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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1937)
4 1 I H r !MLY Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska 2 A Ill ft;nl tuft 'i train D c3 Sarah Louise Meyer I vK, 1 ' a . VOL. WWII, NO. 1. LINCOLN."' ISKRItASKA, WI.DM SI) Y. DI.Cl.MHI.U I, 1:17 phk i: mm: :i:ts " I Y I CHAMBER Tivclvr Ken-ons for Mot Shopping Earl) SETS I RALLY military iSall 4owiis DATE AT DEC. 14 Ever Mure early November the old cry has been dinning in our ears: "Do your Christmas Shop- ping Early!" On the face of It. this is a beautiful idea. Superficial ally the suggestion Is sound. It! seems to have logic, economy and the laws of health to recommend 1 it. Yet the smug, self-righteous slogan we feel to be forceful can-, rellation of any good to he gamed; record attendance is expected by fulfilling its message. Karly j for the junior chamber of roin C'hristmas shopping, in the last j merce annual nil-state football analysis, is fundamentally foolish. - miiy which will be held in Lincoln And so, In a very non-inclusive i on Dee. 14, In honor of "Riff" sort of wav. we have undertaken ! .'ones, the senior lettermen of the Program to Honor Players Of Nebraska, Weslcyan, High School Teams. Nebraska team, the foothnll men of Weslcyan university, and out standing high school players and coaches of the state. Invitations have also been extended to nil members of the 1937 Cornhusker football team. Emmctt .lunge, chairman of the junior chamber of commerce com mittee, which is In charge of the details of the rally, announced that 13 high schools had already accepted his invitation. Delegates will be present from Curtis. Omaha Central. Eairhury, Holdrege, Wilbur, College View. Englc, Ulysses, Valley, York, Ash land and Lincoln high. It is ex pected by the committee in charge (Continued on Page 4). Collegians Give Masculine Picture of Formats For Friday Night. COUNCIL 10 SELECT L to enumerate a flown odd reasons for last-minute glfthuying. There re undoubtedly dozens more, equally valid. Our twcivc are: . By waiting, you have an nc courate Accounting for the "doubt fuls." Everyone, every year, has a list of persons who may or may not come across. If you shop early you necessarily include some who slight you, exclude some who honor you. Ry waiting for the latest possible returns on ques tionable givers, you may buy with the greatest efficiency. 2. Also if you delay your . purchasing, you have an oppor tunity for appraising, or even inspecting, the "obllgational" presents. For those persons to whom one Gives only because given to, It is false delicacy not to observe the ancient law: "An Eye For An Eye, A Tooth For A Tooth." To Thine Own Self Be True. 3. Moreover, las' -minute shop ping eliminates any filching on the gift hoard. If you buy for your friends, as most do, that which is attractive to yourself, you are ever in the danger of reconsidering the giving-away angle, and appropriat ing the article for yourself. With out, any leeway for obtaining sub stitutes, buyers are forced into honesty' with their gift recipients. 4. By waiting until the eleventh hour, in addition, you are forced to pare your present list to the bone. Generosity for the many whose small services and kind nesses -ou might ordinarily choose to remember at Christines appears wanton extravagance with the deadline for all shopping just around the corner, and so you may effect countless economies. 5. Postponement of shopping, too, does away with those special remembrances that turn out, at the last moment, to be most in appropriate. The friend who moved to California is always the one for whom you have selected the fur mittens; the girl for whom you picked the one piece pajamas gets married. And so you must scout around for something else, and jimmy your list to absorb the white elephants. It would be much simpler to wait until all your cronies had settled themselves, and then give them something super. Blurbed Buying. i 6. By not shopping long in ad- j vnnec of the Yuletiuc season, you may take advantage of all the countless commercial inspirations. Magazines, newspapers, the radio,' as Christmas approaches, pour into j your ears all sorts of bright ideas. That's their business, so why not let them do your forehead wrinkl-: ing for you? And the closer you come to December l;, the longer . 'CarCJllinCZ win lie your list or second-mum brain storms. 7. Late Chhristmns buying is acknowledged to be simpler than early shopping. Your mind is com- paratively easily made up because An lllust rated lecture on 'The there is no dazzling array of al- j Carquinc Strait Bridge" will be ternative choices. You get what J presented before members of the there is, and save yourself the Nebraska chapter of the American mental torture of inde'esion. Society of Civil Engineers by 8. Additionally, you nave ; Stanley Michael, junior In civil After years of contacting coeds to get preview glimpses cf Mili tary Ball gowns, the Daily Nc braskan is reversing its policy this fall. Various men on the cam pus who will escort the more glamorous femmcs to Friday's shindig were asked to describe the gowns they were to squire, and after considerable phoning of the girls-in-t he-ease, the lads came across handsomely. Here we pre sent a date's-eye-view of the fash Ion parade that will sweep by at the grand march. According to Dal Tassie of the Beta house, Peggy Durland will wear "one of those flimsy things that you see through and then they put gold on it and a black slip." The gown will be of black net with brief puffed sleeves. "T-Strap Affair." Ed Sleeves, Sigma Nil, explains that Betty Widcnei's formal is of gold satin, fitted at the waist and full in the skirt. "They tell me it's very severe," Ed stated, "with a T-strap affair in back. From what I understand, it's the kind that you can't see much of from behind because the back gets in the wav." Bill Gray, Delt. reeled off a de scription of Flora A 1 bin's gown without hesitation: "It's a white formal covered with I guess you call them gold sequins, and a close fitting jacket." He added that his date would wear a gold feather in her hair. "I helped pick it out,'1 he explained. Perhaps Virginia Lea would have a different way of saying it, (Continued on Page 4i. flRTAR Mm II U II WVIII1UU NAM E CHAPERONS FOR V C E Master Farmer Honors Feature I Annual Ag Week National Call cry ; Seeks to Reclaim 'The Fall Season Los Angeles Terror-Ridden As Mountain Moves on City Members Designate Problems Of Student Government For Discussion. Plans for the National Federa tion of Student Councils conven tion will compose the bulk of the business discussed by members of the student council at their regu lar meeting this afternoon al 5 o'clock in University hall. The del egate to the meet, which is to be held In Albuquerque December 28 to January 1, will be selected by the body. The federated student councils hold a national meeting biennially at which the general problems of all student governing bodies are discussed. The problem that the Nebraska delegate will bring be fore the convention will be dis cussed at the student council meet ing today. Because the national convention comes at the time that the Big Six student council conference is usually held, the Big Six confer ence will not be held this year, I ami instead the topics that would have been brought up they will be i discussed at Albuquerque. Huge Boulders Roar in Relentless Descent on Riverside Drive. BY BARBARA MEYER. The mountain came to both Mo hammed and Los Angeles with a deep roar when Elysian Park's moving mountain started its re lentless descent on Riverside drive and the Los Angeles river bed. At Lookout Point, where the danger of a landslide first was be trayed by cracks in the pavement skirting the brow of the hill, giant boulders, teetering on the edge of the 1 million ton mass of earth and rocks, plunged st intervals and bounded into the dry river bed skirting the highway. Geologists who inspected the gigantic, gaping hole ripped in the face of the 3.0 foot high cliff by the slide asserted that 3 million tons of earth still remain outside the vault, present-' scope. Scllcck. Ramsay. Mintccr, Will Attend Leap Year Party. ; Chaperons for the Mortal Hoard i leap year party Dee. 10 will be Mi-. and Mrs. John K. Selleck, Mr. and Mrs. F,ay Ramsay, and Prof, and Mrs. C. C. Mintccr, according to announcement by Jane Barbour last night. Guests will he Chancellor and Mrs. E. A. Burnett, Mayor and Mrs. Oren S. Copeland, Governor and Mrs. Roy Cochran, Colonel and Mrs. V. H. Oury, Major and Mrs. L. M. Jones, Dean and Mrs. T. J. Thompson. Dean and Mrs. W. W. Burr, Dean and Mrs. C. H. Oldfather. Dean and Mrs J. E. I .cRoKsicnn! Dp:m nnd Tr H Grubb, Dean and Mrs. O. J. Por ing the dan-er that it may conic j p,lson ,-)Pan ,, Mrs H H Kos. pounding down into the heavily, .... traveled area below. ,or' Doiin nnd Mrs- R A- 'Mll;in. "There is less hnpo than ever, ' Dean and Mrs. F. E. Henzlik, Mr. and I am sure the worst js yet to ! and Mrs. Gavle Walker. Mr. and r L ' ' V . V T"H1,'rt Mrs. Howard Kirkpatrick. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Reed, and Dean and Mrs. F. W. Upson. Sporsors to Attend. Mortar Board partv sponsors city, ask with fear and trepidation will be Dean Amanda Heppner, Dr. if this is a display of Mother Erin a Schrick Miss Marram! i , c- .1-1 ......'. Earths wrath. Dr. E. E fichram. Fedde, Miss Nellie Eastburn and 1 w ,v, v0.i.i n,.a,i,.mv in tsstt and an academician in 3 001 , Sessions to Continue Begin Monda.' Thru Friday On Ag Campus. Loaned to the I'niveisity ot Ne braska by the National Academy of Design "The Fall Season'' by Bruce Crane may be reclaimer! hy the National Gallery in Washing ton, according to the conditions ot the bequest, which states that ten years after the artist's death it may be reclaimed or ln-come the permanent property (if th sily. Bruce Crane, famous (or Ins landscapes of autumn days, died October "0 at his home in Hronx Ville. N. Y., at the age ot Ml. One ot the oldest active artists in the country, Mr. Crane worked until the day of his death, when he collapsed suddenly of an heart it tack. Besides numerous other ac tivities in the art world, he was Organized Agriculture wci will he held nrst wee-k. wilh sf s. sions beginning Monday, Dec. !. and running thru l-Yiday. ihe loth. All meetings will take place on the Agricultural college ram pus. Formerly. "Ag week" has been held during the fust week in Jan- univcr- j uary. but it is Imped that -1 1 fi Ihe i probability of more favorable weather, more persons will be at tracted to ;be session. Special events listed on the program of activities for the week include the eleventh annual mas ter farmer presentation at the Lincoln hotel. ;:.",n p. m., Tuesday, Dec. 7. Master farmers and their families will be introduced by Sam R. McKclvie. after which former president of the Solwa-Mhe honored guests will be wcl- of the California Institute of Tech nology. Los Angeles citizens, terrified by the omnious roar and the spectacle of a landslide, in the heart of the gandi club For the last 2?, years. Mr. Crane lived in Bronxville, and painted many lyrical landscapes. A mellow yellow plays a predominant part in his work, for Mr. Crane was fond of doing landscapes of bright autumn days and dull fall days, dominated by gray. The artist started exhibiting at the National Academy as early as of the Geology department, says Miss Lenore Alwav that "landslides are common, and; Alumni of Mortar Board society this is probably the result of some : who are members of the faculty volcanic action. The earth is slip-1 have also been invited to attend, ping just a few inches at a time. , They are: Miss Mathilda Shelby, but it may in a few months equal Miss Kate Field. Miss Eliza Gam the 15 inch slippage that caused I hie, Miss Pauline Gel'.atlv, Miss the San Francisco earthquake in! Alice Howell. Miss Mabel Haves, 1906. This crater is a petty one, Miss Mabel Lee. Miss Marguerite compared to the magnificent land slides that can be seen in the moon, and someday we hope to see many of them thru our University tele- FIVE PHI TAU THKTA MKN ATTEND MEET Paul Sprout, Glenn Hedges, George Dinsade and Rolland W. Nye journeyed to Athens, O., over Thanksgiving to attend the 33th national conclave of Phi Tau Theta. The boys, president, vice president, secretai-y, and chaplain, respectively, of Beta chapter, went as delegates and were accompanied by the Methodist fraternity's na tional president, Dale E. Weesc of Lincoln. McPhee, Miss Laura I'feiffer. Miss Elsie Ford Piper and Miss Louise Pound. Sell Tickets Tuesday. Others are Mrs. was a member of the council of the National Academy and he longed to the American Water Color Society. "The Fall Season" is a woodland scene of greens, mellow yellows and grays. It is soft in color, while at the same time it suggests bright autumn days, warm sun shine, and crisp, frosty days. Rep resentative of his lyrical painting, it is considered one of Bruce coined by Floyd Snovcr. president of the Master Farmers club. Wed nesday evening, the lalh annual farmers family fun feed will be held in the College Activities building. Those attending this in formal get-together will be enter tained after the dinner. Dr. Harold Graves to Speak. General meetings of all organ ized societies will be held Thursday and Friday of Ag week, in Col lege Activities building. The Thursday assembly will he ad dressed by Dr. Harold Graves of the University of Wisconsin on the "Tax Situation." Friday's meeting will have for its speak ers, Dr. Regina Wieivan. Chicago, who will speak on "What Makes Life Interesting?"; Pr. William 1 Continued on Page 2.) Klizahflh j Cninr's bst works TU,.,.r.. t; t.m,i f.. 1 . j 111 m 1 1 j 1.-1 M i, iMinn riUrt u iiinn , , t Hattie P. Williams. Mrs. Fred Wil- Hams, Mrs. Ada W estover and Miss Clara Wilson. Mrs. Stanley Ginn and Miss Mildred Green will also be guests. Tickets for the leap year party will not go on sale until Tuesday. Dec. 7, when members of Mortar Board and Tassels will have them. ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA INITIATES 7 TUESDAY HO Program to Include Songs. Traditional Decking Of Ellen Smith. a College Sport Subject of Program In Temple. ' The Hanging of the Greens din 1 ncr, sponsored by the W. C. A.. ! j will be held tomorrow evening at 1 5:30 in Ellen Smith Hall. This event is held annually for the pur- 1 1 0 W3-IJ Cbraska pose of decking the building in , TALKS B' sim Strait Bridge" Subject of Student's Address Tonight. Virginia Chemist Discusses h''i55tmas, frns fronv Carbon. Adsorption At 176th Meeting. John Hassler, director of re search for the West Virginia Pulp ' and Paper Co., will address stu-. fewer chances for blatantly wrong guesses. The silly early birds snatch up all the out-of-the-way, novel articles, leaving you the dependable convention, a Is. By not shopping early you are spared the possibility of giv. ing some unusual thing that Wouldn't make a hit at all. To the Victor the Spoils. JV In a positive way, on the other hand, the late shopper .las j engine -ring, at a meeting this cve j ning n; .7:30 in Mechanical Arts I hall, 102. Trof. D. H. Harkness ! u-111 rtlsn nw-srnt nifivii which he r took at Ihe engineers' camp last summer. The Carquinez Strait bridge was completed jn ljtil". .spanning the strait of that name located about 2.ri miles north of San Francisco. It is ot the cantilever typo and is the second largest of that type every chance of scoring with his I In the United Slates. It lias two present. Nothing Is qulie so flatter- j main spans of 1.100 feet, and is Ing to a gift receiver as the cer-1 notable for its deep pier with taint that "It was the last in j foundations some 13f feet below the store." Such arc deemed rare 1 the water level. Reservations for the dinner must be in by this noon and may be arranged with Evelyn Taylor, who is in charge of the ticket sale, or at the Y. W. C. A. office. The program for the evening, outlined by Loraine Elmborg. hpnr! nf the norsnnnpl stuff nnd in dents and faculty of the University 1 rnarce f)f th(1 flrranrro,n(.nts, in. of Nebraska this evening at 7:30 eludes the singing of Christmas in Ihe auditorium of Avery lab- ' carols by the Vespers choir di rected ny Maxine heuerie, as ine assemble, followed by a solo hv Tex To Describe Work Tonight. ; Frosh Scholastic Honorary 1 Installs Members in j I srciRl Mrrt . . ! Music as j even new memners were 1111 ; tinted into Alpha Lambda Delta. freshman girls scholastic honor- bit. last night, at special initia-i tion services in Ellen Smith hall. ! Those installed as members in-j "First Rate Music Is a Colli -e jellified Blanche Larson, Doris Red- j Sport." Augustus Zanzig. me;-i- dick. Fern Steuteville. llortense her of the advisory committee of I asady, Dorothy took. Marjorte the federal music project, will de Fa rrar, and Mary Louise Baker, j frI1d this view of the subject at " Members are selected on the basis o'clock Thursday afternoon, when of high scholastic averages earned , h addresses a special public ron during their freshman yeai. vocation in Temple theater. Ac- Marearet Ijolezal was in fliarco ; .lin t Unn-uni i.-i..i-n.,f .-i..l- EmplOyCeS of program arrangements Menu 1 director of the University School committee memners mcni'ieu isa--f Musj,-, the program has ben arranged for the purpiso of oe Roscoe, Marv Griebenstroh, Three seniors in electrical en gineering, now engaging in par', time employment w-ith the lowa Nehraska Light Power Company, will relate technical information and first hand experiences at a meeting tonight of the Nebraska chapter of the American Institute of Electrical Engineci ing. Harvey N. Sko'v is woiking in the load dispatching office. Frank ( . ;and Mary Louise Speidell. nrulni'.i t( lm i i ct r. nn thf. aith. ! ' trimct o ntcAnhln ff,llnl-fd In- ject "The Application of Activated i , ' ' n ' " , 'hv Tov Pozelle ' Howard is in the K street plant of Carbon to Problems of Industrial Hounds and a Christmas reading I fic"- nml Thomas .1. Anderson is Chemistry." Slides will be shown by Virginia Davis. A vocal sclo by ' employed in the engineering office, and demonstrations carried out. I Betty Davis will precede the hang- i ""' ;'""K ''" be held in room Acenrdinir In Dr. V A Wi.sli- I r th ,,n. in whieh nil the '" " -,ln """" " engine.-, nig linn .-i ....... - burn of the chemistry department, I guests will participate the speaker will discuss the gen-1 eral principles of adsorption as well as the application of these principles to such practical prob lems as the removal of object ional tastes and odors, the concentra tion of bodies than can he ad- Special guests will be Dean but members of the society i first meet at 7 o'clock at will the Amanda Heppner. Miss Elsie Ford ; '"Pus studio to have their pic Pipher and the Y. W. C. A. ad- ! "'; taken for the 19.S Corn- Piph visory board. Others attending will be the members of the eight major boards who supervise women's activities on the campus sorbed, f lilt ration, evaporation ami including the Mortar board, A. W. crystallization and adsorption I s. board, barb A. W. R. hoard, W. agents, so-called "capalysts." I a. A. council, Coed Counselor Hassler was obtained by the j board, Home Economics hoard, of stutlent engineering society of the ficers of the Tassels and the Y. W. university and the program, which 'c. a. cabinet, and members of the is open to the public, marks the ! y. W. C. A. prizes indeed. 10. If you must, you discover' that you can get all your shopping done In one full swoop. If you pamper yourself, and buy far ahead of the deadline in easy stages, you are destroying some thing very fine your reserve strength. By drawing upon all your powers In one concerted effort, bred of desperation and necessity, you maintain your red-bloodedness. 11. To most of us, half the fun of Christmas, after the Santa Claus stage, is the last minute scramble to finish up all preparations. We don't enjoy our Noel unless we arc limp with exhaustion from frantic late shopping and buzzing as to head with numberless forgotten items. Calmness just isn't the American characteristic of Christmas. 12. But of greatest importance in our consideration of delayed buying is the fact that "Christmas Shopping I Have Not Yit Done" Is the world's most favorite topic of conversation, l'eople dote on aying; with, pride, with the fatal (Continued on Page 41. Details of the bridge will (Continued on Tagc 3.) be 17(ith meeting of the Nebraska section of the American Chemical Society. A charge of 3.'i cents is being made for the dinner. France Frowns Upon Dating Unless Married or Engaged Says Exchange French Coed Mortar Boarri President Will Discuss Functions Of Honorary. Maxine Durand. president (if the Mortar Board Society, will speak I at the Freshman A. W. S. meeting, j to be held at .r o'clock this after ' noon in Ellen Smith hall. ' Miss Durand, an active member 1 ot the A. W. S. board, will discuss, ! the significance of the senior dates for the offices of general honorary society, and how one is chairman and secretary-treasurer elected to it. Betty Cherny, A.; of this year's Engineers' Week will W. S. hoard member In charge of) also be' held at the meeting. Fol-:the Freshman group, stated that lowing the meeting, members will; Miss Durand's discussion would i make an inspection trip through 1 probably contain an explanat ion of the K street plant under the! the traditions of the annual Mor-' guidance of the plant operators. tar Board party. 1 j PRE MED. ! Ortrtlde McArthur. chairman of , I Dr. Miles J. Kroner will speak , this week's meeting, said that j , at the dinner meeting tonight of : parliamentary law will be dis-j 1 the pre-medieal society at ti:15 Hi cussed. Betty Ann Roach will act' I the Grand Hotel. ' as secretary. ; acquainting students with what is j being done in the field of popular ; music in institutions of bighei learning turnout the count iv Zanzig was formerly director of : music in Brookline. Mass.. public schools, was an instructor at ! Smith college, and lectured on the ' teaching of music at Harvard as i well as founding ami directing the Brookline music school. He has j had considerable experience as a j director of choral ami instrumental I groups and is known as the author I of "music in American Life." Mi. 1 .anzig has written extensively j for magazines and is a member of several committees of the music supervisors' national conference He is acting at the present time as director of music service with the national recreation school. busker. I Election of the society's oandi- History of 'Book of Books' From Ancient to Modern Day OLDFATHER SPEAKS Al VESPER SEMES Professor Tells Educator's Views on Requisites For Success. ATTENTION: BAND MEN Be sure and bring your uniforms in to be cleaned and pressed today U possible, as we are proud of you and want you to have the best pos sible appearance for the Military Ball. The Evai'i Cleanera. Adv. By Elwood Randol. "Everything is too big In the Cnited States New York is too big nml dirty and everyone seems to be In such a hurry to get from one place to another. " That is the opinion .Simone Thierry of Paris, France, has of this country. "Noth ing new," she raid, "but on a much larger scale. Not always better hut bigger." Simone has dark hair bluish gray eyes, is about five foot five, weighs one hundred twenty pounds,, and has a winning bmile which enhances her per sonality. She was born on a far ma little less than a hundred miles east of Taris on the day that the French army was mobi lized to meet the advancing Ger mans. At one time during the war when the Germans seemed to be menacing the house in which her parents lived, Simone was sent to Switzerland for safe-keeping. Al though she was four years old at J the time of (lie signing of the armistice ending the World War, she does not remember any of Ihe celebration for the simple reason that she was not in Paris where the festivities were taking place. The French graduate student ex plained that the Idea held by most Americans that Paris is a capital of spontaneous riots was probably due to some students who wanted to demonstrate some cause. "It is a tradition," she continued "for the students to belong to the Royalist party and have demon strations." Then the police are called out and a crowd gathers around and there you have your riot. Mile. Thierry stated 'that sometimes the communists will have a demonstration and that some other party will try to stop It. This will cause the army to be called out to preserve the peace, but usually the riots are no more dangerous than the strikes in this (Continued on Page 3.) Kansas Tops Intercollegiate Field as 35 States Compete. In the heaviest of competition the University college of agricul ture's livestock judging team placed 12th in the intercollegiate contests in Chicago In connection with the International Livestock show. Twenty-five different states were represented. Kansas won the event with Cor nell second and Iowa third. Som petlng on the Nebraska team were Lester Schmadke. Bradish: Carl Swanson, Kearney; Ray Cruise, Gurley; Russell .lacobsen, St. Paul, and Ear! Hedlund, Chappcll. De Los Johnson, Newman Grove, was the alternate. Prof. R. R. Thalnmn's senior livestock team placed 18th on cat tle, 10th on hogs. 4th on sheep and 12th on horses. Carl Swanson was the seventh high individual in the entire contest. "The professor should be essen tially honest, fair and open mind ed, should keep young, and should get his satisfaction from seeing the dpvelnpment of the students.' sait, T- - TI (-.1 U 1. n m r. J - T 1 1 '1 I'CHM , . 11. oiiuuuiri 111 nil .CI- Related m Library bxnihit tiiipV'f,iift n'- from an Educators iewpoint. j which he gave at the vesper 'i-v ice Tuesday afternoon. ! lit ocan Indited and Is explained as being j .lls ,.,,(,1 th.,, tM,. ,,rofrsM,. slv.nl. I authorized by .lames at the suuges- mns( ()f b, H std,-nt ol the sub lion of Dr. John Reynolds. Puritan j0(,t n(, iv teaching. Moulding ol leader, as he objected strongly to . c,linl0t,,r is ,,ol done direct !v but ine 'iencva oumon. i ins version is indirect Iv processional. "The Book of Books." an exhibit ! of facsimiles illtisl rating the liis- tory of the English Bible, is the (subject of the display on the sec ond floor of the Library hall al present. Starting with one of the two oldest and greatest Bibles in the world, the Codex Sinaitlcus of the Greek Bible, the exhibit progress es to the Vulgate version, consist ing partly of the work of Saint Jerome the Hermit and partly of unrevised translations. Ne:t comes the Geneva Bible, which is the work of English refugees in Ge neva and Intended to bring Eng and into line with continental Gal vanism, followed by the Douai ver sion, the Roman Catholic counter part to the Geneva Bible, produced said to combine the merits of n great many previous translations and is phrased in Incomparably beautiful English. Also displayed is a facsimile of the Coverdale Psalter edited in 1W5 in honor of the quarto cen tenary of the publication of the first Eible printed in English, 1G35. by Myles Coverdale. The Coverdale version was supposedly printed in Zurich in sheets and then taken to England and a different title page substituted which read, "Faith fully translated into Englyshe." When It appeared it was dedicated The processional, "father ot Life." was sung by the choir under the direction of Maxine l'ederlc. "Great Master Touch," v.-ns the choir's special number, and "Tin Earth is Touched in Silence," was sung as a recessional. The group united in singing "It Came Vpnn the Midnight Clear." Marian Brad ley was in charge of devotions. under the guidance of the Jesuits . to tnp Klnfr nv his -humble sub 10 Bring iMiginuu uiiu mie wan me Ttoman church. King Jsmei Version. The King James version is ex- I ject and dayle oratour, Myles Cove dale." The v ork Is described as not accurate, but having grace (Continued on Tpge 4), THE LEATHER Br-r-r, the forecast for today Is fair and colder apaln. "he weather bureau reports that temperatures are generally be low average throughout the country with 20 degrees at the estln- ated low for Lincoln .