3 Lila Jean Doughman And Charles Hunter To Be Married The engagement and approaching marriage of Lila Jean Doughman, fine arts senior, to Pfe. Charles A. Hunter, Jr., junior in the School of Medicine, was announced at the Kappa Alpha Theta house, Saturday evening. The wedding will take place July 28. Miss Doughman is the daughter of Mrs. Lisle L. Doughman, Wichita. She is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta and Delta Phi Delta, art fraternity. Mr. Hunter is a graduate of the University and a member of Phi Delta Theta and Nu Sigma Nu, medical fraternity. He is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Hunter, Topeka. Campus Society Carruth Hall - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Alderson, Effingham, were dinner guests yesterday. Phi Gamma Delta — Miss Ethel Pierson. Kansas City, was a dinner guest Saturday. Phi Delta Theta — Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Warwick and Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Kreamer, Kansas City, Mo., were visitors Sunday. Campus House Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Wathen, Weston, Mo., were weekend guests. Ricker Hall—Mrs. W. W. Jamison, Quinter, was a guest over the weekend. Lt. Royce Larsen, Lincoln, Neb., was a visitor Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hurtig, and Mr. J. E. Beschka, Hartford, were guests Thursday. Hillcrest - Patty Lockwood, Atchison, former student, was a weekend guest. Sigma Alpha Epsilon — Keith Neville, Topeka, former chapter member, was a guest Saturday. Donald Frei, chapter member, will leave for the navy Wednesday. Watkins Hall — Janet Stevens, Lawrence, was a dinner guest yesterday. Eleanor Randall, Emporia, was a sekend guest. Pi Beta Phi entertained the Kansas City Mother's club Saturday. all French, Kansas City, Mo., and Bailey were dinner guests yesterday. Alpha Chi Omtqa-Clifford Teeter, Hutchinson; Mrs. John Power and Mary Power, Beloit; Mrs. Pauline Hamel, St. Joseph; and Mr. and Mrs. J. Drais and James Drais, St. Joseph, were dinner guests yester-dav. Mrs. Curt Alloway, a former chapter member, Kansas City, Mo., is a house guest. Hopkins Hall — Mrs. Greer Wallace, Bakersfield, Calif., and Mrs. Alfred Boehm, New Rochelle, N.Y. are house guests. Foster Hall - Mr. and Mrs. E. Trompeter, Horton, were dinner guests yesterday. Kappa Kappa Gamma — Dinner guests Sunday were Mrs. L. J. Piller, Mrs. Fred Shelton, and Mrs. Thayer, all of Great Bend. Small Crowd Attends Musical Vespers A small crowd turned out for the annual spring musical vespers in Fraser theater yesterday afternoon when Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical society, presented a varied program of solo and concerted numbers. Anne Krehbiel, pianist, opened the program with a Bach Choral prelude. "In Thee Is Joy." This was followed by "Bourree in B Minor" played on the harp by Anabel Keeler. The program included several piano solos, numbers by a string quartet, and a vocal ensemble comprised of six women. The program closed with "Trio in C major" (Brahms), presented by Margaret Kay. Martha Lee Baxter, and Margaret Snodglass. Carl Kobler Engaged To Former Student Phi Beta Pi has announced the engagement of Miss Elma Haas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert P. Haas, Hiawatha, to Carl D. Kobler, V-12 freshman in the School of Medicine. Miss Haas, a former student, is now employed as a secretary at the Sunflower Ordnance works. Mr. Kobler is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kobler, Morland. The wedding will take place May 19. Stockton to Speak at Howard BUY U.S. WAR BONDS F. T. Stockton, dean of the School of Business, will speak on "We Americans" at the high school graduation exercises in Howard Thursday. University Boasts Eight Generals Brig. Gen. William T. Sexton, recently promoted, is the eighth University alumnus to become a general. He is with the Seventh army. Other University generals are Maj. Gen. Ennis Whitehead, Brig. Gen. Julius C. Holmes, Brig. G. Ward H. Maris, Brig. Gen. Marcellus L. Stockton, Brig. Gen. Ewart G. Plank, Brig. Gen. John B. Franks, and M. A. Schockley, now retired. Miss Ruth Krehbiel, secretary to the manager of radio station WING at Dayton, O., visited on the campus yesterday and today. She was advertising manager of the Daily Kansas last year. Ruth Krehbiel Visits Campus UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, MAY 14, 1945 KFKU Monday 9:30 These our Children, Placing Children in Foster Homes, by Marjorie Foulk. Toneka. 9:45 Know France, "The Music of France," by Jan Chiapusso. Tuesday 2:30 Stories Told in Music, "Negro Folk Song" Bradley college students, of Peoria, Ill., bought war bonds totaling 300 per cent of their original goal in the last drive. 9:30 Your Kansas Government, "Forestry, Fish, and Game Commissioner," Dave Leahy, speaker. 9:45 7th War Loan broadcast. Bradley College Buys Bonds Mrs. Odessa Montgomery, Kansas City, Mo., has announced the engagement of her daughter, Marion Alice, senior in the School of Business, to Ensign Robert Stocks Hope, U. S. marmorte service. Marion Montgomery Engaged to Ensign Miss Montgomery is a member of Chi Omega and Phi Chi Theta, business sorority. Ensign Hope was graduated from the Merchant Marine academy at Pass Christian, Miss., and has been in foreign service the past two years. He is the son of Mrs. Joe H. Hope, Kansas City, Mo. BUY U.S. WAR BONDS A railroad's roadbed has a lot to do with travel comfort. A well-built roadbed does away with annoying, sleep-disturbing bumps...like a boat breasting a choppy sea. It gives you "smooth sailing." The kind of gravel used for roadbed ballast is an important factor. Union Pacific uses a special, sturdy type of crushed granite which stands up particularly well under wartime's heavily loaded freight and passenger trains. Then, too, it acts as a "cushion," resulting in more comfortable riding and less wear on locomotives and cars. ★ Listen to "YOUR AMERICA" radio program on Mutual nationwide network every Sunday afternoon. Consult your local newspaper for the time and station. Thus, even the ballast used on the railroad's roadbed plays its part in the efficient, 'round-the-clock transportation of troops and essential battle-line freight over Union Pacific's Strategic Middle Route, uniting the East with the Pacific Coast. Future "smooth sailing" over life's highway can be assured by holding tight to the war bonds we now have . . . and, as an extra measure of economic protection, buying as many more as we can possibly afford. THE PROGRESSIVE UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD