RY 7,194 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1944 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE AM university" and—An- Russell L. lled Kansas City, in 1930 ord in the in action his wife, in 301 West Mo., has with her manwent Mr. and e at 1421 e city, Kan. d Argen- nasicas City, Sansas, and College. training at and has ansan ANSAS ROSSMAN ANCE ABTS TITPF TITPF GUNSLOLLY NODER LNOLEL LONKEY LONKEY GNOWBULL BOOR BOCK MINIMOTION SOOKMAKER EOU PERKINS H KREUBIEL Association Nation e, $1.50 e, Kansas o尔 year ler University maess matter s at office n M March 3, University Navy Wives Organize To Do Weekly Red Cross Sewing Wives of Navy men stationed in Lawrence met Friday afternoon to plan an organization to do Red Cross sewing and knitting. They decided to meet every Friday afternoon in the English room of the Union building at 2:30. Both Army and Navy wives were invited, but no Army wives turned out for the meeting. There are very few in Lawrence, said Mrs. A. H. Buhl, who presided. The English room is being provided for the group by the All Student Council through its public relations committee which is sponsoring the meetings. Alpha Delta P-I-Mary Alice Prinkle, Wichita, was a weekend guest. Carruth Hall dinner guests yesterday were Mrs. Esther Stephens and Mrs. Bert L. Brown, Topeka. Supper guests last night were Jean Hollis and Ruth Wright. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Frobenius and daughters, of Lincolnville, were guests Saturday. Private James Morrow, Lexington, Ky., a former resident of Templin hall, was a visitor Friday. Miller Hall dinner guests yesterday were Rome Kuchenski, Mr. Jan Chaipusso, William Yonalli, Kenneth Warnock; Mrs. Hattie McCoy and Ruth Walker, Oskalaosa. Watkins Hall dinner guests were Bob Whiting, Paul Adams, and Bob Reece. Betty Charles, from Dayton, Ohio, a graduate last spring, was a weekend guest. Ricker Hall dinner guest Sunday was Tom Purdue. Delta Upsilon—Mrs. N. A. Bales, from Portland, Oregon, Don Pome Roy, Amarillo, Texas, and Don Patton, of Hutchinson, were weekend guests. Sigma Kappa weekend guest was Margaret Hogan of Kansas City, Mo. Sunday dinner guests were Mr and Mrs. K. W. Davidson, Miss Meribah Moore, and Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Wagy. Chi Omega weekend guests were Mrs. A. C. Fletcher and Virginia Marshall of Clay Center. Sunday dinner guests were Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Shankland and Betsy Shankland of Kansas City, Kans. Mrs. Marie Ferrel and Mrs. Ed Adams of Kansas Ctiy, Mo., and Miss Mabel Elliott. Pi Beta Phi weekend guests were Mrs. Betty Cramer O'Donell, Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. R. G. Hepworth, Burlingame; Mrs. H. W. Herlihy, Pasadena, Calif.; and Mrs. Nelle Steventon Maier, Kansas City, Mo. Phi Beta Pi dinner guests yesterday were Dr. Moser Voth of Topeka, Mildred Lou Smith of Kansas City, and Mickey McConigly. Kappa Alpha Theta dinner guests yesterday were Miss Marjorie Fadler, Pittsburg; Miss Evelyn Vogt, Newton; and Mrs. Bill Browning and Miss Betty Roberts, Kansas City. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Gaynor and daughter, Ethel, of Kansas City, and Mrs. C. T. Sloan, Kansas City, Me, visited the chapter house yesterday Alpha Omicron Pi weekend guests were Miss Jewell Potts of Topeka, and Helen Highbaugh, a student at Baker University. Kappa Kappa Gamma — Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Morrill of Hiawatha, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wrightman of Sabetha visited the chapter house yesterday. Mr. E. R. Price, Baxter Springs, and Mr. H. E. Danglade, Webb City, Mo., were visitors yesterday. Tau Kappa Epsilon announces the pledging of Virgil McClure of Goodlin. L. R. Crow of Columbus, was a weekend guest. Sunday dinner guests were Miss Nevilyn Stewart and Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Hauge and daughter, Janice of Kansas City, Mo. Sigma Chi - Kenny White and John Sigler, former chapter members now stationed with V-12 at Park College, were weekend guests. Phi Kappa Psi entertained the following guests at a formal party Saturday night: Kathryn O'Leary, Betty Sullivan, Martha Lou Little, Helen Hovey, Sirley Otter, Sue Diggs, Virginia Larsen of Kansas City, Carol Lee Fausett, Jeanne Atkinson, Ruth Herdend of Kansas City, Dineen Somers, Joanna Wagstaff, Shriley McGinness, Mary Morrill, Peggy Sanderson, Susan Altick, Emily Stacey, Alice Rose Shankland, Marjory Kaaz, Jerry Nelson, Pat Turner of Kansas City, Virginia Jo Winter, Martha Smith of Kansas City, Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Wheeler, Dr. and Mrs. F. C. Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Corlett Cotton, and Mrs. Nelle Hopkins. Weekend guests were Ralph Crawford of Chanute, Dean Simms of Baxter Springs, Luther Burbank of Fresno, Calif., and Bob Graham who is stationed with the V-12 unit at Washburn. Foster Hall weekend guests were Rosemary Baker and Betty Jean Smith, Leavenworth, and Mrs. John W. Pratt, Galveston, Texas. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Sharpe, Mr. and Mrs. L. Willison, and Mrs. P. T. Turner, Neodesha, were visitors yesterday. Faculty Members Go To Wichita Meeting Five faculty members of the School of Engineering were present at the 36th annual convention of the Kansas Engineering Society in Wichita Friday and Saturday. Those who attended were: J. O. Jones, acting dean of the School of Engineering; Earl D. Hay, professor of mechanical engineering, Henry S. Stillwell, professor of aeronautical engineering, W. C. McNoun, professor of aviational engineering, V. P. Hessler, professor of electrical engineering, and Ogden S. Jones, geologist with the oil division of the state board of health stationed at the University. Dean Jones gave a talk Saturday entitled, "Water as a State Resource," at the section meeting on sanitary and water resources. Mr. Ogden Jones was chairman of the meeting Friday morning. Walter F. Stueckemann, College freshman, of Ellinwood, has enlisted at the Kansas City naval aviation cadet selection board as an apprentice seaman, V-5, in the U.S. naval reserve. Nov. 17, Stueckemann will be transferred to Class V-5 naval aviation cadet when he becomes 18, and will receive two semesters of college training. Walter Stueckemann Enlists In K.C. for V-5 Training Service for Mrs. Lindley Today To Be in Familiar Spooner-Thayer From a college romance grew the companionship of Elizabeth Kidder Lindley and E. H. Lindley which ended only with the death of ex-Cancellor Lindley at sea while he and Mrs. Lindley were en route home from a trip to the Orient. When the funeral service this afternoon for Mrs. Lindley is conducted in the Spooner-Thayer museum, it will take place in a surrounding with which she was most familiar. She loved to browse around museums. Back to the Pacific ocean where her husband was buried will be taken the ashes of the devoted wife of the former Chancellor and friend of the University. FUNERAL RITES - - (continued from page one) as saying at that time, "Ive never seen anyone as interested in mummies as you." Again during their residence for three years in Idaho when Mr. Lindley was president of the state university, Mrs. Lindley was connected with the various women's functions Upen learning of Mrs. Lindley's death, Chancellor Deane W. Malott said, "The University and city of Lawrence have lost in the death of Mrs. Lindley a gracious and charming lady, who for nearly 25 years had been a vital part of the life of the community. She will be sadly missed by a host of friends of long standing." She is survived by two sons Ernest K. Lindley, Washington newspaperman, and Dr. Stanley Lindley of Minneapolis. Business Staff Entertains Mr. and Mrs. Karl Klooz entertained the members of the business office staff at dinner at the Union Building, Friday, night, after which the group went to the Klooz home, 1119 West Campus Road, for entertainment. The evening was spent playing games. A feature was a birthday cake prepared by Mrs. Klooz in honor of Mrs. Geraldine Resch. Mrs. Resch, whose husband is a trainee at the machinists' mates school, will leave with her husband on February 15. Milton Waller Enlists in USNR Milton Henry Waller, freshman in engineering, has enlisted as an apprentice seaman in the United States Naval Reserve. When he becomes 18 years old, Waller will be transferred to the V-5 classification as a naval aviation cadet. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Waller, Denton, Tex. KU Given Lindley Psychology Library Mrs. E. H. Lindley, widow of the former chancellor of the University who died Saturday, recently gave to the psychology department of the University the bulk of the psychology library of Dr. Lindley. The gift included several hundred volumes, some of which are classical monographs of great value. There are also some great historical works. Accompanying the gift made to the department was a large photograph of Dr. Lindley. An appropriate ceremony recognizing this gift has been postponed because of the war but the department sincerely appreciates the gift and, Dr. Wheeler said it is "another of many acts of kindness of Mrs. Lindley." Campus Postal Men Buy Bonds All postal employees have been requested to purchase war bonds and stamps for the Fourth War Loan drive to the amount of 35 per cent of one month's salary, R. C. Abraham, superintendent, stated today. The Lawrence post office employees are giving more than the requested amount, Mr. Abraham said. Miller Shows Copies Of Old Publications To Three KU Groups Displaying many old newspapers including the first ever printed in Lawrence and original copies of Horace Greeley's famous New York Tribune, Nyle H. Miller, research director of the Kansas State Historical Society at Topeka, addressed three groups in Lawrence. Friday. Making the trip primarily to speak to the University Club, Friday evening. Mr. Miller also spoke to history and journalism students at 3:30 Friday afternon in the journalism building and the University Press Club following a dinner at the Hearth. The Kansas Historical Society has the second largest collection of original old papers in the United States said Mr. Miller. The Society collects every issue of each Kansas newspaper. Interested in all papers from high school publications to metropolitan dailies it preserves thousands of issues annually, many of which are not filed elsewhere. Mr. Miller said that the department of the society in greatest public demand now is the one which grants birth certificates on the strength of references in past publications. Mr. Miller told his audiences of feuds fought by pioneer newspapermen when Kansas journalism was getting its start and gave a vivid outline of the history of journalism in the state. As the Society has time and funds the research director said, old manuscripts and newspapers are being photographed for permanent preservation. Welcome Students To the COLONIAL TEA ROOM Lunch ___ 11:30 - 1:30 Dinner ___ 5:30 - 7:30 Sunday Dinner ---- 12:00 - 2:00 NO SATURDAY MEALS 936 Ky. Phone 978 the "COLLEGE JEWELER" 911 Mass. St. Students Jewelry Store for 39 Years