The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 02, 1939, Page 6, Image 6

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    Thursday November 1. 1939
3 &
the women
i SOCIETY STAFF
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The DAILY NEBIUSKAN
'N stamp
sale good
Over 8,000 purchased
in opening day drive
Between eight and nine thousand
N' stamps had been sold Monday
in the AWS drive which continues
until Nov. 11.
Teams from each of the organ
ised women's houses on the camp
us have been selling in their houses
and In the downtown district Some
30,000 of the stamps have been is
sued to advertise homecoming
Nov. 11.
Tatricia Sternberg, chairman of
the drive, asked at Monday's meet
ing of the salesmen that all stu
dents cooperate to make Nebraska
the "bright spot" of the nation on
Armistice day.
Sellers and their houses are:
Alpha Chi Omega: Martha Ann Reed,
flsth Schrocder, Mary Thorley; Alpha
ODitcroD PI: Doris Janet Marshall, Janet
8 haw, Dorothy Latsch; Alpha Phi: Alice
Louise Becker, Jean Christie, Marlon Pat
ton; Alpha XI Delta: Virginia Sack, Mar
Ian Whitney, Marjorle John,
Chi Omega: Dorothy Miller, Joan Maray,
Ilene Davidson; Delta Delta Delta: Marion
Nicholson, Ann Crouae, Charlotte Kouha;
Delta Gamma: Betty Ann Roberta, Betty
Newman, Pat Frank; Gamma Phi Beta:
Adah Lavondar, Gerry Hawkins, Jean
Geddea.
Kappa Alpha Theta: Betty Maria Walt,
Marjorle Jones, Mary Hansen; Kappa
Delta: Anna Margaret, Mac Peterson, Mar
rlanne Goffe; Kappa Kappa Gamma: Ann
Craft, Mary Beeaon, Molly Woodward; Phi
Mu: Lucille Wiggins, Virginia Peters, Ger
trude Qnmt.
PI Beta Phi: Suaan Shaw, Ann Kinder,
Mary Uoulse Simpson; Blgma Delta Tau;
Shirley Epstein, Merlam Rubnltz, Sareva
Bravennan; Sigma Kappa Jewell Tinker,
Delorls Storjohann.
Dormitory: Bobby Epps, Pat O'Connor,
Doris Stalling, Phyllis Lang, Ruth Groa
venor, Arta Fruth, Janet Cur ley; Howard
hall: Ruth E. Shull; Loom Is hall: Dorothy
Schukdel; Sosa Bouton hall: Maris Rockey.
Wilson hall: Jean MacAlllster; selling on
the ag campus are: Beryl Waver, Marjorle
Sweeney, Man Ohrt, Ruth Herschner, Ruth
Frvdrlcksen, Beatta Bradburg, Eleanor
Crawford, Dorothy Peters, and Ruth Pred
ltt; Towns club: Geraldlne Smith and
Carotins Baker.
Exactly 260 colleges and uni
versities are participating in the
pilot training program of the Cvil
Aeronautics Authority.
The libraries of U. S. institu
tions o? higher learning contain
more than 62,000,000 bound volumes.
Coeds-AND men-express personality,
show love of color in college rooms
Nebraska men and women don't
express their personality by their
clothes alone, no matter what
witty columnists may have said on
the subject of collegiate fashion,
but their rooms express their love
of color, their tustcs, and their
school and house loyalty.
Best-Dressed On Campus Betty
Bachman appropriately has the
best-dressed room In the Alpha
Chi Omega house. She, a true
Cornhusker in spirit, has followed
a red and white color scheme.
White curtains with red ball fringe
cover the windows. The dressing
table's skirt is white with red
Bwags on it. For lounging com
fort she has a red and while
couch.
Smooth.
PI Thi Grace Hill has one of
the smoother sorority house rooms.
Deep brown furniture is compli
mented by the soft, peach tinted
beige of the room's accessories.
The chenille bed spread, deep pile
rug and net dressing table skirt
are all this color. A colonial motif
is carried out in the wall prints
framed with matting, the chintz
covered chair and the round, ivory
framed mirror with its ivory bow.
At the Kappa house the orchids
for a beautiful room go to Mickey
Morrow and Jane Chambers. Their
room is done "down Mexico way"
with hopsacking curtains trimmed
in red, brown hopsacking bed
spreads with their names embroi
dered on them in red. The dresser
scarves are also embroidered in
red with places designated for
comb, mirror, brush. Mexican
prints adorn the walls.
From the south.
Also in the Mexican manner Is
the room of Matilda Halley and
Alice Hackman at the Chi O
house. Matilda spent the Bummer
in Mexico and brought back the
decorations.
Loyal Delta Gammas are Louise
Malmberg and Mary Wacchter
with their "anchored" room. An
chors are on the bedspread, an
chors on the wall, anchors in the
curtains, anchors in the rug, and
all are in blue and while.
Alpha Phi's Rosanne Purdham
and Lynn Goodrich have done
their room in dusty pink and blue.
They have a lengthened dusty
pink dressing table with a blue top.
and a separate dressing chair for
each girl in the same colors. Their
rug is a white Numda, while their
curtains are in the same motif as
their dressing table.
Betty Jane Dutch and Virginia
Smith of the Theta house have a
creamy yellow and blue room. The
wallpaper is light yellow with a
satin stripe, while the rug, the
pleated bedspread, chintz chair
and flowered drapes are blue.
And in the frats.
But smooth rooms are not limi
ted to the sorority houses. Wit
ness Lee Taylor's room in the Beta
house. Lee's red carpet, French
blue couch, whito screen and na
tural bamboo window shades are
evidences of his artistic taste.
Contrast in texture of the smooth
finish rug, rough weave couch up
holstery, and homespun red and
white stripe drapes, adds variety.
Hunting prints on the walls com
plete the picture.
At the Kappa Sig house, Bob
Flory's room is masculine and sim
ple in dark rich colors. A sherry
colored rug, a dark green lounge,
pull drapes of monkscloth, and an
open walnut bookcase make the
room definitely a man's room.
Sigma Nu Jim Richardson adds
the bizarre touch to the house with
his room and its dark blue, star
studded ceiling. Dusky rose walls,
hopsacking curtains, and a tan
rug complement the ceiling. Most
practical feature of the room is
an ashtray tfhat cannot be tipped
over. Smart boy!
Leonard Jacobscn and Bob
Waugh, Sig Alphs, have a four
window exposure, built-in chiffon
iers, gray and cream woodwork
in their room. Their clialr is up
holstered in a rock rib, maroon
material, and their carpet is blue.
Outstanding room at the Phi
Delt house is Jimmy Stuart's
presidential suite; it just couldnt
help but be. It is on the third
floor, northeast corner where two
sides of the wall are glass bricks.
A red davenport and chair add
color.
Phys ed majors
attend dance meet
Eighteen majors In the depart
ment of physical education for
women and five staff members in
cluding Miss Mabel Lee, director
of the department, went to Law
rence, Kas., Saturday, for a Folk
Dancing Festival.
This was the first gathering of
this sort in this part of the coun
try and was led by Dr. Anne Dug
gan of the Texas State College for
Women at Denton, Tex. The con-
ventlon included folk dance en
thusiasts from four states Kan
sas, Texas, Missouri and Ne
braska. Journalists mean
business, so don't
hang up on them
"I'm a journalist student and
I have an assignment to inter
view you on the neutrality sutua
tion." This sentence over the 'phone
at any time is enough to bring
forth a snappy "Oh yeah? Well,
I'm the foreign correspondent for
the New York Times, and I'd like
to interview you on the subject of
the Paris fashions this fr-U' from
any and all cynical collegians.
But this time the interviews are
really on the level. So, even if you
received the call Hallowe'en night,
it was no joke, and some poor
Journalism 81 student will suffer if
you don't keep that appointment
you made to see him in the Corn
Crib some noon.
STUDY AlONG THESE LINES.,
Before you even croak a book to cram in
Ec, or Fi-. Lit., climb into a pair of
MANGEL'S striped pyjamas and put on a
nice warm lounging robe. Comfortably
smart, you'll be able to study faster and
somehow it comes across easier. Your
mind, loo, will be at rest, looking smart,
if some loafer strolls into your room. The
pyjamas are only $1.9ti and the robe (all
sorts and kinds) is but $2.98. Don't
choose between them, you'll want to insist
on both. Here's a combination that lends
a helping hand to midnight oil burners
Our New Store Opens Soon
1219 wO"
Our Button Export
pops up with thtsl
A28-pound pull will
yank the buttons from
most shirts. Takes twice
this much on Arrow shirts.
A small detail, perhaps,
but it's small details all
along the line that make
Arrows America's best
selling shirts. $2 .
Twelve special students have
been selected to take every course
offered at Oglethorpe unlverrsity.
Itll take each one six years to
complete the task.
Society will be found on
page eight.
DRESS
OF
THE WEEK
A Kelly-green three-piece dress,
trimmed in that delectable burnt
sugar shade that looks good enough
to cat, la enough to turn other
coeds "green with envy", and
would add variety to a dull day
on "any campus. The jacket is full
in the back and gathered on a
band at thr waist, with dull gold
buttons up the front. The round
collar adds that desired little-girl
touch.
The full skirt, sixteen gored,
swings gaily, and the studs on the
shirtwaist are also of burnt sugar
hue. To top it all, Mary Kline,
Delta Gamma, wears a green pork
pie hat with a burnt sugar ribbon
band. And still more amazing,
Mary says she made the dresa
herself.
Critic-
(Continued from Page 5.)
leather-lunged males are wont to
vibrate the air with great aban
don, three girls challenge their
best efforts.
Three freshmen girls are there,
two in the trumpet section and ono
playing the French horn. We trust
that we shall be spared the indig
nity of a female percussion artist,
but if that too must come to pass
we say let her be as good as her
predecessors elsewhere on the
platform and then Godspeed to
them all. At least part of the
glory returned to the male stan
dard Sunday afternoon with Em
manuel Wiahnow conducting and
Herman Schmidt at the piano, for
Mr. Lentz' solo. ' T. I. M.
You Can Join the World's
Best-dressed Fraternity for2
For as little as $2 "sg you con join the Loyal
Order M) of the Wearers of Arrow Shirts.
Temporary Location 133 So. 13th
ARROW
The ritual is simple ... go to your nearest Arrow
dealer . . . whisper "Gordon Oxford" . . .
and that inimitable Arrow shirt w'n tho Dover
roll-front j) button-down collar is yours. Hand
overthe $2 and you're in. To clinch
HflE) the deal you get two (patented)
ball-headed (easy-to-find) 4 pins in every shirt.
The handshake ID and ear-thumbing lf&$
are optional ... no extra charge.
ARROW SHIRTS
COLLARS . . . TIES . . . HANDKERCHIEFS . . . UNDERWEAR