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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1938)
PAGE FOUR TOE DAILY NEBRASKAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY m : '' VV. 1 k V SM ' ' . I ' ' 'it ' '1 ;s v- I.:;! , - - SPRING FLOWERS MOTIF OF YAV.C.A. II! Coeds Entertain Mothers at May 8 Breakfast in n, Mew Union. Spring flowers will be the theme tft a breakfast in the ballroom of the Student Union building, when members of the Y. W. C. A. enter tain their mothers Sunday morn ing, May 8, at 8:15. iSThe program and decorations will carry out the tJleme of spring flowers. A toast, "Flowers of Spring" will be given by Muriel .White, Y. W. C. A. president and ''.'Flowers of Summer" will be given by her mother, Mrs. H. A. White. Mary Fellows will sing "The Spirit Flower" by Campbell Tipton. Max ,ne Maddy is her accompanist. Jean 'Simmons and Charlotte Quick will play flute duet. A string quartet also will play. Report Activities. A report of activities and proj ects planned and carried out by !the Y. W. C. A. during last year will b given by Winifred Nelson, Jtoastmistress and president of the Jorganizatlon last year. Group sing ing is also planned for the guests. Members of the Y. W. C. A. cab inet are arranging the breakfast. jPauline Boyd and Ann Hustead are tin charge of the program and Mar garet Krause is in charge of the menu, which will be prepared un Jder the direction of Cateress Quis enberry in the new kitchens of the !fitudent Union building. . "Elaborate arrangements have LLiinuounuMi To the music of BECK - JUNGBLUTH - GIBSON Friday, May 5 A. W. S. Ma fince Dance Friday, May 13 Student Evening Party CONGRATULATIONS U.N. BARBERSHOP J. G. TEIGELER 211 North 12th St. i I STUDiNT UNI ii A 1525 "O" Slrcct Students Obtain Places With Choral Groups Students Interested in the fol lowing choral groups next fall may secure application blanks at the school of music. University Singers Varsity Glee Club Freshman Glee Club Vacancies will be filled before the close Of this semester. been made with Mr. Van Sant for the affair, one of the bright occa sions on the first calendar of the Student Union Building," said Mar garet Krause, a member of the committee in charge. Members of the freshman cah inet are selling tickets for the breakfast for S5 cents. Tickets also may be obtained from Miss Green at the Y. W. C. A. office. All res ervatlons must be made by May 2. Social Hostess Eager to Serve Union's Guests Dark haired and brown eyed Marlon Steel, social director of the Student Union, is enthusiastic over her new Job on the campus. Students will find her eagerly alert to co-operate with them for any ocial function held in the .'union. She expressed herself as being particularly impressed with the friendliness of the students she has met. "I'm anxious for the union to open so that I can con tact more of the students and make their friendships." Her frank smile testified to her sincerity. Altho Miss Steel is proud to have been the first hostess chosen for the Burlington Zephyr, she likes the campus and is sure that she ia going to enjoy her work here. "Ill be glad to place my services at the disposal of any one Who wishes help for parties or who wishes to book events." V in the Beautiful New Union Ballroom They Come From r I I L injur: ' S is v Pi incipal feature of the second stand is at the east end, E 42 High School, University, Adult Students Take Part in Program. Miss Alma Wagner presented forty-two students in her annual spring recital Tuesday night in the Temple Theater. High school students, university Btudents and adults took part in the recital. There was group sing ing in the form of quartet and duos. One large group of twenty two girls sang two numbers, which were received very well by the audience. The program was as follows: Brahma, Serenade. Rachmaninoff. Flooilp of SprlnK. hlta Rlst Roup Punder Mildred Clart Fred rich Sylvia Wolfe Maxlne Pope Wanda Sston Holly Bhnrtleff Sue Plckerlnc Maxlne Lavcrty Oeraldlne Krnut Janet Reenter .Vannelte Ol.t Mnrnaret Hnrvev Hnzi'l Mne Ole Ruth Prokaw Allre RHlnum Constance Chrii- tnnoiu, Mar;nrpt Raker Ix'tF Knveart Claralyre Oavla Martha Mc(;ee Ardltl, Be Sarnn Rofe, Maxlne Pope. Roeern.' Now That the Time for Mak ing SonKn Haa Come, Jamea Ijiwuon. Gounod, Lovelv Flowers, Will Ye, from "Faust," Hazel Mae Ocle. Gounod, Je veaux vivre, from Romeo and Juliet, Rvlvla Wolfe. Hlldarh. Passace BlrtU Farewell, Cllf forrt and Clinton Sturdevant, HaReman, Do Not flo, Mv Love. Ruth That Money an Choice Corn Fed an important part of served in the New ON BUILDING Union Ballroom L i'r -. - .-! : - i ' i floor is the ballroom shown above, Seven Conditioning Units Insure fresh Air in Union Steam Jet Machine Cools Water in Circulation, Holds Humidity. Fresh air and proper tempera ture will be one of the main fea tures of the new Student Union building. With seven separate air-conditioning units scattered throughout the building, the air will present the most favorable conditions possible with modern equipment. By careful division and distribu tion of the systems, food odors will be eliminated from all corridors and lounging spaces. Independent units make this practicable. Steam Jet Cools Water. The water which circulates Brokaw. Mn7.art. AlleluJIa. Maxlne Laverty. Handel-Somervell, Silent Worship, from "Ptolemy," Richardson PouKall. Massenet, Gavotte, from "Manon," Rita Rlst Htldach. The Minstrel. Margaret Harvey, Henry Ftrahlnsky. vlohnlnt. n'Hardelot, I Hid Mv Love, Geonte Joy. Strickland, Pone to Pan, Ruth Fertuson, Barhara HodKman, T'oroihy Huffmim, Marlon Patton. Constance Raker, flutist. Wilson. A Bprlng Morning, Wanda Sea ton. Ronald. O I-ovny Nlcht. from "A Cycle of Life," Reulah Chlnnock Rohyn, A Heart Thafe Free, Janet Res- Meats will form the menus to be B-6591 iuy Spells Dancing I I ' Si" 1 v " ! Oillh. 1 I $jiY-i . i , - " 5S- t - f ' f ' t - J- . k - - - decorated in green draperies, and through the units will be cooled by a steam jet machine which uses waste steam from the steam tur bines of the power house on the campus. During the summer months the rooms will be supplied with sufficient fresh air and re circulated air to create an atmo sphere in the proper comfort zone. In the winter months this 'fresh air and recirculated air will be heated to the proper temperature and humidified in order to insure the most favorable conditions. In this manner a constant tempera ture and humidity will be main tained winter and summer. A smoke exhaust will free all public rooms of tobacco smoke This exhaust system skims the air off the ceilings in such a manner as to not interrupt or unbalance the air-conditioning system. Cords Hold Final Ivy Chain Praclicp Today All members of the Ivy and Daisy chains will meet in front of Grant memorial hall at 5 o'clock this afternoon for the final practice before the Ivy Day ceremonies tomorrow mor ning. The processional will be held at the throne location in stead of at the coliseum as was previously announced. nler. Ktrauss-T.lehling, The Blue Danube, tont'tte Hkoda. Camp leil-Tlpton, If I Were Kind, An- Carl Harnslierer I-a Kort'e, The Mooklnft Bird, Mildred Clare Kreilrn'h, Constance Baker, flutist. Kussell, The Hacred Fire, Charlotte KIM sHt'Krh. St rains, Sprint. Voices. Betty Keese. Klnrh, The Breakers. Milan Starks. Snlnt-Sarns, My Heart at Thine Sweet Voire, from "Hamann and rielllah," tier alrilne Krause Henrv Hrahlnsky, violinist. llontrelti. Mud Scene, from "l.ucta dl T.aniniermo'ir." Antonio Contain, Constance Bakpr, flutist. I.elirn;in. Mvsolf When Yniinn from "In a l'"r!Miin GHrden" ftohert Haiel'v. Ttmnna. Je suli Tltanla, from "MIR non." K"e iMindrr. Tschaik'iw-skv, Farewell, Ye Hllla, from "Jciitin d'Arc." Ma-tha Mctlee. Martin, Tne Minstrel, Uoyd Rulllfson. Buet. I Say That hy Kear I'm Not Hniinted. from "Carmen, Ijiura Holm. Cnmplssll-Tiplon. The Spirit Flower, James Uuiin. Milan Starks, Richardson ItniitMill. KrHiiklln leBar. Accompanists, Martitret BHker. Ituth Brokaw. Warren Hammel. Mrs. MarKaret LindKren, Naomi Yost, Milan Lamliert, Mri. R. E. Hturde vatit. Another way to identify a fool: When his hand la on a steering wheel, there's a chip on his shoul der. Papa Dionne .keeps buying new cars. Maybe he wants to be pre pared , always, to go fetch the doc tor in a hurry. "", Dick Powell wants a new tvp j of movie role- before congress passes thfit bigger navy mil, whirh will condemn him to his present forever. PAD KIT Lincoln Bund, Journal and Star. lighted indirectly. The orchestra DR. CLAPP CHOSEN HEAD OF OLYMPIC MAT TEAM Nebraska Physical Education Instructor Journeys to Japan in 1940. Dr. R. G. Clapp, professor of physical education in the univer sity, was elected chairman on the United States Olympic wrestling committee for the games which have been scheduled for Japan in 1940. Clapp'a election came at the recent meeting of the committee in Chicago. The committee has requested that all organizations sponsoring amateur meets contribute 6 percent of their gross receipts toward fi nancing the United States entry in the 1940 games. Dr. Clapp is also a member of the United States wrestling rules committee. He has served on this body for twelve years and has been chairman for the past eleven years. Spring Banquet of Phys Ed Department Booked for Friday in New Union The annual spring banquet of the women's department of physi cal education, the first banquet to he scheduled in the new Student Union building, will be given Fri day night for students who are majoring or minoring in physical education. Miss Elizabeth Halsey, director of physical education at the University of Iowa, and the president of the central district of the American Association for Health and Physical Education will be the principal speaker. Miss Pound Featured With Washington Pot Article on Folksong An article on English folksong by Trofessor Louise Pound of the department of English, with por trait of her, occupied nearly a page in the issue for April 25 of the Washington (D. C.) Post. The national folk festival so ciety opens its annual programs, occupying several days, in Wash ington on May 6. Miss Pound Is a member of the executive com mittee of the organization. There's no such thing aa an un mixed blessing, it seems. Tuke the radio (please do) it brings ns valuable information and now and then gome excellent entertain ment, but it also turns the spell binders and medicine men loose in our living rooms. Thli accounta for the wide dis crepancy: You Judge your worth by what you are capable of doing ! and intend to do beginning tomor row or next week; the world evaluates you on the basis of what you did yesterday. Architectural Beauty Breaks Campus Skyline Amor-Iran fieoreian style of ar chitecture makes Nebraska'- Stu dent Union fairly loom up on the Cornhusker campus in direct con trast to the typical architectural types of other structures. The general exterior is made up of blending colors of Old Virginia tvDe sand-surfaced, moulded face brick trimmed with Indiana Bed ford limestone. St pel cAsenient windows thru- out the ground floor are designed to admit the maximum amount of light and air to the ground floor area. All other windows of the first, second and third floors are double hung wood windows fully weathers! rinned and screened in copper. Sloping portions of the roof of the center wing of the building are roofed with arche tectural slate having graduated thicknesses and composed of blendine- colors of purple, mottled green and purple, gray and black. Inside the $400,000 structure, American Georgian architecture is carried out in the carpets, rugs, drapeivs, lighting fixtures and furniture, conforming to the pre vailing styles of the 18th century. LA FOLETTE'S TH I R D PARTY HAS FASCIST TINGE, SHUMATE (Continued from Tage 1). simply be accidental," Prof. Shu mate added. "The movement really hasn't gone far enough to enable anyone to declare it fascist. One must hold a reserved Judg ment, for it is impossible for even the leaders of a party to deter mine exactly in which direction their party will move." Governor LaFollette's tradition that of being a member of the great LaFollcttes of the past who have been prominent in American politics would surely not suggest fascism, Shumate re marked. Yet traditions are easily broken when a man enters poll tics. From Good Stock. "As a candidate for president and as a leader of his new third party, Governor La Follete has many desirable qualifications," Shumate remarked. "He is from a part of the country which still too young to have developed strong sectionalism. He is of good American stock, with a family name well known in politics. He also is. young, vigr ' is, handsome, and personable." Governor La Follete's greatest strength should arise in Wiscon sin, his home state, and possibly in the middle west and the indus trial east. Industrialists in the east are probaoly pleased with his na tionalistic policy and his encour agement of or demand for capacity production. "If a reasonable amount of pros perity or economic security occur, or even if conditions get no worse than they are at present, LaFol lete'a party is not likely to gain much headway," opined Prof. Shumate, "but if economic discon tent would become as great as It was during the early years of our depression, or if war should break out, La Follete would stand a good chance of making rapid headway with his party." Harold Petz to Direct State Camp for Boys On Ag Campus in June Harold Petz, former University of Nebraska athlete and present director of intramural athletics at the university, has been annoftneed Pas director of athletics for the Cornhusker hoys state camp, to be held here in June. The boys state ramp is to be held at the agricultural rampus this year. More than 125 boys from a great many communities are expected to attend. I l) II VAT T Tl FD TT7TT II Were Used in Decorating The Student Union Building We congratulate the University and the Student Body upon the successful completion of their new activities center Van Sickle Glass I Paint Co. Salesroom 143 So. 10th Factory at 3rd & M St. LINCOLN, NEBR. UNION BALLROOM GETS FIRS! TEST Ken Nelson and Orchestra Give Music Tonight for 'Breaking-ln.' Dancing feet will glide on Lin coln's largest dance floor for the first time tonight when Ken Nel son's orchestra plays for the Student Union's housewarming. The magnificent ballroom, lo cated on the second story of the. building, has been planned to aid students in their quest for 'smooth dancing, for the floor has been laid so that party-goers will always dance with the grain of the wood. The walls of the room are done in a warm cream color accentu ated hy green drapes with a metal lic thread which cover the huge ballroom windows. For those who like to watch the race of man go dancing by, or for those who feel the need of a brief respite, little balconies oh the third floor have been set in over looking the ballroom and salmon colored lounges have been placed around the dance floor. UNIVERSITY NOTES. "Measures of Business Activity In Nebraska" was the subject of Prof. William Spurr's address at the Wednesday night meeting of Economlea. "Modem Trends and Common Sense in Education" was the topic discussed by Dean Frank Henzlik of the teachers college at the re gional school men's conference at Chndron Friday and Saturday. Dr. G. W. Rosenlof of the teach ers college gave several addresses recently before school groups. He addressed a regional conference of high school students at Hamburg, la., Tuesday on "Signboards of Success." May 10-15 is the dale of the convention of the geneiRl Federation of Women's clubs to he held in Kansas City and Dr. Rosenlof will address the group May 12 on the subject "Character Education the Adult's Part." iAst week he appeared before the Northeast Nebraska Schoolmas ter's cluh at Wayne where he talked before several groups in cluding the Wayne student body and members of the faculty. Thq current issue of the Junior College Journal contains an article hy Dr. Rosenlof on "Teacher Training in Junior Colleges." Harold Ricd, a graduate student, is co-author. Dr. Rosenlof had another article, "Progress in the North Central Association," appearing in the Southern Association Quarterly. "We are passing thru a period of slight economic instability." ac cording to sn editor, who writes with rare restraint. The economic pendulum swings to and fro, snd the great middle classes get conked on their cocos every time it passes. Your Mirror Will Show the Difference Permonent$.$3.50-$10 Hair Styling The Corrcll Beauty Salon 228 N. 13 B2936