foiih THK DAILY M.IIUASKAN I'M DAY. IUIU:il VK 17. f.cUlox,, UihahwL CbtdcAAjojt 'I (lumpus Point of inl'iu niiiLion to Clmrlcue Omen; t lie gentleniini docs not nffor his arm to a lady when cross-i:i- the street unless she is a;;ed or infirm. . .Thursty Phelps feel ins vory skittish an.i truekin' all the way from the I'hi I'si house to the irug store. . .throe Simula .Nil pledges going from one sorority l ouse to another for inspection and then touring the second and third stories peering for dirt and mak ing unnccessaiy eomments about clothes not being hung up... Kay llcndy feeling an author's fatigue after' w riling Student Union dia logue lor the publicity broadcast Thiirsdav afternoon .. .lisping is' one of those things we usually outgrow by this time but there isn't much to be done about it w hen vou've iust had- your teeth , filled, is there lUrhara IVPutron? . . .the bad boys of tho were lined up in a Colonel Ourv shook K. O. T. row while his finder under each nose and excuses for absences.. demanded .they plead everything from aches, but even exams to head-1 Diogenes would , have gotten a thrill when one eulprit answered, "1 went to the show, sir." j Soon On Kg ("anipu Marian Hoppert. Milton Gust.'if.-on spreading I propaganda for a new Home F.c j building with a tap room. . .Kaehel Aldrieh at her '2 o'clock for aj change. . .The Junior Kair Board with plans good enough to put the seniors in their places for the ; r.illv next Tuesday .. .Kay Cruise chauffcuring Mina around the mall. . .Phyllis Robinson hobbling around after a good workout in gym class. . .For the benefit of M'elvin Reerman - Lois Lichlitcr just loves little vine-covered cot tages. . .Admirers of Lois Watt, that Texas blond, wondering' why Heitkotters "'reJ.rV Market QUALITY MEATS AT LOW PRICES Makers of Fine Sausages and Barbecued Meats E 3318 14 S3- 11th Wait I 1 SAVK Moitcv? Trv HOLMS ISu1ni While Tax Paid Motor Oil 10c Up 14th at W i bJ 1 n C 6 V' TWO WARDROBES FOR THE M tailored accents for sports . . . and 5ikr vjFjA' dress-up momenrs. 'accessories ff :'ljf--'- ') j 0 ! or5PORT5! Uf, MSjA New bags in ealts J .A U .fe' I itn' F:nart fabric: gloves with new ptitfliings. buttcn trim Beige, white and colors. Arrot and truim;!" renrfs . . the bright note at your thro:it. Crepe and chiffons 1 gnuned l.-Hth- LA Cjf'iV-" f evs. nark and ! I w :' (J J f J r.o-- loo 7 Societu TIMS WEEK Friday. Delta Gamma tea at the chapter house from 2 to 4 o'clock. Theta Chi auxiliary, 1:1b o'clock dessert luncheon at the chapter house. Sigma Delta Tau spring party at the Cornhusker. Saturday. Delta Gamma alumnae 12:33 o'clock luncheon at the Univer sity club. Delta Gamma annual ban quet at the Cornhusker. Sigma Delta Epsilon. spring party at the Cornhusker. Alpha Sigma Phi Hawaiian spring party at the Cornhusker. Sigma Alpha Epsdon, initia tion banquet at the Lincoln. Beta Theta Pi. initiation ban quet at the Capital. Delta Theta Phi, initiation, at the Lincoln. Sigma Delta Epsilon dinner at the Cornhusker. Sunday Kappa. Gamma Gamma buf fct supper at the chapter house, (i:30. thev can't rate a date on Saturday nights. . .Thil Sutton deciding to devote Friday night and the Mas querade Ball to his old flame, Klsie Buxman . . .Herb Nore com ing in town at the beck and call of Muriel White. . .Ted Doyle carrying an Awgwan sign around that said "Inquire Within." (Vlobrato Anniversary of rounding. Kappa Alpha Theta will cele brate the fiOth anniversary of the founding of the sorority by enter taining at a banquet Saturday evening at the University club. Honored guests will be Mrs. C. Y. Ladd, a charter member of the local chapter, and Mrs. Margaret Gere McCandless of St. John, Kas., daughter of a charter member. Other guests will include Mrs. D. B. Grassett. of Winnetka. 111., grand president of the sorority, and newly initiated members of tho sorority. Mrs. George Grimes of Omaha will preside r.s toast mistress. The table will be deco rated with pansies. the sorority flower, and the colors, black and gold will be carried out in ap pointments. There will be about loft members in attendance, in cluding out of town alumnae. The committee in charge of arrange ments includes Mrs. Frank Sharp, chairman, and Mesdames Wood row Magee. Robert Venner, Linus You Will Sing, Too, After You've Eaten One of Those Swell Meals at the Y 31 4: A CAFETERIA - FOUNTAIN 13th & P PRICE O u( Jon your upkeep and build up your PERSONAL APPF.ARANCL with smart ACCESSORIES' lollow the two rdrobe idea with crup rr nrk hi l."iji'iriiicp'.' for Ftn luj"J.s! .""loc'tK'Il. 1.00 f:!.'v-s In hu''cI'. si. in nnd kid. ."lin'l r 2.95 and Arc!!H,rli'. S; rot Flunr. Dobson and Hold Annual I'minders Day Dinner Sigma Alpha Kpsilon will hold its annual Founders day dinner Saturday at the Lincoln. Hoy Ly man will serve as toastmaster, five members will relate chapter life from its beginning on the Ne braska campus, including Ike K. O. Pace, Karl Eager. Kar) Hawkins, Havmond W oiler and j Sam Francis. Honored guest;; will ' include alumnae ami new initiates. : Taul Ludwiek is in charge. j A t i Announce Koeent ! Pledging Lillian Rohwer of Ainswoith, senior at the university, is a re cent pledge of Chi Omega, and Vera Graf, sophomore of Na ponce, of Zeta Tan Alpha. : j Auxiliary .Heels for Luncheon Auxiliary of Lambda Chi Alpha I will meet for a 2 o'clock dessert i luncheon today at the chapter i house. Hostesses will be Mrs. Kred ' Wircn and Mrs. Ray Koken. i is iHanquol ( Ioo of Convention i Delta Gamma sorority will hold its annual banquet at the Coi n- . busker hotel, the closing1 event of the .'.vo-day province convention. Honored guests will include out- j of-town alumnae and newly in- i itiated members. I Chaperons Lifted for Parlies Chaperons for parties this week end include Alpha Sigma Phi, for mal Saturday at the Cornhusker, Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Hollister and Mr. and Mrs. Ray K. Ramsay. Sigma Delta Tau, spring formal Friday at the Cornhusker. Mrs. Madeline Baer. Dr. and Mrs. David Fellman and Prof, and Mrs. Harold Stoke?. Honor National Officer Kappa Delta active chapter will i entertain at a formal tea. Sun day afternoon from 3 to 5 at the chapter house, honoring Miss Frances Kendig, national inspector from Randolph-Macon. Saturday the alumnae chapter will entertain in her honor at a 1:30 luncheon at the Cornhusker. : u. Hold Hridge Benefit Friday Evening. Auxiliary of Phi Gamma Delta will hold an 8 o'clock benefit at the chapter house Friday evening. The committee in charge includes Mrs. Glenn Deeter, Mrs. Barrcll Hinkle, and Mrs. K. S. Van Sant. Announce Pledging Of IVo. Sigma Delta Tau announce the ! rah Miller of Wall Lake, la., and Vclma Beecher of Lincoln. Initiation Held Friday. Delta" Theta Phi will held initia tion Friday evening at 8 o'clock at the Lincoln hotel. :? t: Phi Psi's Hold Initiation Ianpi I. Members of Phi Kappa Psi will attend the annual Initiation ban quet Saturday evening at th" chantey house. The guest of honor will be Chas. K. Strickland, national vice president of the fraternity. OF ONE.1 Poulhwiek, Hubert John Shiekley. DRESS ACCESSORIES ;tM rn i liir vuft't ii"'f vrry ik'W D'pki'i fjtc All 3.95 mid vfHts . . Mrl p c t drcs H-U (i 1.95 STUDENTS 10 PRESENT E First Baptist Group Plans Sunrise Musicale on Palm Sunday. University students of the First Baptist church will hold their an nual Palm Sunday sunrise service Sunday morning at 7 o'clock. The devotion will lie composed of a baptism service, music, and read- ings before a chancel decorated with palms and seven-branch candelabra. Furnishing the music will be a double quai led whose members are Ruth Randall, Hazel Lawrence, Lois and Twyla Ogle, Clifford. Clinton, and Ralph Sturdevant, and James Lawson. Miss Catherine Cox will present a cello solo, and Mrs. R. K. Sturdevant will be at the console. PREP SCHOOLS TO ASK CHANGE IN ENTRANCE UNITS i Continued from Page l.i eign languages, mat hematics, nat ural and social sciences. In addition to Lean Oldfather, who will preside at the Friday meeting, others from the univer sity will probably include Pro fessors B. C. Hendricks, chemistry department; H. H. Marvin, phy sics; G. W. Gray, history; H. W. Manter, zoology; and the dean, all members of the arts college entrance requirement comittee and, Dr. A. A. Reed, director of the university extension division; and Dean F. E. Henzlik of the teachers college. M.mv of the educators will re main over for a specially called meeting of the departments of pijod the quantity and present dis superintendents and principals of ; tribution of loess, at Jeast in the the Nebraska State Teachers as sociation which will be held Sat urday afternoon at the Cornhusker. at which time the entrance re - quiremcnt problem will again bel.a has come from the sand discussed. hius region, an area of about AniWTNTVfRATTVT j 20.000 square miles in west cen- AJJWlJNItolKAIlVi. ; tral Nebraska. The present sand RULING CRIPPLES ! dunes are the materials left be- GRIDIRON DINNER hind after the fine silt and clay (Continued from Page l.l was eroded and carried away by lieations workers, and those im-; ,h winJ . A o0 n Wac?a' mediately interested in publica- ""tern Nebraska fro i the eas lions: will be held on April 1 at lle !ocss s thicker and 6 p. m. and be completed before a P,nt xvt '-" ,P " 8:30 p. m.; will be limited in re- bv laboratory analysis of loess cards to the program to parodies ; sample over the state on subieet matter and not on' Acrord.ng to the Nebraska sci personaiities. ; entist s theory, loess in this re- A number of the most popular Plon could have been formed only professors have been obtained to 1 d'"mF severe drouth periods when uphold and oppose various pro-' vegetation was scarce if there posals pertaining to needed and de- was any at all. In his opinion sirablc changes in the university ancient first storms which curriculum. The complete list will prevailed here thousands of years be published later. Student parti-! ago may furnish the clue as to cipalion will consist of impersona-i the disappearance of uma-Fol-tions of faculty senate members som man from this part of North providing imagined bv-play in the! America. These storms reached senate during the more serious j sue proportions that even the business ' animals were killed or forced to Life Of North American Mail Has 20,000 Year Old History (Continued from Page l.l date and will in all probability continue to reveal the most con vincing evidence of the antiquity of man in this country. And just as significant, the deeply eroded canyons of the high plains area of western Nebraska offer the world the greatest opportunities for dat ing these discovered evidences of human habitation. The importance of this area is due to the loose de-, posits i the dust from ancient dust storms i which connect the glacial j formations in eastern Nebraska with the elevated terraces in the high plains to the west. No other state offers such an easily distin guishable multiplicity of soil for mations.: I The Nebraska geologist aeeounts ; for these many formations in this i way. As the Koc ky mountains were j rising higher in the dim past, fore-1 irig water and sediment down toward the present Missouri river valley, the ice sheet which touched into northeastern Nebraska ere-1 ated a giant 'lam which piled up the silt formations to a depth of more than 100 feet in some places. Hence, a Pleistocene laboratory second to none in importance, was I formed. ! Temporary Existence. Diseiih.sing 1he existence of early man in Nebraska, Dr. Lugn points out that evidence indicates that he lived in the state for tern- j TIIUI8X OF XEWXESS i Ei Your Favoriie Kvenin povk Convenient for Cash & Carry 333 No. 12 Expert Laundcrers MOVIE BtlltKCTOIlY "W'lion's Your I'.irt Inlay". oitim:i m "Ar-omul tlic World Kevuo", This "(iirl Ovcrlioiiitl "'. STIJ.MIT '(iivon Light"'. VAIISITY "Head Over Heels In Love". "Counterfoil. Lady". poiary periods only. Kxcavations of ancient healths show them to be crude devices probably used for only short periods while dart points and other cutting- stones had been found mainly around these camp sites proper, indicat ing little evidence of permanent abode i'l this region. Dr. Lugn suggests that Nebraska was prob ably too close to the ice sheet at times for man to make his per manent home here, and that such visits as were made in the western area were probably made by trav eling hands of hunters from the southwest, who had earlier mi grated from Asia. In his paper. Dr. Lugn contra dicted a theory held by many geologists that loess formations were made only by ancient rivers which washed fine sediment down upon flood plains. He said: Sandhills Source. 'River valley flood plains are wholly inadequate to have sup mid. Ue west. Rivers however, might have been capable of doing this in other parts of the world. , put most of the later loess in Ne ; migrate elsewhere. It seems prob- i able then, that loess could only have formed after an ice sheet had melted beck far enough to leave great wastes of ground un covered to the action of the wind. c r a r m I f hmr r y tnt ' ' Ash Ralph Bellamy ij - Joan ferry Mts l: I 20 zn sti Tlliine- R-IUMI 1 eir Srhi-elillr V mm a ufitianc theatre m 61 mmmm y ,n,i,a",,,n Your evening gown never becomes drab and uninter esting when you depend on EVANS fine cleaning. Methods . . . individually suited to the fabric and style of your L'own ac tually re-creates it . . . restores its glamour, luster and drape ... to give jtu many suc cessful cvcninjrs. Hesponsible Cleaners PEACE, POLITICS TOPIC National Council Member For War Prevention to Lead Talks. "rutting Peach Into Politics" is the topic for informal discussion at the Unitarian church, 12th nnd H, Sunday night at 7:30. The pur pose of the meeting is to make clear the need for actual worli with voters who want to keep America out of war, but who do not know how to accomplish it. Leon Thomson, field worker of the National Council for Preven tion of War and also executive secretary of the local peace coun cil, and Meredith Nelson, chairman of the Lincoln peace-action com mittee, will start the discussion by leading off with a question-aiid-answcr approach to the sub ject of peace in politics. Thomson will speak on national defense and war profits measures, and on precinct organization as it has worked elsewhere in swing ing votes for peace candidates. Nelson will sketch the city of Lin coln's political approach for peace. Tho speakers and members of the audience will exchange ques tions and answers aimed to show the strength and weakness of po litical peace action. A political ma chine for peace proposes to make Array of IV ( Hvlt irtc V ilhi'iit Jrtrkrt) D .' If i V IR if IA n-U Mnr tml Spring never brought a grander selection of women's dresses than this group. One piece and jacket styles . . . with new fashion deaik You'll love every one and want at least one or two. Frocks J'Ki 1 public the tecords of congressmen and senators on Issues Involvim; foreign policy no that voters can support candidates who uphold peaeo action. The Lincoln peace action com mittee is pledging workers who volunteer to give an hour's servlco each week. Rventy-fivo are now enrolled and the committee ex- m pects to total 100 by April 7, the date of the Kirhy rage public meeting at First Plymouth Con gregational church. The DAVIS School Service "I Cood Tvocher's .fttrijcv' G43 Stuart Bldg Lincoln rWiHEN'S-YoUR-BlRTHDAY?! Ojl 9 TAURUS (fio iBull) APRIL 20 MAY 20 By JOE E. BROWN As the amateur astrologer, in "VVhcn's Your Birthday?" Starts Friday LINCOLN lieu; Spring resses Spec'o Group- Many Styles are regular $19.95 and $22.50 Dresses g95 Hand Blocked Prints w navy ana Diaz. Others in colors Jacket Frock S16.95 (tin iUurlraietl) II you've thought of 1agee's as ex pensive ve urge you to see those "economical" dresses. You'll see all of Spring's new fashion ideas among them.