The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 30, 1933, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY, MARCH 30. 1933.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THREE
ULVMMAE GROUP TO
ENTERTAIN, SENIORS
$igma Phi Sigma Plans
House Party for
Saturday,
Seniors Honored.
The eight seniors of Alpha Chi
Omega will be honored by the
alumnae at a 1 o'clock luncheon
Saturday, April 1, at the Lincoln
Country club. Hostesses will be
Mrs. William Folsom, Mrs. Her
bert Folsom, Mrs. J. F. Stevens,
Mrs. Blanchard Anderson, Mrs. J.
John Grainger, Mrs. Beulah Min
nick, Mrs. G. E. Condra and Mrs.
Walter White. Following the lnn
theon, the afternoon will be de
voted to bridge.
Plan Original Party.
Sigma Thi Sigma is scheduling
ftn April Fool party to be held
Saturday night. The decorations
will be in gold and white, and fea
turing the spring theme. Terry
Townsend's orchestra will play
LaVerne Arnold is in charge of
Arrangements. Chaperons have
not yet been chosen.
Party on Ag Campus.
The freshmen commission of the
Y. W. C. A. on the Ag campus
is sponsoring a party for all fresh
men Ag students on Friday, March
31. Dancing and games will be
featured during the evening.
Favors will be given to the guests.
Evelyn Rezabeck is the chairman
in charge of general arrangements.
1
A MAT
Cpoch as
Spring!!
nc- CLEANED
7$C LIKE NEW
(68c Cash and Carry)
Our special equipment gives ht
FACTORY FINISH to hU w
clean... costs no more to da It this
way...nd Uiey LOOK lot better,
V Cleaner
B3367
221 No. 11
The n
bit
fctttleihlp
who ruld
before Mn
is iocji
.Vote
STUART
LINCOLN
MAT. 15c
EVE. 25c
JAMEIC
FXTIU!
CHARLIE CHAPLIN
"EASY STREET"
ORPHEUM
MAT.
EVE.
15C
25c
Onre in erery girl's life
rotnrn the moment of
decision
OUTSIDER"
An unusual film from Kalherlne
Cornell's stage hit I
Aimt:n
"SCREEN SNAPSHOTS"
"WOLF AT THE COOT-:"
"LURE OF THE Oait-NT"
Rebecca Koertlng is publicity
vucuiuitui. ujim man nas cnarge
of refreshments. The entertain
ment committee Includes Veleda
uavia and Eleanor Worthman.
Emily Snancaard him rhnro-a f
the ticket sale. Florence Buxman
is tne freshmen commission spon
sor on the Ag campus. The chap
erons for the party are Dr. Keim
iu nis aaugnier; fror. and Mrs.
TT T" J
Cabinet Entertained.
The Y. W. C. A. cabinet was
entertained by the advisory board
ai me nome or Mrs. j. fetrus
Peterson on Wednesday. March 29.
This is the annual joint meeting
or me cabinet and the advisory
board.
Sigma Nu Initiates.
Sigma Nu announces the recent
initiation of Glenn Lyon, Clinton;
James Perry, Omaha; Richard
Cockburn, Lincoln; Louis Ulry,
Grand Island; Russell Hoffman,
Des Moines and Everett Munn,
Waverly.
Club Holds Luncheon.
The Pi Kappa Phi Mothers club
held a lfincheon at the home of
Mrs. M. C. Burleigh, Wednesday,
March 29 at 1 o'clock. Mrs. Anna
L. Zinnecker is the assistant hos
tess. Kappa Alums Meet.
The Kappa Kappa Gamma alum
nae will meet for a 1 o'clock lun
cheon Saturday, April 1 at the
home of Mrs. Emmett Junge.
Pledges Chi Phi.
Chi Phi announces the pledging
of Homer Rose of Omaha.
Graduate Goes East.
Charles B. Anderson, former
student at the university, has gone
to Babson Park, Mass., to enter
the Babson Park Institute for a
course in business administration.
D. U. Initiation.
Delta Upsilon recently initiated
Eugene Pester, Tom Cheney, Jack
Avery, Robert Chase, Dick Chris
tensen, Ramon Colvert, Beverly
Finkle, James Harris, Richard
Schmidt and Willis Stork.
Pledges Sigma Chi.
Siema Chi recently pledged Joe
Morgan of McCook.
PARTY GO ON SALE
Head of Executive Board
Expects Record Crowd
At Ag Affair. .
Ticket sales "for the College of
Agriculture's spring party which
began yesterday, according to
n i a n n T.niovtt. Ae executive
J - 1 c I
board president and manager of I
-not-tir aro pvnprted to brine i
jjtfc i. j , . ' - f- w
a record attendance to the Ag
campus' biggest spring event.
Howie Christensen's orchestra
has been secured to play for the
party which will be held in the
Activities building on Saturday,
April 8. LeDioyt announced that
the sales drive has been placed in
charge of Howard White and
Norma Peterson, members of 'the
Ag executive board.
Other members of the ticket
sales committee are George Shad
bolt, Billy Donahue, Murray
Brawner, Norris Enders, L. Hodg
kins, Vincent Daniel.son, Robert
Voss, Bill Waldo, Ray Tonjes,
Roland Anderson, Elmer Pouli,
John Lowcnstein and Robert Bar
ber. Each salesman who sells ten or
more tickets will be givena com
plimentary ticket, LeDioyt ex
plained. Eellouship Student
Cites to Scotlsbluf f
Clarence Dow, graduate fellow
ship student in the geography de
partment, has gone to Scottsbluff
county to investigate land utiliza
tion under the tri-state irrigation
project. He will return next week
to write a thesis on the informa
tion which he will procure. Dow is
working for his doctor's degree.
MerniiMi to Hold Special
f'hrar:il for Pageant
A special rehearsrl for tr--pageant
to be given by the Tanks
lercttes and men's swimming clas.s
has been called for Saturday, Apt it
1 at 12 o'clock. Reheaisals are ir
rharpo nf Dnrolhv Whitney, lien-'
Mality and Don lasieroay. i m-.
pageant will be given in two I
weeks.
- . ,. I
TICKETS
SPRING
BARBOUR SPEAKS TO
ENGINEERS
MEETING
Club Holds Annual Ladies'
Night at Chamber of
Commerce.
An illustrated address on "Fos
sils of the Great Plains" was given
by Prof. B. H. Barbour of the ge
ology department Monday evening
at the annual ladies night dinner
of the Lincoln Engineers club at
the chamber of commerce.
Tales of the "over specialization
of the cat" and the Sioux county
hills wherein lie between 5,000 and
6,000 camel skeletons made up the
theme of his speech.
"Over specialization killed the
cat," Dr. Barbour said. Beginning
life in Nebraska and vicinity, he
said, one kind of cat was provided
with enough teeth both for protec
tion and hunting, but gradually
the number diminished until only
two great saber teeth remained,
forcing the cat to confine his hunt
ing activities to certain types of
less able beasts. The cat disap
peared with the death of these
other beasts, he stated.
Stereoptician slides were used to
explain the evolution of present
day types of animals. Contrary to
common opinion, the elephant be
gan as a small animal while the
pig at first was larger, he said. He
described a prehistoric hog which
measured seven feet in height and
eleven and a half feet in length.
Nebraska was termed as fertile
field for skeleton hunters and the
work of the university in this field
was shown.
E EC FACULTY
Creighton Professor Talks
On 'New Outlooks in
Nutrition.'
The Home Economics faculty at
tended the annual meeting of- the
Home Economics association at
Omaha Friday and Saturday of
last week. The meetings which
were held in the Hotel Fontanelle,
were attended by over a hundred
members from all parts of the
A high spot in the meeting was
Dr. Victor Levine's address on
"New Outlooks in Nutrition." Dr.
Levine is professor of biochemistry
in the medical school at Creighton
university. Another outstanding
talk was given by Miss Frances
Zuill, national president of Ameri
can Home Economics associations,
now heading the Home Economics
department in Iowa City. Her talk
was on "Are Significant Changes
in Home Economics Necessary?"
The annual dinner was given in
honor of Dr. and Mrs. Homer An
derson. Dr. Anderson is the new
superintendent of the Omana pun
list cn V"k"l Q
nfis.. Marv Guthrie. Miss Rose
Schonka, Miss Brietstadt and Miss
Lea Schofield of Lincoln scnouia
also attended the meeting.
REV. IOHNSTON ENDS
SERIES OF LECTURES
Miss Stella Sturloek Will
Talk ut Next Vesper
Service.
"Sin is anything which prevents
us from developing the finest per
sonality possible, while salvation is
the power to escape wrong in
tents," said Rev. Paul Johnston m
concluding his .series of four Len
ten talks at the weekly vesper
services, Tuesday, March 28.
Rev. Johnson's topic was
"Jesus-Saviour." He spoke on the
general theme of salvation, point
ing out that one of the most im
portant steps toward salvation was
the eradicating from one's charac
ter such traits as pride, resent
ment, unmereifulness, and selfish-
Miss Stella Sturloek, national
secretary of the Y. W. C. A. for
the Rocky mountain region, will
speak at next week's vesper serv
ices. FREE FREE FREE
t'.M-ry Momlnv A Friday
l'M KKT BII.1.1AKDS AMI MXOOKER
To All t'ratrrnlljr Men
Vcur Fraternity Pin Will B
Identification
Saratoga Billiard Parlors
ii p urn.
Plinur Hf. 1 20 tieor(e KlacM, Onaer
HOM
ATTENDS
MEETING
Yearbook Staffs Are
Requested to Report
Cornhusker editorial staffs
are requested to report this
afternoon and the rest of the
week at the Cornhusker office.
The-work of making individual
writeups for each picture in the
Junior and senior sections
makes it necessary that every
member of these two staffs be
present. Copy must be ready
for the printers next week.
R. W. Spencer, editor.
MANY ARE EXPECTED
TO ATTEND RELAYS
Eleventh Annual
Affair to Be
April 22.
Kansas
Held
LAWRENCE, Kas. Indications
that the field of athletes in the
eleventh annual Kansas relays will
be little if any reduced over past
years despite unsettled conditions
in athletic departments of colleges
and universities were strong as
preliminary cards of intention to
enter teams continued to come to
Dr. F. C. Allen, director of ath
ictipe at the University of Kansas
and manager of the Kansas relays
which wilf be held here April 22.
With the date of the Kansas
carnival still a month away re
sponse to the announcement of the
Kansas relays program of eleven
relays races and nine special in
dividual events has been instant
onn the -nvpiiminarv reDorts of in
tention to enter teams continue to
come into the University or Kan
woe nthlptir office dailv.
Among the first university class
institutions saying they intend to
have athletes in the Kansas relays
are Kansas State college, Texas,
rrati-o univprsitv. Kansas. Loyola
University of Chicago, Oklahoma
A. & M., Iowa, UKianoma, unu
nell college, Illinois.
TVin nf ihp collece class in
stitutions already reporting they
hoped to have teams nere aih
iniiwiArt Pittsburgh (Kansas)
Tocre vvirhita university,
Washburn college, Emporia (Kan
sas) Teachers, McKendree college
of Lebanon, 111., Baker university,
nioPhorcnn rolles-e. Yankton col
lege of Yankton, S. D., Kearney
(Nebraska) Teachers, College of
Emporia, Iowa Wesleyan, Simpson
college or maianoia, x., jmoija
..sna MiasMirii Teachers. Carle
ton college of Northfield, Minn.;
and Oklanmoa uapusb iuuvciohj
That the field for the Missouri
Valley A. A. U. decathlon to De
held in connection with the Kansas
relays may include an tnree mem
v- th United States decath
irtn Hoipp-ation in the last Olympics
was indicated with an inquiry
from Wilson "Buster" Charles,
Haskell Indian star, from Albu
querque, N. M., saying he hoped
to be on hand for the event. James
A. Bausch, Kansas City Athletic
club star and holder of the world
decathlon record made in winning
the Olympic event, is understood
to be planning to enter the event
here; and Clyde Coffman, Univer
sity of Kansas student who fin
ished seventh in the Olympic
decathlon, has announced that he
will compete in the event at the
Kansas relays. Some half dozen
other entries appear to be certain
for the decathlon in view of the
advance inquiry about the event.
Five events of the decathlon will be
held Friday afternoon, April 21,
and the final five events on Sat
urday morning, April 22.
Harvard university will have
liquor served with their meals for
the first time. The superintendent
of the dining hall said that he saw
no reason why beer and wines
should not be served if the liquor
laws at present were changed.
TONITE
RED NICHOLS
AND HIS
World Famous Pennies
FEATURING
JUNE REA
direct 'from Earl Carrol's
Red has just completed a long engagement at the
Muehlebarh Hotel in Kansas City.
MARIGOLD
Couples $1.10 Stags $1.10
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA,
JANE STEEL NAMED
GIRL-OF-THE-MONTH
Spring Issue of Awgwan
Is Placed on Sale
Wednesday.
Jane Steel, Pi Beta Phi, was
presented as the Awgwan girl-of-the-month,
in the spring issue of
the Awgwan which was placed on
sale Wednesday morning. The pic
tures of six girls: Mildred Huff,
Alpha Delta Theta;Ruth Sears, Pi
Beta Phi; Jeanette Clark, Alpha
rhi rimeea: Florence Dixon. Cbl
Omega; Clara Day, Alpha Xi
Delta, and Lucille Hitchcock, Al
pha Omicron Pi appeared on the
beauty panel, rne gins were again
chosen irrespective of affiliation or
class, but by the individual beauty
of their pictures.
The concluding installment of
Neil McFarland's series about two
freshmen in love, is featured as
Chuck and Phyllis come to the
parting of the ways in "Spring
Breakup.
' "It Was a Lovely Day" a story by
Leavitt Dearborn appears in this
issue. It is a story concerned with
the trials and tribulations of Ben
jamin E. degerton Hamilton, and
Percy Hedgewortn, two conege
students who. tired of dating
steady, decide to go on a picnic
with new girls, complications ap
pear only when the "new dates"
turn out to be the possessors of
their maternity pins.
The cover, designed by Norman
Hansen portrays a slightly over
developed student who is com
placently enjoying an aiiat-K ui
"Spring fever' on me campus
green.
A series of ten letters describing
the entire course of a spring ro
mance appear in "Once in a tiiue
Moon," a story by Lucile Hunter.
Gore again brings to light all
the untold secrets of campus do
ings, mis-doings, and romances.
Katherine Howard's fashion
page is another feature in the
magazine. In this issue, Miss
Howard writes and illustrates
spring clothing.
Methods of having good times
via spring methods are portrayed
in the two pages of cartoons
drawn by Morris Gordon.
Mrs. Rosenquest Will
Continue Interviens
Mrs. C. B. Rosenquist, repre
senting the Women's Faculty club,
will continue to interview appli
cants for the scholarships offered
by the club today at Ellen Smith
Hall from 1 to 4 o'clock. All can
didates, who are unable to be pres
ent at some time during the sched
uled hours, are requested to apply
for a personal interview at some
convenient time.
THURSDAY
Lunch Menu
Stuffed Pofk ICC
Tenderloin '
Pot Roast of Beef T.SZt
with Horse Radish '
Salmon IClJ
Patties
Boston 2CC
Baked Beans
Escalloped corn Mashed potatoes
LENTEN SPECIALS
Stuffed Tomatoes with Crab
Salad and Toast 25c
Deviled Eggs with Potato
Salad and Toast Z5C
Cottage Cheese, Pineapple
and Toast
Served With 5c Drink
BVE1N'S
PBsarntacy
H. A. REED, Mgr.
13 4 p Phone B7037
"Vanities" and Ziegfield Follies
BALLROOM