6 THE DAILY NEBRASKA! Wednesday, March 6, 1940 movies radio hit parade broad way Broadway Collegian joe Whitley. BEREAVED BARO Aloysius Michael Sullivan is a little sad these days, roetry, If you heed A. M. S., is on the skids. In case your English professor hasn't posted you on our Amer ican Keats, be advised that Mr. Sullivan is the sweet voice of native poesy, not to mention the pontifex of the Poetry Society of America. College is to blame for the flight f the muse. Pegasus today is the mount not of the high-minded Plato but of the sour-puss Aris totle. So runs the Sullivan lament. "The net result is that our bards have lost the sense of beauty," Mr. Sullivan grieves, "and turn their versifying on sweat, blood and the stereotyped underdog." To prove his own oneness with intellectual beauty, Mr. S. offers you this winged tid-bit titled, "A Day in Manhattan." "A boy on a Fifth Ave. bus, With a raucous voice, Throws chewing gum On a Rolls-Royce." A man on Second Ave. Reading the New Masses Applauds the jibe. At the upper classes." Aloysius Michael Sullivan. That is if you realize that daily instead of communing with the souls of Sap pho, Shelly and Swinburne this same tyrant. Life, compels him to dabble with nasty figures, finan cial diagnoses and such. Toor Aloysius Michael is associate edi tor of the Dun and Bradslrcet rate sheet. C'est la vie. At the very least. Life is truly sad, especially for JELLY-BEANS. We received a list of the ten best-dressed men now enjoying the full life the other day no doubt you did, too and feel mighty sad to discover that our good friend Lucius Beebe, America's most storied Beau Brummel, has fal len from grace. Only last year, Harvard's dazz ling son held clown the number one position, but this year he's sport ing No. 17 beneath baseball play ers, tycoons, curbstone diplomats and, band leaders. Ever fond of Harvard, Mr. Recbe takes solace in the fact that the Crimson is ttill represented in the immortal 10. No. four place is held down, of all things, by James B. Conant, Harvard's prexy. LIFE IS SAD DEPARTMENT. The other day a posse of the journalism students over at Hun ter College here in Manhattan de scended en bloc to interview Joan Edwards, a Hunter ex and cur rently a dispenser of sizzling mel ody as you may know. Mostly the theme of the inqui sition was to be: Career versus Marriage. The Hunter :h1s, as a man, leaned toward the latter. Miss Edwards listened to the spokesman pop the question to her, wrinkled her brow and then sul lied: "Waste all that time preparing yourself for a meie man!" she flipped. "Don't be silly. I'll take a career anyday." Travel film hour has India pictures Films of India and Tibet will be shown during the Travel film hour Thursday at 7:30 p. m. in the Union. The India film, "The Call of Mohammed" is a study of the mosques and the converts of Mo hammedanism. 'Throne of the 3ods," with its setting in Tibet, shows the ascent made by the Dyrenfurth expedi tion to the summit of the Hima layan giant, John Song, and also features Mrs. Dyrcnfurth's thrill ing escape from death in a glacier crevasse. Lowell Thomas is the anator of this film. Miller band in top spot on hit parade Glenn Miller's horn tooters are the Corn Cribbers' favorites again this week . . . Glenn put "Tuxedo Junction" in first place; "Slip Horn Jive" into number nine bracket; and "In The Mood" in the ten-spot. Jimmie Dorsey's symphony in tom-toms "Cherokee," dropped in- Daily Song Hit Parade (Ten most popular songs f the week): 1. Tuxedo Junction, Glenn Miller. 2. Cherokee, Jimmy Dorsey. 3. Memories of You, Glenn Gray. 4. Dance with a Dolly, Terry Shand. 5. Ragtime Cowboy Joe, Pinky Tomlin. 6. I've Got My Eyes on You, Frankie Masters. 7. I Want My Mama, Clyde McCoy. 8. Nothing, Joe Venuti. 9. Slip Horn Jive, Glenn Miller. 10. In the Mood, Glenn Miller. to second place. Glenn Gray boosted his "Memories of You" from fifth to third position. Terry Shand "Dance (d) with a Dolly" into spot number four. Cowboy Joe in fifth spot. Pinky Tomlin's "Rag-time Cow boy Joe" developed 'rider's cramp' and fell from second to fifth cor ral. This Tomlin number was put on the nickelodeon just for public ity in connection with the Inter fraternity Ball, but the 'Cowboy' sat straight in his saddle and is still is is in the money. Masters record sixth. "I've Got My Eyes on You" hums Frankie Masters to the coke sippers from his sixth place on the honor roll. Number seven award was given to Clyde McCoy, who wils, "I Want My Mama. Joe Venuti, an unknown prior to the Trc .1, fiddled "Nothing" from nothing to hole-in-the-wall eight. Nebraska Art ... Association opens five $100 scholarships for NU artists The Nebraska Art association has announced five $100 scholar ships available for art students. The sum cares for tuition and part of the materials for students in the department. The Riorden-Morey scholarship at the Chicago Art institute was presented a few years ago by Mrs. Morey, a prominent Hastings club woman. The fund was set up in accordance with her will and is granted only to a graduate of the art department, and is limited to the institute. This scholarship awarded only every two years has been the sole representative of this type of aid; the recipient cither must have funds to finance Ag schedules annual breakfast Following a ten-year custom, ng students and others interested in the college will rise early for a a. m. Pre-Eastcr breakfast Sun day, March 17 in Ag activities building. Rev. Bert L. Story, district su perintendent of the Methodist church, will speak, and a short de votional service is planned, accord ing to Bob Messersmith, program chairman. Pat McMahon and Dorothy Pet ers, home ec students, are in charge of food arrangements. Ap proximately 300 are expected to attend. The breakfast, which is now sponsored by the Ag Religious council, started in 1929 on a small scale with Epworth and Warren Methodist young people- Later the Evangelical church was included. Beg your pardon Woody Campbell was not ruled ineligible as a Prom girl candidate because of scholastic difficulties, as it was erroneously stated in the DAILY. She was ruled ineligible because she is a graduate student. It's 'Okie' moving time r IT -'if " . Here is the Joad family as sk etched by Thomas Benton to illus trate Steinbeck's "Grapes of Wrath." The movie version of the best seller is now playing at the Lincoln theater. Benton drew a series of six lithographs to illustrate the story. The one pictured above is one of the best dramatizing the. plight of the unfortunate sharecroppers. Union to show mystery film Saturday "The Thirty-nine Steps," mys tery and spy film starring Robert Donat and Madeleine Carroll will be shown in the Union ballroom Saturday at 8 p. m. It was di rected by Alfred Hitchcock, win ner of highest directing honors in 1938. Donat recently received the Academy Award for the best act ing performance in 1939 with his characterization in "Good-bye Mr. Chips," and Miss Carroll is fam ous for her roles in pictures and radio. She was recently selected by students of Columbia univer sity as the most eligible compan ion on a desert island. The film is the story of an ama teur detective hero who races half a step ahead of the pursuing po lice as he recklessly trails and outwits a clever gang of spies. The setting is in Scotland. part of his way or must be able to earn and leam. That young people who have done their undergraduate work in the University art department be come artists of merit in their after college days has been determined. Someone with a turn for research followed out the case history of several thru their professional and commercial art work, to find a number yet so young that they are "promising," others out lon enough to have "arrived." Scholar ships will enable others from here to complete their work and to have their chance at fame as well as influencing youngsters who srent certain of making the financial grade to enroll. Graduate students at Wisconsin high in scholarship University graduates have made a name for themselves at the Uni versity of Wisconsin. In a recent letter, Dr. E. E. Witts, chairman of the department of economics at Wisconsin ac knowledges the application of Richard T. Eastwood of Buchard for a fellowship at Madison, and adds: 'The Nebraska men who have come to Wisconsin have all ranked among the best of our graduate students. We will be very happy indeed if Eastwood decides to join the Nebraska contingent which has made such a good rec ord with us." Eastwood received his master's degree from Nebraska last June in economics. He is at present an instructor in the extension divi pion of the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He is seeking a fellowship at Wisconsin to con tinue work for hU doctor of phi losophy degree. r AO If snoniM.! Always A Seat For Vk TIIEjRAPIES of vjiium with Henry FONDA Jane DAR WELL John CARRADINK Rutidl SIMPSON n: A New "Information, Plean" Sportltte In Color Paramount Newt I .3 rv . r ryuuv s" S mm" w Tt -.u. , vvf r A Mutiny V'," nil M-aU ..20r C6 l.vrning I Bl.onj ..20 pi 1. IU ..2ic j Movie houses offer class ' A' features Local cinema-fans may take their choice this week between two of the best of the better films the season has yet produced. They are "Grapes of Wrath" showing at the Lincoln and "Vigil in the Night" now playing at the Stuart "Grapes of Wrath," starring Henry Fonda, was produced by Darryl F. Zanuck. It tells the story of the wandering sharecropper and his adventure in the 'haven' of California. Vigil in the Night" tells the in side story of the lives of ttie nurses in a large hospital. The book was written by the author of the "Citadel." George Raft stars in "Invisible Stripes" now showing at the Ne braska theater. The film tells the story of an attempted comeback to the ranks of society by a jail bird. Jodaif,! . . . KILLER vs KILLER!!! RAFT. (Touohr than In "Eacn Oiwn I Die"!) . . . BOGART. Killer ef Roaring Twenties"!) . . in the T.N.T. Packed Thriller of 19401 9. EBBASKA AW . . . 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