The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 16, 1937, Page TWO, Image 2

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    TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1937.
TWO
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor ..George Plpsl
ManaQlnq Editors .Don Wagner, Ed Murray
Newt Edltora Wlllard Burney, Helen Patcoe, Jane
Walcott. Howard Kaplan. Morris Llop.
Barbara Roiewater.
Sporta Editor Ed Steevea
Society Ed.tor Virginia Anderton
ON THIS ISSUE
Desk Editor Murray
Night Editor Kaplan
Under direction of tht Student Publication Board.
Editorial Office University Hall 4.
Business Off ice University Hnll 4A.
Telephone Day: B6891: Night: B6SS2. B3333 (Journal).
Member IW
Associated GoUeglate Press
Distributors of
GoHe&ideDteed
Let's Insure Against
Nebraska Hall With
The 10-Year Plan
Fifty years ago the university was entering an
era or expansion. Departments crowded out of
University hall found haven in the new natural
sciences building:, which now houses the college of
pharmacy, but the accommodations did not last.
Education was experiencing "growing pains" in the
rew prairie state.
Fifty years ago, the regents set about to rem
edy this overcrowding, and on commencement day,
1SS8, the cornerstone of Nebraska hall was raised.
It was an imposing three story classroom building,
built of soft brick with a heavy mansard roof at a
cost of $40,000.
Such cheap construction could not be endur
ing, in 1909, when the university took stock of its
pnysical plant, the evaluation of Nebraska hall had
cropped to 521,000. In 1919, when Cornhuskers
celebrated their semicentennial anniversary, the
evaluation had dropped to $15,000.
But evaluations were not the only things that
were dropping. The building groaned under the
weight of the heavy roof, and iron tie rods, the star
shaped taps of which now dot the outer wall?, were
installed to bolster the weakening structure. In
195. the roof and third floor were torn off. and a
lighter roof plastered over.
If any evaluation were to be placed on the
building today, it would have to be negative. That
is, it could be if you can evaluate human lives in
dollars, and valuable records in the potential loss
columns of the ledger. Every freshman and sopho
more in the university has a three hour class in the
building, and thousands of dollars of military sci
ence equipment is housed under its sagging ceilings.
But more important than any instruments of
numan destruction that might be stored there are
the endless files of the department of conservation
and survey records of years of research into the
natural resources and geography of the state. These
records are invaluable and unreplaceable. They de
serve better protection than Nebraska hall, where
fire or a decaying foundation could make short
work of them.
If we press the point that such unsafe buildings
as Nebraska hall endanger the lives of students and
instructors, we will be accused of every brand of
insidious sentimentalism. But the fact remains:
Any citizen, legislator or student who examines the
buildings for himself will find that the architects
issued no false report in condemning the buildings
12 years ago.
Those individuals, outstate and in the legisla
(BhDWAhiq
Cbrwnq. Hisl j3joLl
By Bernice Kauffman.
Elizabeth Atkins in "Edna St.
Vincent and Her Times" has done
for the poet, what Parson Weems
did for George Washington when
he thought up the story about the
cherry tree. It would be hari to
rame a poet, a prose writer, or a
philosopher of the past or present
who has not been dragged forth
and compared witn Miliay to their
discredit. Without any very con
clusive evidence except innumer
able one and two line quotations,
which Miss Atkins evidently con
siders a mark of scholarship, she
asserts that our Edna has been
influenced by every major writer
from Homer to Archibald Mac
Leish, including Tennyson. But,
she hastily assures us: "Millay is
not imitating earlier poets; she is
merely holding her own in conver
sation with them."
As a playwright Shakespeare
is given a preference; but says
Mit Atkini, in commenting en
the writing of history plays: "In
Shakespeare's day it was not so
hard." But in sonnet the bard
his to look to his laurels for:
"Probably Millay't love sonnets
reveal a greater knowledge of
the complexities of love than
any others that have ever been
written." Compared with Elinor
Wylie, Christina Rosietti, and
Elizabeth Barrett Browning:
"She it temperamentally much
Stronger, much more complex
and imperious." In fact, con
cludes Writer Atkins: "She
walks through her phrases at
Willa Cather's Lucy Gayheart
walked, 'at if she were catching
step with the wind.' Comparison
with the inspipid Lucy is hardly
conclusive.
Quoting "finu" or "livautiful"
phrases seems to be another murk
of Miss Atkins' erudition. She is
given to using poetic expressions
of her own, lor we read: "And
theie was Bliss Carmen ... to
whose marching feet all color was
fluttering flag" and "the sounds
are pretty, mlly as glass wind
bells." In order to enliven her style
she intersperses her poetic prose
with such flippancies as; "A
painter knows that a sensation, no
less than Popeye the S3ilonnan, la
what it is " and "Even Shakespeare
himself, in one or two sonnets,
anapped off his concluding couplet
with an air of "Oh. what the hell!' "
With the biographer we go to
Millay's simplt, childhood home,
with her we wander through the
chaste atmosphere of Vassar,
and with her we escape those de
generate years of Freudism and
Oadaism. For, warns Miss At
kins: "Let no unabashed reader
of an unexpurgated Shakespeare
or Chaucer imagine that he can
THIRTY-SIXTH YEAR
$1.50 a year
$2.50 mailed
Published every
Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday, Friday and
Sunday mornings of
the academic year by
students of the Uni
versity of Nebraska,
under the supervision
of the Board of Pub.
Ilcations.
tion at Nebraska
emphasized in
occurs that the
fire and accident
institutions.
You've Seen Those
Signs on the Highway
Time magazine recently recalled that the first
editorial masterpiece turned out by fugitive Leon
Trotzky while working for a New York newspaper
in those dark days before the revolution was a
dissertation on chewing gum as an instrument of
capitalistic oppression. Observing the masticatory
manipulations of white collar workers on the sub
way, ne reasoned that the forces of reaction were
at work, deadening the mass mind to social changes.
If Mr. Trotzky were not vacationing in Mexico
at the present time, we would have a new crusade
lor him. Less subtle in fact, quite frank are the
billboard arguments that some sector of the status
quo is now using to reassure those who motor by
that "The American Way" is the best in the world.
No one, Voltaire included, would begrudge this
anonymous advertiser the right to say what he be
lieves, but when thousands of billboards are em
ployed, his statement of opinion approaches a flood
of propaganda. And the cynical doubt in human
infallibility possessed by most students tells us that
Mr. Trotzky, given the opportunity, would probably
adapt the billboards possibly even chewing gum
to his particular brand of salvation.
Americans have long held to "progress" as a
sacred national dogma, and the faith has served
the country well where intelligence has been al
lowed to enter into decisions. But all progress is
not necessarily good progress, nor will there be any
if the billboards soon convince us that some sort of
millenium has been reached.
There are few significant mass movements in
this country today that threaten destruction to "The
American Way." The condition that does endanger
democracy is the inertia of the electorate to remedy
the detects in our present system. Much intelligent
criticism must still confront our system of political
patronage before we can attain a more representa
tive government, and much discussion must be pro
voked before we can put the proper patches on our
economic system. Neither of these can be accom
plisned thru the medium of billboard lullabies.
turn back to periodicals of 1920
and reread Alfred Kreymborg,
Evelyn Scott, D. H. Lawrence,
Mina Loy, E. E. Cummings, et
al, without a blush."
Although "Edna St. Vincent Mil
lay became in effect, the unrivaled
embodiment of sex appeal, the It
girl of the hour, the Miss America
of 1920," although she is the "most
popular and representative" poet
of her time, we are assured that
j she was not influenced by such
; contact in that same debauched
iyear of 1920. "Here was. instead,"
the glorifying Miss Atkins says,
"the bubbling, irresistible laughter
of a girl at her first wild party,
catching up the smart sayings of
her dancing partners, nodding her
head to their vehement remarks,
but too busy dancing her stock
ings through to notice the fetid
air and the jaded nerves about
her."
At this point Miss Atkins missed
a marvelous opportunity to quote
and so we will the lines of Millay
that ar most often reprinted in
anthologies:
"What hps my lips have kitted,
and where, and why,
I have forgotten, and what arms
have lain
Under my head till morning; but
the rain
Is full of ghosts tonight, that tap
and sigh
Upon the glass and listen for a
reply,
And in my heart there stirs a
quiet pain
For unremembered lads that not
again
Will turn to me at midnight with
a cry."
Edna St. Vincent Millay Is no
Elsie iJiriKinoi c, nor yet a Shake
speare. She is Edna St. Vincent
Millay. Let us admire her for her
own qualities, not for the spurious
ones that the sentimental Miss At
kins would lead us to believe she
possessed.
College World
That "big sister" feeling caused
a University of Wisconsin sorority
girl a lot of embarrassment re
cently. Before a lecture class began she
noticed a small boy sitting next to
a friend of hers. She assumed the
lad was a brother and was visit
ing the class with his sister so she
chatted with the young man tn
conversation slightly above the
"Little Red Riding Hood" plane.
Suspicion started to itch her
when the class began and the lad
started taking notes. He seemed
to be such a gentlemanly little
fellow so well behaved. As the
class progressed she read some of
the notes and gulod when she
saw that tlioy were well written.
After class she rushed up to her
sorority sister and said: "Say, I
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager Bob Shellenberg
Assistant Managers... Bob Wadhams, Web Mills.
Frank Johnson.
Circulation Manager Stanley Michael
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CHICAOO " POSTON SAN FRANCISCO
LOS ANQSLSV r-OATUAND SATTkl
ture, whose attention we wish to draw to the situa
might well say: "They're students.
They see the condition every day; it becomes over
their minds." In our experience, it
opposite is true; we are inclined to
take the conditions for granted after becoming used
to tnem. But when outside observers point out the
hazard in these decaying: build
ings, we begin to realize the intelligence and time
liness of the proposed building program for state
thought he was your brother.
I . . . "
"Yes, I know, but how could I
have told you? He's the 21 year
old midget enrolled in the School
of Commerce;"
Rice institute males battled for
red headed women before a recent
dance for economic reasons.
Different prices were set on the
heads of the coeds, depending on
color, and on the night of the shuf
fle "hue determiners" posted at
the door judged the hair color of
each incoming female.
Fellows who escorted "Sorrel
topped Susies" go t two bits
knocked off their admittance price.
Less fortunate men who took bru
nettes got a 15 cent reduction, and
the least lucky who brought
blondes got a 10 cent "down."
Coeds at the University of Cali
fornia are sure now that Stanford
gals can't take it.
During the recent cold snap
many Stanford coeds aabndoned
their silk lingerie for furry red
flannel underwear. Palo Alto
merchants completely sold out and
claimed that Stanford women had
been the heaviest buyers.
But did the University of Cali
fornia females go in for the "scar
let scratchies?" Not on your life.
When proprietors of Berkeley
stores were asked if they sold the
brillifintly-hued underwear, they
were taken aback.
"Red flannels?" cried one pro
prietress, arching her ' eyeDrows.
"I didn't even know they were on
the market anymore in Cali
fornia." Another admitted that she had
Just one steady customer for
"wool it's," but "she is a lady well
over 70 years old."
"I've received a lot of unusual
requests, but this one boats them
all," says Lcn Schmoker, execu
tive secretary of the University of
Minnesota's Y. M. C. A.
A mother, worried about her
freshman son, wrote him the fol
lowing letter:
"I am rending you three suits of
woolen underwear under separate
cover. Please see to it that my
boy wears them as he should dur
ing this cold weather." ,
Since it's the right time of the
school year to tell stories about
freshmen, Schmoker relates this
one:
"Not long ago a freshman
stopped me and said. 'Can yog
please tell me in what building
the campus is?' "
The Junior girl at Miami univer
sity who fell into a deep stupor
every time she attended one of her
lectures finally found that the re
flection of four lights on the pro
fessor's glasses waa hypnotising
her.
9nquvrin.
"If you want to be popular,
girls, don't mess with your hair,
or chew gum Incessantly, or paint
your finger nails a bright red!"
That seems to be the ultimatum
delivered by a fair cross section
of the campus males.
We asked them, "What do you
think of the girls on the cam
pus?" and they answered both
with quantity and with quality.
George Rosen, Arts and Sciences
sophomore:
"There are some girls here that
only a mother could love. But
girls in general are a little hard
to meet, unless you have the
proper connections if you don't
belong to a fraternity, you're out
of luck. However, when you get
to know them, they re real pals,
Somehow, the girls of the univer
sity have more bearing and poise
than those from other schools."
Arthur Hill, Blzad freshman:
"Members of the so called fairer
sex. have an advantage in that
they can, by coquettish glances,
extract good grades from other
wise reluctant readers. In other
words, all of the best apple pol
ishers in this university are fe
male. Then, too, they think a
little too much of their own
achievements and abilities."
Bruce Grant, Arts and Sciences
sophomore:
"They're too danged independ
ent, and seem to be concerned only
with the present. As far as I've
been able to find, they have no
serious thoughts for the future;
they're out for a good time today
and to heck with tomorrow. They
want what they want when they
want it, and they seem to have no
desire to assume the responsibili
ties thaf they will some day face.
They are, however, able to do
more with what they have; a girl
of moderate means has sufficient
good taste to dress well. In gen
eral, they are good sports, good
companions, and very nice to have
around."
Bob Lipscomb, Arts and Sciences
freshman:
"As a whole, they're not very
outstanding. There are a few
good looking ones, but they're
plenty hard to find all the beau
tiful girls seem to go to Califor
nia, or Georgia, or Northwestern
Quite a few of them dress well,
and that helps a little. They're
just a little too impressed with the
social aspect of the university;
but, in the final analysis, they're
pretty square, on the level, in spite
of their numerous shortcomings."
Bob Stuart, Arts and Sciences
sophomore:
"They're o. k., I guess. Altho
they're not the most beautiful in
the world, they know how to wear
clothes to bring out their desir
able qualities. They're above the
average in intelligence. Too many
of them, however, spend more
time in social affairs tnan in
study; they seem to have a mar
riage complex, and are more occu
pied in looking for a husband than
in seeking an education."
Keith Klein, Bizad senior:
"To one who has just recently
transferred from a smaller school,
the most striking thing about the
girls is their friendliness. They
are easy to get acquainted with,
they dress well, take an active in
terest in school affairs, and are
above the average."
Earl Roeber, Arts and Sciences
freshman:
"They seem to be all right.
However, they impress me as be
ing here for the fun of it, rather
than to get an education. They're
up in the knowledge of clothes
and hair styles, but down in their
classroom work."
Tim Parker, Arts and Sciences
freshman:
"When I first came here, I was
told that nine out of ten girls are
good looking, and the tenth one
comes to Nebraska. After a little
personal observation, however, I
think that that crack is all wrong,
for we've really a swell bunch of
girls here at the university."
Charles Phares, Arts and Sciences
sophomore:
"It's a 50-50 proposition. Some
are here to be educated, some to
be exposed to a husband; some are
good looking, a few would stop a
clock; most of them work for
their grades, but there are a few
who are the best apple polishers
I've ever seen. However, this
doesn't apply only to the girls, the
boys have their drawbacks, too."
Ash Mousel, Bizad junior:
"This university has the great
est conglomeration of different
types of females than any place
I've ever seen. The general trend
seems to be that they are far from
being practical, they've never had
to face the actual problems of
life, and they're not looking for
ward to the days when they will.
They expect everything to be
given to them. Most of them are
well dressed and good natured, but
they're not here to get an educa
tion; they're busy acquiring a sot
cinl standing and seeing how they
stack up in society."
Dwlght Lord, Bizad Junior:
"Too many girls are getting
away from being feminine. They
copy men's clothes and try to do
everything that we do if we're
so objectionable, why copy us?
Bright red finger nails give me
the jitters!"
Bob Reddish, Arts and Sciences
junior:
"A fellow told me the other day
that. 'A man is Just a little better
than a woman, but he mustn't let
them know if, and I think he's got
something there. The girls here
dress well, but two things they do
get me down chewing gum, and
always messing with their hair
otherwise, they're pretty good."
New Pledges
Announced.
Chi Omega receatly aanauflced
the pledging of two girls. They
are Yarmt Knotek of Ravenna and
Dorothy Chase of Lincoln.
Sarah Miller of Wall Lake, la.,
and Vclma Beecher are new
pledges of Sigma Delta Tau.
Dr. Esther S. Anderson of the
geography department gave an il
lustrated lecture on "Interesting
Facts and Places In Nebraska" at
the "Nebraska day" meeting of
the P. T. A. at Cortland, March 12.
Prof. Blair Discounts Theory
That Sunspols Form Basis. for
Prediction of Heavy Rainfall
Prof. T. A. Blair of the Hetero
logy department discounted the
forecast for a very wet year here
on the basis of the appearance
of sun-spots. Some have given the
erroneous information that a sum
mer of heavy rainfall was inevit
able as sun-spots were much in
evidence.
"It is true that sun-spots do
seem to cause excess rainfall," he
said, "but only in a very general
way." In the past during years
of sun-spots, the rainfall over the
national as a whole has seemed
to increase, but not definitely for
each state.
Appear Regularly.
This year observers have no
ticed numerous large sun-spots
which look like dark patches on
the sun. According to the theory,
these sun-spots appear regularly
every eleven years, with interme
diate spots appearing from time
to time. Usually the presence of
the spots on the sun are accom
panied by unusually damp seasons
in general and increased radio
static and aurora displays..
ERY 0FFIC1
Dairymen to Hold Two-Day
Convention; Register
This Morning.
Creamery officials and em
ployees will meet in Lincoln today
and Wednesday for the eleventh
annual convention of the Nebraska
Cooperative Creameries, inc. The
creamery men will meet today in
the Dairy Industry building on the
ag campus, closing the day's ac
tivities with a banquet at the
Cornhusker hotel, at 6:15 o'clock.
Wednesday sessions will be held at
the Cornhusker.
Members will register at 9 a. m.
today and hear talks by George A.
Farrell, director of the Western
division of the AAA, on "Coopera
tion a Community Enterprise,"
and by Prof. FJ. L. Reichart, asso
ciate professor of dairy husbandry,
on "The New York Butter Mar
ket," an analysis of how the mar
ket operates. Additional features
will be a tour of the university
dairy setup, and a butter scoring
contest.
Toastmaster at tonight's ban
quet will be Dean T. J. Thompson,
dean of student affairs. Speaker
will be William Schilling, former
member of the farm board from
St. Paul, Minn. Music will be
furnished by a string trio com
posed of Misses Ethel Owen, Helen
Ludlan and Hilda Chowins. Melvin
Beerman will present his novelty
rope act, "Life on the Range.
President of the organization is
Carl S. Horn, of Hay Springs, Neb.
Paging Jhe
Smart Qoed
By Helena Rubinstein.
These days life seems to be just
one trouble after another for your
eyes. Either it's windy and things
blow in or there's a blinding radi
ance from the snow that threatens
you with a perpetual squint. In
addition, reading lists have just
been given out again and if the
professors had their way it seems
as if you'd be reading twenty-four
hours a day for the next six years.
But, after all, people before you
have lived through four years of
college and come out with a degree
and their eyes intact. It can be
done and there's no reason why
you shouldn't manage it in reason
able comfort.
Several things you can do for
your eyes. First of all, be careful
always to read In a good light.
That means having enough light
so that you don't have to strain
your eyes, and it also means avoid
ing a glare on the page. Second,
try to sit up while you read. It
may mean more effort for you than
lying down, but It means less effort
for your eyes.
Third, give your eyes plenty of
rest. This doesn't mean that you
must stop reading every fifteen
minutes and go to sleep. But you
should lift your eyes from the
page every half hour or so and look
around. This forces the many little
muscles in the eyes to change po
sition. It prevents tension and
strain. It prevents that occasional
result of several hours steady read
inghaving the page blur as your
eyes suddenly become unfocussed.
If you've never thought of exercise
as a means of resting. Just try
holding your arm In one position
for ten minutes. Then shake it vig
orously and there'll be no doubt in
your mind as to the refreshing
powers of exercise.
Fourth, give your eyes a bath
every day. It's true that nature has
made some provision for washing
the eyes with tears, but a rather
pleasanter and more regular
method is to use eye drops. A
dropperful of herbal eye drops
washes out litle particles of dust
and grit. It leaves your eyes shin
ing and fresh, having something of
the effect of a week's vacation in
the country.
Use your herbal eye drops after
every heavy bout of reading. Use
them before you yo out on a date.
The eyes have been termed the
windows of the soul, and surely
you should keep them clean and
bright
Most girls don't know how to
make the most of their eyes. The
correct use of mascara and eye
shadow is rare and all other aids
to eye loveliness seem to be com
pletely unknown to them.
As a matter of fact, it is not
such a good Idea to wear eye
shadow at all during the college
4ay. Eyeshadow Is formal dress
for the eyes and it doesn't fit with
sweaters and skirts. A drop of
herbal eye tissue oil over the lids,
an eyelush grower and darkener
The sun-spots are caused by gi
ant eruptions somewhat like the
volcanoes of our earth on a gi
gantic scale. The increased energy
undoubtedly has some effect on
the aurora borealis which is un
usually bright during these pe
riods. They also seem to affect
the weather in general.
During the last year of sun
spots, in 1929, the rainfall for the
nation as a whole was above nor
mal, but that for Nebraska was
about average. During the last ap
pearance of the eleven-year cycle
spots, in 1926, the rainfall for the
state was below normal. In 1915,
22 years ago, the state's precipita
tion was far above normal, but
this cannot be attributed solely
to the sun-spots of that year, be
cause the rainfall of the nation
in general was not near as high.
Therefore, while the chances for
a rainy year this year are prob
ably better than normal, it can
not be predicted for certain that
the state of Nebraska will enjoy
the extra rain it has been missing
for the last few years.
for the lashes is all that the well
dressed eye will wear on the
campus. The eye tissue oil is suf
ficient to give your lids a rather
enchanting gleam, just a subtle
hint on sophistication. The eye
lash grower and darkener empha
sizes your lashes at the same time
it helps them to become long.
The night time with its bright
lights and attendant gaieties is the
moment for you to don the glamor
of eyeshadow and mascara. Then
you can really do something with
your eyes. You can lend them a
depth and fascination impossible
to achieve in the cold morning
light.
Choose a luminous eyeshadow
accoi-ding to the color of your
eyes. Blue to make blue eyes
seem bluer still, blue green for
green eyes and hazel eyes, jade for
black eyes and emerald for brown
eyes. The luminous quality of
these eyeshadows is achieved with
certain glistening oils and flecks
of silver and bronze in the shadow.
It's a really dress up style.
Once you've selected your eye
shadow, study the shape and set
ting of your eyes very carefully.
Ifthey are deep set and there is
a lot of space between lashes and
eyebrows, smooth your eyeshadow
in just under the eyebrow line
toward the temples. This will give
your eyes more life and sparkle.
It will bring them out.
But if your eyes seem shallow
and a little uninteresting, place
the shadow close to the lashes
in a single deep streak of color
which can be shaded out to make
your eyes appear deeper and
longer. A sometimes affect trick is
to slant the shadow up and out
to the outer edge of the eyebrows.
This seems to alter the line of
your yes, making them appear
Oriental and exotic.
Persian mascara, is the last ;
touch. You can get it in a whole
variety of colors to go with your
eye shadow. Or you can get it in
black to make your lashes show
to the very uttermost. One last
hint: After putting on the Persian
mascara, brush your lashes very
carefully to avoid a hard spiky
look. The brushing and the mas
cara combined will turn them into
a rich, silky fringe.
MISS KIENHOLZ PRESENTS
MUSICALRECITAL TODAY
Student of Maude Gutzmer
To Offer Compositions
From Schubert.
Mary Elizabeth Kienholz, a jun
ior in the school of music and a
pupil of Maude Gutzmer, will pre
sent a voice recital this afternoon
at 4 o'clock in the Temple theater.
Miss Kienholz will be assisted in
her program by Mary Janice Men
era y, harpist, who is studying
with Marjorie Shanafell.
Three compositions by Schubert
will be included in the first part
of the recital that the mezzo so
prano will present. The numbers
will be "Thranenregen," "Fruh
lingstraum" and "Rastlose Liebe."
"Connais Tu Le Pays" from the
opera "Mignon" by Thomas will
end the first group.
Miss Meneray will present the
second group of numbers on her
harp. "Campfire" and "Clouds"
from the suite "Summer" by Ho
berg and "The Aeolian Harp" by
Godefroid are the selections that
she has chosen to play.
"O Ma Lyre Immortelle" from
the opera "Sappno" by Gounod,
Watts' "The Little Shepherd's
Song," "A pastoral" by Verucinl,
and "Like Wind Upon Water," a
composition of Cadman's will be
presented by Miss Kienholz in the
last group of selections.
Mary Tolhurst will accompany
the singer at the piano.
An Intimate EASTER GIFT . .
Your Photograph
9
Studio Al 226
Sullsdin
Members of Farmer's Fair
Board will meet tonight at 7:30 in
room 305.
Lutherans.
Lutheran students will meet with ,
Rev. H. Erck for the regular Bibla
class Wednesday at 7:15 p. m. in
room 203 of the Temple building.
The topic of the discussion will be:
The Teaching of Jesus Concerning
Marriage and Divorce.
MISS S. MUIRTO DISCUSS
EDUCATIONALLEGISLATION
Lincoln High Teacher
Will Speak at Y.W.C.A. ,
Vesper Service.
"The Outlook for Education in
Nebraska" is the title of the ad
dress to be given by Miss Sarah
T. Muir at the Vespers group this
afternoon at 5 p. m. at Ellen Smith
hall.
As a former member of the Ne
braska state legislature, Miss Muir
will discuss the pending legisla
tive bills in regard to the state ed
ucational system. Miss Muir is
head of the English department at
Lincoln high school and chairman
of the publication board there.
Victoria Sovmour and Virginia
Wheeler are the staff members in
charge of this week's meeting.
Vesper choir will present the
processional and special numbers.
Maxine Federle is director and
Bernice Nolleman is acompanist.
Any women student is welcome to
attend.
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By
amykiJt
Here Is a dainty colorful gut that
only you, yourself can give.
Townend Studio is offering a selec
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photograpfcs especially appropriate
for Easter Gifts.
There is time cnoueh yet to pot this
special Easter photograph Call for
appointment now.
South 11th Street