WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1932 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TTTHEE Former Students Announce Marriage; New Initiates and Pledges Named Lorraine Witt and George Morris of ISetvntan Grove Wed; Evelyn Eastman Visits Campus; Ttco Groups Hold Initiation, and Ttco Elect, An announcement of interest made today is that of the marriage last Sunday of two former students, Miss Lorraine Witt and George Morris, both of Newman Grove. An interest ing visitor on the campus is Miss Evelyn Eastman of Ther mopolis, Wyo., who attended school here last year. Farm House fraternity and Theta Phi Alpha sorority today announce their new initiates. The election of new officers to serve for the coming year is announced by Alpha Delta Theta and Sigma Phi Sigma. Students Married In Omaha Sunday. Miss Lorraine Witt of Newman Grove and George Morris, also of iscwman Grove, were married Sunday, March 20, in Omaha. Both maa 0f the student group of the. u'prw at iirlnnt ci horf Inst VPflr. Mr. 1 r..ii DAtiiv.ia u'AifaA an4 w - - j vuuuv, 11 ui ivciigiuua cum c cuiu lo mmir off rn rH n rr tVio TTnf. I i a i tt t. .. :i ' is a. nieiziuer uj. me xtxiu tuuutu. 1 I t-; t-i : : s: rtti Ijvumh uiauu, ittir, is uiiiiiaitru with Chi Omega and has served as . ... -. . i xr tir a '""i . . v...w. tI eadU cr wl Llc x. v. K. w. lino 1.- - : I i . . . 1 . .. vpar Hnu win hcl in me same ua- pacity next year. She is a member of student council and served on the prom committee. Miss McHenrv. Nelson. Is a Kappa Sigma. Tlwta Phi Alpha Initiates Saturday. rive rirjs uecame inuiiiueis ui -- - -- -- Theta Phi Alpha at a ceremony member of Kappa Alpha Theta, day night. The new initiates are Sweetheart" this year. Miss Upson Helen Holland. Adla Lombrunk. 18 memDer or Aipna umicron ri Eleanor Casari. Helen Bulin. and fnu 18 A"e. J"" Ann Sluueiy. following we inula- . " . . . tion service a banquet was neid m "r Panh ,,:, honor of the new members. Farm House Fraternity fi Inifintinii "Manilas'. The following- men were initiated served this year on the Y. W. C. Into Farm House fraternity Mon- ilJ LU X ai HI ilUUflV ii aiv "v I day night: Howard White, Elmer and is a member of Tassels. Lois Parli Krville Hushes. Merl Peek. Boyd Shank, Dwight Reed. Mark Hackman Miss Eastman Returns To Sebraska Campus. Evelyn Eastman of Thermopolis, Wyo., arrived in Lincoln Saturday to spend a week visiting friends. Last year Miss Eastman attended the University of Nebraska, where she is affiliated with Kappa Kappa Gamma. She is now attending Col orado college at Colorado Springs. Lambda Chi Alpha Banquets Tuesday. About fifty active and alumni members of the local chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha were enter tained at a banquet at the chapter house Tuesday night. The affair was in celebration of Lambda Chi Alnha Da v. the fraternity having set aside March 22 for such ob servance at the last general jcon vention last summer. Alpha Delta Theta Elects Officers. New officers to serve for the coming year were recently elected by Alpha Delta Theta. They are Marian Veseley, Bennet. president; Rose Woerdeman, Wisner, vice president; Mildred Dietz, Scribner, recording secretary; Norma Vitek, Clarkson, corresponding secre tary; Margaret Ward, Douglas, Wyo., treasurer; Alfreda Johnson, Boelus, chaplain; Jeanne Bobbitt, Lincoln, historian; Helen Smrha, Milligan, marshal; Peg Sievers, Scribner, stewardess, and Alfreda Johnson, Boelus, assistant treas urer. Sigma Phi Sigma Elects Officers. Sigma Phi Sigma elected the fot lowing officers Monday evening; Melvin Adams. Lemoyne, presi dent: Robert Buel, Hickman, vice president: Henry Larson, Danne brog, recorder; Lawrence Young, Kimball, custodian; John Johnson, Omaha, senior censor; Clarence Knudson, Homer, junior censor; Lloyd Lefler, Fairmont, chaplain; Robert Young. Kimball, tyler; and Paul Chiles, Cook, historian. Announcement Made Of Recent Pledging. Marian Higbee of Omaha was pledged to Alpha Delta Theta Monday night at the chapter house. Farm House fraternity an nounces the pledging of Heye Lambertus. TheU Phi Alpha held formal pledging for Lucille Stutnika of Lincoln last Wednesday. The democratic convention Is scheduled lo start on May 21. The depression will end on the evening of May 23. Michigan Daily. NOW SHOWING LJ and h band. SIX NEW NAMES ABE ADDED TO A. W. S. BALLOT (Continued from Page 1.) lor member of the A. W. S. board wan nwardpd the. Fanhellenic scholarship award this year and is a memDer or Aipna jamoaa ueua Evelvn O Connor. Elsie. Is a member of Delta Zeta. She has A. cabinet as research chairman Picking: is from Lincoln and is a member of Tassels. Junior members: Jane Boos, Howard. S. D.. is a member of Delta Delta Delta. She was re cently elected the new secretary of the Y. w. c A. ror next year. ne has been active In sophomore com mission work. Miss Bunting, Lin coln, is affiliated with Pi Beta Phi. She is a sophomore member of the board, a member of the W. A. A. executive council and served this year as secretary of Tassels. Margaret Buol, Randolph, is a member of Chi Omega. She is a sophomore member of the A. W. S. board. She was elected the new vice president of the W. A. A. and is a member of Tassels. She has been active in Y. W. C. A. work also. Miss Klotz. Lincoln, is a member of Alpha Delta Theta. She is active in Home Economics ac tivities and Y. W. C. A. work on the Agricultural college campus. Lucile Reilly, Lincoln, is a member of Delta Gamma. She served as nnnhomnre member of the A. W. S. board and has recently been elected the new nee president oi the Big Sister board. Alire Geddes. Lincoln, is the re tiring president of Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman scnoiasuc nonor ary, and is a member of the Out ing club. Willa Norris, Inavale, is a member of Gamma Phi Beta. She has been active in Y. W. C. A. work. Marjory Pope, Chadron, is affiliated with Kappa Kappa Gam ma. She is a member of Tassels. Sophomore members. Calista Cooper, Humboldt. Is a member of Pi Beta Phi. She was recently elected a sophomore member of the Big Sister board for next year. She has been active in freshman commission and A. W. S.- fresh man groups and is a pledge of the Dramatics club. Miss Haxthusen, Omaha, la a member of Alpha Chi Omega. She was freshman chair man of the Y. W. C. A- finance drive. Miss Carlsen, Lincoln, is a mem ber of Kappa Alpha TheU and is an active member of the A. W. S. freshman activities group, as is Mias McAllister. Bash Perkins, of Arnold, is the newly elected sec retary treasurer of the Big Sister board for next year and has been active in Y. W. C. A., freshman commission, and A. W. S. fresh man groups as well as Charm school, a hobby club for freshmen. ' Miss Smith, from Omaha, Is a member of Delta Gamma. She. too, baa been active in A. W. S. freshman group and freshman commission. Elaine Fontein, Co lumbus, is affiliated with Alpha Phi. She has aerved this year as a reporter lor the uauy weDras kan and has been active in A. W. S. fretshman group. Roma De Brown, Lincoln, a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, has also been a member of the A. W. S. freshman group. ORCHESTRA FOR KLUB SHOW NOT SELECTED (Continued from Page 1.) tiona wfll be closed with these towns this week. The date of the Lincoln perform ance has not been set. It is thought that a down town theater will be secured for the show. The probable date of the showing of -Jiugie Belles' in Lincoln Is the week end after spring vacation. Costumes are being sewed for the show and the scenery is being painted in the west stadium under the direction of Norman Hoff. Ad vertising is being solicited by the business staff under the super vision of Bill Devereaux, advertis ing manager. Special Class Apr, 4 Secretarial Training This class is planned for those who want a brief. Intensive, yet thorough course that will prepare quickly for a profitable position. Write for full particulars. Lincoln School of Commerce Member National Ass'n of Accredited Commercial Schools PA Hth St. W. A. BOBBINS, Pres. Lincoln, Nebr. COLLEGE DELEGATIONS TO VISIT COAL FIELDS To Investigate Conditions in Kentucky Area; Will Go To Dreiser Trial. Thirty colleges and universities will send faculty and student dele gations to a nationwide college convention which will gather in Knoxville, Tenn., on March 25 and proceed immediately to the Ken tucky coal fields to protest against "increased terror" in the treatment of striking miners and to distrib ute relief, it was announced yes terday by the National Student league at its headquarters, 102 West Fourteenth Street. The first stop after leaving Knoxville will be at Pinevllle, Ky, where the delegates will attend the trial of Theodore Dreiser, John Dos Passos and eight other New York writers and union organizers on charges of criminal syndical ism. After the trial they will dis tribute several truckloads of food and clothing among the strikers, attend a miners' meeting and make an economic survey of prevailing conditions. On Sunday, March 27, the repre sentatives will form three groups, one of which will return to New York to attend the first annual conference of the league the fol lowing morning; a second will leave for Detroit to investigate working conditions in the automo bile factories there, and the third will remain on the Kentucky scene for several days to conduct a more detailed survey. The institution which will dwlsnat rep resentatives to the Knoxville meetinK wee announced as follows: Brooklyn college. Brvn Mint college, Carnegie Institute ot Technology. Cleveland City collece, Collece of the City of New York, Columbia uni versity, Cornell university, Crane Teachers' college. Lewis institute of Technology, Long island university, Massachusetts In stitute of Technology, New York univer sity. Northwestern university. Smith col lege. Swarthmore college, Teachers college, Union college, Union Theological Seminary. University of Chicago. University of Iowa. University of Michigan. University of North Carolina. University of Pittsburgh. University of Virginia, University of Wis consin and Western Reserve university. SMOKING DOES NOT MAKE POPULARITY (Continued from Page 1.) the temptation before there. So many .girls say that it eases the situation if they can smoke on a date. It seems to Miss Perry that the girl must have an awfully poor vocabulary and a small range of experiences to talk about. Reports are that in many towns and cities it is impossible to place teachers who smoke. In some dis tricts the prospective teacher is re quired to sign a paper saying that she does not smoke and that she will not. If this is carried much farther there will be quite a lot of difficulty resulting from it. Miss Perry reports that there is a large sum of money being spent to study the effects of smoking on girls both from a mental and phys ical point of view. It has been proved that in the end people are bound to suffer mentally from this habit, although it may not hurt them at the presePl time. If the reports of this research prove that the health of the smoking women is so injured as to affect the next generation. Miss Perry says that drastic measures must be taken. A course in "gold mining" is the most recent to be added to the curriculum at the University of Southern California. It is a coed ucational institution. "Who is the greatest engineer the world has ever produced?" a physics clas at Wake Forest col lege was asked in an exam. A freshman answered: "Hoover, be cause he ditched, drained and damned the United States in two years." APRIL FOOL PARTY IS HOOKED FOR FRIDAY First Christian Church to Be Scene of Religious Council Program. An April Fool party sponsored by the student group of the Coun cil of Religious Welfare, will be given Friday evening, April 1, at the First Christian church for students of all denominations rep resented on the campus. A varied program of games, skits and musical numbers has been arranged. Helen Nootz, chairman of the program commit tee, has announced the following selections. Students from the Christian church will present a short skit. Mr. Yao will give a group of flute selections, and Jack Henney will sing. A group of Methodist students will give a hu morous skit. The program will close with numbers by the Thomas quartet. Go to Hauck's studio for photo graphs that satisfy. 1216 O. Adv. GRIMES LANDS WINTER NUMBER OF SCHOONER (Continued from Page 1.) The jobless man . , . the naked trees! A cup of milk . . a slice of cheese Why should we come on bended knees And beg: "Rich men ... if you will . . .. A piece of bread?" By what right ... by what decrees, Have you, with wealth of seven seas. Checked the mill upon the hill? Are you a wolf with a lust to kill? Why should you take the toiler's fees . . . A piece of bread! Subscriptions for the Prairie Schooner may be obtained at the Prairie Schooner office, 121 An drews hall. The Schooner is a quarterly magazine and the price of a year's subscription is one dollar. Retention of tradition at the Uni versity of Vienna really amounts to something. Pledges to frater nities must learn to duel before they can be initiated, and profes sors must meet their classes in swallow tailed coats. Students at Bradley Tech re cently held a pajama parade to a theater in Peoria where prizes were awarded persons wearing the most attractive "evening clothes." Presumably to keep bugs out oi picnic food3 a course in camp cookery for men is being offered at Oregon State this term. GATHER ROUND CORNHUSKERS Your Honorary Colonel and Your Prom Girl Will Be Honor Guests at HOTEL PAXTOM Paradise Dance Saturday Night March 26, 1932 It'll Be Nebr. Uni. Niffht in a big way. - BE THERE FLORSHEIM SHOES Dainty shoes beautifully styled so easy to wear you'll hardly know you have them on yet economical because you can wear them so long. 8 50 '10 Ftrture Arch StyUi $10 HIGH SCHOOL PUPILS Agricultural College Will Hold Annual Contests Late in April. If present plans are successful several hundred eastern high school agriculture students will compete in the annual agricultural judging contests to be held on the college of agriculture campus late in April, Prof. C. C. Minteer of the college announced this morn ing. Records from past years compe tition show that forty schools were entered in the 1931 contests held at the college. The year before only thirty-seven schools competed. Last year the Waverly high school carried away the big honors when they won the livestock and dairy products judging aa well aa the public speaking honors. Other winners included Newman Grove, Fairbury, Albion, Ponca, Milford and Mead. As in other years the 1932 con tests will include judging in prac tically all lines of agriculture. In addition there will be an egg show, egg grading, forge work and pub ic speaking for members of Future Farmers of America chapters. A Waverly boy won the public speak ing contest last year. Professors This is the year for EUHKOPE for a deli&htfulcroing in mod ern Touritt OasM and prices in Europe are at rock-bottom. I '- I V. A LIMITED vacation budget wil take you to Europe this year. Via White Star and Red Star you travel in the best of company, with every comfort, good food and jolly times, at fares from $ 106 one way, $187.50 round trip. In Europe you'll fi ad prices amaz ingly low. Your American dollar goes further than it has in years. You can actually visit Europe and save money. Famous ships to choose from, in cluding Majestic, world's largest; Olympic, Britannic, BeigenUtnd, Pennland, and many others. Send for booklet about Touri cUit. 180 Xo. Michigan Are., , Chicago. Or Agents . WHITE STAR-RED STAB latOTUral Mrusrifl U In the college of agriculture will have charge of the various con- testa. PROF. BELL AGREES PHRASES INFLUENCE US (Continued from Page 1.) giving the American people a chance' or by such a catchy phrase as 'rugged individualism'? The silliness and infantilism of this conception was recently exposed, but it has also been pointed out that we are getting to the point where it is heresy to run counter word worshippers who are in power." "The whole heart of 'verbal magic' Is the readiness of the peo ple to be swayed by it," concluded Mr. Bell. "If people would think even a little into the solidness of the phrases, they would find them suppportless, in the majority of cases. Thea again, these phrases may do more good than evil, be cause they keep the people semi contented most of the time where otherwise they might not be so quiet." Joe V. Ruzlcka, a civil engineer ing graduate of 1931 who haa headquarters at Stanton, was a College of Engineering visitor last week. YOUR CLOTHES Deserve the Best of Care Have Them i Modern Cleaned, They Will Always Look Like New MODERN CLEANERS Soukup & Westover THE OLD RELIABLE CALL F2377 TALK ABOUT SMART VALUES! SEE THESE SPRING COATS U5 ea. POLO CLOTHS AND POLO CORDS (a ribbed fabric) in sports styles; DIAGONAL WEAVES in dressy styles. Double-breasted polo coats with notch ed collars, belts and strapped cuffs. Tan, beige and blue. Dressy coats many collarless; some with scarf collars, wide lapels, manuish collars and necklines. Belted or semi-fitted. Epaulets, side fasten ings, flared sleeves and other new conceits add striking smartness. Coats that are outstanding in fab ric quality, style, practicality and becomingness at this popular price. Spring shades. Sizes 12 to 44 Second Floor. Me SNO Wy GOES! and with its departure comes the arrival of SPRING! Spring is not only here according to the calen dar but also according to the weather. WATCH THE DAILY NEBRASKAN For the latest in new SPRINQ MODES' Our advertisers will have them!' I