41 J A I i $ Paae 4 THE NEBRASKAN Sunday, September 23, 1945. As Club President Announces First Meeting of Year Allen Klingman, president of the Ag Men's Social club, an nounced today that the group will begin its third year of activities with a meeting Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. in room 305 Ag Hall. The Social Club is open to all ag men and in the past has spon sored dances and parties and sup ported ag campus activities. Beanie . . . (Continued from Page 1.) Upon arriving there a drooling clerk asks me, "Wuz you wishin somethin'?" I mutely shows her the ticket. She hands me a beanie an' sez. "You're fortunate to have a beanie. The latecomers will miss out. We have only 150 coed caps and 50 billed lids for fellas in stock and they sell rapidly. So remember to tell your many friends to hurry and get their beanies." I thinks that I must remember to tell Herman. Back to the Union. I ambled back to the Union at a P-38 speed rate an' shows Senior Allah my accomplishment. Huck, huck," I laughs an' sez. "Ssssssee I ggggot my beanie." He mumbles somethin' about wit ty freshman remarks an' proceeds to tell me all the things I'd never heard before about '49 determin ing the school spirit an' how we've got to get into things an' pitch. Classes before us have al ways loved and followed the "Plebe" year traditions an' it's up to us to maintain an enthu siastic attitude by dotting the campus with our beanies. If one of us fails to don the red 'n white toppers we brand ourselves and our class as apa thetic students when we all want to illustrate our sincere eagerness to do our utmost for UN. The po tential graduate's enlightening words spurred my indifference to the zenith of ardent inspiration an' I vowed to be as my fellow 49ers devoted to my omnipres ent beanie. Hard Characters Pace Corridors Of Miisic School BY DEDE MEYER. Through centuries many peo pie have labored under the false allusion that musicians are sensi tive, temperamental souls. This infamous rumor, like all other lose propaganda, should be dis regarded completely. In fact, it's a drownright insult to these tena cious, enduring, ever-striving per sons. I say enduring. Perhaps else where such is not the case, but anyone who struggles through the University of Nebraska music school must surely have at least the endurance of Atlas. And what's more, he should graduate with ears accustomed to the sweeter sounds of an active stone chipping concern. Powerful Talent. For as one approaches the U. N. school of music some lovely after noon, he is caught and nearly blown away by currents of on rushing talent. Near the ground floor a coloratura soprano battles it out with a basso. But alas, as is usual the male is no match for- the weaker sex, and the soprano climbs triumphantly to her grand climax, emerging in a final screech, while her accom panist pounds majestically in the lowest octave. Higher up in the building Grieg's "Piano Concerto" wrestles with "Mendelssohn's Spring Song." This contest for su premacy seems to be undecided, especially since the mellow tones of Hazel Scot's boogie woogie float gently down the stairs and mingle with the more sedate, classical adjios. Here and there a violin puts in her two-bits worth, and every once in a while a trumpet note dashes up the hall, followed by a few of its brothers and sisters. Morse made his first telegraph instrument from an old picture frame. Aspiring Aclors Glimpse Theatre Activity at Party Actors and actresses by the dozens, footlights, floodlights, greasepaint and scenery will be in evidence Tuesday night as the university theater plays host to all students interested in working in the drama department this winter. Calendared for 7 p. m., the party, first of its kind in recent years, will begin on the stage in the Temple auditorium. Dallas Williams, university theater di rector, and Don Kline, Nebraska Masquers president, will act as co-hosts. Four Plays. Information about the four scheduled major productions, try outs beginning Sept. 26, experi mental theater one-act plays and related theater activities will be discussed with interested students. Tours of the drama facilities in the Temple will be conducted by members of the Masquers, theater society. Entertainment and refreshments have been planned following the tours. AUF . . . (Continued from Page 1.) can be given in cash or pledged to be paid at a later date. A booth in the Union will take subscrip tions from Lincoln students and a booth on Ag campus will be set up where Ag students may contribute. Sororities, fraternities, dorms. organized houses and N R.O.T.C. on the campus will be reached thru their representatives. On Monday, Oct. 1, speakers will tour organized houses on campus and explain the purpose of the drive and take contributions. Progress of the drive will be graphically shown on a poster in the lobby of the Union. Each day's collections will be posted. Solicitors will turn in money each day at 5:00 p. m. in room 315 of the Union and from 9 to 12 KNOX THE HATTER id Guvs like girls ... in liats! And tlieyV liose new, super special Campus-time toppers . . (lids to jou) ,wnu KNOX YOUNG NEW YORKERS Left, a tom boy brimming in bright color, 2.95; right, a bonnet BOY FRIEND in JUILLIARO ZEPHYKOT. Corduroy, 6.95. MhM T ttmk. ft. U. fW 0 w ' ' '" v J1' A .- -..',. "X-.. "v ". t t ' ''-, . . Younger Misses' Ilat Shop Third Floor a. m. on Saturday, Oct. 6. A rally for all solicitors is scheduled for Thursday at 6:00 p. m. in the Un ion ballroom. Catholic Sliiflent Group Organizes The Newman Club with Mon- signor George Schuster as chap lain, Catholic student organiza tion on the campus, will hold its first officers' meeting of the sea son Monday evening at 7:00 p. m. in the club rooms, room 205 in the Temple building. Plans will be made for the All-University Church Night to be held Friday, Sept. 28 in Parlors X-Y-Z in the Union. Catholic services, consisting of mass and sermon, will be held each Sunday morning at 11 a. m. in Parlors X-Y-Z in the Union. wTK N HAVE EVERYTHING YOU WILL NEED IN THE SUPPLY LINE ZtrPFK NOTEBOOKS DK AMINO INSTRUMENTS MET.GEN n4 K. K. M.W, lk I SID art fng in bering mvi:rii.s LAB. COATS mm APRONS prtr4 ymr rtothes ALWAYS WELCOME CO-OP lttt R 8t. He who laughs last has found a dirty meaning. CORRECTION. Delta Tau Delta, campus fraternity listed as inactive in the September 19 issue of the Nebraskan, is active on the campus this year. U. of N. Students to the oldenrod Lincoln's Exclusive CARD SHOPPE and STATIONERY STORE 215 North 14 St. l'l Blorks Sth Stadtnt t niaa OPEN EVENINGS ViN3BtL t'.xclutirr! Third Floor MfflGQR mil teool fabric TOPCOAT J I rlAk q A I that's a perfect take-off on a man's coat. lifted from blueprint to buttonhole by the very same men's fllpagora tailors! A co-ed enjoys its nicety of crisp detail . . . the wonderful, light weight covert or fleece. Black, blue, grey, brdwn, fuchsia. 10s to 20s. Yvmr-roumJ tofomi $32.50 Orcomt 37.50 pteiw hp Km & mS&ik