The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 20, 1939, Page 5, Image 5

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The DAILY NEBRASKA!
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X7ae&T December 20, 1939
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SOCIETY
They all say they'll study
over vacation-well, MAYBE
7y
With the plea of "too much
studying" ringing in our ears as
the latest excuse for little activity
over the Christmas holidays, we
view the vacation scene with a
healthy skepticism.
Still, the impressive
piles of books leaving
the library and filling
home-bound suitcases
would indicate that va
cation evenings may
be spent by the study lamp too
bad the professors can't at least
uee the pretense.
TONIGHT
the Sigma Chi's annual Christmas
dinner dance will be held at the
L Lincoln Hotel. Coming from Kan
sas City is i;ari Laeveiand wno wm
attend with Mildred Allison. Bill
McKerney and Ruth McMillan,
Theta; Don Marler and Maxine
Taylor; John Campbell and Mar
ian Bremers, Alpha Phi; and Dick
Faytinger and Lonnie Grant, Tri
Dclt, will all be among those cele
brating the beginning vacation.
LINCOLN GIRLS
have decided to liven up vacation
here with a Red and White ball.
Twenty-one girls, prominent in
Lincoln activties, will be hostesses
at a party on Dec. 28 their bids
include the
names of the
girls and are in
the same c'ors
as the name giv
en their group.
Hostesses will be
Pat Woods, Es
ther Louise Lef
ler, Sis Faulkner,
Ann Beard, Marion Bennison, Bar
bara Scott, Ruth McMillan, Janet
Smith, Wanda Seaton, Betty
O'Shea, Mary Rosborough all
Theta's; Dorothy Ann Koenig,
gess, Mary Ella Bennet, Kappa's;
and Betty Jo Koehler, Pat Cooper,
Harriet Talbot, and Bette Rath
burn, DG's; Nancy Halligan,
Alpha Phi, and Cay Duermeyer,
Tri Delt.
On December 29th, also in Lin
coln 20 young men will play host
to a large group. The bachelors
are Tom Davis, Charles Oldfather,
Phi Delt's; John Folsom, Dick De-
Brown, Tom
'Tk4 Woods, Sterling
VZrfrl Mutz, Orval Ha-
CIRISTMAS
mi
sua?
22i-'S ger, Jack Stew-
art, Beta's; Dick
Joyce, Phi Psi;
ohn Mason,
ATO; Clyde
Martz, DU; John
Upson, Carl
R o h m a n , and
Bob Ludwick, Sig Alpha; Nate
Holman, Sigma Nu; and Jack
Weidman, Sig Ep. The ball will
be named after the status of the
young men.
OMAHANS
will hold their annual Christmas
balls. Two outstanding parties
will be the Spinsters ball on De
cember 26 at which numerous
university girls will be hostesses,
and the Friars ball New Year's
Eve. Among the NU hostesses
will be Hap Mcintosh, Mary Jean
McCarthy, Kay Tunison, Mary
Lou Ball, Jean Stuht, Ann Weaver,
ver, Shirley Hoffman.
SURPRISE
of the week is the candy passing
of Brandon Backlund, Phi Delt,
and Emily Hess, Theta. The Phi
Delt's claim that it is the first
candy passing in four years at
Shirley Hoffman.
ANNOUNCED
at the Alpha Phi house during
their formal Christmas dinner was
the engagement of Mary Lou
Daly to Paul Wagner, Alpha Sig,
with a candy passing. Candy also
went to the Alpha Chi's In honor
of Alice Svoboda and her ap
proaching marriage to Darryl An
trim, Wesleyan Crescent.
Barbara Scott is at home
"sleeping off" a double dose of
sleeping tablets which she mis
took for a half -dose. The Theta's,
unable to wake her, created, ex
citement for the neighborhood
yesterday noon by calling an am
bulance squad to her aid.
70 of teachers
achieve 'success'
More than 70 percent of the stu
dents attending teachers college
since 1925, have been successful
So states Dr. O. H. Werner in
report published in "Educational
Administration and Supervision'
and based on a nine year study of
1,896 students enrolled there.
Altho most of those studied did
not graduate from the university,
they must still be termed successes
because they achieved their pur
pose in attending college.
Thus those who resured two
year certificates but entered voca
tions other than teaching before
the completion of their college
work or married before they se
cured their degrees, as well as
those graduating from the univer
sity, were all judged successful if
these were their respective reasons
for attending the university.
To date or be dated'-coeds
prefer the cheaper way
by Paul Svoboda.
With the winter's formal social
whirl officially started by the pre
sentation of Elizabeth Waugh as
Honorary Colonel at the annual
Military ball, the problem of dates
for hundreds of collegians will
arise. Those fortunate males who
found a suitable companion for the
ball did so weeks before the event.
set because the male gets to take
who he wants where he wants and
therefore should be glad to meet
the expenses
Cay Deurmyer, arts and sciences
sophomore.
The girls have the advantage.
Even if they don't have much of
a choice, they do get to go a lot
of places for nothing. On my al-
ZZrT JZ ....hhTA v lowance I wouldn't get to go any
!?IiL6 7255 "n.fy where. In fact I could hardly keci
disappointed and had to make sec
ond choices.
It is also true that many a coed
put on the stall act and accepted
definitely only the third of fourth
proposal, that is, those few de
sirables" for whom the male heart
yearns.
Who has the advantage in the
present system of dating, the boy
or the girl? The boy has a wider jy nag to oot the bUL Ala0
field of selection because he does irl who aren't dated nrobablv
the asking, but he has to foot the wouidn't be accepted if they were
bill. On the other hand the girl tn as,ir fflP ,ate.a. Another advan-
hardly keep
up my reputation in the Corn
Crib.
Mary Stoddard, teachers junior.
Oh, heck . . . it's a toss up.
Everybody's satisfied, aren't
they?
Josephine Gold, arts and sciences
sophomore.
This is where the girls have it
over the opposite sex because the
gets to trip the light fantastic to
everything and anything without
touching the purse stnng, how
ever her disadvantage is that she
has to wait to be asked.
Bobby Epps, arts and sciences
freshman.
Eve lured Adam with the p
apple somewhere back in th
ginning of time. The female
continued to do so thruout
ages and she gets better with
practice. I think a girl has the ad
vantage. If she possesses those
qualities of luring, inviegling, call
tage is that they don't have to
plan the evening's entertainment,
which is a problem in itself.
Carolyn Carlson, bizad sophomore.
The boys, but definitely if a
fellow wants to date he can. Even
though he doesn't always get the
on girl he wants, he nevertheless has
?- a choice. Some of the time girls
want to rftate but cant.
Ruth Grosvner, arts and sciences
sophomore.
The boys . . . darnnit! No mat
ter what else, a boy can always
find "some kind" of a date while a
nas
the
them anything you like, and uses girl has to sit at home and wait.
them to her advantage she can get Besides since a ooy ioois an me
a date anytime. Beauty is not a bills he can determine what the
requirement but intelligence along entertainment is to be. Let me
some lines is. The paying problem say this, however, anyway you
does not enter into the question, look at it dating is O.K., the
Girls don't expect the boys to Utopian state of pre-marital corn
spend a lot of money on them. pionship between the sexes would
Pat Fleming, arts and sciences be when the girls asked the boys
junior. . but the latter paid the bills.
By all means the boys. They can - '
ask for the dates while we have Two coeds are members of the
to take what we can get. The dis- livestock Judging team of Massa
advantage of having to pay is off- chunetts State college.
X
Jjf E'RE not boasting. But we are proud and we've patted all of our buyers on
the back for filling our store with such wonderful Christmas gifts! Whether you want
to pamper papa's hobby ... put glamour back into mother's life . . . indulgean imp-
little sister or greedy little brother: whether you want to thrill the girl who
has everything, or play godparent to the friend who seems to have nothing
gift from here will win all their praises as a gift worthwhile!
Att Park
Wrapped Ready
Under
o. Gift x
tour ,riWJ s7 X
In