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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1937)
PAGE FOUR THE DAILY NEBKASKAN. TUESDAY. NOYKMRKK 16, 1937 You'll be GOING PLACES tli ia formal season In halters ami harnesses and wo don't mean horsibacluiding. for these arc the ways the new "Naked" evening dross is held up. Frai'.ccvmr.anl has them hold the draped lodiccs to the figure. BELOW THE KNEES any thing might happen . . . and in an evening dress it means frou-frou i fullness t) you). The above is slim and .straight from the siioulucrs and they are bare. IF YOUR FORMAL needs altering, repairing, or the hemline adjusted, cill The Buttonhole Shop, 81518, 1242 M. Dress designing, dry clean ing. DO NT HOLD YOUR BREATH to acquire the flat diaphragm for thci-e new slick formal jvift do a few bend ing exercises ami Ur.nd up straight. GERMAN CLUB MEMBERS HEAR WELT-POST EDITOR Mrs. Dora Strauss Relates Impressions of Germany Thursday Evening. Mrs. Dora Stauss, editor of the Welt-Post, Lincoln's only German newspaper, will be the speaker at a meeting of the I'niversity Ger man club to he held in the Tem ple Thursday at S p. m. Mrs. Stauss, who spent most of the past summer traveling in Ger many and visiting her two chil dren who live theie. will relate in simplified German her impressions of ihe country, its policies and its people. Also on the evening's program will be musical numbers by Miss Janet Currier and by a student quartet composed of Francis Loetterle. Clifford Sturdevant. Ger ald Wilson and Eugene Pentner. All students in the German depart ment and any persons interested in German are invited to attend the meeting, according to Erich Al- j brecht, faculty member in charge. ('()'('H T() S1EK HiSTORHOlWAGES before bjzad group NATIONAL ESSAY CONTESTS J4" Ad;h"" i Delta Sisnia I 1 Members Three Prizes Offered for Best Discussions of Minority Problems. Announcement has recently been made by the New History- society, rational historical organization, of an essay contest on minority prob lems that it has opened for people or every nationality anil race, re- siding in the United States and iu 1 an industrial tour of Lincoln dusi territories and island possessions. ns 'irms ?ome tin!C in tlle near The New History society is at future. Such a tour is held once present engaged in eliciting the ear'1 semester. Plans for a theater opinion of the peoples of the world, i party were also discussed. and especially youth, in vital problems. The subjeit of this year's competition deals with minorities in the United States and posses-' sions. Three prizes have been of fered for the best essays. $300, 200. and $100. Among 'the con ditions of the contest is a length limit of 2.000 words, and a time limit. May 15, 193S. Theie is no registration fee. Address of tiie : society headquarters is Z2 East ' 65th street, New York City. Art Exhibition in Morrill Hall Display Work of Reynard (Continued from Page l.i and sketching in my home state. ' Mr. Reynard water colors are fresh and colorful, suggesting for the most part some scene from rural or bourgeois life. Featured In this collection are many works depicting farmers and laborers at work, and also reproductions of farm animals. Reynard's eichirgs. however, feature mainly musical scenes, further carrying out his love fur music along with his artistic abil ity. In this collection are featured "Brahm s Sonata," Rachmani noff," "Dr. Se-ge Koussevitzky," "The Lege." "The Trio." and "Ar ture Toscanini," which is auto graphed by Mr. Toscanini. Fond of children, Mi P.ynard depicts also in his etchings young sters at play, and on of his etch ings now on display which gained national recognition illustrates his two little girls sled riding. It is entitled "Sled and Snow." Dr. Kurz Pnltliies IJMk of Selection From I n ix li Author "P.iges a Lire et a Dire'" is the tide of a book by Dr. Harry Kurz. i chairman of the department of Romance languages, which will be off the pres soon. An advanced dvcrti.-ing folder My, "this book may be ued in any French class from the second year on for th. enjoyment of bri-f interlude of eight reading and oial practice. It is neither a text nor an anthology, but a collection of ishort selection taken only from gre'-it French euthors and chosen for their special stylistic quality in oral delivery." TYPKWIUTKUS All standard mikti for sail er rnt. Used and rtbuiit machines on caiy terms. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 1J0 f: M. BtlW Lincoln. S'br. BURNETT STYLE SHOPPE says when xnopping for that dress for the Military Ball be sure and nee the lovely dresses at reasonable prices. Where charge accounts are welcome. VELVET and VICTORIAN in the dropped shoulder effect, wide skirts, little waistlines, putted siccv. EVENING SLIPPERS ... for long evenings of comfortable, wincing. Satins . . in black or whites for tinting. Gold, and silver as glittering contrasts. Choose your slippers wilh rr.ro this year . . . dresses are styled to show them to advan tage SG.93 at Magee's. BARBARIC GOLD bracelets, gold chains, rows of gaudy heads echo the jewelled note in your gown. MISS AGNES suggests an in dividual hair style, finished with sparkles, for the Militaiy Rail. Agnes Beaute Slupp.v Hotel Cornhusker. B3122 116971. i nmpiis TUESDAY. Coed Counselor Board 12:00 Noon Y. W. C. A. Vespers 5:00 P. M Barb Steak Fry 5:00 P. M. Kosmet Klub 5:00 P. M. Tassels 7:00 P. M. Tap Dancing Hobby Group. . . 7:00 P. M. Interfraternity Council 7:30 A. M. WEDNESDAY. Musical Convocation Frosh A. W. S Student Council Corn CoLs Classics Club Chemical Engineers 7:30 P. THURSDAY. Student Forum, Dr. Lyman Harris 11: A. Broadcast by Advanced Music Students 4:15 P. German Club 8:00 P. SATURDAY. Nebr. vs. Iowa Uni 2:00 P. Wednesday Niahl. Ernest Smith, business manager of Magees and member of the new ; Lincoln city council will speak j . mKit.OfV r.t riAltl ClOTVlU Pi dl ( iijtriii-E, vi - honorary Bizad fraternity on Wed- j nesday night at S:00 p. m. At a recent meeting of Delta j Sigma Pi. plans were made tor , MARTIN, COY FEUD SMALL COMPARED WITH RAYN0R, JAN (Continued from Page l.i of friends she worked out her plot carefully. Three small Negro girls were drafted for the purpose. Red wigs, just the shade of Riggs' thatch, were purchased and placed on the tots' heads. The plan almost fell through when their mammy suggested that Die university was not a fit place lor respectable Negro children. Exit Comes Late. Anyhow, came the time tor the Eeta dinner, attended by the chap ter and dates. In rushed the som ber girls, well coached, and made straight for Ray. Seeing them com-: ing he made a humed exit, but a little too late 'Daddy! Daddy; Yon can come i home now: mamma isn t mad any ; more ncv. !" they shrieked, tugging hard at his coat tail as he fled. : Needless to say. the house rocked! with riotious laughter and Riggs . was conspicuously absent. The three small dusky maidens , have not been reen since. CLAYTON ANNOUNCES CORNHUSKER PICTURE ' ABSOLUTE DEADLINE (Continued from Page l.i American because they included th' feature. The pictures for the Cornhusker this year have a darker back ground, which brings out the best qualities in the face and even sets off the hair. Beauty Candidates to File. Students who wish the home Is offering a variety cf smart styles frcm your Cornhusker photographs. It is advantageous to order vrhen proofs are accepted X SNAKY, SLINKY satins arc shirred and molded in the s-lim pencil silhouette. FOR SOMEONE WHO HAS LOVELY SHOULDERS, wear a gown strapless at the back, steeped in allure, but fitting closely around all its edges. WE'RE NOT ONLY GOING PLACES, we're goin' to town on the formal fashion edition this Thursday. Smoctzi's shingle is still out. if you can't finH everything you're looking for. Calendar Ellen Smith Ellen Smith Ellen Smith School of Music Sosh 107 Grant Memorial Morrill Hall 9 Temple Ellen Smith Uni Hall Sosh 107B Teachers 21 N Club Rooms 4:00 P. 5:00 5:00 7:00 7:30 P. P. P. P. Temple KOIL Temple Coliseum CAMITS STUDIO TUESDAY. Innocents 12:00 Coed Counselor 12:10 Rag Bus. Staff 12:20 town folks to see their pictures , i should see that they have their : pictures taken for the Cornhusker. j for copies are sent to many school r .. ......... 4 U ui i 11 j uujaiua mil inc aiiii. j All sorority houses and eligible! unorganized nouses should submit i the names of their beauty candi- dates to Bill Clavton by Wednes- day. Nov. 24. After the girls' ; names have been submitted, the girls will be sent over to Miss Good of the girl's physical edu- i catronal department where their body measurements will be taken. The beauty queens must have a : well developed body but the em- ; phasis will be facial beauty. j . NEW GROUPTO GIVE CONVOj , Eight Musical Selections ' Offered This Week. i This week's music convocation ! will feature a new group of ad- j I vanced students. These students are fulfilling their requirements ! by these public appearances, and ; an appreciative audience helps j j mui h in determining the success I of their appearances. j Number s presented will be the : : following: Hrahma, Sonata. On. I. Alb-ira Mtrm 1 iflrwt fniMtt , ; Vrr lirarh. ! Oiiltrrwaa, I MMrrrf la 4 ntajr. I an- lll'-na. ll-4n: unr -M'k. IIrltMitrn. hitilM. 4 mair, 4tn. i ' Va. 1, Alktra '..a hrtaj Jam I Mn-kH-r. 4.rlffi, Ht a l4m-l I rrt I'4lha9, MjwMal. 4Mir? Ira ll-ii: Kirli- ' rMa lltiucall. Hr.a'r'. 4 at'd"'' Marcart-I inn 1'vfcr. M-mtf-UMtlin. Ijtrd 4M, iliraham, I lr,Ti 'Ihiak": William Mill-r. i f ymanikl. Vrtiira 4p. a. ; I: Krmmf. Kltlr; Mraaita. lmli;nttng; i lluaiw Hrmii. it, Kltau4, Na. 1.1: HrnclttiMl I vrr. Classified ADVERTISING 10C PER LINE itiVKnp.TATt.K M.KM'INi: HMM-i I Tr ami fl J: ij ni J.Vi S " K!.. F.-.'.Xi TOWNSEND ri. J- a By Johnny Howell Quarterback and Mary Anna Cockle JOHN HOWELL AS MANY AiNNA SEES IT Came the dawn Monday morn ing and very soon after, it seemed, the football team. Some of us more reckless souls elbowed our way between, among or through a mob of at least a couple of thou sand othern all with the same in tention and evidently about as much determination aswe had Wc wouldn't mind the splintered shins from the encounters, but we were a bit griped because the play ers all made a get-away and were in the depot before anyone else. However, wc did manage to see Bill Callihan, Jack Dodd with F'rannie Knudtzon again, Fred Shirey of course with Barbara Meyer, and this time Johnny How ell grinning at his public, who happened to be Jane Barbour. FORGOT TO MENTION The high school party that drew quite a university crowd last Fri day, Max Lake was there, and Bob MeCanipbell, Don Anderson, Sarah Field, Lois Harpster, Jack Geilatcly and scads and scads of others. Two Sigma Nu's, Gene Richardson and Bus Knight, seem to prefer dating a certain Lincoln high girl, with Gene, I think, a little in the lead. n WOMEN WANTED Two dates for the Military ball Must have proven ability in truck in', shaggin' anil Big Apple. Must be experienced. Blonds preferred, but good looking brunettes not ex cluded. Present references upon application to Leonard Dunker and : Bill Sackett, D. U. house, j i HEARD AND SEEN ! Leonard Cronk and Maxine ; Grant gazing fondly into each i others eyes of an evening at the 'Turnpike, Lloyd Jeffrys admitting I he was a tool for dancing blondes and trumpets, everybody at the ;D. '. house calling tri Delt Helen Rothery, Mrs. Kaymon Culvert, j Acacia's serenading at about the I crack of dawn Friday night, i , . ' . jTHE D. G. IGLOO Howling winds outside made the Delta Gamma house party most I',' 3wV O. MC r Societu appropriate Saturday night. Huge icicles hung from the ceiling and the orchestra was banked with icebergs, definitely one of the fancier house parties of the sea son. Newest combination for the evening was Col. Crittenden him self and Jean Dotv, who have been seen together often since Ted left for New York. AS JOHNNY SEES IT Thanks a million from the foot ball squad to the student body for a grand welcome at the Burlington yesterday morning. It helps a lot in taking the sting; out of our first defeat this season. Fred Shirey must have turned In his crack performance at Pitt Saturday for a Theta among other things. Making up for lost time Shirley barged over to see his trick yesterday noon, As he stood wait ing for her, Lucille Anderson, Theta pledge, stood feasting her eyes on the mngnlficant Shirey. After he had gone she asked who he was. when somebody 'said Fred Shirey to her she gasped, ran out the door and followed him to his car. At this point she finally came out of the trance, did a snappy left face and marched to the drug. Does that Shirey guy attract 'em? V Max Luke, D. U., seems to have found a true love in Betty Meyer, K. K. G. The two sit on the steps of the bakeiy every day before her 2 o'clock Poly Sci class. Yes terday Max just couldn't stand to wait until 2.."0 to sec Betty so, as Prof. Fellman was expounding the evils of something or other, he raps on the door. When Mr. Fellman answered, Max asked if he (fell man) would please deliver a note to Miss Meyer. The professor took the note, delivered it, and again began his spiel while Betty buried her nose in the billet-doux. DRiVEL Pi Rho Sigma of Omaha drew a good Lincoln crowd at their paity Saturday. They tell me it was rowoy-dow with the gang coming to first at the Inter mission for a breath of air. Alpha Phi will have to start looking for a 4 M y. 5W By J BRYAN atijaurncivtstand LIBRARY EXHIBITS VOLUMES OE HAKE 'SHAKESPEARIAN A' "Shakespeariana" Is the title of the library hall exhibit this week sponsored by the reference depart ment of the university library. Specimens for the exhibit are taken from the library's collection of valuable old books. Among the rarest volumes are "Poems on Several Occasions by Shakespeare," written in 1760 and containing "Venus and Adnois," and "Tarquin and Lucrece." An other is "The Tragedy of Hamlet, iTtnce of Denmark, " printed one hundred years after the first quarto for Richard Wellington at Dolphin and Crown in raid's Churchyard and E. Rumball in Covent-Garden. The inscription reads, "as it is now acted by her Majesties servants." Old Version of Hamlet. An antiquated book is that of "The Tragicall Hiftorie of Ham let" printed in 160,'t. "Hamlet" is said to have been first performed in 1594 but the first quarto do scribed as "surreptitious" was printed in 1603 and differs from the second quarto and first folio. "To be, or not to be" noticeably varies in tho first anil second quartos, but the second printed in 1604 is held to be correct. Henry E. Huntington's famous library in California possesses a second quarto. Editions of "Romeo and Juliet" prove popular with a facsimile of new mantle if the cups keep roll ing in. Bob "VanTine" Van Nor man has been dubbed "second story man" after an hour dance with Alpha Chi O. Barbara Meyer, D. G., who also thinks Fred is a perfect 32, is in the dog house because she took all the History 9 papers from the files to aid Fred in his scholarly en deavors. This should be an in teresting rare. AND THE DELTA GAMMA'S They did their best to make University Terrace one of the cold est spots in town last night. The house was hung with icicles and a huge iceberg almost hid the or chestra. We shiver to think of it, but we did have fun. CAN'T HELP MENTIONING Teoplc seen at the Panhcllenic tea, Mary Fisl.ir, Chi Omega sim ply a vision in velvet gown of deep purple. Margaret McKay look ing almost as lovely as she did at the Kosmet Klub presentation, this time in dusty pink. Eleanor Kelly, akesGood yNj M ISD-PDUHD FDDTBALL IHYQDB CQL11G1? At Princeton. Yale. Rutgers. Pcnn. Lafayette. Cornell and other ZZl new kind of footbaU is comin6 to the fore. If. fast spec Tacular. You can't play on these bantam teams i you wejgh nwe han 150 pounds. Speed and brains count more than weight. With no b,e .taums. no big training tables, no big injuries, the p.gsk.n pccwL have made their sport most exciting to watch mo,, popular W Let Arnold Nicholson tell you the story of midget ootbaU. W Uhy it's sweeping the colleges, in Little Men-Here'. Hem. by ARNOLD NICHOLSON YOU CAN'T BEAT THE GOVERNMENT. Stanley HiRh foits yn Ihr wld'i bitsrsl .lit In ily r.imimgii, winch tlifotich nrw'paprrv poyirrj, radio and movie srll the New Deal lo America. "SOCKING A CROOK," said young Larry Wayne, "in definitely out moded." So he went after the cop hating Carrnichaels hit own way. Lelie T. White telli how. in The Last Wayne. AN AMERICAN DOCTOR IN CHINA. Victor Hciser. M. D., relates the deeply human story of China's battle against diwase. TROUBLE, TROUBLE. Charity Hacke't had just ten hours left to fmiih Highway Project 721. Then, mysteriously, the 40-ton digger started to slip. A short story by Karl Detzer. NEWFOUNDLAND SPENDS ITS WAV INTO BANKRUPTCY. Bertram B. Fowler tells how it happened, and what they tried ncrt, in Govern, menr by Receiverihip. "DOCTORS HUMAN?" To Sally, they were soulless bums, until on. overlooked a mea.le, in Hannah Leei' Hooitali Are for Sick People. ... Read Tith Marchet On. by Mary Roberts Rinehart, and Jutt Call Me Mari,e, by Kenneth Payson Kempton. "An Excellent conceited Tragedie of Romeo and Juliet" printed in 159 f. The original is the earliest known edition of the play. David Garrick's adaptation of "Romeo anil Juliet" is shown in the orig inal form, Interleaved and well an notated in pen and ink. "King Lear In Brief." A facsimile of the first edition of "Venus and Adnois," printed in l.r93 is exhibited. Henry K. Hunt ington paid $75,000 for an original first. The Globe Theatre pluyers of tho Century of Progress Exposition edited "King Lear in Brief," which, is also displayed. "King Lear" with Nahum Tate's alterations and revisions by J. P. Kemble ia shown. Kemble played the part of Lear in 1808. One of the notations reads: "Oswald sidle round from L. to N. to avoid Kent who still pursues him." C. F. Tucker Brooke of Yala edited "The Shakepearc Apocry pha" which is a collection jf works which are credited to Shakespeare hut the origin of which are really up known. Ten volumes of Shakespeare's works were printed by Thomas Bowdler, who expurgated "Those words and expressions which can not with propriety be read In a family." Fioni this works came the verb "to bowdlerize" which was first used about 1836. Phi Mil's president, donned pale blue and Irene Sellers, of the Al pha Xi Delt house, rose copper satin for the occasion. In one group were Jane Walcott, Jane Barbour and Betty Cherny, the inevitable three having tea to gether, Jane Walcott quite the cen ter of attention with the best look ing new black caracul coat. o Don't know whether yov've ever been to a Lincoln high party, but the one given al the Cornhusker Friday night drew quite a crowd of our own college set. Gene Rich ardson, Sigma Nu pledge, was there and D. U. Max Lake, Bob McCampbell and Don Anderson of the Delt house with Sarah Field, Tri Delt, and Lois Harpster, A. O. PI proved they were not too blase to mingle with the youngsters. Hull used the Toronto exercises us a forum from which he again lashed wt at dictators and assert ed that the will of mankind to peace will in the end prevail over the ruthless aggressiveness of the ! rulers bho believe in rule by force, E-1123 A A oiuxa or '0ittwm& 225 So- st-