JANUARY 16,1946 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE SOCIALLY SPEAKING Delt's Elect Officers Newly elected officers of Delta Tau Delta fraternity are David Stimson, president; Ralph Hedges, vice-president; Robert Lee, recording secretary; Robert Bonebrake, corresponding secretary; and Glee Smith treasurer. O'Neal-Pattee * Finned Gamma Phi Beta has announced the pinning of Betty Jo O'Neal, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. B O'Neal, Ponca City, Okla., to Frank Pattatee, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Walter Pattatee, Smith Center. The announcement was made at dinner Friday by Mrs. Alph Baldwin, housemother, who received a corsage of gardenias and roses. Miss O'Neal wore red and white roses. Assisting in the ceremony were Jane Atwood and Jane Owen, who wore corsages of gardenias and roses. - * * A senior in the College, Miss O'Neal is president of Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Jay Janes. Pattee is an engineering freshman, and was a member of the Varsity football team. Before he entered the navy corps in 1942, he attended the University. He is affiliated with Sigma Chi fraternity. Chi Omega Has Guests Snencer Bayles Married Chi Omega Has Guests Sunday dinner guests at the Chi Omega house were Sgt. Harry Robb and Dean Schwartz, Kansas City; and Chris Thomas, Kansas City, Mo. Susan Grath, Manhattan, was a week-end guest. Virginia Belle Monahan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ames Monahan, Topeka, and Dr. Spencer Bayles, son of Dr. and Mrs. Ernest E. Bayles, Lawrence, were married at the bride's home, Saturday. Preceding the ceremony, Mrs. Willard A. Monahan, Jr., played while John Bayles lighted the candles. Dr. Bayles, the bridegroom's father, sang. A graduate of Kansas State college, Mrs. Bayles was a member of Alpha Delta pi sorority and Mortar Board. She received her master of art degree in nutrition from Columbia university. She is nutritionist in the out-patient department, University hospitals. A graduate of the University School of Medicine in 1944, Dr. Bayles is a resident in medicine and pathology at the University hospitals, Kansas City. He was affiliated with Fhi Gamma Delta fraternity and Nu Sigma Nu medical fraternity while attending the University. Alpha Chi Gives Buffet Guests at the Alpha Chi Omega buffet party Saturday were William Deggen, Lee Roy Amundson, Robert Marcy, Dean Banker, James Bruce, Leo Hines, Thomas Butler, William Nord, Eric Eulich, Richard Cray, Robert Mac Jones, Robert Elbel, Hubert Church, Art Hoodman, A. R F. Landon, Kenneth Nohe, Robert Edwards, John Beach. Thomas Conroy, William Lytle, Max Howard, Harlan Lill, Millard Musselman, Meloin Stephens, Gary McKee, Ralph Robert Hollibaugh, George Waugh, William Richardson, Jacob John Kindscher, Wayne Bear, Robert Foerschier, Douglas McCloud, Clarence Jenkins, Edward Schneitner, Joseph Kott, Paul Luckenbill, John Strandeberg, Robert Tenant, Donald Bledsoe, William Schmeider, Laurence Silks, James Findley, Robert Spencer, Richmond McClure, John Kapfer, Kenneth Miller, Donald Curry, Thomas Yound, and John Light. Piller-Ball Pinning Announced Kappa Kappa Gamma has announced the pinning of Catherine Piller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl J. Piller, Great Bend, to Charles Ball, son of Mr. and Mrs. C.R.Ball, Pasadena, Calif. Mrs. Andrew McKay, housemother, who received a Jolliffe Hall Is K.U.'s Most Versatile House MARY ELLA BARBER (This is another in a series of articles by the Daily Kansan to acquaint the campus with the various organized houses, their members, officers, and histories.) Jolliffe hall—the most versatile house on the Hill—has served as the University club, the Acacia fraternity, and both men's and women's dormitories. ☆ ☆ ☆ In 1941 O. Jolliffe, Reabody banker and oil man, endowed $50,000 for a men's dormitory. In 1943, with the decrease in men students and the lack of accommodations for women, Jolliffe hall, 1505 Ohio street, was made a women's residence for the duration. Jollife's colors are green and white, and its flower is the white carnation. Traditional parties are the open house held every fall, and the Christmas party. Mrs. Elizabeth Kite is serving her second year as housemother. Mary Ella Barber is president of the barber. Other officers are Dorothy Wheat, vice president; Rose Marie Trueddell secretary - treasurer; Elizabeth Young, social chairman; Colleen Jones, song leader; and Mary Goodell, intramural manager. Other members of Jolliffe hall include Clarice Beaver, Betty Ann Benjamin, Phyllis Betts, Margaret Bower, Lucena Burns, Betty Jo Canning, Virginia Cassell, Lois De-Wald, and Virginia DeWald. corsage of pink camellias, made the announcement at dinner Saturday. Sara Krebbbiel and Nancy Slater, who assisted in the ceremony, wore gardenias. Miss Piller's corsage was an orchid. Barbara Erickson, Jean Fitzgerald, Carol Graham, Mary Frances Roady, Audrey Heidecker, Etta Henry, Winifred Louis, Helen Miller, Virginia Moseman, Carolyn Owsley, Marian Probst, Billie Stillman, Frances Thelen, Barbara Weaver, Martha Webb, Kathleen Webster, and Mary Yost. Miss Piller is a sophomore in the College. An engineering senior, Ball is a member of Phi Delta Theta. Alpha Delta Pi has announced the pledging of Elinor Browne, Kansas City, a College junior. Alpha Delta Pledges Browne Kappa Kappa Gamma has announced the pinning of Marilyn McEwen, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Fred J. McEwen, Wichita, to J. F. Kelsey, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Kelsey, Osawatomy. The announcement was made by Mrs. Andrew McKay, housemother, who wore a corsage of pink camellias. Hanna Hendrick and Manjorie Free, who assisted, received gardenia corsages. Miss McEwen wore an archid. Marilyn McEwen Pinned Eastwood, Mattern Paintings Shown in Nelson Gallery Miss McEwen is a senior in the College. A junior in the School of Medicine, Kelsey is a member of Nu SigmaNu medical fraternity. Two paintings by Prof. Raymond Eastwood and one by Prof. Karl Mattern, of the department of drawing and painting, are included in a new exhibition at the William Rockbill Nelson art gallery in Kansas City, Mo. Prof. and Mrs. Mattern, Professor Eastwood, and Miss Ann Murray, University museum assistant, attended the opening of the exhibition last week. 'Spring Mess' Is Phi Delt Tradition From six founders at Miami university, Ohio, in 1848, Phi Delta Theta has grown to more than 60,000 members and 64 of its 105 active chapters have passed the half-century mark of existence. Kansas Alpha chapter of Phi Delta Theta was chartered on the University campus in 1882. Since that time, the white carnation and the colors of azure and argent have been borne by this chapter. Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Phi Delf housemother, has been with the fraternity for 19 years. The "Spring Mess" or formal dinner-dance is a traditional affair which will be held again after reoccupation of the chapter house in February. Temporary quarters for the fraternity are located at 1409 Tennessee street. James Sanders is chapter president. Other officers are Donald Ong, treasurer; Carl Clark, secretary; Benjamin White, alumni secretary; John McGuckin, historian, and Keith Congdon, warden. Other active members include William Jenson, Charles Aylward Charles Ball, Harold Baker, Ever- JAMES SAUNDERS ette Gille, Louis Goehring, Richard Hawkinson, Michael Kuklenski, J. Bertrand Morris, Stanley Hobbs, James Gregath, Fred Helm, Patrick Maloney, Jack Morgan, Charles McCord, John McShane, Harold McClure, William Shaffer, David Smart, Donald Yelton, Joan Murray, Charles Putz, Holland Chalfant, and Neil Thompson Pledges to Phi Delt are Cecil Chappelow, Robert Hess, Ralph Edwards, John Stauffer, Donald Owen, Thornton Cooke, Richard Housewerth, Russell Baltis, Dean Johnson, Robert Franklin, and Frank Newell. John Gorman, Robert Hollibaugh, Garland Weed, Jack Kendree, James Black, Gene Alford, William Kelly, George Waugh, Rey Irwin, Fred Gableman, Willigim Martindell, and Jack Greer. Locksley Entertains Sunday dinner guests at Locksley were Beverly Brown, Parsons, and Maxine Dunkelberg, Capt. Don Andrews and Vance Hunter, Los Angeles; were guests Monday. Kappa Has Sports Scholarship Trophies MARY MORRILL (This is another in a series of articles by the Daily Kansan to acquaint the campus with the various organized houses, their members, officers, and histories.) 冰 肉 肉 Parties at Halloween, Christmas, and other holidays are annual events for the "Kappa's." Omega chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma, current holder of both scholarship and intramural trophies for University women, was established on the campus Dec. 17, 1883 The national fraternity is in its 75th year, having been founded Oct. 13, 1870, at Monmouth College, Monmouth, Ill. The organization has a total membership of more than 38,000 with chapters in 74 colleges and universities. Scholastic awards, fellowships, and foreign exchange scholarships given by the national fraternity since the 1930's have totaled $52,000. Competition for the awards is open to all college women members or non-members of the fraternity. The foreign scholarships of Kappa Kappa Gamma are now known as the "Virginia Gildersleeve Awards," in appreciation of the alumna's leadership in foreign affairs and her active interest in the fraternity. In addition to its members in the service which have included Lt. Col. Winifred Stilwell, Kansas City, an alumna of the University, and its members who worked in the establishment of service women's centers in large cities, Kappa has contributed during the war with the Nora Waln gift fund of $15,000 which was distributed in England to war suffering children. Miss Waln also contributed the royalties from her novels in this venture. The Nora Walt fund has been extended to include rehabilitation of the mothers and children of the suffering nations in Europe. Miss Walt is now in Germany as foreign correspondent for the Atlantic Monthly Magazine. She expects to return to this country soon, and will speak at the University at Honors Convocation. April 30. The budge of the fraternity is the golden key. Fraternity colors are light and dark blue, and the official flower is the fleur-de-lis. Mrs. Andrew McKays is housemother. Omega chapter has a membership of 56. Officers include Mary Morrill, president; Marilyn McEwen, vice-president; Gloria Gray, pledge chairman; Sue Crabb, treasurer. Active members are Carrie Arnold, Marilyn Child, Marjorie Free, Beverly Frizzel, Hanna Hedrick, Martha Lou Little, Marilyn Maloney, Marilyn McEwen, Barbara Neely, Elizabeth Prentice, Lucy Smith, Cora Lou Child, Patricia Ferguson, Gloria Gray, Jane Hayes, Sara Krehbiel, Marita Metcalf. Nancy Miller, Mary Louise Samson, Trene Sandelius, Irene Sewell. Thayer Displays Prints, Drawings Two loan exhibits will be on display at Thayer Art museum through January, Mrs. Mary Warner, curator, announced today. A collection of black and white prints including work by three University artists, Karl Matern, Miss Maude Ellsworth, and Arnold Jacobson, circulated by the Midwestern Museums association, is in the second floor North gallery. "Look at Your Neighborhood," an exhibit of drawings and paintings with a city planning theme, is in the second floor South gallery. Picnic Grounds To Be Completed in Spring Prospective picnickers will have to wait until late spring for completion of the University picnic grounds near the dance platform by Petter lake, Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, said today. Difficulty in obtaining labor will delay construction of the three stone ovens being designed by George M. Beal, professor of architecture, Dean Werner explained. The picnic grounds will include tables and benches to accommodate about 50 persons. Since the date of completion is not known, no plans for a formal opening have been made, Dean Werner said. Graduates Appointed To Teaching Posts Three University graduates have been appointed to teaching positions through the teachers appointment bureau, Prof. H. E. Chandler, announced today. Harvey F. Nelson, who received his master's degree in 1966, is physical education instructor at the army air base at Guard. Belful Hawley, a music education graduate in 1939, will teach public school music in Olathe. Mr. Nelson and Mr. Hawley have just returned from military service. Chauncey A. Yeomans, a graduate student in 1914, will become principal of the Selden royal high school next semester. Seven Students To Present Musical Recital Tomorrow Betty Rae Thomas, Marilyn Smart, Marion Sheldon, Marylee Masterson, Mildred Evelyn Aleson, and Mary Carolyn Daugherty will sing in the regular Fine Arts recital at 3:00 p.m. tomorrow in the Frank Strong hall auditorium. Mary Jane Waggoner will play a piano number. To Commission 34 The 34 navy V-12 engineers to be graduated from the University in February will be commissioned here, and then sent on a four months cruise, Captain Chester A. Kunz of the navy, announced today. Following the cruise, the men may request additional training, or, if eligible, be discharged. Dorothy Shelden, Nancy Stephan, Jean Murray, Jeanne McGrew, Mary Louise Ainsworth, Eleanor Churchill, Patricia Glover, Nancy Goering, Martha Laffer, Mary Margaret Morris, Patricia Moyer, Catherine Piller, Mary Kay Sims, Nancy Slater, Mary Zeller, Alison Jones, Maxine Gunfly. The pledge class includes Mary Jean Hoffman, Nancy Hullings, Martha Goodrich, Barbara Schreiber, Sarah Smart, Jane Tansel, Ella Louise Barbee, Elizabeth Berry, Barbara Day, Marlyn Frizell, Eloise Hodgson, Barbara Olson, Virginia Rogers, Georgianna Sewell, Elizabeth Sifers, and Mary Valentine.