'' ' i , :t ' ' . - . ; if , 1 , .2 m vrsf FOUR , , .... - . " - i . CAM IPmSOCBETrY . . . Ailfiic yiw . . . ;iii in iofs, Alplw Clii Onieyn, wis llie chosen one last Lucille li'cilly, Delta (inninia received ihe lionor o- SEEN on tlie C'limmm: Kldml Merrick mid a .swiirm of hungry women . . . Humid Hookstroin HportiiiK a sinootli new car . . . Kmmet Moiiivh still worrying alxml his iadi In drill . . . Al Clark and (.MuriNwi Hennett tlrlv ing everyone crazy with their new fiUCHHlnn jnme l''ranccs BoM man Htiivinyr to recognition In the new Spill Takers society by cHvortinjj about in very undig nified fashion . . . Inez tloancy nnd Harry Haynie imlulninj; in a few well placed fisticuffs . . . Dick C'ocklmrn aiimunclnn' his new tlirnw sonj; "I'ouhle Trouble" wmielhiiiR: ahoiit his Pi I Mil follow ing, no doiiht . . . and everyone's thoughts turnniK to valentines and young love -oven Paul Wurtz! i.i CANDY and cigars for the Phi Mus and Theta Chin Monday niuht . . . when Kranklin Vandehiii fi: and Cinee Schnicrda informally an nounced their engagement. , SIGMA Alpha Kpsilon an nounces the pledging of Hoi) Mar tin of Lincoln, and Hal Cummins of Seward. BECAUSE of her excellent work in tho university home economics department, Bin barn Barber was selected as this semester's winner of a scholarship to the Merrill I'nlmer sellout ill Detroit, for which she left last week. She is affiliated with Alpha Phi, and was this year's president of Omieron Nil, home economics scholastic honorary. She is also a member of Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman scholastic honorary. She is also a member of Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman scholastic honorary, and of Phi Upsilon Omieron. FRANK Day of Lincoln was re cently pledged to Sigma Nu. V MU Phi Kpsilon alumnae will be entertained Saturday at luncheon at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Lindgren. Miss Mary Willman and Miss Halycon Hooxer will assist the hostess. Following luncheon, an informal musicale will be present ed. Valentine decorations will pre vail, and about twenty arc expect ed to attend. PHI Delta Theta announces the pledging of Mark Woods of Lin coln. ALPHA Omieron Pi alumnae will entertain the pledges of the active chapter at a buffet dinner, Wednesday evening, at the home of Mrs. 'John Rosborough. Ar rangements for the evening have been planned by Mrs. Herbert Pot ter, and about sixty ate expected to attend. BETA Theta Pi alliance met Monday at the home of Mrs. F. M. Fling' for luncheon. Assisting host esses were Mrs. J. H. Broady, Mrs. 11. ,1. Lehnoff, Mrs. K. H. Nolle, Mrs. .lohn Rosborough, and Mrs. Carl Stein. A book review followed the regular business meeting. Thirty-four were present. BARBARA Bates, former uni versity coed, prominent In dra matic circles, and member of Pi Beta Phi, wan married Dec. 5 to Robert Sears of New York City. KAPPA Sigma alliance will rivet at the home of Mrs. Hugh Dalton for luncheon Tuesday. Mrs. William Dalton and Mrs. Harry Lotton will assist the hostesses. About twenty-four are expected to be present. SIGMA Chi Mothers' club will meet at the Y.W. C. A. Wednes day afternoon for luncheon. Host esses will be Mrs. A. H. Rait and Mrs. R. G. Douglas. Decorations will be carried out in the Valentine motif, and about sixteen are ex pected to attend. i DELTA Gamma Mothers' club will also meet for luncheon at the chapter house Friday. The com mittee in charge includes Mrs C. J. Steen, Mrs. K. F. Brooks. Mrs. C. K. Rcilly, and Mrs. A. H. Moses. ; DEFINITE proof that students read the Nebraska n society col umn was established Sunday when nny number of readers reported that Frankie Masters did appear the Intel 'fraternity Ball, a du at p, (he has enough agl '.f V-f HEIGHT TO MAKE ' lV-' il EITHER j y J ' ' ffP j VATCS CENTER ff ) VlSC'lV I V WITH THE SECOND SEMESTER KTllinvc its I'irsl. wind mid vc'ryon! ln'ciMiiinn rciMiiMMlcd 1i tin1 niiI zero wciitlicr llic inli'ivsl Kiotlil)t focuses on Prom uirl HUnus. wliirli opened vestrr iliiy. Senior uonien limy indiente 1 lu'i r intent ion.s nny lime tliis week, tlie deml line Kridjiy, iM'lirimr.v 11, lit .r n'elnek. The proeeeilinns lire sln'omleil with inys- lery us is ll iislom, hut the recent irl up'in tlie whispering hiisiness, inilienti'H thnt tlie simp Iiom's will soon he drilled out. Ami just hv wiiy of reininiseeiiee WHAT'S DOING Tuesday. Kappa Sigma alliance lunch eon at the home of Mrs. Hugh Dalton, 1 o'clock, Wednesday. Sigma Chi Mothers club luncheon at the Y. W.C. A., 1 o'clock. Alpha Omieron PI alumnae buffet supper at the home of Mrs. John Rosborough. Rose Bowl game pictures to be shown at the Temple at 7:15. Thursday. Sigma Phi Epsilon auxiliary luncheon at the chapter house, 1 o'clock. Phi Mu Mothers club lunch eon at the chapter house, 1 o'clock, Friday. Pi Beta Phi formal at the Cornhusker. Delta Gamma mothers club luncheon at the chapter house, 1 o'clock. Alpha Xi Delta mothers club meeting at the chapter house. Saturday. Chi Omega formal at the Cornhusker. Mu Phi Epsilon alumnae luncheon at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Lindgren. Sunday. Sigma Nu sweetheart dinner at the chapter house. tardy perhaps, and had conquered the snowdrift which the Ne 1 raskan erroneously chronicled in ten point type. Little excuse is found in the fact that conserva tive downtown papers made the same mistake; we can only assure readers of more accurate checking in the future. MRS. A. O. Gronquist and Mrs. Grace Probascoc will serve as hostesses to the Alpha Xi Delta Mothers' club meeting at the chap ter house Friday afternoon. About twenty are expected to be present. MEMBERS of Delta Delta Delta Mothers' club met at the home of Mrs. J. E. Lawrence, Monday for luncheon. Mrs, Ralph Ludwick, Mrs. W. H. Oury, and Mrs. Claude Burt were assisting hostesses. Fol lowing the luncheon Mrs. J. Knox Jones reviewed "Mary, Queen of Scots and Isles" by Stefen Zweig. AUXILIARY of Sigma Phi Kp silon will meet for luncheon at the chanter house Thursday. Mr. J. R. Bennett, chairman: Mrs. Homer Sehott, Mr. Guy Green, and Mrs. M. L. Johnson will serve as host esses. s. PHI MU Mothers' club will meet for luncheon at the chapter house Thursday. Hostesses for tne aner nooq will be Mrs. H. K. Moffitt, Mrs. J. Nesbit. Mrs. Emerson Jones, and Mrs. Fred Shimerda. MOTHERS' Club of Sigma Al pha Kpsiion will entertain the fathers of the active members of the chapter at dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Martin Thursday evening. VALENTINE party was held Sunday night at the Phi Mu house by the Mothers' club for the ac tives, pledges and their dates. To add zest to the evening, both the unexpected was announced. Jeanne Palmer, Ulysses, -and Vic Herman. Kappa Sig, Osceola, announced their engagemetn by means of tele graph. MARRIED Saturday at high noon at the Presbyterian church in Grand Island were Miss Zoraida Alexander and Mr. Brice Teeter, both former students at the uni versity. When in school, Miss Al exander was a member of Delta Gamma sorority, Mr. Teeter is af filiated with Alpha Tau Omega. Elizabeth Reimers, of Grand Is land, and a sorority sister of Miss Alexander, was malol-oi-nonor. Carl Willard, former Nebraska student but recently graduated from Northwestern Law Cullege, was best man. Bill Garlow, Bob Shellenburg. Bun Nichols, and ( Kenneth O'Connor were ushers at '. the affair. Tha couple will reside in Stockton, Calif. j Movie Box STUART "MAONIFICIONT OBSES .SION" LINCOLN "KING OF BimLNSyUIC" ORPHEUM "SANDF.KS OF TIIF. KIVK.lt" LIBERTY 'OLIVF, OF INDIA" SUN- "NO MOKK LADIF.S" "THUND1CK IN T1HC MAST" COLONIAL "WK'KK ONLY HUMAN" and "FIGHTING COWARD ' Westland Theater Corp. VARSITY "MIDSHMMKR NIGHT'S DKF.AM" KIVA "THK OLD HOMF.STKAD" "PUBLIC ENKMY NUM KKR 1" FEDERAL OFFICIALS APPROVE CHANGE IN PWA APPLICATION (Continued from Page 1.) approved by the committee as architects for the building-. New Foundation May Assist. The structure will Include ball rooms, publications offices, club rooms, lounges, auditorium, and a cafeteria if present student and faculty suggestions are drawn into the plans. It will closely resemble union buildings existing on ram puses in Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota, Oklahoma and many other utates. Additional funds and financial assistance may be secured from the University of Nebraska foundation recently established. Chancellor Burnett includes the union among the projects which the fund might well support. The plan proposes to solicit donations and bequests from former students, fHonria and natrons of the univer sity. An attempt will also be made to secure grants from several ex isting institutions such as the Rockefeller, Guggenheim, and Carnegie estates. Other Colleges Send Information. Approval of Regents for re quests for additional funds culmi nated a long campaign of the stu dent council. The Daily Nebras kan thru its editorial columns en couraged and fostered the attempts of the council. Preliminary inves tigation of the union problem was carried on over a period of a year. Many of the campuses support ing a student union were requested to send information to the council. This information was compiled and assimilated and is the basis for nrpspnt union nlans. Objection to the proposal lay maly in the financial difficult ties involved in its completion, These objections were circumvent rri hv available eovernment funds Additional allotments and expendi tures of congress will do much to assure funds for jvenrasKa con structions on the university cam pus, it was indicated. John and Franklin D. Roosevelt, ir sons of the nresident and Har vard students, have taken a pledge for safe driving, fcsom nave ocen involved in numerous accidents. Dartmouth made football last season. S38.G00 on Vanderbilt Phi Pais and Betas had a private war recently with eggs, (old mud balls and garden hose. To win a $3 bet, a former Uni versity of Minnesota swimming team captain swam 225 feet under watei. Dime novels got their start toward popularity as Sunday school literature, according to Frank K. Walter. University of Minnesota librarian. SI rHeiu DLn ne and PHOENIX HOSIERY in the new Spring colors To your VOAJWiAMw Nothing will please Her better than Vbuncwiv fl I WLm sntine. If nt to cor to us yo i. !,i4nmnt select proper Tl I Y-t.U THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Many G-Mcn Sec Service in Investigation Department TuniowT hi IIoovitV Division Uicutrr Thuii All IMi'Hivc (inmpH BY ARNOLD SERWER. (AkwiiIhI'iI ColluKliit Prs CorrMponilcnl) WASHINGTON, D. O. No other body of federal Investigators has as rapid a turnover in per sonnel bh does tho Bureau of In vestigation of the Department of Justice. The average period of service for the Secret Service men, the U. S, Post Office inspectors, and the Narcotic Squad of the Treasury department is consider ably longer than the nverage pu rine! of service among: Jay Kdgar Hoover's G-men. Although Hoover catches tuem younger, the other services keep them longer. Some observers here say it's because Hoover's special agents, being younger, are too ambitious to stay in the depnrtmeni anu awiiu gradual salary advances and pro motions, when the field of private investigation is so miirn more re munerative. Others ay It's the work itself that causes the turn over In the Bureau of Investiga tion. At nny rate, year after year they leave the department to go with private detective, agencies, Into the practice of law, or into other types of public service or into business. The vacancies arc filled by competitive examinations from time to time. Work Long Hours. Hoover uses vonnir men with two types of training, nccountnnts, hmiI voiine- i.-.en with law decrees. Of a'force of 000 G-men, about 200 are accountants, the remainder arc mvvirn. Annlicants successful in examinations held in any one of the department's 37 regional of fices scattered over the country, romp to wash nirton ior a rinai examination. Successful appli cants, if physically fit and of good character arc finally enrolled in a three months training course in the bureau's school here, On com pleting the course they are ap pointed special agents at salaries ranging from $2,500 to $3,000 a year. In return tor inai salary uic young special agent works long hours, jumps from one city to an other, and follows his instructions in tho lpttor. Cnrrvine- out orders often entails various kinds of un pleasantness. One assignment many agents dread is any case having to do witn me wnue siave traffic. Tiicy'd sooner be on the firina- line than eo through the un dercover routine often necessary to locate the organizer of the traf fic in a particular locality. The word "undercover" is particularly apt here. Played Sax to Get Man. It's nice work for rolling stones though. You never know where the department will tell you to roll to next, and how long they'll keep you there. Married men in the service have a particularly hard time of it for this reason. Their families live with their bags al ways packed and a railroad time table handy. One young agent, who had been making plans to get home, was as signed to a difficult case in a midwestern city, that kept him on the job for six months without a break. All he had to do was to play the saxophone. A criminal wanted by the bureau, tne G-man s suuerior learned, was eventually going to put in an appearance at a certain night club. It seems he always dropped in at tnat ciun whenever he got back to town. The G-man, who had played the saxo phone in college bands, was or dered to get into the night club orchestra bv hook or by crook. After playing in several other bands the agent finally heard of a vacancy in the club's orchestra, applied for it and got the job. Few G-Men Get Shot. For six months he played "Dinah," "Tiger Rag," and other current melodies, and searched the crowds danrlng by for a glimpse Ml Hns ERY as a . you do not find come in person lection, just. ive to new pPj if-S? CO 1 95 of the man he'd been sent out to spot, And one night ho saw his num. At the first opportunity he telephoned his chief and the G-men a me down and picked up ineir man without any irounie. uw saxophone-p laying (1 - ni a n m thoughts promptly turned noun--uiirci. He discovered to Ills dis gust that he was ordered to keep his Job In the orchestra ior an other few weeks before quilting, so as to avoid casting suspicion upon himself as being In any way con nected with the picuing up or im: man the department hud been after, If you're contemplating applying for a Job as a special agent, don't LUCKIES ITS W rnAtrin vrr;ii? mtv "LUCKIES rSsS ' LESS ACID JkJW$tl ,.,..- - mi tvr ' 1 , . - Yr n ur Al 2 H "II ., -mu iiiim J ' W I. . Going to town with Luckies A LIGHT SMOKE of rich, ripe-bodied tobacco Over a period of years, certain basic advances have been made in the selection and treatment of cigarette tobaccos for Lucky Strike Cigarettes. They include preliminary analy ses of the tobacco selected; use of center leaves; the higher heat treat ment of tobacco ("Toasting"); Rtant chemical H i howrtiot other pop ulor brands hav an xc of acidity ovtr lucky Strtko of trot 53 to 1C01 TUESDAY, worry much about gelling shot. In the past ten years omy inmw . . ' . i I. Itl.,,1 In Half dozen men nave oern m the lino of duty. In thn same period a great many more young men were killed playing football. VAliirh I.iIiil'h to mind tlie fact, by the way, that If you've got all the other quallflciillonH U) neroum n special agent, you have a better chance for an appointment If you happen to be an athlete. Hoover has a predilection toward them as additions to his force. When physical education was made non-compulsory at the Uni versity of California, enrollment In this department Jumped 1,800. The typlcul Harvard man Is "an Indifferent old mnggot with u funny accent," says the univer sity's alumni bulletin. Stuart Mauley, University of California sophomore, Is u man i. "LUCKIES" MOISTURE AW- Luckies are less Excatf of Acidity of Other Popular t 5 ? ? - i . i i - . - AlANCt IUCK' STPIKI I B R AND R AND BRA NO O SI f JcfNTlRf ii. A UAVIS I 'nC I'LUCKIES"! i. VI BLENDING i ? 4i 1 r 1 CONTROI I i RES'JtTS VERIFIED Vt INDEPENDENT CHEMICAl LABORATORIES AND RESEARCH GROUPS OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO ' i "IT'S TOASTED" I EERKUAUY II, IQ.'M. without a country. Horn In Japan of American parents, he Is a citizen of neither country. Ohio State's champ football team brought In $:i:i0,000 at homo games this yeiuj Averaging a full point higher In their grades than their non-work, lug fellows are students receiving NYA assistance Spinach is l he fastest selling vegetable in the student cafeteria, at Georgia's Emory university. Go abend ami sleep, A CCNY proftssor ot philosophy Is quoted as saying those who sleep in class learn more. Baker university hopes to build a stadium with the help of a penny chain letter! Harvard has started a course for stammerers. i i i ,, r "LUCKIES" STANDARDIZED UNIFORMITY consideration of acid -alkaline bal ance, with consequent definite im provement in flavor; and controlled uniformity in the finished product. All these combine to produce a superior cigarette a modern ciga rette, a cigarette made of rich, ripe bodied tobaccos A Light Smoke. acid Brandt Ovar lucky Strike Cigarette 5 5....? - ' '-'- '' - oer pair GOLD S Street Kluor I -. j -i .";V . ' . 'v.'