PAGE SIX THE IUILY NERKASKAN TUESDAY. FERKUARY 15, 19.$a. (RadLo . (DjiamcL WliuasL m 9 dihflitiqlittL Oil Uul CIvl BY NORMAN HARRIS. Readers. . .don't forget to send in your entries to the contest which this column is sponsoring, the rules of which were pub lished in Sunday's "R.ig'. . .for you who have not seen them yet ...Here they are again... briefly . . . I. Select your favorite in each of the following groups. 1. Swing band. 2. Dance orcheitri. 3. Male vocalist. 4. Female vocalist. 5. Swing tunc. 6. Dance tunc. 7. Radio Comedian. 8. News commentator. 9. Fifteen minute program. 10. Local program one which originates in NEBRASKA. II. Write your selections on a postcard or piece of papae and mail to Radio Editor, Daily Ne braskan, and be sure they will be postmarked Fel). 26 or be fore, or they will not be ac cepted. III. Sign your names so you will get your prize, if you win one. The person coming clooest to the consensus of opinion will win two free tickctj to the junior senior prom; second place win ner will get one free ticket; and the first 50 entrants will receive 8x10 photocs of Columbia Broad casting system stars heard over KFAB and KFOR. . ..Honke (,'nrtiT, veteran news commentator will imuurate a new series of broadcasts over Colum bia next Monday iui.I.t the spon sorship of General Foods corpora tion. . .he will be on five times per week. Monday thru Friday, 5:30, ic. s. 1. 1 . . .Carter was born in TJaku. South Unpsi i. son of a Brit ish consul, attended Cambridge university, was a member of the llritish Air Force in the great war ...has worked for half a dozen newspapers . . . -Hurry! A Only 3 moi e cMys JOAN BLONDELL LESLIE HOWARD "STAND-IN" Plus 'THE RIVER'' Fred Km 'Xincoln xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ENDS TONITG...I The faoalral k-4 to plf-larre! MICKEY ROONEY... "You're Only Young Ones" "Ho d 'Em Navy!" ' St Irts WEDNESDAY! Another OuUtnd nj two. hit proaieml PAUL MUNI BETTE DAVIS "BordeVtown" (Tt pictuie tht thousands asked us t buna back:) AND!" Companion Hit I wife Im4 h:' "ANGEL" MARI r.NK iiiairn Mfc.MHP.HT MUllHMi r.MW. . . VT HIIH1UM Any Hral 1 Till l:M FRIDAY It wif woith tint ing . . . the tinuh it! rim I TED MO RITC! I Itrtl) ItiNip I ' Hun""' "SKI FLIGHT" 'High Tor' Receives Praise From First Nighter Critic Mueller, Albin Take Acting Honors in University Players Fantasy. By Fern Steutcville. "Hih Tor" is a confusing- play. It is listed as a comedy, but it re mains a mystery. When the Play ers presented the show last night, miraculously minus most of the usual first night boners, WaUlemar Mueller and Flora Albin presented scenes, bordering between the fan tastic and the teal, that were more beautiful than the troupe's follow ers have seen nil season. Jcnks Plays Indian Role. An open stage, the lower half the rugged peak of the mountain Tor and above, the blue-black sky between sunset and sunrise, with intermittent rolls of thunder and flashes of liuhtning, furnished the setting from which an Indian, Hart Jcnks, silhouetted on the summit, offered a magnificent prayer to the god of the dying fire; six REGENTS WEIGH CHOIR ALLIANCE WITH UNIVERSITY (Continued from Page 1.) day. Barb Council Supports. Further student support in favor of the proposal was advanced when the llarb council met last Thursday afternoon and unani mously voted to extend a "hearty approval of the action of the Student Council in regard to en couraging the Board of Regents to accept the Choir as a university organization." The petition presented by the Student Council wit a the signa ture of every member attached asked that the board do one thing for the Great Cathedral Choir; provide a room that it can defi nitely call its own. The Choir, un der the direction of John Ros borough. has offered to pay any expense that it will incur outside of its upkeep of its room. At the present time, flic organization is very self-supporting, having re fused many grants offered it by music-loving Lincoln people. First Big Thing. "This is the first big thing that the university has been offered for some time. llliam Clayton, sttl dent council member in charge of the petition, stated. "This Choir if we can say that it is part of the university, will really put this institution on the map. Right nowi the Choir is singing material that I only three or four other famous choirs in the country are singing." "We must make it clear that the Choir is not asking to be taken into the university," Clayton added. "It' is asking whether or not the university would like to have it. Members of the Student Council feel that the Choir has more to offer the university in the form of publicity and fame than the university iin to offer it." Extended Eastern Tour. The Lincoln Cathedral Choir for a time sang at a large church in Lincoln. When too many people becan to believe that the Choir was composed entirely of member of that sect, it became the organ ization of its present form. Last yenr the Choir took an ex tended trip thru the East, singing Hurrr I. tint 2 Part GIANT g UNIT PROGRAM All. MONT tN MIT RIDIN' DYNAMITE!! BUCK JONES "SUDDEN BILL DORN" in I 2 HHr: r. d ... foal I "SAI 2aOal i, ha4. l HNK WAMTKI) A THH.IIX HMK MOT IT!I foala tan k tow llory? "SALESLADY" Mltso.N ta HIT . Muialn '"'p "Palnlrd af VOIR HtallMta" TkrlHi TOKH' Alwayi A Krai Latest Newt Alwart A Hral phantom Dutchmen of the six teenth century, too healthy to be good spooks, crept around thru the rocks; three bank robbers ap peared as from a dime novel, and Annand Hunter and Don Uoohm furnished first rate slapstick com edy in the swaying basket of a steam shovel that gave the audi ence as well as the occupants a sensation of seasickness. Dutchmen Bowl Fireballs. Tt is a noble effort for student actors to try to give a convincing characterization of the old crew of the Onrust. The Dutchmen have lived on the same mountain for 300 years, have remained young while slowly becoming mere voices in the air, figures seen thru the light; yet they still have their fun by bowling rocks and fireballs at the steam shovel and the beacon , and a girl who wants him to. The light, the bated emblems of the business men and the girl, in the men who have enchanted them and end, win out, but not before the detained them from their beloved audience is made to feel a sym Amstenlnm. pa thy for the mountain and a dis- Flora Albin, the wife of the cap- Ida in for the steam shovel. before the most cultured in that pait of the country. Last Christ mas vacation its itinerary which included appearances on the Ford Sunday Kvcning hour and Rudy Valle's program, fell thru when another of its sponsors postponed the appearance. The organization is considered to be one of the three or four best in the country at the present time. KOSMET KLUB PLANS REVISION OF ANNUAL SPRING SING RULES (Continued from Page 1.) at least 27 hours credit in the university, and must be in good standing in all hours this semester. Henpecked Husband in Hell. "Hades Ladies" is a two act fantasy, concerning Elmer Smith- ers, a henpecked husband who earns his living writing bedtime stories for children. After quarrelling one evening with his wife, he falls asleep and dreams of the place his wife told him he could go. Elmer wakes up in the reception room of Satan's palace on a festive evening. A plot to overthrow Satan, in which Elmer becomes involved, is included in the story A complete cast of speaking characters as given in the script, VARSITY,,, COOD NEWS LINCOLNI Our A"ic l.me I'rirrn It t 1 P. M. II I - P. M. 5? 100 All Hrala All Hrot r.trrit humlitF II fcvrry liar NIGHT PRICES Mala Untr Vlrr P. M HIT NO. 1 (Hie of th crratetl pirturrl ol all tinira. Abraham Lincoln with WALTER HUSTON UNA MERKEL 2 BIQ FEATURES RICHARD DIX la "IT HAPPENED IN HOLLYWOOD" H44r4 ArtnHlona COMEDY NEWS (I EHVA-ow All teat 150 Alwiyi 2 FIRST RUN a HITS CraihlitQ Inta now ranaeland adven tures . . . Gent hitt a new high in merry, action. pjched musical west erns. tm m it - im OLD Hit Nn. 2 A TULUO CARMINITI ANNA NEAGLE tain of the Onrust, with WaUlemar Mueller, who is the rugged, civili zation loathing owner of the mountain, standing together on the peak nt dawn just before the phantom crew leaves on the phan tom ship, say: "God knows where ghosts leave off and we begin; Clod knows where wc leave off and gliosis begin." Thus ends the night's meeting and love of the alive ami the dead in a poetic scene. Audience Feels Sympathy. Save for the Indian who wisely says, "Nothing is made by men but makes in end good ruins," an 1 for the shadowy Dutch crew, "High Tor" is a simple comedy of two money grabbers who want to cut down a beautiful mountain, a man who doesn't want to work, whieh was written by John Ed- to M'lrlH, M wards is as follows; Iln1:im ami JrUnm, Nirlt g, t-:iiit-r Nmlthcrft, a huttMii,!, ai hm- nnnn so. Ivy hmllhrra, a wile, a wivr so, Junior Smlthrr, n , n hy n. t'haron, the old frrrymnn All the rivrr Styx. hiittm, mlrr nf thp nndrrworlil. lined. raitlral dMll. Hrrlfrhiih, the rinrr nf thf dt'vlU. MriHlrniti. line old .Nirki. a si'iillr nmn'ii grnllrntan, and K:tliin' rrv:inl. Jonathan o'Hara ANlrrr, another hllihnnd, Harold Snioorh, a yining ni:tn, a ynnns nirn raltrnre Darling, n wrrt ynilnc thine. IVrnrphnnr, a lady l Hudrs and .iiwi of th Nctti world. April. May and Jnnr, tlirre Indlr of Haden. Old Scratch, a fcallilf, a bailiffs to. Dr. H. K Schilling of Union col lege will address the university so ciety of Sigma Xi Feb. 21 at'7:30 p. m. in tlie lecture room of the physics building "On the Proper ties of Waves." flurry! f.'nifs 7mrJavf "HOLLYWOOD HOTEL" 20 Stars t Great Bands Plui; Donald Buck Novelty Newt III -' VnmimL The university symphony or chestra, climaxing a period of un usual musical activity, will be heard this morning on the Charter Day program, along with Dorothy Canfiekl Fisher, one of Nebraska's distinguished contributions to the field of literary art. This con tribution by the orchestra is a special one, and will be followed by another of the regular sym phony concerts on March 6. For today's musical program, j the orchestra will open with the overture "Euryanthe," by Von Weber, the German composer. Two Slavonic dances by Dvorak, in A flat and C major, will serve to liven up the proceedings, while Massenet's "Phedre" will finish the group in fine measure. There is no reason why students should miss the wonderful program this morning, as all classes are dis missed at ten o'clock. We hope that a large number will take advantage of the op portunities to be ejoyed by partici pation in "Billy" Quick's Univer sity Players orchestra. In addition to seeing all Players productions without cost, you will find that this group offers excellent chances for ensemble work, since it is small anough for each musician to re available in larger organizations. In other words, this orchestra has all the properties of a well-organized jam session in the pursuit of study of the light classics. If you own or play an Instrument, and are not otherwise crowded for activity time, may be suggest that you drop over to Mr. Quick's of fice in the School of Music and see him at your earliest oppor tunity? The recital program for tomor row will be presented by Doris Foreman, piano student of Her bert Schmidt, who is giving her senior recital at this time. Re flecting the apparent local prefer ence for Bach, Miss Foreman will open her program with his Fan tasy in C minor. tyNortKrtSZ H? S fl y if DOROTHY LAMOUR JON HALL MARY AITOR C. AUBREY SMITH THOMAS MITCHELL JOHN CARRADIN Starts Friday! "TTFl I la) I I rar si U ioHnib!EIRffiof "LOOK OUTF0R LOVE" XxxxxxxKkxkkxxxxxxxxxxxx Por U vJ9k"& u