THURSDAY. JANUARY 15. 1931 SOCIETY Social Calendar A number of house parlies in contrast to the various fonnnl ilanccs will comprise the. sorir.l activities tliis week-end. Those who indulge in social nffairs may divide their lime between the house parties and the formal dnnees. Delta Sigma Phi and Sigma Tnu have scheduled parties at the chapter house for Kri day evening as liavo the Lutheran club and the Ag College Ath letic association. Alpha Delta Theta and Sigma Kappa are making plans for entertaining active members at house dances on Saturday evening. , At Lincoln Hotel. Two hendred and fifty couples have been issued invitations to the Delta Delta Delta formal Satur day evening at the Lincoln hotel. Ohaperones who will sponsor the dance are Capt. and Mrs. G. W. Spoerry, Col. and Mrs. W. H. Oury, Prof, and Mrs. E. H. Bar- bour and Mrs. Farley, house mother. Mrs. Inez Sargent Leaves Temporarily. , Mrs. Inez Sargent. Kappa Alpha Theta house mother, is recuperat ing from a serious illness in Kan sas City. Mo. Mrs. Rae of Boul- der. Colo., will replace Mrs. Sar gent during her absence. Pledges Use Snow Theme at Function. A snow party in keeping with the winter season has been planned by pledges of Alpha Delta Theta for the entertainment of active members at the chapter house ;(!f Hr Is a heroine one tht will win your iyp pathy, your heart, your admiration your cheers ai Bhe adapts herself to fight with cunning al luring weapons those who seek to cheat her of life innocence and respect. Joan Crawford The Empress of Emotion exquisitely oeautifut .... in triguing! clever in "PAID" with Robt. Armstrong Marie Prevost John Miljan Even finer than The Trial of Mary Dugan' " : Stage "i MLLE. BEBE MOFFIE IK Vogues of 1931 WITH Curry ft Deaylva Jimmy Byrne AND JACK NORTH The Intimate Banjokester STUART SYMPHONT OF 20 STUART Show! Continuous 1 to 11 Vaudeville a-7-9 A at Friday Delta Gamma formal dance Cornhusker hotel. Sigma Alpha Iota lormai uaute at Lincoln hotel. Methodist stuGent and patron dinner from 5 to 7 at Wesley Foundation parsonage, r.nntist student party at First Baptist church at 8 o'clock. Delta Sigma rni nouse pan. Lutheran club party. Ag college athletic association party . Sigma Tau dam e. Saturday. Sigma Kappa house dance. Alpha Delta Theta house dunce. Delta Delta Delta formal dance at Lincoln hotel. Gamma Phi Beta formal dance at Cornhusker hotel . Saturday evening. Wintry decora tions will carry out the theme of the party for which Catherine Warren's Varsity Ramblers are to play. Fifty couples will attend the dance which Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Hill and Mrs. Emma Holyoke are chaperoning. Sally Pickard Elected Pi Beta Phi President. Sally Pickard. Omaha, was elected president of Pi Beta Phi, at a regular business meeting Tuesday evening. Dorothy Jane Weaver will assist her. Dorothy Stanley was elected vice president, Florence Binkley, recording secre tary, and Jane Schaible, corre sponding secretary. Alice Reader will ' continue as treasurer. The meeting was held in honor of Virginia Hutson, visiting province president. Pirate Party to Be Given At St. Paul's Church. The young people's class of St. Paul's church have been invited to a pirate party Friday evening in the church parlors at 8 o clock. Games, programs and refresh ments have been planned to enter tain the geusts who will come in costume. Affairs Honor Miss Hutson. Members of the active chapter ni nii thl were entertained at a formal dinner Tuesday eve ning to honor Miss Virginia nut aon. The visitor has also been Vinnnr ftiest at several affairs given by Lincoln alumnae groups. Phi Tau Thetas Attend Dinner. Some thirty Phi Tau Thctas at tended the dinner meeting held Tuesday evening at the Wely w.inrfa'tlnn nnrsnnnee. After a two course lunch, the members wero privileged to hear Dr. F. E, Henzlik of Teachers college, who spoke at length on "The Belief and Behavior of the Individual." Dr. Henzlik mentioned the forces which make religtou move for ward, listing scientific thought nj rvRintirins the conversance theory, and the industrial changes of this machine age. He staled that we cannot live without the machines, so we must learn to uroh them to the best of our advantage. Dr. Henzlik also spoke of character education. The Phi Tau Theta pledges win take their pledge examination Sunday afternoon, at the Wesley Foundation parsonage, and they will be initiated Jan. 20, at the Immanuel church, at 7 o'clock. Alpha Chi Sigma Schedules Formal. Members' of Alpha Chi Sigma will entertain at a formal dance Friday evening in the Venetian room of the Lincoln hotel. Leo Beck's orchestra will play for the two hundred and fifty couples who have been invited to attend. Chap erones for the occasion are Dr. and Mrs. Edgar J. Boschult and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Parmalec. Alpha Delta Pi Mothers Entertain Omaha Auxiliary. The Lincoln mothers' club of Alpha Delta Pi is entertaining the members of the Omaha mothers' club at a luncheon at the chapter house Saturday. Mrs. W. Boyd Smith. Mrs. H. J. LnKiree, Mrs. A. J. Randall, Mrs. Geanie Hen ririrks. Mrs Lauritz Chrlstensen, Mrs. Thomas Reynolds. Mrs. T. F. Kinman, all or omana, win motor han fnr the luncheon. Mrs. Ida Bumstead, house mother, and Mrs. C. A. Birdzell, president or the Lincoln club, are in charge. Alpha Omicron Pi Informally pledged Lois Van Nostrand Satur day. Lillian Benda, teaching at Odell, visited at the Theta Phi Alpha house over the week end. Rose Komarek, president of Theta Phi Alpha, resumed her work at the university after a three week's illness. Plumb rfll Huts . . . Busting WJftHEEEB. in "HOOK, LINE AND SINKER" with Ralf Harolde Dorothy Lee . Also Travelogue & News Now Showing LINCOLN 12 to 1 25c A Great Musical Event EUROPE'S FINEST OPERA STARS Mi tin m vuiri CCT'PANY tCfcTcf ViORLD liaOUTAR UXXtettMOteSsr SfMPHONY ORCHESTRA MME. JOHANNA GADSKI, SEMBACH, BAUMER, BRAUN FRICKE, VON ESSEN AND OTHER RENOWNED SINGERS TWO FAMOUS WAGNERIAN OPERAS Gitterdammerung" -: - - Moil, Jan. 19 JTiegende Hollander" - - - Tues., Jan. 20 ' TICKETS, $1, $2, $3. $4, $5 TAX FREE JIail Orders may be sent to German Grand Opera Committee, 1624 City National Bank Bid?., Omaha OMAHA CITY g ota AUDITORIUM today SPECIAL RAILROAD RATES THE DAILY N ERR ASK AN nrlo-lnal mntlnn indicated the favorable stand of the majority of the council. This was followed by further discussion and a motion fot adjournment which wt.s then in troduced by Williams was lost by a vote of twelve to two, McCleery not voting. Actions Indicate Approval. In the proceedings which tl.?n fnllnived the council declared that it would dispense with a roll-call vote and declare Its stand on Mc Cleery 's motion by means of a group vote. Members' action th rail for Question wer an open indication of their almost unanimous approval or me motion. At this point, however, McCleery moved that his motion be tabled until a special meeting next Wed nesday. He pointed out that all members of the council who were not present would then be able to certain other members of the group who might be in a stale or muecision wouia nave un to reach a fixed viewpoint. This motion was carried and was followed by a successful mo tion for adjournment, thus post poning formal vote on the motion until next Wednesday. Unless a decided change of sentiment toward the question takes place within the next six days the Student council is prac tically certain to go on record as opposed to compulsory military drill and a committee will be duly appointed to appear before proper authorities in behalf of that stand, council leaders said. SCHULTE STRIKES AT SUNNY Hi FANS THREE Catherine Edberg and Dorothy Neeley, alumnae of Theta Phi Alpha, spent vacation at the home of Miss Neeley in Long Beach, Calif. Miss Marian Becker, David City, is a guest at the Pi Beta Phi house this week while regis tering for work for next semester. Illness during the past year kept her from attending this semester. Lewis C. Fedderson, Marquette, intends to enter Nebraska Central college at Central City, next semester. He is enrolled here in the arts and science college at present. JENSEN ADDRESSES LETTER TO SOLONS (Continued from Page 1.) sen. He does not state the name of the legislator. Jensen is a former instructor in the romance language department of the university, which position he held for eight years. In the last election he opposed Gov. C. W. Bryan for nomination on the dem ocratic' ticket for gubernatorial h :iors. STUDENT COUNCIL TO VOTE ON DRILL (Continued from Page 1.) actual record of the ballots might be presented by the committee. Members of the council then prepared to declare their stand on the motion by means of a roll call vote when Williams raised a point of order to the effect that a vote of that nature was not permissable according to rules of parliament ary law without first notifying the members who were not present at the meeting. In the diseussion which followed, Boyd Von Seggern, Bill McGaffln, and Fred Grau expressed favor able arcTiments on McCleery's 'motion while Williams, the lone opponent, expressed an opposite viewpoint. William's argument that the Student council was tak ing a step which might not be in accord with student sentiment was answered by McGaffin as follows: Elected by Students. "We were elected by students at an open election in order that we might be representatives of their interests on the campus, we are the figurative voice of the student body and it seems to me that any stand which we take is only a mlnature representation of the belief of the student noay as a whole. I believe we are acting in accord with all principles of fair ness when we vote for the accep tance of a motion which has as its design the abolition of compulsory military science." A motion for tabling McCleery's resolution was then introduced by Fred Grau. The- motion was lost by a voter of eight to six, McCleery remaining neutral while the count was taken. The defeat of the move to table "Your Drug Store" Our noon lunch business Is sure growing and boy how busy our Soda Fountain if. We thank you. Bu'lnoB Is kood. THE OWL PHARMACY Phone B1068 148 No. 14 P St. (WE DELIVER) DANCE! Thursday Nite WITH Lee's Serenade A Hot Colored Band. Directed by a University Student Admission 25c j PLAhTTIOR 5 MILES WEST ON "O" Coach Flays 'Fatheads Who Put Husker Teams on Pedestal' Henry F. "Indian" Schulte, head track coach at Nebraska, in an .i.Voa before Lions club at Omaha Tuesday, made the state ment that it is tne tans wno con sider Cornhusker teams unbeat able who make the coaches lives hard. "It's a bunch or damned tatneaas who put the Nebraska rootoau team on a pedestal, wohship at its shrine and consider the Com hus- kers unbeatable, who make it so tough on the team and coaches," the track mentor declared. "Nebraska supporters consider their teams unbeatable in the val iv That- attitude nermeates into the players and unconsciously they develop a feeling of superiority, and as a consequence are likely to let down. "But Oklahoma, Missouri and the rest of he valley teams don't let down. They're the under dogs and fight all the harder. What's the result? Lok at last season's record. You'll find it there." Further commenting upon the Nebraska football situation, Schul te declared that he had absolute faith in D. X. Bible and believes his system will succeed. He con cluded his talk with a few re marks on track prospects for this year, stating that Hugh Reah and Willis Lamson loom as possible record breakers'. Coach Bible, who followed Schulte, discussed fotball from a competitive angle. Bible's remarks were concerned with the two big things of football, the will to win and the way to win. K. U. TANKMEN MEET fouraallstlc orranisattons. the Na tional Editorial association, the American Society of Newspaper Editors, and the two educational groups, will work to bring the schools of journalism and the edi tors of dally and weekly newspa pers into closer relations. The committee will seek to es tablish means of co-operation be tween the schools and the newspa pers. Its report will be presented for adoption to the American So- rintv of Newsnaner Editors at its annual meeting in Washington, D. C, next April and at the annual convention of tho N. E. A. later. The two educational groups will consider it at their annual meeting next December. University cadet band thirty years ago wis made up of about twenty-five pieces. It was led by Profersor Wilson of Chicago. WANTED Student! desiring summer work ap. ply to mr. j. c. McAllister, HOTEL LINCOLN, Friday. A working knowledge of chemistry Is valuable but not important. Is Return Match, Jayhawks Taking First One by 57 to 27 Count. LAWRENCE, Kas. A return match with the swimming team of Washburn college, Topeka, will be held at the University of Kansas Thursday evening. Kansas swim mers at Washburn last week won 57 to 27, taking first in all but two of the nine events. By agreement, the 400-yard re lay has been cut to 200 yards, and because of the length of the tank, the short dash will be 50 instead of 60 yards. Kansas entries will be: 50-yard dash Kruse and Bur cham. If J-yard dash Kruse and Bur fchem. 220-yards Oaki and Bowdish. 440-yards Aoki and Bowdish. 150-yard back stroke Dill. 200-yard breast stroke Steph enson and Henson. 200-yard relay Bowdish, Mar shall. Dill and Aoki. Medley relay Dill, Henson and Burcham. Diving Stephenson and Mar shall. B1.EYER NAMED ON GROUP TO SELECT JOURNALISM AIMS M A.DISON, Wis. Dr. Willard G. Eleyer, director of the school of journalism at the University of Wisronsin, was one of three jour nalism professors chosen by the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism to represent that association on a joint committee of daily and week ly newspaper editors and publish ers and heads of schools and de partments of journalism which is to draw up a statement of the aims and methods of journalistic train ing. The committee, which is com posed of three representatives from each of the four outstanding Learn to Dance Will Teach You to Dance In Six Private Lessons I Can Correct Any Fault You Have In One Lesson Special Arranged Course In Variations Private Lessons Morning, Afternoon and Evening by Appointment RESULTS GUARANTEED LEE A. THORNBERRY Phone L8251. 2300 Y St. 49th Holdrege Bus Goes Past the Door Business men, industrialists end engi neers 600,000 of them resularlr resd the McGraw-Hill Publications. More thin 3,000,000 use McGrsw-hill books and masazioes in their business. The Business Week Srstem Radio Retailing Electronics ATistioa Product Ensineerinf Factory snd Industrial Engineering and Management Mining Journal Pomtr Engineering and Industrial Engineering Mining World Coal Age Electric Railway Journal Textile World Bus Transportation Food Industries American Machinist Electrical World Engineering News Electrical Merchandising Record Electrical West Construction Methods Chemical & Metallurgical Engineering "Whitewash this Disaster?" "Never!" said the Editor C-R-A-S-H! The very earth seemed wrenched asunder by a giant hand ; ; ;Then dread silence; an ominous pause; fol lowed by a terrific inferno of destructive flame and explosion. That frightful conflagration at the Denmark, New Jersey, government arsenal, took heavy toll of lives. The little town nearby was suddenly hurled into a maelstrom of terror, loss ; . ; and federal investigations. There was little justification for this calamity; hardly any ex cuse for the lack of protection to lives and property. But, Gov ernment investigations whitewashed all concerned until . . . The editor of Chetn and Met investigated the smoldering ruins. His report was not of the "whitewashing' type. It boldly set forth the facts disclosed the lack of protective measures placed the blame directly where it belonged. And, all through the bitter controversy which followed, this editor held his ground didn't retract one word of the truth. The consequence? From that time forth, the Government has faithfully embodied, in all arsenals constructed, those rec ommendations for safety and protection which were stressed in this McGraw-Hill journal. McGraw-Hill editors, first of all, must dig out the truth ; ; j then through every opposition, stick to their guns. This is one big reason why so many of the nation's leaders turn to these journals for news on industry's doings. This, too, is one big reason why you should read the McGraw-Hill paper that covers the field you expect to enter. Leading college libraries have McGraw-Hill Publications. Ask your librarian. Mc GRAW- HILL PUBLICATIONS m - McGMW-HILl PUNISHING CO . Ntw Yorl.. Oucoqo- PMode1phio WaMBtfl". DttrO'l 5 loo-Cleveland loi Angetos Son f ranc-seo-Bos The "Big Stick" On Lost Articles! We . are the "Big Stick" when it comes to finding lost articles for students. Our Clas sified want ads have shown themselves very proficient in locating valuables lost in the shuffle of college life. The next time you lose something just drop in and insert a small want ad and you'll find that the results are quick and satisfactory. If you can't find it in the ordinary way, you are reasonably sure of success by this method. A great many students have tried it and find that what we say is true. Our office open practically all day. Regular office hours, 1:00 to 6:00 every afternoon. Did you ever look on the bulletin boards of sonic of our most imposing buildings and see the funny little scraps of paper tacked thereto? These scraps of paper carry heartbreaking appeals for the return of someone's notebook, pen, watch, gloves, etc. How the persons who stuck them up expect to get their belongings hack that way is a mystery to us. probably more so to them. If they really want their coods back, they should use the best medium possible The Xebraskan's Classified Want Ads. SURELOCK HOMES OUR SPECIAL INVESTIGATOR Lost and Found Dept of the Daily Nebraskan U HALL Phone B 6891 flOtiU! MM MM FTJ n Br I I rvl