FOUR TIIE NEBRASKAN MISS MARGARETE C. HOCH DOERFER, instructor in the language department at the Uni versity, and George H. Rogers, of Lincoln, recently secured a mar riage license at San Diego, Calif. AMONG the many mid-July wed dings of University graduates is that of Miss Rhona Smith to Edwin B. Nelson. The ceremony took place Sunday in the chapel of the First Presbyterian church, with 75 guests in attendance. Mrs. Nelson is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority and Mr. Nelson is affiliated with Sigma Alpha Epsi lon. v THE MARRIAGE of Miss Kath- erine James to Gerald Caley will take place August 15. Both are former University students. MISS WILLADENE ANTON will be married August 29 to John Weldon Price. Mr. Price is a senior law student and a member of Phi Alpha Delta. BOTH Miss Esther Brehm and John A. Johnsen, who plan to be married this fall, have attended this University. Their engagement was announced Sunday. ANNOUNCED recently was the engagement and approaching marriage of Miss Lorna Allene Patterson to Robert Allen Schick. Mr. Schick was graduated from the University law college where r he was affiliated with Delta Up silon fraternity. MISS ETHEL M. HANSEN be came the bride of Lowell H. Hurt at a ceremony at the First Pres bytciian church in Cheyenne, VVyo., July 10. Mrs. Hurt is a grad uate of the University. ANOTHER approaching mar riage is that of Miss Eldora Miller to Wesley Johnson. The wedding will take place Aug. 18 at the Bethlehem church at Wa verly. Miss Miller has attended the University. A MEMBER of Kappa Gamma and Sigma Alpha Iota, Miss Esther Kinnett, of Ulysses, will be married Aug. 8 to Norman R. Hillyer. Mr. Hillyer is a graduate of the University and will teach in Omaha next year. B. THOMAS SNIPES who re ceived his B.Sc. degree in agricul ture and M.Sc. in entomology from the University and who received his Ph.D. in entomology this spring from the Iowa State college at Ames, will leave with Mrs. Snipes July 27 for New York from where they will said four days later for Vicosa, Brail. Mr. Snipes has been appointed professor of entomology at Escola, Superiore de Agricul tura e Veterinaria to serve for three years. Mrs. Snipes is a Uni versity graduate rind is a member of Alpha Delta Theta sorority. PERFORMED recently was the y marriage ceremony of Miss Mar garet E. Reuter and Lloyd L. Pos pishil of Schuyler. Mr. Pospishil is a graduate of the University and is county attorney at Schuyler. TURNPIKE M DPPCCUTC IJ H ZZIZ I wmmg B Adm. 83c Ea. Advance at Danielson Floral Co., 1306 N St. Door Adm. $1.10 Each. FRANCIS TOP FBACK IN COLLEGIATE POLL In the first week of a nation wide pole to select an all-star col legiate football team, Sam Fran cis, famous Nebraska gridster, leads the fullbacks with a total of 58,116 votes, it was announced Sunday. Leading the entire field was Louisiana State end, Gaynell Tinsley, with more than 69,000 votes. The team thus chosen, after an other week of balloting, will play in the fourth annual all-star vs. professional game against the Green Bay Packers the night of Sept. 1 at Soldiers' Field, Chicago. Following the player poll, fans will ballot for another two weeks on a coaching staff for the collegiate squad. Other well known grid stars of the past season who rank high in the voting are Averill Daniell and Bill Glassford of Pittsburgh, Ed Widseth and Ray Antil of Minne sota, Merele Wendt of Ohio State, Steve Reid of Northwestern, and many others. Other Cam pi Romeo wooed Juliet on a bal cony because he thought it good psychology; today, they make love on a balcony, not because of the tenderness of it all. but because it costs 35 cents to nit downstairs! Exchange. Because he cribbed on a two hour exam, a student at Nebraska .State college stood up before the 100 members of his zoology class and apologized to them the in structor and the school. By cutting the shells of hen's eggs and glueing a small glass pane over the hole with petroleum jelly; experimenters under the di rection of Dr. Howard Kernkamp of the University of Minnesota's farm, can watch the actual growth of baby chicks while in the shell. A fine of $5 will be demanded from any student of Pennsylvania State college who misses a class within 24 hours of a vacation. En trance to classes will be barred un til the money is paid. A "job-hunting school" at Ohio State University has been organ ized to teach seniors how to write letters of application and how to face interviewers. Personnel man agers of several large companies will aid the instruction. To learn about the health habits of the black widow spider, John Pierson, zoology student at Oregon State college watches the ink colored captives for an hour or so daily. Ten cents is all a certain tiny coed at Hamltne university has to pay to get into any of the local theaters. She is 18 years old and can hardly reach the ticket win dow. Collecting and pickling spiders : the hobby of Mrs. Harriet Exlint Lloyd, a doctor of philosophy at the University of Washington. She has 10,000 in all and 400 different species. AK!V-f ULKS ! Just as You've Yi Heard Them On the ' Air. PEPPY ! I rr ORIGINAL! ! - VERSATILE ! ! . MCA Prrtmu ; "... i'j amdftU ORCHESTRA Friday, July 23rd MISS SCUDDER HELPS WITH PEACE CAMPAIGN University Student Working With 200 Others at Emer gency Camp. Word has been received from Miss Frances Scudder, who will be a senior in the University next full, from an emergency peace campaign camp in Spencer, Iowa. Miss Scudder, along with 200 other college students, is giving her time and effort this summer toward raising $150,000 to do some exten sive work in peace education in the rural areas of the United States. There are about 45 teams out over the country, according to Miss Scudder, six being stationed in the middle west. One team of boys is headquartered at York, Nebraska. Thirty of the students who are in the teams, Including Miss Scud der, were tralnpd for ten days at an Institute of International Rela tions at Napervil'a, Illinois. At this institute tliere were experts in European and American relations, experts in government, and in edu cation as speakers. Concentrated and intensive training for the short period was provided. The students were then sent to the various locations where they will remain until the first of Septem ber. The work of the teams consists of speaking before various groups including Farm Bureaus, labor or ganizations, church groups, wom en's clubs, chambers of commerce, and service clubs; holding discus sion meetings, leading study groups in international relations; initiating poster displays in co operation with the young people of the community; organizing peace councils; and awakening an in terest in the people as to the part that the United States plays in the world. "It is most important." Miss Scudder writes, "to crystallize existing peace sentiment and to convey that feeling to the con gressmen." Included in the team of which Miss Scudder is leader are Miss bally Morris, of Enid, Oklahoma. and Miss Ruth Aldredge, of Mil waukee, Wis. CAMPUS WORLD Harold E. Wise. suDervisnr of physical education and biological sciences, nas been elected treasurer of the department of scienc in struction or the National Educa tion association at the recent meet ing of the group in Detroit. Mrs. Dorothv Lindsav who re ceived her master's degree in ingnsn here several years ago, who is now an instructor of mnrf. ern languages at McCook Junior college, is Btudying French at Mid dlebury college in Vermont. She writes that one speaks and hears only French in the school in which sne is registered. Beck Green, who has been teach ing art in the six weeks' summer session here, a product of the top notch Lincoln experimental school in New York City, will spend a short time at his home in Califor nia before returning to New York. The University's elementary ed ucation laboratory school wound up its summer program Thursday with a play by one of the grades ana demonstrations and exhibits prepared bv the other Classen Mis Clara O. Wilson, chairman of the aepartmem of elementary educa tion, is in charge and Miss Nina Baker of Lincoln is principair Prof. Maurice Weseen of the English faculty Is spending the summer at Berkley, Calif. Dr. Rufus Lyman, dean of the college of pharmacy, received a letter from Dr. Ronald G. Hoick, associate professor of pharmacol ogy, who with his family is spend ing the su.nmer in Denmark, Dr. Hoick's former home. He recently joined the Nebraska faculty from Chicago university. Melvin Van Denbark, instructor in English, will spend a week vis iting friends In Kirksville, Mo. He left Lincoln Saturday. Chancellor and Mrs. E. A Bur nett left town Thursday evening for a vacation In several eastern states. They will visit their son, Knox Burnett, who is In New York, and will make several trips EVER LISTEN TO TIBICEN LINNEI? AMES, Iowa, July 17 Shrill voiced "Tibicen linnei" is hitting his choral crescendos and dimin uendos again. No, he's not a virtuoso. He's an insect, known popularly as the Cicada or "dog day harvest fly," and unpopularly as a strident noise maker who habitually dis turbs noon day naps. The Cicada's screech is produced by a "drum" or vibrating mem brane on his abdomen. The noise, really a love ditty, always ceases before nightfall and whenever in sect enemies appear. Closely related to the 17 year locust, Tibicen linnei is much larger, is colored black and green instead of orange, and lives only 3 years in the ground. The term "locust," loosely ap plied to all Cicadas, is a misnomer. A locust is really a migratory grasshopper. Dr. C. J. Drake, Iowa State col lege entomologist, says the Iowa Cicada Is not harmful. CIIET BEAVER GETS ARMY COMMISSION Former R. O. T. C. Cadet Has Post of Second Lieutenant. The university military depart ment has announced one of its former R. O. T. C. student offi cers, Chester Beaver of Yankton, S. D., has been appointed a sec ond lieutenant in the regular army and assigned to Fort Lincoln, S. D. The appointment followed a year of activity duty at the fort as one of a 1,000 R. O. T. C. cadets chosen for outstanding work at summer camps and in directing school units. Beaver was one of 50 to receive permanent commis sions. Meanwhile a number of Nebras ka students have been selected for army posts during the coming year. It is not known which will accept, but those who do will have a chance at a regular commission such as received by Beaver. Those who may go to Fort Crook in clude Morris Reynolds, John Jar min, Richard Rider, Galen Jones, Orvil Hutchinson, Bert Hartzell, Bob Gibbons, John Davis, Carl Heinz, George Hughes and George Beyer. Elmer Clausson has been assigned to Fort Logan as an en gineer and Robert Hutton to Fort Snelling, Minn. Only 48 Travel ROBES And PAJAMAS Regularly 3.95, 5.95 So smart for lounge wear. . .for travel. In solid colors and print ed designs in ultra modern designs. Of washable crepe they're ideally suited for hard wear. High shades 2nd dark colors. Sizes 12 to 40. ' Special Sale! Y ?X t i A -'J VIRGINIA AMOS ES - AMES BARRIE'S play : Speech Senior Moves Audi ence With "What Every Woman Knows" In the last of the university speech department's "Tuesday eve nings" in the Temple theater, Miss Virginia Amos enthralled her audience with the touching story of "What Every Woman Knows," by Sir James M. Barrie. This young actess displayed ex traordinary ability in her por trayal of a variety of characters which included a French countess; the siren, Lady Syble; the urbane politician, Mr. Veneables; and the proud Scotts, John Shand and the members of the Wylie family, father, David, James, and Maggie. In the first act, John Shand, a young book worm, is given 300 pounds for his education and, in exchange, promises Father Wylie to marry his daughter, Maggie, The story continues with the rise of John to a seat in parliament and the carrying out of his promise to the Wylies. Then enters Lady Syble who proceeds to lure John away from his wife. Meanwhile, Maggie has made herself indis pensible to the humorless John whose speeches in parliament would be less effective without Maggie's added touch. Eventually, Maggie shows him that it is really she whom he loves and reveals the thing that "every woman knows" to be that a man prefers to think that he has made his own success even though his wife is his real source of help and inspiration. At this time, Don Buell, member of the speech department faculty, announced that the department's final production would be Shake speare's 'The Merchant of Venice" on Wednesday and Thursday, July 28 and 29. 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