FOUK THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TIIUKSDAY, MAY 21, 1936. NEBRASKA CAMPUS n S(DDAEL WDiDLDLL SEEN ON THE CAMPUS. Dick Doty driving John Brown lee's "egg-beater' hither and yon ...D. G. freshmen serenading the actives with more energy than artistry, we fear. . .people conceal ing their identity behind varl-col-ored dark glasses. . .Bill Critten den decked out in bowtic and sailor straw hat. .. .everyone eagerly reading the Cornhusker. . .new Tassels proudly wearing their red and white pledge ribbons. . .liter ally millions of people trying to find parking spaces at nine o'clock ...Eleanor Compton and Pat Scott lunching together in the Tasty. . .Harry Haynie and Inez Heaney enjoying a lengthy conver sation in the midst of a history lecture . . . everyone congratulating Faith Arnold on her successful book .... Bill Strong composing songs to sing to Hita Alger.... Wood Shurtleff carrying 500 page texts about with the explanation that he intends to read theme every night between the hours of twelve and five... Jack Kllis faithfully entertaining his Theta sisters. . .some Carrie Belle girls in now culottes ridinc bicvcles... Doris Hoagland trying to learn the gentle art of football. . .Bob Calla han and Whitey Reed offering co eds cokes so they can read the girls' Corn husk ers too lazy to walk to U hall?... Ruth Rapalee and Don Moss deep in study under the shade of his concertible roof ...Taul Wertz and Claude Wilson yelling pointless remarks to pass ing cars during drill... and every one starting to think about going home. CHAPERONS club met for a picnic luncheon at the W. A. A. refuge Tuesday afternoon. Fol lowing luncheon, the afternoon was spent at bridge. The com mittee in charge of arrangements was headed by Mrs. Margaret Rea, who was assisted by Mrs. Gertrude Adams, Mrs. Cora Bent ley, and Mrs. J. W. Bishop. RECENTLY elected officers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon are: Buzz MEN WOMEN To nr II service coupon book. $-7.9. in arrvlce for $1, Hook sells on night (ilAIHNTfcKU By 18 leading Lincoln firm. A & C Shu Chateau Sain Uftice, 311 So. 1311) St. ih'is summer with Paramount's Zoric Dry Cleaning Light summer clothes soil easily! Let us clean them thoroughly, with out shrinkage, without fading ... by the Zoric Odorless method! . . And we specialize WASH SUITS W a s h 1 ng Is the most sanitary way- of cleaning clothes. It's also the thriftiest! Send you sum mer suits to Paramount today! PARAMOUNT LAUNDRY und Zoric Dry Cleaning 837 So. 27th F-2373 'For Skill 4, Care Beyond Compare' Fresitfti Cool I 1 m Is WHAT'S DOING THURSDAY. Zeta Tau Alpha, Mother'! club meeting, 2:30 o'clock, chap ter house. Kappa Delta Mother's club, covered dish luncheon, 1 o'clock, Mrs. E. W. Elwell and Mrs. C. F. Lyman. FRIDAY. PI Beta Phi house party, chapter house, 9 p. m, SATURDAY. Alpha Omlcron Pi, alumnae banquet, Shrine club, 6:30 p. m. Gamma Phi Beta, spring par ty, chapter house, 9 p. m. Kappa Alpha Theta, senior breakfast, chapter house, 10 a. m. Sigma Alpha Mu spring par ty, chapter house, 9 p. m. Gamma Phi Beta alumnae, bridge luncheon, 1 o'clock, Uni versity club. Pi Kappa Alpha dinner, 6:30 o'clock, Lincoln hotel. Sigma Phi Epsilon, alumni banquet, 6:30 o'clock, Corn husker hotel. Delta Gamma senior break fast, 10 o'clock, Cornhusker hotel. Delta Gamma alumnae, 3 to 5 o'clock, Mrs. Frank Woods. Zeta Tau Alpha alumnae, 1 o'clock luncheon, University club. Delta Upsilon, lawn party, chapter house, 9 o'clock. SUNDAY. Sigma Kappa senior break fast, chapter house. Fonda, eminent archon; Johnston Snipes, eminent deputy archon; Stanley Brewster, eminent record er; Dick Brown, eminent warden; William Wallace, eminent corre spondent, and Donald Akin, emi nent herald. SIGMA Kappas, too, are hold ing a senior breakfast next Sun day morning at the chapter house. The breakfast is an annual affair. The committee in charge of ar rangements is composed of Max ine Whisler, Genevieve Hoff, and Alta Kohlscheen. MEMBERS of the active chap ter of Gamma Phi Beta will en tertain at a spring party Saturday evening at the chapter house. Chaperons for the affair will be Professor and Mrs. O. H. Werner and Mrs. Lola B. Hood, house mother. The committee in charge of general arrangements is com posed of Louise Brock, chairman; assisted by Maureen Tecker, Mar jorie Colburn, and Detta Rohn. BILL Kovanda of Elk Creek, Nebraska, is a new pledge of Sig ma Phi Epsilon. OLD and new members of the Bizad executive board will hold a get together at the Lincoln hotel, tonight at 6:30. MUSIC STUDENTS PLAY ORIGINAL SELECTIONS Four W in Awards for Onn Compositions ut Program in Temple. The annual conceit of Original Compositions was presented by students of the theory department of the school of music Wednes day afternoon at 4:00 in the Tem ple theater. Those who participated were: Robert Burdick, Alice Terril, Ruth Friess, Marcella Laux, Ruth Ran dall, Roberta Willbee, Vance Lein inger, Ernest Green, Ruth Hill, Evelyn Stowell, Larry Griesel, Jane Welch. Frances Spencer, Dorothea Gore, Margaret Baker, Irene Remmers, June Goethe, Eunice Tierney, Marjorie Smith, Margaret Baker, and Mary Louise Baker. These students presented works of their own composition some of which were awarded Alpha Rho Tau Awards. Those who were granted awards were: Ernest Green, Vance Leinger, June Goethe and Eunice Bingham. Accompanists for the program were Evelyn Ruth Hill, and Ruth Randall. 750 CORNIIUSKEKS SOLD WEDNESDAY Editor Urpes Studrnts Get Copies at Once. Half of the Cornhuskers, all the 750 available copies, were diptrib uted to purchasers yesterday at the Cornhusker office in U halj. More copies have been brought up from the printers today for distri bution. Altho the office will be open until Friday afternoon and books will be available until then, students are urged to call for their copies im mediately. To avoid extra work and confusion, all purchasers arc urged to bring their receipts. The books of those who have paid only $1 on their installments will be placed on sale immediate ly. Those who desire to purchase these annuals may have them for $4.25 eacb. R.O.T.C. HAS TWO NEW AWARDS FOR COMPET (Continued from Page 1). the Reserve Officer's association to the company that wins compet. On the guidon will be inscribed the fast Free Delivery J on Drugs Supplies Sodas Sandwiches UNI DRUG 14th & S B3771 AGAIN A SUCCESS. Issuance of the Cornhusker year book seems to have created quite a furor on the campus these days. With the final disclosing of the six Nebraska Beauty Queens con gratulations are again in order, and excitement and pride is rife among the sisters of the five or ganizations represented. The gen eral concensus of opinion seems to be much in favor of Faith Arnold and her staff's beautiful publication. Everyone, examina tions to study for or not, may be seen with his or her face buried in one of these red books, hungrily looking over the miscellaneous photographs for a likeness of themselves, or ardently gazing at the portraits of "campus idols." At any rate everyone is very proud to own one of the new 1936 Cornhuskers for it holds many happy memories with photographs as reminders. SATURDAY morning the senior girls at the Kappa Alpha Theta house will be entertained with a breakfast. The seniors who have not passed candy during their col lege career will be compelled to eat lemons. Those who are vic tims of such a tradition still have one moie day to do something about it, however. NEWLY elected officers of Kappa Sigma arc Gay Miller, grand master; La Verne Luedke, grand protectorator; Dean Kearl grand treasurer; George Porter, grand scribe; Dick Spangler, guard and Jim Beltzer, guard. MOTHERS club of Delta Upsi lon met for luncheon at the home of Mrs. R. W. Tyler with 30 pres ent. New officers elected are Mrs, Harry Ankenv. president; Mrs. J, M. Roberts, vice president; Mrs, J. E. Weaver, secretary, and Mrs. Caroline Phillips, treasurer. As sisting hostesses for the afternoon were Mrs. W. I. Anderson, Mrs. G. F. Nye, Mrs. Nellie Magee, Mrs. Hazel Lyman, and Mrs. Georga Burt. FRIDAY night members of Pi Beta Phi are entertaining the senior members with a house party. A dinner and program will precede the party. Chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Corp and Mrs. Pearl Petermichael. Joyce Ballantync is in charge of all ar rangements. MEMBERS of the active chap ter of Sigma Alpha Mu will en tertain at a spring party Saturday evening at the chapter house. Chaperons for the affair will be Rabbi and Mrs. Harry Jolt, and Mr. and Mrs. David Zolat. MAXINE Durant, Tri Delta, and Vernon Clemans, Phi Alpha Delta, informally announced their en gagement by passing the candy and cigars at their respective houses Monday night. name of the company and the sig nificance of the prize. Cadets who planned to attend the field artillery camp are in for a disappointment because headquar ters has not approved the recom mendations. This will effect this year's junior class. Fill CHI THETA INSTALLS OFFICERS Miss Marshall Heads Professional Croup; Plan for Initiation At a recent business meeting of Phi Chi Theta. business admini stration professional sorority, of ficers for the year 1936-37 were in stalled. They are: Alleen Marsh all, president; Miriam Butler, vice president; Helen Rosker, treas urer; Ruth Pierce, recording sec retary, and Margaret Standiford, corresponding secretay. Outgoing officers are: Miriam Butler, president; Alaire Barkes, vice president; Alice Crowley, treasurer; Aileen Marshall, record ing secretary, and Ruth Pierce, corresponding secretary. LAST DAY! WALTER HUSTON TOMORROW More romantic than 4 ( One Night of Love"! Far funnier than "Mr. Deeds"! AOOLUMKAnCWt E 'FLYING LABORATORY New Department to Conduct Aeronautical Tests; Purchase Plane. LAFAYETTE, Ind., May 20. Amelia Eaihart, the aviatrix who conquered the Atlantic and Pa cific oceans, has taken over the "flvlnir laboratory ' at Purdue um versity with the establishment of the "Amelia Earhart fund for aeronautical research." Several unnamed donors have cooperated in the purchase of a 10 passenger plane now being built in Burbank, Calif., to carry out iarj- oratorv experiments. This shin will nave a cruising speed of 190 miles an hour to be eouinned with two motors of 500 horsepower each. It will be of the same tvne as tne pianes usea oy the aviatrix in her transoceanic flights. Periodic field tests on actual flights will be made in the new plane. It will be equipped with extra gasoline storage space for use in trans-American and South American iaunts in the in terest of science, it was announced. Counsellor on Careers. Amelia Earhart has been a counsellor in careers for women at Purdue University and an aviation consultant there for some time past. She will have complete charge of the flying laboratory and with her husband, George Palmer Putnam, New York book publisher, will go to California in July to accept the plane. Altho it is a 10 passenger trans port ship, the passenger compart ments will be fitted as a flying workshop with a hatch cut in the fuselage for navigation- observa tion. Special equipment will in clude robot pilot, de-icing appli ances, a radio "homing" device and a two-way radio telephone. Pur due University television station will be used in experimentation in transmitting pictures to the plane. Make Experimental Tests. Experimental work will include tests of speed and fuel consumtion under varvine conditions: use of oxygen in altitude flights; the hu man equation or iaiigue ana en durance in relation to altitude, diet, sleep, eyestrain and other factors, and flights under varying weather conditions. Purdue Universitv officials are clearing a 385 acre airport here to carry on the flying experiments. Currently tests are made for the hpst tvns of material for runwav construction at the Purdue experi ment, lieia. ine lauoraiury oi Purdue is working overtime test inrr nhort wave radio communica tion and television usages where visibility in riying is oaa. co operating with the aviation section is thp other science departments such as those studying aerological conuuions. Prof. R. W. Wood of Johns Hop kins has made a "specroscope" ruled with 30,000 individual lines to the inch. c LASSIFIED ADVERTISING IOC PER UNE LOST Gold Gruen wrist watch last Saturday at stadium. Kewara. hiii Davis, (.'all B".ri23. WANTKD Picnickers at all hours. Apply Milwaukee Delicatessen, jiij "()" StrrpiL LOST Beta pin. Kinder pleuse call Boll (j a tin on. mm. Kewaru. Heitkotter's Market MEAT POULTRY OYSTERS FISH 140 So. 11th Street Telephone B3343 Let V Figure Your Meal Problem $ "RHODES, the Empire Builder" We honestly believe this to be the most de lightful entertainment ever shown at the Varsity. 111!: HBB flSTIPS 0BT FRANCIIDT TONE tWAtTEB CONNOllT Halle bT IllltUI tutcuf ki io.tr ioi stcisstia' MATINEES 20o NIGHTS 25c Was ustiand tudrt m 11 mmmm CONNING THE CAMP! By Arlen Crenshaw Business men can talk all they wish about college education not helping young men along in the practical affairs of lire. This department knows dcfl nitely they are wrong. We've just been hearing about the young collegian in the Uni versity of California at Los An geles. He bought a very expensive make of automobile. In four months he had paid out a big bill in repair expenses. That made him angry. He did this: On the side of the beautiful car he painted the words: "This is-the last "blank " car I will ever buy, In four months it has cost me $300 in repairs." Then ho pro ceeded to drive it slowly thru the business district, and particularly in front of the Blank agency. It was only a matter of hours before the agency bought the car back from him and took over all the repair bills. Father Divine "likes to have college people visit him" or so he told a reporter fro mthe Princeton paper who tried to get an interview from the son of heaven in his New Yorw sanc torum. "But" said the Father, "Too many people come cnooping around here and then go away and write the wrong things. Bo sure you print the facts." The Father seemed proud of the fact that just the night be fore, a delegation had come from Smith college. All college professors now and then get some gems in the an swers to examination questions. But Professor William Beery of Ohio State, who teaches geology, manes a practice of saving his. A few examples, recently: "The earth is round and is 25.- 000 miles from one end to the other." "The earth is 60,000,000 miles around and is composed of atmos phere, the north and south poles ana me cauaior.- "The earth is thought to be flat at each end of the equator and the poles being 27 miles shorter, the earth tends to bulge at the equa tor." The PTnunds k-ppnor at tho TTnl. versity of Georgia took one look at the lawns the other day, sat down, shook his honrl nnrl hnrl an inspiration. His poem appeared in Liie cuuege paper nexi day. ll read : U. of Georgia's son or daughter, Do you love your alma mater, If so, it should be your duty To protect her vernal beauty; Man or woman, youth or lass Please don't step upon the grass. The depression is held resnon- sible for growing interest in home economics being shown by boys. The World Pays Tribute to The famous French triintht, l.itui Pasteur, uhitte pi ft In mankind nn a urine yean added In the lifespan, liven and breatltes again in the. person of Paul Muni in the production "lit Story of Louis Pasteur." Greatest Life Saver In History! Pasteurization does not mean boiling or changing the flavor of milk. It means simply holding milk between 142-145 de grees for 30 min utes, to Insure its safety. KOSMET KUJB NAMES MEMBEItS TONIGHT Initiation, Election Of Officers Slated To Precede Banquet Kosmet I'lub will announce its new members this evening at 6 o'clock, when It will hold initia tion before a banquet in the Corn husker hotel. Election of officers will precede the initiation. Out going officers are Robert Pierce, president; Wil liam Garlow, business manager; and Richard Schmidt, secretary. Members were chosen at a special meeting last week from workers of the last two semesters. Go JHlome by the ILAILTRTDDHrSr MDQJiriE Arrange to ship it off this June by your old friend Railway Express and when Commencement Day dawns, be fancy free to board the train for home. Anything trunks, bags, books, golf clubs, cups, even your diploma Railway Express will pick them all up on your phone call, forward them at passen ger train speed, deliver them safe and sound at your home. And it's economical. Railway Express rates are low, and you pay nothing at all for pick up and delivery service. There are no draymen's demands, no tips, no standing in line, and sure ness is made doubly sure by Railway Express's double receipts, with $50.00 liability included on every piece you ship. Besides, you have the choice of forwarding your things either prepaid or collect, and they'll be home as soon as you are. No other way of shipping gives you this kind of service, as you probably know, and to get it you have only to phone the nearest Railway Express office. 1128 "P" St. Depot Office: C. B. & Q. Depot 7th & R Sts. Phone B3261 Lincoln, Nebr. Railway Express Agency live. NATION-WIDE R A I L - A I R SERVICE is : t ' 4 If 1 V-I Av I r ;'.;-:r Dr. Louis Pasteur is credited with saving more lives than any other man in history. Through his work the process of pasteurization was developed. Rec ords in large cities b:fore and after the coming of pasteurization prove unquestionably that thousands of lives have been saved by pasteurization. And Roberts Dairy takes no chance of losing any if the complete protection that p-jper pasteurization affords. As a very important safeguard, Roberts milk is not exposed to the air after pasteurization except for the necessary second of tims when the filled bottle of milk is automatically capped. A record of perfect safety for more than twenty-five years proves the complete safety of Roberts milk. ACCEPT ONLY THE BEST Insist on oberts Milk Properly Pasteurized Immediately after the Initiation the banquet will begin, including new and old Klub members. Graduation Gifts For the graduate nnd the graduate's sweetheart, Elgin Watches for men, start ing at 17.50. For women, as low as 18.75. The Diamtmih Start at 15.00 Matching Ri't nt Trlcen You Will Be rieuHcl to I'uy 237 So. 13 Phone B3264 a Qreat Man IP -jo : t I rV V