THE DAILY NEBHASKAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 193ft PACK FOUK BY THE HAHNTEK The new D. G. lord over all Is Helen Catherine Davis. Some re ports are that she will probably get over-proud now but we think she will be able to get her hat on. The embryos that the two friend ly houses on the campus have gath ered for their egg scramble have gotten so old that they are hatch ing out into fine healthy chicks. The Nus under the sponsorship of Tom "Mother" Davidson have ten young ones in the box. The Alphs are not as human and are letting theirs die and rot in the cellar. We guess they have no kind-to- dunib animal spirit. With Ivy Day just around the corner, the groans are becoming louder and louder along little house row. The Pi Phis, Phi Delts. The tas. Phi Psis, and Alpha Phis have kept that corner full of so-lo-mios most of the last two weeks. The three Sigs, Kappas, and the Alpha Chi Os have kept lower 16th in stitches. One wonders how it could be so good on Ivy Day and so bad now. The Thetas have an African na tive in their "midst. At least one of the boys who camps there seems to think so. He claims she ought to get a cut from somebody pretty soon or they will lock her up in the zoo out in the park. In case you don't know her, she is Mary Helen Husted. Is Gwenie Orr still having open house? The rumors are that her folks have put in an appearance and so now she is studying very hard. Term papers and stuff are her work now. There wore a ct.uple candy pass ings last meeting nite. The Alpha Phis had one and so did the Pi Phis. Mardora Croper and Don Wagner, Alpha Sig did their duty while the off and on again ro mance of Helen Marie Kincaide and Barney Ingrain, Phi Gam, have come to a stand ,still with their sweets. aggravations Ag campus went red today. The Farmers Fair board is selling red handkerchiefs with Farmers Fair written on them and 1938 under neath this. Max Brown calls the girls campfire girls. He hasn't exactly named the boys yet. So don't any one be surprised when you see this red splurge; your sight is still all right. Spring has not made Carl Roy er's head turn toward new things because he and Margery Lind quist, Tri Delt, can still be seen together frequently on the Ag campus. 1 wonder what technique Willie Stonebreaker's girl used in her hitch hiking. She seems to come to her 8 o'clock every morning in a nice new car plus front dxr service. I believe it is the same car evei y morning. Ait Moseman had Barbara Ro man! to the . Farm House hou.se party Saturday night, but 1 saw her get in the oar yesterday with Lawrence Frisbie. It seems that previous to Saturday night they had been seen several times to gether. Is it a new reunion? Your Cornhusker negative at TOWNSRND'S STUDIO will make a lovely large photograph for a Mother's Day gift. Order now. Adv. 1UII J. RUN Lutheran Bible Hour. Lutheran students will meet with He v. H. Krek for the last regular period of Bible study dur ing tlvs semester Thursday after noon. The meeting will lie held in loom of the Temple. Alpha Phi Omega. Members will met at the Cham ber fit Commerce tonight at 7:00 o'clock It .JEIIAUNIKESS A record turnout of first night ers at the Kosmet Klub show and very near the front row John Kd wards enjoying the production al most as much as the audience... Don Carlson slinging onto the stage all the while doing his best to exhibit false curves to advan tage. . .Frannie Knudtzon in shorts having a rugged game on the ten nis courts. . .The Fiji's lounging on their porch to watch the pas sensby. . .Dorothy Van Patton proudly displaying a sunburn ac quired at an all day picnic Sunday . . .Venetian blinds going up in fhe Student Union building and quite a crowd of speteators at the door to catch a glimpse of the interior . . .Mary .lane Mitchell looking not so P. R K-ish in anklets and hair ribbons . . . Al Sehroeder. one of the few obliging men with a car... Barbara Meyer taking life more seriously for a change. . .Grace Hill telling about the time she passed the candy at Oklahoma... and just everyone staring long ingly out classroom windows at the wide open spaces. It seems to be a pretty well known fact around the Pi Phi house that Virginia Clemens is strutting a Beta pin after the Triad. The young man in question is no other than Bob Armstrong. We really didn't mean to cross any bridges before we came to them, but someone told us this on first hand authority. The Phi Psi's had an hour dance with the Tri Delts last Friday night, and while Al Randall is hardly what you might call dainty, he nevertheless was quite em barrassed and unduly alarmed when one of the pieces of lawn furniture collapsed with him. To add insult to injury Gertrude Mc Arthur, self-appointed chairman of the committee for lawn furniture and its upkeep, presented him with a bill for damages inflicted on the chair, which is nice wrk if she can get it. A CHIPS (Continued from Page 1.) it. The instructor can't help but notice the first two or three rows and sleepers in that vicinity are easily observed. Then, too, the per sons who choose the back row seats are suspected of having ul terior motives their behavior and actions are frequently looked for by the Instructor. Therefore pick one of the middle rows. Second, pick out somebody with a nice broad back or bushy head of hair to sit behind. The best type of person to havein front of you is a football player. This is hard to arrange, however, since most of the gridiron athletes seek out the back row. If they would only real ize that their letter sweaters and names make them marked men in every class, it would greatly sim plify this problem of trying to find one to sit behind. The reason for seeking protection behind broad shoulders is obvious; it breaks the visual line of fire. Conceal Yourself. Third, know the various posi tions of camoflage. A favorite position of the majority is as sumed by flopping the book open, placing the right el' iw next to it, and then laying"the right hand against the forehead at if supporting the head and shading tne eyes. This gives the appearance of reading but since the Instructor can not see your eyes, they can be closed in bliss. Another oft-used technique it to place the head in both hands, shading the eyes, and drop off sleep. A third, but dangerous method, is to shift into a defen sive posture behind the guy in front and close the eyes. If he moves, though, you are left as prominent as a hitch-hiker's thumb. There is a fourth method, but ti is very radical. That is the method of cutting class and re clining full length, with the eyes closed, the nostrils distended for A-1 snoring, an J a Don't Dis turb sign on the chest. AG COLLEGE ESTES COOP TO HOLDBENEFIT DANCE Decorations to Carry Out Steamship Motif at Party Friday. Aboard the S. S. Kstes, students will dance to the music of Jack El lison's band at the annual Kstes Coop dance to be held in the Ag Student Activities building, Fri day, April 29, from 9 to 12 p. m. Booths and carnival concessions are also being planned by the Y. W.-Y. M. staff in charge of ar rangements for the party which will be held aboard the S. S. Estes. Tickets are S5 cents a couple or 25 cents for women and 30 cents for men single admission. They may be purchased at the Y. W. C. A. in Ellen Smith or the Y. M. C. A. in the Temple building. DeLoris Bors is general chair man, assisted by Lucille Marker. Pat Sternberg is head of the deco ration committee and Frances Vaughn is in charge of tickets. SPANISTCLUBMTDiNE AT BULL HEADJNN TONIGHT Mexican Chef to Prepare Native Dishes for Students. "Polio frito con mostaza y vino" is the Mexican masterpiece offered Spanish devotees attending the banquet of the Spanish club to night, It is "chicken fried in mus tard and wine" to be prepared by a Mexican chef and served in the Bulls Heads Inn at 7:30. Accompanying the dih will be "Salsa y tocino salado, y zanaho rias" and a cocktail, salad, Mexi can vegetable and dessert, or "pos tres." Several South Lincoln men will be present at the banquet as well as members of the faculty teaching Spanish and students in their classes. Between 60 and 70 reser vations have been received. orchesiTgrouFplans wesleyanjppearance Misses Moore, Waters Lead State Music Teachers In Discussion. In preparation for the group de monstration to be given at Nebras ka Wesleyan university on Friday evening, all Orchesis members must attend practice tonight at 7:00 according to Miss Claudia Moore, director. Miss Moore and Miss Flavia Waters Champe, Lincoln dance teacher, will lead a panel discus sion Friday night on "Music in RelaHon to the Dance" before the 21st annual convention of the Ne braska Music Teachers association. POPULAR GOTHAM DANCE ORCHESTRA PLAYS HERE MAY 6 (Continued from Page 1.) 10:30 or 1:30. The young maes tro has appeared in many of the nation's leading hostelries, includ ing the Roosevelt in New York, the Edgewater Beach hotel, Chi cago; Hotel Sehroeder in Milwau kee, the Baker hotel in Dallas, and the William Penn hotel in Pittsburgh. Among the features included in the Tucker repertoire is Bonnie Kaker, famous radio vocalist who has charmed many of the night spots with her specialties. Also, from his group of 20 mu sicians, Tucker has three women vocalists who sing alone or as a trio and six men who form a male choir. Those who have heard Tucker say his broadcasts arc among the most versatile on the airlanes. Tucker, one of the music world's most radiant personalities, is a native of St. Louis, and was born there about 25 years ago. He attended high school in Illinois, then attended Northwestern uni versity for a year, attempting to equip himself for a medical ca reer. Forced to quit school be cause of financial difficulties, Or rin launched himself on a per manent musical career, starting out as a saxophonist. His rise has been phenomenal pince the Chicago world's fair in 1933. Mills Teachers Agency . E. Mills, A.M. Manager Specially needed: Odd combinations of subjects. B55W Stuart Bldg. Lincoln, Nebr. Men Air Views of 'Hadies' Ladies' Stand on Women (Continued from Page 1.) considered women to be all alike. "I'm afraid not, thank Heaven. Some girls are quite different and when the love bug starts to nibble, man, you've got something there." Thurston Phelps, Flotsam in the show, held that all women are in herently selfish, and alike at least in that respect. He added, how ever, "but I fear that -there's one that might be different:" One Girl Per Man. Everett "Duke" Deger, portray er of Satan, declared, "There can le just one girl for any man, and I do mean one!" Bill Williams, who takes the part of King Henry VIII, holds that all women are not alike nor is love but an illusion. "They may be alike in that they are nearly all looking toward the goal of marriage, but they differ in many ways. Women are inclined to .take the initiative toward getting what they want, and the more domi neering they can be, the better they like it. But all men don't have to be suckers!" Art Ball, who portrays the come-ye-hither Fersephone in "Ha des' Ladies," argued, "Maybe love is just a dumb illusion, but it's a mighty beautiful dumb illusion. Women will rule you if possible, but the cry of every man ought to be 'Are we men or are we mice?' There's no reason why a woman should dominate us. After all, who buys the stockings?" he asked, cryptically. Love no Illusion. Bob Burruss, another female im personator in the show, Ivy, the hen-pecking wife, said, "1 don't think ' that all women are alike. There is a certain type of woman that some people judge as char acteristic, but that's silly. There's no illusion to love, unless a man loses his head, as he may well do in college." Don Moss, Kosmet Klub mem ber, declared that as far as wom en being alike was concerned, he believed, "Yes, everyone of them. They have the same line, if any, and are all after the same thing a husband or maybe only a fra ternity pin. Love is based on illu sion, I think, and given the same basic qualities, a man could fall in love with any number of different girls." Phil Weaver, who takes the part of Beelzebub, prince of the devils, stated, "Of 100 choice girls on the campus, 99 are exactly alike. The other one is different. They say beauty is only skin deep, but that's good enough for love sometimes." Tomorrow, we'll give you the women's views on the matter. Here's What They Say ; About Hades' Ladies John Selleck says: "I wish I hail a half spring show. Hades' best and it looks like a Margaret McKay: "It's a Rood thing 1he seals in Temple theater tiave pretty Rood arms. If it hadn't been for the arms of my sweet holding my sides in place, 1 woubl have " split them laughing at Dobson." Dave Bernstein whispers: " "Strictly confidentially, Hades' Ladies is really a good deal. If you promise not to quote tno, I'll ti even admit that it's very funny, has calchy tunes, and laughable routines." i R. D. Scott spouts: 1 "Alas, poor Yoriek! If Shakespeare's jester wore J alive today, he could pick up a lot of good lines y and songs from Hadies' Ladies." jj Karl Arndt expounds: "It's the old law of supply and demand working attain. People demand a good, tuneful, funny Kos- y met Klub show and Hades' Ladies supplies it." Chuck Tanton says: ... ... " Must ltke pooil old r.eeeh-Nut it s ret resiling ami spicy. When it comes 1o a swell show 1 eliews Hades' Ladies. You had better gum and see it." SEE IT THIS WEEK! 3 tt REGENTS AFFrRM STAFF REVISIONS FOR NEXT TERM (Continued from Page 1.) College in New York City. Found, ed in 1936, Queens Collage admiU only selected students who have had nt least four years of Italian, French or Spanish in high school During his stay in New York Dr. Kuiz expects to learn much which may be of value to Nebras ka's own department. He will not be chairman of the new depart ment but will act as a ranking officer. Paul Stewart Resignr. Also accepted was the resigna tion of Paul H. Stewart aa state extension agent in agronomy. Stewar" who had been with the agricultural extension division since 1916, has been on leave of abser :e during the past year to do v irk for V. ; federal land bank in C.iaha. C. BerUand Schultz, who for the past several year has been senior field man for the museum, was ap pointed an instructor in the de partment of geology for April and May to take over the classes that were taught by Dr. E. H. Barbour until his recent illness. Heads Field Work. With the beginning of June and continuing through the remainder of the summer, Schultz will be in the employe of the museum where he will bein charge of the sum mer field work in western Nebra ka. Prof. K. F. Schramm, chair man of the department said that Schultz will become a regular in structor beginning next fall. He will conduct four courses in beginning geology, one course in paleontology and will assist in field courses. Schultz returned re cently from the American Museum of Natural History and the Frick laboratories in New York City where he goes the second semester of each year to continue his work on oreodents. Tuesday afternoon the regents named Frank Cunkle, now at the University of Kansas, as teacher in the school of music for next year to take over the work in organ theory and practice now taught by Wilbur Chenoweth, who has been granted a leave of ab sence for next year. Mr. Cunkle Is a graduate of the Eastman School of Music. The DAVIS SCHOOL SERYICE "A flood Teachert Aganey1 1918-133 Conn in anA Se Vt 64 Stuart Bldg. Lincoln, Nebr. " interest, in Kosmet Klub's Ladies is one of the Klub's sell-out to me." " 1 .... i