The DAILY NFRRASKAN Wednesday, Decemlifr 6, lQjjfl IN THE SOCIAL WHIRL Mrs. R. L. Cochran honors Chi Omegas Saturday night Mrs. R. L. Cochran will honor the Chi Omegas at a formal danc ing party at the governor's man sion Saturday evening. Some of the dates are: Gloria Hanson and Joe Flammang; Dorothy Wear and DU Dick McConnell; Ruth Salis bury and Ed Schwartzkopf ; and Barbara Dale and Sig Alph Bob Burruss. PIGGE DINNER will highlight the weekend with ye Sigma Nus holding sway Sat urday evening at the Lincoln. The party is open to Sigma Nus and their dates only. On the date list so far are: George Gilmore and Kappa Ann Weaver, Steve Dewey and Theta Betty Marie Wait, Bob Phillips and Kappa Delta Marion Weiler, Bob Moffett and Pi Phi Nancy Haycock, Dick Holm and Alpha Chi Frances Grim, Don Al bin and Tri Delt Ruth Grant, Jim Roberts and Alpha Phi Marion Patton, Vic Coulter and Gamma Phi Gerry Hawkins, and John Ain ley and DG Polly Perkins. ALPHA PHIS are the first of the sororities to have their yearly formal. They will dance at the Cornhusker Saturday evening. Dates include Marilyn Goodrich and Beta Tom Woods, Pat Prime and Maurice Miller, Janet Moon and Sigma Nu How ard Marshall, Dorothy Tipton and Phi Delt Lauren Barnabey, and Helen Gartner and ATO Ed Butler. FINAL CHECKUP on Military Ball dates finds Alpha Xi Delta Ruth Clark going with Chi Phi Bob Griffin, Dlta Gamma Louise Malmberg with Sig Alph Bill Hindrichs, Thi Mu Frances Vaughn with Sig Ep Ernie May, Kappa Delta Mary Eileen O'Don nell with DU Joe Fraser, Alph Chi Mary Lee Adams with Sigma Nu Jack Scott, Alpha Phi Eleanor Winslow with Kappa Sig John Miller, Pi Phi Janet Haggart with Phi Psi Harold Swan. CONFUSION has arisen as to whether the Mor tar Board party is Friday or Sat urday, Dec. 15 o 16. To settle the matter, it's on Saturday and, please girls, don't make two dates for the same night. Paladian literary society will hold initiation services Saturday for Harold Alexis, Bert Anderson, Ruth Dale, Edurn Hayes, Betty Hutchinson, Virginia Mutz, and Edith Rusness. Alpha Sigma Phi announces the pledging of Max Cory from Alex andria. A new Chi Phi pledge is Norman Hansen of Hemingford. Pi KA held election of officers Monday night. Bill Randall is the new president; Kenny Simmons, vice-president; Robert Kemp, sec retary; and Wayne Anderson, treasurer. Tassels name top salesmen Officers to entertain at Christmas party Jean Burr with 45 subscriptions, Beth Howley with 35, and Mar garet Krause with 30 were an nounced as the winners of the Tassels Cornusker drive at a meeting of the pep group Monday evening. Saturday afternoon Tassels will be entertained at a party given by the officers. Decorations will be in the Christmas motif, and gifts will Medicine, last forum topic t Physician, technician f speak in Union tonight Dr. G. W. Covey, Lincoln physician, and Miss Elizabeth Pitch, laboratory technician in Dr Covey's clinic, will speak at the last of the series of vocational forums tonight in parlors XYZ of the Union. Dr. Covey will discuss medicine as a vocation, and Miss Pitch will dicuss her field as a vocation for women. Preceding the 7:15 forum, which is open to the public, Nu-Meds society will hold its regular month ly dinner. At this time, new mem bers of Theta Nu, onorary pre med fraternity, will be tapped, and Nu-Meds officers will be nomi nated for next semester. Three speak at ASAE meet Three university agricultural engineers are presenting technical papers at the annual mid-winter meeting of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers In Chi cago Dec. 5 to 8. Professor C. E. Smith will dis cuss the results of this year's field studies of dual tractor tires; Ivan D. Wood will analyze factors af fecting the cost of irrigation pump lng, and Miss Ruby Lopcr will read a paper entitled "A Program for Farm House Modernization. Mr Wood is chairman of the society's committee on power costs of lrrl gation pumping. C. L. Zlnk, englner In charge of the Nebraska tractor-testing laboratory, the only one of its kind in the nation, is also attending the Chicago meetings. The midwinter program is one of two conferences held each year by the professional engineering organization. NYA, service department move back to stadium NYA and service department have been moved back to the west stadium from the coliseum. Students must now call at the stadium for their NYA checks. LEAnn TO HDAKfCE GUARANTEE YOt! TO !ANCE IN fl PRIVATE LESSONS (Special Rate to Student) BE PREPARED FOR THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS rh. .!, IRVING KUKLIN ". be exchanged during the afternoon Pictures of the Nebraska football games will be shown for enter tainment. Tickets for the Mortar Board party will go on sale this week by te organization. Te price is $125 per couple, and only members of Tassels are authorized to sell the tickets. 000 (D B? S for tTVIilitary0 Ball Smart and lovely arrangements of your selection Orchids Gardenias Camellas Violets Valley Roses Carnations Sweetpeas Sweetheart Roses 1338 O St. Phone 2-6928 WHY DOESN'T AN AIRLINE PILOT WRITE A NOVEL ABOUT FLYING ? i . ) - f v o o WeMiOne jtist did ! The Story Take away today's lighted airways; take away radio beams and you're back in the '20'a .. .with the hard-shelled pilots who flew the mail "by the seat of their pants." Here's a novel of one reck less flyer who inherited a bankrupt airline, a handful of insubordinate pilots, and a girl manager who pre dicted he'd have to grow up or crack up. The Authors When an expert flyer is also an ex pert writer that's Leland Jamieson ! Millions of Post readers know his short stories. His first full-length novel is part autobiography, part fiction all superb entertainment. Right now, as High Fronlicr hops off, Capt. Jamieson is at the wheel of a DC-3 somewhere between Miami and New York, where he regularly flies day and night runs. HIGH FRONTIER by LELAND JAMIESON "TOO YELLOW TO PLAY FOOTBALL?" lie was on the sidelines now. He was the guy who had broken Billy Cooper's l"g. The guy 85,000 people were waiting to boo. And today was Game Day. A short story by Paul 0Neil on page 22 of this week's Pout. THE PLAIN PEOPLE FACE THE WAR. The writer, John W. Vandercook, recently talked with French shopkeepers, peasants, heard their stories; then motored Into Germany and spent hours with Nazi small-town leaders. New insight on how the common people of two countries are taking it. HOLLYWOOD HUSBANDS HAVE SO-0-0 MANY PROBLEMS! Reuben Rosen, Hollywood's Boy Wonder, was a wow at changing BcripU into happy endings. But could he kill his wife's infatuation for her new leading man? (Quick, get the script-girl!) A short story, Suggestion for a Happy Ending, by Edith Fitzgerald. WILD COYOTES BREAKFASTED WITH US! Snowed in 'eight months of the year, seven thousand feet up in the High Sierras, the author of this unusual nature article and her husband actually taught wild coyotes "table manners "1 Read The Coyotei Come. MARRY FOR LOVE-REPENT AT LEISURE. A boy of nineteen marrying a woman of thirty-one? It won't last, people were saying. But the wife, deajMirately in love, had the courage to find out. Read riease Let Me Come Home, by Helen Dcutsch. IT WAS SMART TO BE RED. Eugene Lyons gives you a Who's Who of Communism's (Slite . . . how they line up unsuspecting professors, naive clergymen, writers, and "society" folk as a front for their propaganda. AKD . . . Short stories by Maurice Walsh and David Lamson; articles, poems, cditoriuls, Post Scripts and cartoons. All in this week's issue of The Saturday Evening Poet. -a " 1 .i ' 1 m() x;