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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1936)
TUESDAY. MAY 5. 1936. THE DAILY NKBKASKAN mum RIKINFtt FIRMS iwj INTATFS K YIIIIIH I Jl II 111 I 1 Ul I I IIIIIIU II (DCOAtL WIHOKlL SEEN ON THE CAMPUS. Francis Boldroan making 'stcen trips between Andrews and Awg wan office. . .Bill Sawtelle surpris ing Proessor Arndt by asking a question in class Adna Dobson and Bob Ramcy being conspicuous among ihose disappointed over the non-appearance of Jan Garber this weekend Theta's going in for extensive porch sitting again Wary Gavin and Jeanne Rowe hanging onto Ken Kee Mary Austin looking very young with a hat tied under her chin.... How ard Linch and two of the brothers taking their afternoon nap in back of Administration building. ...Lots and lots of Sigma Nu's driving vari-colored convertibles around. Charles Reilly and Bill Gisn having to walk home from a pic nic Dave Bernstein and Aaron Finkelstcin blossoming out in sweaters exactly alike Henri etta York and Smith Davis going places together quite consistently. Betty Rowland looking very smart in a spring green suit.... Henry Remington displaying a smooth, new, brown and orange Pontiac ..... Carol Williams a n d Margaret Johnson playing Garbo with dark K'asses.... And every one really beginning fo get into tne spirit of ivy day. ANNOUNCEMENT is made of the engagement and approaching marriageKof Miss Kathryn Neely to Wayne Schammel, both of Lin coln. Both Miss Neely and Mr. Schammel have attended the uni versity where Miss Neely is a member of Delta Delta Delta sor ority. MOTHERS club of Sigma Kap pa will meet for luncheon Tues day afternoon at the home of Mrs. George Davies. Spring flow ers will be used as table decora tions. About 20 are expected to be present. a PHI Mu alumnae entertained at a buffet supper at the home of Mrs. Robert Mallory, honoring the senior members of the active chap ter. The regular business meet ing followed the social hour. As sisting hostesses were Miss Gladys Hutchinson and Miss Ruth Kier. TH ETA Xi auxiliary will meet Tuesday for a covered dish lunch eon at ' the home of Mrs. George Reitter. in Eagle. Assisting host esses will be Mrs. G. B. Golding, Mrs. O. K. Kingery, and Mrs. Floyd Rawlings. About 15 arc expected to attend. MEMBERS of the Pharmaceu tical club will entertain at a ban quet and spring party Friday eve ning at Eastridge country club. Speakers at the banquet include Chancellor Burnett, Dean Thomp son. Dr. Lyman, and Mr. Swakee of Nebraska City. About 300 bids have been issued to the dance which will follow the banquet. Chaperones for the affair will be members of the faculty of phar macy college. Leonard Fleischer is in charge of general arrange ments. PHI Mu Mothers club will meet Tor luncheon Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Asa E. Fletcher in Omaha. Twenty mothers from Lincoln are expected to attend. Assisting hostesses will be Mrs. John E. Elmhorg. Mrs. R. C. Bea vers, and Mrs. Prescott. MARGARET Kerl of West Point, member of Alpha Omicron Pi who graduated in 1935, has ac cepted a position in connection with the tea room of the Walker Gordon laboratory company in Princeton, New Jersey. For the past year she has served as assist ant dietician at Carrie Belle Ray mond hall, . MRS. J. W. Bishop was elected president of the Hostess club of the university at the last meeting of the group held recently. Mrs. Caroline Phillips will serve as vice president and Mrs. Harrison M. Angle was chosen as secretary -troaaurer. DICK Schmidt, president of the Innocents and Delta Upsllon, In formally announced his engage ment to Mary Jane Mitchell, Kappa h'Appa Gumma, by passing the cigars Monday night. Miss Mitchell duplicated his performance with condy at the Kappa house. GEORGE Anna Lchr passed the candy at the Kappa Delta house Monday evening announcing her marriage Saturday to Clement Theobald. The wedding took place at the home of the bride. Andrew Price and Josephine Ferguson at tended the couple. IVY DAY ACTIVITIES, THEN AND NOW (Continued from Page 1). nf the Black Masque who pulled the queen's Jlnriknha from the Temple thoater to tte throne. From five to twenty outstanding Junior women are masked pbcIi year and thus initiated Into Mor tar Board society. The new mem bers are selected by unanimous vote of the active members of the society. Mortar Board sponsors a service program which includes Tassels, Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman convocation, freshman buttons, the tea honoring sophomores and Junior women of high scholastic standing, and the various wom en's organizations. Mortar Board also gives four women's scholar ships each year. The Mortar Board party, to which coeds ask their own escorts and pay all expenses, is another projpct of this society. Within the last two years Mor tar Board has been the chief In strument In bettering women'i pol ices In the university. Another re cent project Is the establishment of an Inter-Orpaniratlon council of the presidents of all organized women's groups and other women student leaders for the purpose of creating stronger co-operation be twern the various organizations of the university WHAT'S DOING Tuesday. Theta Xi auxiliary, 1 o'clock luncheon, Mrs. George Reitter, Eagle. Alpha Phi Mothers club, 1 o'clock luncheon, chapter house. Sigma Kappa Mothers club, 1 o'clock luncheon, Mrs. George Davies. Friday. Delta Gamma Mothers club, t o'clock luncheon, chapter house. Alpha Tau Omega auxiliary, 1 o'clock luncheon, Mrs. J. P. Horan. Phi Mu Mothers club, 1 o'clock luncheon, Mrs. Asa E. Fletcher. Pharmaceutical club, banquet and dinner, Eastridge country club, 6 o'clock. Saturday. Pi Beta Phi alumnae, 12:30 o'clock luncheon, Mrs. F. G. Caldwell. Mortar Board alumnae, Mrs. F. D. Coleman, 2:30 o'clock. Sunday. Delta Gamma, Parents day dinner. University club, 1 o'clock. MOTHERS club of Delta Gam ma will meet for luncheon Friday afternoon at the chapter house. Spring flowers will center the tables, with pastel colored ap pointments being used thruout. The committee in charge of ar rangements for the affair is head ed by Mrs. W. B. Comstock, as sisted by Mrs. C. M. Skiles and Mrs. E. E. Rider. CHAGRINED and amused were the Alpha Chi actives Monday night, May 4, when the pledges en tertained at the annual "Song Ban quet." Included in the program was a dance by Alice "Sally Rand" Richmond, impersonations with Alice Bainum and Elaine Wilson as Laurel and Hardy. Rachel Diller put Betty Boop to shame and Helen Jennings was "all right, all right" as Major Bowes. They closed their skit with bits of gore. AUXILIARY of Alpha Gamma Rho entertained their husbands and the active chapter at a lawn picnic at the chapter house. Mon day night. Seventy attended the affair. AND MORE ABOUT IVY DAY. With ol man weather taking a turn for the better, prospects look good for a balmy Ivy day, Thurs day. Those "in the know," are pre dicting big things in the way of who will be wearing Mortar Board masks, Innocents' robes, and espe cially who will receive the crown of the queen of the May. No longer is it safe to venture out on one of these delightful evenings. Campus snoopers are hiding be hind hedges and such places trying to seek the secret of their com petitors' success in the sing. Delta Gamma's and Kappa Delt's, by great effort and if the wind' is blowing in the right direction, can hear the Pi Phi's and Theta's do their vocal best or worst, as the case may be. Fraternities, espe cially Sigma Nu's, are taking life easy these days, and will prob ably not start worrying about the big event until Wednesday eve ning. All in all, however, the day of days promises to be a huge suc cess, and if nothing more, we can always be thankful that we get out of Thursday classes. ALUMNAE of Mortar Board will meet Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. F. D. Coleman. Election of officers will be held and Mrs. Coleman will tell of her visits to other chapters. Assist ing hostesses will be Mrs. Frank Beers, Miss Alice Davis, and Miss Helen Eastman. RECENTLY announced is the marriage of Miss Harriet Eleanor Brown of Atwood, Kas., to Orris R. Ireland which took place April 26 at Atwood. Mrs. Ireland is a graduate of the university and is a member of Delta Zeta sorority. PI Beta Phi alumnae will meet for luncheon Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. F. G. Cald well, when the seniors of the ac tive chapter will be honored guests. Assisting hostesses will be Miss Alice Howell, Miss Anne Stuart, Mrs. Oliver Everett. Mis. Richard Rogers, and Mrs. John E. Hous ton. ACTIVES and pledges of Kappa Sigma entertained their mothers at a dinner at the chapter house Sunday afternoon. Table decora tions were carried out in spring colors with centerpieces of spring flowers. About 80 were present at the affair. j THREE 10 TALK TO Interested Seniors Apply At Bullock's Office This Week. Three business firms are inter viewing seniors this week Inter ested in merchandising and selling activities, according to Prof. T. T. Bullock, head of the Bizad place ment bureau. Tuesday C. T. Gibson of Gamble Skagmo witll interview those in terested in merchandising as a ca reer, as will a representative of the Proctor Gamble company who is looking for students with inter ests in selling, accompanied by talent in the advertising line. Wednesday Mr. Maurice Hanna ford of Beatrice and a Nebraska alumnus will be here as a repre sentative of the J. C. Penny stores. Arrangements to meet these in terviewers may be made in Pro fessor Bullock's office Tuesday morning. ORDER "FOR SORORITIES IN SING CONTEST IVY DAY ANNOUNCED (Continued from Page 1). the contest. For the past two years members of Kappa Alpha Theta have won the honors in the sorority contest, while Sigma Phi Epsilon was declared the winner of the fraternity sing for the past year. Any group winning the cup for three successive years is en titled to keep the trophy perma nently. The cup which will be awarded in the intrasorority sing for this celebration is on display in the window of Long's Book Store at the present time. Judges Named. Judges who have been named for the sing are: Professors Charles Amedon of York, Arthur Eylcr of Crete, and Mrs. Olive Seamark of Lincoln. Rules of the contest which have been set up for the sorority sing state that no group which has en tered may compete with a group of less than five members. All 1 singers in the women's division 1 must be passing in at least twelvn of their academic hours, and the . leader of the group must be a stu dent in the university. The I alumna may only help in the prep aration for the sing. Each soror ity will be allowed to ping only one Social Chairmen Hold Meeting at 7:30 Tonite Members of the Social Chair men's club will meet at the Alpha Phi house at 7:30 o'clock this evening. It is urgent that all social chairmen for the last and the present semester attend the meeting. Arrangements are to be mad5 for another social chair men's stag party. song, and they must be prepared to sing when called upon. For the men's groups, the only requirement is that each singer must have been pledged to the fra ternity with which he is competing by February 17, 1836. Any group wishing to withdraw from participation in the sing must file their intention to do so by Tuesday noon, May 5, according to the announcement made by Miss Yoder. AG FAIR HORSE SHOW RECEIVES ENTRIES IN COED RIDING CONTEST (Continued from Page 1). son and Marian Hoppert; Alpha Omicron Pi, Marcia I. Jackson; Chi Omega. Rosalie Motl and Betty Clizbe; Carrie Belle Ray mond Hall, Ruby Badgerow; Del ta Gamma, Mary Gavin, Marian Sherwood, Rosamond Wigton, and Natalie Rehlander; Kappa Alpha Theta, Flora May Rimerman, Har riet Hoenig, Jane Smith, Margaret Uptegrove, and Mary Davisson; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Barbara Selleck, Katherine Hcndy, Dorothy Kutcher, Helene Wood, and Jeanne Rowe; Pi Beta Phi, Janet Cald well and Lucretia Green; Phi Mu, Cathleen Long and Ruth Pylc, and Wilson Hall, Charline Dcin. A loving cup, presented by Faulkner Eros, of Lincoln will be awarded to the winner in the con test. The trophy was won last year by Helen Lutger, Alpha Phi. Entries for the contest will be received until Thursday, May 7, according to Mr. Nore. Prof. Laura Pfeiffer of the his tory department addressed history students of Lincoln high school the past week on the subject of the renaissance. Barh Trarhmcn File For Intramural Meet Entrants for the barb intra mural track meet should be made today at the office of In tramural Director Pctz in the coliseum. TO HOLD JUNE MEETING Doane College Will Play Host to Religious Convention. Nebraska older youth conference of the Congregational and Method ist churches will be held during the week of June 8 to 14, at Doane college, Crete, Neb. The theme of the conference will be "Christian Living in the World Today." The meeting will be sponsored by the Rev. F. I. Finch and Gert rude Hanford. Registration may be made with Miss Jane Penning ton, 540 No. 16th St., Lincoln, or with Miss Dorothy Atkinson, 410 Barkley bldg., Lincoln. VESPER SERVICES TO ROUSE ENTHUSIASM FOR ESTES MEETING (Continued from Page 1). the Nebraska-in-China staff of the Y. W. will be in charge of the 4th Week The IrniKh nhnw that Ihf whole town pinnated. Frank Capra's MR. DEEDS GOES TO TOWN GARY COOPER JEAN ARTHUR at .,,Hm4 frtnfrtm Wmwmmm Elkhorn Valley Stages Daily to Fremont-Oakland-West Point Norfolk and Points North EXCURSION RATES Over the Weekend beginning Friday nnd ending Sunday Nights Busses leave ONLY from NEBRASKAN HOTEL 230 No. 11th St. New Bus Service Phone B3888 services, Poetry, composed at the conference last summer, will prob- ably be read as a part of the le volionals for the meeting, accord ing to Miss Scudder. "Many students have already made their plans to attend the an nual conference this summer, and in order to arouse additional stu dent enthusiasm for the trip, we are scheduling the service this aft ernoon. Valuable information for those who are interested in attend ing the conference, as well as those who would like to know about Estes activities may be gained at the vespers this after noon," Miss Scudder stated. 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