I VimIh K''H and Mnry South of Nor f(lki i.iuirino Mfirvol, Margaret Sclii'iiitz, Wilhi ItoRora nml Helen Van Glider ol' Hastings, Wllela Hlakesle' 0'f Fairbury, Polly Robbins, Rich and poris Pinkerton of Omaha anl Jo;,n jvilon of York aro gliosis at the Gam ma l'hi Beta house. Alary liosencrans, '22, Is spending ,ie week omt at lior home In Platts Qocoooccoocccecceosceecisec cccoocecccocccoeecooecoodo & Where do g You Lunch? ix, Pardon us for asking. Our ob jeet, however, is merely to sug ,: p st that you try this restau j": rant. You will find a first-class menu f: at very popular prices. Every j;f iliinsr about our place is very j, clean and inviting, and the te rooking and service well, just ask those who eat here. " I pnrra I nntp ( arp il. la i: k ' ;Cx xX - SWS s x x x x " 'x xjit m-mFMW 37 Till KS.FRI SAT. Liberty Concert Orchestra International News Weekly !iihj-fs ami lnin1 f Interest "WHITE EAGLE" With Kiith Kilnml BUSTER K EATON In "TIIK (iOAT" "BIG JIM" "Tlir MiimmyinB Hear" JEAN GIBSON & CO. "The 4 . ii 1 1 1 C'lirti of Syncopal Ion" JOHNNY COULON ' The Mhti Tiny f annol 1.1ft" FRED LEWIS "The Comedian" A DRESS REHEARSAL A Trnveiily In One Art SHOWS START ?:SO. :K, :(IO Miit. 2c; NikIiI : l.nl. ISc. Til I K. l'RI. SAT. Rialto Symphony Orchestra Pathe Semi Weekly News The W orlil'a Kvent Uaiilir.ed "SPIKING THE SPOOKS". A New Kdnealional Cmel.v FRANCES ROSENSTOCK AND ETTY FITZGERALD VtM'al Knlerlainem "WIFE AGAINST WIFE" Shows Start at 2:30, 7:00, 9:00 Mats. 20c. Night 35c. Chi. 10c LYMC ALL THIS WEEK The First Real Million Dollar Picture "FOOLISH WIVES" Other Entertaining Feature Shows start at 1, , 5, 7, 9, Mat. and Night Prices 50c BUnk Your Lights At The GREEN LANTERN I Crisp Bright j Organdy Dresses (j j for party wear chic 8 Ratine and S Gingham just the thing for 8 8 school S You'll like them a s Prites to suit you X 7- .iff! JkA M I -H rWlfAIXf 1 FRESHMAN PARTY AT RDSEWILDE SATURDAY First Year Students Will Cele brate With Big Dance and Fun Fest The Freshman Fest comes Saturday evening and don't Sou forget it! For five and a half weeks the committee in charge has been working its head off running for the entertainment, decorations, refreshments and every thing i Iso that will go to make this hop live up to the reputation and high standard that lias been set by past functions of the same kind. The tickets are on sale by the Green Gob' lins, the freshman class officers and at the Student Activities office and may he bought at $1.10 each. The place is tiie Rosewilde and the time is eight o'clock. Refreshments art guaranteed aud the fine arts depart ment will vouch for the decorations. 1 oe k i.io dance orchestra will fur nish the music. As to the commutes that is fixing up the details of the event, it is made up of some of the best members of the freshman class for the purpose and the whole class is back of Iheni and pushing for their success. They are: Roy Randolph, Helen Guthrie, Wilbur Peterson, Ma-lio- Mi ("arty, Francis Sperrey and Edith Replogle. In past years this Freshman Hop has been the main attraction of the school year for the freshmen and has held no mean interest for the upper classmen. This time is to be no ex ception to the rule, according to Wen dell Bergo, the class president, as telephone calls have been coming in ever since the work was started be fore aeation, for information con' cerning the event. Wilbur Peterson, who is taking a main part in selling tickets, reports that they are going fast and it is confidently expected that all can easily be gotten rid of. XI DELTAS FOR NEXT YEAR ARE ANNOUNCED Xi Delia, honorary Sophomore girls' society, announced Wednesday evening the following girls to carry on their work for next year, 1922-23: Kleanor Peters. Lucilo Majors. Myrtle Uptegrove. Frances Montzer. Hurtle High. Wilma De Fored. Rosalie Plattner. Isabel Evans. P. g Haskell. Martha Dudley. Goldie Young. Thelma Cathpole. Edna Doorman. Kathryn Warner. Mildred Othmer. Glee Gardner. Dolores Posse. Dorothy Davis. Catherine Koch. Bess Withers. Dorothy Duggan. OR. STEINMETZ WRITES 111 FUTURE OF RADIO Noted Electrical Genius Gives Out Many Advanced Theories Concerning Radio "Although radio telegraphy is never likely to replace ordinary telephon ing bi tween two individuals, it is pos sible that radio transmission will be employed in sending toll messages from city to city," says Dr. C. P. Stein' metz. "Future developments in radio may bring about some interesting dis coveries, among thtm the establish ment of the fact that radio waves pass through the earth as well as through the air. "Now that we have radio in such a high state of development, no place need ever be out of communication with the rest of the world. In times of disaster, when other means of com munication are cut off, when wires are destroved. the radio can still be used to Mnil messages to other places. Orpheum NOW. SHOWING SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 MARK TWAIN'S Greatest Comedy A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S COURT tSe rirat Time lm-1. at Tbeae Fric !! Tax THE Expeditions, traveling in distant lands, in places where no wires havo ever been stretched, can transmit messages by radio. Communication by radio at sia is of course, one of the great possibilities, as we all know. " We cannot expect that radio will replace ordinary telephone communi cation between individuals. It is not possible to direct radio messages so absolutely. Radio is too general, it goes out over a large area, and oth' ers - not everybody, but others coulci hear the message as well as the per son for whom it was intended. Put radio might be used in sending toll messages. A telephone subscrib er might talk by wire with a radio Central station in his city, and the message which he wanted to send to a far distant place might then be put on the wireless from that station, to be received by a similar radio cen tral in the other city, and then trans mitted by telephone to the person ad dressed. "It is by broadcasting that radio will perform the most service to the nu.st people. Speakers can address the nation at .large as was done with the President's inaugural address; lec turers can lecture to larger audiences; college professors can be heard by many who might not be able to take regular college courses, or who, while attending the classes of some profes sors, would lose the lectures of others elsewhere whom they might desire to hear so that people might receive some aspects of college training with out leaving their homes; ministers wight preach to many who are not present at church; public information might be sent out, as is already being done. "Radio is a very large subject, a big thing, so that only those who have studied it thoroughly can safely dis cuss what may come of it in future years. Obviously we are far from having reached its limits of develop ment." Personals. Profess.ir Gurnsey Jones has left for Chicago, where he is to spend sev eral weeks while convalescing from his recent illness. Professor Roy E. Cochran of the American History department, will lecture Thursday evening to the Fair buryCollege Club at Fairbury, Xebr. P. J. Carey, '03, is practicing law with offices at Muskogee, Oklahoma. Ruth Turner will spend the week end at her home at Fairbury. Charles Emory Barber, '04, is city superintendent of schools, Alhambra, California. William Maxwell of Chicago, Wayne Loomis and Donald Deveries of Fre mont and Otto Beezer of Denver are guests at the Alpha Tau Omega hous?. Catherine Phillip, '23, is visiting at her home at Columbus. Harold Scoins and Homer Johnson of Omaha are guests at the Delta Chi house. Alvin S. Johnson, '97, is a journal ist in Xew York City. Mr. ojhnson received his Ph. D. degree at Colum bia university. Caroline C. Nelson, 'OC, has been appointed to the Girls' School at AJ mer, Rajputana, India. G. E. Fawcett, '05, is estacion ex perimentel agricola, Tucuman, Argen tina. Lila Drollinger, 'IS, writes that she has enjoyed very much her teaching in the Lincoln High School this year. Superintendent J. W. Hussey, '20, and Mrs. Hussey (Gretchen Morse, ex '22)) )will return to their school work at Cambridge next year. Mrs. Hussey has not taught hereloiore but has been employed by the Board of Education of that place to teach in the Junior High School next yea-. Ed Hugg, '17, former Cornhusker basketball captain, and J. W. Hussey, '20, also a letter man at the univer sity, were both members of the Cam bridge American Legion Baskelball team, state champions. Dwight Thom as, '18, a former basketball star at Nebraska, and coach of the Curtis of the Curtisalk. ofcordSlsgL Vrazil Agricultural School, played some games with the team, also. The alumni association is in recept of a letter from Ethel Hartley, '17, who is doing missionary work In Hangchow, China, in which. that she finds her work in the -jf-eign field very interesting. She writes tr.t next week the Hangchow Young Women's Christian Association oges through the most important step of its history up to this time that of formal organization. Taul L. Brockway, '05, who is city engineer for tlie city of Wichita, was kept quite busy the first of Ap:fl helping subdue the flood waters of the Big and Little Arkansas rivers, both of which caused considerable trouble in the lowlands. Mr. Brock way was In charge of the workmen whe were engaged in diking up the banks of Big Arkansas river, where the most damage wus done. Dr. James C. Waddell, '10, Is prac ticing medicine with the Hepperlen Clinic, Beatrice, Nebraska, DAILY NEBRASKAN NEW CAPITOL TESTS HANDS 0FJ1F. MICKY University Professor Has Com plete Charge of all Tests on New Building In the building of such an immense and monumental structure as the new Nebraska State Capitol -building is to be, it is necessary that an exhaustive study bo made of the exact soil con ditions which underlie the site of the new building. It wasleft to the en' gineer to devise methods by which this work could be accomplished. The great responsibility of supervising this work was given to Professor Clark E. Mickey, head of the Civil En gineering department of the Univer sity of Nebraska. Under his direct supervision and with the able assistance of H. Glover, a graduate civil engineer of the uni versity, thorough tests were made of the various formations underlying the nw site. In order that the structure Rh-" stand intact for years to come it was necessary to determine the nature and size of the foundations to be used. Whether the foundation could be safe ly built on the top soil or whether it would be necessary to go down to the sandstone layer which lies about lil'ty feet below the surface. Had a greater study of the soil conditions been made before the present biuld ing was e. reeled, it would still be safe and could be used for many years more. But as it is the foundation was weak and.it is today a menace to the people who have to work there. In the making of the tests Professor Mickey had a great many test holes drilled and the kind of the underlying soils carefully determined. Then an excavation about thirty'two feet square was made on the southeast corner of the grounds and in this hole the various bearing tests were made. At seventeen feet below the surface cn an area of sixteen square feet a bearing power of 7.9 tons a square foot was found. The soil at this point is of a loess clay foundation. The hole was then deepened and tests made on the underlying bed of sand stone which at this point is about 47 feet below the surface. On a bearing surface of one square foot a load ol 03.2 tons was placed before failure. On another area of 4 square feet a load of 94.4 tons a square foot was placed before the rock gave way. The loading for the various tests was ac complished by piling up rails which had been brought in from the Burling ton shops at Havelock, these being placed on an ingeniously arranged column made for this purpose. Edwin S. Jarret, a New York en gineer, who designed the foundations for the capitol building, said in clos ing a letter to the capitol commission: "There is no question but that the co'op-eration of Mr. George E. John son and Professor Clark E. Mickey with the foundation engineers and the efficiency which resulted from that co-operation and the use of the facili ties of .the Department of Public Works and the University saved in '8XS' x'SxK.'x.S&.i it ' I 1. yj r' BUDD 'TpHIS patch-pocket suit will always be favored by young men. It is a particu larly acceptable So ciety Brand model for Spring wear. mmm til l fiFlU-!rM I $3S I u this operation a substantial amount of Public Money." Mr. Jarrett speaks f the borings and tests on the Slate House grounds, in their exactitude and magnitude, ils a notable engineering achievement. Personals. R. E. Fortna, '21, is in the employ of the McKclvie Publishing Company, acting as livestoe-k fhhhnan for tlie publication, "The Nebraska Fanner,'' with the -entire state as his ten-t'oiv. The Nebraska Univeisity club of Portland, Oregon, held their annual dinner in the Crystal Room of the Benson Hotel, the evening of 1'ebru ary p2, 1922. Fred W. Rronn acted as toastmaster. The program con sisted of music and talks reminise ent of the oM Nebraska university and was thoroughly enjoyed. Tiioso tak ing part in the proarain were: J. C. Stevens, president; Ethel Eriord Hewitt, secretary; J. p. ilelai.d, Ed ward R. Harvey, L. V. liew;i, Mrs. J. C. Stevens, Ethel E. Griffith. Miss Kimmel Brown, Nellie Re:hv. 11 May. Alice Rothwcll War-, Rul-inl p. Bryson, Grace BisM-i :.;,., .;nj Fred W. Bronn. Edward 11. Harvey was elected president and . l.. Tem ple secretary for the corning year. Dr. Wolcott took 1 is class in na ture study and oraif.oiopy to Cap ital Beach lake lasi .c..;ui day, where S.Y Gingham Styles for "Miss Flapper" Here are styles in charmingly cool ging ham frocks which will appea to any "Miss Flapper." When old and young women alike are disguising themselves and are appearing to be what they are not-or even if they appear to be what they are why should the Flapper worry? She is aware of the fact that any or all of the styles are created mainly for the fulfillment of her whimsical ideas of dress. The New Bouffant Styles in these dresses will delight her The New Peter Pan Styles of blouses will arouse the spirit of school days in her The New Combinations of organdy with gingham will add indi vidually to her wardrobe With these styles, she has the privilege of resembling a demure Colonial belle a young school girl or, in fact any feminine person she wishes to and she will still radiate the New Spring Modes Apparel Floor Two U&dge aG&enzel Si Thursday. April 27. 10:22. they spent the forenoon in (ho study of birds. A kildoiv'a nest with four evgs was discovered. And quite a number eif wateT birds, including ducks. gense, pulls and sand pipers wore seen. Twenty-seven students made the trip. CCCCCCCOGCCCCCOSCCCOCCCOCO sososccccoccoccoscosccceco FRANCO-AMERICAN BEAUTY SHOPS M Rocm 8, Liberty Theatre Big g Marcel 50c, Shampoo 50c $ Hair Bob 35c H : L9072 143 No. 13th St. il WANTED Men interested in summer work. Leav summer work Leave Applica tions at Student Activities Office Now ; u ii " . -V- sJi For choice Corn Fed o Si Beef call at Braun'ss 8 Market S 8 139 So. 11th