass. Miss Rosemary Ketchan, Msrc. Revoxix Sebary, and Msrc. Clara Mantra also sent a jay, elaborately gilled. A heavily brown mug of clay origin was signed by Juro, and expressed the sentiment "When the roll is called up yonder I will be there." One of the most personal touches was found on a shiny funnel, stating "Each for himself und all for each other," and "Chunt von good heck." Mary old bottles, some of them suspiciously labeled, cups and stains redden of beer, tin pans and beakers, and "little brown jugs", "abunded. Each piece was suitably inscribed with the name and sentiments of the sender. One particularly attractive jacket was painted in blue, and represented the Bronx Beauty, feared and undefined. Prices for eye-gouging $2, for nose busting $2.50, and for Big Jobs, $15." National Baseball Week April 4-11 1 Baseball, $1.25 value 1 Glove, $2.00 value Both for $1.98 D. & M. Sporting Goods Ernst & Son 826 Mass. 721 Mass. St. Your Easter Suit need cost you only $25 The quality is there, men, also the style. Many of these suits have hand- held collars and hand- made buttonholes insuring a fit and the appearance of a higher priced suit. A look is all we ask—the suits will sell themselves to you. Some with 2-Pants. —Tonight— Billie Dove in "Sensation Seekers" VARSITY —Tomorrow— From wash-tub drudge to goldmine queen—but what a price she maid! Shows: 3-7-9 Prices: Mat, 10-35; Eve, 10-40 Comedy News Felix LAZMMLE GERRIDGE AFTERSON'S PERCH OF THE DEVIL MAE BUSCH PAT O'NALLE Starts Monday — Lillian Gish in "The Scarlet Letter" See the Kansas Relays! Ride to the "Kansas Relays" in a Good Used Car We never close 1926 Standard Buick Sedan, like new. 1924 Master Buick Sedan. 1924 Master Buick Touring. 1924 Hudson Seden. 1924 4-Cyl. Buick Touring, a dandy. 1923 Buick Six Touring. Lawrence Buick Co. 7th at N. H. St. Phone "Buick 402" We can help you finance that fraternity loan. All of Our Meals Are Good but Our Sunday Meals Are Even Better De Luxe Cafe Soap Special 9 cakes of Jergen's Fine Violet Soaps $1.15 value for 85 cents Rankin's Drug Store 11th & Mass. Phone 678 Stop in on your way home. Quite naturally, Brick's is favored by the patronage of an expressively large proportion of the Hill's most intelligent students. Why not Brick's today? Strawberry Shortcake and Fresh Strawberry Sundae Blue Mill For Breakfast, Dinner or Late Supper Throughout the many years of our existence there has developed about Brick's an atmosphere no restaurant of recent origin could possess. BRICK'S The OREAD CAFE Run by Harry The Way to a Return To Student Government PACHACAMAC TICKET Council Officers President ... Raymond Nichols Vice-President ... Charles Haines Secretary ' ... Walter V. Freese Treasurer ... Don Buckley Cheerleader Bates Huffaker Representatives College Jack Dressler Murray Danglade George Roscoe Dunkin Kimble Clifford Anderson Chris Partington Tom McFarland Leland Gradinger Engineer Vernon Krehbiel William Mullins Ralph Nusser Graduate Orbia Michie Pharmacy Gene McIntire Law Martin Dickenson Business Upton McGill Education Maurice Krahl Fine Arts F. H. Rockhold Medicine Dick Sheldon Senior Class Officers President ... Jim Smith Treasurer ... Wayde Grinstead Junior Class President ... Carl Addington Treasurer . George Lehmberg Prom Managers . Paul Parker ... Fred Heryer Sophomore Class President ... Paul Woolley Treasurer ... Paul White Hop Manager ... Bill Keeler ... Bob Borth "Back to Student Government"