The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 01, 1939, Page 4, Image 4

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    The DAILY NEBRASKAN
"Wednesday, November 1, 1939
80CIETY
Military preparedness, policy
of coeds as formqls approach
DESPITE
the fact that today heralds the
opening of November, and that
makes it over a month until the
Military Ball there are many girls
who believe in' being prepared.
Perhaps the coming election for
Honorary Colonel has some effect
on the future combinations. At
any rate, preliminary arrange
ments for the big event include
Rosanne Sheehan, KKG, and Bob
Brust, Phi Psi; Ruth Lavender,
Gamma Phi, and Steve Davis; Bet
ty Mallo and Jim Jones, Sigma
Nu; Pat Wilson, Alpha Phi, and
ATO Max Meyers; Ann Weaver,
KKG, and Jack Nelson, DU; John
Spence, Sigma Nu, and Betty Ann
Nichols, KKG; Marion Jones,
Theta pledge, and Houghton Furr,
Beta; Shirley Hoffman, KKG, and
Bob Rydman, Phi Psi; Pat Prime,
Alpha Phi, and Maurice Miller;
Harriet Hedelund, Alpha Phi, and
Gilbert Holmes; Marcella Bauer,
Alpha Phi, and Dave Christie,
ATO; Mary Lou Johnson, DG
pledge, and Carl Olenberger, Phi
Gam,
MONDAY NIGHT
brought two candy passings. Jack
Reed, Theta, and Don Moore,
Kappa Sigma, concluded a three
year wait with a big candy pass
ing. The result was hilarious. At
the Chi Phi buffet supper there
was a candy passing worth noting
when Barbara Clark and Joe
Saunders came through.
Tanksterettes are having a pic
nic for the new pledges at the
W. A. A. cabin. Formal pledging
Will follow the picnic dinner.
THE CAMPUS
appears to be greatly engrossed
for the next week in hour dances,
exchanges, dinners, initiations and
pledgings and last but not least
Mother's club meetings, but the
general atmosphere concerning
these activities does not carry the
enthusiasm found when the week
end comes around. Phi Mu pledged
Betty Hackman and Lucille Wig
gins; Gamma Phi Beta pledged
Mary Ellen McCracken, and Kap
pa Delta pledged Anna Margaret
Lipp. Delta Sigma Pi announces
the formal pledging of Max Ber
gen and Bill Turney. Initiation at
the Delta Sigma Pi house included
Dick Allgood, John Becker, Ray
Carlisle, Stan Markytan, Eric Riis
ness, Bob Westfall, Don Rector
and Vernon Wiebusch.
AFTER HAVING
her picture appear in the Collegi
ate Digest Yvonne Costello,
Chi O, received letters from
boys at Notre Dame, Villanova.
Leigh, Niagara university and
Springfield college. Yvonne was
elected as queen of Brownson hall
at Notre Dame by the residents,
who each semester choose a coed
whose picture appears in the Di
gest to reign as their queen.
WEEKEND
hour dances include the Delta
Gamma-Delta Upsilon on Friday
night; AOPi-Delta Upsilon on Sat
urday night. The Sig Eps have a
dorm hour dance on Friday and Pi
Phi on Saturday. The Gamma
Phis have a Phi Gam hour dance
on Friday and Phi Psi on Satur
day. The Trl Delts will have a
Phi Psi hour dance on Friday and
Farm House on Saturday.
EXCHANGE DINNERS
will include the DU-KKG dinner;
Alpha Phi-ATO's; and Tri-Delt-Sigma
Nu's tonight.
The Alpha Phi mothers club
held a bridge-benefit on Tuesday
afternoon to raise funds to deco
rate the room at the chapter
house reserved especially for town
girls. On Thursday the Sigma
Chi mothers club will meet for a
1 o'clock luncheon. Also on Thurs
day the Chi Omega mothers club
will meet for a 1 o'clock dessert
luncheon. Mrs. R. L. Cochran will
speak on the history of Chi Omega.
A CANDLE LIT
church wedding formed the back
ground for Mi.ss Irene Louthan,
Kimball, and Mr. Bernard Tomich,
Bushnell, when they were united
in marriage at the Presbyterian
church in Kimball at 4:30 p. m.
with Rev. John Weston officiating.
SLEAMI TO DA!iCE
V GITAR4NTKKD IN SIX V
Ol'KIVATK I.KXNONH S
$ LEE A. THORHBERRY
Ot-S6.16 (Nlnoe 1920) 100 Y H(.1j
Attendants of the couple were
Albert Tomich, who took a Farm
operator's course here in '35, Inez
Louthan, Gene Louthan and Elsie
Tomich, student of the university.
Icy handed ghosts treated Love
hall girls to a Hallowe'en party
in Raymond hall ballroom last
night. The recently composed
"Love Hall Song" was taught to
the guests by Helen Johnson, com
poser, assisted by Tony Skoda.
Baseball
(Continued from Fr.ge 3.)
coin, first baseman; Dick Joyce,
Lincoln, and Al Schmode, Winside,
catchers; and John McDermott,
Grand Island, outfielder. Lawrence
Anderson, Wolbach, regular right
fielder on last year's squad is not
in school this semester but he will
return to his post next spring.
Wilson back.
Except for pitchers and center
fielders, Coach Knight can put on
an experienced team on the dia
mond. With Joyce and Schmode
both lettcrmen and the old depend
able Wilson and LaMaster at sec
ond and shortstop, respectively,
the center line of defense looks
good.
Hurley, Gilmore, Held, Garey,
Jackson, Ray, Pollock, Van Bus
kirk, Heming, Ockerman and
3choening are the leaders from
last year's promising freshman
team and holdovers from the var
sity team. The pick of these men
will replace the seniors on last
year's squad.
The schedule for next spring has
not yet been announced but con
ference games will be played with
Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri,
Iowa State and Oklahoma of the
Big Six. Non-conference games
may include a spring vacation trip
to Texas university, and Texas A.
and M. Tentative plans for a game
with Minnesota may materialize.
Varsity men checking out equip-
ment were: First base,. Rubino,
Lincoln; Lonnquist, Waverly; Buell,
Bassett; Ganz, Alvo, and Pollock,
Fremont. Second base, Schocning,
Lester, la.; Wilson, Dow City, la.;
Third base, Essman, DeWitt. Outfielders-,
Gilmore, Lincoln; Van i
Buskirk, Worland, Wyo.; Boye,
Omaha; Gabelman, Tilden; Stron,
Plymouth; Grovert, Lincoln; Mc
Dermott, Grand Island; Hurley,
Ohiowa; Ockerman, Lincoln. Pitch,
ers, Truscott, Omaha; Garey, Lin
coin; Tegtmpier, Burchard; Bauer,
Lincoln. Catchers, Schmode, Win
side; Gillespie, Lincoln; Joyce,
Lincoln; C. Schmadeke, Newman
Grove; Heming, Chappell. Short
stop, Doyle, Red Cloud; LaMaster,
Elm Creek.
iliis weekjfist
jm meet another jammis person
THROUGH THE
iwtijwjits zerreiis
of Helen Hayes mother to Helm Hayes 'dauqhkr alwid
Helena :rHayes
w
Here is a unique story: what the JJ
outsider does not see of Helen ''
Mother, she reveals to her
granddaughter (and to Post
Hayes, the anecdotes the world hasn't heard, readers) the struggles and glamorous career of
Here, as Helen Hayes' mother says, is "every America's great actress, who has spent thirty-
little thing I can recall about my Helen Hayes"
...In a series of letters called Mary, This Is Your
four of her thirty-nine years in the theater and
"on the road." First of eight parts this week.
IN THIS SAME ISSUE
A half hour of excitement: Harold
Channing Wire's yarn Glory Hole about
a cave-in 1700 feet down! (Too bad they'd
fired the lad they thought was "yellow,"
the only man who bad the key to the
rescue . , . . )
AND a lively story of a girl reporter
who went out to cover the races and ran
into a story with a real news angle
when she fell in love with a gentleman
rider, and he walked away!
MORE spine chills in the climax of Alec
Hudson's vivid and authentic submarine
war story, Battle Stations.
PLUS ... an article, The Great Red
Father, by W.G.Krivitky, on the bloody
undercover work of the Comintern in
Germany; and You Must Borrow-by
Lowell Brentano. (Attention - students
low on their pocket money !) Also stories
by Zachary Gold and William Faulkner,
poems, editorial, cartoons.
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