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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1939)
Th n.n,Y ntjmuskan Tuesdlcry. Nrrwnl)cr 28, 1939 fwiitMiwffi!(i!iBra:rai!im the women 6 SOCIETY WHIRL Turkey call resounds and collegians plan farewells THANKSGVING HOLDS touch f00tba- were evests of the .... .... . club. Esther Davis and Dorothy the Interest with dinners and tnvi- A , U1 . tations Tor vacations. Delta Gam- Maxwe11 V doub,e Pian0 ma's chone 'Frank's Giving' and numbers, and Lucille Maxwell held their Thahksgivin dinner played the saxophone and sang last Thursday; Theta's held their several blue songs. The program Zl Kaye Hunting. waiting to celebrate at home. On La"1"' Morrison, Dorothy Jean Tuesday the Alpha Phi dinner is Bryan, and Dorothy White. slated, and will be formal. And Uie Gamma Phi's celebrated last THETA'S night, as did the PI rhi's at din- will holc, thelr monthly birthday ner- x party for all their girls having rr,u -rr rsr-Mro November birthdays guest of LjUIINvj IU UtlNVtK honor will be Betty Dodds from for Thanksgiving is Elisabeth Omana. Waugh who, with her father, will ' visit relatives. Priscilla Chain, Theta, will spend the vacation in Tulsa, Oklahoma in the home of Bucky' Prime, ATO. She will leave on Wednesday morning with Mr. and Mrs. Prime. Also leaving on Wednesday is Virginia Clemens, Pi Phi, to snend vacation in Chi-1 cago. 'Jinks' Smith, Theta, will spend vacation with Jay Monahan, Theta, in Omaha. Marcclla Com forto, Italian exchange student, will spend Thanksgiving with Jean Woods and Eleanor Lutz in Coun cil Bluffs. GOING STEADY are Betty Jane Dutch, Theta, and John Mas in, ATO, the new com bination wan announced over the week-end. PHI DELTA THETA Mothers club entertained at the chapter houne on Suifday for the boys and their dates. Korly-five coup'.es attended. Also on Sunday was the ATO buffet supper. Dur ing the evening guests were en tertained by part of the Kosmet Klub skit and songs were sung around the fireplace. THE BETA'S are entertaining th?ir dates this evening at a Tlianloigiving dinner at the chipter house. Among those eating turkey will be Bob Pillsbury with Mary Lo Ball, Kappa; Frank Vette with Jean Craig, PI Phi; F-d Huwnldt with Barbara Rebuff. DG; Piker Davis with Beth Hovvley of Raymond hall; and Bill Edwards with Bar bara Hodgman, Alpha Phi. MARRIED on Saturday in Lincoln were Row ena Beadle to Bill Dcwcese, Phi Rho, who is attending medical school in Omaha. Rowena will finish school this year. TOWNE CLUB held an exchange dinner last night with over 130 present. The Jug gernauts, victorious barb team in Hoick folks to Danes Dr. Harold Hoick of the depart ment of pharmacology addressed the Danish Brotherhood recently on "Life in Syria." Dr. Hoick was on the faculty of the Amer ican university at Beirut, Syria for five years. Riding academy holds contests for coeds Winners in the second annual riding contest held Sunday at Shreve's Riding Academy by classes were: Intermediate Mary Jeffords, Maryellen Robinson, Betty Nich ols, Murile Clyce; pair class, Mary Beeson and Betty Ann Roberts, Lynn Goodrich and Lillie Suttgen, Muriel Cylce and Ellen Partner; beginning class, Louise Matthews, Virginia Chambers, Harriet Hed lund, Lois Fuelling; novelty, Mary Yellen Robinson, Mary Bee son, Mary Fran Kier, Betty Ann Roberts; fine harness, Little Lutt gen, Jean Ann Danley, Gwenith Orr, Mary Fran Kier; novelty class Muriel Clyce as Calamity Jane, Louise Matthews as Robin Hood, Ruth McMillan as Buffalo Bill, Harriet Hedelund as the Headless Horseman; advanced, Lillie Lutt gen, Betty Ann Roberts, Gwenith Orr, Mary Beeson; stock class, Mary Ellen Raitner, Mary Beeson, Mary Yellen Robinson, Mary Jef fords. Arthur Cullen of Omaha was the judge of the event, while Miss Ella May Small, sponsor of the univer sity women's riding club, pre sented the ribbons. Announcer was Jack King. Would-be Amazon contends ' Women no longer viragoes, termangats of a boisterous, " browling, turbulent naruro Inquiring reporter Sooners sh i ver, yet they say the food isfine,thegirls,O.K. 'Boy, what women!' By Paul Svoboda. met such hospitable people. I think Saturday the Husker played Ncbskans are just swelL host to the Oklahoma Sojners and Mike Kintz: during the day your reporter went T"'3 is an unusually friendly about singling out visitors from campus. You really ought to be the "oily" state in an attempt to P"oud of your Union and state cap- discover just what the Sooners lto for they are the biggest build- thought of Nebraska as a state InSTS of that kind that I have ever and Nebraska as a university. 8ecn- Probably the most interesting in- Melvin Tilbury: terview was that with Rodbird. a It could be a little warmer but dark-skinned, befeathered Indian outside of that everything is really wnose nauve American regalia at- swell, traded a lot of attention from Ne- Donald Host: braskans what 'worn(,n! j sre woud 1, , y- ursi imPless,on like to come to school here. Jack Hushes of Nebraska? Jack Redbird: Ugh, ugh. I like him (Nebraska) fine, but it's kinda cold. Boy, you Comhuskers really have the spirit. And the people, gosh, one would think you were way down South You've got a good football team and a friendly and nice campus. What else can I say? Bryce McDade: If all the girls are like the few I met I sure would like to come where the good old Southern hos- to school here. Besides the fern pitalily is supposed to be the best inine part of it I think the uni- The meals here arc just like the versity and Union building are ones mama cooks back home. very nice indeed. Herman Ziemer, band manager: Clarence Miller: Nebraska is just all right. The School's fine and the girls are people treated us plenty O. K. I swell. I would like to come to think your Union building is the school here but I don't know best I ve ever seen, but the weath- whether I could stand the weather. er, brrr! Mary Marie Bates, band queen of '39: It's awfully cold out, Isn't it? Kappa Kappa PsUband fraternity Fifteen rahs for Nebraska. The women are fine, cigarettes are cheap, no sales tax, and the Husker Back in Oklahoma it isn't quite band treated ua better than any so smoKy anu misiy. ive never otner scnoou Pan-Hellenic Chairmen o ctat jr. J y w iv,.' .- 1 V.. ft. , 1 ;,:' I - 1 --1 . i..Jinnrt k. II i 4 Jk .. i. i ill in Ill Frtttrtr'i nol! Thin ymmntary on the advantages and disadvantage of the "helplMg darllnR" attitihla In women M wmcwhat allewr(eal; IU exaggeration are not a be taken literally. By Holly Shurtleff. The Amazon women of Asia had the right Idea. Yon can bet your life that they weren't ordered around by the male species as we women of today are! They were viragoes and termagants of a bois terous, browling and turbulent na ture who loved a good fight The women of today have been reading Emily st so long that they have become sweetly insipid group who cannot even have a good fight without a lot of vile no toriety. They have developed an inane taste for frimps and finery which hold them down so that they cannot even step over a Btone without the help of a masculine arm. Training camps, America can easily dispense with nazi camps and nudist camps; but America does need a few Amazon camps for helpless, nystencai women. These camps could train women to settle those most vindictive and authoritative men who feel it is their constant duty to criticize the female sex. Woman's dormant pugilistic pow ers could be developed, in such a camp, so that any woman who is insulted by a man, to such a de gree that she finds herself at a loss for verbal reciprocation, could land a wallop on the insolent fel low's face that he could not laugh off. The camps could also train women to settle their quarrels be tween each other by means of a fist-cuff rather than catty n marks, If this practlc wer to be carried on widely, it would be come the conventional thing to do ...and many a reputation would be saved. College girl first. The college girl, or well edu cated female, will probably be the first to accept the idea of Amazon camps, for they have analyzed the male characteristics and have found them to be of a most obnox ious sort. The worst traita in males are found, by statistical re?4 search, to be especially prevalent in college men. A few are listed as follows: The "love 'em, lick 'em, and leave 'em" attitude. The opinion that women's mental pow ers are nil. The command that "best girls" abstain from the use of finger nail polish and makeup, which command, if obeyed, results in the boy friend casting admiring glances toward the most painted up hussy in the room. The order that a girl should smootch every time the lordn' master feels like it. The jealousy of him-who-has-hung-his-pin over the time that the fi ancee spends with her friends. And worst of all . . . the insistence that his date be a good sport about drinking, smoking, petting and jokes until he fall9 in love with her and wants her to reform and become a veritable nun-like crea ture, who will unbend only at the desire of his will. But who am I to say these things? . . . After all people who live in stone houses shouldn't throw glasses. ALE I REQULAR $4.95 & $6.00 Pictured above are the chairmen of the committees which were In charge of the annual Pan Hellenic scholarship tea. From right to left they are Mrs. Harry Pecha, Mis Natalie Rehlaender, Mra. Elmer Hansen, Mra. Ted Barger, M n. George Trimberger, Mrs. Gerald Carpenter, Mrs. James Mc Pheeters and Mrs. Emmet Gillapsle. Mrs. Glenn Ullstrom Is shown In the center, .11 pkyypy T!i'"VVN fy:-i y - New! Different! Oay! A ItnoLby-tootl brogue of CORDUROY ana GWXR KID . . . fleece-lined . . . with leather platform, English crepe soles! P.KIGI1S and GRKKN...BLl!13 and RED... RED and YELIX)W! 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