UESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1943 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE city to residents in all natural ABTS JANE SMAN, TIPPIN BOCK ANAGA OXLEY FOSTER ERKINS CHBIEL 50 a.ansas. ar ex- versity matter ace at ch 3. Several Organizations Announce Election of Officers for the Year Several organizations are announcing the election of new officers today after chapter and organization meetings last night. Hour dances will take the social spotlight Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday nights again this week. EAU g Chaperones at the Sigma Kappa open house Saturday night were Mrs. Edna Ellsworth, housemother; Miss Meribah Moore; Miss Kathleen Doering; and Mrs. Macle Butcher. ☆ Chi Omega . . . . . pledge class entertained Sigma Chi fraternity at an hour dance last night. Delta Gamma . . . Lt. L. D. Welch of Salina and Lois Crozier of Lawrence were dinner guests last night. Phi Gamma Delta . . ☆ ... Ruth Ruhlen of Tonganoxie and Betty Cox of Baldwin were weekend guests. Phi Gamma Delta . . Dr. and Mrs J E Wright of Kansas City were luncheon guests yesterday. ... weekend guests were Mrs. A. J. Bradley and Mrs. C. T. Horton of Blue Mound. Watkins Hall . . . Dorothea Weingartner was a dinner guest Monday. Sigma Kappa . . . will have an hour dance Wednesday. ... has announced the election of the following pledge class officers: Mary Vermillion, president; Betty Wahstedt, vice-president; Dorothy Jean Walker, secretary; Martha Belle Hogan, treasurer; Peggy Small, social chairman; and Ruth Fisher, song leader. ☆ ... will have an hour dance with PT 6 tomorrow night. . . . chaperones at the open house at the hall Saturday night were Mrs. S. M. Stayton, housemother; Mrs. Charles Esterly; Miss Carlotta Nellis; and Mrs. R. D. Montgomery Carruth Hall . . . . . Lt. William Wegman was a luncheon guest yesterday. . . Lt. Maurice Hill is a guest at the hall today. Sigma Nu . . . ... has announced the election of chapter officers: Jack Jarvis, commander; Bill Lee, lieutenant commander; Clarke Hargiss, secretary-treasurer; Frank Gruden, chaplain; Tom Messplay, historian and reporter; Jim Baker, pledge trainer; and Bob Stewart, rush captain. ...guesses at a picnic at the chapter house Saturday night were: Jane Atwood, Betty Jo O'Neal, Ann Young, Joanne Johnson, Marion Montgomery, Shirley Hargiss, D. J. Morris, Sarepta Pierpont, Penny Aschcraft, Margie Cooper, Betty Ann Hopkins, Leea Nea Marks, Doris Bixby, Burnett Replogle, and Wanda Cline, of Wichita. . . . has announced the pledging of Dean Banker of Russell. Kappa Kappa Gamma . . . Susie Wieder, Sue Elliott, and Barbara Breidenthal, all of Kansas City, were guests Sunday and Monday. Tau Kappa Epsilon . . . . . Lt. Robert Thompson, who recently returned from the Solomons, was a dinner guest last night. ... Mrs. Louise Vogel has returned from a week's visit in Trenton, N. J. Hopkins Hall . . . ☆ Corbin Hall . . . ... will have an hour dance at 7 o'clock tomorrow night. Foster Hall . Foster Hall . . . . week-end guest was Winona Carpenter of Kansas City, Mo. Cpl. Jim Beers, Sigma Phi Epilion here last year, was a guest of Mrs. R. H. Wilson, former Sigma Phi Epsilon house mother, who is now housemother at Foster. .. guests Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Voth of Goessel, Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Hopkins of Kansas City Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Ruth of Everest. War Fund Drive Opens Here Monday Plans for the War Fund drive on the Hill will be discussed at a meeting of the central committee at 4:30 p.m. today in the Fine room of the Memorial Union building. The drive is a part of the National War Fund drive which starts Oct. 18 and unites all the separate campaigns which are raising money for war relief. The World Student Service Fund campaign is one of the participating agencies in the National War Fund drive. A student chairman who will cooperate with Dr. F. C. Allen, chairman of the War Fund drive at the University, will be elected at the meeting this afternoon. The Home Economics Club will have a tea for all old members and those interested in joining the club, 4 to 5:30 p.m., Thursday, in the dining room of Fraser hall, Marilyn Maloney, secretary, announced today. Home Ec Club Will Give Tea Wasps make their nests of wood. HEY KIDS --- LOOK! I Take Pictures of Anything — Anywhere PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN AT YOUR HOME - Your Satisfaction Is Guaranteed - It Costs Less - Immediate Service TYSON, photographer STUDIO 1120 Rhode Island Phone 2423J for appointment K.U. Dames Install New Officers The University of Kansas round table program to be presented from 9:30 to 10 p.m. Friday over KFKU will be the first in a series to continue throughout the year each Friday night. This is the fourth year of the University round table. Subjects of wide and pressing interest are to be discussed, according to Dean Paul B. Lawson, and participants will consist largely of members of the faculty, but there will also be students and business and professional men. Mrs. N. P. Sherwood is faculty advisor. The topic for discussion Friday will be, "Should the voting age be reduced to 18 years." Those participating are Dean F. J. Moreau, School of Law, Hilden Gibson, asst. prof. of political science, and Ed Kelley, senior in the College, from Garden City. Round Table Returns Over KFKU Friday The K.U. Dames, an organization of married women students, will have installation of officers for the coming year and a reception at the Hearth at 8 o'clock this evening. Mrs. Veryl Logan, retiring president, announced today. Membership in the organization is open to married women students, wives of students, and wives of servicemen in the University training programs. A committee, appointed by the Chancellor, composed of faculty members has planned the series of weekly programs. It consists of: Dean Paul Lawson, chairman; Edna Hill, home economics; Leslie Waters, economics; R. S. Howey, economics; F. J. Moreau, law; C. P. Osborne, philosophy; and Bernard Frazier, design. New officers are; Doris Patterson, president; Opal Plathe, vice-president; Louise Relph, treasurer; Margaret Rich, secretary; and Lucille Cook, reporter. Spanish Club Will Meet Thursday Students who have taken Spanish in the past and are interested in using it in conversation are invited to attend the meeting, according to Miss Maude Elliott, club sponsor. Spanish Club Will Meet Thursday The first meeting of the Spanish Club, El Ateneo, to be held at 4:30 Thursday at 113 Frank Strong Hall, will be in the charge of Bolivar Marquez. Tentative plans for the program include music and con- versational practice CHRISTMAS BOOKS We recommend: For the BOYS OVERSEAS Price—Good Humor Man. $2 Darrow—You're Sitting on My Book. $5 House May Change Senate Plan Thurber—Fables for Our Time. $1.00 $1.00 Benchley Beside Himself. $2.50 Spalding—Love at First Flight. $2.00 House May Change Senate Plan Washington, (INS)—House military leaders indicated today that they would rewrite the Senate plan for tightening draft deferments and insert the Kilday bill placing fathers at the bottom of the induction list. $2.00 Douglas—The Robe. $2.75 Schachner—The Sun Shines West $3.00 Harmon Co-op Will Have House-Warming Gibran—The Prophet. $2.50 Seagrave—Burma Surgeon. $3 don marquis—lives and times of archy & mhitabel. $2.50 Selections from the Modern Harmon Co-op, women's cooperative house which took over the men's John Moore co-op house at $1537_{1/2}$ Tennessee this fall, will have a house-warming from 7 to 8 to-morrow night, Kathleen French, house president, said today. 229 titles from which to choose 95c and $1.45 "Although the house won't be in the shape we really want it for several more years because we have to work slowly, we are still proud of what we have done to it so far," she said. The women have done all the work by themselves, she added spending Saturdays and evenings painting their rooms, scrubbing and waxing floors, cleaning up the yard and so on. The co-ops at the University are all independently run by the students living in the co-ops themselves and receive no aid from the University or any fund. Through their own Student Housing Board the students are buying and fixing up their houses. At present there are four co-ops operating on the University campus. Besides Harman, two other women's co-ops, Kaw Koettes at 1614 Kentucky and Jay Coeds at 1541 Kentucky. The John Moore house, the only men's co-op on the Hill now, is at 1409 Rhode Island. Come in, and see them. We wrap for mailing Kalis, McClanahan Appointed To Board THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 666 Betty Lee Kalis and Thorton McClanahan, college seniors, have been appointed by the All-Student Council to sit with Forums Board, as announced by Jill Peck, chairman of the Charter committee, which has charge of Forums Board. Hilden R. Gibson and E. O. Stene, of the political science department, have been chosen to sit with the charter committee. A meeting to select a chairman for Forums Board will be held at 4:30 this afternoon in the Pine room of the Memorial Union. Prof. Helleberg Dies; Was Former Member Of Sociology Dept. Prof. Victor E. Helleberg died at Lawrence Memorial hospital after a brief illness. He came to the University in 1910 as assistant professor of sociology, was advanced to the rank of associate professor in 1913, and to a full professorship in 1927. He retired from active teaching service in 1937, and devoted his energies to the preparation of a volume titled "The Social Self," published in 1941. Professor Helleberg came here from the University of Chicago where he did his graduate work and served as instructor in sociology from 1908 to 1910. He was an alumnus of Yale University where he received the A.B. degree in 1883, and of the University of Cincinnati where he took a law degree two years later. During his 27 years of service at the University, Professor Helleberg had a profound influence on a great many students who took work with him, his fellow professors said. Professor Helleberg is survived by his wife and two nieces. Interment will be in Cincinnati. A memorial service at the Unitarian church has been arranged for next Sunday at 3:30. Tau Beta Pi Elects Eleven New Members Eleven new members of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, were announced yesterday. Initiation will be held Oct. 22, said James V. Walker. The new members are: Lee Leatherwood, senior; Oscar T. Bloomer, junior; James A. Crask, junior; Frank Gage, junior; William Robert Stephens, senior; Robert Lamberton, senior; D. Graybill Parks, junior; Mark Viesselman, senior; Eugene Verhage, junior; John Pruitt, senior; and Lloyd Crow, junior. — BUY U.S. WAR BONDS — As seen in MADEMOISELLE The one and only Glentex ICE MIST . . . America's most popular scarf. . . is back on the counters again! Light as a breeze, yet warm as toast . . . and all 100% pure wool! In white, and a rainbow range of heavenly colors. $1.98