The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 22, 1938, Cornhusker Edition, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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    PAGE TIVE
CORNHUSKER. SALES HIT NEW HIGH
TIIE DAILY NEBRASKAN, SUNDAY, MAY 22, 193B
More Than 1600
Purchase Books
In Advance Drive
Comments Praise 1938 Edi
tion as One of Best Works
Ever Published.
The 1938 edition of the Corn
husker which conies out Monday
promises to be a record-breaker in
more ways than one, a3 word is
received that to date 1,636 copies
of the annual have been sold.
Total sale of last year's volume
was slightly more than 1,400. Thus
far, there have been more books
sold than at this time ' my year
since 1932, when the . lie high
was reached.
Sold this year on a graduated
price scale, the year book has
gradually risen in price since the
campuswide drive by staff sales
men and Tassels.
Comments Pour In.
Daily, comments pour Into the
offices of the publication. The
Art-Craft Engraving company,
recognized for years as being one
of the ranking institutions in its
field, has complimented the Corn
husker staff on one of the best
yearbooks that company represen
tatives have ever seen.
"From the comments which we
have received thus far," statef
Business Manager Howard Lynch,
"we know that we have an ex
cellent yearbook, and one which
every student should have. It
will be a loss to each individual
wso fails to purchase one.
T)o contestant work of Tassels
and staff salesmen during the en
tire sales campaign was respon
sible for a large part of the in
crease in sales. Ranking staff
salesman for the year is Harry
Prouty. Helen Kovanda and Vir
ginia Fleetwood led Tassels agents,
with Priscilla Wicks in third po
sition.
Cornhusker Shows Students
Working Way Thru College'
Esquire Artist
Praises Ilusker
Beauty Queens
After choosing the beauty
queens for the Cornhusker, George
B. Petty, famed Illustrator of
beautiful women in Esquire and
one of the most competent judges
of feminine pulchritude in Amer
ica today, writes that Nebraska
can well feel proud of her coeds.
Mr. Petty said: "It was very
fortunate for me that you didn't
wish the six Cornhusker Beauty
Queens arranged in order of
beauty. Because the high percent
age of pulchritude, plus the photo
graphic perfection, makes it al
most impossible to rate them nu
merically. Nebraska can well feel
proud of this crop of sweethearts
of the Cornhusker."
In picking the six queens from
the 20 candidates, Mr. Petty had
the accurate measurements of the
gills, an informal picture and a
formal photograph of each. No
sorority affiliations were used
with the names of the girls.
Stoking Furnaces, Cooking,
Fixing Window Displays
Pay for Education.
Representative of the ways that
approximately 00 percent of the
university students spend on the
average of 21 '2 hours a week are
the two pages of pictures in the
1938 Cornhusker with the caption,
"They, Like Many Others Earn to
Learn."
Five percent less men worked
this year than last, but still many
students are doing everything
from stoking furnaces to setting
up window displays during tne
hours that they are not attending
classes.
Among the pictures displayed In
the Cornhusker showing students
in characteristic poses while at
work is the picture of Bob Ramey
putting an arm on a wax figure
in preparation for dressing her for
a window display in a downtown
department store. Another shows
Iloland Nye behind the pulpit of
the Emmanuel Methodist Episco
pal church.
Olsen Hamburger King.
King of the Hamburger Inn Is
Kenneth Olsen, who spends six
hours a day before the hamburger
griddle. A teachers college sopho
more, he spends twelve hours a
week in classrooms. Don Everett
boasts one of the most unusual
jobs for a university student. He
is a guard-instructor at the state
reformatory, works evenings and
week ends and also wields the Da
ton for the old fashioned square
dance orchestra there.
Representing the women on the
campus who do not spend all of
their spare hours in caking and
play are Inez Heaney and Virginia
Meisinger. Miss Heaney is shown
giving her pleasing smile to a pro
spective customer by the counter
of a department store, and Miss
Meisinger is pictured taking the
pulse of a patient at Bailey's sani
tarium where she works on the
night shift.
Griffin Shovels Coal.
Joe Griffin, freshman geology
major, is snapped by the camera
while shoveling coal into the fur
nace of the Y. M. C. A., where he
works 21 hours a week. A taxicab
driver when he is not at work in
the fine arts department is George
W. Wilson, Lincoln senior, who
also claims the longest working
hours of the students who are
earning money while they are at
tending the university. The Corn
husker camera man found Sam
Schwartzkopf not on the football
field but cleaning the windshield of
a customer's car while at work at
a Standard Oil station.
The Cornhusker did not have
SDace for pictures of many of the
students who are working their
way through school by doing all
kinds of unusual jobs, but it dedi
cates these pages to all of tho
who earn while they learn.
CLASSICS CLUB PICKS
KREBSBACIl AS PREXY
Happ Awards Prize to Hay
Krebsbach at Group
Picnic, May 19.
Ray Krebsbach was elected
president of Classics club at the
election held at the club's annual
spring picnic at Pioneers park
May 19. Hazel Gee was chosen
vice president and Elna Glade as
secretary-treasurer.
During the picnic Ray Krebs
bach was officially awarded the
Grover E. Barber prize by Prof.
Albert Rapp of the Classics de
partment. The Barber award is
given each year to the winner of
a contest held for four to five
year Latin students. Games, songs
and refreshments furnished the
program.
ANNUAL
BREAKS
RECORDS FOR AO
Lira
E
Business Manager Replaces
Advertising Section
With 'Who's Who.'
Shattering all advertising: rec
ords, the 1938 edition of the Uni
versity's yearbook leads any such
volume ever printed in ad lineage,
as it reaches the campus for distri
bution Monday morning.
Instituting a new feature this
year, Business Manager Howard
Lynch has replaced the old adver
tising section by a new "Who's
Who" division, in which are listed
the names of all university alumni
whose names appear in the volume
"Who s Who in America."
The names of these persons, to
gether with identifying remarks
are listed on the upner left hand
and the lower right hand portion
of each double page layout. Strik
ing ads in two colors complete the
displays and make the section a
readable and interesting division,
Honorary Military Club
Hears U.S. Army Officer
Praise Local Cadet Unit
Nebraska chapter of Red Guidon,
honorary military society, held its
annual banquet In the Student
union Friday evening. Honored
guests were Colonel W. H. Oury,
Col. L. J. Crosby, Col. J. S. Faes,
Col. E. L. Wilfie, and Col. D. Wood.
Col Oury delivered a short address.
Major C. J. McChene, inspecting
officer, commented upon the high
standing and wonderful progress
the artillery unit at the university
has attained.
IMg Six Meet Provides Plenty of Action
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I'leniy of acnon was recorded
yesterday on the stadium cinders
as the Tigers won their first out
door championship. Eldon Frank
of Nebraska top left, is shown
rniLRtinc in tn win his heat of the
220 yard low hurdles in the pre
liminaries Friday. Top center
hhows Knight of Kansas beating
Darold Dodge of Kansas State to
the tape in the second heat of the
220 vard lows. Nebraska's Har-
wln Dawson, top right, was just in
the middle of his Jump when the
camera clicked catching him in
mid air. He won the event,
rricsmcyer of, Missouri, bot-
trim if ft in -lust readv to cluck
the tape In the 220 yard dash while
Bob Simmons, Nebraska, center,
is breezing in ahead of Gee, Mis
souri, in the prelims of the 440.
Bottom right, shows Foy Kansas
jiii i.'i ... r ii inrirn in iimfti.'inf .v ir.i rrrri ftianf.vnr-l","----
Nebruka photo by BUS Blnxon
crossing the finish line ahead of
Torlblo of Oklahoma in the quali
fying heats of the 220. i1