The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 19, 1935, Page FOUR, Image 4

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TUESDAY. MARCH 19,' 1933.
FOUK
TUP lUI V VJ.Mtl ACk' M
ill if. ill I ivi4iiiifk;ifi ' ., , a aM aaaaaMa-aa-a- i
uate of the class of 1H0.I and a member ot Hurt tiood nie lrnr.
Kappa Stoma. There's a picture of him over in the lemp e,
for anv Knls with literary Icaninjrs and artistic inclinations. 1 ho
room, "we think, is the University Department of Speech office,
and it's open any time.
m w t
ANNOUNCED at the Gamma
Phi Beta initiation dinner were the
engagements of Julia Greene and
Jerry Parson of Hastings, and
Frances Kingsley and Harold Aid
rich, Sig Ep, of Lincoln.
V
MARRIED March 9 were Miss
Rosabel Johnson and Edwin V.
Hanson, both of Houston. Tex. Mr.
Hanson is a graduate of the uni-
....,;)-.. orH a mpniher of Siffma
Gamma Epsi'.on. The couple will j
live in Houston.
IN MARYSVILLE, Kas.. Feb.!
23, Mildred Mae Morton of Lincoln, !
and Harry R. McKee of Gregory, j
S. D., were married. Both Mr. and
Mrs. McKee are seniors here, and ,
she is a member of Alpha Chi
Omega, and he, of Sigma Phi Ep
ailon. I
APRIL 6 is the date set for "the
wedding of Joe Reimers, Grand Is
land Delta Gamma, and Dean
eb.ster, D. U. Both Miss Reimers I
and Mr. Webster have attended the j
university and he is living in cni
cago. where he is employed by the
United Railroad board.
MARRIED March 2 were Wini
fred Steele and Dale Hockabout.
Mr. and Mrs. Hockabout have at
tended Nebraska, and will live in
Council Bluffs.
ANNOUNCED Sunday was the,
engagement of Rachel Branson of j
Lincoln and Carl Gilbert of,
Greeley. Colo. Miss Branson is aj
graduate OI it;uiHOAtt anu a
ber of Delta Gamma, while Mr.
Gilbert has graduated from the
University of Colorado at Boulder
and belongs to Delta lau Dena.
and belongs to Delta lau ueiia.
The wedding win Replace m the
late spring, and the couple will live
in Greeley.
NO DEFINITE date has been
set for the wedding of Naomi Me
Adams and Robeit Bundy, both of
I.inrnln. Mr. Bundv has attended
Tnlane university, and has gradu-
ated from the university, wnere ne
. . ..
is a member of Phi Sigma Kappa
TO BE MARRIED this summer
are Doreen F. Rickard of Lincoln,
and Robert M. Bell of Bellwood.
Mr. Bell is a former student here,
and a member of Acacia. The cou
ple will make their home in Lin
coln. MARCH 2 in Beatrice, Evelyn
McKee and Thompson Weese, both
of Lincoln were married at the
Centenary Methodist church. Mr.
Weese is a graduate of the univer
sity. The couple will live in Cotner.
AND IN WILBER Jan. 5, Eer
nice L. Beach and Raymond P. At
wood were married. Mrs. Atwood
has attended Nebraska, and the
University of California at Los
Angeles, and Mr. Atwood is a for
mer student here.
ANNOUNCED Sunday was the
engagement and approaching mar
riage of Martha Ellen Vermaas
arid Lawrencs Berg, both of Lin
coln. Miss Vermaas has attended
the university, and has been teach
ing until recently.
GAMMA PHI S fifteen new ini
tiates were nonored Saturday
night at the annual initiation ban
quet at the chapter house. Toasts
were given by Louir? Hossack,
Margaret Vail, and Evelyn Stow
ell, and Ann Pickett presided as
toastmistress. A number of alum
nae, including Willa Norris of Mil
ford were present at the affair,
and decorations were pink carna
tions. LAST SATURDAY morning in
New Voik CjLv. Virginia Faulkner
of Lincoln, and Everett V. Weil of
Nw York were married. Mrs. Weil
who is an Alpha Phi here, has
written two books, "Friends and
Romanx" and "The Barhians," and
is now writing a third novel.
k
IN ORD Marrn 12. Alta E. Carl
wen and Jesse L. Pearl were mar
ried at the Christian parsonage.
Mrs. pearl is a graduate of the
University School of Nursing in
Omaha, and Mr. Pearl is a former
student here. The couple will be at
home near Burwell.
SUNDAY evening at the home
of Mrs. Maurice Deutsch, Mu Phi
Epsilon met 'for a buffet birthday
supper. Mrs. R. L. Cochran pre
sided at the table centered with
jonquils and stocks, and with pur
ple tarwrs in silver holders on
either ide. On the program were
Miss Marjorie Shanafelt. Miss
Margaret Kimmell and Miss Ruth
Haberly. and in charge of arrange
ments "for the affair were Miss
Sarah Apperson. Miss Shanafelt,
and Miss Genevieve Miller. About
thirty-five rue.ta attended.
YESTERDAY Mrs. Raymond J.
Pool was hostess for the Chi Phi
auxiliary luncheon and business
rseetisj t hw home. Plans were
made for the entertainment of the
Omaha, auxiliary t luncheon
April 12. at the home rt Mrs. John
Agee. Fourteen attended the meet
ing. .
AT THE HOME of Mrs. Reuben
Walt Sunday, alumnae and actives
of Sigma Alpha Iota were enter
' talnJ at a musical tea. Decora
tions were In green, yellow and
white, arid calendulas centered the
serving tables. Included on the ,
pre gram were rocaj numNr ry
Miss Helen StowelL piano selec- (
tions by Miss Muriel Jons. and :
several selections fiven by the t
IT'S PRETTY SELDOM THAT NE
briisku ots n world premier and stili
more seldom tlwit university students
have a chance to see a play by a famous
author from their own alma mater. Yes
terday evening, at the Temple, Fred Mal
lard's new play. "My Lucky Star,'
opened for the first time to play to Curn-huski-f
audiences. The locale of the play
is a small Nebraska town, and the cast
Nebraska people. In fact, the whole thins?
is of interest to people of the state. We
niirlii tlint Fred Mallard is a grad
WHAT'S DOING
Monday.
Chi Phi auxiliary, dessert
luncheon at the home of Mrs.
Raymond Poole.
Tuesday.
Mrs. A. W. Carpenter and
Miss Margaret Carpenter, 1
o'clock luncheon at the Uni
versity club honoring Miss
Margaret Beardsley.
Chaperons club, 2:30 meet
ing at the Gamma Phi Beta
house.
Sigma Kappa alumnae with
Miss Gertrude Beers and Miss
Lucivy Hill, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday.
Alpha Omicron alumnae as
sociation, 6:30 dinner at the
home of Mrs. Myron Noble.
Thursday.
Legislative Ladies' league,
meeting at Carrie Belle Ray
mond hall at 2 o'clock.
Kappa Deita Mothers club
at the chapter house, 1:30
p. m.
Alpha Chi Omega mothers
cluo at the chapter house, 2
o'clock.
Friday.
ALPHA XI DELTA, spring
party at the Cornhusker.
Saturday.
Sgma Alpha Epsilon
founders' day banquet at the
Lincoln hotel. 6:30 o'clock.
Phi Delta Theta banquet at
the Cornhusker hotel.
Alpha Gamma Delta alum
nae, 1 o'clock at the home of
Mrs. Arthur Anderson.
SIGMA NU, house party.
... Mildred
e'S SJ2S
Walker and Miss Evelyn Stowell
were in charge of the arrange
ments for the affair.
ruit AFTERNOON at the
Gamma Phi Beta house Mrs. Lola
Hood will entertain the chaperons
club. Assisting Mrs. Hood as host-
ess are ua. auv. ------
. i il Poom Airs.
Angle, on, l am - -
Madeline Baer. and Mrs. Frank
Schrader. A shoit skit will be pre
sented by the pupils of Mrs. Ada
C. Malcolm.
PROGRAM PLANS
FOR ENGINEERING
MEET ARRANGED
(Continued from Page 1.)
Others are: North Dakota L.
Erandee, "The Airplane.' 'and E.
Hall, "Diesel Power;" University
of Kansas R. D. Woodson. "Prin
ciples of the Autogiro," and H.
Crosse, "Artistic Industrial De
sign:" Kansas State (two to be
selected) Thomas Beckwith. "Heat
Treatment of Aluminum;" L. R.
Burdge, "Air Erakes;" F. P.
Brown, "Air Conditioning," and
H. C. Bates. "Tube Failures in
Cracking Stills."
At the evening's 6:30 banquet at
the Lindell hotel. C. E. Davies,
secretary to the national A. S. M.
E. organization, will appear as the
principal speaker with his address
on "Building a Profession." Fol
lowing other short talks, Oz Black,
well known entertainer, will ap
pear on the program. Professor
Weiland indicated.
Commencing Friday's program
at 8 with breakfast at the Lincoln
hotel, an informal discussion con
cerning the problems and activi
ties of the student branches will
take place. At 10:S0 a tour of the
engineering buildings and the uni
versity power plant will be made.
Award Made Friday.
Noon will find the representa
tives lunching at the chamber of
commerce at which time the writ
ers of the best technical papers
will be announced and the prizes
awarded. At 2:30 an inspection
.if tr-iil mnrl'jde the convention.
One half of the group will go thru
the Louisville cemern. piaui "u
the Ashland pumping station of
the Lincoln waterworks, and the
second half will inspect the Have
lock railroad shops and the Cush
man Motor Works.
"All university students and lo
cal engineers are given a special
in station to attend the programs."
Prof. Weiland said. "The mechan
ical engineering students especial
ly, along with students of the
other engineering department are
urged to be present."
Nomination for 1H35'S shortest
introduction. Made by President
Lotus D. Coffmann of the Univer
sity of Minnesota (Minneapolis). It
is: "The invisible newspaper by the
town crier, Alexander Woollcott."
Knox college. "Old Siwash,'
(Galesburg. 111. i, possessor of the
"world's worst football team." won
the basketball title in the Little 19
conference.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTTSBIENTS
Oaaailteaa Ara Caaa
10c PES LINE
Kldmum of 1 Unit
KtWAkU for return of I'lii lu
.rrity inn and ruard attached.
Ckllilwn Lrjtia;. 152U H- 1st 161.
Spring Afternoon Drives
rji' rou know that roo run tai
a criv of 30 mlla
for onl . 90
1120 P St. Phona B6B19
IMcr Cut Cocksy
Movie Directory
STUART
"SWEKT M U S I C" wilh
Rudy Vallce, Ann Dvorak.
LINCOLN
"ST. I.Ot'IS KID" and
"BURIED LOOT."
ORPHEUM
"BACHELOR or ARTS" with
Tom Brown and Anita Louise.
COLONIAL
'THE G U K A T PANAMA
CANAL MYSTERY."
LIBERTY
CLEOPATRA'' with Clau
de! te Colbert.
SUN
"M A X H A T TAN MKLO
DRAMA" anil "I SELL
ANYTHING."
WEST LAND THEATRE CORP.
VARSI fV (25c Any Timet
PRINCESS CHARMING"
and "MAN OK ARAN."
KIVA (Mat. 10Ci Nit 15c)
Or are Moore in "ONE
NIGHT LOVE."
Vraz Shows Erro: in Modern
Impression of the Bohemian
Race.
(Continued from Page 1. 1
a compliment that Berry, being a
Yankee compares the Bohemians
to his own race, and Lockhart, the
Scotch author of British Agent,
writes in the sequel. Retreat from
Glory, "Like the Scot, the Czech
is thrifty, hard-working, and am
bitious. He is hospitable when oc
casion demands, but wastes no
money on entertainment for the
joy of entertaining. Trained by
years to suppression to conceal his
feelings, to laugh when he wants
to cry and to cry when he is really
laughing he is difficult to fathom."
"The two important Czech prov
inces ot Moravia and Batavia,"
says Professor Vraz. "have an il
literacy record of less than 1-2 of
one percent, and there are 16,000
i libraries in this population of
1 15.000.000.
Lockhart writes again in his
book, of the Bohemian, "Once one
has plumbed his depth, one finds
sterling qualities of grit and cour
age. He has a fine physique, is
one of the best gymnasts in the
world, and has a passionate love
for the hills and streams of his
country. Beneath his practical
exterior, he has a soul tor poetry.
His love and understanding of
music are inborn, and it is a sore
point with the Austrians, that both
Mozart and Wagner" found Prague
infinitely more receptive to their
genius than Vienna.
"His worst fault is scarcely of
his own making. Circumstances
have made him a provincial.
"The Czechs at any rate, have
made good their claims to inde
pendence. At a time when Central
Europe was a kind of witches'
cauldon bubbling over with cor
ruption, debauchery, dishonesty,
and decadence, they furnished the
one justification of a nation's vi
tality. They produced the men
and I write without exaggeration
the exceptional men whom the
moment demanded. At a time
when a whole world was crum
bling around them, they were not
afraid to build. They may not
have built perfectly. But I feel
sure that thev have built solidly."
IDisEfied
aV
1. Q s
' "i
vY
AT TRYING TIMES TRY A Smooth OLD GOLD
TAP DASCIMG CLASS
TO MEET THURSDAY
Big Sister .Hobby Croup
Continues Learning
Routine.
One ot the Big Sister hobby
groups, the tap dancing class, will
meet Thursday at 7 o'clock in the
gymnasium to continue learning
the tap routine on which the 20 or
30 members have been working,
according to Lois Rathburn. Big
Sister chairman of the group.
Miss Elsie Ford Piper sponsors
the tap class and Ruth Hill ac
companies the dancers. The group
meets the first and third Thursday
of each month.
Businessman Flays
Xebraska Whisker
Battle as Sales Hit
Factories idle, people out of
work, rent unpaid, sales dropped
off 60 percent, all this is bemoaned
by a Daily Nebraskan advertiser
as a result of the beard - contest
being sponsored by the campus pa
per in conjunction with the Stuart
theater, which is putting up $15 in
cash prizes.
In a letter to the business man
ager, the owner of this establish
ment complains that his sales on
razor blades has decreased over
half of their former volume all be
cause campus "cakes," and other
wise, have put away their beard
hack saws until March 30 when
they will appear before the judg
ing board with their growth of
hair, fuzz, or what have you.
In compensation for the loss of
business on razor blades, the ad
vertiser pleads that the paper an
nounce his complete stock of hair
tonic. This tonic is guaranteed,
he declares, if rubbeed on the
whiskers three times daily, to
make a Rasputin out of a lily in
less than two weeks or by the end
of the contest.
According to an announcement
made Monday by the sponsors of
this beard battle of the century, a
pass to the Stuart theater will be
given everyone who stays in the
contest, besides the winners of the
cash awards. There is still time to
enter at the Daily Nebraskan
office.
CENTER POSITION
A WORRY TO COACH
VEENKER OF I.S.C.
AMES, la.. March 18. Faced
with the prospect of having no ex
perienced man to fill the center
post on his 1935 Iowa State foot
ball team. Coach George Veenker
already has begun the search for
a center
In an attempt to develop a capa
ble man for this position, he has
had four candidates working out
all winter quarter. Three fresh
men. Albert Sharkey. Gary, Ind.:
Vaughn Rogers, Fort Dodge, and
Dunvood Hansen. Sioux City, and
Burdette Hanna. Marion, a reserve
from last year's team have been
working out under the direction of
Assistant Coach Joe Truskowski.
The regular varsity spring drill
will not begin until March 26.
Coach Veenker expects 80 men to
report for spri-g practice.
THE ANNUAL
JOY NIGHT
A Variety Program of 18 Act
MARCH 22ND-23RD
Reserved Seat 25e 8:15 P. M.
L. H. S. AUDITORIUM
hy a QDileitinia?
ttth y 1
Wl i llic ftWent-uiindcd veek-cnj ue-t
bargrs into our Lalhrtx in Ly znit-ULe, don't
Lean Lim villi a Lar of t-oajt. Save Lis
emLaiTa&Mrjrnt and yours Ly concentrating
on an OI J Gold, vLile Le La els tactfully
away. Great little comforters, thee O.Gs!
S
PAGING THE
SMART COED'
Forward March! Yes, it's high
time we were all treading the
measure of smartness In new
spring shoes. And so, let's get
serious about It, and show March
that we've decided on our shoe
wardrobe while she was making up
hre mind whether to be winter or
spring.
Ot course, we all know that navy
blue Is to spring what white is to
summer. Choose a pump in jiavy
kidskin .trimmed In white kidskin,
or a perforated design with a tiny
buckle for trimming, to wear with
the new bright prints. With this
shade you might wear beige hose
with a bluish cast. If you are par
tial to navy hose, be sure they are
sheer. You see it's important that
hose be sheer this season because
eyes are on ankles and that's
authentic! And by the way, did
you know that the stocking busi
ness was founded on leve? Yes.
way back in 15S9, the Rev. Lee
invented the first stocking machine
because his fiancee was so busy
knitting her winter hose that she
had no time to be with him. Today,
3.000 silkworms die at a clip to
make 1 dozen pairs of silk stock
ings. However, we're trying right now
to keep pace with shoes, and for
the moment hose must fade Into
the background.
For campus wear, nothing could
be more different and new. than
the "peasant shoe." It's a 1935
version of the ghillie. only the
tongue goes up instead of down,
and so hugs the instep. These
come in brown and white calf skin.
The new reddish beige stockings
go best with brown and suntan are
as good as ever with white.
Other highlights are: An open
work oxford of a neutral sort of
beiee suede, with beige lizard or
brown calfskin trim. Here is your
chance to wear those dusty beige
hose, close to the color of sand. A
summery oxford of natural linen,
with toe, trimming and heel of
darkish brown calfskin would be
just right to wear under a suit
and over the downtown pavement
right now. A stocking in the same
neutral linen color would be most
becoming, not a pinkish flesh tone.
To wear to spring parties, a very
simple, classic opera pump of white
buckskin with a cutout design on
the toe, would give most any dress
an advance note. These shoes are
lovely worn with some new, very
sheer stockings that are a creamy
pink sunburn color.
As a summary to help you keep
in step with the modern tempo,
remember these points: White
buckskin, blue and white linen,
brown and white calfskin, kidskin
in all colors, perforations, and dull
finishes-
Fashionably yours,
ALICE MAE.
It will be "Hell on Earth" at the j
Lafayette college (Easton, Pa. i
junior prom. At least, that's the
scene the decorations will depicL i
DOUBLE FEATURE Program
Only a Prlncesi could get
herself into such a am!
PRINCESS
CHARMING
with EVELYN LAYE
HENRY WILCOXON
Plu Rob't Flaherty'i
MAN of ARAN
A Saga of the Sea
NOW
' LaitliaM Ca lac
I I
Most People Envy the
Girl Who Can Wear a
J
unior
Miss
DRESS
(Sizes 11 to 17)
a. JCHSf
Pon't scold be
cause you think
you're tiny! Feel
happy most
folks envy you.
Envy you, too,
because you can
get your dresses
for so little. 12.50
buys a cunning
print or navy
blue. Be in! An i
See!
A
Look mannifcn in your suit! Tailored
thrte-piece or tip-length, with Li
swing and balf-btlted backs. Tweed
and wool crepes in plaids, decks
and plain colors. All
lored . . . and tlioirinz
deration for the college girl's
bucget!
uwii ii aoa j
IP!,
iff
I 1m
yj JJOLD'S Kampus Korner Third Floor
The Sirit-or for Spring
Must be a Mannish Type
expertly tai
a keen eon
COLD'S Tliir4 Fluor
4
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