tKEDNKSnAY. MAY in. 1032. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THREE ssaiii Close of School Brings Affairs Entertaining Outgoing Seniors K(ipPn 7"" ("'"' Graduates Honored at Supper i llrcakfast Given Kappa Alpha Theta Seniors; Chi Omega dads llavo Picnic. Parties for oiitjroiiijr seniors m-cupy llu- ci-iitcr of inter- est t'"s witk. .Wcnil (.reck Mvv groups luivo nlrcnd.v an imiinccil their plans. Tho Chi Ouwan Aluinniic dub entertained their seniors Salunla.v. Knppn Alpha Tlieta's nre planning a brenUi iisi jor nniiiriui, , .un.v i. aw inionnal Mulct supper Sill uri In y night will honor (lie seniors at the Kappa Kappa Gumma House. h'nnixi Seniors Honored HI ay 21. Members of Kappa KRppn Gnni nia sorority will cntortnln the sen iors t n buffet supper to be hold at the chapter house Satunlny nlpht at 12:30. The pnrty, which will be attended by members of the active chapter only, is to be very informal. Kappa Alpha Thela Entertains Seniors. At an 11 o'clock brenkfast Sat urdfiy. May 21, the outgoing sen' iors of Kappa Alphu Theta soror llv will be the guests of honor Alice Pedley and .lean Young are In charge of the plans for the nf falr. The house will be decorated with spring flowers and a short program is being planned. Chi Omega Seniors Honored at Picnic. Chi Omega seniors were enter talned by their alumnae members at a steak fry at Pioneer park Monday evening. Over thirty were present. Out-ttf-Totm Parents Visit Alpha O House. Out of town parents who were euests at the Alpha Omicron Pi parents' day Sunday, May 15, were Mr. anil Mrs. B. R. Hendricks of Wahoo, M-. and Mrs. Henry Here man, Seward; Dr. and Mrs. J. W B. Smith. Albion; Mrs. Nettie Wostoupal, West Point; Mr. and Mrs. K. D. Upson, Odell; Mr. and Mrs. K. W. Huse, Wavnc: and Mr and Mrs. George Haass, Kmerson. Alpha Xi Delta Fetes Bride-elect. Members of Alpha Xi Delta were entertained Monday evening at a party honoring Miss Kleanor Flatemerseh who will leave Lin- These children of today whit do I hey want? To be rlrh? To be l iveri ? To bn excited ? 'Wliat more? See CAROlt LOMBARD CHESTER MORRIS ADRIENNE AMES ALISON SKIPWORTH 0 Quramaum STAGE PAUL YOCAN DANCERS In "MUSICHORE" FRANK DE VoE -SCREEN FORD STERLING In "TWENTY HORSFS" "A LESSON IN GOLF" ADDED STUART ORCHESTRA riavinp "THE NEW MOON" STUART Always 72 eoln the early part of June for Pittsburgh, Pa., where she will be married June 28 to Omar Held. Miss Flatcmersch is a graduate ot inc university where she was member of Alpha Xi Delta and Mortar Board. She has been In structor of physical education at vvnittier Junior high school this yea r. Mi. Held is doing personnel work for the University of Pitts burgh. A gift was presented to me oriae-io-Dc oy the active chap ter. Kappa Dells Give Prohibition Party. A "prohibition party" is thy novel plan announced by Kappa Delta for their final house party scneuuica tor Saturday, May 21. About forty couples are expected to attend. The "High Hatters" win play for the affair. Alumnae who will return for the party are Willa Belle Springer and Mina Pfeiffley of Crete! Velma and Marguerite Bloom ot Lexington; and Auralea Tillman of Hooper. Chnperones will be Mr. and Mrs, Tom Dickey, Mrs. Adeline Harns- burger and Mrs. Anna Marsh, nousemotner. etv D. U. Officers Are Elected Monday. At an election held at their reg ular meeting Monday night, the memners of Delta Upsilon selected the following now officers: Marvin Robinson, president; George Hut ton, vice president; Jamese Buis, recording secretary; Leavitt Dear born, corresponding secretary; and uean w ebsier, steward. Pi Kappa Phi Elects Heads for ext Year. Vi Kappa Thi elected the follow ing officers for next semester, Gerald Young, Oakley, Kas., was re-eiecieci president! Bernard Kchwieger of Grand Island, secre tary; Harold Goebel, Mendota, 111., treasurer; Charles Owen, Craw ford, historian; Charles Werner, Lincoln, chaplain: Dudley Thomp son, Fullcrton, warden. Ttco Sororities Announce Pledges. The pledging of Elfrieda Stauss of Lincoln is annonuced by Alpha Omicron PI. Kappa Delta an nounces the pledging of Beatrice Donaldson or Boone, la., and Helen Edelmeier of Nickerson. Religious Council to Picnic Saturday Eve The University Council of Reli gious Welfare, both student and faculty groups, will have a picnic baiuruay evening at I loneer park Members will meet at the temple at 4:45 Saturday afternoon. Games will be played at the picnic. The committee in charge is composed of Miss Lulu Range, Miss Grace Spacht and Miss Bernice Miller. Cutworms and Grasshoppers Engage Attention on Battle Fronts. HEINZUK TO TALK AT I COMMENCEMENTS Dr. F. K. Henzlik. dean of Teachers college, is scheduled to give four high school commence ment addresses this week. May 17 he will speak at Scottsbluff; May 18 at Minatare: May 19 at Mitch ell, and May 20 he will speak at Gering. I INCOLX. NVl.r.. .May IS- A bombshell bursting in the courtroom where Judd Brooks and Marcia Ferguson are on trial for the murder of the latter's hus band, could not have had a more devastating effect than the sensational" disclosures made today during Prosecutor lflV:..' r t w I : ; ii.a cAdiiuiiauun oi icnnicr UIDDS, Interrupted frequently by me objections of defense counsel, the state s star wit less told a story of frequent "jsu oetccn the w accused in keri Lane, long rendezvous for tomobile pet Je She climaxed w, testimony by positively identify "I Jodd Brooks the man she een running fi' froai the a t J" home the night the murder fYv. XV i See the Headlines Leap to Life! Learn Hte Hidden Truth About the Most Sen sorial Murder Trial of the Decade! f Ag OIRIPHEUM . !h THEATRE J Kenneth Thomson ThurS. - tTl. Oat. w'aycoff. Grant Mitchell "Wnm do sof parport to tuvt KCaHr ofe4 i erh Wtl i M WUm to be Ok boD pUuuble totoam County agents and county farm bureaus are starting their annual battle against bugs in Nebraska. The coming campaign Includes war against grasshoppers, which have been Increasing during the past three yeara and have apparently come thru the winter in fine shape. Cutworms nave already done con siderable damage in east central Nebraska. Other forms of pests have been reported working on alfalfa In the central part of Uie state. In the grasshopper conlrol cam paign JiiRt getting under way, county agents are telling farmers to scatter poisoned bran over waste lund where hoppers are hatching before the little hoppers move to the cultivated fields. It is again a caso of a "stitch In time." O. S. Bare, entomology specialist of the agricultural extension serv ice, said Monday that ten pounds of bran bait scattered properly now would be more effective than 100 pounds of the same bait used later In the season. I. S. Ulrich, county agent of Hall county, baa printed and distrib uted several hundred stiff red cards carrying formulae and directions for poisoning both cutworms and grasshoppers. With the exception of the amyl acetate included for the grasshoppers, the same poi soned bait will attract both cut worms and grasshoppers. Cut worms, however, need their daily dose In the evening while grass hoppers should have theirs in the morning, the bulletins advise. Ulrich also prepared a circular let ter and more arrangements so it will be convenient for farmers to get the poisoned bait. County Agents at Work. M. C. Townsend, county agent of Dodge county, has Arranged with one of the leading drug stores in Fremont to handle white ar senic In quantities for Dodge county farmers. Townsend also arranged with a Fremont feed store to keep a quantity of the ready-mixed bran bait on band. J. F. Stack, county agent or Nance county, has arranged with a mill at Fullcrton to mix and sell the poison bran bait for about a dollar a hundred. He has already put out bait for cutworms and saved a consiaeraDie acreage ot small grain. County agents in Burt, Saun ders, Douglas, and Cuming coun tics visited by Bare last week were all getting ready to help farmers scatter poisoned bran bait. Farther west in the state, and in Boyd county, hoppers were coming out by the millions last week. carl Dale planned to start tne Valley county larm bureau activt ties against hoppers last Monday. In Adams county, grasshoppers were hatching abundantly In two localities where eggs had not been found in great cumbers last fall. The extension service at the ag ricultural college began duplicat ing the essential facts about grass hopper control on cards Saturday. Ey Monday noon, over twenty county agents had ordered 18,000 of the cards for mailing to farmers in their counties. Information on the cards Included the formula rec ommended, and specific directions for mixing and spreading. STUDIO THEATER IS PLANNED FOR NEXT SEMESTER (Continued from Page 1.) Pierce Baker school in Yale, and has spent two years abroad on a Guggenheim foundation scholar ship. He naa already attained prominence as a playwright. W. Zolley Lerner, asisstant in structor in dramatics and public speaking at the University of Ne braska, is the author of an orig inal play, "Kaddish," a one-art play dealing with Jewi3h life to begin Thursday. The play has been accepted for publication by the Prairie Schooner. Dorothy Thomas is the author of the fourth play to be presented at the opening Thursday. Only a few invited guests win be present at the opening Thurs day, which will mark the first step in the inauguration of the experiment. Seats 250. The studio theater is located on tne second floor of the Temple and the room has been redesigned to meet the needs of the course. The theater will accommodate about 250 people. Tapestries will form the background for all plays, and it is expected that various lighting effects and stage settings will be tried out. According to Miss Howell, the experiment will give dramatic stu dents the opportunity to write, choose and present plays. Students will have the opportunity to see their own plays enacted, and tne opportunity to try experiments along the line of direction, criti cism and presentation. The the ater will be, aa the name indicates, place of experiment in the field of dramatics. It is hoped that all situations will be found in present ing these plays which would ordi narily come up in all phases of dramatic "work. Among plays expected to be pre sented next year in the studio the ater are Tchekhov's "Masks" and O'Neil's "Great God Brown." A play by Uugi Pirindello will also be produced. Such plays as these STA'.E THEATRE NOW Monday, TuMday, Wcdnndiy Only Anytlm fLr!!s Anytlmt I IVANS New Awgwan Pleases Reviewer Who Sees It as One of Sprightliest Comics A cover picture of red goblins, Innocents, uhouL to rhoko n green Innocent-to-be iinnoiinccH the Ivy Day themo of tho May Awgwan, on sale at campus stands Wednes day. And the comic lias a now kind of lettering in Its boldly black name-plate, From largc-breiiMted lady on ttiii frontispiece to mevltablo collar ad on the rear cover, this month's is sue makes its .sisters in tho rollege comic world look a wee hit sick. The art work goes metropolitan, a la Robinson, and on the whole it's a most captivating magazine, "Gore" Is there, ol course, in all Its morbidly interesting detail, and Jimmy Cunoo's difficulties as a student are revealed In a "Vig nette" sketch. The reader, too, is taken behind the scenes while a Kosmet Klub Kust is rehearsing, and the short play "Jumbled Belles" offers nn Inside picture of tho chaos a director faces, Lovers Take Note. In tune with spring on te cam pus, tho May issue follows op Its March article of "How to Write" with a sprightly page of how to love. It'H titled "Lover's Hand book" and tho points It makes are well worth tho student's time. Ferhaps adverse criticism might be directed at the staff of the otherwise ritzy publication for the looso way poetry Is thrown around. It Is a bit disconcerting to be read ing a snappy comeback and sud denly run on a misplaced love lyric. The demise of tho old Toctry Page Is keenly felt. A group of Nebraska's fair coeds again decorates the comic, but this month it goes under the name "Of Thee We Sing" and re marks under the pictures are not of tho "Because she is beautiful" type, Tho "May Scream," pages, Ivy day announcer and the traditional Ivy playground como in for their share of attention, too. And a Hindu fanatic flagpole-sitting on a stately column engages the reader with his naive statement, auito appropriately on tho same pngo with the satirized Ivy day costumes. would afford but little pleasure to tho average theater-goer but are exceptionally valuable to the stu dent of dramatics, Miss Howell ex plained. Besides plays of this type it is planned to produce original plays written by students during tho year. Producer Interested. A great deal of interest in the studio theater is being displayed by eastern producers and critics. Barrett Clark, producer of New York City, has been a visitor on the Nebraska campus and has ex pressed his interest in tho plan. According to Miss Howell, Mr. Barrett plans to keep in touch with the progress made by the ex periment. "It should strengthen all the work of the department," said Miss Howell commenting on the studio theat. , "for experimenta tion makes for progress." BIG VOTE CAST IN AO ELECTION RACES TUESDAY (Continued from Page 1.) student council from the college In the recent general election. He de feated Bill Waldo, Alpha Gamma Rho, In tho race for secretary. Fll ley is also a member of the barb council. LaVern Gingrich, who was elect ed treasurer of Ag club is a mem ber of Farm House fraternity. He Is also a member of the university 4-H club and was a member of the junior Judging team this year, He also competed on the meat judging team at Chicago. Hp lives at Fairfield. The 1933 Farmers Fair mana ger, Reuben Hecht, is a member of Alpha Gamma Rho. He was on the junior judging team this year and served on the Junior fair board also. Victor Rediger, Farm House, was a member of the dairy team this year and took the place on the board caused by the resignation of Albert Ebers. Ralph Copenhaver, barb, the other member of the sen ior fair board, served on the junior fair board this year. Served Thla Year. On rice lads Is a member of Chi Omega sorority and was on the Junior fair board this year. Marion Lynn a ad Helen Hcngstler wore the other fair board members elected. Albert Kbcrs, Farm House, de feated Glenn Heady, Alpha Gain ma Rho, in the race for senior man at large on the Ag executive board. F.bcrs Is a member of the Wcntmlnstcr A capellii choir and president ot his fraternity. He lives at Seward. In the race for coll-agii-fun committee membership, Charles Livingston, Alpha Gamma Rho, was elected chairman. Jason Web ster and Mark Hackman, the other two men members, are members of Farm House. The three girls elected were Vera Mao Bang, Dor othy Luschlnger White. and Marloa CLASSICS CLUB PLANS PICNIC ON THURSDAY A picnic on Thursday haa been plunned by the Classics club. The picnic will be held at Pioneer park. All those who wish to at tend the picnic are asked to meet In room 202, Andrews hall, at 4:15 Thursday afternoon. Your Drug Store For over twenty years, the Owl has served you faithfully. It will not fail you now. Best quality for least cost. THE OWL PHARMACY WE DELIVER 148 No. 14 A P. Phone B1068 TYPEWRITERS See us for the Royal portable typn writer, the Idenl machine for th student. AH makes of machines for rent. All makes of used ma chines on easy payments. Nebraska Typewriter Co. Call B-S157 1232 O St. CASH PAID FOR USED BOOKS 20 More in Merchandise HOW TO GET IT 1. Trado in your used books for Graduation Gifts or other merchandise thnt you might need. 2. Trado in your books ami ask us to give you credit on your next year's books or for summer school. You Save This Way Because You Get MORE for Your Books FACINb CAMU 9 Just Received! Son wflnnua ate each OASKETWEAVES AND POL D AIRE CLOTHS in polo coats and the new swagger style. Polo coats are belt ed and have notched collars. "Swagger coats' feature rippling lines - unbelted with loose sleeves and tailored collars. All have novelty cuffs. Silk or rayon linings. These are the smart forcasts for summer wear. You'll want one to take on your vacation, whether it's go ing to be at some resort or the old home town. The values are remarkable; the styling, youthful, up-to-the-minute and flatter ing; all simply too alluring to resist! Sizes 11, 13, 15 and 17 Jlisscs Shop Second Floor. Csmsejr Cart n PtH Newt