NOVEMBER 14.1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Gaynor, Society Edito Guests of D.U.'s Guests at a "manor house" formal dance Friday night at the Delta Upsilon house were: Margaret Logan, Nancy Jackson, Jean McIntire, Josephine Byerley, Patricia Creel, Joan Larson, Jean Francisco, Patricia Zachman, Barbara Smith, Jo Ann Weworth, Alice Ackerman, Eleanor Albright, Maybele Karner, Joan Power, Helen Harkrader, Virginia Stephenson, Marjorie Darby, Marjorie Boyle, Mary Ainsworth, B. Ann Brown, Lice Peterson, Topeka; and Mary Tanner, Kansas City, Mo. Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Warden,Mr. and Mrs.Lloyd Houston, Mr. and Mrs.Edward Nelson. Alpha Omicron Pi entertained its patronesses and alumnae with a coffee and dessert Monday night. Ketzler-Evans Pinned A.O. Pi's Entertain Chi Omega has announced the pinning of Joan Louise Ketzler, daughter of Major and Mrs. K. N. Ketzler, Ft. Leavenworth, to William Allen Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Evans, Kansas City, Mo. The announcement was made Friday night at the chapter house with the passing of chocolates. Miss Ketzler received an orchid corsage. Mrs Edith Martin, housemother, and Patricia Coolidge and Alice Rose Shankland, who assisted Miss Ketzler, received corsages of white chrysanthemums. Miss Ketzler is a college sophomore. Mr. Evans, a member of Ph. Kappa Psi, is a senior in the School. --night. Pledge classes of Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha Delta Pi will be guests at a coke party Thursday afternoon. Burton Visits Tipperary Donald Burton, Russell, was a dinner guest Monday at Tipperary. Smith-Butler Wed The marriage of Miss Evelyn Margaret Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Sumption, Santa Monica, Calif, to Ensius William P. Butler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mayo P. Butler, Seattle, Wash., took place Nov. 8 at the Ft. Schuyler Presbyterian church in New York. Mrs. Butler attended the University last year, where she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega. Ensign Butler, a member of Sigma Chi, was a V-12 engineering student at the University last year. The couple will live in Daviesville, R.I., where Ensign Butler is stationed. - * * Guests of A.D. Pi Sunday dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house were Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Conner, Miss Ellen Conner, and Mrs. M. C. Hardman, Leavenworth, Miss Suzanne Reilly, Leavenworth, and Miss Ruth Reid, Kansas City, Mo., were weekend guests. Locksley Has Visitors Miss Joyce Morgan, Wichita; Phyllis Ellis, Ens. Vic Crangh, Hutchinson; and Lt. Dick Wildan, Ft. Worth, Texas; were guests Monday at Locksley hall. Dinner guests Sunday were Miss Jean Corwin, Wakeeney; Pfc. Merlin Corwin, Topeka; Miss Ruby Peck, Fremont, Neb., Catherine Rodeeer, Norme Hoff, and Anna Wakenhut. James Yoxall, Wakeeney, was a guest Sunday. Miss Barbara Willis, Kansas City, Mo., visited the hall Saturday. * * Pearsons Visit Chi O's Mrs. Marie Pearson and daughter, Ethel, were Sunday dinner guests at the Chi Omega house. Pledges Entertain The Pi Beta Phi pledge class entertained Sigma Alpha Epsilon pledges at an hour dance Tuesday Exchange Dinners Thursday Will Begin Season Series Exchange dinners among sororities and dormitories will begin Thursday night, Jane Miller, Pan-Hellenic council president, announced today. Five girls from each sorority and dormitory, with the exception of four from Jolliffe, Foster, and Sleepy Hollow halls, and three from Ricker hall, will attend dinners at organized houses, Miss Miller said. Alpha Chi's Give Dance Alpha Chi Omega pledges entertained at a dance Friday night. The chapter house was decorated in blue and white with a bedtime theme, and pledges and their guests wore night-shirts. Theta's Have Guests Dinner guests Sunday of Kappa Alpha Theta were William Sharp, Charles Marsh, Keith Wilson, Frank Davis, Ens. Robert Bayles, Roderick Maclvor, Donald Fricker, Charles Hunter, Duane Kline, Charles Wagstaff, and S 2 c Ted Sciacqua and S 2 c Larmarr Denny, Norman, Okla. Weekend guests were Mrs. Charles Hunter, Miss Katherine Burchfield and Miss Nancy Haffner, Kansas City, Mo.; Miss Joan Moore, Miss Virginia Stuber, and Miss Marjorie Snyder, and Miss Marjorie Snyder, Winfield. William Brackman, Wichita, and Charles Bothorf were dinner guests Friday. D. Holds Openhouse Guests at the Delta Gamma open house Saturday were: Hubert Kintzel, Robert Holli-baugh, Richard Nelson, Bruce Worthington, George Darsie, Dale Haynes, Joseph Barrington, Rensselaer McClure, Ens. Give Arnold, John Oear, James Richardson, Lowell Prenske, Preston Clement Ben McKinley, Orval Kaufman, William Richardson, John Gardner, Glenn Crittenden, William Riehl, Bolivar Marquez, William Reeder, Lew Purinton, Patrick Thiessen, William Addis, William Wellborn, Donald Cochran, David Shaad, Dale Smith, Thomas Mayhew, Fainaf Funston, Edward Brunk, Richard Marsh, Edgar Williams, Donald Jackson, Lloyd Eisenhower, William Lacy, Robert Dafforn, Albert Welch, Richard Menuet. William Burgess, James Conard Jack Peeler, Eugene Sawyer, Wendell Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Slason Michael Nichols, Otis Harding, Marshall Fryer, Albert Welch, Carol Stuart, Helen Hovey, and Dorothy Oelschlaeger. WE SERVE Vegetable Plates Steaks Dinners Delicious BARS and STRIPES BILL'S GRILL Wm. Pappas Across from the Courthouse 1109 Mass. Harkness in Law Lt. Thomas Harkness, '43, recently discharged from the air corps, is enrolled this semester in the School of Law. His wife, the former Roberta Breitweiser, who attended the University in 1943, has been discharged from the Spars and will join her husband soon. In Medical Corps Lt. James M. Mott, Jr., who received his medical degree from the University in 1944, has been assigned to the medical corps at Scott Field, Ill., near St. Louis. Stoneback Honored Capt. Ray G. Stoneback, '41, has been awarded the bronze star medal, He is assigned to the 10th air force, which is assisting with the redeployment of Chinese troops. Capt. Stoneback entered the army in December, 1941, and was sent overseas in November, 1943. Blades in Red Cross Josephine Blades, A.B. '28 and M.A. 31, has been a Red Cross representative with Evacuation hospital 91 in Europe for the past two and one-half years. Before that, she was in the government offices in Washington. * * ON KFKU Miss Blades visited the department of romance languages recently. After a brief visit to her home in Independence, she will return to Washington on her way to China as a member of the personnel staff of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation administration. 9:30 p.m. National Education week program, presented by Tonight: Thursday: 2:30 p.m. Book review program. "The Thurber Carnival" by James Thurber, reviewed by Professor John Hankins. 2:45 p.m. Spanish lesson. K.U. Food Handlers Attend Two-Day Health School Food handlers of K.U. enrolled 100 per cent in the two-day school conducted by the state board of health for employees in Douglas county food-handling establishments. Thirty-nine students were among the 117 employees of the University department of food service who comprised one third of the enrollment, in which 60 other establishments were represented. All K.U. food handlers are required to report for annual chest X-rays and serological tests. Permanent employees wear clean white uniforms daily, and dishes are pre-washed, then sterilized at $ 180^{\circ} \mathrm{F} $ The bacteriology department of the University periodically checks bacteriological count and butter fat content of milk used. Y.W. Plans Social Meeting A joint social meeting of the Y.W.C.A. advisory board and cabinet will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. W. S. Johnson, 1509 Crescent road, Miss Martha Peterson, chairman of the advisory board, announced today. THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH It's WRIGHTS for Records For Homecoming Get These New Hit Tunes SPIKE JONES "Drip, Drip, Drip, Sleepy Lagoon" PERRY COMO "That Feeling in the Moonlight" TOMMY DORSEY "A Door Will "It's Gotta Be This Or That" BENNY GOODMAN Also— "Rhapsody in Blue"—George Gershwin Albums WRIGHT'S Corner of 9th and Mass. Phone 725 NEW at the LIBRARY "Our Age of Unreason;" a study of the irrational forces in social life, by F. Alexander. "The First Woman Doctor," the story of Elizabeth Blackwell, by R. Baker. "National Self-determinism," by A. Cobban. "Radio Production Directings," by A. R. Crews. 1945," by A. P. Hackett. "Price and Related Controls in the United States," by S. E. Harris. "Radio and English Teaching," by M. J. Herzberg. "The Psychology of Children's Drawings from the First Stroke to the Coloured Drawing;" by H. K. Eng. "Fifty Years of Best Sellers, 1895- 1945," by A. P. Hackett. "The Axis on the Air," by H. Ettlinger. "Price Flexibility and Employment," by O. R. Lange. "Off Mike;" radio writing by the nation's top radio writers, by J. Lawrence. Correspondent, by S. J. Lucas. "Radio Workshop Plays," by J. M. Morris, "Meteorology for Pilots," by R. W. Mudge. "Yellow Magic, the Story of Penicillin," by J. D. Ratcliff. "The Art of D. Hill." "Combat Correspondent," by J. G. Lucas. "The Wayfarers," by D. 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