The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 10, 1938, Image 1

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Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
VOL. XXXVH, NO. 101.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, MARCH 10. V)M
PRICE FIVE CENTS
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FOK YOUK
BENEFIT
We realize the fact that It may
take some time and effort on
your part to rend the stories con
tained elsewhere In this paper. We
also realize that once In a while
you may be slightly puzzled by
the Jargon employed, especially as
regards sports stories. Therefore,
for your benefit, there has been
complied a glossary of terms In
common usage among the rag re
porters and headline writers. To
simplify matters, the question and
answer method will be used.
Q. How is a party usually de
scribed? A. A party Is thrown, tosied,
given, held or postponed.
Q. Whnt do candidates for va
rlous positions do?
A. Candidates aspire, run, get
presented, get elected, try-out, and
compete.
Q. What kind of material Is
available for tackle nnd guard po
sitions on tho football team our
ing spring practice?
A. Husky, rugged, fast, poten
tial greats but inexperienced.
Q. What words describe a beau'
ty queen, or any other holder of a
female honorary post?
A. Pretty, attractive, prominent
In activities.
Q. How is the fact that a stu
dent gets a Job phrased ?
A. He accepts a position.
Q. How is a convocation speaker
described 7
A. As an eminent authority In
his field.
Q. What Is a person who has
been out of college five years and
has a Job?
A. He Is a prominent graduate
Q. How does a person inter
viewed by a reporter talk?
A. He states emphatically, de
Clares, tells, relates, points out.
Q..What is the headline for a
sports story wherein Nebraska
triumphs athletically by a single
point?
A. Huskers Crush Foe Under
foot.
Q. Whnt is the headline or lead
paragraph for a sports story
wherein Nebraska loses by a sin'
gle point?
A. Huskers Meet with Hard
Luck.
Q. What do students hang onto
arniuid here.
A. Pins and the words of
speakers.
Q. Whnt. kind of an orchestra
Is secured for a dance in the coll
seum?
A. The best available, the topi
in rhythm, the biggest name band
In Nebraska i dance history.
COUNSESslOlSTALL
NEW OFFICERS, CABINET
Jean Marvin Presides Over
Ceremonies in Ellen
Smith Today.
Installation services for newly
elected officers and cabinet menv
hers of Coed Counselors will be
held this afternoon in Ellen Smith
hall. Beginning at 5 o'clock, the
services will be conducted by Jean
Marvin, retiring president.
Those who will take their places
as officers and members of the
board Include: President, Virginia
Meet wood; vice president, Mar
Sherbnrn; secretary treasurer.
Ruth Clark; senior members, Phyl
lis Chamberlain, Bonnie Burn
Virginia Nolte, Elizabeth Smith
and Marjorle Churchill; Junior
members, Maxme Lake, Fern
Steuteville and Faith Medlar
sophomore member, Mary Bullock.
Bililo Group DiscushCB
Minor Proplirls Today
"Messages of the Minor Pro
phets" will be the topic taken up
by the Bible Discussion Group
at their regular weekly meeting
today at noon in Former Mu
seum. The group will be led by
C. D. Hayes, general secretary of
the University Y. M. C. A. Pre-
be served.
'Super Navy'-For What?
Asks Prof. Norman Hill
Professor Describes Need
For "Definite Foreign
Relations Policy.
By Ellsworth Steele.
While congress debates a 'bill
jrovlding for what has often been
Urmed the "super navy," there
still remains uncertainty as to
what is the American foreign
policy. Norman L. Hill, professor
or international relations, ex
plained that the formulation of a
naval program depends on the esti
mates of naval experts of the
equipment necessary to carry out
the foreign policy that has been
decided upon.
"In the United States, we have
always been negligent in the de
termination of the basic foreign
policies to be protected, but sur
feited with the extravagant de
mands of the naval "expert" for
more ships.
"The proposal now before con
gress raises many questions to
which answers are not readily
available. I hope that congress will
not act too hastily. If we can avoid
an aggressive fpreign policy, I am.
Inclined to think that our naval
needs are already amply met."
The proposal before, congress
Players Go on Air
In Third Campus
KFOR Broadcast
Theater Group Dramatizes
Queen Elizabeth's Life
On Radio Tuesday.
Stepping backward Into the
seventeenth century, the Uni
versity players will Interview
tjuecn Elizabeth this coming Tues
day night over tho third weekly
Kampus Kslendnr radio program,
sponsored by the publicity com
mittee of tho Student Council,
Tho program will be In the form
of a playlet, written especially for
the occasion.
Since the Kampus KAlendar will
go on the air over KFOK at 7:15
Tuesday evening, at approximately
the same time that the second
night's performance of tho Max
well Anderson play "Elizabeth the
queen is being presented on the
Temple theater stage, the Uni
versity Players In the cast of the
drama will not appear In the radio
broadcast. Names of those par
ticipating In the radio program
will be announced Sunday,
Visits Music School.
First of the Kampus Kalendar
series, an interview with the seven
candidates for Junior-Senior Prom
queen, was followed Tuesday night
by a program devoted to the
(Continued on Page 4.)
Exhibit Depicts Unusually
Modern Art of 18 Century
'Voluptuous School' . Now
On Display in Romance
Language Library.
Showing a sizeable amount of
manly and maidenly pulchritude
playing hide and seek, the "uol-
uptuous school" of 18th centry
French painters is on display In
the romance languages library in
U. hall until Thursday, when the
pictures will be returned 'to Mor
rill hall.
"Born a hundred years too
soon," Fragonn.nl, most advanced
of the four painters represented,
lived in the latter half of the 18th
centry. A favorite of Madame
Pompadour, who commissioned
him to paint her boudoir, he was
very popular with the high society
of his day, because much of his
work was "immoral."
"Light becomes the hero" of his
paintings. Fragonard, with Wat
teau, was far ahead of the photo
graphic realists of his day, fore
shadowing the Impressionists of
the lflth century. A pervading
light is the keynote of his pictures,
rather than sharp outlines. One
pervading color gives the picture
a unity, though the colors are not
so attractive. For Instance, his
"Schoolmistress," shown in the ex
hibit, an appealing picture whose
center of interest is an under
dressed, blonde youngster, is in
somber colors, the most impressWe
part of the picture being the play
of light and shadow.
Fragonard was a pupil of Bou
cher, another "voluptuary" whose
work is displayed, and who was
a better colorist. Tho he was
more of a photographic realist,
some of his paintings have a
unity of golden tone.
From the pictures shown, Wat-
Omaha 'N' Club Honors
Presnrll on March 2 I
The Omaha "N" club announced
that its dinner honoring the Ne
braska basetball team and Glenn
Presnell, new varsity backfield
coach, has been postponed from
March 15 to March 23.
new calls for approximately $1
000,000,000 to add 73 new fighting
vessels to our navy. This bill Hill
considers no exception to the usual
method of building a program on
an indefinite foreign policy.
"The Vinson amendment to the
bill before Congress pretends to
correlate our foreign and naval
policies, but it was so vague and
general as to be quite meaningless,
It asserts that our navy should be
sufficient to protect the United
States and possessions. Does this
include the Philippines, whose in
dependence we have promised in
180 1
But What It Aggression?
The amendment promises that
our navy shall not be used for
aggression, Hill continued. But
what Is "aggression?" The term
has been so difficult to define that
as yet international law has not
found any generally accepted defl
nltlon.
"The Vinson amendment further
asserts that our navy shall be
great enougn to support our na
tional policies. What are our na
tional policies? What is our far
eastern policy today? Is It to com
pete with Japan for far eastern
advantages or to recognize that the
(Continued on Page 8.),
E
19
Society to Grant Awards
Of $50 to Sophomore,
Junior Women.
Sophomore or Junior women
who desire to apply for one of the
scholarships of $50 offered annual
ly by the Lincoln branch of Amer
ican Association of University
Women have until March 19 to file
thetr applications at the office of
the Dean of Women in Ellen Smith
hall.
Annually the Lincoln A. A. U.
W. awards a few of these scholar
ships to sophomore or Junior stu
dents registered for at least 12
hours of work who are wholly or
part self-supporting. In addition to
these requisites, women must have
a scholastic average of 88 percent
(Continued on Page 4.)
teu seems to have specialized in
protraying idyllic pastoral Lovers'
Lanes. He is described as "painting
with gold and noney," and, a great
draftsman, was profoundly a real
ist beneath the superstructure of
style and mannerism.
Chardin, who practiced a warm
and glowing manner of painting,
is me fourth artist represented.
I
Five Woolley Recognitions
Go to Unmarried U. S.
Citizens.
Five scholarships worth $G00 and
a room in the United States House
at tho Cite university in Paris are
offered for the coming year thru
ine sponsorship of the Institute of
International Education.
Woolley scholarships, founded bv
President Emeritus ' Woolley of
Mount Holyoke, will be announced
in June and will take effect in
October. Two of the awards are
In music, two in art (painting or
sculpture) and one in psychiatry.
Candidates must be unmarried
American citizens, men or women,
with a good knowledge of French.
Candidates for the psychiatry
award must have obtained an M.
D. or be in the last year of study
for that degree. Age limit for the
art and music scholarships is 19
to 32.
Application blanks, which must
be filed before May 1, may be ob'
tained from the Institute of Inter
national Education, 2 West 45th
St., New York City. Added informa
tion will be found in the office
of the romance language depart
mcnt.
NAZI RULES
OFFERS SCHOLARSHIPS
Dictatorship Tells German
Student to Avenge in Blood
At Jehovah's own command, so
the ancient scripture story goes,
Moses, prophet of the Israelites,
climbed to the top of Mt. Sinai
and there received two tablets of
stone. Inscribed on them by the
hand of the Almighty were ten
commandments, which were to be
come the fundamental moral law
for one quarter of the peoples of
the earth.
Three thousand years later, out
of the conflict of philosophies
which characterizes modern Ger
many; comes a nazified "ten com
mandments for German students."
It is a new code of conduct, molded
for use by a dictator ruled people.
Sent for publication in the Daily
Nebraskan by Geist Dcr Zeit,
German monthly magazine, and at
the request of Erich Albrecht of
Nebraska's department of Ger
manic languages, are the following
"rehn cesetzo des deutchen stu
denten." , Nazi Ten Commandments.
1. German student! It is not
necessary that you live, but it is
necessary that you fulfill your
duty toward your people. What
ever you are, be a German!
2. The supreme law and the
highest dignity of a German man
is honor. Offended honor can be
avenged only thru blood. Your
honor is the loyalty you owe to
jour people and to yourself,
AK-SAR-BEN SHOW
I
Ag Honorary Holds Eighth
Livestock Exhibition
In Horse Barn.
The eighth annual Junior Ak-Sar-Ben
show will be staged Sat
urday by the Block and Bridle
club In the college horse barn
which hns been re-named "Equine
auditorium" and arranged to ac
comodate the record crowd which
such promising attractions as a
milking contest and mock live
stock auction are expected to at
tract. Agricultural college ami short
course students will compete for
prizes in showmanship contests
which will parade highly fitted,
well-groomed animals in five dif
ferent classes, horses, beef cattle,
dairy cattle, hogs, and sheep. . ,
Clock Opens Ceremonies.
When an alarm clock rings at
7 p. m., Master of Ceremonies
Earl Hedlund will open the activi
ties and a Junior trumpeter will
formally call the classes.
Time and quantity of milk
drawn will be the basis for the
Judges' decision in the cow milking
(Continued on Page 3.)
STAGED A
URDAY
BY BLOCK
BRIDLE
Railroad Employee, Joe
IJollege Use Same 'Line
'Hard Up,' 'Crummy' Found
In Both Vocabularies.
But Two Meanings.
The most collegiate university
sophomore and the most illiterate
railroad lineman share some of the
same slang words, according to
D. V. Snapp of Lincoln in an ar
ticle in the February issue of
American Speech, a magazine of
which Dr. Louise Tdund is an edi
tor.
The student and the lineman have
a common stock of slang, the for
mer Burlington official declare1,
but a world of difference lies be
tween the meanings which the two
draw from it.
"Crummy" to the campusite is
an accurate description of an un
attractive date, but when Hie rail
road worker says "crummy," he
means the bunk car. A "block" to
the lineman is not something to be
traversed to get to class, but "a
guv to pull wires."
"Hard-up" is not a statement of
insolvent financial condition but
the technical position of a pole.
"In the work of these gangs
who build and maintain railroad
communication lines," Snapp
writes, "A lingo has developed
which obviously has bpen employ
ed to save time and effort."
No Economy of Words.
Allho most of the expressions
are terse and pointed, a few of the
terms, especially those which re
fer to equipment, are not the re
sult of striving for economy of
Y.M. Cahinrt Members
To Moot This Evening
Tor Supper, HiiMiiexs
Members of the University Y. M.
C. A. cabinet will meet tonight at
6 p. m. in the Temple for a suppr
and cabinet meeting. All commit
tee chairmen will report on the
activities of their groups since the
last cabinet conference.
Other business will include dis
cussion of plans for attendance at
the State Student Christian as
sociation training conference
which will be held at Peru from
March 18 to 20. Jerry Williams,
Y. M. C. A. president, urges all
cabinet members to be present.
3. To be German means to have
character. You too are meant to
fight for the freedom of the Ger
man spirit. Seek the truth that Is
embedded In your own nation.
4. Lawlessness and freedom from
binding orders are not freedom.
There is more freedom in serving
than there is in the commanding
done by you. The future of Ger
many depends on your faith, your
enthusiasm and your will to fight.
5. If you lack imagination, you
will be unable to accomplish any
thing. You cannot incite unless it
burns within you. Have the cour
age to admire and to be revered.
6. National socialists are born.
They are also the. product of edu
cation, most of all the product of
self-education.
7. If there is anything mightier
than fate.i it is your courage with
which you bear it. Whatever fails
to destroy you makes you
stronger. Praised.be the experi
ences that make you hard.
8. Learn to live within an
orderly unit. Order and discipline
are the indispensable foundation
of every community and the be
ginning of all education.
9. As a leader be hard to your
self in carrying out your duties,
determined in carrying out what
is necessary, and be helpful and
good. Never be small In judging
human weaknesses but great in
recognizing the wants of others,
and be modest in regard to your
15 BEST DRESSED
L
A.W.S. Board Selects Most
Style-Wise Coed to Be
Revealed March 24.
A. W. S. hoard members voted
last night for the Best Dressed
Girl of 1038, after a final review
of tho fashion-smart coeds, who
gathered at Ellen Smith Hall at
5 o'clock, for tho ordeal.
The name of the girl elected
will not be revealed until she Is
presented lit the cllmnx of the
Coed Follies stylo show In a
"strikingly unusual modern set
ting," Irene Sellers snld.
Lists Candidates.
The candidates will appear In
tho show. They are Thenra Nye,
Alpha Chi Omega; Margaret
Smith, Alpha Phi; Inez llenney,
Alpha Omlcron Ti; Arlcne Or-
cutt, Alpha Xi Delta; Frances
Knudtzon, Delta Delta Delta; Na
talie Rehlnender, Delta Gamma;
Henrietta Wilson, Gamma Phi
Beta; Virginia A. Smith, Kappa
Alpha Theta; Alice Nemec, Kappa
Delta; Dorothy Campbell, Kappa
Kappa Gamma; June Capps, Phi
Mu; Muriel Krasne, Slgira Delta
(Continued on Page 3.)
words, but of humorous attempts
on the part of the burly trainmen.
"Give her Nebraska" means in
railroad lingo to fill in dirt around
a pole. Originated by a Nebraska
worker, the phrase has spread nil
thru the middlewcst on the C. 13.
& Q. 'system.
Verging on baby talk Is the ex
pression "Mooley cow," which in
lineman jargon indicates that the
speaker is unable to hook his
safety belt. This belt, incidentally.
is a "scared strap" to those in the
know.
Activity of a woodpecker or a
yellow hammer pecking at a pole
is pointed out from one workman
to another by the shout of "Line
man not on the roll!" which means
literally that a "lineman" not
listed on the roll books is on the
pole.
The foreman of a gang lias been
called the "main squeeze," with
headquarters at the "official end,'
and any workman in the gang may
be termed a "bully or a "come
along."
Other expressions arc as fol
lows :
' "Snivvey," wire to fasten pulley
blocks.
"Animal car," wash car.
"Cross arms," toothpicks.
"Digging tools," knives and
forks.
"Lineman's church," a church
with a cross on the. steeple.
"Pull," the deviation from a
tangent of a comer pole.
"Railroad," a train is coming;
clear the track.
Henry Hrahinski Gives
Junior Violin lleeitul
On Sunday al Temple
Henry Brahinsky will present his
junior violin recital at the Temple
theater. Mr. Baker, who is a stu
dent with Emanuel Wishnow, will
be accompanied by Margaret
Baker at the piano.
The afternoon's program selected
by Brahinsky is as follows:
Rarh. Charonne (for violin ulnncV
Tarhalknwsky, Con'Tiin. D major; al-
tcrn mndfrntn, Andante (Oanznnetia), Al-
Ircrn Vtvapimn.
Pvorak-Krclsler, Slavonic Dance, E
minor.
Wlfnawskl, PolnnalM Brilliant. Op. 4.
own wants.
10. Be a comrade! Be chivalrous
and modest. Be an example Mn
your personal life! The way you
deal with others reveals the degree
of your moral maturity. Let there
be uniformity in your thinking and
acting. Follow the example of "dcr
Fuehrer!"
The new commandments bear lit
tle connection with those put forth
in the Bible other than in name.
They appear obviously to have
been designed to instill the Nazi
creed in young Germans. That "dcr
Fuehrer" is constantly looking
toward possible armed conflict in
his plans to regain for Germany
her lost colonies and control over
central Europe Is probably one of
the reasons back of the wording of
the first nnd second command
ments.
Back of commandment seven
may be seen the German program
of setting up habits of selft-depri-vation
for her people. Some au;
thorlties hold that such a program
Is Intended to prepare nazis for
war times when national self suffi
ciency would be desirable and
necessary.
Preparation for the regulated
life of armed forces and of civil
ians in time of war may be seen
in the eighth commandment. In all
of them may be found the German
idea of complete subjugation of
the individual to the welfare of ten
;tate,
CANDIDATES
UNDERGO JUDGING
Student Union
Program Brings
Billiard Artist
PLAYS FOR AG BOARD
Goddess of Agriculture's
Presentation Comes
At Spring Dance.
Slernlc Sternburg and his 11
piece band have been signed to
play for the Ag executive board
spring party, Friday, March 25.
According to Ray Cruise, co-man
ager In charge of planning the
affair, the board "is getting nn
unusually good orchestra in order
that the Ag executive board may
provide a party which will show
its appreciation to the students
for their work on Ag campus this
year.
The Spring party is an annual
affair featuring the presentation
of the Gorldes of Agriculture, who
reigns during the festivities of
farmers Fair. The Goddess is
selected from the senior class by
(Continued on Page 3.)
Former N. U. Professor
Leaves Oklahoma Post
Sooner Daily Cites Low
Wage as Cause of Dr.
Sears' Resignation.
Formerly associate professor of
botany at Nebraska, Dr. Paul B.
Rears has resigned as head of the
Oklahoma university's botany de
partment to take up a position in
Oberlin college. Hts move Is at
tributed by the Oklahoma Daily
to the inadequate salaries paid by
that institution.
Born in Ohio in 1891, Scars
ca no to Nebraska as assistant
professor of botany in 1919. Since
1915 he had been an instructor in
Ohio State university. In 1927
Scars accepted the position as pro
fessor and head of the Oklahoma
department of botany.
While Sooner newspapers quote
Oklahoma university authorities
expressing their regrets at losing
Sears, Nebraska's Dr. R. J. Pool,
chairman of the botany depart
ment, declares "The University of
Nebraska should have kept him.
He has made a real name for him
self at Oklahoma."
"Sears has been doing a good
deal of work in plant ecology, par-
ticularly concerning past climatic
conditions as revealed in pollen
THEATER LEAGUE OFFERS
PRIZES FORSHORT PLAYS
Judges to Base Decisions
On Humor, Satire,
Comedy.
Announcement has been made
by the New Theater League of a
contest for one act plays and
short skits based on progressive
social themes. Decisions will be
made on a basis of humor, satire,
and comedy.
Prizes for the plays have been
announced as $100 for the best
one-act play of 40 minutes, $50
for the second best. A prize of
two weeks at Camp Unity has
been offered for the best ten min
ute skit, end one week at the camp
for the second best. All scripts
and requests for information
should be addressed to 132 West
43rd st New York City.
Symphony Goers Hear 'Voice
In a Century' Friday Night
Marian Anderson, Favorite
Carnegie Hall Contralto,
Sings at St. Paul's.
Friday Marian Anderson will
step out on the stage at St. Paul
Methodist church as "one of the
world's greatest living singers."
Years ago this colored girl's par
ents saved enough money from
their coal and ice business to buy
a piano so that their daughter
rfflght have some music.
At the age of six, Marian was
singing in the Union Baptist
church and her mother did white
folks' housework. When her father
died, Marian's mother went into a
department store as a cleaning
woman nnd soon Marian joined the
adult choir in the church nt the
age of 13. Three years later she
took over the financial support of
the family, singing in community
affairs to earn the money. ,
Debut In Atlanta.
Her formal debut came in a Ne
gro school in Atlanta, Ga., church,
friends aiding her to finance her
study of music. Their reward came
in 1925 when, out of 300 appli
cants, Marian Anderso;. was chos
en to solo with the New York Phil
Charles Peterson Displays
Trick Shots at C. of C.
Today at 1 :30.
Nebraska's Student Union Ac
tivity program will open today
with an exhibition by Charles
Peterson, world's champion trick
idiot billiard artist in the billiard
rooms of the Lincoln Chamber of
Commerce, nth and P st., nt 1:30
p. m.
Peterson will present a free ex.
hlbition of his talents. According
to Hay Ramsey, alumni secretary,
and member of the Student Union
board, Mr. rctcrson, a professional
billiard player, feels the game has
degenerated, find Is devoting his
life to elevation of the game, con
cernlng himself malnlv with th
establishment of billiards in uni
versities and colleges all over the
country.
Peterson makes a tour every
year, staging most of his exhibits
in Student Union buildings of va
rious universities. All of his ex
hibitions are free, and he has
worked up a fripndly feeling
wherever he has appeared.
While Mr. Ramsay was at Pur
due university on a recent trip,
ho met Peterson, and, learning
that he was making a tour, in
duced him to stop off in Lincoln
and exhibit his wares.
grains which he finds in bogs,'
Pool states. "In the last few years
he has become interested in the
dust bowl, in the biological and
social problems arising from it."
Sociologist Urges Individual
Training Versus Laying
Down of Precepts.
An unprincipled education which
teaches an individual to be pre
pared emotionally and intellectual
ly for the world would be justifi
able in our society today, accord
ing to Dr. J, M. Reinhardt, sociol.
ogist, who spoke before the Y, W,
C. A. vespers yesterday afternoon
in F.llen Smith hall.
"Children will evolve their own
principles." said Dr. Reinhardt, "if
we arc honest in answering their
questions. We should teach that
which is valuable to the individual
I nn nnt mat wmcn is cased on
principle.
r.uui.ttU"r. is Hiways carrying
people somewhere, even ir, a static
society where education is sup
posed to keep us in the bounds of
tradition, in the speaker's opinion.
Sudden spurts always take move
ment, however.
"In the modem world disastrous
results occur when the individual
is thrust between the two forces
of one system of education chieh,
pulls back, and the other whie.
pushes forward," asserted Dr.
Reinhardt.
Mary F.llen Osborn led devo
tions. The vesper choir sang the
processional and recessional. Di
rector of the choir is Maxine Fed-
erle and accompanist, Tex Rozclle
Rounds.
THE WEATHER
Better put on some warm cloth
ing beneath your raincoat today,
because the weather man predicts
that it will be partly cloudy and
much colder after yesterday's
half Inch rain.
harmonic at a Stadium concert.
Then followed engagements as a
mattei of course, but most of them
at Negro schools and churches.
In 1930 Marian decided to risk
the attempt and sailed to Ger
many for several months of inten
sive 6tudy. At length she hired a
hall for $500. the . last time she
ever had to pay, and gave a con
cert. It was after this concert that
critics proclaimed her a full fledg
ed artist and heaped lavish praise
upon her voice.
"Voice In a Century.
Her tour of the continent was
immensely successful. One critic
writes: "The storm of praise swept
Europe. Conductor Arturo Tos
canlni gave her his sensitive ear,
told her, 'A voice like yours conies
once in a century'.;" After the
Salzbury Festival in 1935, critic
Herbert F. Peyser of the New
York Times hailed her as "one of
the greatest living singers."
In America her Carnegie hall
concerts sell out weeks in advance
and the audiences call her back
repeatedly for encores. In 1937
the Scholastic magazine chose her
In its group of 12 headline women
of the United States. Time de
clares that hers is "one of the
(Continued on PagJ i.)
i