FOUR fever, but this vear with the thermometer at 0 for txvo daysjtn 0f a cat xvhich one of the and then freezing fir a w eek, excuse o one wants to wear because, after all. chiffons and raging dust storm and there is always a KKJ to 1 chance that the elements will do something smartie. This weather may be good for several things but richt off hand we can't name one, and any way you take them gray days" aren't '"hey days" as far as we are concerned. o SEEN ON the campus: Frank. Crabill hurrying somewhere, busy, as usual members of the Kosmet , show cast looking faintly pinkish yellow Bob Joy. Tom Britton and ; Ed Uptegrove playing pitch in the : "Moon" several brave young men , playing tennis on the courts be- side Bessie Paul Amen carrying, manv books in the general direc-; tion of the Math building Anne Roscow and Dorothy Green saun tering Hank Kosman in the box; office at the Temple looking very official and smoking a cigar Art Bailey of "Kiss Columbo" fame,, verv mannish looking in the day-; light two violets battered and dusty, near the north wall of the Administration build ing Wood Shurtleff searching for Maynard Miller, reason unknown Les Mc Donald dodging a car while crossing- the street. I ! AFTER the Delta Upsilon initia tion this afternoon, the chapter, will entertain at a house party to-' night The party is closed and fiftv couples are expected to at tend. Fred Guggerraos is in charge t-n orrtntrpTTirntc artd Mr find Mrs. Clody Stewart and Mrs. Caro-! i FORTY members of the Kappa line PhUlips will chaperon the! KAPPA SIGMA alliance will Kappa Gamma alumnae associa party. j hold their last evening bridge , tion will meet for luncheon and a JlOTELOFE PARK Dancing Every Night Except Sunday and Monday "Sure, enjoy yourself," said Jim. "Its a ding Good cigarette." if: ... V'. PRIL SHOWERS MAY BRING MAY flowers, hut so far we haven't soon imvtliinp of the showers ami the luiirc for the flowers doesn't look very bright in all this gray weather. Now that initia tions are practioally all oxer ami every, one lias srrown very weary congratulating everyone else ami the Kosmet club is haxinir its i'lin' ami the Park" has opened, it should he spring, but the xveather man eertainlv isn't being verv definite about it. TheYe is a decided lull in campus activity 'long about this time. . . . '. it -i 4 i . w hich is usually attributed to spring ; spring fever isn't even a good I snr nxr formals to the parties. organdies don't do so xvell in a WIIATS DOING. Friday. KAPPA SIGMA alliance party at the chapter house, 8 o'clock. PI KAPPA ALPHA auxili ary, 1 o'clock luncheon at the chapter house. Ag Barb League mixer, at Student Activities building. Delta Upsilon closed house party at trie chapter house, 8:30 to 11:33. Saturday. ALPHA GAMMA RHG Spring Party, at the Corn husker. TASSELS 5:30 o'clock din ner at Lincoln. SIGMA NU spring party at the Lincoln hotel. ALPHA CHI OMEGA alumnae association, 1 o'clock luncheon at the chapter house. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA alumnae, 1 o'clock luncheon at the home of Mrs. Joe W. Seacrest. LCO CCCIC BCG JUNGB&.UTH AND TUCIC ORCKCSTRA party of the year tonight at tht chapter house. Forty-eight will attend the affair and the hosts will be Mr. and Mrs. Henry Campbell Dr. and Mrs. Glen Warren, Dr. and Mrs. Earl Deppen. Mr. and Mrs Max Roper and Mrs. Chauncey Smith. Mrs. Henry Campbell is ir charge of the arrangements. RECENT initiates of Delta Sig- i ma Lambda are: Vera Bartow, I Fairbury: Forrest Brown. West jern: Tom Dixon. Big Springs; Harold Lutton, Ashland; Lyle Jen- sen, Big Springs; Robert Schlucke- bier. Palisade; Bill Schneiderwind, maha and John Vogler. Kimball. . . AND THE Betas had a bit of fll niayt la:t .u wifh thf more ingenious of the brethern rougm. nome irom zoo.ugy I The odor of the specimen was quite I unpleasant and tr boys had them selves a time putting tne cat skid under the pillows of the unsuspect ing in their midst fun! SIGMA PHI Epsilon held initia tion Sunday. Those initiated were, Nathan Allen. Lincoln: Earnest Jaeggi. North Platte: Ralph Noll kamper. Gregory. South Dakota; Purman Rembe, Bancroft and Paul Wcnke. Pender. After the cere mony a banquet was serxed at the chapter house with Burt Durkee as toastmaster and Capt. Walter T. Scott as the principal speaker. MRS. GARDNER Moore enter tained the Sigma Alpha Iota alum nae at her home Tuesday. There i were twenty-four present and the I following officers were elected: Mrs. R. M. Anderson, president; Genevieve x uson. vice-presiaeni; Ruth Dreamer, secretary; Grace Wekesser, Treasurer and Kathe tine Simpson, editor. Assisting Mrs. Moore as hostess were Lu- jcille Reilly. Fern Ammon and Lu cille Harris. I j TO-NIGHT on the ag college :' campus in the student activities i building an Ag College Barb i league mixer will be held. Chap erons for the affair will be Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Prescott, Ruth Eloise ! Snerry and Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Keim. " " THE DATLY NERHASKAN ANovie Directory STCART "THE GOOD f AIRY. ' LINCOLN -XVEST POINT OF THE AIR" with Wallac Beery. ORPHEUM On the tage. "CHICAGO KOLLIES OF 1935." plus on the screen. "STRAIGHT FROM THE HEART." COLONIAL STONE Or SILVER' CREEK" with Buck Junes. LIBERTY FORSAKING ALL OTHEKS." SUN "WONDER BAR" plus "CRIME WITHOUT PAS SION'." WESTLAND THEATRE CORP. VARSITY (25c Any Time) "FUGITIVE LADY" plus "STMPHONT OF LIVING." KIVA (Mat. 10c; Nit 15c) "DYNAMITE RANCH." business meeting at the home of Mrs. Ruth Seacrest, Saturday. Guests for the afternoon will be Mrs. Helen Schneider Andre, na tional feld secretary and Mrs. Eu gene Andrews, national director of Standards. They are here visiting the active chapter. Assisting Mrs. Seacrest as hostess will be Mrs. Paul Holm. Miss Olivia Pound, Mrs. E. A. Burnett and Mrs. Wal don Howey. PI KAPPA ALPHA auxiliary will meet this afternoon at the chapter house for a regular busi ness meeting. Mrs. Fred Decker is in charge of the meeting. AG BARB LEAGUE asks both ag and city campus students to at tend their mixer tonight on the Holdrege St. campus. Miss Mar garet Feddy. chairman of the Home Economics department, will be a special guest, and Mr. and Mis. R, C. Prescott. Miss Ruth Sperry. and Dr. and Mrs. S. D. Keim will chaoeron. "If everyone ate as do those people whose income is more than $5,000, farmers could use all the land." Secy, of Agriculture Hen ry A. Wallace. "You can't rerulate thieves in the utility business. AU you can j do is supplant them with govern I ment ownership." Rep. Maury 'Maverick (Dem, Tex.) Guy Lombardo, who is 32 years old, has led his band for 20 years. The violin he holds under his arm at every appearance has never been played. It's not even tuned. Dr. F. D. Keim, chairman of the university agronomy department, has been in Washington. D. C. for the past week, attending meetings of the bindweed conference. A Spring A 'ternoon Drives Did you lr .- tr.at vru ran take drite '! lor cniv . 1-20 t St. mi:es $1.55 Phone B6819 Motor Out Company A'wjyff Open y : I was working way late at the office one night and ran out of cigarettes. When Jim the watchman came through I tackled him for a smoke. "Sure," says Jim, and he banded over a pack of Chesterfields. "Go ahead, Mr. Kent, take three or four." Jim said hed smoked a lot of ciga rettes in his time, but he'd put Chester field up in front of any of 'em when it came to taste. . . . "and they ain't a hit strong either," is the way Jim put it. That was the first Chesterfield 1 ever smoked. And I'm right there with him, too, when he says it's a ding good cigarette. MOXDAT WEDXESDAT SATl'IOAT IUCBEZIA LILT BICHABD BOXI pong BO.IELLI KOSTEXjUTZTZ OECHEST1A AM) CHOILS 3, DUST FALLS IN LINCOLN Geology Students Measure Dirt Brought Here by Week's Storm. 40 CAR LOANDS PER MILE , Forty car loads of dust per square mile fell in the Lincoln ter ritory between March 21 and March 28. according to Dr. A. L. Lugn, associate professor of geol ogy at the university. Calculations made thru the xveek by graduate students in his department showed that 5 grams per acre, or 3,072,000 pounds per square mile. Following the great dust storm of March 20, Charles Osborne of Cherry, and Marion Graetz of Omaha, collected the total dust fall for a period of one week in Lin coln. A pan partly filled with water was placed on the roof of Morrill hall at the university, about forty fect above the ground lvel, and dust collected rrom 4 p. m. March 21 to 4 p. m. March 28. Dust Does No Good. Most of this dust blew from the west and southwest out of western Nebraska, Kansas, and eastern Colorado, Dr. Lugn believes. Such dust does no particular good, says the geologist, and unless there is too much probably does no harm. It is mostly the same kind of soil that is already here, he points out. Dr. Lung thinks the storm of March 20 will go down in history as one of the greatest ever to blow across the plains, since it covered territory from Nebraska to Texas and some of it blew on to the At lantic coast. "Apparently about half as much dust fell per square mile in the Lincoln area on that one day as fell the following entire week." says Dr. Lugn. "In view of such figures as these and others col lected by careful observers in other places, no one can very well doubt the efficiency or the quantitative importance of the wind as a geo logic agent for the transportation of earth materials." PIPER TESTIFIES HE SAW BLOWER ACCEPTING BRIBE (Continued from Page 1.) his election to congress. Blower was connected with the Soakem Utilitv Co. o rtiri vnn n.-iJc him if he had ever participated in pork-barreling nr Intr-mlline- activities? A. Yea He said that Blower had participated in both of them, stiefler reDeatedlv said in his testimony that Piper had told him the facts reluctantly at firsL When Gillespie asked him if this had led to the formation of any opinion in his mind, Stiefler replied "Yes. be cause a person of high moral char acter is reluctant to discuss other men's characters." Judge Nutting found it necessary then to rap for order. Piper's own testimony, which followed, began with a resume of schools where he had obtained bis law training. After naming at i length six institutions that he had j attended, the plaintiff counsel in- j terrupted to request him to repeat ( the lisL Following graduation from j Harvar J. Piper entered govern-1 ment service at Washington, an-i : tvas assigneJ tc the district in f which Blower lived at the time of his indictment piper Called Blower Name. Piper disclosed that he had been called before an investigating com mittee that examined the indict ment against Blower and was fined $10t for contempt of court, as he had called Blower a name in his testimony. "Did you pay tne fine?" the counsel questioned. "I paid $200 instead because I felt that $100 didn't satisfactorily ex press my contempt of Blower," Piper replied. Dictaphone records revealed what the money paid to Blower in the hotel lobby was tor. Piper as serted, and he named other agents working with him on the case that saw Blower accept the money. In first examination, Irxvin Ry an, managing editor on the day when the story xvas submitted to te paper, denied knowing Blower. In cross examination. Attorney Rosenblatt asked: Q. Do you print everything sub mitted to your paper? A. No. Q. Do you investigate the au thenticity of all stories A. Yes. Q. How did you check the source of his story A. By former nexxspaper ac counts. An interruption occurred in the questioning of Marylu Petersen when a Daily :seorasKan pnoio grapher attempted to take a flash picture of the courtroom scene. "Stop" commanded Judge Nutting, "Don't take that picture until the jurymen take their feet off the rail I don't want any pictures taken of my court looking like that" Who Wants $10 for doing something easy? All it takes is about 5 minutes of thinking. Why the Central Cafe is now the most popular student and faculty rendezvous in not more than 50 words. After the parties Friday and Saturday, and for Sunday dinner, just grab some of our menus and write your answers on their backs. Hand in or mail to the Central Cafe before midnight of Sunday, April 14. Judges will be selected this week. CENTRAL CAFE "We really leant and appreciate rnur butinets'' Carl von Brandenfels, Mgr. GOLD Wear them here! Wear them there! For They Are New and "All-Occasion" SPORTS SUITS Single Breasted Double Breasted They're leisure looking clothes that would be as much at ease al a spring party 33 in the classroom. They're rich looking . . . expensive looking . . . smart! Yet the price is only 21.50. It's little wonder that the college men are coming to Golds more than ever this season! We invite you to see them, too ... at Gold's! T ? r t oii-A iVT't j lFff-l ..... ?r- & I feF If Men itore 11th St r r mil AY. Arm i. S. 1935. UNIVERSITY FAD HIS GAUHMNV. U.C.LA. Students Add New Yacht to Oceanic Colleges. PLAN VISIT TO EUROPE By tollrte New hwlc. LOS ANGELES, April 4. The floating university fad which this year hns swept several score col lege students off around the woiij struck xvith full force at the Uni versity of California at Los An geles this week. Plans xxcre announced for the June 29 departure of the E. L. Doheny yacht, Casiana. now the floating campus of the Inter. Oceanic university, with a crexv of U. C. L. A. students and Dr. Fred eric P. Woellner, U. C. I A. pro fessor of education, as chancellor. The Inter-Oceanic university plans to visit many out-of-the-xvay corners of the earth and will give a year's credit for the trip which includes stopovers at foreign uni X'ersities. Seriousness of the project is in dicated in the rumor that the yacht's itinerary has been arranged "so that the students will be in Europe during the height of the social season." & CO. 81. 3L C S. T.) COLUMBIA NETTYOIX nn. Lkxjtt a Mm Tomou Co. '- 'IS. : : '!