The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 24, 1933, Page THREE, Image 6

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    FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1933.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THREE
SOCIETY,
THETA XIS TO GIVE
PIRATE SHIP PARTY
Kavna Delta Announces
Recent Initiation
Of Five Girh.
Pirate Ship Is Theme.
A Pirate Ship is the theme that
will be carried out in the decora
tions at the Theta Xi party Friday
evening. One part of the house will
be decorated to resemble the hold
of a ship lighted by candles and
lanterns. About sixty couples are
expected to attend the party which
is an annual aiiair.
Kappa Deltas Initiate.
Kappa Delta initiated several
girls recently at a ceremony at the
chapter house. The initiates are
Frances Hinkle, Trenton; Loretto
Murphy, Omaha; Rosemary Need
ham, Ord; Sylvia Smith, Daykin;
and Beth Taylor, Lincoln.
Alumnae to Meet.
The Alpha Gamma Delta alum
nae will meet for a 12:30 lunch
eon Saturday at the home of Mrs.
K. R. Lewis. Assisting1 hostesses
will be Mrs. E. E. Harris. Mrs. R.
E. Grady and Mrs. E. O'Brien.
Sigma Nus Plan Banquet.
Sigma Nu will give a formal
banquet Friday evening at the
chapter house, following the intia
tion of seven new members in the
afternoon. Dr. Edward H. Hashin
ger of Kansas City, division in
spector for the fraternity, will be
the speaker. About sixty are ex
pected to attend.
Tri-Delt Is Married.
The marriage of Miss Elizabeth
Pettijohn, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Pettijohn of Oregon,
Mo., to John R. Eiser, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Eiser of Nebraska
City, took place Sunday afternoon
at the home of the bride's parents.
Mrs. Eiser is a graduate of the
university and a member of Delta
Delta Delta sorority. Mr. Eiser,
w ho is a graduate of the university
law college, is affiliated with Sig
ma Chi and Xi Alpha Delta.
Club Has I ncheon.
Alpha Xi Delta alumnae will
meet Saturday for a one o'clock
luncheon at the chapter house. The
hostesses will be Mrs. Gordon Ba-
QU,UTY CLEANING
at Lower Prices
Butler Cleaners
M1679
STHJAB3T-j
IN1
With
MYBNA LOY
Added
LANNV ROSS MUSICOMEDY
Laming Monday!
HELEN HAYES
In "Son. Daughter"
LINCOLN
MAT. NITE
LOG TRACK
Coming Monday!
Jamei Cagney -Hard To Handle"
IDtPfliEIUM
AO IP J
Mat 15C N'te 2SC
fed iiiii0it,f J
EXTRA!
"SCREEN SNAPSHOTS"
Showing Hollywood' Stars and
Their Youngsters!
mm
a. a mm
SOCIAL CALENDAR.
Friday.
Corn Cobs, Dinner Dance, at
Cornhusker.
Afl Club, Mixer, Activities
Building.
heta XI, House Party.
Palladian, Temple. .
Saturday.
Sigma Nu, Hou'm Party.
Beta Theta, House Party.
Engineer's Ball, Cornhusker.
Delta Sigma Lambda, House
Pirty.
ker, Mrs. Dale Schilling and Miss
Margaret Sowles.
Palladians to Meet.
The Palladian Literary society
will be entertained at the annual
alumni program Friday evening at
the Temple. Dr. Samuel Avery,
chairman, Mrs. R. M. Bancroft and
Victor Seymour are the committee
in charge. Margaret Ready, presi
dent of the active group, will greet
the alumni and Dr. Avery, presi
dent of the alumni association, will
give the response. Musical num
bers, skits and a debate will com
pose the program for the evening,
Group to Give Tea.
Lambda Gamma, Lutheran girls
organization, will entertain all the
Lutheran girls on the campus at a
tea from 3:30 to 5:30 Friday after
noon at Ellon Smith hall.
Chaperons Club Meets.
The Chaperons club held a meet
ing recently at Carrie Belle Ray
mond hall with Dr. Elizabeth Wil
liamson as hostess. About 35 were
present. Mrs. Chauncey Palmer
Smith read an original comedy
Appointments followed the Easter
motif.
SPECIAL EDITION OF
NEBRASKA ALUMNUS
RELEASED THURSDAY
(Continued from Page 1.)
Alumnus points out that passage
of the proposed measure would re
duce the university to a third or
fourth rate institution.
This appropriation, if passed and
signed by the governor, says the
Alumnus, would cut the university
to less than was appropriated for
the two years 1915 to 1917. nearly
twenty years ago when tne uru
versity had less than half as many
students as it has today.
Backing: up their appeal for
alumni action the special publishes
the complete report of the univer
sity regents submitted Wednesday
to Lieutenant Governor jurgensen,
presiding officer of the senate, and
Representative George O'Malley,
Greeley, Speaker of the house, to
gether with the pertinent ecutonais
which have appeared in the lead
ing newspapers of the state.
"Within the past three years,
the University of Nebraska has
lost four deans and directors, two
of them to positions that pay
$4,000 more than they were re
ceiving at Lincoln. Yet the legisla
tive committee would fix tne
maximum for any dean at $4,000,
just the salary hike that was given
those able men who were wooed
away," declared the Omaha Bee
News in an editorial appearing
March 22, which was reprinted in
the edition.
Editorials from the Lincoln Eve
ning Journal for Monday, March
20, and the Lincoln star lor Aiarcn
22. were quoted at length.
In a personal letter to the
alumni, Ray E. Ramsey, secretary
of the Alumni association, says,
"The situation is serious and the
university faces a crisis. Now is
the time to assert yourself for your
university. Do it yourself and do
it immediate'."
SENIOR TOJSjVE RECITAL
Lucille Ambrose, Student
Under Chenewith, Will
Entertain Sunday.
Lucille Ambrose, student under
Wilbur Cheneweth will give her
senior recital Sunday aiiernoon,
March 20, at the Temple theater
at 4 o'clock.
Sonata in g minor, Preste, An-
dantine, Scherze (Allegre Molte)
Rende, (Presto) all by Schumann,
will be her first group of selec
tions. Her second, "A Frog He
Would A "Wooing- Go." by Cbeno-
weth, third, "Reflets dans L'eau,"
and "Prelude" by Debussey.
Concert in b flat minor, "An
dante non Treppe e Molte maes
teso, Allegre con spirite An dan
tine semplice. prestissimo Allegre
con fuece by Tschaikewsky" will
be her last selection.
Official Bulletin. J
Social Dancing.
There will be pocial dancing in
the Armory from 7 to 8:30 Friday.
March 24. Admisr?on is five c
JANE BOOS RELEASES
PERSONNEL OF STAFFS
Some YWCA Members Have
Not Indicated Their
Preferences Yet.
The personnel of the Y. W. C. A.
staffs was announced Wednesday
by Jane Boos, chairman of - the
membership staff. Several mem
bers of the Y. W. C. A. have not
yet indicatet' their staff prefer
ence. Misa Booa requests that all
girls interested in becoming a
member of some special staff de
note this by attending the meet
ings of that particular staff.
The membership of the various
staffs as they are now organized
is as follows:
The social staff, under the lead
ership of Helen Lutz, consists of
Wanda Crammer, Alice Kier, Iso
bel Aurand, Patricia Frichie,
Melda Alben, B. Marie Hansen,
Margaret Grant, and Mae Svo
boda. Muriel Moffit Is Head.
Muriel Moffit has charge of the
program and office staff whose
members include, Elizabeth Moo
maw, Margaret Nelson, Alairc
Barkes, Jean Walker, Grace
Kratky, Bernice Kane, Lida Tusha,
Betty Beck, Rosemary Anderson,
Alice King, Tli.'odor Lahrman,
Ruth McNally, Elsie Beschmer,
Beth Schmid, Lois Turner, Emily
Hickman, Rowene Miller, Dora
Slaughter, Lorraine Hitchcok, Lu
cille Hile, Valentine Klotz.
MemLe:s of the project staff are
Virginia Showalter, Ruth Byerly,
Bernice Kane, Dorothy Cathers,
and Eleanor Neil. Ruth Cherney
is chairman. n
Membership Staff Announced.
The membership of the finance
staff of which Bash Perkins is
chairman, is composed of Mar
garet Ward, Phyllis Sidner, Isabel
Hossack, Breta Peterson, Mar
jorie Shostack, Alice Geddes. Mary
Edith Hendrick Kathleen Becker,
Anne Pickett, Belle Marie Hersh
ner. Dorothy Porter. Jean Brownlee,
Phyllis Humphrey, Corrine Claf
lin, Margaret Hopper, Dora Lange
vin, and Dorothy Veon make up
the home development staff of
which Dorothy Cathers is chair
man. Elizabeth Rowan Chairman.
Members of the industrial staff
whose chairman is Elizabetn
Rowan are. Bash Perkins, Ruth
Otley, Ruth Thompson, Mildred
Waide. Margaret Hunter, Mary
Stander, ertrude Hill. Betty Han
sen, and Myra Grimes.
Vespers staff, under the direc
tion of Willa Norris, includes Doris
Slaughter, Francis Gregory. Anne
Pickett, Frances Scudder, Dorothy
Lee Hartzler, Alaire Barkes, Mary
Fuqua, Elsie Beeschorner, and
Harriet Bowen.
Marion Stamp is chairman of
vesper choir which is made up of
Virgene McBride, Fredamae West
man, Edna Mae Poulson, Dorothy
Oreutt, Vivian Lett, Konnie
Bishop, Ellen Daly, Donna Green,
Gertrude Hemphill, Althea
Scheidt, Frances Scudder. Frances
Reimer. Marion vesely. uons
Cochran, and Beth Schmid.
Ag Staff Selected.
Agricultural staff, with Gene
vieve Jeffries as chairman, is com
posed of Ardith Van Hausen, Lor-
. - . . . T -
raine uraKe. tscue jtiane hcimu-
. r . - r r 1f...M
ner, Helen touiiensmyi-r, jiuun
Moffitt, Catherine Agnew. Doro
thy Zeigenbush, Florence Downs,
Arline Stoltenburg, Kamenne
Rebbe. Lucille Hile. Valentine
Klotz, Ruth Wolfe, Florence Bus
man, Katherine Jones, Helen
Smrba, and Anita Corlett
Members of the international
and interracial staff are Florence
Buxman, Eleanor Price. Ruth Ot-
ley. Loretta Murphy, Phyllis Sid- j
ner, Ethel Roher, Lillian Vodehnai. j
Kathrvn Tukev. Lorraine Hitch-
cock, Dorothy Lee Hertzler, Emily
Hickman, and Jane Richardson.
Arlene Bors is chairman.
Freshman commissipn is headed
by Lucille Hitchcok and includes
Vera Ovenford, Bernice Kane, Ele
anor Neale, Ruth Hill. Allene Mu
mau, Melda Alben. Anne Pickett,
Madge Benson, Elizabeth Moo
maw, lone Beers. Elsie CJough.
Marian Brown, Eva Jane Sinclair,
and Irene Hentzen.
Elaine Fontein Is Head.
Elaine Fontein is chairman of
publicity staff which is made up
of Violet Cross, Carolyn Van An
da, Alice Beekman, Gwen Thomp
son, Betty Segal, Louise Perry,
Margaret Thiele, Dorothy Ziegen
busch, Helen Kropf, Frances Mor
gan, and Elizabeth Bushee.
Membership staff, beaded by
Jane Boos, includes Virgene Mc
Z'nie. Rowene Miller, Helen
i
I
I
Kropf, Lucille Dowington, Myra
Grimes, Kathleen Levy, Emily
Hickman, and Elsie Clough.
Martha Hershey is chairman of
conference staff whose members
are, Mary Lou Kink, Alice Lee
Trechsel, Ruth Cain, Mary Fuqua,
Betty Barrows, Paula Davis, Ra
chel Jacox, Florence Blome, Rhila
Martin, Jane Richardson, Bernice
Kane, and Grace Kratky.
Members of Girl Reserve staff
are, Martha Davis, Carolyn Van
Wright, Betty Barrows, Frances
Scudder, Dorothy Whitney, Irene
Nabity, and Mary Porter. Breta
Peterson is chairman. .
COLLEGE STUDENTS
USE SCRIP DURING
RANK MORATORIUM
California Universities Use
Idea to Help Thru
.nsts.
Scrip, the much talked about
form of substitute money, was
used extensively in several col
leges during the recent bank mora
torium. Printing presses rolled out
scrip in 5 to 25 cent denominations
last week for the use of students
in cafeterias and bookstores of
Los Angeles universities.
At the University of Southern
California, students checks were
exchanged for scrip, which was is
sued in $5 books, broken up in de
nominations of 5, 10, and 25 cents.
As some of the Trojans had credit
directly with the University and
others had enough cash to see
them through the financial crisis,
it was not necessary to supply all
the students with scrip. .
At the University of California,
at Los Angeles, checks of rea
sonable amounts were exchanged
for scrip. Those who purchased
articles with cash were given cash
in change while those who paid
with scrip were given scrip in
change. Departmental fees were
deferred for one week in order
that students might have an op
portunity to procure cither checks
or cash money.
lum ii minim iiiljiiiiiiiiiMhi i'TVI' ftlHi"" rlMmUHnrTT" '""
Demofex
I FbUNftOTON.GABAlENTS
I Introduce -; r"N.
"POUFF" .1
.That "Utile some- I 0H itfiT fvjLj i
thing tchich all $&'A 1
xoung thine nhouUI fr.-;'-i..",i:ih ' j
near. ' 0M j
B 4 LJJmh !?&sttti II
JUST what you've been look in p for all- the time the
smallest, lightest, softest, little step-in ever a girdle
that fits like an extra skin and feels as unobtrusive.
TWO-WAY STRETCH ELASTIC only ten inches lonjr
entirely boneless as washable as a handkerchief. Th
bringer of trim, sleek lines while placing no handicaps o'
activity. You?ll love it! Sizes 26 to 30.
Second Floor
Miller
Puzzles Are Sign of
Neurotic Condition
The professor who in 1931 caused
stormy protest over his opinion
that those who whistle are mor
ons, has now created grounds for
another furore by announcing that
the present craze for jig-saw puz
zles is a neurotic condition, a
symptom of a nervous disorder.
The professor, Charles Gray
Shaw of the New York University,
tells what he thinks of jig-saw
puzzle fans by stating, "The jig
saw, like the cross word puzzle, is
a self imposed intelligence test, by
which the puzzler wishes to as
sure himself that he is not in the
moron class. Such tests, on a
smaller scale, are used for deter
mining degrees of imbecility. The
present craze for puzzles is a neu
rotic condition, a symptom of a
nervous disorder."
The University of Hawaii holds
one of its extnesion courses on the
rim of a volcano so that the stu
dents may better study botany,
geology, and volcamic phebomena.
A
Friday Lunch Menu
pig in e
BLANKET 5V
E SCALLOPED T-i
OYSTERS J
CREAMED TUNA ON
TOAST !V
ROAST LOIN PORK
with Baited Swert Potato 3 V
BOILED TONGUE AND tmpgi
SPINACH
WAXED BEANS AND
MASHED POTATOES
LENTEN SPECIALS
Stuffed Tomato with Crab
Salad and Toast 25c
Deviled Eggs with Potato
Salad and Toast 25c
Cottage Cheese, Pineapple
and Toast 20o
Served With 5c Drink
IPisAB-BEsacy
H A. REED. Mgr.
13 & P Phone B7037
SPam