Si SUNDAY. MAY 1, 1932 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THREE ratline Jay Morning Breakfast Inaugurates Busy Week in Campus Social Circles Thcta Sigma Phi, Phi Beta Kappa Banquets Monday And Tuesday Also on List; Numerous Roundup Events Planned. The May Morning breakfast of 1 ho University Y. V. 0. A. inaugurates a week tht will be crowded with social activity. Monday there will be a Theta Nigwin Phi banquet at the Uni versity club in honor of the honorary 's new members and those who will graduate. The annual Phi Uetn Kappa banquet will be held at the University club Tuesday evening following the initiation of new members of the organization. .Many K'oiindup banquets are scheduled for later in the week, and Ivy day will be tho occasion of a number of social affairs. May Morning Breakfast At Ellen Smith Hall. The May morning breakfast given annually by the Y. W. C. A. cabinet takes place this morning at Ellen Smith hall. Those who at tend will be seated at tables for four decorated with spring flowers and will be served by the social staff directed by Louisa Sassack and Teresa Libershall. Jane Robertson, president of the Y. W. C. A., will preside, and Ger trude Clark will give a welcome to the mothers who are special guests at this time. The response to the welcome will be made by Mrs. Wallace Robertson of Beatrice. Marjorie Peterson, former presi dent, will review the work of the year just passed and will introduce all the past presidents who are in attendance. The new Y. W. C. A. cabinet and staffs will be pre sented by Miss Robertson. The Vesper choir will sing and Louise Perry will give xylophone num bers. Banquet Monday by Theta Sigma Phi. Honoring new initiates and sen ior members of Theta Sigma Phi, this honorary Journalistic sororfty will hold its annual banquet Mon day evening at the University club. The toast mistress will be Miss Harriet Ray. The new initiates, who are Margaret Edgerton, Fran ces Morgan, Caroline VanAnde, Jean Speiser, Hilda Hull, Roberta Christenson. Irma Randall, and Mary Sutton, will be called upon for speeches. Lavender, gold, and green, the sorority colors will be used in decorating the tables. Special guests at the banquet will be Frances Wing and Margaret Tin ley. Pi Beta Kappa Banquet Listed for Tuesday. Following the initiation of the Pi Beta Kappa candidate, the an nual banquet will be held Tuesday evening at the University club. Dean Guy Stanton Ford of the University of Minnesota, who is a member of the Pi Beta Kappa sen ate, will be the speaker. Dr. John Emmet Kirshman and Dr. Nels " Bengston, faculty members who HEKflEiyTHEWMifBreTT UW AND LADIES n inilnrant . ' --- '"niKiic lie f!t-p-m . " 7" 'T W force. n- You' John Wrav 'BUTI ETTHG in a Mu.ilci r a... reen Attractlqn. r Stuart Symphony Orchestra Plavlnc Frde Grofe' "Three Shade! of Bluee" A. J. Bablch. Conductor j Vudevlllg 3:00-7:00-:00 P. M. p jJ wWi,h 5v m m w jv ww mm mm wm . wn a mk. i m STUART iiiilll SOCIAL CALENDAR Sunday. Newman Communion Breakfast, Newman club house, 0 o'clock. were elected to the organization last year, will be presented at this time. Musical selections will be given by Herman T. Decker. Phi Delta Theta to Entertain at Dinner. The sisters of active members and the daughters of alumni will be entertained at dinner at the Phi Delta Theta house Sunday. Those who will be present are Ann Bunting, Mrs. Culver, Fay Foster, Vera Fosters, Letitia Foster, Mary Henn, Susan Lau, Isabelle Hag gard, Laura Recknor, Barbara Spoerry and Bernice Weeks. A. and S. Honorary Holds Recent Iniation. Fifteen girls were initiated into Vestals of the Lamp, honorary Arts and Science organization, Thursday evening at the home of Miss Dorothy Cook. Eleanor Dem ing, president, conducted the ser vice. New initiates are Margaret Bull, Alice Beekmann, Hildegarde Batz. Margaret Clapp, Calista Cooper, Marian Dunlevy, Evelyn Haase, Dorothy Hughes, Geraldine Moses, Katherinc Oury, Lillemore Taylor, Christobel Weaver and Ruth Wimberly. Following the initiation the evening was spent in formally at the home of Miss Mar garet Hochdoerfer. Alpha Chi Omega Honors Initiates. In honor of the new initiates of Alpha Chi Omega, a banquet was held Saturday night at the chapter house. Toasts were given by Imo gene Stienmier, representing the active chapter; Jean Magill, the new initiates and Mrs. Joe Noble, the alumnae chapter. Evelyn Adams, Ogallala; Mary K. Albin, Lincoln; Margaret Coup land, Elgin; Mildred Craven, Osce ola; Wilma Dale, Lincoln; Helene Hexthausen, Lincoln; Janet Jen nings, Davenport; Ruth Long, Cowles; Georgetta Kimsey, Lin coin; Jean Magill, Holdrege; Jean- ... . i lOUEti In I., i drama . .. b uin",f"Vrji warren r &UE91!1Fv (paw cnw mu' ; On the Stage Vaudeville'. Comedy Senna j- ' "Lander Bros" in H'p!ng Hands 1tt4 k Helen Ambrose Blta nt t. Burie Ludlow una Cfticcos in th Riviera ette Clark, Omaha; Mildred Mor ton, Lincoln; Bernice Rundin, Wa hoo; Mary J. Porter, Ogallala; Doris Wiren, Lincoln; Mildred Wil liams. McCook; Lei a Halms, Lin coln and Genevieve Dowllng, Lin coln, are the new initiates. Harriet Shaw, an Alpha Phi from the Kansas chapter, was h guest on the local chapter over the weekend. She came here to attend the Tassels convention. Polly Spenco of Crawford and Tyler O'Connor of Omaha also visited at the house. Annual Mothers Day Banquet. Acacia fraternity is today enter taining mothers of members at the chapter house. 1503 H street. Thirty-live mothers will be pres ent. At 11 o'clock tho chapter mem bers and their mothers will attend church at Plymouth Congrega tional church. After the service dinner will be served at the chap ter house. Decorations are to be in green and ted. American Beauty roses and green ferns will be used In profusion throughout the house. Richard Bell as toastmaster will give the welcome to the mothers, and Mrs. Jessie Bell will respond. Mrs. A. H. Brown, Acacia house mother and John Dean will also speak. The afternoon's entertainment will be as follows: Piano selections. . .Vincent Daniels Reading Mrs. G. Miller Selections Electa CJunrter Mrs. O. A. Andrews Mrs. Louise Mitchell Mrs. Clyde Boyles Mrs. E. B. Baer Readings Evalyn Terry Piano accordion selections .... Gene Ellsworth Selections. Harriet Cruise Kemmer Songs Chapter NEBRASKA WRITERS . GUILD MEETS MAY 7 Thomas Raysor, Michael Cinshurg Will Be Speakers. Professor Thomas M. Raysor, head of the English department, and Michael Ginsburg have been scheduled as headline speakers at the spring meeting of the Nebras ka Writers Guild, which will be held May 7 at the Lincoln hotel. The meeting will open with reg istration at 10 o'clock. After the members have registered, a fic tion round table di&cussion, led by Mrs. J. E. Almy will take place. At noon a fellowship luncheon will be held. Later in the afternoon group dis cussions on articles, led by Alice G. Harvey, on poetry, led by Loren C. Eisley, and on drama, led hy Mrs. Chauncey Palmer Smith, will start at, 2 o'clock. At the informal banquet that night, Prof. Raysor will talk on "The Therapeutic Value of De Quincey and Hazlitt for the Des perate Writer." Michael Ginsburg will discuss the "Influence of the Present Russian. Government on Literature." Mrs. Marie Weeks will announce the contest awards at the banquet. Non-members of the guild may attend the banquet if they make reservations with Theodore Diers, secretary, by May 6. Arrange ments will be made to seat campus organizations in a group if it is so desired. SPEAK AT PHI BETA KAPPA BANQUET Members of Phi Beta Kappa at their annual banquet Tuesday eve ning at the University club will hear Dr. Guy Stanton Ford of the University of Minnesota. Doctor Ford is a member of Phi Beta Kappa united chapters senate. In itiation of new members will pre cede the banquet. At the banquet music will be furnished by Her man T. Decker, school of fine arts. Waldo Wedrl Keceivcs $750 Fellowship Grant Waldo R. Wedel, graduate assist ant in the department of sociology, has been granted a $750 fellowship in anthropology for next year at the University of California. Pfeiler Addresses Public School Forum "Tendencies and Developments in German Schools was the topic discussed recently by Dr. Wilhelm K. Pfeiler, department of Germanic languages and literature, before the Lincoln public school forum. Starts Monday Monday-Tueiday-Wednecday , ONCE MORE THE DRAMATIC GENIUS , -OF STAGE AND SCREEN ALEXANDER' HAMILTON- RtatMmui, 0.nta, Mul" ef )1 but nuutend by wumam Jl'KIOK nCATVItS Nwr York I nlrenlty Ol Cln S. H. Van Dine MuravT Mj.irTj TrTrt Talk PatlM Jfwe TARTH THIRSnAT M M11XION FRKNCHMHN" I S Ji irMllSlilli! f o : 1 rcn UMLLIl OF PLANS FOR WEEK Displays Almost Ready for Annual Exhibition Says Chairman Dann. OPEN HOUSE IS FRIDAY Arrangements for engineers week arc practically complete, ac coiding to word released by Wil lard Dann, general chairman in charge of the program for the week. The window display for the week is In readiness and will be open to the public in windows of sev eral downtown business places. Arrangements for the banquet are complete, as are those for the ex hibits to be displayed by each of the departments in the engineer ing college on engineers night, May 6. The campus structure has been erected by the mechanical engi neers and will be on display early in the week. Its nature is being concealed until time for its appear ance. Tho banquet will be held at 6:30 Friday, in the Hotel Cornhusker. Ray Ramsav will act as toastmas ter and Eddie Jungbluth will fur nish music. To Make Awards. The program presented at the banquet will include, after an in troduction of the toastmaster by Willard Dann, a talk by Richard Ferguson, engineering student, on "Professors I Have Met," music by Schwezer and Dean, and pres entation of the honor awards, in addition to the main address by Judge Bayard H. Paine. Honor awards which will be made are the Sigma Tau freshman medal, the A. S. A; E. award, the Clark E. Mickey award, the O. J. Fee, award and the Blue Print key. An announcement of the Blue Print staff for next year will also be made at the banquet. Each department in the engi neering college has prepared a window display, according to Wil liam Norris, chairman of the win dow display committee. The agri cultural engineering department will have a display in the window of Crancer's music shop showing modernistic farming. It will in clude a farm tractor operated by remote control and modern farm buildings and machinery. Displays Planned. The department of civil engi neering will display a model Bur lington locomotive in Gold's win dow. A photo-electric cell will be on display in the Eastman Kodack window by the electrical engineer ing department. The department of applied me chanics will show a model rock crusher, and the chemical engi neering department will have a model of an oil refinery on dis play in the window of Walt's Music Shop. The display of the mechanical engineers in Magee's window will be representative of mechanical en ginering. It will include an eight foot model of a locomotive, a model of a steamboat and a model of a power plant, in addition to dis plays from other branches of me chanical engineering. Displays for open house night, Friday at which time the public will be permitted to review the work of the engineering college, will consist of exhibits prepared by the various departments i nthe col lege. The civil engineering exhibit include relics of the first railroad to cross the United States, fur nished by the Union Pacific rail way and a miniature road made up of all the various kinds of mate rials, from the old to the new type, materials will be tested by the de partment of applied mechanics aa part of exhibit. NEW POWER GIVEN DANCE COMMITTEE AT ILLINOIS UNI URBANA, 111. The committee on student affairs at the Univer sity of Illinois has approved the student council's recommendations for amendments to the regulations governing the dance supervision committee. Expenditures for class dances now must first be requls tioned through the chairman of the dance supervision committee and the secretary of the committee on student alfairs. Two percent of the gross receipts of the eight class dances will hereafter go to the dance supervision committee for running expenses. The com mittee will have the power to ap prove the price, printing, issuing, and collection of tickets, and to recommend to the owners of cam puc dance halls improvements in general conditions. LYMAN RETURNS FROM ST. LOUIS MEETINGS Dean R. A. Lyman of the college of pharmacy returned Friday from St. Louis where he attended meet ings of the survey committee of the Retail Druggists association. E WANTED! 1000 picnickers at picnic headquarters THE STATE MARKET Formerly Lincoln 1439 "O" Open till midnight Wiener We Suggest Potato vea Frultt. Sandwiches and complete at request 1 1 SCHOOL OF MUSIC BKIEFS The twentv-slxth musical con vocation at 4 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at the Temple Theater will consist oi a junior recuai cy Edna McConnell. student with Herbert Schmidt, and Loretta Priesner, student with Marguerite Klinker. The following students appeared on the Thursday afternoon recital in the School of Music: Nell Dear inger (Mrs. Policy); John Erick son (Mr. Schmidt); Delia Kolling (Mr. Klrkpatrlck); Eugene Ellsh worth (Mr. Harrison); Marcella Laux (Miss Wagner); Charlotte Perry (Miss Klinker); Viola Pnrrv Plnra firunkemnver. Mar jorie McAllister, Gerald Mott. Vic tor McAllister, Howard O. Miner and Lester Rumbaueh. (Mrs. Thomas); Doris Dickinson (Miss Callen). Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. a miscel laneous student recital will be broadcast and Thursday at 2:15 d. m. a student organ recital will go on n.f ajd. Marlel Jones. Dianist. and Kath- erine Kimball, soprano, will give a program at the nurses home of the Lincoln General hospital this afternoon. Hazel Kinscella will act as one of the judges on the national hrnnrlrnstinO' contest to be held this evening at 8:15 p. m. central standard timn from New York. Joseph Littau, assistant director of the school of music orchestra, will also be one of the judges. Hazel Kinscella smoke before the Altrusa club Monday evening. John Qjutnlan, tenor aiuaent with Walter Wheatley, sang last week at the Orpheum theater in Omaha. Mr. Quinlan's repertoire has been coached with Mr. Wheat ley. Mrs. Marie Jackson, soprano, sang a group of songs on the Elks club program over KFOR Thurs day. Greta Hageman, student witn Vpm TTnton. Rane- for the Daugh ters of Veterans Tuesday evening. Clara Holm was tne accompanisi. Komuio aoiaevuia, siuaem wiui Ruth Dreamer, played for the birthday dinner at the First Lutheran church Tuesday evening. Howard o. Miner sang a soio Sunday evening at the Bethany Christian church. The Thomas Male auartet. cirls trio. Harold Hollingsworth and Marian Wil liamson will give a program this evening at the Sterling Methodist church. Lester Rumbaugh was soloist last Sunday morning for the East Lincoln Evangelical church. The male quartet will sing a group of numbers Friday eve ning at the Warren Community hours. These are students with Mrs. Thomas. Edith Lucille Robbins announces the following recitals of voice students: Ruth Jefferson. Sunday afternoon. May 8, 3:45 p. m. at the Caldwell Memorial United church. 18th and L streets. On May 16 in the Temple ! theater, two song-cycle quartets will present "In a Persian Gar den," by Liza Lehmann, and "The Morning of the Year," by Cadman. The annual recital will feature fifty students in choral groups and solos the last of May. The public is invited. On Saturday afternoon, Ruth Jefferson, Lilian Demel, Ray mond Forshay and E. F. Heinecke presented "In a Persian Garden" at Ellen Smith Hall for the annual reception and program sponsored by Miss Heppner. Wilbur Chenoweth gave a talk on carillons at the Mu Phi meet ing Wednesday evening. Follow ing students with Mr. Chenoweth appeared in a recital Friday after noon: Josephine Waddell, Janet Kohn, Ruth Amen. Winifred Hy land, May Landis, Laureola Stover, and Ruth Dean. CORSAGES TABO AT PROM Economy Program Back of Committee Bequest at Lafayette. LAFAYETTE, Ind. In accord ance with the general economy policy of all Purdue social func tions this year, the Junior Prom committee went on record last week as opposing the wearing of corsages to the Prom Friday night. While no definite prohibitive measures were undertaken, the committee published a request for all students to co-operate in mak ing individuals expense a mini mum. The recommendation was well taken and few corsages were seen. Tickets were priced at 14 this year instead of $5 by the elimina tion of favors, altho the programs offered were more elaborate than usual, having slender metal covers which could be shaped into cos tume bracelets. In spite of these economy gestures, the affair is ac knowledged as the best Prom ever held here. VTITH a good deal of satisfaction " we can look upon a recent re port of the National Industrial Conference Board which asserts that the cost of living for wage earners declined 20.7 percent from October, 1929, to February, 1932, while the average wage reduction for the same period was only Z.Z percent. The reason set forth for this encouraging situation is that "more severe reductions have been made in routine and, especially, executive salaries rather than in wage rates." Delicatessen B5585 and Sundays Red Hot Buna Sttakt Marthmal. Chisi and salad pieKiea- picnic lunches put up PHONE B5585 L HOLDS 150 MEETING Dean James of Northwestern Talks to Group on Washington. The Nebraska Schoolmasters club, an organization of men in the field of education in the state of Nebraska, held its one hundred and fiftieth meeting at the Lincoln hotel, Friday evening. Dean J. A. James, of the graduate college of Northwestern university, ad dressed the group on "George Washington, American Citizen." Dean James is in Lincoln on the program of the Mississippi Valley Historical association. The din ner Friday evening was held in honor of tho Washington bicenten nial. The organization, which was founded in 1898. includes a large number of members of the Univer sity of Nebraska faculty. Among the charter members are Dean Emeritus L. A. Sherman, and Dr. H. E. Bessey, for whom Bessey hall is named. Dwight E. Porter, principal of Omaha Technical hiirh school, was elected president of the club at the j meeting uriaay. ne succeeus v. A. Bowers, pecretary of the Ne braska State Teachers association. DIMMER EMDS HIGH JUDGING CONTESTS Winners Honored Friday Ere at Chamber of Commerce. The annual eastern Nebraska high school agriculture judging contests closed in Lincoln Friduy night when the four hundred con testants were honored at a banquet at the chamber of commerce. Win ners in all events were announced then and L. C. Obcrlies of Lincoln acted as toastmaster. Adrian Tolen of Ord won th2 public speaking honors in tha fu ture, farmers contest. Fiances Vannoy of Waverly was second. Leonard Turner from Ponca won the forge contest while George Hartman of Falls City won high honors in woodworking competi tion. "Sammy" Sampson's Mead high school boys won the poultry judg ing when they placed second, fifth and sixth individually. High indi vidual honors went to Kenneth Kimbrough of Geneva. Virgil Poch of Geneva was first with his exhibit of white eggs in the egg show. Robert Foreman exhibited the best brown eggs. j In babcock testing, Curtis John son of Mead won top honors. Al bion high school took first place in the dairy products contest. Wav erly copped high honors iu dairy cattle judging. The same school won first in grain judging and identification. Roratio Erskine of Waverly was the high individual in the contest, Scotia high school won the live stock judging contest while Hebron was second and Albion third. Low ell Meyers of Eagle was the high individual scorer in the contest Gerald Johnson of Pawnee City won the egg grading contest. Earl Adams of Newman Grove was sec ond. OHIO STATE HEARS SANDBURG DELIVER SERIOUS LECTURE COLUMBUS, O. Slipping into profound seriousness, Carl Sand-1 burg, noted American poet-singer, j novelist and lecturer, presented a I lecture-recital program before ap- j proximately 1,000 persons Tuesday j night in university chapel. i The entertainment was spon sored by Chi Delta Phi, honorary literary society, and centered around eleven of his books which ; his friends called his "eleven crimes." In characterizing the life of an artist,. Sandburg said that critics clash over the works of art in de termining whether they have in trinsic value. "An artist may meet objections from critics. Sometimes two generations pass before crit ics see art in artists' work," Sand burg related. "Spotting genius when it arises is very important but extremely dificult. Any person who feels he has design should obey what his innermost heart tells him instead i of what others say. Such a per- i son may be developing art. D. W. Williams, '14. valuation engineer for the U. S. treasury de partment' in Washington, D. C., visited the geology department last week. SUNDAY DINNER 85 Served 12 P. Jr. 8 P. Jf. You'll enjoy this delicious food so elegantly served CORNHUSKER COFFEE SHOP Hotel Cornhusker "Under Schimmel Direction" Talk of the Talkies by Mr. Talkie "Lost Squadron" Lincoln. A movie within a movie, depict lng the neck breaking stunts of the film daredevils in a thrill of mod ern romance of the air, opens at the Lincoln theater Monday with Richard Dlx and Mary Astor la the leading roles of the "Lost Squadron. ' Hollywood's great film industry is revealed mott inti mately, with the sound stages be ing opened for the first time to the public. "Alexander Hamilton" State. Theater goers who saw George Arllss in the "Man Who Played God" will undoubtedly attend the State theater the first half of the week to witness this great picture, "Alexander Hamilton.'' This pla3 written by Mr. Arllss and Mary Hamlin, deals with the humanity of Hamilton rather than with the constructive genius which made him a founder of our nation. Mr. Arllss Is supported by Doris Ken yon. "While Paris Sleeps" Orpheum. ' This .story concerns a French war hero who escapes from a pri son at Saint Laurent to save bis daughter from the streets of Paris. He ultimately sacrifices honor and his own life that bis daughter may live and marry the man she loves. Victor McLaglen and Helen Mack are co-starred In "While Paris Sleeps." "The Trial of Vlvisnne Ware" Orpheum. "The Trial of Vivienne Ware," which is familiar to most radio fans, having been broadcast over KFAB recently, opens at the Or pheum theater Thursday. It in volves the mysterious murder of a millionaire architect, with Vivienne Ware (Joan Bennett) accused of the crime. After the district at torney has demanded an electric : chair conviction, the innocence of Miss Were is proven. "Fifty Million Frenchmen" State. For the last half of the week the State theater has booked "Fifty Million Frenchmen" with Claudia Dell and William Caxton in the leading roles. This is an all tech nicolor comedy picture. "The Mouthpiece" Stuart. "The Mouthpiece" deals with the tragic fate of a great legal light who sends an innocent youth to the electric chair in an excess of pros ecuting zeal. He leains his ghastly error too late. His conscience de stroys his value as a prosecutor. In a revulsion of feeling he turns to the defense of persons accused of crime, bringing all energy and skill that had won him fame as the criminals' nemesis to the de fense of those same criminals. IN 1931 there were registered in 1 the United States 25,814,103 au tomobiles. This was 781,178 less than were registered in 1930, but then we can expect that each year there will be more and more of these old "Model T's't junked. Ne braska's registration was 416,131. lf you are , LfOBECK 1 nte TYPEWRITERS ft us for the Royal portable typ writer, the ideal machine lor the student. All makea of machine for rent. All aiakw of ua4 tarn thlnea on taay payments. Nebraska Typewriter Co. Call E-C157 M O tt SUNDAY NITE SUPPER It's always a treat to meet the gang st the Cornhusker. Give the girl friend a real break and bring her o the TASTY PASTRY SHOP i i 4 :5