The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 15, 1931, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY. OCTOKKR
BLUE PRINT STAFF
iMEMBERS ATTEND
4 PENN STATE MEET
, Three members of the Nebraska
Blue Print staff are attending the
Engineers College Magazine asso
ciation convention which is being
held at Penn State.
They are Jack Hutchings, man
sging editor; Wesley Koch, assist
ant editor, and Bill Johnston, cir
culation manager.
DANCING KEEPS
YOU YOUNG
LEARN TO
DANCE
Ballroom Dancing
New Special Kates in
Borner Sisters
Studio
1536 -P" St.
B4819
m0S. ALL
WEEK
Ina
Claire
IN
Rebound
WITH WALTER
HUSTON
"CHIC" SALE
DICKEY MOORE
FRANCES STARR
GRANT MITCHELL
: ktartackti-all
tKt minic and lou$K
r ( ley end
f trl ill lev with I
fcvndrtd tmilti foi I
very twr. I
a Janet
Clurle
cffcrely
cAlaryMnn
Added
NOW
a io 'tP' -
Floyd I S $fh
Gibbons ISk y $fi
SHOWS , .j
1-3-5-7-S I . "1t
ViUntil 5. SO
mm
r i
. y
J AndyC.yde
.:! Comedy
!'! FOOTBAU. Nioh I
b and NEWS 10-50 I
THE
FALL OP
OF THE
SILVER BALL ROOM
HOTEL LINDELL
DAY,
FBI
ADMISSION $1.00
CHECKING INCLUDED
New Loungp Where You Can Sit anil Smoke
LEO EECll
AND
HIS ORCHESTRA
Sat. Nite, Simon Harold's Colored Band from Omaha
1.'). 1931
SOCIETY
Tit 1i.kii.Mi C 41,,-.!. Ar 1 rtll
j ii imuur iii 1 1 11 1 1 licii uuuoiuiuiuci .
of Kappa Alpha Thota will entertain at a tea this afternoon at
thu chapter house from 3 :60 to 5 :3U. Two liunareu guesis,
ninonp whom nrc the presidents of the sororities and the hoise
mothers of the various fraternity and sorority houses, will at
tend the affair. In the receiving line will be Mrs. Cox, Helen
Driuuinund. chapter president ; Zetta Johnson, chapter vice
president; Mrs. Curry Carroll, district president; Mrs. Donald
IVjrlcr, alumnae president; and Mrs. C. F. Ladtl.
Autumn colors will reaiure in
(iprnmt inns through the house and
on the tea table. Presiding at the
tea table will be Mis. Leslie
Grainger, Mrs. George Proudflt,
Mrs. Gerald Carpenter and Mrs.
Thomas Woods.
A. T. O.'s. Phi Gams'
Give First Exchange Fete.
nnp of the first exchange din
ners of the year was held Wednes
day evening when pledges of Alpha
Tau Omega were dinner guests at
me t ni uamma uciui iuci
house and the active members of
Phi Gayima Delta were .enter
tained at dinner ar. me iorm
VOCAL ORGANIZATION
TRYOUT THIS EVEMNU
(Continued from page one.)
is definitely organized and a time
suitable to all members can be
uptppH nnon. Rehearsals in past
years were held twice a week, but
they must be -wore irequent wis
von r hprnuso nf the nlan of broad
casting, Hollingsworth explained.
Broadcasting over Rf ab win
start as soon as the staff of the
station feels that the grnup is well
organized. Tryouts will be held
over the radio through the co
operation of the University studio
so that suitable solo voices for
broadcast work can be found.
Judges for the tryouts will be
Howard Kirkpatrick of the uni
versity schoo of music, Detrick
Dirks, manager of radio station
KFAB, and Harold Hollingsworth,
who has been appointed director of
the glee club by Mr. Kirkpatrick.
No particular btudy or ability
to read music is needed," Hollings
worth said. "Many students have
naturally good voices, and we
want them to try out. We would
especially like any groups of two,
three, four, or even more who
have done some singing, together
to come to the tryouts. A special
appeal will be made to all men's
organizations on the campus to get
their members to tryout. We want
this group to be representative of
the university as a whole."
Anyone who would like to be
the accompanist for the glee club
should appear at one of the try
outs, Hollingsworth stated. Any
one who has had some experience
with sucn organizations auu uu
viqu ,!,,no some arransriner and
transposing of music is invited to
come.
FEM ALE PHILOSOPHER
MEDITATES ON RHYTH
MICAL QUALITIES OF
YAWNING IN AFTER
NOON CLASSES.
(Continued from Page 1.)
It is hard to believe that there
are people who will look lightly at
literature, it is impossible to be
lieve that there are students in this
university who do not read a book
a month. I cannot, will not believe
it of a group of ..."One, two
three, four, five, six. seven, eignt,
nine, ten rows all going good. I
can sit back now and relax. It
gives me a glow of satisfaction,
achievement, to see all these peo
ple yawning. I'm sure no one else
has seen the miracle during this
hour, no one else has kept a min
ute by minute survey. I ll bet they
wouldn't even know they were
part of the show.
Open shut, open, shut, automa
tic, rhythmical, fascinating. Open,
shut, open shut. "... .and young
ladies and gentlemen, let me leave
one last thought, plant one last
seed in the garden of your mind.
Let me say to you that" Open
shut, open, shut, was that me
yawning? I'm afraid it is getting
me too. I don't want '
I am glad the bcil just rang
I am saved. I am not like the
others, I am not part of the mir
acle I am still, rarest of raritif.
one who sits on a chair in the back
of a class room and does not yawn.
A gamrnglablc, which was given
by James II to Samuel Pepys has
iust been placed on display in Lon
don museum. It is inlaid with ivory
and various colored woods, and
with it are a set of chessmen and
checkers in tinted ivory and an
ivory dice box with maimers.
enihg
OCT. 16th
ri Vl A
. , rnB.rm nf .nntr.
speeches and vaudeville was pre
sented. Miss Bethyne De Vore Is to be
come the bride of Newton Keith
Demmon Saturday at the Presby
terian church at Norfolk. Miss
De Vore is a member of Alpha
Omicron PI. i
Delta Chi is honoring its pledges
with a party at the chapter house
Saturday evening. Governor and
Mrs. Charles W. Bryan and Pro
fessor and Mrs. Herman T. Decker
are chaperones. About seventy-five
couples will attend.
FORUM HEARS TERRY
ON SOVIET PROPOSAL
(Continued from page one.)
live entirely by themselves, accord
ing to Terry.
in rnnpinainn Mr. Terrv declared
that in criticising the communistic
plan in Russia, one miiFt however,
appreciate the principle that It is
a courageous effort on the part of
the Russians to improve the con
dition 01 tneir country.
Mr. Terry, who is editor of the
"League of Nations Chronicle" of
New York City, left Lincoln Wed
nesday, following two days on the
namnna Hnrino which time he ad
dressed' more than ten student and
faculty groups concerning various
political problems of world signifi
cance.
The World Forum discussion
Wednesday was the third of a
series about the Russian situation.
Next week. Oct. 21. Miss Mar
garet Fedde will lead th discus
sion with a talk on "Education and
Life in Russia Today," as she saw
it while touring the country for six
weeks last summer.
Tickets will be on sale in Ellen
Smith hall, at the Y. M. C. A. of
fices in the Temple, and in social
science hall for 25 cents, Tuesday.
THE ONLOOKER
BY MURLIN SPENCER
ITvarv vpdr it RPpmfl the (llltv C
J
the sports columnist to fight for
new flags for the stadium. Last
year Guy Craig carried out a suc
cessful campaign for new flags,
but the new ones have become bat
tered and torn. It would look
much better if the lone survivor
now hanging from the southwest
pole was taken down than to allow
it to stay there all by itself. Dur
ing a football game, flags add to
the attractiveness of the stadium
and give it a gala appearance. In
most schools, flags of each school
in the conference are flown along
flAcr And the
I Willi bUC - O
emblem of the opponents for the
day s game, ui course, il wuu.u
necessitate the addition of a few
more poles, but this would be no
great item on the expense account.
Although the season is partially
over, it is not too late to put in
the new poles and run up the
flags. It would add greatly to the
barren appearance of the stadium.
The main occupation of the stu
dent body this week seems to be
watching a colored gentleman lay
ing bricks in the new mall north
of" Social Science. Every hour there
are a large number of students
watching the work.
The best idea of the year, for
the past thirty years in fact, has
been turned in to The Nebraskan
in the form of an editorial. It sug
gests that women break down and
walk on dstes instead of demand
ing a cap- every time they go out
And the queer thing is that it is a
woman that suggested it. What
a relief and help it would be if the
women students of this university
would take a little exercise in
stead of spending all of their time
tearing boles in the pocketbooks
of their male escorts. But its a
cinch we ll be out of school long
before women ever get to that
stage. Is there a depression on?
Not if you ask the women.
The varsity looked good in
M
R. BONES SAYS
A MOUTHFUL
This shoe has whof I co
perfect toste, ma'om."
"Why, of course
it's a Florsheiml"
1201 frjf Fir,t Fl0r
THE DAILY NEBILSKAN
scrimmage against the nubbins
Wednesday. Three teams of Husk
ers succeeded in running up five
touchdowns. The longest run of
the afternoon was made by Manley
in returning a kickoff sixty-five
yards. The scoring punch was
there and the nubbins were unable
to hold for any length of time.
Imnrnvement in blockine was
the most noticeable feature last
night. The Huskers have been
sadly lacking in this department
of the game, but if they continue
as they have started this week,
there will be no more need of
worry on the part of the coaches.
One or tne mcmDcrs or tne var
sity was overheard to say last
nicht that the freshmen were
tmich nnnnnents. "YOU hurt their
pride when you take them out of
the play," ne said, "ana tney come
hurk all the harder." This bids
well for a good struggle In the.
stadium Saturday when the var
sity and freshmen mix.
Girls! Have vou seen those new
swanky brimmed hats at the Band
Box Millinerv in The Lindell Hotel
Building? And the material is
that expensive looking velour and
for only $5.00. Adv.
K. U. WOMEN OUTRANK
IN SCHOLASTICALLY
Registrar Reports Sorority,
Fraternity Students
Grades Higher.
HQMORARIES SHOW WELL
LAWRENCE. Kas.. Oct. 14.
Women rank higher than men, and
the fraternity groups, both men
and women, rank higher than the
non fraternity groups in scholar
ship at the University of Kansas,
according to the undergraduate
scholarship report for 1930-31,
just compiled by Registrar George
O. Foster.
The report is for all students ex
cept those in the graduate school,
and ratings are based on 3 points
for an A grade, 2 for a B, 1 for a
C, zero for a D, and minus one for
a failure.
Honorary fraternities and sorori
tes with selected memberships, na
turally rank high, with an aver
age of 1.99. The all woman aver
age was 1.44. compared with 1.07,
the all men's average, and the uni
versity average of 1.19.
Sorority women, as a group, av
eraged 1.57, while non sorority
women are rated 1.38. Fraternity
men ranked 1.15 and non frater
nity men 1.04.
Of the fifteen national sororities
at the university, the leaders are
Your Drug Store
Do not neglect that cough or
cold. We fill your doctor's
prescription.
THE OWL PHARMACY
148 No. 14th 14th and P Sts.
Phone B1068
LEARN to DANCE
Will guarantee to teach you
In 6 private lessons. Also
three lesson coarse.
Lessons by Appointment
Learn the new dance Moucht
LEE A. THORNBERRY
B3635 Private Studio 2300 Y St.
We Feature
GIARRAFFA
NO NAIL SOLES
They're Different
And They're Better
Why Not Drop In
and Let Us Show
Them to You?
Boston Shoe Shop
1335 O ST.
Alpha Kappa Alpha, with a rat
ing of 1.85, fololwed by the Alpha
Omicron PI with 1.73.
The national fraternity list is
led by Alpha Kappa Lambda with
1.54.
Honorary fraternities and soror
iites are led by PI Mu Epsllon, a
mathematics organization, with
2.80, and Phi Beta Kappa with
2.65. Membership of these organiz
ations rank near straight A grades
and there are 18 Of the 30 organ
izations of this group in which
grades are better than a B, aver
age. Theta Sigma Phi, national jour
nalistic sorority, leads the profes
'slonal group with 1.87. All musical
organizations show good scholas
tic records with the women's glee
club leading with a record of 1.80.
The tennis squad and the "K"
girls had better than B averages,
with the tennis squad leading at
2.14. Other athletic organizations
rate lesser points.
Rent-a-Car
NEW FLAT RATE
$3.35
20 Miles and Time
to 1 :00 A. M.
Ask Us
MOTOR OUT COMPANY
1120 P Street
B68I9
'ALMOST
Tfe
.SAMt.. ,
NONE GENUINE WITHOUT THIS
CAN'T eUST EM TIAOEMAfr,
CANT BUST EM
CAMPUSc&QCORDS
AM 1f
(AiniAMCItCe If CALIFORNIA
YA
' w
You Can
ft .A THtr . j C)
ipa HV u Li
o KILLIAN'S -
1212
When firemen tried to extinguish
a large farm fire on Candia, near
Ancona, Italy, recently, they were.
unable to obtain water. They con
nected their pumps to several large
vats of wine standing in a cellar
and put out the flames in a snort
time.
University Students
Welcome to Crete
Enjoy your week end outing on
the Blue, Lunches put up.
KIND'S CAFE
COFFEE SHOP
SPECIAL
STUDENT LUNCH
Meal.
Fountain Service
Open 7 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Even if your man-servant, Meadows is in Paris
selecting your shirts at Charvet's, you can dress
yourself quite satisfactorily in Campus Cords!
No trouble at all! Easy to get into, easy to look at,
easy to wear! These corduroy trousers are right!
Well tailored, correctly cut with snug hip-fir,
straight hang, wide but not extreme cuff bottoms.
Made of the finest cream-color corduroy, Campus
Cords wear unbelievably well, keep smart to the
last.
Ask for them by name Campus Cords. Look for
the label inside the waistband. It protects you
against imitations.
F. loesser-Hf. ynemannCo. SFrae$jei
Chicago Portland New York Loi Anjtlei
BET YOUR LIFE WE CARRY
All sizes No matter how lean how
how tall how small we can fit
and this
year they're
MWLYARMSTRONGS
ECONORflY BASEMENT
Get Genuine Campus Cords at
12th & O
THREE
FALL
FOOTWEAR
HAS NEVER BEEN '
SMARTER
S4.95
and
$6.50
See our Maralyn. Modes
in any desired color or
material.
Sizes 3's, 9's
A AAA's to C's
fat
you.
a
"
V
if
f.
i -