A I; ' 4 U FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1932 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THREE Initiation, Banquets House Dances and Spring Parties Planned by Groups Delta Gamma, Theta and Gamma Phi Beta Arrange Banquets for New Initiates; Eight Plan House Parties While Two Have Scheduled Spring Parties. Initiation banquets, house dances and spring patties have been planned by university groups for this week end. Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta and Kappa Alpha Theta sororities will hold initiation banquets Saturday evening. House dances will be given Friday evening by Alpha Xi Delta and Delta Upsilon, and Saturday night by Beta Theta Pi, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Sigma Lambda, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Zeta, and Phi Mu. Members of the Dramatics club will give their spring party at the Lincoln hotel Friday evening, and the members of Pi Kappa Alpha will entertain Saturday evening at a spring party at the Cornhusker. BANQUETS. O- Delta Gamma. About one hundred active and alumnae members of Delta Gamma are expected to attend the initia tion banquet which the sorority is to hold Saturday evening; at the Cornhusker hotel. Following the toasts the freshmen will present a stunt and Carolyn Eckles will dance. Gamma Phi Beta. At the Cornhusker Saturday night the Gamma Phi Betas will hold their initiation banquet. About fifty will attend including both alumnae and actives. Miss Janet Winter will bo the toastmistress. Brown and Mauve will be the colors carried out in the decora tioa During the evening the fresh men will present their "Scum Sheet." Kappa Alpha Theta. The initiation banquet of Kappa Alpha Theta will be held at the University club Saturday evening. Miss Lowa Howard of Kansas City, an alumnae of the Nebraska chap ter, will serve as toastmistress. About- one hundred actives and alumnae will attend the banquet, plans for which are being com pleted by Mrs. J. C. Whitten. springTarties. Dramatics Club. At the Lincoln hotel Friday eve ning the dramatics club will enter tain approximately eighty couples at a spring party for which Roger Wilkerson's orchestra has been en gaged to play. Miss Colita Aitken and Voldimer Peterson will be the chaperons. Pi Kappa Alpha. Following their initiation ban quet at the chapter house, Satur day evening, the members of Pi Kappa Alpha will entertain about three hundred couples at a spring party at the Cornhusker hotel. Ed died Jungbluth and his orchestra will play. Chaperoning the dance o o o o Yhy not join the ladies? .... Join the ladies and come on out to Pla-Mor this Saturday night for a real honest to goodness good time. You'll like Pla Mor. Once you've danced here, you'll not be satis fied to dance elsewhere. It's very reasonable, too. I'll Be Seeing You at Pla-Mor! Admission 25c Dancing Free o o o o WHICH IS "THE N O ft' airy I SOCIAL CALENDAR Friday. Alpha Xi Delta, house dance. Delta Upsilon, dance at the chapter house. Dramatics club, party at the Lincoln hotel. Ag Mixer sponsored by Phi Up silon Omicron at Student Activi ties building. Saturday. Beta Theta Pi, dance at the chapter house. Delta Tau Delta, house dance. Kappa Alpha Theta, initiation banquet at the University club. Pi Kappa Alpha, spring party at the Cornhusker. Delta Sigma Lambda, dance at the chapter house. Delta Delta Delta, house dance. Delta Zeta, dance at the house. Sunday. Phi Upsilon Omicron and Omi cron Nu tea at 3:30 o'clock in Home Economics parlors. will be Mrs. Margaret Davis and Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Harper. HOVSEDANCES. Alpha Xi Delta. At the dance which will be given at the Alpha XI Delta house Fri day night, the upperclassmen of the sorority will be the guests of the pledges. A spring motif will be used in the decorations. Mrs. Adeline Harnsburger, Miss Lulu Runge and Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hickman will be the chaperons. Beta Theta Pi. The chapter house of Beta Theta Pi will be the scene of a dance Saturday evening, for which many out-of-town alumni are expected to return. Decorations suggestive of St. Patrick's day will be used. Walt Wherry's orchestra from Om aha will play for the party. Delta Delta Delta. The pledges of Delta Delta Delta will entertain the upper classmen at a house dance Satur day night. The chaperons will be Mrs. Paul Ream, Colonel and Mrs. W. H. Oury and Captain and Mrs. G. W. Spoerry. Delta Sigma Lambda. Fifty couples will be entertained at a dance at the Delta Sigma Lambda house Saturday evening in honor of the new initiates. Roger Wilkerson's orchestra will play. Chaperones for the party are Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Melker, Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Easterday, Mr. James Cuneo and Mrs. H. C. Burgess. Delta Tau Delta. About fifty couples will attend a party held at the chapter house of Delta Tau Delta Saturday evening. Leo Beck's orchestra will play for the affair. The chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. K. M. Arndt, Mrs. Zella Wolf and Mrs. Woodbury. Delta Upsilon. Honoring the new initiates of Delta Upsilon there will be a dance at the chapter nouse riaay eve ning. The Goldenrod Serenaders win fumiah music for the danciner. About seventy couples will attend the party, whicn win oe cnaper oned by Mrs. Carolyn Phillips and Miss Pauline Gellatly. Delta Zeta. The members of Delta Zeta so rority will entertain Saturday eve ning at a dance at the chapter house. Mrs. Anna Taylor and WISER SEX"? Professor and Mrs. Earl W. Lantz will be the chaperons. Phi Mu. The upperclassmen of Phi Mu will be entertained by the pledges of the sorority at a house dance to be given Saturday evening. The party will be chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Ed Weir, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Peters and Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Hallet. CONVENTION APPROVES DISTRICT CONVENTIONS (Continued from Page 1.) into one. Discussing price level he said that advisabiliy of increasing the amount of money is rather problematical as it is hard to tell where money will be spent and consequently it is hard to say what commodities will benefit thereby. Walter J. McAdams of New York city discussed briefly rules covering the selling of eggs on the exchange. E. L. Reichart of the dairy department of the agricul tural college pointed out that in creasing uniformity in quality, standardization of butter to con form to market requirements and incerase in the efficiency of op eration thru the elimination of losses were points that should be striven for by manufacturers. He advocated a system for scoring of butter to be based on quality, composition, efficiency of opera tion, degree of plant maintenance and value of the creamery to the community. M. N. Lawritson, assistant man ager of the state dairy develop ment society, declared that 300 pounds of milk was about the min imum weight for an efficient milk producing cow. He favors fewer but better cows. Dr. P. A. Downs of the dairy department also spoke. One of the features of the morn ing was the auctioning of twenty tubs of high scoring butter, the money to be turned over to the association. Each tub contained ten pounds. One of the high prices paid was that of $1.65 per pound by Zimmer and Dunkak company of New York. They also purchased another tub at $1.20 a pound. Van Boskirk and Remington of Lin coln purchased a tub at eighty cents a pound. R. W. McGinnis, Lincoln, representing the North western railroad purchased three tubs. The highest scoring butter came from the Madison Co-operative creamery with a figure of 93. Purchases were made by others during the morning. Al Forke was auctioneer. On the Thursday program Dean J. E. LeRossignol of the College of Business Administration reviewed Professor Wessen's recent book, "Words Used and Misused." CHILDREN'S THEATER WILL GIVE PANTOMIME (Continued from Page 1.) mond Hunter, Robert Charles Agnes, Misses Evelyn Gutzka, Marjorie Dean, Marjorie Parr, Bernice Palmquist, Sylvia Schafer, Maurine Libbels, Phyllis Sandin, Virginia Jonas, Mildred Brand, Blanche Carr, and Dorothy Kep ner. The parts of the children will be taken by Misses Dorothy Card, Helen Hewitt, Marylouise Neal, Martha Whelan, Betty Brown, Elaine Holcomb, Georgia Walker, Dorothea Fulton, Betty Lou Wentz, Patsy Oxley, Anne Kinder, Jean Hoppe, Virginia Lee, Margaret Fowler, Helen Severa, Sylvia Wolf, Alice Louise Becker, Betty Trailer, Gladys Mason, Carolyn Davis, and Ghita Hill. The parts of the slave boys in the play will be taken by Carl Rohman, Joe Hoppe, and Stuart Goldberg. The play is the first pantomine which the University Players have undertaken. "With such a large cast, and the use of action only, the play is one of the largest un dertakings which the players have produced for the children's thea ter," declared Miss Pauline Gel latly who together with Miss H. Alice Howell is directing the per formance. PHI DELTA PHI INITIATE EIGHTEEN THURSDAY (Continued from Page 1) Robert Kinkead, Cheyenne, Wyo.; David Lamme, Fremont; John Mertz, Omaha! Victor Schmidt, of Lincoln; Donald Starnes, Chey enne, Wyo.; John Steen, Scotts bluff; Kenneth Sutherland, Fre mont; Ivan Van Steenberg, Beaver City; Al Wahl, Omaha; Cecil Adams, Lincoln. Baptist Church Plan Palm Service Sunday A special Palm Sunday vesper service will be held Sunday at 5 in the First Baptist church. The church junior choir, directed by Mrs. Carl Hedeen, will sing special numbers. Included in the program will be an organ and piano duet by Mrs. Hedeen and William Gant, Easter readings and several instrumental and vocal solos. "If all seniors In Yale university were laid end to end they would keep right on sleeping," says the Yale News, and the News ought to know. I tarn SsM iiiiwiMAJsJiSm I 'I'illWw i ) fulfill mm , $1 ;f weekly VliiUfe IT DRIVE IS TO BEGIN MARCH 29 Purpose Is to Induce Prop erty Owners to Proceed With Building Repairs. Lincoln's United Employment campaign to bring back prosper ity, put Idle money to work and provide jobs for the heads of fam ilies will begin under the direction of L. E. Gunderson, general chair man who is finance secretary of the university, March 29 it was decided at the first campaign or ganization instruction meeting at the chamber of commerce, Thurs day. Mr. Gunderson declared the campaign is not for the purpose of trying to get people to spend money unnecessarily but to induce property owners and employers to proceed with the building con struction, repairing and remodel ing projects that need to be done. "There are houses that need to be painted and remodeled, garages other buildings that should be built, and a thousand and one things that not only need to be done but should be done right now," Mr. Gunderson said. After all, It's a Townsend photo graph that you want Adv. Similar to "pansy man" tactics in Cornhuskerdom is the plight of the recently elected "Beauty King" of the University of Denver. Not only did his own fraternity tub him, but a neighboring house sent him a lily. IRON IS POURED LIKE WA TER AT THE FOUNDRY ROOM IN M. A. BUILDING IT REQUIRES OLD CLOTHES AND COURAGE. (Continued from Page 1.) self consists of three parts, the cope, drag and cheek. For the making of these molds ' a special sand is used. It has to have placticlty, in order that it may shape around the pattern. It must have .permeability in order that it can let the steam, gas and air coming from the mold escape. It must have refractoryness in order to resist the intense heat. Inci dently the iron that was poured Tuesday had a temperature of only 2,750 degrees farenheit, which means that the sand had to absorb 544 b. t. u.'s per pound of metal. The furnace or cupola in which the iron is melted Is another in teresting part of the foundry. It is shaped like the name implies. Instead of being stoked from the bottom It is ntoked from the toD. First a wood fire is built, and to the wood is added a layer of coke, and then a layer of iron until the desired amount is reached. This Is left to heat for a while, and then just before time for the pouring, air Is forced through the furnace, the oxygen from which intensifies the heat to the extent tnat tne metal becomes fluid. When this molten fluid reaches the proper temperature for pouring, a vent is opened in the furnace and the mass runs out into a ladle. The ladle is manned by two men, and is car ried to the different molds on a trolley. The exciting and interesting part of the entire foundry work comes with the pouring of the molds. The molds are placed on the floor, and weighted down. The ladle is placed near the mold, and the pouring begins. The metal runs into the mold, and if every thing goes well it is a matter of only a few seconds before tne moia is filled. If it doesn't anything might happen. Tuesday something did happen while pouring the last ladle of metal. The intense neat or the iron caused moisture to ap pear on the steel weight This moisture turned to steam, and the explosion shot molten iron and sparks all over the room. The per son that I was standing next to showed me what an iron burn will do. A piece of the metal unfortu nately landed between his fingers, and stayed long enough to burn two holes in his flesh. Had it landed on the top of his hand, strange to say, it would have rolled off, without leaving a calling card. According to Mr. Overstreet, in- NOW THRU SAT. RONALD COLMAN in the "UNHOLY GARDEN" Extra Added DUKE ELLINGTON "St. Louie Blues" Comedy Newe Club life, restau rant, free swimming pool, gym, library, spacious lounges, roof garden, sepa rate floors for men and women. Six minutes from Penn or Grand Cen tral Stations. George Turkel Manager structor In the foundry laboratory, it is not the purpose of the course to turn out trained foundrymen. On the contrary it is only used to give the young engineers a work ing knowledge of the foundry room. "One could read every book on the subject of foundry, said Mr. Overstreet, "but If they have had no actual experience In mak ing molds, or pouring iron, their knowledge would be of little use." Besides doing actual foundry work, the course Involves an instruction in theory and practical use of metals Including the melting point of different metals, the fusing temperature, and many other -dp ,i i .si o 1 m t H. 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Later they are put to work making simple molds, and as they improve in technique, the work becomes more difficult Members of the mechanical engi neering college are required to take one year of the foundry work, while members of the electrical engineering college need only one semester's work. "It is a man's work," declared Beginning Friday An Especially Attractive Showing of Feather Weight Jersey Dresses and Two and Three Piece Knit Suits 12 Sum 12-42 Jerseys if they are light in weight and trimmed wttfc the new touches of crochet and gay knit suits, in whlck the sweater is very important are actively engaged I bringing spring to your wardrobe. Tireieaa hours et New York shopping discovered these smart atytec fta such varied colon sod aUea at such a thrifty prteo. 5$ Rough Cotton Sportwear BUM 11-20 To get into tbo rough ia fashion's aim aft tke aa ment and thee smart washable w tura tft trick. RlbintHM and Crochettes bring cotton to In a new guise. Gay know these labftoa will J. Davidson Not Mr. Overstreet "If you are not a man when you go to work In a foundry, you either don't make the grade or you come out a man." After watching the work Tuesday, the writer Is very much inclined to agree. "Your Drug Btore" Our Soda Fountain And Lunch eonette service, Bigger, Better than ever. Remember your Drug Store. THE OWL PHARMACY WE DELIVER 148 No. 14 JL P. Phone 1068 95 $6 pastels, plenty of Interest you. Third floor 1201 O EtTMi Lfaoota, KW. Fred Hansen You? See Our Windows Today. Store Open Saturday Evening Till 9:00 O'clock J0kJ n MI 1 N lVirtll 133 SOUTH 13 STREET C0L0HIAL 1