MONDAY; NOVEMBER 27; 1944 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THRE Phi Chi Theta, Business Sorority Will Give Tea Tomorrow in Union Members of Phi Chi Theta, women's business sorority, will hold a tea Tuesday afternoon from 3:30 to 5:30 o'clock in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union, according to Betty Pile, president. Mignon Morton, vice-president, is in charge of arrangements for the tea, which is being given for girls interested in joining Phi Chi Theta. A girl must be a junior in the school of business in order to be eligible to pledge. Refreshments will be served. Mrs. F. T. Stockton, alumna member of the organization, will pour. Campus Society Jolliffe Hall—Lt. Max Wymore, a former student, Melvin Lebow, and Richard Smith were dinner guests Wednesday evening. Pat Cameron, Perry, was a weekend guest. Sigma Kappa—Chapter members had dinner yesterday at the Colonial tea room. Tolene Dudley, Hugoton, spent the weekend with her sister. Pat Harris, Altamont, and Mrs. I. C. Shar, Holton, were dinner guests Saturday. Alpha Delta Pi — Dorothy Roth, Ellinwood, and Elaine Neel, Topeka, were ruests Fridav. Kappa Alpha Theta—Lt. Curtis J. McCoy, Jr., was a guest for dinner Saturday. Dean Huebert, Kansas City, medical student, was a dinner guest Sunday. Corbin Hall — Mrs. Virgil Bauer, Highland, was a weekend guest. Miss Phyllis Wickert, Clafin, and a former student, was also a weekend guest. Gamma Phi Beta—Mrs. J. E. Mulenbruch, Argonia, was a weekend guest. Betty Ruth Wright To Wed December 12 Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Wright, Kansas City, Mo., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Betty Ruth, to Lee E. Murfin, U.S. Navy, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Murfin, Kirksville, Mo. The marriage will take place Dec. 12 at the Week Kirl o' the Heather in Glendale, Calif. Mr. Murfin is a seaman first class. Miss Wright is a former student at the University and was in the School of Fine Arts. She is a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Rabi Wins Nobel Prize Stockholm — (INS) — The Nobe. prize in physics for 1944 has been awarded to Isidor Rabi of Columbia university, New York, for outstanding achievement in atom study, the Nobel committee has announced. The delayed 1943 award for the same subject was granted simultaneously to Otto Stern, of Pittsburg, also for atomic research. Miller-Arbuckle Vows Solemnized Saturday, Nov. 4 Mr. and Mrs. J. Roy Miller of Hutchinson, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Jean Ann, to Lt. Thomas E. Arbuckle, Jr., U. s. navy, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Arbuckle of Hutchinson. The ceremony took place at 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 4, at the home of the bride's parents. The Rev. Melvin A. Pearce officiated. The bride is a graduate of Colorado Women's college in Denver. The bridegroom, who has recently returned from 18 months' service in the Southwest Pacific, was graduated from the University in 1941 with a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi. Lieutenant Arbuckle received his commission at Annapolis. The couple left for a wedding trip, following which Lieutenant Arbuckle will report to Seattle, Wash., for reassignment. Capt. and Mrs. Henry Polk Lowenstein, Jr., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Helen Edna, to Willard Allan Osborne, son of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Osborne of Seattle, Wash. Helen Lowenstein Engaged to Medic Miss Lowenstein has attended the University for three years and is a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Her father, Captain Lowenstein is in the navy in New Guinea. Mr. Osborne is now attending the University and is a navy pre-medic student. He has had four years of sea duty in the navy. KFKU Monday, Nov. 27 Monday, Nov 27 9:30 p.m. Health for Happiness "Meat Sanitation," P. B. Darlington, speaker. 30 p.m. Know Russia. "Russian Music and Musicians." Waldemar Geltch. Tomorrow 5.OPP, your *Ransas Government* 4.OPP, Andrew P. Schoepel, speaker. 2:30 p.m. Art by Radio. 9:45 p.m. Excursions in Science. Registration for the marriage course being offered at the University of Minnesota has reached 300, with the number of men taking the course at a low figure. More students are being urged to enroll for the course. Few Men in Marriage Class Gustafson The College Jeweler Student Jewelry Store for 40 Years 911 Mass. St. Phone 911 Portrays President Wilson Woodrow Wilson (Alexander Knox) asks for a joint declaration of war from a joint session of congress in a dramatic moment from Darryl F. Zanuck's production "Wilson" which is being offered students at the Jayhawker theater the next three days at reduced prices if special tickets are procured. Student Prices Low For Picture 'Wilson' Stan Schwahn of the Jayhawkater theater has arranged with the producers of the road show "Wilson" to give special University student prices at matinee and evening performances Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The student tickets may be obtained at the registrar's office and when properly signed by the student and presented at the box office will entitle the holder to the following special prices: Matinee—balcony, 40 cents; main floor, 50 cents. Evening—balcony, 60 cents; main floor, 75 cents, including all tax. The saving ranges from 15 to 35 cents over regular prices. No seats are reserved. The show "Wilson" is 2 hours and 35 minutes and the running time of the complete show is three hours. Students are urged by Mr. Schwahn to see the show from the beginning with the features starting at 2:55, 7:25 and 10:25. K. U. Student Receives Award Cpl. Leslie W. Butterfield, former University of Kansas pre-medic student, has been awarded the good conduct medal for exemplary behavior and efficiency, U. S. army headquarters in New Caledonia have announced. Cpl. Butterfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Butterfield of Iola, is a stenographer in the officer personnel and records office of the transportation section of the south Pacific base command headquarters. He was a stenographer for three years in the department of bacteriology here. BUY WAR STAMPS ... AP Correspondent Visits Here Saturday Recent changes in the Chungking government have brought in men who are less distasteful to the Chinese Communists, said Morris J Harris, former Associated Press correspondent in China, who visited the campus Saturday. The shake-up in the Chinese government may be the first practical step toward unifying China for more rigorous and effective defense against Japan, he declared. Mr. Harris was in charge of the A.P. office in Shanghai from 1927 to 1941; he was arrested on Dec. 7 1941, and was held in the same crowded, unsanitary prison which was described in convocation, Nov. 6, by H. G. W. Woodhead, a British correspondent. Mr. Harris was being held at the same time as Mr. Woodhead, but was in a different "cage." He was in the first group of Americans to be exchanged for Japanese nationalists and returned to the United States. As chief of the foreign desk in the Washington bureau of the A. P., Mr Harris has charge of outgoing news from the United States. Before he went to China, he was with the Tokyo Advertiser from 1921 to 1923 with United Press in Philadelphia and Washington, D. C., in 1924; with the Manila Bulletin in 1925; and with A. P. in Kansas City, Mo., in 1926. Send your Christmas gifts before Dec. 1. "Buy an Extra Bond today" With Victory comin' our way let's make it swift and sure. Instead of letting up, now, above all, is the time to give out—with extra dollars, extra effort. Let's back up our fighting men by keeping in there pitching till the thing is cinched. Victory takes something extra to win. Make it an Extra War Bond . . . Today . . . Now! 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