The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 01, 1934, Page FOUR, Image 4

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THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 1. 1011
FOUR.
THE DAILY NEBKASKAN
Will Play al Creek Ball
CAWPUSOCIETY
NO MATTER what
pons, fraternity elections still go
on. This time "it's the Tekes. At
their meeting; last Monday nigm
the following officers were chosen :
Bob Thorpe, president: Russell
Oilman, vice president; Karl Cars
iPiis.m treasurer: Mike Smith, sec
retary; Dick Stines, historian; Dee ,
Griffith, serseaiil-at-arnis; and
Jack I'helan, pledge master.
"
BEFORE her marriage in Feb-1
ruary. Miss jane iteniat'iiut-i
be entertained here and there at a
number of parties. Last night Mrs.
Anna Dorgan was hostess at a
dinner and theatre party, to which
ton guests were invited. Tonight
Miss Betty Pringle and Miss Roma
Ridnour will entertain fifteen at a
iithon shower and bridee party
at which Miss Lillemore Taylor of ,
Auburn wiil be an out-of-town
guest. At a luncheon at the Uni- j
versity club on Saturday Miss j
Florence Panter will be hostess to ,
eight guests. j
FOR THOSE who have succeed- j
ed in making an eighty average or j
better . . . among the sophomore, j
junior and senior women . . . the i
Mortar Boards are entertaining at
a tea Sunday afternoon in Ellen
Smith hall. Almost four hundred I
invitations have been issued to the
affair. I
i
THREE new members have been
pledged to Alpha Xi Delta. They
are Gretchen Bender. Laura Long
acre, and Marion Miller.
AT ONE o'clock today the Sig
ma Chi mothers will be entertained
at a luncheon at the home of Mrs.
C. M. Sutherland. Assisting her
will be Mrs. V. M. Martin and
Mrs. H. Cunningham.
EXCEPT FOR THE BALL TUESDAY
night it's beginning' to look ns it the only
mid-week activities of iinv consequence
are the l ush parties which are being- given
for the mid-year graduates of the high
schools. For t lie last couple of days, both
sororities and fraternities have been busy
with luncheons, teas and dinners, and the
Moon lias become a rendezvous for in
formal rush parlies. It would seem that
until final pledging studies will be ne
glected for the more important business
of the moment.
else hap-o
FARM HOUSE fraternity an
nounced Wednesday the pledging
of two new men, Paul Swanson
and Vincent Arthand.
WHAT'S DOING
Thursday,
Delta Zeta mothers club at
the home of Mrs. Lillian I -vin
at 2 o'clock.
Sigma Chi mothers c' 1
o'clock luncheon at the home ot
Mrs. C. M. Sutherland.
Phi Omega Pi alumnae, 7:15
dessert and coffee supper at the
chapter house.
Miss Betty Pringle and Miss
Roma Kidnour, party for Miss
Jane Rehlaender.
Friday.
Pi Kappa Alpha auxiliary, 1
o'clock.
Sigma Phi Epsilon auxiliary,
1 o'clock luncheon at the home
of Mrs. Charles Ammon.
Saturday.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, moth
ers club, 8 o'clock benefit bridge
at the chapter house.
Alpha Chi Omega, alumnae
and actives, Dutch treat lunch
eon at the chapter house.
Kappa Alpha Theta, formal
at the Cornhusker hotel.
Miss Florence Panter, lunch
eon for Miss Jane Rehlaender
at the University club.
Delta Zeta. house party.
Sunday.
Mortar Board, tea at Ellen
Smith.
: FT" VY
l j m s l
for dessert and coffee at 7:45
o'lock, when Miss Esther Pauley
and Miss Laverne Marshall will be
hostesses. A group of novels will
be reviewed by Mrs. Roy Green.
MOTHERS of Delta Zeta will
meet this afternoon at the home of
Mrs. Lillian M. Langevin. who will
be assisted by Mrs. Frank Card.
At the Zeta Beta Tau house
Tuesday evening a dinner was held
by the members in honor of Na
than Lew, who graduated from
THIS evening at the Phi Omega law school at the end of the first
Pi house, the alumnae will meet semester.
1
I r "
A 7
A
(J
tommmmmmmimammmmamim.m. n i t
Jimmie Joy, pictured above, w
to Lincoln to play at the Interfra
urday night, Feb. 10 in the coliseu
fraternity council. Joy and his mu
a sensational engagement at the
They have appeared in long time
Pittsburgh; the Bal Tabarin club.
Memphis; the Brown Palace hotel,
toniomm, and numerous other
'--t
ill bring his twelve piece orchestra
ternity ball which will be held Sat
in under theauspices of the Inter
sicians are coming here direct from
Hotel Lowry in St. Paul, Minn,
stays at the William Penn hotel,
San Francisco: the Hotel Claridg.
Denver, the St. Anthony. San An
places thruout the country.
College World
College education has proved
largely unsuccessful in its major
endeavor of making man the mas
ter of his environment, in the opin
ion of Dr. Lewis A. Wilson, assist
ant New York State Commissioner
of education.
Belief on the part of many that
they can do their best work after
having had "a little drink," was
shown to be erroneous in a series
of experiments carried on recently
at Cornell university by Dr. A. L.
Winsor and Dr. E. J. Stongin.
Because college petters parked
their cars before his home, a pro
fessor at New York university
asked trustees of his suburban
town not to have snow removed
from the roads so that he could
spend some peaceful evenings.
Professors at Mills college. Cali
fornia, defend the slang of under
graduates as a technical college
language.
Students in an English class at
Oklahoma A & M college are fined
one cent every time they mispell a
word. The fund derived from this
source is used to pay for an annual
banquet of the class.
American authors, states Dr.
John Ransom, professor of English
at Vanderbilt university, Nashville,
Tennessee, have the brains and
ability to become great writers,
but they work too fast and are too
slipshod.
Universities in Russia are en
meshed in the whole system of
adult education and include in ad
dition to theory, practical work in
the fields and factories during va
cations.
select the gills who make up the
beauty section of Louisiana Tech's
yearbook.
McGill university (Canada) stu
dents have turned out in such num
bers for ping-pong matches that
the school has built a special
bleacher section to accommodate
all spectators.
IS
Art
Students in the department of
geology at the Pacific college will
make a trip to the mohave desert
region and Death Valley during the
spnnjr vacation to study soil and
rock formations.
Upon observing the notice,
"Dates Signed for English Ex
aminations." a student at the Uni
versity of California remarked,
"There are hardly any more func
tions where a man can go stag."
Huron College, situated in Lon
don, Ontario, is probably the small
est college in existence today. It
carries a total enrollment of
twenty students and five faculty
members.
Students at Florida State college
for Woment must take an examin
ation on the college government.
Those failing to pass the test are
campused for two weeks. At the
end of the punishment they must
take another test before regain
ing their social privileges.
In order to solve the problem
of jobless persons with doctor's
degrees. Germany has decided that
only 15,000 students will be per
mitted to enter Gorman univer
sities next year. Only one woman
for every ten men will be per
mitted to matriculate.
The hounds chasing Eliza over
the Ice almost stopped the show
at the rerent production of "Uncle
Tom's Cabin" presented at the Uni
versity of Michigan. An attempt
to drag them across by leashes
ended by having the curtain rung
down and an early intermission.
Fifty-two percent of the students
graduated from Iowa State college
at Ames, last quarter, have been
placed in positions since graduation.
Norman Thomas, Socialist, told
a gathering in New York recently
that schools in this country had
been "sterilized" by the removal
of controversial subjects from their
curricula.
Carlos Hevia, 33 year old grad
uate of the United States Naval
Academy, accepted the presidency
of Cuba last week after a chaotic
day during which nobody knew
who was running the country.
Pop Warner, football- coach at
the University of the Pacific, is
the originator of tbe plan designed
to eliminate scoreless ties by
awarding one point for each first
down.
The female of the collegiate
species is inclined to abstrain from
alcoholic beverages much less than
tje male, if a questionaire circu
lated by the Commerce Bulletin
of New York university indicates
anything.
Mae West has been chosen to
Ninety students at the Universi
ty of Kentucky have been given
work under the C.W.A program.
The government has granted fi
nancial support to eleven campus
projects. The majority of the
work consists of repairing campus
roads and painting university
buildings.
Twenty-five men have answered
Coach Millards Peterson's call for
Rugby candidates at the University
of Southern California.
BEAUX ART BALL 10
OPEN ART EXHIBITION
Forty-Fourth Showing Will
Start February 13 in
Morrill Hall.
Bailey Is Master
Ceremonies; Satire
Presented.
of
Peter Rabbit" by Mr. Yenne's fine
arts 55 class; a take-off on Ham
let, Margaret Carpenter: "The
Child Wonder," Lois Patterson and
Art Bailey: piano solos by Henry
Barbour and Douglas Harper; Kip
ling's "East is West." by Francis
Brandt: "Wedding of the Painted
Doll," the sophomores.
If students at the University of
California make grades of A. thov
receive a S5.00 rebate on their tu-1
ition. I
A satire on women card play
ers, "If Men Played Cards as
Women Do." was featured in the
variety program of the monthly
dramatic art departmental night
held last evening in the Temple
theater.
With Art Bailey as master of
ceremonies, the parade of home
talent included child wonders, a
piano soloist, and transported the
audience from a haughty king's
court to the forest in the vicinity
of Peter Rabbit's home, and back
to the wedding of the painted doll,
with short stops to hear about
Hamlet's tonsils, and the adven
tures of one of Kipling's British
officers in India.
The cast for "If Men Plaved I
Cards as Women Do" included:
John, played by Dwight Perkins;
Mark. Bob Chase: George, Melvin
Fielder; Bob. Don Crow. The rest
of the program is as follows: "Two
Slatterns and a King," Kathleen
Carraher; "The Adventures of
MEALS That Really
Surprise for Only 15c
We feature a large vaziety of foods
And earh customer i. given
individual service.
ORPHEUM GRILL
Orpheum Sldg.
223 No. 12th
A most unusual story told
in a new and most unusual
fashion. Different from
anyl'iinii you lime ever
seen.
FREE FREE FREE
We will gladly check your parcels and
baggage free of charge.
Come in and inquire about our low round trip fares
to your home city.
THE COLLEGE BUS DEPOT
232 North 12th Call B2595
(A lhanch the I niim But Ui pol )
h
MOTIF IS WORLD CRUISE
The forty-fourth annual exhibi
tion of the Nebraska Art associa
tion will be opened Tuesday eve
ning, Feb. 13, with the annual
Beaux Arts ball. A "Round tbe
world Cruise" motif will furnish
an opportunity for variety in color
and design.
Costumes may include a wide
range of types varying from trav
eling costumes to a wide variety
of foreign dress.
In addition to the ball Tuesday
evening, there will again be a
series of "Living Pictures" repre
senting masterpieces in painting
Open to Members Only.
The ball is open to members of
the Art association only. Family
memberships, however, make it
possible for the entire family to
attend as well as those guests they
may wish to oring.
The exhibition will last from
Feb. 13 until March 18 durine
which time the work of a number
of contemporary artists will be on
exhibition at Morrill hail. Every
Sunday afternoon, durine this
terest to art lovert will be given.
period, a lecture on a topic of in-
Save IvUflDimesr
on
Fine Arts Bus. Or.
Dot. Zoology Law
Engineering Sets
(University Approved)
Loose Leaf and Bound Notebooks
FOUNTAIN PENS
LOWEST PRICES
at II
7
7K7?
Did
W
iggam
Mean You
when lie said that an ed
ucated man is charac
terized by his alertness
as to what goes on
around him. Would this
mark of education find
you wanting? Are you
in a position to express
an up - to - the - minute
opinion on such press
ing student problems as
c o in p ulsory military
drill, the student coun
cil petition, or how to
solve the parking problem?
IF NOT . . .
Then whv not get in the
swim and classify "alert
and educated"? How?
W ell, vou can go a long
wav toward getting in
r
touch with what's going
go in the university bv
investing a dollar in a
subscription to the Ne
braskan that will keep
posted on the ins and
outs of campus doings
for the rest of the vear.
Come down to the Rag
office today and let us
assure you of a copy or
stop at the booth in
Social Science Hall.
Did You
Know?
1.
That the Nebrakan
carries all the cam
pus news all of the
time, society, sport?,
editorials, events,
everything that goes
- i. M
iu maw up college
life.
That the JNebrafkan
is entirely a student
project published by
the students, for the
students and all
about the students.
It is YOUR CMS.
paper.
3.
That you can pick up
your copy of the Ne
braskan every morn
ing in Social Science
Hall on your way to
class. Get the raj;
early so you can plan
your day.
4.
That you can secure
a subscription to the
Nebraskan for only a
dollar. Stop at the
desk in Social Sci
ence today AND AS
SURE YOURSELF
OF A COPY'.
DAILY NEBKASKAN
U. HALL