3 Campus Society Phi Beta Pi—Guests at the spring formal held at the Country Club Saturday night were; Dorothy Mae Dahlin, Virginia Urban, Gerry Nelson, Martha Cable, Pat McMahon, Willa Wolfe, Mrs. Robert Hull, Mrs. Frank Strick, Mrs. Emerson Yoder, Barbara Heinsohn, Doris Anstadt, Beverly Bohan, Kathleen Jones, Lorraine Tetter, Margaret Steeper, Clella Kutz, Barbara Rigdon. Lorna Ecfieldle, Mary Stark, Adrienne Hiscox, Eloise Crandall, Jeanne Faubion, Jackie Woods, Arlene Bronaugh, Helen Peperell, Marylyn Brand, Ida, Woodburn Doris Jane Demaree, Jim Bridgens, and Ima D. Pool, Mexico, Mo. Chaperons were Dr. and Mrs. N P. Sherwood and Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Tenenberg. Guests at dinner Sunday were Dr. and Mrs. Noble P. Sherwood, Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Tenenberg, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Sealy, Helen Peperrell, and Jim Bridges. Gamma Phi Beta — Guests at the Freshman Cruise Saturday night were: Stan Hobbs, Johnny Murray, Harold Warwick, Kieth Congdon, Bill Chestnut, Wayne Hird, Ted Batchelder, Frank Wendlandt, Jim Baska, Bert Kintzel, Hal Wilcox, Page Brent, Jack Pealer, Bunk Chase, and Dude Carson, Washburn. Delta Tau Delta -Edgar Allbaugh, Richland, former chapter member, and Dean F. T. Stockton were dinner guests Monday night. Carruth Hall - Elva Meuer and Max Banks, Gypsum, former resident of Templin hall who was recently discharged from the army, were Sunday dinner guests. Mr. and Mrs. John Worral, Kansas City, were visitors Sunday. Pvt. Emil Heuer, Nashville, Kan, former hall resident, who recently returned from Germany and from a hospital in Springfield, is visiting on the campus. Phi Delta Theta—S/1c Frank Pomeroy, Holton, former chapter member, was a dinner guest Monday evening. Tipperary—Jody St. John, Richmond, M; Sora Webb, Blue Springs, Mo; and Connie Petterson, Plainville, were weekend guests. Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Park, Blue Springs, Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Richardson, Kansas City, Mo., were guests Sunday. Mrs. W. M. Sno-dgrass, Wetmore, and Mrs. W. W. O'Dell, Kansas City, Mo., were guests last week. Virginia Stephenson, Lawrence and Miss Sara Webb, Blue Springs Mo., were dinner guests yesterday. Foster Hall — Dixie Tidswell, Olathe, was a weekend guest. Alpha Chi Omega — Sgt. Bob Cooley, Pratt was a dinner guest Saturday night. Cornell University sponsored a Festival of Contemporary American Arts last weekend. Meltvedt Marriage Announcement Made Col. and Mrs. H. G. Meltvedt, Ar- lington, Va., have announced the marriage of their daughter, Lola, to Lt. Gilbert J. Schauer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester J. Schauer, Colton, Calif. Mrs. Schauer is a member of Sigma Kappa sorority and was a sophomore in the College last semester. Lieutenant Schauer is now overseas The military wedding took place April 19 at Daward Army Air Field, Daward, Neb. Sixteen Students Will Give Piano, Violin, Voice Recitals Sixteen students in piano, violin, and voice will present the first of two advanced student recitals marking the end of the regular school year in Fraser theater, Wednesday evening at 7:30. On the program students will be presented from the studios of Jan Chiapuso, Carl Freyer, Waldemar Geltch, Meribah Moore, Alice Moncrief, Irene Peabody, Ruth Orcutt, and Joseph Wilkins. Mrs. R. D. O'Leary and Judge Hugh Means, local members of the class of 1895, met this morning in the alumni office to make plans for receiving their former classmates at the class' 50th anniversary during commencement. Class of '95 Plans 50th Anniversary UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, JUNE 5, 1945 Woolen Mills Return To 1943 Price Level Washington - As another step in cutting consumer costs of civilian clothes, the OPA has ordered woolen and worsted mills to return to their average prices of 1943. Price Administrator Chester Bowles described the action, effective June 9, as bringing nearer the OPA-War Production Board goal of more essential garments at moderate prices. He predicted that the action would reduce prices for wool woven fabrics about 7 per cent and for wool knit fabrics about 4 per cent. This will cut the costs of garment manufacturers, who in turn will pass the saving along to retailers, who in turn are required to pass it on to clothing buyers. Starting with the approaching July-September quarter, each mill must re-schedule its output of various price lines in such a way as to arrive at a weighted average price for all fabrics which is no higher than its 1943 maximum average price, Mr. Bowles said. Alamaba Has N.R.O.T.C. Alabama Polytechnic Institute was among the 27 colleges and universities chosen by the Navy department for an additional Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps unit. Dramatics Group Will Initiate Sixteen At Dinner Tomorrow The Dramatics club will have an initiation dinner for 16 students at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow, Margie Johnson, treasurer of the club, said this morning. Initiates are Marjorie Dinsmore, Elizabeth Evans, Joy Godbehere, William McGarry, Mary Louise Mathews, and Joan Woodward, College freshmen; Louine Brown, Patricia Graham, Suzanne Hamel, Joan Harris, Clyde Jacobs, and Grace Piros, College sophomores; Ruth Ann Bird and Rebecca Vallette, College juniors; Lee Baker, V-12 education junior; and Anne Zimmerman, College senior. Howard Engleman Injured Aboard Destroyer in Pacific Lt. (jg) Howard Engleman, former University basketball player, suffered multiple burns while serving as a navigator on a destroyer-escort in the Pacific, his mother, Mrs. Beulah Engleman, Arkansas City, has been informed. Lieutenant Engleman was graduated from the University in 1941 and played basketball for Coach F. C. Allen in 1939, 1940, and 1941. His wife and their 1-year-old son, Howard Dodge Engleman, are living in Salina.