Friday, February 7, 1941 DAILY NEBRASKAN London paper among journals in Book Nook Files of Sunday editions of leading newspapers is the latest addition to the reading material row available in the Union Book Nook. A London paper, the Man chester Guardian, is included, as well as the New York Times, the Omaha World Herald, the Kansas City Star, the Chicago Tribune and various student publications. "Out of the Night," Jan Valtin's new Book of the Month, which is the story of a communist in Ger many, is now also on the Book Nook shelves. The water-color sketches will remain on display for another week. These were done by a stu dent, Robert Wolfe, and picture scenes near Red Cloud, Neb. Orchestra leader acquires rhythm of Oklahoma Indians The influence of solid, exciting Indian ryhthms can still be heard in Joe Sanders' arrangements for the rhythm section of his orches tra as a result of Joe's first ac quaintance with rhythm, back in his kindergarten days. Joe went to kindergarten in Centrfclia, Oklahoma, then still Indian territory, and when he was six, he saved the life of an Indian schoolmate who was near drown ing in a river. As a reward the chief of the child's tribe presented Group elects Eugene C. Reed, conservation and survey division and assistant state geologist, and C. Bertrand Schultz, assistant director of the university museum and instructor in the geology department, were honored by election to fellowship in the Geological Society of Amer ica at the annual meeting of the society in Austin, Tex., according to official confirmation received from the secretary of the society. The society has ,a membership of only about 700 out of the total five or six thousand active profes sional geologists in the United States. Election is considered the highest honor which a geologist can receive in this country except for the Penrose medal, which is given by the society to one dis tinguished geologist every year. This year it was awarded to Nel son H. Darton of the United States Geological Survey who spent some time doing survey and map work in Nebraska and lid joining states about 1900. ' Sponsors for Trofessor Reed Daily critic sees . . . Clare Boothe's 'Europe in By Marjorie Bruning. Playwright Clare Boothe achiev ed unusual heights for a woman in her field when she wrote her re cent book, "Europe in the Spring," which rolled "off the presses this fall, giving to Americans a vivid, yet re served piece of reporting which shows its au thor as an alert, i n te 1 1 i g e n t woman with fears for the safety of her country's dem ocracy. Miss Boothe, who dedicates her book to her journalist hus band, "Time" editor Henry R. Luce who "un Journal. Clnra Booth. derstood why" she wanted to go to Joe with a beautifully wrought tom-tom and inducted him into the tribe as a blood-brother to the other boy. After that Joe was trained by the best drummers in the tribe, learning from each his specialty. By the time he was 14, he knew more ways of beating a tom-tom than any three Indian -drummers put together. Sanders, the "Ole Left Hander," and his orchestra will play for the Interfraternity Ball, Feb. 15. professors and Mr. Schultz were Prof. A. L. Lugn, Dr. G. E. Condra, and Dr. M. K. Elias, all of the University of Nebraska and fellows of the society. . In addition, Professor Reed was sponsored by R. C. Moore, state geologist of Kansas, and Carl O. Dunbar of Yale uni versity, and Mr. Schultz was spon sored by W. E. Scott and Paul McClintock of Princeton univer sity. Other Nebraska members of the society include Dr. E. H. Bar bour, director of the university museum, and Dr. C. H. Wegemann of Omaha. Vassar college is completing a topographical map of the world, covering a wall space 16 by 48 feet. Texas Technological college is holing a "give a brick" cam paign to complete its West Texas museum building. Connecticut college recently ob served its twenty-fifth anniversary. 'JT N . ' ' ( i , 0 J as Europe during such a crucial pe riod, spent February to June, 1940, in Italy, France, the Low Countries, and England, trying to determine exactly what was going on in Europe. She talked with peasants and diplomats; had a wild ride across the Spanish bor der, chauffeured by two Portu gese; witnessed the German inva sion into Belgium and air raids in London; saw Paris, stripped of its gaiety, its democracy, and its morale; and then returned to America to write a brilliant, startling book about Europe and its fears and hopes. Sometimes a man's work. Although Miss Boothe, as an analytical, sometimes cynical New Yorker, does the job of a man in her interpretative account of Eu rope in the spring, the reader is ever aware that he is also seeing Europe as it was through the eyes of a charming, sympathetic woman. What Miss Boothe wrote of what she saw turned out to be a book bearing shocking reality and truth, intermingled with phrases of hope and enthusiasm. Her chief purpose in writing this bit of timely European history was to explain why what she saw hap pening to Europe is so important to Americans, and their position in world affairs. An interventionist. Miss Boothe is frankly an in terventionist but certainly not a radical agitator for her cause. Dialights 4:30 p. m. Merryle Stanley Rukeyser, financial news column ist discusses the national economy as affected by the present world disturbance CBS. 6 p. m. Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians in "Chesterfield Pleasure Time" WOW. 6:30 p. m. Al Pearce and his Gang KFAB. 7:55 p. m. Elmer Davis and the News - KFAB. 8:00 p. m. "Johnny Presents" with music by Ray Blocks or chestra and the Swing Fourteen KFAB. 8:30 p. m. Campbell Playhouse starring Douglas Fairbanks, jr., in an adventure drama in the Car ibbean. 9:45 News of the World, a summary and analysis of the de velopment of the news of the day by CBS correspondents -CBS. Family complains of drafts, prof seals self in attic Professor Chester J. Prince of William Jewell college, Liberty, Mo., has qualified as a college professor. His family complained that cold drafts were coming from the at tic of their home, so the self-sufficing prof took hammer and nails and went to work. When he was done he found that he had sealed himself in and no manner of prying could get the boards loose again. Then he pounded for help. His two daughters and a boy friend rescued him. Weeks ten best sellers Fiction. FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS, by Ernest Heming way. OLIVER WISWELL, by Ken neth Roberts. S A P P H I R A AND THE SLAVE GIRL, by Willa Cather. MRS. MINIVER, by Jan Struther. RALEIGH'S EDEN, by Ing lis Fletcher. Non-Fiction. A TREASURY OF THE WORLD'S GREAT LETTERS, edited by M. Lincoln Schuster. TRELAWNY, by Margaret Armstrong. PILGRIM'S WAY, by John Buchan. WINSTON CHURCHILL, Ly Rene Kraus. REPORT ON ENGLAND, by Ralph Ingersoll. the Spring' writers best work Every thought which came to life on her typewriter is typified by its sanity, clarity, and the important truth it carries. She is so sincere in her belief that democracy can be saved if quick action is taken and backs up her argument so well with her accounts of the fall of France and stories of corrupt politicians and weakened public morale, that her readers, though they may not agree in full, at least see a lesson for America in the futile struggles of France and the Low Countries against inva sion and are ready to follow her in an American crusade to estab lish world democracy. Hard-boiled, cynical critics, with an aversion to giving women writ ers credit for achievements which rank with those of men, acclaim Miss Boothe, without reservation, as a woman worthy to be placed in the ranks of today's most ag gressive and talented historians, the foreign correspondents. ; t.t.v r? IJ r : 1 f ' ' ' ' - I f r i t r" 0 J ) i ''14 - t'a -M ! I 1 - f , m l i t V, VwMt, Ji'2' v ri.-. . y if; Bob Montgomery, as Mr. Smith, submits to being shaved with an old-fashioned razor by Carole Lombard, Mrs. Smith, while Gene Ray. mond, the loyal friend, looks on in a scene from Alfred Hitchcock's comedy, "Mr. and Mrs. Smith," now playing at the Varsity. one With the Wind9 movie ranks first in student survey By Student Opinion Surveys. AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. 4 Choice of more than one-fourth of the nation's college students, "Gone With the Wind" was easily ranked the collegians' No. 1 motion pic ture shown in 1940, a poll con ducted by Student Opinion Sur veys of America, reveals. Based on a scientifically repre sentative cross section of the U. S. college enrollment, the survey showed "G. W. T. W." the choice of 27 percent. Only one other pic ture was the preference of even half that many "Rebecca" was selected by 14 percent. Other national surveys of critics and editors in the motion picture field have not included "Gone With the Wind" because it has not yet been released for general dis tribution over the entire country. Among college students, however, David O. Selznick's production was such an overwhelming fa vorite that it could not be ignored until the 1941 poll comes around. The top ten pictures of the year, DANCE AIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA 0 Uil 12 10 Cents Per Person -STUDEHT- Afternoon of art bores freshmen English students Discovered vesterdav in mvste rious gallery B Morrill hall, third floor, left was a group of fellows apparently engaged in the old-fashioned African sport dominoes. But alas, what seemed to be a cultural afternoon of dice throw ing turned out to be an afternoon of mental inspiration for half a dozen freshmen English students. Waiting for an inspiration to overwhelm them while they looked at the Midtown art exhibits in the gallery, members in all the fresh men English classes taught by Prof. Melvin Van Den Bark were rather dubious of the inspirational value of art as emphasized by their teacher. He required them to gaze at the pictures until struck by an idea for a theme. Final tally revealed: One stu dent had a vague feeling that an inspiration would hit him any mo ment; four students' minds were tota' blanks; the last was sound asleep on the gallery floor. according to collegiate opinion, were: 1. Gone With the Wind. 2. Rebecca. 3. Grapes of Wrath. 4. All This and Heaven, Too. 5. Foreign Correspondent. 6. Knute Rockne, All-American. 7. Northwest Passage. 8. Northwest Mounted Police. 9. The Mortal Storm. 10. Boom Town. Interviewers asked students to name the best picture "they had seen" during 1940; so many of the favorites mentioned were not necessarily released during the last year. YOUR DRUG STORE Far that date tonight, grt her m box of Gobelin ChitrtAalet. The OWL PHARMACY 148 No. 14th A P Phone 2-1068 to mm