I'llKSDAY. 1MAKCH 23. 1937. PMtn 1111,' ItVIIV N 1,'ltlJ A dk' A INI 1 Societu diJbLt Ubiqinia. (bvd&Mon. SEEN ON THE CAMPUS. It might be a good idea If the A. T. O. who uses the muscle builder every night pulls down his shade before his Identity is dis covered. . . .the Beta's were a mite surprised the other evening when they were serenaded by the Phi Psis under the very capable leadership of Al Souders we hear tell that the waitresses at the Pasty were plenty perturbed Sat urday when Jay Ramsey, Sigma Nu, started having fun with choco late pie and stuff... a group of Phi Delts looking into a yawning hole and indulging in a few dreams of the house to be...Dicli Paul still being reticent about the way his face got to the present battered state it may be the magazine articles advocating a sylph-like figure for spring but Doris Brisco and Lois Dietrich are dieting in a big way and begrudg ing every bite the sisters take.... Dave Bernstein's new pale green felt hat seemed a size too small after Kay Hendy made a few ad miring remarks. . .Margaret Bilby and Ruth Houston limping up and down stairs, suffering from the effects of a recent horseback ride. Delta Phi Delta Meets Today. Members of' Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity, will hold their regular monthly business meeting Tuesdav. March 23. at 4 o'clock 204 Morrill hall. A pledge service will be held immediately after the meeting. Delta Theta Phi Initiates. Delta Theta Phi announces the Initiation of Carl Matschullat of Page and Lowell Jackson of Bene dict. The initiation was held Fri day. March 19. in the English room of the Lincoln hotel. Three Fraternities Initiate. Beta Theta Pi initiated 16 pledges Saturday into the active chapter. New initiates are: Allen Armbruster. Robert Armstrong. John Bass. Paul Bradley. William Cochran, Richard DeBrown. Roy Broyhill. Orval Hager, Arthur Raber. Wirt Salthouse, Theodore "Your Drug Store" Drug store ftecdi at the Right Price H.'ic Bryino vulnl&e 29e Aika-Seizci 49c 49c Bromo-Slr.er .. 30c Listerlne Tootn Hasre 19c ..uc Vtck'n Vapo Rub 29c TV t.istenne Antiseptic 59c rparm Tooth Past 39 You will enjoy our fine Box Chocolat'a. Noon lunches t our New Fountain The Owl Pharmacy P St. al 14th Phone B10S tt Deliver THIS WEEK Tuesday. Gamma Phi Beta 1 o'clock luncheon at chapter house. Wednesday. Theta Sigma Phi alumnae, Mr. A. K. Donovan, 7:30 o'clock. Thursday. Alpha Chi Omega mothers' club 1 o'clock luncheon at chap ter house. Pi Kappa Alpha auxiliary, 1 o'clock dessert luncheon at chapter house. Alpha Delta Theta mothers' club, 1 o'clock no host luncheon, chapter house. Welton, John Krausc, Frank Tall man, John Weingarten, Charles Rice, and John Folsom. Kappa Sigma held initiation service Sunday morning at the chapter house. Those initiated are: Bob Flory. Max Gould, Bob Hall. Dick Hitchcock, John Freden hagen, Bob Rothwell, and Jack Dowling. Sigma Phi Epsilon initiated the following men on Sunday: Julian Bors, Richard Carter, William Ko venda, William Pfeiff, Truman Spencer, Lloyd Dunlap. Don Dur fee, and Milton Mastalier. Engagements. Weddings. The engagement of Mateel Stein of Sioux City to Preston Allen Polsky of Lincoln was announced Sunday. Miss Stein has attended the University of Nebraska where she was pledged to Sigma Delta Tau. She was also a member of Gamma Alpha Chi, national adver tising sorority. Mr. Polsky has also been a student at the univer sity. Steinmeier-Morrison. Imogere Steinmeir of Ansley announces her engagement and ap proaching marriage to Russell C. Morrison of Lincoln. Miss Stein meier is a graduate of the Univer sity of Nebraska law school and has been admitted to the bar. She is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Morrison is a gradu ate of the college of business ad ministration at Nebraska and a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The couple will live in Blair after the wedding which will take place in May. Owens-Frey. The marriage of Musetta Owens to Clarence Frey which took place July 11 at St. Joseph. Mo., was announced Sunday by the parents of the bride. Mr. Frey is a senior at the University of Nebraska. Martin-Krause. Thurza Martin of Lincoln and Wayne Krause. former student at the university and a Sigma Nu pledge were married Feb. 27 at Glenwood, la. The couple will re side in Lincoln. Regular Features in THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Around and About J iritlt Sarah l.ouite MfjT Mo?l Your Senator hy Harold Niemann Inquiring Reporter hy Merrill Englund The Vrcss hy Morrii l.ipp : Shuck 1j hy Ed Slrrtrt llarharisms fcj t red Harm Musical Footnotes hy George Kimball Seen on the Campus hy Virginia Anderton Seen on Ag Campus hy Marion Hopper I Campus Caps and ovns hy Dorothy llentt and ': Dorothea Fulton Around Washington hy Martin Cox. All' Counselor's Corner hy Student I'atoi Krowsing Among the Books by Hemic Kauffman Quotable Quotes Airciated Collegiate Prrt Contemporary Comment College Exchange University IVotes yew and feature Sertire Seen On Ag Campus. Darrell Bauder insisting on ex ploring the second floor of one of the sorority houses doesn't he know it's considered "No Man's Land?". .. .Prom girl Adiienne Griffith posing as "Calamity Jane" with Leo Cooksley as "Wild Bill Hickok" the other night... Lois Lichliter with Adrian Lynn at the spring party. . .LeRoy Hultquist relying on the brothers to remem ber the name of his Friday night date . . . Betty Stewart still can't make good Swedish coffee, so Howard says...Prot. H. P. Davis the most popular chaperon on the campus. . .Practically all of Ag college crawling out of bed and going to the seven o'clock pre- Easter breakfast Farmhouse fellows coming in shifts to F.ng lish classes. It's your turn Wed nesday, Chris Sanders. .. .Roger Cunningham and Erik Thor tak ing advantage of the masquerade ball to appear with someone dif ferent Thane Davis startled to find some men cruel enough to command that their wives be put to death ... Everyone planning to turn out for the rally Tuesday night. The rumors that it is to be extra-special good seem to have convinced even the most studious people that they should come. a Greek Dinners Feature Week-End. A round of founders day dinners, initiation banquets, teas for visit ing officials ami spring parties kept members of university sorori ties and fraternities busy over the week-end. Kappa Alpha Theta. On Saturday in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of its founding and also in honor of thir ten initiates, Kappa Alpha Theta : met at the University club for a ! banquet with 150 actives and alumnae present. A special guest was Mrs. D. Bligh Grassett of Winnetka, 111., grand president of the sorority. Mrs. George Grimes of Omaha presided as toastmist reas and the entertainment con sisted of a skit by Lincoln alum nae. The sorority colors of black and gold and the sorority flower were used as table appointments. Kappa Alpha Theta entertained at a tea Sunday afternoon at the chapter house for Mrs. Grassett. 125 guests were present, including actives, alumnae and a house mother and president of every sorority on the campus. Kappa Delta. Another tea on Sunday was J Kappa Delta at the chapter house honoring Miss Frances Kendig of Kenbridge, Va., national inspector. One hundred guests were invited. The appointments on the tea ta ble were in green and white with gardenias and white tapers as the centerpiece. Miss Helen Tuttle and Mrs. John Beachly poured. Miss endig will be in Lincoln un til Thursday. Kappa Sigma. Following the formal initiation Sunday morning of Kappa Sigma pledges at the chapter house, a banquet honoring the new initi ates was held at the Lincoln hotel. About 40 active and alumni mem bers attended and several informal talks were made. Seaman A. I fhllclUU, tll.NLIICL IMailll lllrtrtLCI 111 i Kappa Sigma, was a special guest. Alpha Sigma Phi. Entertaining at a Hawaiian party in the Cornhu.sker ballroom .Saturday evening was Aplia Sigma Phi fraternity. Three hundred couples were present at the affair which was chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Hollister and Mr. and Mrs. Danna Cole. Preceding the spring party members of the active chapter entertained their dates al a dinner at the University club. Hawaiian leis in various colors and palm trees in the ballroom carried out the Hawaiian theme. Delta Upsilon. Delta Upsilon fraternity enter tained at an initiation dinner at the Comhusker Saturday evening, following formal initiation at the chapter house in the afternoon. Dr. R. W. Bliss of Omaha, a charter member, addressed the group. A closed house party was held at the house in honor of the new initi ates following the banquet. Beta Theta Pi. At the Capital hotel Saturday HXI active and alumni members held a banquet in honor of the new initiates of Beta Theta Pi. Initia tion was held in the afternoon. Kdear S. Wescott as toastmaster introduced Dr. Palmer Findley of Omaha and Kenneth Wherry of Pawnee City who were the guest speakers. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The annual founders day ban quet of Sigma Alpha Epsilon whs another large affair of the week end. The banquet was held at the Lincoln with a large group of out-ol-town alumni In attendance as well as local alumni and actives. Roy Lyman served as toastmaster and sneakers were C. K. Ttft. F.arl Kagei t. Kenneth Hawkins, j Raymond Weller and Sam Francis. I Initiation t new members was! MOVIE nnti:cToiiY IJiCOLi "Wlion's Your Hirtluhij " OIIPIIEULM " Diiiniiffrtl Lives' "Mil ii of tlio lYople" STUAKT "Love Is News" VAHSITY "Head Over lloils In Love" "Counterfeit Laily'' Brower, Fullerton; Betty Jean Davidson, Casper, Wyo.; Ernestine Gard. St. Joseph, Mo.; Maxinc Grant, Onawa. Ia.; Betty Hed strom, Deadw'ood, S. D.; Janet Lau, Lincoln; Mary Margaret' Maly, Lincoln; Barbara Meyer, Omaha,- Virginia Smythe, St. Jos eph, Mo.; Nan Talbot, Lincoln; Virginia Wheeler, Glenwood, la., and Lucy Jane Williams, York. 1). I'.'s Hed-e Ed Shuck. Delta Upsilon recently pledged Edward Shuck, a freshman from Lincoln. -tit Two Students Will Be Married. Miss Patricia Hcrrick. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Herrick of Omaha, will be married May 8 to Donald M. Starnes of Cheyenne. Wyo. Miss Herrick was affiliated with Kappa Alpha Theta and Mr. Starnes with Kappa Sigma and Phi Delta Phi. national honorary law fraternity. After their mar riage the couple will reside in Cheyenne, Wyo. Skiing is the most "body bruis ing" sport at Harvard University. In the annual report of the Hy giene department it was found that skiiers suffered the most in juries. Football men had no serious injuries. Operatic Numbers Feature Student Program at Temple Theater. Walter Reusch, baritone student with W. G. Tempel, presented a voice recital at the Temple theater last evening. Assisting Reusch were Duane Harmon, cornetist, and Ruth Freiss, accompanist. Two operatic selections were chosen by Mr. Reusch to open his program, "Avant de Quitter Ces Lieux Cavatina" from "Faust," by Gounod, and the recitative and aria, "Vision Fugitive" from Mas senet's "Herodlade." Included in the second division of the tecital were "Willow Echoes" by Simon, "Inflammatus" (Stabat Mater) by Rossini, and Schubert's "Serenade." Four Ger man compositions made up the third section of the program, "Morgen-Hymne" by Henschel, "Zueignung" by Strauss, "Llcht" by Sinding, and Tschaikowsky's "Nur wer Die Sehnsucht Kennt." For the final part of his recital Mr. Reusch sang "My Lady Walks in Loveliness" by Charles, "Brown October Ale" from "Robin Hood," a light opera by DeKoven, "Noc turne" from "Over the Rim of the Moon," and "Hi Gaucho," a num ber from the "Song of the Open Road" by Malotte. ALBERfSCHlERTO HEAD BAND HONORARY IN THE INI IIOIAKV. MONDAY. James W. Knight, Omaha. Eugene Doolittle, Anselmo. Robert Chatt, Tekamah. DISMISSED. Myrna Athey, Geneva. Virgil Poch, Geneva. Jack Mack, Scottsbluff. Gamma Lambda Members Schedule Smoker For April 7. Albert Schroeder, junior in the college of engineering, was elected president of Gamma Lambda, hon orary band fraternity, at a meet ing held late recently. Other officers elected were: Clinton Sturdevant, vice president; Erie Constable, secretary; William Gil lespie, treasurer; and Robert Chambers and Charles Minnick, corresponding secretaries. Schroeder, Sturtevant, Cham bers, Minnick, and Stanley Michael will compose the executive com mittee of the organization for the present session. Plans were also made at the meeting for the all band smoker which will be held April 7. A "No Cigarette Bumming Leaguo" has been formed on the campus of Louisiana State uni versity. League members promised not to bum or be bummed from. I Bumming of "drags" is permitted. WHEN IS A SKUNK NOT A SKINK? ASK ANY WPA IOWAN There's a lot of difference be tween a skink and a skunk. True, both are black and white stripes, but it's a lot more fun to jerk the tail of a skink. A skunk is well, a skunk. But a skink is a lizard, a very uncommon lizard, which has been found hibernating in Iowa for the first time. When you yank the tail of a skink, he snaps it off and scurries away. At least that's what one did that Thomas Scott, Iowa State College extension wild life conser vationist, tried to catch. This skink was one of more than 50 -found by WPA workers in a gravel pit refuse pile in Palo Alto county. The skinks were hiberna ting in a compact mass the size of a football about 4 1-2 feet below the surface. Harmless to everything but in sects, the skink is so uncommon a lizard that very little is known about it. Like other lizards, it is covered with scales. DR. HOLCK TO DESCRIBE USE OFBAR BITURATES Dental Association to Hear Talk on New Discovery Wednesday. Dr. Harold Hoick of the phar macy college faculty will address the meeting of the Lincoln Dis trict Dental society at the Coin husker hotel March 25. He will speak, he said, on the old and new bar biturates. These medicines are used by dentists to quiet the nerves of nervous pa tients, and in recent years to pro duce brief anaesthesia. Some pa tients become very afraid when they have to have dental work done. The bar biturates soothe their nerves. The effect produced upon the patients is very much like hypnosis, which is also used by some dentists. Virginia Amos Presents Senior Hecilal Tonight Virginia Amos will present a senior recital Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock at Temple theater. Her dramatic reading will be the play "What Every Woman Knows" by J. M. Barrie. New Deal Barber Shop IIAIIICUT 35c 1306 O Street MISS SHANAFELT LEAVES FOR EASTERN INTERVIEWS To Visit Scientific Schools; Meet Nationally Known Puppeteers. Miss Marjorle Shanafclt, cura tor of visual education at the Uni versity of Nebraska, left Sunday night for a three-weeks visit to various eastern centers where she will spend much of her time in terviewing nationally known pup peteers and visiting several of the large scientific institutions of the country. She will stop at Washington D. C, New York City, Albany, where the New York state mu seum Is located, Rochester, the Field Museum at Chicago and va rious other centers including the James L. Clark studios where the University of Nebraska's African mounts are prepared. While in New York City Miss Shanafelt will visit Mr. and Mrs. C. Bertrand Schultz. Schultz, a member of the Nebraska museum staff, is completing some research in the Frick laboratories of the American Museum of Natural Historv. c LAbblHED ADVERTISING 10c L,NE LOST P;i!'kr desk hnse for fountain Pen. T.cft in the post office at Tcm nln Theater. Kinder plense return to the Daily Nebruskun Business Man ager. Heward. For Economy Use The Evans THRIF-T Only Sy2c per lb. Mm. bdl., 10 lbs., 63c . Flat Work Ironed Shirts Finished 10c B6961 Laundry Cleaning Miriam Hopkins says: "My throat welcomes Luckies my favorite cigarette tor 5 years 'if f-, vy: VC"" ' 'L "'mm ' ' ' , A ly '"""'my lT 'Luckies have been my favorite cigarette for about 5 years. They're a light smoke that sensitive throats welcome. Of the many trends that siveep through Holly wood, one of the longest lasting has been the preference for Luckies. I once asked a 'property' man who supplies ciga rettes to the actorswhat the favorite is. He answered by opening up a box con' taining cigarettes. They were all Luckies.' STAR OF THE RKO RADIO FICTURE "THE WOMAN I LOVE" -jy. held during the afternoon and the banquet was held also in honor of the new initiates. I Initiation I Mil ly Alpha Xi I)-ltt:i. The active members or Alpna XI Delta held formal initiation Sunday at the chapter house. ; Those initiated v.ete: Lois Callan, Omaha; Hel'-n Lively. Wymorc; Arlenc Magnusen, Lincoln; Mar gery Manchester, Omaha; Rilla Mae Nevin. Custer. S. D.; Lois Owens, North Platte. n m Gamma I'lii'a Initiate Eight Mfwnhrr. Saturday afternoon tie active chapter of Gamma Phi Beta held formal initiation. Eight girls were initiated. They include: Lorraine. AUhands. Lincoln; Lucille Beach, Lincoln: Betty Ann Cary. Lincoln; Carolyn Kennedy, Sidney; Dorothy Koser. Omaha: Helen Kovanda, Elk Creek; Marian Nelson, Blair, and Velma Neu, Lincoln. Fourteen Initiated lnl I) C. Delta Gamma held formal initia- ; tion Saturday at th chapter house. Fourteen were inniareo, incni'iinjt. j l Elinor Anderson, lloldiege; Marie i Aji independent survey was made recently among professional men and women lawyers, doctors, lecturers, scientists, etc. Of those who said they smoke cigarettes, more than 87 stated they personally prefer a light smoke. Miss Hopkins verifies the wisdom of this pref erence, and so do other leading artists of the radio, stage, screen and opera. Their voices are their fortunes. That's why so many of them smoke Luckies. You, too, can have the throat pro tection of Luckies a light smoke, free of certain harsh irritants removed by the exclusive process 'It's Toasted". Luckies are gentle on the throat. THE FINEST TOBACCOS "THE CREAM OF THE CROP" A Light Smoke "Ifs Toasted" -Your Throat Protection AGAINST IRFClTATION-AGAINST COUGH r r-,ty I 7 Tii- l-Tur T-' i'" . '