The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 28, 1939, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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DAILY NEBKASKAN
FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1939
The new national defense pro
gram will result in a 50 percent in
crease in R.O.T.C. enrollment,
Harvard officials predict.
AT THE HEAD
OF THE CLASS
MARIAN KIDD
Horses, horses, crazy over
horses! So all tin college gals
who go in for horseback riding
find themselves in the WAA
riding club which Marian Kidd,
Kappa Alpha Theta secretary,
has had charge of for the past
three years . . . consequently,
she is getting campus equestri
ennes ready for the FARM
ER'S FAIR riding events next
Saturday, May 6th. This week
end, Marian is off to the stu
dent council convention in
Minnesota ... on the council,
she is co-chairman of the com
mittee that looks into matteis
pertaining to campus elections
. . . candidates' eligibility and
such. Marian is also a member
of this year's junior-senior
prom committee. As for this
business of going to college...
she's a bi.nd junior looking for
ward to department store per
sonnel woik ... in the mean
time she wears the ATO pin of
John Smith Just in case you're
looking forward to a lot rf
exams coming up . . . don't
study too lung at one time
without a pleasure jaunt down
to the
HOTEL
CAPITAL
GIVE YOUR MOTHER
7 '
f ')
ALWAYS CHERISH
Sluujonil Port rail Can Liress Uliaf Heeling oj cme
Let us make an enlargement of one of your applica
tion pictures. A large SxlO portrait complete
with folio for only
Skooslund
1214 "0"
dCuvcoLiii dCmdinj JhszaiteJu!
NEBRASKA
1 I
graJACTTsAT. at 11 A.Ptl-
There Are Three Things I Can Do Better
Than Any Outlaw That Ever Lived . . .
FIGHT! . . SHOOT! . . and LOVE!
i i ifi
HUMPHREY BOGART ROSEMARY
t:THAl-
POPEYE'S
"Aladdin an III Wonderful Lamp"
Iuiiuiuiiii.UBuiuuiiwiwiiii mmmmmammaaimmm juuwwjiiuwiiuih i ,
Wtijiylutg. wUJl Wahq, I
i gjiimwumi.j mi mi mBIIWfTaPiTlljllil'flMyii VWIIirUiiiiT'g"lJi'IM 'fTriniM'millliBliTI BliTT
Omaha and Orrin Tucker the
headlines of the day . , . and
lots of the college kids will bide
their time with the beards, bars,
and burlesques at the Golden Spike
celebration . . . such as, AOPi
Natalie Johnson and Fiji Dale
Ruser; Sigma Kappa Chloe Taylor
and Sig Alph Bill Heinrichs; Al
pha Phi Flossie Moll and Phi Dclt
Bill Fox; Alpha Chi Delores Bors
and Sig Ep Gene Walters; Delta
Gamma Lucy Jane Williams and
Sig Alph Bill Haney; Ann Beard,
Theta. and ATO Bud Cather
(while Margie McKay will be with
Stan Potter from Omaha); AXiD
Eleanor Collier and Phi Alpha
Delta Henry Dress; Delta Gamma
Maxine Kingsbury and Phi Psi
Bob Miller; Alpha Chi Val Harper
and Dwain Limprecht, Phi Alpha
Delta; Kappa Harriet Pugsley and
Sigma Chi Bob Fenton; AOPi
Elisabeth Smith and Walter Sav
idge ... to the Orrin Tucker
rhythm will go Sigma Kappa
Helen Higgins and Harold Mizner;
AOPi Ruth Yourd and Sig Ep
I Frosty Wilson; Kappa Jeanie
! Newell and Sigma Chi Frankie
Kappa Phi holds
dinner tomorrow
I Initiation, installation
1 of officers to top affair
K-'tppi Phi, Methodist sorority,
' will initiate new members, install
j officers and present awards to
outstanding pledges at an annual
spring dinner at 6 o'clock tomor
I row evening at the Student Union.
Mrs. H. M. LeSourd, national
j sponsor and guest for the occa
. sion, will address the banqueters
on the theme of the evening
i "Water Wonderland." P e u 1 a
Rrigham will preside as toastmis
. tress and Hiva Mills, president will
j conduct the initiation service.
! Emily Frandsen is in charge of
1 ticket sales.
j Among those attending will be
two national officers, three past
; national officers and Mr. C. W.
Molzen editor of the national pub
: lieation, who will conduct the ini
I tiation service.
A GIFT SHE WILL
Shsdto
E2991
LINCOLN
.S7,... .
Bid Ba.w
... ' eoroe Li.. hi
nil,.' - "-yes I I
Next t " ' "''
flle I Marry-
hi i nam r
l I il I I I l
LAKE mniui emir .nwmwiM
I'KTK HMITII'S
"DOUBLE DIVING"
Coufal; Delta Gamma Jinnie
Wheeler and Sig Ep John Scofield;
Theta Virginia Stoddard and ATO
Chuck Davis; and Sigma Kappa
Frances Brown and Sig Ep Bill
Eynon . . . and Saturday night the
Phi Psi's are having a big picnic
and Sunday all of the gals at the
AOPi house "with pins" are hav
ing a picnic with their dates
and the Alpha Phi's are having a
buffet supper and picnic in
Omaha this week end ... all of
which means that people are rush
ing to get things done in the few
weeks left of school . . . another
candy-cigar passing is that of Tri
Delta Leone Wilson and Chi Phi
Clayton Mossman . . . and so goes
the social news of the clay . . .
Alpha Xi Delt announces the
pledging of Virginia Cochrane.
Chi Phi's new officers . are Ed
Segrist, president; George John
son, vice president; George Lonie,
secretary; Kenneth Teich, treas
urer; and Cecil Hallowell, sergeant
at arms.
Kappa Sig announces pledging
of Clarence Herndon and Howard
Kelly, both from Grand Island.
Alpha Phi's new officers are
Doris Marie Poellot, president;
Jean Morgan, vice president; Elea
nore Berner, treasurer; Gertrude
Berggren, secretary, and Marnni
Bremers, social chairman.
225 schools now
giving marriage
training courses
225 colleges are now giving
courses in training for marriage,
it was declared in a recent issue
of the Look magazine by Dr. Ern
est R. Groves of the University
f North Carolina. He pioneered
his first class in 1027 when the
students petitioned the faculty for
such a course to help prepare them
for marriage.
"Child marriages recently have
shocked all America," declared Dr.
Groves in his article, "but mar
riages of many older persons are
as pitiful ami absurd. Because
parents often cannot or will not
tell young people what they must
know, colleges are now offering
the honest, useful information that
fitness for marriage requires of
modern youth."
Dr. Groves' article is accom
panied by pictures showing classes,
mixed and unmixed, at his own
school as well as others. Tho con
sidered revolutionary 16 years
ago, the course is now treated like
any other subject by many Insti
tutions of learning. Dr. Groves
stated. Instruction includes in
formation about courtship, engage
ment, finances, marital adjust
ment, conception, and pregnancy.
He lclievcs the most important
quality for a successful marriage
is the desire for a home and chil
dren. According to Dr. R. D. Lyman,
there is no such comprehensive
course Riven at Nebraska al
tho there is a course in Soeial Hy-
peine.
The University of Detroit will
again this year sponsor the na
tional intercollegiate turtle race.
The Nicholas Murray Butler per
manent intercollegiate philatelic
trophy hd.s been won by a. Crown
university student.
F
I
lornhusker
UNOER JCHimiflEl. OlftECTION
1.1 proud
to be the
host to
Friday
TASSI LS
INITIATION
DINNKK
Saturday
PI HI.TA PHI
HANOI IT
sh;ma PHI
IPSHilN
lUNOLKT
THITA XI
IJANOl'KT
HOME OF THE
TrstyPrstrVShdr
Coed Counsel
board installs
120 Sunday
Leader Fern Steuteville
to explain purposes
of big sister group
Some 120 girls will be installed
by the Coed Counselor board Sun
day at 2:30 p. m. in Ellen Smith
hall. These girls will act as big
sisters to the freshman girls next
year.
Presiding at the installation
services will be Fern Steuteville,
president of the organization, who
will explain its purpose. Other
members of the board who will as
sist in the services are Faith Med
lar, Mary Sherburne,' Maxine Lake,
Melva Kime, Mary Bullock, Ruth
Clark, Ruth Grosvenor, Ruth Ann
Sheldon, Jane DeLatour, Natalie
Burn and June Bierbower.
After the services, the sponsors,
Miss Elsie Ford Piper and Miss
Leta Clark, will be introduced.
The first mass meeting of the
Counselors will be held Tuesday at
5 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall. At
this time, in order to start next
year's activities, the newly in
stalled members will be assigned
to groups of ten serving under
each of the 12 board members.
Prof. Fedde asked to give
paper for education group
Prof. Margaret Fedde has been
asked to present a paper at the
World Education Congress which
meets in Rio de Janeiro the first
week in August. Dr. Benjamin
R. Andrews, professor of house
hold economics of Columbia uni
versity is chairman of the commit
tee. SAT.
AND
SUN.
AND HIS
. I II IN ih'II'iiii irn ifi ni iriiinrcn in iwiiii
1 yTt nrliirli Mur .lltr.irllmi at lnl Vlrtur,
I : tall ft- 1
211
I fcf.:W:W3Li:iuii. 8-1?
I'VE FOUND IT!
Where to Go Tonight?
to
-U6IUEEEIS
See the Engineer-Law
DERBY
Music by Grady Mullins
SOUTHERN GENTLEMEN
Buy Your Ticket at the
dJOKI
Li j lj vy Li v,
1.00 Per Couple
U.S. supplies
'talkies' to ROTC
War department gives
projector to Kentucky
LEXINGTON, Ky. (I.P.) A
sixteen millimeter sound projector
will be supplied the University of
Kentucky department of military
science and tactics by the United
States war department, for the
purpose of stressing instruction in
the R.O.T.C. unit by the means of
"training" films.
The moving picture sound
equipment is being furnished to
R.O.T.C. units in colleges and uni
versities where bad weather dur
ing the winter months limits out
door drill.
Several officers from the United
States signal corps who are ex
perts in photography have been
sent to Hollywood for training in
sound photography, the training to
be especially under technicians in
charge of photographing animated
cartoons.
tqmight
ORRIN
ITUCKERS
and his
Famous Orchestra
fTURMEf
A dv. Tli-Urts H: F. l'nlil )i r. M. A
X t OunicNnn I Inrnl Co. V
Adm. at Door, $1,111 l a.
00
CBS-NBC ORCHESTRA
No Increase In I'rlre
Mln. Ilin f-ervl-! KMh 1 O
mm
the
EvIILLS
mm
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mix