The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 21, 1922, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKA!
Smi.l.iy, Mny 21. 1JVJ2.
Alumni Notes.
Ti, alumni association Is in receipt
of a letter from Mrs. E. E. Miller,
'(Mildred Butler, '14). Mrs. Miller
slates, "Upon arriving in Paris I be
,nnu member of tbe Amorlcnn Col-1,-pe
Women's Club, which boasts of
about one hundred members, who
represent colleges and universities
from every section of the U. S. I
lioped I might have the opportunity
of meeting other women from the
nl'i urslty of Nebraska, but thus far I
,.,1 the bole representative of that in
stitution. This group has recent.' r
taken nteps to become affiliated with
ilu Anurican Association of Unlver
sitv ,.nen, which is to have a con
vention hue in July. . . . May tlio
June liom coming be mosr successful.
who rsnnot attend, eagerly an
ti cipate '.he news thereof in the next
edition of the Journal."
Max li. Jamson, 14, is practicing
law at J'oiterville, California,
(limit Aaron Stannard is a civil en
gineer ui Lincoln.
Vera Pool, '16, is teaching in Lan
ding, China.
-
l ha l ies E. Gunnels, '15, is connect
ALL THIS WEEK I
CECIL B. DeMILLE'S
Production
"SATURDAY
NIGHT"
Other Entertaining Features
I
SHOWS START AT 1. S. 5, 7. 9
" Milt. SO Mht .W f'hll. lr
MON., TUES., WED.
Constance Talmadge
THE PRIMITIVE
LOVER
Other Entertaining Features
SHOWS START AT l-S-R-7-9 Sharp
MkIn. 20 MrI' 85 t liildrrn 15c
e
ALL THIS WEEK
A Zane Grey Picture
WHEN ROMANCE
RIDES
Other Entertaining Features
Shown Start 1. S, S. 1.
Mats. 1JW Kronlnc Sir Child, lik
ed with the American Kami Bureau
Federation, Chicago.
Columbia Mntheny, '15, is working
with the united charities, Chicago.
Frank C. Jean, '11, is head of the
botany department, Greeley Teachers
College.
L. L. Vtishop is a government for
ester in Warren, Ponn.
Freda Tlishop, '15, is teaching home
economics in Sioux City schools.
Messrs. Charles Hankin, '21, John
Vetters, 22, and Clee Hickman, '22.
have reached their destination and
are now in Mexico with a large oil
company under the direction of Jer
ome U. Burnett, '15.
PLAY ENDORED BY
CHICAGO MINISTER
(Continued from Page One)
out regard to cost or hazard, and it
is as natural as the law of gravitation
that lie should be the producer of
Eugene O'Xeill's thrilling dramas of
actual life, where characters are of
the clay and language we know, and
the flow of blood and beat of pulse
proves pn excited heart. Big wth im
portance and fame as these two essen
tial laciors are in uie unequaueu sue-
cess of the O'Neill plays, now the lit
erary talk of the Eenglish speaking i
world, without the personality and ;
skill of Pauline I-oril, "Anna Christie," j
which is critically voted the best of (
all American plays, would probably
have gone the way of many genuinely
fine works that were killed in the ren
dering. Spell Binding Tragedy
Pauline Lord is the heart and
lungs, eyes and teeth of "Anna Chris
tie," and it is her performance of the
rich and salty play that holds tightly
one's attention until the last line is
spoken. It is a spell binding tragedy
of the sea, with an old Swedish bosun
as the last victim of the "Old Sea
Devil" that has killed the men and
saddened the women of his tribe as
far back as the tales of them run.
When his wife is taken, he sends his
little daughter off to some farmer
cousins in Minnesota, so that she may
grow up inland and never know the
spell and curse of the old devil sea.
This caged child of the sea, perishing
for it, grows up into a bitter and for-
COOOQOCOQiOOQCOOOOSCeOCCCOC
lorn young woman and it is after a
period of sinful living in St. Paul,
upon which career she was started by
ono of the cousins sick and disconso
late that she finally comes east to
meet her father and the sea. How
it cleanses her until she feels that
all her misoiles had been those of
another and forgotten person; how In
spite of her father's plans for her she
falls in love with a sentiment;'! sen
man; how this fellow goes wild, tear
ing drunk when her new found charac
ter bids her tell him what she's been
and how he can't help crawllirg back
to her just the same all this is viv
idly and fascinatingly told in the four
acts of "Anna Christie."
"Don't bawl about it," says Anna lo
her whimpering father. "There ain't
nothing to forgive anyway. It ain't
your fault and it ain't mine, and it
ain t his neither. We're all poor nuts.
And things just happen: And we yust
got. mixed in wrong, that's all."
Proof of Acting Genius
Play-makers, playgoers and play
critics have testified to the fact that
Pauline Lord is giving in her perfi rm
ance of "Anna Christie" the most sub
tle and convincing proof of nciing gen
ius that the American stage has ever
known. In naturalness, spirit, inner
bloom of life, humor, power, truth.
everything that touches and Illumines
the broken Buffering of her life Is in
her voice, eye end gusture. No won
der the audiences cheer. Not since
the first visits of Bernhardt and Huso
have the discerning patrons of the
theater had such occalson to crowd
and eulogise the theater and its at
traction. No one should miss Pauline
Lord In "Anna Christie."
Eugene O'Neill towers among Amer
ican playwrights today. He thinks for
himself on lines that r.re meaty with
Nebraska Men
Wanted
To sell the ivtiill trade n eompletn
lliK of FeiiHoiuililo mvktlm. I'lt'llX
ni'1, ernfiliililo. slimmer and spin-'
liim work. The mii'i who meets
nir ri'iiiivmiiits will be Ms own
"Ihiks" and I lie iii:iuiif:ii'luriT's 1I
rort rMWosnt:itlv Direct si'llinir
incniis lower hvIivh to the retailer
ir (I larger commissions lo onr men.
Wrllo lis briefly about:
Yourself;
Terrilorv von irf 'r:
When you ran start mh in2miiiS
When yon can slart.
American Webbing
Company
Department -' Neckwear
l'pn lilcnio lthnilr IhIiiihI
Successful men will bo offered sim
ilar all year spare-tline work.
meaning and dips his pen in the blond
of the lift? thai flows before him. His
characters we know, or feel we do,
and they are so human, whatever
their manner or place or living, one is
held until the end of his moving ston
with almost breathless and surely
thrilling Interest. Arthur Hopkins Is
now offering at the Plymouth Theater
New York, tho latest O'Neill play,
"The Hairy Ape," with even greater
degree of favor thnn over, if the np
plaus of the critics and literati, as
well as the tide of public support, may
he taken as deciding factors and ob
viously little else counts.
RiitTVOiTSflKX '.t'Hf"!: ; :i : :: l: t tfsuSJUOt ')Litlt!;:!Ci:::!'j.iO'lOi.!i':i':;!:)r!t.iCt:?SJi:'!!S3!'jfiirtl
IM W
IS
WILL YOU BE WITH HER
WEDNESDAY,, MAY 31.
Bid Her Farewell in the Moonlight
AT THE LINCOLN
ACXERMAN'S ORCHESTRA IS PLAYING
IN THE SEASON'S FINAL APPEARANCE
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I !! !i K V. X !! K K K a X ,K 4!
Silk Sweaters
m
flowerlike shades
that will add a
touch of color
n
to your costume
h They are suitable jj
S for afternoon or (j
evening wear
k $5.95 and up fc
8. ,S
SooocooooGoooocccooooooocb
a
Here's wishing you luck
and less need for it"
A Student to the College Inn Organization.
The business of promoting the tripping of the light fan
tastic is not a creature of luck; it is an institution too sub
stantial and worthy in its means to be rocked by obstruc
tionists and destructionists whose reach exceeds their grasp.
We convert or condemn the thotless volunteers who pro
voke cheap publicity by confusing facts with fancies.
We suppress the so-called humorous vein of some who
would criticize at the expense of the public. For instance:
We don't believe that the big College Inn Orchestra
was the only CROWD at our Friday night dances
Everybody knows that COLLEGE INN is not the name of
a hotel or a local bootlegging establishment
There is no proof that the Trumpet Quartet is an ANI
MAL that has eight legs and blows thru its horns for the
amusement of others . , . ... i..-
Nobody ever saw the word Oboe in print with the letter
"H" in front of it.
Joke if you will but it is a serious business J
We know that tbe Golden Rule is not a metal .yard-stack and
that You are part of our organization, clipping the profit
sharing coupons at every dance you attend.
COLLEGE INN DANCES
"Back Next Season with a Brand New Line"
ORPHEUM THEATRE
SIX DAYS STARTING
TOMORROW
TEARS, THRILLS, LAUGHTER, BEAUTIFUL SENTIMENT
pr;ces Matinees, 25c; Nites, 35c, Chidren, 10c.
THIS VEEK
a
IT A Story Sixly Years .old IT THE BOOK THE PLAY1 81?"
' jyfpj 1 1 and Good for Another Sixty Known in Every Country of the World
IsuEiE ; .y T pictures , Ji 1 jjj ji
te pf Cy r 07 1 f SHOWS l
BH SS- 25c V TODAY Pii:
'pflife s.M.t,OOC f A Production f at " 1,3, SvWliiSr
;pl j;10c ry,4 Finest Screen 'Clock J,
Biroadeasiiieg
AD! Is the general call for "Are You Ready"
VlJli V FOR SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
THIS SIGNAL BEING FLASHED TODAY TO NEBRASKA STUDENTS SO
YOU CAN GET READY AND "TUNE IN" IN TIME TO DECIDE BEFORE
THE SEMESTER TERMINATES.
An opportunity is being offered to Nebraska Students in the selling line
to make some real money which is guaranteed to pay your next years col
lege expenses.
We are now in the market for new blood to instill into our sales organi
zation, and offer an attractive commission. This all sounds good to
you student's, but do not apply unless you are a live wire and can make
things hum. We want men, but we don't want to pension anybody, and
our proposition won't stand, dead ones.
Getting down to brass tacks, we want men who feel they can go out and
get the business.
Until a representative arrives in town, all students interested are requested to file
before THURSDAY NOON their name, address and Phone number with Station A,
Box 1177.