THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN RECITAL HERE APRIL 8 K. U. Student Succumbs T. Acute Appendicitis 21 Ateneo Offers Spanish Musica by Harry Cooper and Carmen Staley El Ateno has announced a meeting for the afternoon of Thursday, April 8th, at 4:30 o'clock in Fraser. Two Kansas City Musicians will give compositions. Mr. Harry E. Cooper, of the American Guild of Organists, and a prominent teacher and pianist of Kansas City, Mo., will be assisted by Miss Carmen E. Staley, soprano. Hail Hall is on the public This is the first time that a language club on the Hill has attempted anything on this scale, but it is exasperating. The attendance will justify the plan. The Caprice Español which Mr. Cooper will play is said to be very unusual technically as well as musically. Miss Stalley will play the Hara. The Carminum in French. The complete program will be announced later. Medical Women Arrange Series of Six Lectures The Women's Medical Association under the leadership of Dr. Martha Bacon, has arranged for a series of lectures to be given every two weeks at Bornice Kubu, c22 is president of the Bornice Kubu Dorothy Shelley is the secretary. The first lecture, "Hypnotism and Spiritualism" has been given by Dr. Mary L. Estabrook. The second lecture "The Relation of Music and Medicine," will have given Nicholson. Myrtle Friedel will give Homeopathy Her topic is, "What is Homeopathy?" The fourth lecture, "The Relation of the Petituary Gland," will be given by Laura Henry. The fifth lecture, "Röntgenogengestaltung (X-ray)" will be giv- The medical association, through the efforts of Dr. Bacon took its place upon the Hill early last fall. Membership is open to women in the School of Pharmacy as well as those interested in medicine. BY THE WAY Raine Rahn. c22. has discontinued her work in the college for this year. She returned to her home in Topeka Friday. Geraldine Rogers, c23, spent Sunday in Topeka visiting friends. Nadine Cox, c. 22, Katherine Coulter, c. 22, and Cerrine McGhie, c. 22, spent Friday in Kansas City attending the Track Meet in the evening. Jane Obriener of St. Louis, Mo. and Thursa Chamblies of Kansas City, Mo., spent Saturday and Sunday at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Ellis Paul, c22, spent the week end at his home in Kansas City, Missouri. Professor Dockery of the Pay- ology department gave a talk Wednes- day evening at the Phi Chi. Frie- dale attended the reception of Psychology to Medicine." Miss Jessie Cline, instructor in the department of home economics will spend her Easter vacation at her home in Columbia, Mo. Dr. Florence Sherbon gave a talk on "The Health of the Child," Monday afternoon. This is one of a series of talks put out by the Red Cross Auxiliary. Berta Banker of Sapula. Ok., spent Sunday and Monday with her sister, Marta Banker, c20 at the Chi Omega house. Hasa Hillman, A. B. '17, and Helen Lockett, c'23, spent Saturday in Kansas City, Mo. Delta Upslaff fraternity held formal initiation Monday night for the following men: Fred W. Koester, c17; Hugh J. Vaughn, c20; Hugh H. Wood, c24; Earl J. Johnson, c23; Reba A. Pinkert, c21; Paul W. White, c23; Mac Stacy, c23 and R. Dean, W. Deaver, c23 Paul Haworth, 123, will spend his vacation in Burden. Virginia Hames, c'20, has returned a school after being called home by he death of her father, G. S. Hames, of Oak Grove, Mo. Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, assistant professor in the department of home economics, will spend her Easter vacation in Wichita. The Washburn Review says that a baseball game has not been scheduled between the Ichabods and Jaywalkers for the reason that K. U. did not jump at the chance to lose game. George McKee, e23, from Lathrop Mo., died Monday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock, at Simmons Hospital, 805 Ohio street, as a result of acute apoplexion. He was sick Sunday night March 21, at his house in house at 546 Louisiana Street. His parents arrived Mo.day morning and he was taken to the hospital. The body was taken to Lathrop, Mo., this week. Deceased is the second in the family in the year; an older brother died of acute appendicitis just nine months ago. ENGINEERS ENTERTAIN Tau Beta Pi, Engineering Fraternity Hold Banquet and Initiation Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, hold a banquet and initiation at the Eldridge House, Wednesday evening. Thirty-three men were at the banquet including a number of alumni and thirteen initiates. John L. Harrington, e95, Structural Engineer of Kansas University was down for the banquet and was one of the leading engineers of the facility. F. W, Epps, ce04, Bridge Engineer of the State Highway Commission of Topoka, was initiated as a graduate member. Prof. H. A. Rice acted as tastmaster at the banquet. Talks by the alumni, faculty and students of the engineering school were on the program. The program follows: Adoption of the metric System, by Dean P. F. Walker; The Social Side of Engineering, by F. W. Epps; Throughput of Harrington; Mercury Vapor Lamp; C. Long; The Human Side of Telephony, by Willis H. Beltz and Hunting a Job, by Warren R. Neumann. The following were initiated: F. V, Epps, H. C. Long, James Straman- Warren, Marwen R., J. R. Wahstehist, Jason Mason, Paul P. Murritt, John T. Tracey, Mason R., Paul C. Icolland, Thomas Mott, Gay E. Willis and Willis H. Beltz. Oklahoma men's and women's glee clubs will present the comic opera "Cobra" near future. The orchestra score is in the arrangement. for forty instruments. STUDENTS TOTAL 3578 Housing Problem Unsolved More Room in East Part of Town—Foster Registrar George O. Foster announced today that K.U. now has actually 3878 students and the total number of students who attended the summer session. "I remember when we celebrated the first one thousand students and that it is time we were celebrating news of more thousand." Mr. Foster said. According to Mr. Foster the housing situation is not improved. The general opinion is that students will be obliged to cease discriminating the poor and the needy where there are more "room for rent" signs than in the commonly known district. The students directory shows however that they are more students residing east of the main thoroughfare than ever before. Willard O. Hilton, A. B. '18, has come to the University to the vacancies in the State Survey which have been created by the resignation of P. C. Murphy and Francis L. Martin, A. B. '18. For the past five months Mr. Hilton has been engaged in the gathering of data for the survey, while employed in the offices of the Empire Gas and Fuel Company at Bartlesville, Oklahoma and in Chanute. Vacancy in State Survey Filled by Graduate PROTCH The College Tailor internity, Society and Commercial Printing and Engraving A. G. ALRICH 736 Mass St. FRESHMEN are we going to wear the caps? NO Get together. Four Bits Smoker—8:30 Eagles Hall Prof. Raymond A. Schwegler will deliver the third lecture of the series on "The Relation of Religion to Present Industrial and Social Problems" Wednesday evening at 7:30, in Myers Hall. His Subject will be "Christianity versus Materialism," and a large audience is ungled. The Y. W. C. A. classes in Comparative Religions will be held "tires day afternoon at the usual hours." "Social Principles of Jesus" by Dr. E. A. Edwards at 2:30, and "India and Other Mission Fields" by D. P. B. Lamson at 3:30. Both classes will be held in Fraser 209. Varsity "A" Club will meet Wednesday at 7:15 o'clock. Eastman Kodaks L. E. Waterman and Conklin Fountain Pens Women's Glee Club will meet at 7:30 o'clock, Wednesday evening, in Room 13 Fine Arts Building. The K. U. Compeopolitan Club会议 which was to have been held Saturday night will be postponed until September in the account of the World Outlook Campaign. THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass. St. F. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggist Announcements MADE CLEAN One of the principal factors in the great demand for is the snow-white cleanliness of the plant where it is made. MADE CLEAN SOLD CLEAN $5.00 PER COUPLE Zephyr Bread Bakery 6th and Mass. AND believe us, brother, you will get the most wonderful opportunity to satisfy that desire that you've had in years at JUNIOR PROM the kind you simply can't resist, the kind that thrills you, fills you with an insane desire to dancewill be a REAL feature of the Prom. INFUNMAL REAL SYNCOPATED JAZZ ... JUST A FEW SUGGESTIONS TO THE BASHFUL, BACKWARD OR NEGLECTFUL YOUTH Achoth 1811 Alpha Chi Omega 1495 Alpha Omicron Pi 1056 Alpha Xi Delta 1953 Chi Omega 365 Gamma Phi Beta 268 Kappa Alpha Theta 295 Kappa Kappa Gamma 240 Pi Beta Phi 99 Sigma Kappa 1198 CALL HER TO NIGHT. REMEMBER IT'S TO BE APRIL 16 DESPIE RUMORS TO THE CONTRARY No authorized dances are being given this week until Thursday. Those scheduled for Wednesday night are not authorized and the University Senate rules forbid students to attend unauthorized dances. The Student $ ^{1} $ Volunteers will meet at 6:45 o'clock, Wednesday, in Myers Hall. TAKEN by mistake- *Notebook*- Will person who unintentionally took my Economic and Financial History note telephone. Saturday afternoon please phone 1634. Teacher says I need every resource I have. I'll appreciate the return. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY YE JOLLY LITTLE TAILOR SAYS; YE JOLLY LITTLE TAILOR SAYS: Be it modes or manners, true distinction dwells in simplicity. Ed.V. Price & Co. tailored to order clothes exemplifies the art which conceals art—that dignity which—disdaining frills and furbrows, impresses by its absence of "fussy" details. Samuel G. Clarke 1033 Mass.St. EASTER LILIES Roses, Carnations, Pear, Violets, Jonquils, Etc. "Somebody" at home will appreciate some of these for Easter The Flower Shop 825 1:2 MAS8. ST. PHONE 621 "Before going home for the vacation I'm going to treat the "gang" to an Easter Dinner at The Oread Cafe "Bricks" said a "frost" today. "Its the best place in town to have a quiet lit tie party." Reel Tailors Let us make you moving pictures on the Screen of Fashion Our showing of Spring Patterns will aid you immensely in your selection of materials. 917 Mass. St. Wm. H. Schulz Can You Think of any Better Investment for a Dollar and a Quarter Subscription to than a Your School Paper for the Rest of the Year? The Daily Kansan Sent any Place on Earth Until the End of School $1.25 Call K. U. 66.