The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 15, 1934, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 15, 19.11,
FOUR
THE DAILY NtfRRASKAN
if
someone different. It's all for the good of the cause, we guess,
which, by the way. is n mighty good one.
o-
SPEAKING of marriages - two
alumnae of Upland were married
on the same day recently. On Nov.
3 Pearl Christensen became the
bride of Waldcmar Hansen of
Ogallala. Mr. Hansen is employed
with a Lincoln construction firm.
And Delma Madsen was married to
Orville Nielsen who has been
teaching in the high school at Hol
brook. SIGMA CHI wishes to announce
the recent pledging of Howard
Austin of Rapid City, S. D., and
Fred Schultz of Duncan.
BR ICE i .. fc.R left Tuesday
evening to i nt the Nebraska
chapter oi omouard and Blade,
honorary advanced military soci
ety, at its national convention
which is being held in Cincin
nati, O.
THE FORM of hour dance invi
tations seem to have reversed its
order. The Kappa Sig's invited the
Chi O's to come to their house last
night from 7 until 8 o'clock you
sec the Chi O's and the Kappa
Sig's are brother and sister fra
ternities. ALUMNAE of Mu Phi Epsilon,
women's honorary musical soro
rity, will be entertained at a lunch
eon at the home of Mrs. H. J.
Phillips todav. Assisting hostesses
will be Miss Mildred Shannon and
Mrs. Altinus Tullis.
GEORGE HOLYOKE was elect
ed to fill the Phi Psi presidency
upon the resignation of Jack
Gavin.
DELTA SIGMA Lamba auxili
ary was entertained at luncheon
Tuesday at the chapter house.
Hostesses of the affair were Mrs.
D. E. McCormack, Mrs. F. E.
Melker. Mrs. G. F. Hamilton and
Mrs. R. Case, and the afternoon
was spent in planning a Christmas
party and a bridge benefit. About
thirty eruests were present. The
house was decorated with bitter
sweet and tapers.
KAPPA DELT Mothers club will
meet this afternoon for a dessert
luncheon at the chapter house.
TEA DANCING GROUP
MEETING POSTPONED
Big Sister Tap Dancing hobby
group which was scheduled to
meet Thursday evening, Nov. 13,
has been postponed because of the
Big and Little Sister dinner which
will be held in the Armory the
same evening. Lois Rathburn.
leader of the group, announced
that members from this group wUl
YOU CHEERED
"LADY FOR A DAY"
YOU'LL STAND UP
AND CHEER
ZfiJ I Carole
YitJ
iS "LADY
Any Seat 25c Any Time
Travel
1
Union Bus Depot
13 & M B7071
INTERSTATE INTERSTATE
'70 TRANSIT LINES
I cast these lOOO votes for
r -
th GAGE Style Contest
(Peraon voting).
A genuine GAGE hat vill be individuolly desijead for each of the 5
winner by Goge Brothers & Co., creators of finest quality women's hots. J
PLACf THIS COUPON
The Daily Nebraskan Office
Basement of U. Hr.i5
VERYONE'S PRACTISING FOR
Kosini't Klub. Sonic n'wh ure very
liinic from tho unusual effort of trying
to 1)0 chorus jtirls in fact wo heard of
one poor little coed who rated a free ride,
up the law collere stairs because she was
so tired and just could n't make it. The
Kosmet Klul) ticket sale is in full prog
ress, too. Prospective members are doing
their best to sell the largest number
Girls in sorority houses are helping them.
In some houses there are as many as five
different pledges all selling tickets for
Hostesses for the affair, Mrs.
George Kline and Mrs. C. F. Ly
man, are making arrangements for
about eighteen guests. The decora
tions will consist of autumn
flowers.
STILL MORE people are going
to Lawrence this week end. Pi K.
A's who will make the trip are:
Jack and Dick Fischer, and Fran
cis Hanna.
SIG ALPHS going are 'jaques
Shoemaker, Bob and Tom Davies,
Bud Lutz, Jack Green, Amos
Eager, Mark Mortenson, Jerry
Hunt, Jack Pace. Gifford Price,
Harold Hoppe. Paul Ward, Bill
Colwell, Ross Martin, Jack Ellis,
Ray Macey, Bill Green, Al Turner
and Sam Francis.
REPRESENTING the Kappa
Sigs at Kansas will be Bob Mehr
ing, Bill Doherty, Glenn Lickty,
Wes Griffin, John Becker, Val
Verges, Gerald Kelley and Bob
Kronkright.
AND SIGMA Nu's who will be
there are Darwin Legitt, Bob An
derson, Jim Perry, Russ Hoffman,
Owen Johnson, Tom Davison, Har
very Lawren. Dick Zesch, Doc
Cruzan, Ted Bradley, Chick Alex
ander, Harry Haynie, Dick Cock
burn, John Brown and Bob Trout.
WHAT'S DOING
THURSDAY.
Kappa Delta mother's club,
chapter house, 1:30 p. m.
Big and Little Sister din
ner, Armory, 6 p. m.
FRIDAY.
Acacia mother's club, bridge
party, chapter house, 8 p. m.
Social Sciences Graduate
Students tea, Ellen Smith
hall, 3 to 4:30 p. m.
SATURDAY.
Marriage of Miss Helen Le
Rossignol and Lincoln Frost,
jr. , home of Mr. and Mrs.
J. E. LeRossignol, 4 p. m.
It's a Townsend Photograph that
satisfies. Adv.
present a dance routine at the din
ner. The next meeting will be an
nounced in a few days.
Pete Butler of Colorado Teach
ers college caught his own forward
pass and scored a touchdown
against Colorado college in 1930.
Lane Technical school at Chi
cago is the first public school in
the country to offer courses in air
conditioning.
B
. May
J
BY CHOICE"
Roger Pryor Waiter Connolly
SCREENLAND: "It ecliptef 'Lady
Fop A Day' and i THAT en
achievementl . . . better rot mlt
tnn!"
ST.4RT1G TODAY
IN BALLOT tOX AT
I Movie Directory-
LINCOLN THEATRE CORP.
STUART (Mat. 25c: Nlte 40c)
"THE BARRETTS OF WIM
POl.E STREET," with Norma
Shen.-er, Krcdrlc March unci
CIihi-Ios Laughton.
LINCOLN (Mat. 15c; Nite 25c)
One Strut Ion Poller's "A
t;itU, OK THE LIMBER
LOST." Tod-Kelly comedy
and Popeye Cartoon.
ORPHEUM (Mat. 1Scs Nite 25cl
"THE FOUNTAIN" with Ann
Harding.
COLONIAL (Mat. 10c: Nite 15c)
Buck Jones in "WHEN A
MAN SEES RED."
LIBERTY (Mat. 15c; Eve. 20c)
WILL ROGERS In "DAVID
II ARUM."
SUN (Mat. 10c: Nite 15c)
"HE WAS HER MAN." with
Janie? Cugnev and Joan Blnn
dell. Also "THE BIG EXEC
UTIVE," with Ricardo Cortez.
WESTLAND THEATRE CORP.
VARSITY (25c Any Time)
"LADY BY CHOICE," with
May Robson. Carole Lombard
and Roger Pryor.
KIVA (Mat. 10c; Nite 15c)
NEBR. -IOWA FOOTBALL
GAME films, plus Reh Russell
in "THE MAN FROM HELL."
There's a sign in the Nebraska
dressing room this week that will
undoubtedly adorn the grey walled
room until the final whistle blows
on the Kansas Aggie Thanksgiving
day game. That sign reads: "Down
the stretch now with a conference
championship at stake. It's the fin
ish that makes champions."
This is typical of the attitude
which pervades the Husker camp.
All thought, all activity now is
centered on the Big Six crown,
with three games between a re
sumption of that coveted title and
the Huskers. It's the last stretch
of the 1934 season for Dana X.
Bible and his boys, the final race
that will end either in the fourth
j consecutive league title, or some-
thing that has but once been re
corded in the annals of the Big Six
some other team at the head of
the parade than Nebraska's Corn
huskers. The "big 'tins" are off the sched
ule now. Minnesota and Pitts
burgh, with the gashes they rent
in the Scarlet and Cream banner,
are things of the past. The Husk
ers are searching for more confer
ence scalps to add to their al
ready well-filled trophy rooms, and
beware of the Huskers when they
go a-hunting!
First on the list comes Kansas
Jayhawkers, the one team that iis-
placed Nebraska at the head of the j
Big Six, way back in 1930. Even
then, the Huskers trimmed the ;
champs, 16 to 0. Saturday, at Law-
rence, the two clash again in a re-
newal of one of the oldest grid rec- '
ords on the annals of either school
t?S2SE5ZSaS2S2S25252S2S2S2SH5H32!HS2SES2S2S2E?g
All JLillieS OI KJ
BEAUTY CULTURE
GLADYS PARKER'S
BEAUTE SALON
SIX O'CLOCK APPOINTMENTS
1229 N St. Upstairs. B235-;
i i v :
JL
en g n dt
sir n hi m m m v I -:-x.
fu) TATIP. M3K
a ARNOLD LEVINE J k.
K or a t iTr c a i rM a
I ig 1ZZ9 N St. Upstairs. ft
H M I II 1 1, M 1 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 I u U M 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 Mllil j i'i i r--f ; fWiJT I
IM.iji.uji ointmgf wwwrK-.Yrrvyswrw'M'x''-'" ftw"-- t" y f 'r ; .
H?df ey; iv. "''ihhil
Screen Favorites Re -united
m .-. ;.wvv v ' MU T- dUSi 'v.
vn&&tii&tiMmXi 1 1 1 m nirnTi mi m i win;T:
Norma Shearer and Fredric March, the romantic
sweethearts of "Smilin
in the film version
"The Barretts of Wimpole Street
now at the Stuart!
It was in the 1890's that Nebraska
and Kansas first met on the grid
iron. For a number of years the
two schools came off about even,
then Nebraska began asserting
that supremacy which has per
sisted since. Not since 1908 has
Kansas triumphed over the Scar
let, even in the banner years at the
Jayhawk institution.
There is also a precedent es
tablished which listens bad for the
Jays but good for the Huskers.
Nebraska has always had the "In
dian sign" on the Mt. Oread team
when on the Lawrence grid (on
the home field, too, for that mat
ter), but Nebraska victories have
been especially noteworthy when
on the opponent's field. It was at
Lawrence that Coach Bible's Husk
ers trimmed Bill Hargiss' youths
16 to 0, with All-American Jim
Bausch in the Jay backfield. It
was on home sod that the Mt.
Orcadians scored their last "break"
in the Nebraska series, a 20-20 tie.
But the Jayhawks of 1934 are
out for revenge. They have keyed
BOYDENS
Hot Plate Lunches for Noon Meals
Steaks and Chops
Evening Meals
Complete Fountain Service
Boyden Pharmacy
H. A. Reed, Mgr.
jW J,
A
Thru," are seen again
of that great stage hit
their team to fever pitch, prepar
ing for the invading Huskers much
as those same Huskers prepared
for Pittsburgh. If Bill Hargiss'
lads can break precedent, the dope
bucket, and everything else con
nected with the science of gridol
ogy and come away from that vale
below Mt. Oreads frowning height
victors, their season will be com
plete. Wiped out will be the stains
of defeat by Tulsa, and Kansas
Aggies, and any others which may
be pinned on them before the '34
season ends. When their football
men hang up their moleskins after
the season has rounded out, they
can do so with a certain feeling of
pride and confidence, because they
knocked off Nebraska. About all
BOOK NOOK
Supplies any book published.
CHRISTMAS CARDS
CIRCULATING LIBRARY
MAGAZINES
Lincoln Theatre Bldg.
!
f
-3V
thAv have to do now is knock off
Nebraska. They have planned for
everything in case they do, but the
task in hand is quite a great, uuc
Let twenty consecutive conference
victories speak for tnemseives.
This "gunning" for Nebraska is
auite the raee in the Big Six. The
Huskers have played the big
boogey man for so long that moth
ers in Kansas. Iowa, OKianoma,
and Missouri frighten their chil
dren to sleep with the ominous
warnintr: "Now vou be eood, or
those Cornhuskers will get you.'
Conseauentlv. a victory over
Nebraska in any of the afore-mentioned
states is of sufficient im
Dortance to warrant a state-wide
holidav. or the resumption of
power by the Republicans. It's cer
tainly an opportunity for drastic
measures. And the football teams
of those various institutions prac
tice and drill with the one thought
uppermost: Maybe this year we
can knock off Nebraska. It has
turned almost into a suppliant
plea, a fervent prayer. And the
teams "lay" for Nebraska. All
their heavy artillery is stored for
the Huskers. When .Nebraska
comes to town, or when they in
vade Memorial Stadium, they are
prepared for the fight of their
lives, a fight against a huge, over
powering machine that never yet
has faltered in four years. They
prepare for Nebraska, and those
three games, the first with Kansas,
the second with luckless Missouri,
and the third with the powerful
Kansas State aggregation witll be
battles royal for Nebraska. The
three are going to give all they
can to removing the Scarlet and
Cream banner from the top-most
place on the Big Six mast. But
they will find a Cornhusker
equally as desirous of winning: a
team with a reputation at stake
and more than ready to live up to
that leputation.
The final stretch is here. Ne
braska's final stretch in the race
for the Big Six championship. You
can hear the pounding of cleated
shoes on turf as they round the
last curve. The finish is in sight.
Big Six watch out! Nebraska is
in full stride for nothing but vic
tories! A professor at Boston univer
sity stated in a press interview
that comic strips have more to do
with what the public thinks than
dozens of Brisbanian columns.
FOOTBALL
Follow the Cornhuskers to
LAWRENCE
Saturday, November 17th
VIA
UNION PACIFIC
Students' Special
Round Trip
GOOD IN COACHES ONLY
LEAVE LINCOLN 7:00 A. M.
LEAVE LAWRENCE 11:59 P. M.
Secure Tickets at Students' Activities Office
Coliseum Bldg-.
OF AWe-
'AGGIES' DOWN ALPII
PHIS IN TOURNAMENT
The "Aggies," women's Nebi as.
ka-ball team from Ag campus,
won from the Alpha Phi team in
one round of the Nebraska ball
tournament played Wednesday
night, November 14. The K. B. B.'s
(Kan't Be Beat) won from ton
Kappa Delta's the same night.
Friday the Alpha Xi Delta's will
play the Th'ta's, and the winner
of this game will play the Aggie
Monday. The winning team of 'the
game between the Delta Gamma's
and the Gamma Fill s Friday, will
play the K. B. B.'s Monday.
CONDRA, IIUFNAGLE
BACK FROM SURVEY
Dr. G. E. Condra has just i
turned from a trip to the western
part of the state where he was in
charge of the ground water si if
vey work. He was accompanied ny
Richard Hufnagle, campus ph.i-
tographer, who took pictures of
the beet sugar industry. 1ho.
pictures will be used in a publica
tion which will soon be released by
the soil conservation department
of the university.
Standings in Style
Contest Up to Dote
Votes are given in thou
sands: Jean Tucker 465
Frances Ireland 438
Muriel Hook 379
Margaret Chase 325
Jane Cleary 315
Helen E. Lawrence 299
Mary Gerlock 276
Virginia Selleck 241
Sancha Kilborn 237
Mary Yoder 232
Jean Arnold 169
Marilyn Miller 53
Marilyn Spohn 47
IF YOU NEED A CAR
why not rent frrim us good mm
at lowest rates in the country
no red tape. The car can call for
you and take you home (or a
trifling charge.
MOTOR OUT COMPANY
Always Open 1120 P St. B68I9
$400
you might say
lliere are few things
that cost so little
and give so much
A
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