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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 19, 1933)
FOUR CAHPflJSOCflET Y a sh.nl visit before losuiuiMji llu of the coiintrv From the time mosi 01 ou rem ....... .... lust class is over at ten minutes to twelve on Wednesday, is aiinvoxiniatrlv HH.lMHJ senm.ls. so start counting them oil now. Thoso'who do u.. to class Wednesday morning will he anxiously watchin? the cloek ami mil icipatin- the busy two weeks ahead of them. ONE OF THE two formats which are scheduled for Wednes day night is that of the SIR Alpha, which will be Riven a' the Corn husker hotel, following the annual dmner at the chapter house . r ort -five are expected at the d.nner which will feature decorations in seasonal colors. Chaperons for the dance are Mr. and Mrs. Karl Arndt. Professor and Mrs. Clifford Hicks Mrs K W. Nelson, and Mrs. Hal Minor. Four hundred couples have been invited. THE OTHER is the Sigma Chi dinner dance at the Lincoln to which fifty couples have been bid den. Mis. Cora Bentley. Dr. and Mrs. G. E. Condra. and Dr. and Mrs Harry Flansburg will be the chaperons,' and Duncan Sowles is in charge of the arrangements. Christmas colors are to be used i the decorations. AND AT THE house the same evening the Phi Delts will enter tain at a 7:30 dinner dance, for which Don Horning is making the arrangements. Col. and Mrs. W. H. Oury, Mrs. Dora K. Finch, and Mr. J. B. Harlev are to be the chap erons, i SEVERAL FAMILIAR faces will be seen around Lincoln for the holidays when quite a number of grads and others will have their own homecoming for a short time. Ed Sickel and Bill Irons, now at tending Harvard business college, will arrive on Friday, as will June and Virginia Foster, Genevieve Smith, and Roger Wilkerson, who are going to Northwestern. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Faulkner, jr.. arrive the same day from Philadelphia. Hal Miles, who has been at Michi gan is home now, and returning soon from the same places are Kathryn Murray and Bonita Ivins, Elizabeth Leland. studying at Western Reserve in Cleveland, and her sister, Dorothy, who is a li brarian in Brooklyn, will arrive the latter part of the week. HERE'S SOMETHING that should be of interest to most ev erybody in Lincoln as well as in the university. Jane Rehlaender. Delta Gamma, and Drew De Vriendt A. T. O. are making plans tor their marriage which will take place some time in February. Gos sip says that Jane has a lovely new square cut diamond ring, which was supposed to have been a Christmas present . . . just a little early. AND ANOTHER thing ... we hear that Carolyn Van Anda is wearing a sweetheart pin, mot out i, but what and whose is a secret. THIS WEEK is to be crowded with social activity for Harriette Love and Elizabeth Pancost whose marriage will be solemnized during the holidays. These holiday wed dings are furnishing an added in centive for the gay events which always crowd the Christmas sea son, and there will be ready made festive atmosphere to add zrst to these prcnuptial events. Today Miss Mary Edwards Sum ner will entertain at her home in honor of Elizabeth Pancoast, whose maid of honor she is to be. On Wednesday Jane Steele will give a tea at her home for both brides-to-be. Miss Margaret Beardsley will give a luncheon and shower for Miss Pancoast on Thursday and Tyler O Conner will be hostess at a tea on the same day for Harriette Love, whose maid of honor she is to be. Friday Miss Love will be honored at a luncheon given by Miss Mary Lauer, and Miss Elizabeth Shearer will entertain for Miss Pancoast at a luncheon and kitchen shower. Saturday, Miss Love's bridesmaids will attend a luncheon at the Love home, and on Christmas day, Miss Mary George will honor Miss Love t a tea at her home. Miss Mary Updike will give a dinner for Miss Pancoasfs bridal party on the 26th, and on the following evening, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pancoast will give a prenuptial dinner for their daughter and the bridal party. It looks like a busy vacation for Omabans and particularly for the college set AND IN LINCOLN Miss Rutb Holmes, who will be married Christmas day to William TempeL plans to spend a busy week. On Tuesday she will be honored at an evening party at the home of Mrs. C. J. Rouzee. Wednesday noon Mrs. Arthur Perry will entertain four guests at a 1 o'clock luncheon and glassware shower for Miss Holmes. Wednesday evening; she will be entertained at the home of Miss Kathryn Simpson, who will be assisted by Mu-s Althea Sbeidt and Miss Eileen Story. Thursday Miss Frances Kingsley, Miss Ma ra in Paul, and Miss Evelyn S tow ell, will honor Miss Holmes at a FOR THOSE WHO WILL REMAIN in Lincoln, W'ciliu'sdiiy fvetiiiiR will offer us much as the 11 venire weekend in tlie wiiy of entertainment. I'x'lli f the tlown lon hotels will he used for the first lime this .season for mid-week social functions of university interest and ; third event of the evening will he a formal dinner dance and house party. It looks as though there won't be many out-oi-town students stayinjr here over Ihe holidays, hut the itii will lie partially I'illi'il llV the inanv who are leturninst for ir school work in other parts buffet supper and linen shower at the Kingsley home. On Saturday evening Mr.'and Mis. F. M. Holmes will entertain at a prenuptial din ner at their home for Miss Holmes, Mr. Tempel. and the wedding party. THE MARRIAGE of Maigaretta Finch, Sigma Kappa and graduate of the class of 1932. to Gerald C. Ernst of Kansas City will take place in Lincoln on December 30. The announcement of the wedding was made Sunday by her mother, Mrs. C'lma Finch. 9 TWO MORE parties honoring Miss Jean Field and Donald Scott, who will be married on December 27. are listed on the calendar for this coming Friday and Sunday. On Friday Mrs. S." S. Rogers and her daughters. Elizabeth and Mrs. Meredith Darlington of Fairbury. will honor the bride-to-be with a shower at their home. And on Sun day the parents of the groom. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Scott, will enter tain at a prenuptial supper at their home. Guests will present the cou ple with kitchenware articles, which will be placed around a Christmas tree. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Fullager entertained eleven guests in honor of the couple Sunday at their home. Pink and green, the color motif, was carried out in the nut cups, place cards, and menu. The afternoon was spent informally. AND STILL another couple is planning to be married during the holidays. This time it will be Elizabeth Barber, Alpha Phi, and Howard Mixson, Lambda Chi Alpha from Omaha, both graduates of last year, who announced their en gagement and approaching mar riage Sunday. The couple will live in Colerainc Minnesota, where Mr. Mixson is assigned to a civilian conservation corps camp. LAST FRIDAY evening Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Ashton entertained at a party announcing the marriage of their daughter, Alice, to Ken neth Reed of Campbell. The cere mony took place at Seward on Oct." 28, with Miss Janet Ashton, sister of the bride as maid of honor, and Leland Copple. cousin of the groom, best man. Mr. Reed is a graduate of the university and a member of Farm House and Alpha Zeta. . A RECENT marriage of interest in Omaha was that of Miss Flor ence Binkley to Dick Devereaux, which took place Saturday after noon at 4 o'clock at the Central United Presbyterian church. Mrs. Devereaux was a Pi Phi here and Mr. Devereaux was a member of ATO. Miss Imo Doris Wells was the maid of honor, and William Devereaux was best man. The bridesmaids were Miriam Kis singer and Miss Betty Kimberly, and Edward Binkley and George Kennedy were the ushers. Follow ing the ceremony there was a re ception at the home of the bride's parents. After a short wedding trip the couple will be at home in St. Paul, Minn. NEWS OF another out-of-town marriage was only recently re ceived. On Oct. 28 in Indianapolis Miss Letta Bell Roder of Lincoln was married to Everett E. West brook of Lincoln at the Northside Methodist church. Mr. Westbrook formerly attended the university, and after a temporary residence in Fort Wayne he will bring his bride back to Lincoln where they will make their home. Mrs. Westbrook was entertained Sunday morning at a 10:30 breakfast at the home of Mifs Marguerite Phillips, and Mrs. Bernard Warren recently gave a kitchen shower in her honor. She will leave for Fort Wayne on Dec. 21. DURING THE holidays Miss Frances Pothast will be married to LOWEST BUS RATES Over the CHICAGO '5" One Round One Bound Way Trip way Trip S .90 Omaha 1.35 .6S Vork 1.00 2.W Dm Moines 4 5 1.25 Grind Island 1.25 40 Iowa City 8 53 1.95 Kearney 3.50 S.50 Detroit 14.00 3 45 North Platte 6.30 16.50 New York J1.50 6 50 Denver 1100 2.55 SIouk City 4.35 12.50 Salt Lake 22.50 .50 Wahoo .90 17.50 Lot Angeles 31.00 ROUND TRIP OMAHA RAPID TRANSIT LINES Lrg (lomfurlahlr Litentri Inwrrd Hutirt 223 So. Hth St Lincoln, Nebr. Phone B7938 Look to Roy Williams Hinze, who Is a graduate of the college of phar macy at the university. TYING A quilt and mending toys was the entertainment for the Alpha Delta Theta alumnae last night when they were entertained by Mrs. Frances Drath, with Miss Katherine Klapp assisting. The affair was a Christmas party and the decorations were in red and white. TONIGHT AT the chapter house the Kappa Sigs will have their annual alumni banquet, which will be attended by about sixty. Fol lowing the dinner, the actives and alums will have a combined Christ mas party. IN COMMEMORATION of the founding of the Nebraska chapter of Sigma Alpha Mu, Hymen Ros pnherir was host to active and alumni of the fraternity at a din ner Sunday night at me corn husker. Mr. Rosenberg was the first nrpsidpnt of the chaDter. and ten charter members of the group were present. Brief talks were given by Al Batt, president of the Omaha alumni, and Max Blazer. CHRISTMAS GIFTS were pre sented to twenty children from Tabitba home at a party Monday afternoon at the Alpha Gamma Rho house. And the A G R s are planning to entertain about thirty alumni at the annual Christmas banquet tonight at the chapter house. seasonal COLORS and dec orations were used at the Campus club dinner last night at the Uni versity club, when about forty-five memoers oi me group uu Marjorie Snanafelt of the museum .tonnrtment srjeak on "The Old Christmas Rituals and Customs." Following the dinner the cluD fnmmllv mesented a Erift to the University hospital. DISCUSS JEW PLEDGESj Siema Delta Chi to Plan; 0 Awgwan Advertising Campaign. Members of Sisrma Delta Chi, journalistic professional and hon orary fraternity, are planning a e-eneral session for immediately after the Christmas holidays. Ac cording to Dick Moran, president of the organization, arrangements will be made for the initiation oi about eight pledges. Their names will be anounced at a later date. The journalistic fraternity will also aid in planning a definite ad vertising campaign for the Aw gwan, humor publication on the campus. ARRANGE FOR INITIATION Theta Sigma Phi to Hold Literary Meeting In January. Tentative nlans have been made by Theta Sigma Phi, national journalistic honorary for women, to hold initiation :.oon after the Christmas holidays. No definite date has been set for the initiation, but it will prob ably take place on January 11 and will be held at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Pike, president of the alumni chapter. In conjunction with initiation plans are being made for a literary meeting to be held the same evening. THIEL WILL NAME INTERFRATERNITY BALL COMMITTEE (Continued from Page 1.) given to junior men in past years but following drastic revision of the council's membership, will be filled by seniors only this year. The change was one of several designed to remove politics from the council. Meeting Will Be Short. Thiel stated that while the meeting will be comparatively short and the announcement of the ball committee will be the major business, the reports of commit tees on campus beaut if ication and revision of the council constitution and rushing will also be discussed. The campus beaulification com mittee which is endeavoring to se cure aid from the regents on the council's proposal to have a num ber of stone pillars erected on the malls, is preparing specifications for the project which will be pre sented tonight. Elton Ross is chairman of the committee. f.irrvfxwVr at OI R House H 2 truiet 5jf K h ,e,h,Hir nl UH ft g KA MERRY CHRISTMAS AN DM A HAPPY NEW YEAR g 5 The Owl Drug Store Ruth and P Street! B1068fc )m&K&3 &&K&tt& Holidays 9 Round Trip GOOD 180 DAYS Nebraskan THE DAILY NERRASKAN I PERM TO Oxford Professor Desires to Reprint Story Taken From 'Prairie Schooner.' The "Prairie Schooner" mag azine has again been honored by Edward J. O'Brien of Oxford England thru his request to re print "Crossroads Woman" in the forthcoming edition of his annual anthology "The Best Short Stories." Written by Howard Mc Kinley Corning, "Crossroads Wo man" was proofread by "Prairie Schooner,, Editor L. C. Wimberly, professor of English at the univer sity, and first published as one of the leading- stories in the 1933 winter issue of the Nebraska mag azine. Mr. Corning was born near Ben nett, Neb., and is now living in Oregon. He writes both prose and poetry. His two volumes of poetry are "Those People," and "The Mountain in the Sky." Several of his poems are Included in the 1932 edition of "The New Poetry." The total amount of money re ceived by the Indiana Daily Stu dent in its annual Christmas cheer charity fund drive up to Friday, Dec. 14 was $233.39. REQUES SPECIAL CHRISTMAS RATES RT Seward -35 $ .65 Utira 55 1.00 York 65 1.00 Auroro 1.10 2.00 Grand Island 1.25 2 35 Hastings 1.75 3.15 North Platte 3.45 6.20 Denver 6.50 9.50 Los Anoeles 17.50 31.00 WEST 9:30 A. M. 6:00 P. M. FAIRWAY BUS SYSTEM 1325 P St. Central Hotel B-4224 vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv. We Can Help Those Less Fortunate Than Ourselves And A A A A A A Christmas BARBS TO START CAGE SCHEDULE AFTER HOLIDAYS (Continued from Page l.i and at the end of the schedule the two champs played for the title. Harry West was named last spring to serve as president of the Interclub council during the pres ent year, but due to outside work he was unable to serve in that capacity. The purpose of the council is to organize the Barb men into an or ganization which will encourage them in taking part in campus ac tivities, and to offer the Barb stu dents some social life under the direction of a committee, the Barb council. CAPACITY CROWD ATTENDS MESSIAH HELD ON SUNDAY (Continued from Page 1.) people, including Governor and Mrs. Bryan, Chancellor and Mrs. Burnett, the university rege-.iis, the deans of the university and their wives. A naur ctllop nl At form. Which provided for the seating of the en tire chorus ana iz. orcnestra on tho stnirp. flddpd ereAtlv to the ef fectiveness of the performance. me piairorm was aesigneu una year by Prof. Harry Cunningham, chairman of the department of architecture. Kirkpatrick Directs. For almost thirty years the an nual production of "The Messiah" was directed by Mrs. Carrie Bell RT Omaha $ .90 1.35 Wahoo 50 .90 Sioux City 2-55 4.35 Kansas City . 2.95 5.50 Chicago 5.90 9.45 Des Moines 2 90 4.95 Minneapolis ....... 6.90 11.35 Detroit . 3.50 14.00 New York 16.50 31. bO EAST 7:30 A. M. 2:30 P. M. 12:45 P. M. 7:00 P. M. at little bother and no expense! It's Christmas time! But Christmas to inanv will mean little more than anv other Iav of the year. For it is thev on whom fate has not smiled kindly. In cooperation with Lincoln charity or ganizations, the Dailv Nebraskan is conduct ing a campus-wide campaign for old clothes. Things for which you no longer have any use, will prove most useful to Lincoln needy during cold winter months. Those old shoes you can't wear, which at the present time merely clutter up your clothes closet, may just as well he given to charity. That dress you thought had seen its last day weeks ago, w ill see many more when given to folks who never get to buy pretty new things. So give and help spmebody have a mer rier Christmas. We'll he glad to call for even the smallest contribution. It's the little bits that eventually count. W e can all do a little to help. A A A A A A Ads for Gift TUESDAY. DECEMBER 19. 1933. Raymond, when she made it one of the foremost musical presenta tions of the state. Since her death, it has been conducted by Howard Kirkpatrick, director of the uni versity school of music. Last year, for the first time, members of the organization were selected by invitation of the di rector, opening new fields of tal ent for the production. The solo ists and three hundred members of the chorus rehearsed for eight weeks preceding the performance this yar. An appreciative audience ap plauded the numbers of the ora torio enthusiastically, and the voices carried well in the excep tionally large auditorium. A spe cial broadcast of the concert was made from the coliseum over radio station KFAB. NAME COMMITTEE TO C00FEUATE ON PILLAR PROGRAM (Continued from Page 1.) versity engineering department which will be presented to the Regents with the petition. It is expected that plans will have been completed very soon after the holidays and that work on the project will be started within a few days, providing all arrangements can be made. Women's Cleaning at LOW PRICES Plain SILK or WOOL qpa DRESSES 73V MODESTLY STYLED SILK or WOOL 4 )f DRESSES 1iJ ONE-PIECE FORMAL A mtk DRESSES, without slipsJ.j3U WE EMPLOY EXPERTS tf AHSITY V CLEANERS 221 No. 14 Joe Tucker B3367 Roy Wythers AAA A A A Suggestior 1U At the University of Minnesota many students are receiving aid from a reaerai worn-aid . rund which has recently been estab lished there. Funds for the project are being provided by the .state CWA. The largest crowd to view a luot- ball game at the University of Oklahoma this year came to the Oklahoma-Oklahoma A. and M. game on Thanksgiving day. There were 16,446 fans present. A GIFT SHE WILL JUIIVIIVinili y f. A i A . it rermanent & ft A soft, luxuri- j 95 I ani wave spiral or Cro quignole com plete for only. . Other Beautiful Waves , $2.75 and $3.75 2 We Specialize In Only the A A Best of Beauty Work. u A A A A A A 227 Natl B. ef RIArvd A, Commerce Bids. 7y nl