FOUR fcdiioL, UiAqimcL CUxdoAADih SKKN ON THK CAMPLE. Adolo Bvers ami John KdwaiMs decklinj; that 11 o'clock classes arc unnecessary evils and tlomj; a hasty about face out of V hall... Virginia Wheeler falling asleep at Cneil Counsellors and her V. Ci. sisters tiptoeing out so as not to disturb her... A group of Convo cation Concert Rocrs tryinR to es cape at intermission and finding the door blocked by the teacher. . . Prof. Belt's discourse, about chang ing .standards of feminine pulchri tude and the remark that the medieval madonnas would be To dav's wallflowers, if they got that far... Betty Moss decidedly against mercy killing and capi tal punishment and ready to ar gue with anyone at the least pro vocation ... Sarah Louise Meyer being made special emissary to eonvev Lewis Cass1 lovo to Mil dred Lawrence... Mickey Darner alternating with Martha Mont gomery in a triangular affair with Kcta-'s'Weldon and Holy. . .Harold lingers asleep on a bench in Mor rill hall. .. Dutch !ichstadt going to the wnmg l',rls-s for Uvo w,,pks: niavbe philosophy is too deep for vmi Dutch. . .Requests pouring in to keep certain names out of the column, suppression of news we calls it and it's "agin" our policy. a- SIGMA CUT mothers club will honor active members and their dates at a buffet supper at the chapter house Sunday night. Feb. 1 Decorations will follow the val entine theme. Mrs. Cora Bent ley is in charge ot arrangements. The supper will begin at 6 o'clock. : ARRIVING vesterday for a few days' visit with Fi Beta Phi was Mrs James K. Webster of Gales burg 111. Mrs. Webster is assistant to the Grand President of Pi Beta Phi. She will be entertained at the c hapter house at tea this after noon from 4 to 6 o'clock. PHI GAMMA Delta fraternity announces the formal pledging of Clement Waldron of Omaha. il; THE INSTALLATION of offi cers for the second semester of Pi Beta Phi was held early this week. New officers are: president. Helen Hewitt: vice president, Helen Fox: treasurer. Kda Clare Maxwell: re cording secretary. Mary Jane Wil son: corresponding secretary, Janet Caldwell: pledge supervisor, Puth Van Slyke: and social chair man. Rita Alger. PHI CHI TH ETA, women's pro fessional business sorority, held an initiation recently in FJlen Smith hall. Those inita'ted were Harriet Cummers, Pat. Jensen, Ina Jack son, Margaret Patterson, and Ger nldinc Moore. CHARLES H. ABBOT, a grad uate of the university and a former resident of Lincoln, has been com missioned to tour 20 Latin-American republics inviting them to par ticipate in the Texas and Pan American exposition to be held June 12 in Dallas. Abbot now en gaged in oil business and Texas politics was a former newspaper man at Houston. Texas. . . . WORK on the Cornhusker is progressing rapidly if results can be indicated by I 'at Lahr'S lit erary efforts at the Moon. . . j. THE BODY of Kevin Kermit Olsen. a naval cadet aviator who j was drowned in a plane crash. ! will lie brought to Fremont, his home town, for burial. Olsen was a graduate of the university where j he received liis bachelor of science and electrical enginering degrees in IS.';::. He was affiliated with Delta Tan Delta fraternity. PHI DELTA THETA mothers: club met recently at the home of: Mrs. N. F. Bab.son. A social hour: followed the business meeting. ' t j . . . THREE GUESSES as to j whether or nut Margaret Harvey j is wearing" Acacia Fred Hodie's : fraternity pin in concealment ... MISS MARJORIE FOPE ol . Chadron was married yesterday to' Philip C. Fikkan of Knimett. Ida. ; Mrs. Fikkan attended the ntiiver- . sity and was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. The eon-' pie will make their home in Nam- pa, Ida. ALUMNAE of Alpha Delia Tlieta met at the home of Mrs Sarah Kste.v Assisting the hostess; wn.TMiss Mildred Huff. Miss Jose-I plune Jelen of Omaha spoke on her ( recent trip to tin; Hawaiian Is lands. AT A MOTHERS CLI'B meet-1 Ing at. the Alpha Xi Delta chapter house a 2 o'clock tins afternoon, Mrs. C. D. Leonard and Mrs. Ida: Magnu-fon will be hostesses. ! I: ,'.i i VALENTINES SivesdhscUiL A I.:i rye Select inn a I'fJ I 'l'f Su ectliejil't hI From Which lo fluinc Hi I I EASTMAN Societu THIS WEEK ThursGay. Sigma Phi Epsilon auxiliary luncheon, 1 o'clock, at the chapter house. Sigma Alpha Epsilon mothers club luncheon, 1 o'clock, at the home of Mrs. H. R. Williams, 2635 South. Alpha Xi Delta, mothers club, 2 o'clock, at the chapter house. Friday. Delta Gamma mothers club luncheon, 1 o'clock, at th chapter house. Phi Mu mothers club lunch eon, 1 o'clock, at the chapter house. Beta Theta Pi dinner dance at the Lincoln. Delta Delta Delta formal at the Cornhusker. Saturday. Chi Omega formal at the Cornhusker. SEEN ON a; CAMPl S. By Marian Hoppcrt. Frank Shipman roaming around alone lately ... Maxine Trump and Kleanor Green exercising their vo cal cords on the steps in the Home Kc. building ... Krik Thor wishing he could take, over this column just for a day... Jeanne Palmer trying to learn how to cook. . .Frank Svoboda a good 0 minutes late for Kd urn lion 63... Kiithanna Russell drawing on the walls of Campus lnn...Ogden Riddle peeved because Genevieve Bennett brought LeRoy Hultquist homo the other night... Wyona Keim unconsciously answering "here" when called upon to recite ...Lois Cooper unhesitantly nam ing all the parts of the eye... Si Parks, with mouth wide, open, holding open the Dairy Industry door while the whole chemistry class filed out... Boots, boots, boots. more and more girls arc wearing them on the campus... Genevieve. Johnson looking espe cially pert in a bright green tunic dress ... Everyone reserving Fri day night to dance to the music of Paul Moorhead's orcestra at the Ak-Sar-Ben ball. . .Wonder who the three were who didn't vote for Melvin Beerman for president of the 4-H club. . .It's going to lie a tough job for "Biff" Jones to keep Ted Doyle's mind on football next fall from the looks of things now. It's a blank. A VALENTINE motif will serve as table decorations when the Phi Gamma Delta mothers club enter tains at a buffet supper Sunday evening at the chapter for actives and pledges. AROUND AND ABOUT (Continued from Page J.) oils defeat. The era of the mas sive, he-muscled woman athlete is in rapid wane, with perhaps Kleanor Holm Jarrctt the most publicized representative of the new deal. Chief advocate of the new school is Paul Gallico, spoils writer, who set the feminine athletic and other worlds afire not too long ago by announcing firmly that women in sports should be beautiful. It was his opinion that in most prevalent athletics women are unlovely to behold both in action and in the bedraggled aftermath. He favors such graceful pastimes as archery, horseback riding and backstroke swimming lyricizing pretty faces framed in white churning water. If our own Miss Lee knew how university gals dread the chance disillusionment of some susceptible male when they're caught in bil loway gi -en rompers or a cotton one piece bathing suit, there'd be some changes made hereabouts. And pronto. A game is a game, but. . . In this week's Saturday Re view of Literature Christopher Morley discusses "The Avon Flows" by "Shakespeare and George Jean Nathan." The play is an attempt to determine what might have happened to Romeo and Juliet 'had they lived to bear the fardels of matri mony." The first act of the drama is taken from "Romeo and Juliet" the second from "Othello" (if you can imagine it), and the third from "The Taming of the Shrew." In com menting on the work Mr. Morley says, "If you had just the right kind of audience, how they would enjoy it which is, as Nathan der Wcise knows, the most hopeless praise for a play." But even so, we are inclined to agree with the reviewer that we should "admire to see" the play. . "Ma, a comic strip character in a local paper, says that if a man . . . resists temptation, all on earth the temptation has to do is to put on a little more perfume." Such temptation, we notice, is "always welcome" around the publications offices. Vox We 1 1 ,i c Sieci;il Vnleiitines Kcir Kvcr.x ? 1 tut I -r (if 1 Ik K.'iinii.x KODAK STORES, INC. 1217 O Street nn 11 iiiii 1 iiii i i ii i ii i i ii ii ii i ii ii'ii ii i n i i i n in . i , i i i u n i i i i i n i u ii VIII I II II I I'll I Vllfll I V II I U I V H L. U I LM1 I M 11-11 IW I JIU,UUU bin OVVLLLO Money to Go Toward New Equipment for Hixon Laboratory. LAWRENCE. Kas. Two gifts to the University of Kansas, each of $5,000, were announced recently by Prof. Olin Templin, secretary of the Kansas University Endow ment association. One was an additional gift to provide equipment for the Hixon laboratory for medical research now being completed at the Uni versity of Kansas hospitals at Kansas City, and the other was from the esate of the late Aldie Haver of ElDorado. Erection of the Hixon labora tory was made possible by a gift of $20,000 from friends of the school of medicine, $27,700 of PWA work, and $13,856 from ac cumulated fees of the University hospital, making total construc tion cost $61,556. The added $5,000 will make it possible to provide some of the highly technical equip ment needed for a medical labora tory. Miss Haver, from whose estate the other gift comes, died recently at ElDorado. She was a member of a pioneer family of Butler county, and left some $300,000 in be quests. In addition to the gift to the university, she listed in her will the Methodist church, the" Al len Memorial hospital of ElDor ado. and other organizations and individuals. The will specifies that the in come from the $5,000 shall be used for scholarships for some male graduate of ElDorado high school, who at the time the scholarship is awarded, is pursuing a course in law or in medicine at the Univer sity of Kansas. Check for the money has just been received, and as soon as iti can be invested, and make suit able return, a scholarship will be j awarded. VARSITY SQUAD BEGIN SERIES OF DEBATES (Continued from Page 1.) Kansas State, while a third team will journey to Knox college in G.'.lesburg. 111., for a debate there. On Feb. IS one Nebraska team will meet Kansas State before the Kiwanis club and the Brown coun ty farm bureau of Sabetha, Kas. The other local team will meet another squad from the Kansas university on Feb. 19, at which time the debate will be broadcast over radio station KFEO of St. Joseph, Mo. Meanwhile, the third Nebraska team will jcurney to Chicago for a debate with Chi cago university and Northwest ern university after leaving Gales burg, 111. At the same time on the Ne braska campus another debate squad will be engaged in a debate with representatives of the Uni versity of South Dakota. This debate will take place Feb. 18 in the Social Science auditorium. March activities will include a debate with West Virginia March 10. in either Lincoln or Omaha. Debates have also been tentative ly scheduled with the University of Colorado on March 22, and with Michigan Stale later in the month. April activities of the forensic department will be taken up by a legislative assem bly of Iowa State. Y.W.C.A. TEA TO REGIONALOFFICER TODAY Hold Reception for Miss Clara Schwieso, Sec'y., in Ellen Smith Hall. The Y. W. tea honoring Miss Clara Schwieso, Y. W. C. A. re gional secretary, will be. served in Ellen Smith hall this afternoon between the hours of 4 and 5:30 o'clock. Invitation has been issued to both old and new cabinets of the Y. W. C. A., on the city and ag campuses, the advisory board, and the freshman cabinet to attend. Jane. Keefer and Caroline Kile will pour, and will be assisted by Elea nor Hickman, .1argery Manchest er. Rilla Mae Nevin. Lois Owens, Doris Meier, and Iois Callan. Evelyn Taylor is in charge of ar rangements. Ciiniiell college men have found it a dangerous practice to tell their coed friends that those who come from small families are "spoiled." Two out of every three Grinnell girls are the "only chil dren" in the family or one of two children in the home group. Heitkotteri r."" War"1 QUALITY MEATS AT LOW PRICES Makers of Fine Sauiaget and Barbecued Meat T'or Your Friends We Have Funny hie s and Fi'mully Ones THE DAILY NKBKASKAN . MOVIE DIUECTOKY ''Beloved Enemy'' oikiiii:ijm 4 -Rembrandt" STUART "One In n Million" VAIIS1TY "Theodora Goes Wild" Names Communism as One Cause of Breakdown in South. Discussing Christianity's rivals in Mexico, ft. B. Henry, Presby terian student secretary, stated be fore the Presbyterian fireside group last evening that philosophi cal creeds and communism along with personal indifference were bringing about a Christian crisis in the countries of the South. "Indifference to religion in Mex ico," stated Mr. Henry, "is not of the same type as it is in the United States. Indifference there may be illustrated by the statue of Christ, the "Lord of the Lock," a figure of Christ with a padlock on his lips, which signifies that the people want to worship God but they want him to keep quiet. They want to believe in Christian ity, but they do not want to prac tice it." Following Mr. Henry's talk, the group joined in fireside discussion of the problem of Mexico and of Christianity. ENGINEERS HEAR TALK ON USE OF EXPLOSIVES Harold Hofner Elected to the Presidency of Chemistry Organization. "Use of Explosives" was the topic upon which Col. C. J. Frank furter based his talk to the mem bers of the Chemical Engineering society in its regular meeting Wdnesday evening. Colonel Frankforter spoke at some length on the industrial and military uses of explosives, dem onstrating his lecture with ignition and detonation of sample charges. He told members of the organiza tion what part chemical engineers play in the field of explosives. Election of officers was taken up in the business meeting that followd the address of the evening. Officers elected for the second se mester are Harold Hofner, presi dent; Miller Fidwell. vice presi dent; Paul Linstedt, secretary; Richard Rose, treasurer. William Reichardt was appoint ed chairman of Engineering week for the Chemical Engineering so ciety. STi nKMS SIGH WIT1 1 HKIJKF AS MUMPS DEPAKT The students of Nebraska breathe deeply once more. Again they have come thru an epidemic of contagious diseases unscathed. For the last month and a half, in fluenza, mumps, and scarlet fever forced many students to take va cations. Thursday, only four students were confined to the infirmary be cause of the flu, all of whom were much better. This is quite an im provement, as there has been an average of 10 to 12 flu patients in thp infirmary since the holi days. Scarlet fever and the mumps seem to have left too, no new cases having been reported. The remaining few mumps convales cents are much improved. Dr. R. A. Lyman, head of the student health department, ex pressed his belief that the flu. as well as the other contagious dis eases, are gone for the season. The student health department is still on the lookout for an epidemic of the measles, which usually makes its appearance late in the winter. i 1 - 'Wow... Man!' I think we've got something here!! 2 BIG FEATURES STAUTISC. JiMh RAYE GIRL" nith SHIRLCY ROSS ROB'T CUWMINCS Monroe 2nd feature Vf DOROTHY STUDIES 1935AAU. FIELD MEET MOVE Coach Schulte Points Out Running of Owens, Cunningham. As a reward for its faithful work, the Husker indoor track team was given a treat yesterday in the form of a movie which showed the highlights of the Na tional A. A. U. track and field tourney held in 1935 at Memorial stadium. While the group of 35 cindermen were viewing the pic tures, Coach Henry Schulte point ed out the fine points and mis takes of the concerned perform ers. Some of the well known track men depicted on the screen were Jesse Owens, Ohio Slate Negro, who inscribed his name in the na tional sports annals at the Olym pic games last summer; Ralph Metcalfe, the Marquette Negro sprinter; Glenn Cunningham, for mer Kansas U. miler and now a runner in this event in the east, and Eulace Peacock, Temple IJ. Negro who took first place in the 100-yard dash of the '35 A. A. U. track tournament. Several events in the 1934 Big Six outdoor track and field cham pionships were also flashed on the screen for the edification of the Nebraska team aspirants. At the conclusion of the movie, several trackmen took light workouts. The Husker will get their first taste of indoor conference com petition F(b. 20. when Coach Bill Hargiss arrives here with his Kan sas Jayhawks. TO FRESHMAN A.W.S. Ag Leader Describes Work of Farmer's Annual Spring Show. Describing the activities and or ganization of the Farmer's Fair. Clyde White, chairman of the Farmer's Fair board, addressed members of the freshman A. YV. S. at their weekly meeting held Wednesday afternoon in t h e drawing room at Ellen Smith hall. The Farmer's Fair, which is put on solely by agricultural stu dents, was started 16 years ago and is held the first week in May. White staled. The fair is man aged by a senior board composed of three men and three women, and a junior board with the same number of members. They are advised by a board composed of three faculty men and three fac ulty women. Another advisory board which aids the students is made up of prominent people in the state. Exhibits Show Progress. Numerous exhibits depicting the progress of agriculture and the work being done by the vari ous departments on the agricul tural campus are seen at the fair, according to White. Each year a budget is sub mitted and every effort is made by the managers to keep within its limits. Among the various activities sponsored by the fair are a pa geant, a parade, a horse show, the intersorority riding contest, and a dance. The pageant was started in 1932. and is directed and participated in by students on the agricultural campus. The pa rade usually includes the latest types of farm machinery, live stock, and several bands. last year the horse show was intro duced, incorporated with the in tersorority riding contest. Plans for this year's fair, ac- Between Classes Stop for a Fingfr r f Wave . JV 0-v 3 Drrnc. Rpcnndi. . tiening Oil. Cii- tile. Filch' Shampoo CAt Wave V Only two blocks from c.impus EKPTitnced Operators. Open EveJ. 219 No. 12th St., 1st Floor . Orpheum Beauty Salon B2796 TOMOIimtU J Homing H r if If r irilh Thrtr Start "llIC It It O A It-CAST "Si .ii i Mi.' MARTHA "BE LOVED ENEMY" "HIDEAWAY OWSLEY 7 in llrauliful . . . Cxotic ... nlmiir.l I, -main Tartan Stvht a Malf'.'. LAMOUR RAY MiLLAu iiiiiiisn w. Marcus Show Pimlcd On Siukp t Orpin'""" rtuth cihiist -La Vie rare. " is what you might call an "eye-filling" girls show. There are scenes that fairlv "glitter'' with ensembles of women in bespangled attire. In one specialty number they fill the stage befeathcred as birds of colorful plumage ai'd hover about in a gilded cage. It is not necessary for Man.us ensembles lo dance. They just appear The "piece de resist ance" of the program is the silver scene inspired by Ha Cha San, billed as "nudity in silver." It is quite spectacular. Ha Cha San proves the exception ti the rule in that she discloses her prowess as a contort i"ni.'t. Tnc favorite of the show was Leon Miller, dancing comedian. From a distance his eyes arn like Eddie Cantor's. He prob ably knows it and takes ad vantage of it. He made a hit with the audience in his si lo appearance in which he did throe old dance numbers and three more by request. The adagio dancers also offer one of the several good features of the Marcus progiam. A. H. cording to White, include a new variety show and a bigger and better' horse show. The fair conies on Mav 8 this year. Rilla' Mae Nevin presided at the meeting, with Maxine Lake as secretary. At the close of the meeting." Eleanor Whitney was chosen to act as chairman at the next meeting. Rose Hill will as sist her as secretary. Xvrn V.. Wiijdoi! Yiil Omaha rnnriil (1a Miss Vera E. Rigdun. instructor in geography ami extension, went to Omaha Wednesday lo lecture befote a 'lass in economic geog raphy, under the auspices of the Oniaiia Municipal university. The subject was "Resources and In dustries of the Laurentian Region of Canada." c LASSIFIED ADVERTISING 10C PR LINE I'.riO.M fur Iv.ii .... Street. i:.3.-. L')ST A: luiT l-'r.-iionii! v F:hin" St"iif I.: :ie..i.t 1 1 1 ; i f 1 1 1 1 . mi" l.iij.-'! i 1 1 k M'l. Cull i: T'.Ov LEON 0 1 TOMORROW- A gA A ''''r't-lhlr t Yt-popping hnl,ri;iy ... A F f W 9 curtain o( lumg qiru! $100,000 pctu ill Jk m', L f 5 invested m (iDO maflnif ie?nt costumes: A . I eV,vr i -see- '"1 yt VVtf ' 1 L'lidfi the Ancialusian Moon I 4 W Trees Les enqueues Oe Fenmis . I k M,'" "' S'U'' 1-2 P.M. plj if' I I! r-...... .... ..... ) 1 c a M V lit " .'io mi jigu,. , h.imij Cuyd .mrj his Ji(uj.. Tne Btltoidt. S.-.-ike K.le, N'.im.m .nui Hintin Sitteri. tl ar-n OeVi.es. f ,d Oorman E-n McAtee. Micl.ey King. Di.li White, Sif.a Al,nez, Lei S. t r. in. - f F 1 35c ! J H 1i Christ, The k Olivei, G-o.;:i C-:ui'y. r.ch;; ri&G&v Ht, ii.. JN!! TAILV "0FF T0 THE RACES' bh"lcf P"'"' Sl.m SummtevMI. fkmhiahv n. vm. cTiinruTQ wu qtatc 111 I I . 1 II III .11 M I I POETRY COMPETITION Bolker Takes First Place in Ted Malone Radio Verse Contest. First and second prizes ami live honorable mention awards went to University of Nebraska students in the state intercollegi. ale poetry contest conducted dur. ing January and announced on Ted Malonc's program of poetry over the Columbia broadcasting system on Thursday, Jan. 2s, 1937. First honors in the state com. petition among seven stale eo. leges was awarded to Norman Bolker for his poem "Morning, ' part two of "Section Gang." Edith Grubman won second place with her poem, "Let me not to the marriage of true minds admit im pediments. . . Judges of the contest, Joseph Auslander, associate editor of tin North American Quarterly Re view, and Audrey Wurdemann, rulitzer poetry prize winner of 1935, advised Ted Malone the Ne braska poems were some of the finest college verse they have ever read. Honorable mention was given the following Nebraska students for their submitted verse: C. Rob ert Weaver, "To a Virgin of the. Orient": Gertrude F. Richards, "Tommy": Helen M. Jorgensen, "Transiency": Ethel Stout. "A ban don.'' and 'Lucy E. Weir, "Where Is Peace?" Thirteen other students in state colleges also won honorable men tion awards. One was from Has tings college, three from Omaha municipal university, three from Chadron normal, two from York college, two from Kearney State Teachers college. Chancellor K. A. Burnett re cently received a letter from Ma lone ' in which the radio poet thanked the chancellor. I'rof. L. C. Wimberly and the students of the university for their co-operation in the contest. 'Blue Monday" at Louisiana j Tech is more than half blue from the laundryman's point of view. ' of the 1.100-odd men's shirts 'collected each Monday morning j by the school's laundry trucks, more than r7 are that color, ! ranging in shades from mild baby blue to the mighty tones of mid 1 nicht blue. Whitman's Valentine Heart Aim ri'';i s I' "mm ''I -'res!l Sloek .lust Keeeivoii 1.00 and 2.00 WE DELIVER UNI DRUG 14th Si S B3771 MILLER w 1 Crin.lyi. Dorotn ne M .11,11. Dot! 7 4 ftp. X -J UV- J 4 ' j I 3 i i 'f f Q SPECIAL MIDNITE SHOW SAT. 11:30 P. M. O