The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 27, 1938, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    FOLK
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 193
JW Wjahqahsd JOiauAs h
: ? (5"" $e- 0 x3
. Union contest the big talk at
the tea dance. . .Theta Xi's, still
raving about the wonderful veni
son dinner of Monday nite. . .Fritz
King; shot the little deer. . .George
Scemnn, Phi Psi woman hater su
preme, with a secret love in the
"what-would-you-call-it" room. . .
Betty Rathburn, DG, about to get
a ticket for over parking... rav
in? of returned Oklahoma visitors
about the purty houses thar...
Betty Jean Peterson, Theta, plan
ning lo divide hers and Gutru's
(Acacia) time between their house
parties. . .Marion Lydick, Alpha
Phi, in a luscious pink and white
angora sweater set... Janet Har
ris, at the tea dance with Bill Fox,
Phi Delt...an uncensored Aw
gwan, whatya' know... Joe Wood,
i5ig Alph, also at the tea dance... .
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, a
swell band at the Turnpike, How
aiU Becker and his Pennsylvan
ians, r.s a bit of competition to
houso parties . . . lots of open
RICH-wTHICK
' HOME '
ivRf STYLE :n'
SPECIAL NOON-DAY
PLATE LUNCHEON
2
Hey, Hey,
"JITTERBUGS"
TODAY at the
3ARSITY
at; tes
J lM !
J
k JOE VENUTI t HIS SWING CATS J
John;! Carls iirry tdmt J
PriMirt ky
houses for Saturday. . .Kappa,
Delta Gamma, Alpha Chi and Al
pha Phi . . . biggest rally so far
planned, to sort of set off home
coming spirit with a bang, as if it
needs to be set off .. .liberals
rightly beaming all over the place
...Jane Shaw, Pi Phi, keeping
people laughing at her wit.. .Fred
Stiner, Phi Psi, saying that 1 es
lost his pin... ha ha... the white
spot of the nation due for another
football frenzy come Saturday..
WITH INVITATIONS ON prison
stationery, and stripes the "thing
to wear," the Theta Chi's intro
duce a really novel open house
party Friday night. . .
GUESTS AT the Delta Gamma
house this week will include their
province secretary, Mrs. Swischer,
and former misister to Denmark,
Ruth Bryan Owen Rohde, Delta
Gamma.
Alpha Xi Delta house party is
going to be a hillbilly style with
decorations in accordance. The
front of the door will be fixed up
as a moonshine distillery (with
the kind pormission of the dean),
pictures of pa, ma, Abner and
Daisy May around. Some of the
girls and dates there will be Kath
ryn Horrigan and Dave Noble,
Sig Alf: Harriet Wood and Hal
Snyder, Sigma Chi; Barbara Rose
water and Bill Butts, Sigma Chi;
Lois Owens and Merrill Englund,
Kappa Sig; Helen Severa and
Harold Niemann, Acacia.
Kappa Alpha Theta house party
will be decorated in the theme of
their homecoming decorations, so
they won't reveal anything about
it, but some of the couples are old
' otnnrlht'Q' Pria PJiflin flnH Rnr'lsir
; Prime, and Mary Ruth Marnell
and George Swoboda; Jean Cook
land Hiirami Messmore, Sig Alph;
! Dorothy Chase and Meredith Ren-
nick; Dot Cline and Bob Smith,
' Delt.
Chi Omega house party will
i carry out the theme that has been
! going round in the minds of so
i many lands these days pheasant
hunting. Some present will be
Mary Jane McMullin and Wilbur
Simmons, PiKa; Eddie Houston
' and Gordon Haney; Wilnia Grln-
sted and John Hayworth, SAE;
; Faye Lambert and Harvey Min
; nick. Acacia: Virginia Jones and
! Dick Logan; Margie Munger and
j Jim Evenger. Kappa Sig; Mary
Ellen Comerford and Don Shultz.
Kappa Sig; Betty Flory and Bill
Hayworth. PiKa; Lenoia Mans
field and Lee Prawitz, Acacia, and
I Lea Hyland and Charlie Mead.
Kappa Delta house party is to
be a fall festival. Fall colors and
leaves will be used. The horn of
plenty is going to be represented
also. Couples there will include
Letha Petit and Lloyd Jeffries.
Delta Sig; Billie Suing and Lowell
Jackson: Marguerite Malovec and
Ray Cruise, Farmhouse: Gail Fer
guson and Carl Olenberger, Fiji,
and Doris Greybull and Warren
Schroeder.
Counselors Fe
'Little Sisters'
Advisors Plan Annual
Freshman Banquet
Tickets go on sale today for the
annual Coed Counselor-Little Sis
ter dinner to be held in the Stu
dent Union ballroom Thursday
evening, Nov. 3. The dinner is a
yearly affair for the purpose of
promoting acquaintance and
friendship between freshmen and
their big sisters, and between af
filiated and unaffiliated freshmen.
General chairman of the dinner
is Faith Medlar. In charge of
ticket sales is Ruth Clark; food
committee is headed by Mary Bul
lock; program committee by Fern
Steuteville, and decoration com
mittee by Mary Sherburne.
All coed counselors will be re
sponsible for getting tickets for
their little sisters. One coed coun
selor has been chosen from each
sorority house to sell tickets to
her house, and those representa
tives have be,en asked to meet
briefly at noon today in Ellen
Smith hall.
Anyone wishing to obtain tick
ets may buy them from any coed
counselor, board member, or Ruth
Clark, sales manager.
Political Clubs
Born on Campus
Young GOPs, Demos
Start Organizations
State politics have arisen with
surprising celerity on the campus
within the last two weeks. A short
time ago, several students an
nounced the formation of a univer
sity young republican's club. Last
evening, Phillip Mullin, sophomore
from Friend, called the Rag of
fice with the following announce
ment:
"All students between the ages
of 16 and 40 who are interested
in an organization of the univer
sity young democratic club, see or
phone Phil Mullin, room 445, Lin
coln hotel.'1 This organization is to
be associated with the Lancaster
county democratic club."
TOLSTOY CONVO
United States when she was ap
pointed minister to Denmark by
President Roosevelt.
Before her appointment to the
diplomatic post, Mrs. Rohde,
daughter of the late William Jen
nings Bryan, was the first woman
to represent the old south in con
gress, the first woman to be ap
pointed to the congressional com
mittee on foreign affairs, and the
first woman to attend the Intra-
Parliamentary union in London.
The one time regent and faculty
member of the University of
Miami will speak at 7:30 o'clock
in the university coliseum.
Cornelius Vanderbllt jr., author,
traveller, and lecturer, will speak
tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock in
the coliseum on "The Twelve Most
Interesting People I Have Inter
viewed." From a sparkling list of
celebrities, Vanderbilt has chosen:
Hitler, Mussolini, Kemal Pasha,
President Roosevelt, John L.
Lewis, Herbert Hoover, Duke of
Windsor, King George VI, Stalin,
Pope Pius, and Chiang Kai-Shek.
TYPEWRITERS
All standard makes for tale or rent.
Used and rebuilt machines on easy
terms.
Nebraska Typewriter Co.
130 No. 12 St.
Lincoln, Nebr.
B21S7
Now Showing . . .
At Your Favorite Theatresl
FREE MOVIE TICKETS
Regular
LEADED
BRONZE
GASOLENE
Irr Mavle TkkrU
14th at W. HOLMS
IS"9
LOOKING
for better food?
lor more variety?
for lower cost?
Then eat hart. It'a these things
plus tht advantage of the "via
ble" menu that have made us
such i popular place to tat.
ISELIN CAFE
(Continued from Tage 1.)
was asked to use her influence in
soviet propaganda. She left her
native Russia and has since de
livered hundreds of lectures, writ
ten countless magazine articles
and books, and is at present au
thoring two more books.
One of the world's greatest au
thorities on Russia, she is brought
to the university thru the efforts
of the convocation committee
headed by Prof. Harold V. Stoke
of the political science department.
Altho she originally accepted
communism as a likely remedy for
the ills of Russia, she has more
recently changed her mind. One of
the principal evils of communism,
she says, is the form of collective
farming, a type of labor which she .
considers as literal slavery. While j
admitting that, during the reign of j
the czar, illiteracy among the I
working class was astonishing, yet '
the people did have pride in taking ;
! care of their small farms and their
cattle.
With the anti-religious propa
ganda now being forced down
their throats, she asserts, they are
really unhappy human beings.
Their farms, their cattle, their
homes all have become public
property. They own nothing they
are mere slaves tools of the gov
ernment. In many instances they
I are unwillingly dragged to the
various collective farms where
! they must work for the govcrn-
! ment.
j Speaking of the plight of her
people, the countess, a resident of
the United States for several
years, declares: "My people have
passed from tyranny into slavery.
Bolshevism is a house built upon
the sands; its timbers are decayed.
But, altho it must collapse, no one
can predict the manner nor time
of its downfall.
"The corroding influences that
today are at work upon Russia
are anti-religion and militarism.
If my father were alive, he would
say, 'Let the people be quite Il
literate rather than have schools
which teach their children irrc-liglon."
CROSBY I 1
"MNG YOU I
til nollirr ( .
tI
I SUEZ-
i sV"
Li
JOHN 1JTM- 1
TURNPIKE
Present
Fri., Sat., Oct. 28-29
"1!
'7
lal
TEACHERS MEET
Frederick BrM. Muek Ctrptrttlta
Presents
HOWARD
cum
and His
PEIUISYLVANIAHS
(Continued from Page 1.)
lect taxes in rural districts; for the
support of schools in urban dm
tncts." Rohde Address.
The appearance of Ruth Bryan
Rohde on tonight' program Is of
special Interest both to convention
goers and to Lincolnites. A gradu
ate of the university, she became
the first woman diplomat of the
Playing the Combined Stylet
of Kay Kayser, Blue Barron
and Sammy Kaye.
44m. KrMat, sue Earfc.
A4m. kalrda, SI.S frr Coaplr.
kill
DAHCE
Friday 9 to 12 P.M.
aw
0
Pcffcon ECESEGTEA
Help m&k this Union party a real rally. You don't need a date. Wear
anything. Just come and join with fellow Nebraikaoa In tbla pre-f ame
celebration.
TUDEHT
mm
u "PliiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiHiiiii!:!!!!:::!"' " ' '
FAAGEE'S
Welcome Yjelraslm OeacL
"7.- '
TGTTTD (TC A T HATC
IOI impuiltru vciwi
Thursday, Friday and Saturday onlyl
. . . these Paris styled hals will be iea
. i 1 v..-;- TV.v
P J lovely! See theml
j;:TM Regular $7.50 quality
6 S
THIRD
FLOOR
Yxq Stock Of 1 J
w $12.95 j " rT
FALL DRESSES ,
They're new . . . dashing . . . distinctive styles .... ;
with a definite appearance ol "finer" quality, fill g'. 1 j U
types are included . . . dresses lor sport, street or j .f ffj
classroom. You'll want several to liverf up your H
wardrobe I SLwW
Sites 12 lo 20; (fc I J
311.44 M I 11
ij Thuridar, Friday and Saturday Only! '
Y I cHuxuriouiiij JurreJ-
'M coats . m
I Gorgeous styles . . . Paris inspired . . i
ill abundantly furred in Mink, blaclc or grey
I mffT Persian Lamb. Beaver, Skur.'t, Wolf cr f
j J Fox. Coats with a sophisticated air . . .
if a more expensive look.
I i Others S39.95
Inlrimmed Coali $19.9j t $M.9. to $125
WOMEN'S FLOOR OF FASHIONS ... THE .'H!RD
1
i
-9
I 7
yv
Nev Fall Colors in
,1 x 77
ummina
HOSIERY
Bid
Fin 3-thrtad
Firt Fall Shadti
First Quality Host
79
End chilly nights vith
LAROSNUGS
A nne balbriggan pajama.
Vo i II love irt cur.'r let!
el t.-t-.e tr-j rnocn . . .
a r.tw eV".n isrus in Ihrrt
r:vac;o'j iroa.i . . . Cip.ii
El-t, Sun G ov, c.-.J Hsst.
$198
x
New PURSES $095
R r. ar.'l r.i sl.iix.r.! r. p .-f.s . . . s
Its-Mis . . . m v.-y a:st.Mi.t tty.ts
lir.t su.3.1, sxo'-'.n at. 4 :air.td ca.t Othrrt
. . . r..w ,.-.-;., m-.ad.ri; w.r. j, w , fl
chow, L.own orl l.ni. r
Costume Jewelry $1 to $3.50
ACCESSORY SnCTIOlI-FIRST FLOOR
GOSSARD'S
fjtw JJiyli bosom
GIRDLE
This r.tw crofsl coulds your
t:g Idta:!y lor out jmn
cotir.tf. It tx'.nds thrtt
trch.s abovt tht wamlint ar.i
1 1 i m i n a 1 1 1 oil "irntntinfl"
b-J.i- Ot lovtiy tatm and
two way tiastic.
f5
Others $3.50 to $10
THIRD FLOOR
Selby StylEez SHOES
tf 1 1-.
11 you navs an i"i
amartness and a longing h jl)
for comfort, you'll enjoy II
wtaring then new Styl-
and $7.50
i,
A)
A ,
" I I Etz shoes
Tfc, S Ar
(arrltr JfuP"'"'
SHOES )
Selby Arch Preserver
You'll wtar thtm with pride . . .
lor Arch Preserver! now offer
thtir famous fitting qualilltt In
styles you ntver dreamtd to
find In "arch" shoes.
J875
and $10.75
lh Cad
$8.75
WOMEN'S SHOES FIRST FLOOR
OUR BOOKS ARE CLOSED. All charges now on Dec. 1st Statements.
r
lip"
!!iiil:-,v.'
mil nil i j ii hi ii inn nt n n 1 1 1 1 n i inn ,1 i tit i i lit , " "!' til t i
mimimiisfetHfe
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