MONDAY. JUNE 5. 1944 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE club will 4:30 in Memorial pose of a Miller, airmaint mg-4:30 Election arrill, worrist nsan EAN SIMS GORRILL, MA THIELE $1.75 Kansas, year ex- University is matter office at March 3, Phi Beta Kappa Will Have Annual Initiation Banquet on Friday Fhi Beta Kappa, national honorary scholastic society, will have its annual spring initiation banquet at the Hearth on Friday, Raymond Nichols, secretary of the organization, announced today. Sixteen seniors will be initiated at this time, he reid. This number includes both those who were announced earlier in the year and those announced at the honors assembly. The exact time of the banquet hasn't been decided upon as yet, he said. Phi Chi. medical fraternity, dinner guests yesterday were Dr. H. L. Huchert, an alumnus, and Kenneth Brown of Newton. Harman Co-op Sunday dinner guests were Anne and Kathryn Krehbiel, Frances James, and Donna Lou Burt. Chi Omega dinner guests yesterday were Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Craig of Wichita. Mrs. Maud Sigman was a week-end guest. Alpha Delta Pi weekend guest was Jane Miner of Kansas City, Mo. Sunday dinner guests were Mrs. C.-F. Lyons and Mr. and Mrs Robert G. Shyrock, all of Kansas City, Mo. Alpha Chi Omega weekend guest was Mrs. Winston Kinderdick of Newton. Mrs. Helen Huebert and Jean and Bobby Huebert of Halstead were guests. Battenfeld dinner guest Sunday was Max Musgrave, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Uptergrove were Sunday evening visitors. Corbin Hell weekend guests were Ruth Ann Todd, Atchison; Anna Marie Bartsch, Topeka; Mildred Jones, Highland; Margaret Krebhiel, and Jean Anderson, Kansas City; Lorraine Carpenter, Claflin; Mrs. C. F. Taylor, Norton; Mrs. Dean Stackhouse, Mrs. Bill Ryan, and Betty Lewis, all of Kansas City, Mo.; Louine Brown, Bethel; Donna Eurke, Eureka; Lydia Alice De-Mont. Phillipsburg. Jean Turnbull of Topeka was a guest Saturday. Dorean Linquist is a new resident. Jeanne Honey of Hartfort City, Ind., was a visitor during the weekend. Cpl. Benedict Vuturo and Pfe. George Wilkerson, both stationed at the Smoky Hill army air base, were Sunday guests. Foster Hall guests Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Hammer of Leon. Eileen Steinmetz of Perry, was a weekend guest. Carruth Hall dinner guest Sunday was Miss Mary-Elizabeth Evans of Lawrence. Phi Beta Pi dinner guests Sunday weep Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Curtis of Kansas City, Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. J. Leon Seeyel of Lawrence Wager Hall. Sunday guests were Lois Gerstenburger of Eudora and Bob Neis. John Swalys of Kansas City was a guest Saturday. Watkins Hall weekend guest was Mary John J. Crittenden of Wichita Claudia Chamberlin was a dinner guest yesterday. THE HEARTH Shelton-Barber Engagement Told Sunday at Miller Miller hall has announced the engagement of Mary Ella Shelton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Shelton of Atchison, to Lt. Herbe H. Barber, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Barber, also of Atchison. The announcement was made at the hall and chocolates were passed Sunday afternoon. Miss Shelton received a corsage of talisman roses. She was assisted by Julia Ann Casad, College sophomore, and Jean Moser, College freshman, who wore gardenia corsages. Mrs. S. M. Stayton, housemother, received a corsage of pink rosebuds. Mrs. Shelton, who made the announcement, wore a corsage of red carnations. Miss Shelton is a freshman in the College. THE HEARTH For Luncheons, Dinners And Groups Phone 1036 1941 Mass Closed on Mondays Lieutenant Barber is stationed at Portland, Ore, with the communications division of the army air corps. He attended the University from 1939-41 and graduated from St. Benedict's College in Atchison in 1943. EDITORS WILL BE---a:/de Mrs. Fred Pierce and sons, Donald and William, of St. Joseph, Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. Shelton were present for the announcement. (continued from page one) viduals who have made exceptional contributions to the University Daily Kansan. These will include awards for the best editorial, news story, and feature story. Announcement of the Kansan staff for next year will also be made at this time, Mr. Beth said. The dinner, which is an annual spring event in the journalism department, is primarily for journalism students and faculty members, but nearby newspapermen have also been invited to attend. Reeve-Virden Pinning Announced Kappa Kappa Gamma has announced the pinning of Paula Reeve daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Reeve of Phoenix, Ariz., to Herbert Virden, son of Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Virden of Kansas City, Mo. The announcement was made at dinner Saturday night followed by the traditional passing of chocolates. Miss Reeve wore a white orchid corsage. Mrs. Charles D. Howe, housemother, who made the announcement, and Frances Morrill, who assisted with the ceremony, received corsages of gardenias. The announcement was made at the same time at the Beta Theta Pi house. Miss Reeve is a senior in the College. She served as president of Kappa Kappa Gamma last year and is also a member of Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary journalism sorority. Virden is a sophomore in the School of Medicine at the University of Kansas hospitals in Kansas City. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity and of Nu Sigma Nu medical fraternity. Margaret Boltz Married In Topeka Church on May 30 The marriage of Margaret Anne Boltz, Fine Arts senior from Topeka, to Lt. George Weyland Driskill of Vineta, Okla., took place May 30 in Topeka. Dr. Ormal Miller read the ceremony. Mrs. Driskill, a resident of Corbin Hall, will return today to the University from Estes Park, Colo., where the couple spent their honeymoon. She will join her husband in California in July and return to the University in the fall for her final semester of school. Lieutenant Driskill is a graduate of Texas A. and M. Boats Bring Kansas Settlers Pioneers settling Manhattan arrived from Cincinnati in boats which had followed the Ohio, Mississippi, Missouri, and Kansas rivers before running ashore just above the mouth of the Blue river. Drake's for Bakes HELP WIN THE WAR SUMMER EMPLOYMENT For Students and Teachers By Making ROCKET POWDER Hercules Powder Co. Sunflower Ordnance Works Apply at Plant, East of Eudora, or at U. S. Employment Service 201 West 8th St., Lawrence ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ "Your help really counts when you're a WAC!" say America's college girls ★ Corporal Margaret E. Wyant, University of Ccalifornia.“My family has three men in the Armed Forces, so I couldn't just wait for the war to end. In the Women's Army Corps, I'm working for victory—and I know it's work that'll help bring our boys home sooner.” ★ Sergeant Anne Macintosh, New York University. "My job is one that any college girl would be proud to do—intelligence work at an Army post! With 239 different jobs to choose from, every Wac has a chance to do work she's fitted for and enjoys." - Private Mary E. Murray, South West Missouri Teachers' College. "Being a Wac makes me feel I'm helping my country—while I help myself, too. I'm getting valuable training and experience for a post-war career. And I'm all set to go new places." ★ Major Cora W. Bass, Mississippi State College. "As a member of the General Staff of the Second Service Command, I see daily the urgent need for more and more Waes. To every college girl it's a chance to serve her country in a truly important way." New WAC opportunity for college girls If you want to finish your college work before starting your Army career, you can enlist now and arrange to be called later—any time within the next 4 months. The ARMY needs Wacs... The WAC needs you! WOMEN'S ARMY CORPS WOMEN'S ARMY CORPS MAIL THIS COUPON FOR INTERESTING FREE BOOKLET ROBINSON STATION WYANDOTTE COUNTY COURT HOUSE 710 M. 7th St., Kansas City 16, Kansas I should like complete information about the WAC Name___ Address___ City___ Age___ State___ Phone Number___