I i . FOUR THE DAILY NEBRASKAN FRTDAY. DECKMRER 7, 1934. CAMIPOJSOOIETV AGAIN A , WEIGHTY PROBLEM faces the male population of the campus to buy or not to buy corsages. In past years there have been splurges and lapses in this long standing, practice. Gardenias were quite evident at the large parties last year, and oii very important occasions f.onie lucky girls were the proud possessors of orchids. If you know any thing at all about sorority houses, you will know that there is never anyone in them as excited or as proud as the girl who receives a box from a florist, just before a formal party. From all we can figure out, with the Military Ball, the Sigma Nu Pi dinner and the Sigma Alpha Mil formal all in the same weekend, many coeds will again be wear ing corsages. TONIGHT has been set a-side as a closed night so nothing will con flict with the Military ball which will start at 8:30 o'clock in the coliseum. Extensive plans includ ing formal dinners have been ar ranged by some groups on the campus. Anyway, everyone will be at the ball, the presentation of the Honorary Colonel will be a surprise worth looking forward to, and a good time will be had by all. , ABOUT 300 invitations have been issued to the Sigma Alpha Mu formal which is the first fra ternity party of its kind to take place this year. The affair is be ing given in the Cornhusker hotel ball room Saturday evening at 9 o'clock with the Beck-Jungbluth orchestra furnishing the music. The committee in charge which is composed of Jerry Cohn, Irving Hill, and William Flax has invited Prof, and Mrs. Karl M. Ardnt, Prof, and Mrs. James Melvin Rein hardt, and Maj. John P. Horan to chaperon. WITH MUCH POMP and cere mony, a pig roasted whole with all its special trimminga will be dedicated- at the annual Sigma Nu pig dinner Saturday night at the Lincoln hotel fit 7 o'clock. There will be favors for the seventy girls who will be present and dancing during and after the banquet. Special guests will be Arthur Dob son, a Lincoln alumni, and Lloyd Corp, the newly appointed chapter advisor. Those who will chaperon are Mrs. O. J. Fee, the house mother. Dean and Mrs. J. E. Le- Rossignol, and Geoige H. Turner. I "t CHI PHI actives will be guests of honor when the pledge class en tertains them at a party at the chapter house Saturday evening at eight-thirty o'clock. The house will be decorated in the colors of the pledge class which are red and blue. Chaperones will be Mrs. Melsana Daniels, the housemother, Mrs. Cora Bentley, and Professor and Mrs. Harold Stoke. Arrange ments for the affair have been made by Gordon Uhri. J HOME ECONOMICS association chose the Horn of Plenty as the theme for its annual dinner given In honor of Ellen Richards last night at six o'clock in the Home Economics building cefeteria. The address of welcome was made by Ardeth Von Housen, president of the association. Miss Margaret Fedde, head of the Home Eco nomics department, gave the main address of the evening. THE MARRIAGE of a former university student took place No vember 26 when Grace McCarty of Memphis, Tenn., became the bride of W. Russell Freidell of Dorchester. The groom is a Scot tish Rite Mason and a member of the Shrine. After a visit in Illinois the couple will reside in Dor chester. RECENTLY news has been re ceived of the marriage of Mildred Brand to G. F. McFarland of Long Beach, Calif., which took place October 29 in Rock Island, 111. The bride is a graduate of the univer sity and a member of University Players and National Collegiate Players. She is in Lincoln at pres ent and will leave Sunday to join her husband in Wisconsin, where they will reside. ALUMNAE of Alphi Xi Delta will meet for a one o'clock lunch eon Saturday at the chapter house, The hostesses will be Miss Lulu Runge, Mrs. H. C. Zellers, and Miss Elizabetj Hansen. BETA SIGMA PSI wishes to an nounce the recent pledging . of Gordon Bygland. Albion; Kermit Rosenberg, Albion; and Rudolph scnmiat, Lnsner. -Movie Directory- LINCOLN THIATRE CORP. STUART (Mt. 25c Eve. 40c) COLLEGE RHYTHM with Joe Penner, Jack Oakle, Lanny Rum, Helen Mack, Mary Brian, Lyda Roberta and Goo-Cioo. Mickey Moune cartoon. LINCOLN (Mat. 16c; Nlte S5c) ANNE OF GREEN GABLES Anne Shirley & Tom Brown Silly Symphony Cartoon, Ruth Eltlnc Musical. ORPHEUM (Mat. 1Bcj Nlte 25c) ONE EXCITING ADVEN TURE with Binnle Barnes, Nell Hamilton. RHAPSODY IN RHYTHM on the stage!! COLONIAL (Mat. 10c; Nlte 15c) IN OLD SANTA FE Ken Maynard. LIBERTY (Mat. 15c: Eve. 80c) 20 MILLION SWEETHEARTS Dick Powell, Ginger Rogers. SUN (Mat. 10c: Eve. 15c) FRIENDS OF MR. SWEE NEY Charlie Ruifgles ami PARIS INTERLUDE. WESTLAND THEATRE CORP. VARSITY (25c Any Time) " THE CAPTIAN HATES THE SEA, with Victor McLaelen, John Gilbert and Alison Skip worth. KIVA (Mat. 10c: Nlte 15c) THE PHANTOM EXTOESS with J. Farrell MacDonalii. 12 Stan In fC-Snk A Corned y rTvipJ WHAT'S DOING Friday. Military ball, coliseum, 9 p. m. Phi Omega Pi, mothers' club, 1 o'clock covered dish luncheon, chapter house. Sigma Chi mothers' club. 1 s'clock luncheon and Christmas oarty, with Mrs. C. E. Spangler. Social studies tea for faculty and graduates, 4:00 to 5:30, so cial science room 217. Saturday. Dean Amanda Heppner, tea, Tor Mortar Board active and alumnae members, 3 to 5 p. m. Mu Phi Epsilon, 1 o'clock luncheon, Mrs. B. B. Gribble. Zeta Tau Alpha alumnae, 1 o'clock luncheon with Miss Maude Rosseau. Sigma Alpha Mu, formal, )Crnhusker. Alpha XI Delta, alumnae .uncheon, 1 o'clock, at the chap ter house. Sigma Nu, annual pig dinner and dance, Lincoln hotel. Pi Beta Phi, alumnae, 12:30 o'clock luncheon with Mrs. Stan ley Zemer. Varsity Dairy Club Mixer, Student Activities Building, Ag Campus, 8:30 p. m. "It's a Townsend that satisfies." Adv. photograph OMAHA SINGERS BRING OPERA HERE SATURDAY (Continued from Page 1.) mann will conclude the brief con cert with "Ich liebe Dich" by Grieg. Tickets may be secured for 25 cents from any one of the German instructors or some of the German students. Downtown tickets are on sale at Schmoeller and Muellers or can be bought from Mrs. Stauss of the Welt Post offices in the Kresge building. YOUR DRUG STORE Try out hot lunch combination. You'll like the Courteous Service extended you by our fountain boys. IT e Deliver The Owl Pharmacy 148 No. 14th B1068 Special Added Attraction IN PERSON! NOVELLE BROS. & SALLY "The international Funtlert" Dlrrct (ram ( hint llratre, t Iticac! Static ARNOLD LEVINE $ On the Screen Fmtt Moving Romance with m Surpritel! ' l Another Terrific STAQE SHOW! JAC "-monies ....nritell FRANK. STARE . Wrophon. jr BILL tif.-. BLONDIE A Bonn rati- SJ Wolf with BINNIE BARNES W3 HetSkem, ri Cvnjii, E Wc P!WtU, Gran MitcsiH, Regular rnces Mat. Eve. STARTS TODAY! "T? k. a , iiifltii in ii m-JLk n v LID V I Now that the deep snows of win ter are swirling over and In Me mortal stadium, the football men have hung up their nice silk out fits, and the long faces are thaw ing out somewhat, Nebraska uni versity focuses its attention on the coliseum, where, nightly, a group of some twenty men and a doughty coach spend their energy in the attempt to turn out a winning basketball quintet. It's on the ticket that the Scar let and Cream, for so long a door mat in basketball circles, but re cently rising under the tutelage of Coach Harold W. Browne, Is due for the biggest year it has had for a decade. There are still the grey bearded, wizened old prophets who stick to their unproved theory that "Nebraska never did have and never will have a really good bas ketball team," but they have given way, in 1934, to a consideration by the fan authorities of what Ne braska is going to do to some of those teams. "We're not dead yet over here at Nebraska U. No sireee. We've just been waitiu for the chance, and now's our chance." It does seem that the Huskers are going someplace in basketball this year. There s a slew of re turning veterans from last year's quintet that finished fourth in the conference, and a regiment or holdovers and new men who are threatening the regulars. There's no such thing as a cinch job on Nebraska's 1934-35 maple ma chine. Speed and accuracy in sev eral men come up from last year's freshmen and hot-foot flash work by ex-B team men has given lots of competition to varsity men wno would hold down their iods. There's not much height to the newest Browne machine. Exclud ing, of course, Hardy's 6 foot 5 contribution, junior center Harry Sorenson. The lanky blue eyea, blond Swede is one of the four lettermen returning from the quint that finished last years season But outside of him, there's really not much height to the team. Whitaker and Hale forwards. Whitakcr less than 6 feet. Hale about that. Wahlquist at guard is slightly over 6 feet. Widman about the same height. Bud Parsons is right around the half dozen feet mark. But there's not the length in those Huskers that was concen trated last year in elongated Ice land CoddIc Kenneth Lunney & Co. Lacking this height, which may or may not be essential to a bas ketball team, depending on your point of view, the Scarlet depends on speed to burn. While the lanky boys are passing the ball way up in the air among themselves, some little lad leaps high to spear one, then short, precise, accurate passes. A bounce under aome de fender's outstretched arm, fast dribbling around another bigger, clumsier man, poise, quick aim, and two points are rung up. That's the principle upon which the 1935 Huskers are going to found thtir hopes of bringing a Big Six cham pionship basket title into their col lection. Sharpshooters and feeders are the essentials to such a brand of basketball. There's Henry Whit aker, ace forward, and Leland Hale, a new man. Crack ahots, both of them, excellent at handling the ball. Then there's George Wahlquist. Bud Parsons, and Har vey Widmaxi in the back court Each is clever and adept at bring ing the ball down into scoring posi tion and flicking it at the right moment, in the right way. to the right receiver. When called on, they can also contribute their share of points. At center well, with big Harry Sorenson with us for two more years and Lester Mc Donald coming up in the sopho more ranka, this position is more than well taken care of. Sorenson is an excellent pivot man, can con trol the tip, pass speedily and ac curately, and has th height and reach to go way up after shots which just hit the bangboard and bring them down in the resounding swish which means points to the well trained ear. Defensively, the Huskers of 1935 are a bunch of fighters, scrappers for the ball wherever it may be. And the dogged, fighting manner gets results. In their practice games so far, the frosh have proved rather tough, but the frosh are exception al this year. When the varsity really clicks, they are no math for the smooth, precise machine which Coach Browne is building and which will improve with time. People Today Want Literature Like a Good Meal Pleasant, Not Too Heavy, and Easily Digested, Says Prof. Fay. (Continued from Page 1.) work. Verbs combined in a ehal owy, obscured form and slipped like oil over the surface of the brain. "What has happened to words since 1800?" Professor Fay asked. "They became rich. English and French became administrative and imperial languages. They grew as standardized and as scientific as posible. When a language has its boundaries in dictionary terms, it dies." "A word is alive as long as it is not clearly defined, just as people are intellectually alive as long as they are open to change. It exists within us and yet helps to form the atmosphere around us just as a tree has its roots in the ground and spreads into an individual grandeur in the air." Mr. Fay feels that our language for some time has not had its roots in the soil. "Up to the 17th and 18th centuries everyone thought of literature as the disciple of the mind." he declared. "Science bare ly existed. It was literature which made you charminjr and gave you power. Not until after 1800 did the belief in science really grow. Grad ually the kingdom of science has expanded until it has absorbed the kingdom of literature." Authors like Shakespeare, Mon taigne and Rabelais, who lived in a period when the language was not so removed from the expres sions of the peasantry could revivo and recreate their work with ex pressions having infinite possibili ties," Prof. Fay continued. "Byron and Hugo lived ina catalogued pe its possibilities. Exceptionally gift ed, they realized something had to be done in order to stir people and they hit upon the idea of using millions of words explosions of sound, to cause a blinking of the eyes and an interest in their ideas. "It is the same principle as the grandiose supply of chords which the organ furnishes at weddings in order to fill up space and express the drama of the occasion. Hugo expressed the general feeling of the crowd. He expressed the soul of a multitude because he had no soul himself." "The best seller is the nearest approach to the newspaper and consequently must be easily under stood circulated and digested" as serted Prof. Fay. "Words have really lost nine-tenths of their pow er and prose has become more scientific and poetry more empty." Reaction against this type ot writing started in 1872 in France with three disillusioned poets, ac cording to Mr. Fay. Rimbaud sought to recreate living qualities in words and to build a public for this new literature in order that it might retain the sparke of life. Verlaine tried to elevate literature thru eloquence, from a musical point of view giving each syllable a rhythmic value and many of his poems sang thru the reader's mind like a popular tune; Mallarme held that the science of writing effec tively was based on the associa tion of ideas, in putting together some facts and avoiding others. He believed, however, that only com binations of words which give an esthetic idea are valuable. The foremost disciples of this movement, according to Professor Fay are James Joyce of England and America's Gertrude Stein. Doctor Fay regards the working toward a new literary conscience ness as a great spiritual move ment and if it doesn't succeed, he fears that all language will be doomed in five or six countries. The only hope for mental happi ness he feels, is the steady growth of a new kind of conscious poetry of the mind in which in which words have a singular potence and permanent elasticity. Choice Corsages fur the Military Ball Lincoln Floral Co. B4617 1040 O Street ANNUAL FUNCTION HOLDS SPOTLIGHT (Continued from Page l.i and 35 cents for spectators. They are on sale at Latsch Bros., Gold's, Ben Simon and Sons, and George Bros., or may be procured from any military science student. Final arrangements for the ball were completed Thursday night with the last practice of tn srrand march in the coliseum. According to Charles Steadman, publicity agent for the ball, some 5,000 peo ple are expected as dancers and spectators and dancers for the event Andre de Coppet New York banker, has given Princeton uni versity (N. J.) more than 500 vol umes which originally formed part of the library of Napoleon Bona parte. Approximately three-fourths of the college women in the United States attend co-educational col leges. The skeleton of a buffalo, shot by the Grand Duke Alexis of Rus sia in 1872, is among the prized possessions of the Brown univer sity biological laboratory. The City of Genoa, Italy, pre sented one of the rarest of all the documents and proofs ot the Ge noese origin of Christopher Co lumbus to Dr. David Allen Robert son, president of Goucher college (Baltimore, Md.) in celebration of Columbus day. Presenting GERMAN GRAND OPERA in Three Acti "Dear Wweischuelz" Saturday, Dec. 8, 8:15 P. M. Admission 25c TEMPLE TIHJE ATTIRE 12th and R Sts. I ' LINGERIE Is What She Wants for Christmas! JOf EVEN if she is one of those girls who always , f ' 5) has lots of everything, she'll Mill be glnd W V m V ' to pet nice undies. These have all the finer Wv V o qualties that make them gifly. jKl V . tfj&f t yf 'y $1oo 'f ) hm 'y slips panties j Third J l-il "THE STORE OF PRACTICAL GIFTS" IN. AH , INTERNATIONAL LAW. ALL) (SORTS OF PERSONS, STATES ANDC j5rCOUNTRlES MUST BE ,( IN THE CIVILIZED STATES A STATE I O A MfcMtJtK OF THE FAMILY OF N&TlfiWf. MA CilhJF ' AMD NIT 15 AN Ir .INTERNATIONAL 9evF: rw n m r. i r t- rv -fj t ij , Ah Bhere'j one 'law every pipe tsmoksr should obey :rftX "NO-BlT" IT Al PRINCE ALBERT - i 1 r ' Ano 'ttx-'S P,p A r OyERNMENT OP A H A If "(y .1, 2 ,T7 VIOLAT ION OF 1 dFttzril Co Ytwi an inter- Vrr- ' t . ... - .'Z ,-ii,-,--r m m P1 P INTERNATIONAL DELINQUENCY IS.) I HM.ni INJUKTTU MNOTHEK j STKTtiUrOMITTtU BY THE GOVERNMENT OF A STATE THROUGH VIOLATION OF AN INTER NATIONAL DtiTV HOMMPM li THE TONGUE s u n H. 1 SLOW BURNING 2 JOy huwGE Albert ssl