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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 18, 1938)
PAGE EIGHT THE DAILY INKMtASKAN, Fit II) AY, MAKCII 1H. 19311 y I BY THE HAIIIN IKESS sponsible. Ferhaps it Is the Influ ence of your haunt ress'a col leagues. But no mutter hnw it enme about we've gone off on 11 rampage again and this time our happy haunting grounds cover the deeper recesses of the masculine ' wardrobe. In other words, we're going to drag a few skeletons from closets. To begin with we've always had sneaking notion that Dave Dea klns owned a. Little Lord Kaunllo roy costume complete with a wig cf yellow curls. But search the Phi Pelt house high and low, the brothers have never been able to discover It. And really It would be no sur prise at all If Thuratv Phelps ar rived at the dinner table at the Phi Fst house some time wearing a hula skirt. We're practically posi tive he has one. And If you could be a little mouse at the Slg Alpha house some mght .lust as the boys were crawling Into uppers and' lowers, we'll bet our next pair of horn rtma that Web Mills would be don ning a night cap. And right next door if you took the trouble to Investigate you would probably find that Monsieur Wadhama has at least one tea gown for little Impromptu affairs such as he and his friends are apt to cook up the last minute. For Paul Wagner and Matador Cropper we suggest a brother and later suit the kind we all used to wear. If thev haven't an outfit cf this description we're wrong again. . Just to look at him you'd never tiapect it but don't you think very fellow should have at least one pair of dirty cords? How ever, with us seeing la believing in till case. We're talking about Bmitn Davis, the D. u.'s bid for best dressed man. We've heard can't remember who told us that Johnny Howell can cook. People wear aprons to cook. Johnny can cook. By de- aucuve reasoning we should say mat jonnny must own at least one spron, the frilly kind may haps. , Frank Coufal, best blusher at the Sigma Chi house, we should like to see dressed ns Bashful, one of the seven dwarfs. But if he were, too many giila would be thinking they were Snow White so guess we'll have to leave him out. Tucked away in some corner of an Acacia closet there must be a pair of Dr. Denton's, the kind of pajamas we used to wear In kindergarten days. This year these bits of evening attire have made a comeback as fashion sheets have shown them In what are practically out-sizes. To model these, we suggest that great grid ter star, Marvin Plock. Other mannequins who ought to make a personal appearance ome day are George Rosen in a top hat, Clayton Ankeny In knee panfcl, John Welngarten in a ballet skirt, Hal Halstead In a barrel. T)waine Llmprecht In rompers, Ben Bushman in a coat of armor and Paul Monson In a fluffy fem inine formal. Then too, there are Just lots of people around this neck of the woods who would look best In Just a plain old cap and gown. NATION PAUSES FOR WILDLIFE WEEK, SEES WASTED WEALTH (Continued from Page 1.) whiter snows melt and the spring rains fall has rushed to the sea in floods bearing with it a wealth of fertile earth. If Topsoil Goes, Man Goes. "When the topsoil goes, man goes," said Theodore Roosevelt, the first president to warn this country that its wealth of wild life would not last forever at the rate it was being consumed. When the topsoil disappears, the green plants that make animal life pos sible will disappear. America was once so rich In wild Ufa that the pioneers could not Imagine a time when there could be a lack of fish, game and forests. There are some old men who still remember the herds of buffalo that roamed the plains, buffalo that have been completely wiped out now that man has moved across the continent. Despoil Great Lakes. The cheapest food for man Is fish. The supply a half a century ugo in the Great Lakes seemed un limited. Still, today, the Groat lakcs are nearly empty of white fish, and the salmon of the Pacific coast is in grave danger. Civilized man has committed these crimes against the earth and the waters from which he must pot all of his food. He commits these crimes by draining lakes and marshes, by turning clear streams Inlo open newer, by stripping the forests nnd ravaging the grass l.ird.i, Only can this waste of the na i'.r.i o'Jt-i.vr wealth be stopped ly (!:e united support of everyone Is the belief of the National Wild life Federation. The sp is rlFlng In tho maples, pnd in th politicians. A liick town is a place where t hoot owls Uerp the nifiht- hinnu awake. One of the surest ways to lose 'ii v la to lend il to a loose ' ,HcJ, (Mptimiiit. A;-(.KVAT10S A barefoot boy with shoes stood silting in the grass. But a bare foot gnl by the name of Marian Slarlin ran home from class. You see It rained the other day, no kid ding, and Marian didn't want to get her shoe:; wet. She went home vln back alloys hut she was seen by a good friend of mine who felt that one and all should know. A. G. B. pledges are harvesting their wllii oats tills week. Those freshmen are carrying green and gold sickles around the campus and wherever else they may go. One eo-ed was heard to remark that Jim Dixon's sickle was Just too cute and wouldn't he give It to her? She must not have been the right one because Jim still has his sickle. What will the Alpha Zeta mixer be like with the two Ag fraterni ties having hell week? I have a hunch that sonic of the more ag gressive pledges will see fit to get to the affair In spite of the best attempts of the actives. It would surely be too bad if some hand some freshman had to leave his partner on the dance floor and go homo to wax floors. This spring weather does the darndost things. Kvon Marvin Vaughn was seen walking to school with a good looking brunct the other day. Tsk Tsk. Now, Marvin. Leo Hansmire's watch must be a little fast as he was seen to start intermission at 15 till 10 at the Engineers' brawl. Wonder If he will do the same tonight. We he:ir t'.at Burnoil Gingery has bu'n hanging around at 3045 Holdrege lately. Those Inland girls must really have something on the ball. We wonder why Neil Dawes, Epworth's best, is not the charter mwm V ' m ill Top It Off With A STEVENS Hat There's a Steven's here for every one of you. Made In the style you prefer and the color you want. You get so much for so little. They Look Like a Million NEW SPRING Ralston Shoes for Men stt ouu When you wear one of our Arrow patterned shirts you can be sure It's correctly styled . . . styled with the Incomparsble skill that has made Arrow America's leading authority on All are Mitoga form-fit. All Sanforized . . a new shirt free if one ever shrinks. GOLD'S Men', store . . . 11th St. member of the CornhUKkrr Cnun tiiyman's Liars rhib. We hear that he la the champion story toller of the agronomy department and Hint Is surely going some. SOCIETY Spring is now sprung. Lovo Is In the air. Kveiyone Is blossoming out with new spring clothes. Hint, read the rest of the pnper. For this evening tho, blue clothes will be In prominence, Some couples present represent the Pi Pill house. Mildred Weber and John Bishop; IVlphlne Scaly and Bill Kov, via; Pat Peterson' and Frank Cole; and VI tilllatl, who went In school here last year, Is coming bao.. to go to the blue party to go wllh Van Alexander. Maybe she Is making; a second try for a heart. Which one, we're not saying. We might my that "Hell Week" Isn't, always so hard on the pledges as the actives. Frank Kud rna came limping and all tired out over to see PLhyllls Jensen. When she asked him what was the mat ter, he said that they were having "Hell Week" and It was more tir ing on the actives than the pledges. ' Kappa Delta has recently pledged Lucille Krlesoii and Ma rion Stove. STUDY REVEALS SARTO RIAL VAGARIES OF THE PROFESSORS. (Continued from Page 1.) one of the six suits, each plainly stamped as the very correct 1010 model, tweedy, ultra-British. High Water Pantl" Whether the professor has In creased In stature or whether the rain back In the summer of 1027 shrank the trousers of the said suits is not known, but suffice it to say that, the term "high-water pants" is the only applicable de scription of the condition of the nether garments. Pants and shoes are separated by an unbridgeable gap; each goes its separate way and never the twain shall meet. Bow ties of every violent hue, broad, droopy, poetic-looking ties, prosperous-looking ties which rtrike the note to which handker chief, socks and shirts combine In soul-saddening h.uniony - all these types and more exist on the Ne braska campus. "Armor Knit In Rings" There is the dress which is cited as tangible evidence o what a too great exposure to science and allied subjects may do -the dusky rose dress that bulges In the wrong places, that calls upon the photo graphs which "live forever" to look to their laurels. The dress is IWE GIVE S.&H.0 It's The Latest Thing! W M yaj Three Button Drape! Tailored by Clothcraft Lined with Earl-Glo Rayon Here's news for the man who likes to be In the fore of fash Ion, The latest style bulletin says "the three button single breasted drape." And here it Is, ready for you faithfully tail ored by Clothcraft's expert craftsmen. And like all Cloth craft suits it's made of fine fabrics to insure wear as well as style. 995 There art 'l the new itylM In Ralttoni. In ill th colon. Priced to allow you to have several p.ilra without hurtino. the old bankroll. See theml And Smilel 495 2.00 2.25 2.50 described irreverently us "not much dress, mostly slip, a sort of armor knit on In rings." The al ternate which does duty for Tues day and Thursday classes Is a gray creation which defies description but Is a thing quite wonderful to behold. There urc professors who are known for their Infinite variety, for their leopard-like ability to change their spots with the dawn of every new day. And there are those who are remembered for a characteristic type of attire as the professor who wears the suit candidly described as "looking as though the professor had been kid naped and left In the sack. With the suit, as an Invariable noeom- v It v0 o cVev. 7 I'm--- - J .11 IV. v . T ' panlement, comes a green and white shirt and thi remnants of a once beautiful maroon tie. in parting, may wc add that if "by their shirt and socks ye uhall know them," wc can only reiter ate that "any rcsi'tiiblunen of the characters herein depleted " DRESS CANDIDATES FAVOR FESTIVE BLACKS, BOLEROS (Continued from Page 1, ) Alpha XI Delta. Across the sllght ly dropped shoulder line are fluffy (iuhonnet flowers. Muriel Kraane, Sigma Delta Tail, will appear in spring print on white taffeta, wdlh fuchsia straps, buttoned down the o oW'-r"0.i e' tat I & AO .-.. ?"tor kn " . .1"".' ... jwkVU jCt L Important j J ff r m A A- . . - , Soft Cloves to Match.... I.95 and 2.95 Defiant Amusing back, and escorted by a puffed sleeved bolero. Turquoise blue In draped satin Is the glamourous choice of Doris Weaver from Carrie Belle Ray mond hall. A glimpse of white fur at the top makes the gown even more luxurious. Hlgma Kappa Km- Virglnla Smith, Kappa Alpha Thctu, has chosen shlrtwalsted navy blue In inoussellne d sole, with starched white collar and cuffs and puffed slu'vcs. Dorothy Campbell, Kappa, also plans on navy, In net with whlto linen ap plique on the skirt and white linen Jacket, Alice Nemec, Kappa Delta will appear In an orchid chiffon redlngoie over peach chiffon, a ( V tin 7V 70 - Or, m 1 Let 0et - -nv r! too f Say CUaiAADJikL Flowers 50c Younj Scarfs... 50c and 1.00 uostume Jewelry 1.00 Street Floor "Picture dress" with fuchsia belt and shoulder .straps. The cunclldatoa will take part In dress rehearsal Junday uftcniouii with their models In social science auditorium beginning ul 2 o'clock. One of them In tho Beat Dressed Girl of lU.'IH, elected by the A. W. S, Judges last Wednesday. She will be revealed at tin ( Umax of the style show, March 21. COUNCIL DISCUSSES COOPERATIVE BUYING FOR CAMPUS HOUSES (Continued from Page. l. evening In the student center, but mk s' l.l' r v "'in". .. ue c C0. 19S0 ft : '' sT w -1. v no definite decisions had been made as to the time and frequency of the shows. Ulher bualiicsH before the g,,v. ernlng body was consideration of the new Ag Poultry Science cluh constitution, presented by l,anr. once, Jones. Tho constitution was approved. Kva Jane Sinclair, co-chalrinan of the publicity committee, re ported that the committee had sponsored three Tuesday night radio broadcasts publicizing tho university, and had made arrange ments to continue the weekly sc ries until the end of May. mrr