J.- TIIDKSDAY. MAKCH 26, 19.. four THE DAILY NEBRASKAN NEBLQAS.KA CAMPUS n S(DDAEL WDiDIDLL SEEN ON THE CAMPUS. Thyllis Jean Humphrey wishing that clocks went backwards.... Becky Oldfatlier astounding every one with the remark that she likes French classes. . .Ptcvo Wim hcrly giving up the moustache idea Maig Harris dunking doughnuts with the greatest of ens.'.... Doc Elins sleeping sound ly thru Ec class Sigma Nil pledges looking rather pained for some reason or other. .. .Jean Leftwieh trying to sneak out of class. .. .Mary Janet McGeaehin and Bob Kay heckling each other in front of liie library Sig Chis already asking for Triad dates. . . . Naomi Henry reading high class poetry to Homan Walsh Lois ijlinr mowing down telephone poles with her machine. .. .lietty fclayme optimistically riding with the top down on her car. .. .Wini fred Nelson and Johnny Howell taking in ull the cinemas in town ....Dorothea Fulton and John Dalling hunting up a bridge game ....Eugene Worn! tripping down Sosh hall. . . .Warner Marsden fol lowing Jackie Reynolds around... Bill Dugan raking the Kappa Del- WHAT'S DOING Thursday. Alpha Delta Theta Mother club, 1 o'clock luncheon, chap ter house. Alpha Chi Omega Mothers club, 1 o'clock luncheon at home of Mrs. Clark Jeary. Friday. Delta Upsilon, dinner, Corn husker, 7 o'clock. Saturday. DELTA TAU DELTA spring party, Shrine club. Delta Gamma Banquet, Corn husker, 6:30 o'clock. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, dinner. llurrv! Knd Thursday!! - & HERBEfif7T Ifl Louise FAZENDA I llxilj Past Draper 100 s M A V Cirtl 3 Soil Nits f,'f J 6 P. M. ta lawn bright and early this morning Betty Marshall going primitive and making a Camp Fire headband. .. .a skunk paying a visit to several Ei.glish classes... Thurston Phelps being faintly amused with people and things .... Ruth Sears walking into Fol lies practice only a half hour late Marion Rolland worrying about a law exam.... Bill Cline and Gus Peters walking down the streets with canes. . . .Frank Sears studying hard for future semesters Marjorie Thomas visiting classes for fun.... and everyone listening to the radios in cars. 20c Till LAST DAV "My Song For You" and "Society Fever" THUR. The sreat play and novel now on the screen CONRAD VEIDT I 1 In Jerome K. Jerome's Companion Feature Kif itinr y t charming: thin ftory of a girl, a boy and a baby. r"I W 1 1 i rasa 7u OTHEIUI 1 i 'DOSfLf IRVING PICHEL IAN KEITH iti 11 nciara V , " 1 - CHERRY OR LEMON? Despite down slips, dust storms, and other forms of annoyance which pop up, young love con tinues to flourish. For the timid soul, there's always the quiet hand holding specialist, very good for shows and symphony concerts For those of a more aggressive nature, such as Phys Ed majors we recommend the men of brute strength; football players and po litical leaders are excellent in this field, ve understand. But for the real old-fashioned girl, just give her a guy from Todunk who will take her to the drug store and ask her what kind of a small coke she wants. A' lit MOTHER'S club of Sigma Al pha Iota is meeting today at the home of Mrs. Anna Anderson for a 1 o'clock luncheon and business meeting. Mrs, Elmer Moomaw is assisting hostess, and about 15 arc expetced to be present. & ALUMNAE of Pi Phi will meet for luncheon and bridge at the home of Mrs. Howard Gramlich, Saturday afternoon. Assisting hostesses will be Miss Etta Yont, Mr3. Ivan Wood, Mrs. Richard Skold, and Mrs. Ralph Fortna. it RETURNING for spring vaca tion is Miss Flora Albin, who is a student at Northwestern univer sity. Miss Albin attended the uni versity last vear and is a mem bcr of Delta Delta Delta sorority. c SENIORS of Alpha Chi Omega were entertained at a waffle sup per at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight McVicker. Twelve were present, and the evening was spent in informal entertainment. RECENTLY announced initiates of Acacia are: Bill Miller, Lin coln; Duane Miller, Lincoln; George Meier, Peoria, 111.; Thomas Hicks, Wilkes-Barr, Penn.; Frank Johnson, Cozad. Neb.; Fred Shirey, Pittsburgh, Pa., and Jacob Krieg, Cheyenne, Wyo. COED FOLLIES REVUE E T J 1 M I vNr .... -.4 C f CHI Phi announces tne initia tion of Todd Breunig, Leigh, Neb.: Dick McGinnis, Humboldt; Ernest Tullis, Omaha; Wayne Mullet, Su perior; Millard McGee, Omaha; Sylvester Rouse, Oxford; Ralph Woodruff, Grand Island; Clayton Mossman, Omha; Harry Fiory, Pawnee City, and Dean Kadavy of Omaha. NEWLY elected and installed officers of Chi Omega are: Lois Hiatt, president; Rosalie Motl, vice president; Betty Widener, secretary; Margaret Bilby, pledge mother; Marjorie Fredcnhagen, treasurer; and Frances Weyer, herald. MOTHER'S club of Alpha Sig ma Phi will entertain members of the active chapter and their guests at a buffet supper Sunday evening ! at the chapter house. About 25 couples will be present at the af fair. . MORE and more signs of spring! After watching a marble game ; played by some of the neighbor '' hood youngsters, several members ! of Kappa Sig decided to join the , the game. According to custom they played for "keeps," but. sad to say, by the end of the after noon, members of ye goode old fraternity were minus their mar bles as well as their good disposi tions. FLECTION of officers consti tuted the main business of the reg ular meeting of Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary musical sorority, Wed nesday afternoon. Ruth Freiss will act as the new president, with Louise Magce as vice president, and Vera Kellcy, treasurer. Harriet Byron will be social chairman, Inez Heanay. editor, Elsie Mansfield, social chairman, Dorothea Gore, rush chairman, Ruth Fries, senior Panhellenic representative with Stella Linhart as alternate. Inez Heany is Junior Panhcllenic representative : and Harriet Byron is alternate I delegate CDTCOUITV v . 1 , I ' .. downtown houses were entertained I Wednesday night at a smoker f j held at the Chi Phi house, and i i sponsored by the pledge class t ; George Shakelford, president of Lite: cu n I I a ii 1 1; Klwt'i, Y' 111 Candidates of Organized Houses Model Spring Fashions. Newest spring styles,-presentation of the 1936 best dressed Ne braska Coed, and nine skits will compose the program of the Coed Follies, unnual show sponsored by the A. W. S. board to be given tomorrow evening, March 27 at 7 o'clock in the Temple Theater. Members of Chi Omega, pre senting a typical amateur hour, featuring a trio, hill-billies and several other entertainers, are scheduled to give the first of the nine acts on the program. This will be followed by a tap dance, given by Theda Chapoton mem ber of Alpha Delta Theta. A group of quartette medlevs, sung by members of Sigma Alpha Iota will be presented as the third number of the program, while an additional musical act will be spon. sored by Howard and Wilson hall with the presentation of a skit, built around the song, "You're My Necessity," written, composed, and played by Jane Goetz of Wilson hall. Presentation of a blues singer, Marylu Williams, will be the num ber which Delta Delta Delta will contribute to the program. An un usual skit entitled. "Dust on the Moon" will be given by Alpha Xi Delta members. A group of "Blue Tunes," will be sung by a sextette composed of members of Kappa Kappa Gamma. The final number in the group of skits is to be given by members of Delta Gamma and will feature r.sw school-room idea with chorus numbers, a trio, and dancing. Set promptly for 6:30 o clock, the final dress rehearsals for skits will be held today in the Temple Theater. Rehearsal for models will be held at 8 o'clock this evening in the Temple. It is necessary that all persons taking part in the show attend the final rehearsal, accord ing to Jean Walt, general chair man in charge of the show, and costumes which are to be worn on Friday evening must be worn at the rehearsal. Those taking part in the presentation ceremony are also asked to be present at the 8 o'clock practice. Representatives of each organ ized house on the campus are sell ing tickets for the show and women planning to attend the Fol lies are urged to purchase their tickets before Friday evening. A Doom will be stationed at the Temple for those who wish to buy tickets at the door, according to Jane Barbour, chairman of the ticket sale. Those in charge of the show in clude :Lorene Adelseck, in charge of dressing room; Jane Barbour, tickets; Alaire Barkes, usher supervisor on first floor; Betty Cherny, publicity chairman, and supervisor of ushers on second floor; Barbara DePutron, proper ties; Dorothy Beers, skit master; Wsie Buxman. presentation; Mary Edith Hendricks, guest hostess; Sancha Kilbourn and Lois Rath burn, models; Mary Yoder, style show; Lucretia Green, style show chairman, and Gretchen Budd and accompanist: Jean Walt, Hazel Bradstrect, general assistants. Snakes have been seen in fra ternity houses before this, but Josephine, young imperial boa constrictor now doubling as a pet and scientific guinea pig for a Cornell fraternity man, is real. Josephine was a gift from Dr. Harry Eno, of Colon, Panama, to Frank Trevor, a senior from Syra cuse, N. Y. Trevor plans to take Josephine to Comp Woodland, a Boy Scout organization, where he is nature director and where he already has a snake house with 300 specimens. The boy you'll see over with the linemen every night and with that very conspicious eager look In his eye is Gus Peters, probably the hardest worker of the spring grid squad. Gus after playing two year of freshman ball has decided that this year the name of Peters will be among the starters this year or never. Handicaps have been against him so far due to other boys with more service stripes and such, but from an unprejudice viewpoint It would be hard not to give him at least a tie score with all the other guards of the roster. In the two sorimmages staged this spring the dark-locked Hus kie has stood out like the Dlon- nes In an old ladles home, mis weight is among the lowest of all guard applicants, with Mehr ing being possibly the only ex ception. His actual specific grav vity Is 175, a weight for which he was extremely apologetic. "It may help me, tho," he added "for my speed Is better than ever be fore." u Now being only a junior and having played only one year of varsity competition, two more years, undoubtedly fat years, lay before the young Peters. The boyhood football training came from Lexington high school where Gus played his last two years, tho his home is Omaha. The first two years were spent in Om aha South high and were devoid of all gridiron activity. Football was not the boundary of his par ticipation for he was entangled with all sports of the prep institu tion. Last Saturday as Gus was trying to make that usual Im pression on whoever might be concerned he was approached by Link Lyman, line coach, who suggested that he leave the game to give some of the other boys a chance. This suggestion was made only two plays before the end of the mix, at which time Peters pleaded to remain until the multi pass play which they were manufacturing. The request was granted and Peters was the third receiver of a lateral on the play. Just as he was getting the biggest thrill of his life be lieving that he was finally away for his first touchdown, someone hit him from behind and he has been hobbling on a cane ever since. Iniurv was only a minor sprain, but it may be enough to confine him to the sidelines for the re mainder of the spring season. As he was carried via teammates shoulders to the sidelines he kept yelling, "I asked for it; I asked for it." His hobby's the cinema, his girls are one, his brothers none, his age 20, and his affiliations the same as his brother. ACACIA BOWLERS, D. U.'S FINALISTS Zelu lvla Tan, H'lu Tliola Pi Yuiiiuhm1 in S(iui-1 inal KoiiihI of Inlrniiiiiral K ruling (!nniH'titioii. N.'inil'iinil ruiuitl of tlio intrnmurnl liciwliiig tournament, tnr niclit shows Hie Acncins narrowly siircziiiK a two out of three . r . i . . rn 1 i..li Hiu.;i, I K'iniO Victory over .cia ihih inn, mm in-n ip"ni winning lover Beta Theta l'i with two straight. cncia took tho opening game ot their match Willi t lie seme ?! 8i JLfn thZe?nrm points, and wf, next game and came thru victors to the tune of 814 to 810. The final ind deciding game of the matcn proved to be a very close one, with each team taking its turn at holding the lead. At the end of the hard fought game, the storekeeper's tally showed the Acacia team slowly nosing their way to victory, and the final score was 885 to 811. High point man of the series was Julian Milder of the 55. H. T. team who chalked up an average of 1P1 points. Second honors and hiJ game of the match go to Wiiliam Sibley of the Acacia team. Sibley's average was 177, his high game, 210. Marvin Tlock. also of the Acacia team, averaged 184 for two games. Delta Upsilon won easily over Beu Theta Pi with scores of 841 to 719 for the first game, and 913 to 763 for the second and final game of the match. Ralpl Sarson of the D. U. team bowled the highest average of the closely followed by a brother member of his team, Robert Cal lahan, who averaged 185. High game honors also go to the D. U.'s for George Sawyer's 201 game, James Begley of the Beta team won third high honors with an average of 163 for the two games. These four teams competed for ftnnl positions after an elimina tion match staged last Monday. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, winner of the last league, was dropped from the tournament when its score of 2,216 for three games was thn lowest of the five league winning teams. The final match of the tourna ment will be held Monday after noon, March 30, at 5 o'clock. Thi D. U.'s and Acacias will bowl three games, the winner of the tournament going to the team scoring high in two of the three. A consolation match will also be staged Monday afternoon be tween the Z. B. T. team and the Betas. They will also bowl three games. Dr. Leroy Hartman of the school of oral surgery, Columbia univer sity, recently was credited all over the country with developing a new chemical formula for killing pain in teeth that are being drilled. But now a reaction is setting in, and the public is finding that may be it isn't all the newspapers said it was. Said Dr. Paul Kitchen of Ohio State university: "The pub licity given the new desensitizer is unfortunate in that anything which gives hope or promises as much relief as this does should have been put in the hands of the profession for a tryout before it was put into the minds of the public." Altho the student body plainly evinced disapproval of German policies, the executive committee of the University of California has voted to contribute $500 to Amer ica's participation in the Olympic games. Prof: If-'iy ivas Ben Hur seMemed to the gulky s? Soph: Because Valerius Cr.it us d'ulri 7 have a chariot 'xith a "Tu tret Top" charge of a hhort program discussion. and m I-min is Svmldvr to Tell of I'olutitftT Convention Friday S. oiid steel over your head certainly makes modern automobiles safer, and this improve ment like many others has resulted from the pioneering work and vast resources of General Motors. Few people realize the initial cost of developing the "Turret Top," and if is only the faci that it is used on mil lions of GM cars which enables the averape person to afford its benefits. General Motors J Public-Minded Institution CHtVROLIT rOVHAC OLD.-MOBILF. ll ll l I t SAILS CADIIXAC j UTT1 IKK AN STl I) KYIS ! IWNKI) TO MKKT. j Fridny. All Lutheran students are in vited to a meeting of the Lutheran Student Fellowship in 203 Temple. Friday. March 27. 8:30. 4 Speakers will be Francis Scud der who will speak on the recent Indianapolis convention of the Stu dent Volunteer Movement: Melinda . 1 1 1 t . j : I ; jnuei sun, reuenuy ciclipu pn-ai- I j dent of the Midwest region of the I ! Lutheran Student Association of I j America; and Willard Strangman, who will give an interesting ac- I count of the construction of the Kay nricige, a project on wnicn Air. Strangman was employed for two years. Social and Fellowship hour will follow. All Lutheran students are invited. Classified ADVERTISING 10C P LINE LOST: YHlow Purkr (..unlnlri pen. Initial M. L. S. Call KIM It. WANTED TO Rl'Y Si 4(1 Tuxedo. tail H1394 after five Thumday or I LOST : Thl Xlu re.tert bracelet. T.e- aaxd. Call at Kebrukau office. S3 ffp$l 1 1 -y ARROW MAJORS in STYLE TUv WAIVES Tub Royally sanctioned", this dressy, go places shirt has be fome. a perennial favorite with col lege men. Comes in a handsome array of British stripings with full definite colors. Exclusive Arrow fabrics Sanforized Shrunk. A TTnW SHIRTS SlJL,Sir and TIES s ,, -. . r X"r2 and 250 WOMEN SELECT MAY QUEEN THURSDAY (Continued from Page 1). cuse; Elizabeth Bushee, Lincoln, Janice Campbell, Lincoln; Mary Dodrill, Lincoln; Elsie Goth, Red Cloud; Dorothy Gregg, Nebras ka City; Ruth Henderson, Hardy; Harriet Heumann, Sew ard; Lorraine Hitchcock, Lin coln; Phyllis Jean Humphrey, Mullen; and Elizabeth Kelly, Ne braska City. Other Candidates. Theodora Lohrman, Lincoln; Sancha Kilbourne, Omaha; Rowene Miller, Arubs, West In dies; Eleanor Neale, Fort Cal houn; Ada Petrea, Lincoln; Anne Pickett, Sterling: Leis Person, Lincoln; Lois Rathburn, Lincoln; Irene Remmers, Firth; Clara Rldder, Callaway; Ruth Sears, Omaha; Elizabeth Shearer, Om aha; Virginia Selleck, Lincoln; Florence Smeerin, Woodbine; Margaret Straub, Linocln; Beth Taylor, Lincoln; Jean Walker, Indianola; and Eleanor Worth man, Louisville. The polls will be in charge of members of Mortar Board, but only members of the advisory board of Mortar Board will count the votes in this election. Identifi cation cards are necessary to vote. A Massachusetts Tech professor states that the death rate is lower among married men than unmar ried men, that fewer married men go insane, and fewer commit crimes. Try MR. ALEX New Hair Styling for Your Spring Party Giffen Beaute Salon B3717 1209 M Mail Orden Filled at Lincoln's Busy Store We Give S. tt H. Green Stamps! Jhrifty Thursday Feature NEW MAN-TAILORED SUITS FOR ONLY . . . Just In time for Easter. ..a spe cial sule ol smart nun-tailored suits that are grabbing the fashion honors. Double and single breasted models in flannels and tropical worsteds. Plain or pleated backs. Sizes 14 to 20. GOLD' S Third Floor. By fl 1 O90 GROUP OF NEW SPRING BLOUSES loo Clevorly styled blouses ot KinKhara, linen and aretat rii'l.es. Also smart Madras iiirt!'. wrute. pastel shades, po gay plaids. Sizes 34 to 40. A Thrifty Thurs- nay soeciai. GOLD'S Street Floor polks-dots and MATCHING TWEED LUGGAGE .. Aeroplane Type Smart, lightweight and sturdy. Xcw grey and brown tweed ensembles with, attrac tive woven stripes for contrast. Theso eases have twin inverted locks and leather English post handles. lit "SSS5s ill - w; "S iiV ;, N jjte Two-Piece Ensembles Consisting of a 21 inch wardroha bat box and an 18 Inch overnight tAsfi. Overnight casa haa bar for rlrcsr-M, partition and threa pockcta. Complete 10 00 28 In. Pullman Cases A Pullman cm with tray to match th above seta. The lid has a convenient puckct . . . the tray baa tie tapes. At.. 8 95 Leather Bound Ensembles A tweed ensemble with leather blndlnr- 0Xf1,.'i cases hava lour puff pockets sod tie tapes In bottom. WtRPROBE CASES Efluloped 1'ltfc n,u,,,,!Lji turea to hold aix or eight dreues. Threa puif J"! and tie tapes in body ot case. 11 inch a IX."'' size. 15.00 and Pallmaa Cases 29 inch sits Overnight Caa IS. 21 &nd 24 inrh a i tea. 5. 95 and 7.50 Rat Boies 18 inches square. II inches square .. and 10.00 HOLD Strtat riour. '