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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1948)
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Tuesday, November 16, 1948 Editorial PAGE 2 Latest Destruction . . . Some people never realize it when they have a good thing. The Crib in the Union was entirely redecorated for this year new murals, new booths with new upholstery. The redecoration was badly needed and most students appreciate it. However, there are always those few destrurtive souls, who feel that they must put their mark everywhere. These same individuals carve up desks, chairs and walls all over the campus. The latest destructive escapade has taken place in the Crib. A survey of booths in the Crib show that someone has quite systematically and deliberately made slashes in the upholstery on the booths. The marks are made in the seats and backs of the booths. Also, the piping of the upholstery has been cut off in small sections in several of the booths. There is no need to go any further in saying that there is absolutely no excuse for such destruction. Campus News In Brief A joint meeting of the Y. M. and Y.W., Tuesday night on the Ag campus at 7:30 will feature a series of colored slides illustrat ing the rapid modernization, which has been taking place in Turkey the past 25 years. A rug, some Turkish jewelry and trinkets will be on display. Persons Interested In studying the 'Faith of the Epsicopal iWlVUVVVWUVVWVWWVVVWV Here's a model you'll go for! m J You'll find college men's collar favorites in 5 h tf miLLIPS-JONES COIF.. YVWVVVWVVVVVVVVVWVVVVVVVVVWW'lVVi TICKETS ON SALK NOV. 13-19 tteservod Spain $1.20 tax In-1. Church" are invited to attend the Inquirers Class, each Tuesday eve ning at 7:30 in the Canterbury club room of the University Epis copal Church. The Rt. Rev. How ard R. Blinker will be guest of honor at a Canterbury Club lunch eon Thursday noon. Tickets are available in the Club room until Wednesday noon for 40 cents. Pi Mu Epsilon will meet Nov. 16 at 7:30 p. m. in Room 209 Bur nett hall. There will be a Phalanx pledge meeting Tuesday night at 7 p. m. in the Armory. I'nion Danre committee will meet in room 316 at 7 p. m. Tuesday. Regular Button-Dowa with Comfort Contour" collar Van Heusen builds extra good looks into this campus favorite. Low-setting for that casual look, for a wonderful feeling around your neck. In smooth white oxford, lab-tested. Sanforized a new shirt free if jour Van Heusen shrinks out of size. Ask for Van Heusen DcLuxe Oxfordian, 13.95. Other Van Heusen shirts $3.50, $3.95, $195. Van Heusen the world's smartest shirts NEW YORK I. N. T. "ibieodmiid J Ac (Daily TMaoaAcui Member Intercollegiate Press FORTV-SEVKNTH IEAR Subscription rate are $?.M per semes ter ninilrd, or $8.00 for the enllere year. i An mailed. Klnrle ronv 6e. Published duilv durlnr the school war encept Mon davi) and Saturday!, vacation and ex amination periods, by the Inlversltj o Nebraska under the anperviiilon of the I'ubllration Hoard. lOnlered as Seeond Class Matter at the Post Office In I.tn eoln. Nebraska, andrr Art of Con-re. March 3. 1K7. and at sneclal rate of postage provided for In section 1103. Art of Ortohrr Z, IR17, aathnriied September 10, 192 1. NIrM News Editor Susie Reed Scliinn to Speak Al Ag YM-YW Miss Ruth Shinn, YWCA di rector, will speak to a joint meeting of the Ag Campus YM and YW Tuesday evening about her experiences in Turkey. The meeting will be held in the Home Ec parlors at 7:30. Arriving in this country this fall after teaching three years in Turkey, Miss Shinn is head of the university YWCA. Her talk will be highlighted by slides and pictures of Europe and the Near East. Singing and a short entertain ment preceding the meeting will be led by Truman Bachenberg and Mavis Musgrave. The Ag YMCA and YWCA Cabinets will meet prior to the evening meeting at 5 p. m. in the Ag Union. limon-CdL y Bald Sadie Hawkins day is over, with a large number of elated females and a corresponding number of deflated males. The union party was reallv full of hichlichts and sidelines which bear a post mor tem number of orchids and onions (to borrow from Melick). The prize onion of the evening was the wolf-gal who chased her L'll Abner into the door marked "Gents." Witness. Janitor Johnny, swears the red face could be seen in Kansas City. No sideline at the party were the decorations created by the Dance committee. The most popu- 'Shmoo Inn", where Kickapoo Joy Juice and Mountain Dew were in great demand. Costume prize win- 1-1 . : -i rj.. T . : ' ners and Bob Braden as L'il Abner won tickets for cash value in the Crib. The actual race might not have been exactly as Al Capp planned it, but it was certainly good for "kicks:" The gals had to carry the fellas' feet, while they ran the length of the ballroom on their hands. Fastest team, Shirley Ruff and Buck Buchanan, say its be cause Buck has such big hands. That gallon of mountain dew prize really was welcome after this or deal. Nul said lor Sadie Hawkins. Another big event of the month has been the checking out of pic tures in the lending library. Three pictures remain of the collection, but Don Crowe, one of the bor rowers, became so interested in the library that he made a cash donation for the purchase of ad ditional Van Gogh prints. The in itial donation for this purpose was made by the Kosmet Klub, and the Hobby committee would like to present the plan to some inter ested group for use as a perma nent philanthropy. Coming up this week: The big Dimitry Markevitch concert, with the University Symphony accom panying. Tickets are free, and a limited number are being checked a -mm- irnniE nnaDnans Nov ember 17, 1H, 10, 20 LETTER!!? Dear Editor.- The undersigned heads o f organized houses wish to put them selves on record as protesting the excessive price of the Military Ball tickets. We feel that it is high time that some form of re sistance be exerted against student organizations which charge such exhorbant amounts for traditional campus social events. - Therefore, we are urging all the members except cadet officers of our respective organizations NOT to attend the Military Ball. Respectfully submitted, Richard Schleusener, eBta Sigma Chuck Thoene, Phi Gamma Delta Psi Walt Dorothy, Sigma Phi Epsilon Paul E. Dietrich, Sigma Chi Len Potash, Sigma Alpha Mu Richard Schleusener, Beta Sigma Winton Buckley, Alpha Tau Tedd Huston, Phi Delta Theta Omega Frederick Bender, Tau Kappa William H. Norton, Sigma Apha Epsilon . Epsilon Carter H. Kokjer, Delta Upsilon Richard L. Coyne, Phi Kappa Psi Frank Loeffel, Farm House Chuck Tramaine, Delta Tau Delta Edward P. Trumble, Sigma Nu AIRWAVES "I am the creator of all moods . . . love, hate, joy, sadness. "I am a ghost. I haunt you in your dreams. I remind you of warm lips, of the roar of sea against the rocks, or the gentle fall of leaves in the autumn air. "I am here and then I am gone. I touch your hand. I whisper words into your ears that you shall never forget. You reach out for me but I am gone. I shall haunt you as long as you live. "I am all these things and yet I am nothing . . . "I am Music." Probably the best collection of, moods of love, hate, joy and sad- j ness at the University is the li-. brary of music kept by the radio section in the little room off stu dio A in the basement of the , j Temple. There, over 3,000 rec- ords are filed. These are for use, 1 in any radio play that is produced in the Temple, the library Doast. such names as Khachaturian. Stravinsky, Rossini, Brahms, and even unfamiliar ones . . . Ibert and Glazounoff. Head of the mu sic library is Dorothy Buthman. Music director is Jim Johnston and assistant directors are Bar bara Rayburn and Shirley Sabin. 6 Today's Authors of the Ages production brings you the age-old m ;r..l ... . . f l.x.tKui Vw ana oeauuiui mwv ivmi"- Sir Walter Scott. William Dempsy, director of the radio section of the speech department, has an- A il. 1 . mnti i-.-jt M-pr iispH j It U U l u m: lai-n " 1 in a radio play. Playing the leads ' are Don Johannes as Prince John; I Max Lee as Ivanhoe; Olive Gett- man as Lady Rowena: Gaylord Marr as Brian De Bois: Bob Lund- ( berg as Gurth; Dwight Swith as ; Wamba and Paul Harrington as Peter the Hermit. j The mood of the play will be ; set with music by Prokofiev. It will be a mood of "meuievalness, the period of knighthood and fair ladies, in short embodying the romance of the dark ages. Music is sometimes used to replace dif-! ficult sound effects, encountered in plays. In Ivanhoe, to replace the sounds of battle in a tourna ment, music is used. Instead of the clash of battle-axe and lance j and the ring -of armour . . . agi tated music will be used. Yes, mu sic certainly is the creator of moods. out from the Union office or school of mu-sic. Look forward to Holiday Hap penings in the next two months. There are plenty of contests, pro grams and special entertainments, including Talent Bureau, Ping Pong tourney, Dri-Nite Club, and an open house, to fit the season, so: Come to the Union It Suits! IVOX omCK OPKN 12:305:00 I. M. (ionvral Admission 7v tux Int l. Rex Hoffmeister, Kappa Sigma Doug Peters, Beta Theta Pi Today's Farm Flashes On The Air program on KOLN at 4:30 p. m. will feature an on-the-spot interview at the Ag College, where Chuck Johnson and Charlie Dug dale will interview men at the in ternationally famous tractor-testing laboratory. The interview will be wire-recorded and played back. A dramatized poem will be the theme of Thursday's Playwright's Matinee . . . The Pied' Piper of Hamlin. It's the story of the man whose magic flute led away all the children and rats of Hamlin, because he did not receive pay ment for his efforts to rid -the city of the rats. The play prom- ses to be exceptionally good due to the manner in which it is writ- ten: there is a variety of voices and most of the lines are short and punchy. This makes for good radio reading. Note: It's coming soon! It's called "simulated broadcast." The radio section is working on a plan which will call for the use of al most all the talent available in radio. Watch for it in the future. Baseball Coach Tony Sharpe announced that a very impor tant merlins will be held to nic lit for all freshmen inter ested in playing frosh baseball. The meetinc will be held in the "X Club" Room in the Coliseum at 7:30. Classified lOST Browr. lea'her Jarket at AT3-B.-la fi Kane. Peter Pan ark laM Writ , the Kid Krarl fall clary Joeelvn. 2-7 il BAI.I.P.Oi M IiANfIN; '"- Kxiert .mati intnj' t NeCe Sl-eiileil StuUio, 27('5 Koyal Conn, fail 3 6("2. SIL'I'KNT rtiile 1rire nle to New V,.rk fny Tir f lii.'-trr.i' va:Bimn. Ijcm. . rt.r i. n fi fim'kKTrrU-. .aen7er.t roofi-t'iS tlo k from Ac Campus. Hhare :th 3 A K boyi. Private tia?h. buhk td, nd rtf.k. lev. 'od bu coi.iiecuon. 34.'.! I'ua- T-i -3s72 MORROWS SKLK PKKVlOE UAL'M'RY -!i.4 Vie S. 0en ! A. M ti 3'i I'. M Siiil-m owned WANTKIi rt'Jrra in Ienver nd B-r1hHid Pf Thil:-riivir.e vncaiion Cll Mor riiKiri 2-.4 KveriMiM. KOK ale. I a venlrt -ted romt-malion with 2 c :r lo nm'rti. 1 lllrar lutile 2 fl.r lan.pn ranee Bed nh spring 2 lotion mttreke. ;irl hi tcle. Prefer. Oood condiiion. Priced tor immed.a'e ul Plxme -24". 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