The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 08, 1938, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    FOUR
TIIR DULY M-KHASKAN. TL T.S1UY, KOVEMKER , 1938
QixisL (Dovll
Gorsh, and did you have fun at
Kansas ? . . . have you ever had
so little sleep? ... (yes) ... and
we settle back, sorta', to another
week-of-it-nll . . . with some of the
same flashes with different names
. . . like Bette Silvevblatt. SDT,
passing the candy last night with
Stuart" Gar.z. ZBT ... a mighty
quick romance . . . and Bobby
Marston, Sigma Kappa, returning
the pin of one ATO ... a feud
between an Alpha Chi and a Ki O
over a certain Acacia . . . Colonel
Oury'a sham battle called off be
cause it disturbed W. P. A. work
ers . . . Marie Anderson, Theta,
victim of a bucket of water thrown
from above . . . the ideal coed con
test at the Lincoln causing big dis-
Reviewing the Kansas Trip
By MARIAN BREMERS.
"All Aboard."
V.lhnll to 1v'inw:w " All Alioal'tl." Aft Of tlUVC
minutes delay for (.ieorge, Ahel, Pick Watt, ticorjrc Amvyll who
failed 1o leave the Phi Pelt house until 7:00, the tram pulled
out of Lincoln and headed for the south. Attempting to
keep the fans from general pandemonium were llieta, .Marian
Kidd, and Sigma jnu, Jack Kingen
cussions about the merits and de
merits of our pals . . . Kanna's
anticipating a bit of candy-cigars
soon . . . Marge Griess, Alpha Phi,
waiting for a late street car with
Elmer Madison, Phi Psi ... to no
avail . . . Football Brock doing the
wisecracks in Dr. Stoke's poli sci
class . . .Kappa Sigs in Kansas
City en route to KU . . . Ti Phi's
at Kansas taking the honors for
Football Queen with a mighty cute
girl . . . everybody in clubby
groups trying to keep warm while
they compare weekend fun . . .
For all Stephen's College alums,
there is a dutch-treat dinner at the
Cornhusker Wednesday night at
six.
heimer who were student council
representatives on the trip.
A Jam Session.
The band kept warmed up for
the game by holding a jam ses
sion in the front car and every
one sat around to join in on the
chorus of Alexander's Rag Time
Rand. Averv Forke and Tom
Brown of D. U. worked up a quar
tet with Gene Richardson and Jack
McPhail, while Ray Smith, S. A.
R., breezed through the cars at
intervals followed by parts of the
freshman team.
Rowdy March to K. U. Union.
From the minute the train rolled
into Lawrence things happened
Foreign Consuls Present
Gifts to New Phonetics Lab
PAN-HEL TO CLOSE
SCHOLARSHIP FILINGS
Applicants for Pan-Hellenic
scholarships must file their infor
mation blanks in the office of the
Dean of Women in Ellen Smith
before noon Thursday. Nov. 10.
Five scholarships of $35 will be
awarded by the association at the
annual Pan-Hellenic scholarship
tea which will be held Nov. 18 in
the Union.
Eligible for the scholarships are
junior and sophomore women, be
longing to sororities, who are par
tially self-supporting, who are car
rying 12 hours, and who have an
average that is at least 85. Ap
plication blanks may be secured
this week at the office of the
Dean of Women.
goal post is now at the S. A. E.
house thanks to me mougnuuim-fts
of Webb Mills. Bill Haney and
Lucy Jane Williams.
To Kansas City, and . . .
The majority hurried to Kansas
City for dinner. At the Plaza
Rovale were Joe Stevens and
Harry Prouty of D. U. with Pi
Phi's, Rity Alger and June Stcb
bins. The Muehlbach hotel there
was Gwen Orr, Mary Stoddart,
Casey Campbell, and Betty Ann
Kennedy dining and dancing with
Jack Highland, Jim Armstrong,
Chic Robert, and Jack Gellately.
Kansas City has some super floor
shows and Theta's Wanda Seaton,
Janet Smith, Tody Benison along
.;tu o a IT1 'o T2rh T uilvvip- Harold
llilU A-U V I C lutiif,o I'l'- ' Willi n. u"".--r
Tassels, Corncobs, the band, and , Osborn, and John Fulsom after
all the fans started a rowdy march , seeing the Spinning Wheel':! enter
from the station to the Student tainment can offer more details.
Union. Down town Lawrence was: Home Again, Oh!
taken by storm when the Lincoln j
cars joined in. Herb Glover was Coming home on the 1:00 a. m.
chief chauffeur with about twenty j train, peonle were served crab
people dangling on his car. Hcrbinieat special by Roy Profitt and
, l L t ll..... Int...' I l.t....t C... fli.ln't
pai Kco vy me Miuuinu nun jimn iiiuniui. n'mit i-cvu-i
Literature Arrives
From France, Italy
To add to the foreign atmo
sphere of the newly opened pho
netics laboratory in U hall, a large
shipment of pictorial and literary
publications has been received by
thp rnmanre languages depart
ment tn hp nrrantred in a perma
nent collection for the laboratory.
The collections are gifts from
the French, Italian and Colombian
cnic. in (hp United States, who
will continue to send material to
the university as the tourist bu
reaus of their countries publish it
Book of Mussolini.
Two most striking and unusual
of the nresents are a ii inch eiec
tvicni tmnserintion of a famous
speech of Marconi, formerly used
by NBC, and a huge book pub
lished in celebration of the 14th
vear of Mussolini's reign, both
sent by the Italian consul.
The book weighs some 30
rounds, is one and a half feet
wide, two feet tall and about five
inches thick. Called "Imperial
Italy," it glorifies in pictures and
lnro-e tvn the achievements of
Mussolini, including the Ethiopian
campaign, and me development ui
industry in fascist Italy. Published
in 1936, the huge volume is rep
resentative of the cream or me
most modern photography and
mnifpnn which Italian "journalism
had reached. Frontispiece is a two
foot photograph of Mussonn s pro
file, mostly chin and helmet.
Also from the Italian consul
came travel and news magazines
and pamphlets telling of the social
and economic achievements of
Mussolini.
South American "Zig Zag."
The SQuth American magazine
Zig Zag, comparable to a combi
nation of Life and the National
Geographic, came from the Co
lombian consul, in addition t
other travel books published h
the Colombian tourist bureau
From the French consul cam
the latest maps and tourist book
published by the French govern
ment, all bearing unusual romnior
cial design in red, white and blue
The entire collection win h
placed in the phonetics labomtorv
for the entertainment and use h,
students, beginning next Wpef
with emphasis on the Italian ma
terial. The next week win V
riem-'u VVCl-tV HIKl IOUOU in" that
"Spanish Week." 6 nat
"Let us see what we can do tQ
keep the light of tolerance, justice
and free pursuit of learning burn
ing throughout this year." Barn"
ard College's Dean Virginia r"
Gildersleeve sets a broad goal for
today's college students.
Your Drug Store
How about a new fountain cerli
Now? All prices and all guarantied
History paper and covers.
THE OWL PHARMACY
P Street at 14th Phone B1063
FREE DELIVERY
found his car tightly anchored in
the mud. Tri Delts with a red,
white, and blue car were Gertrude
cct around to taking a train until
Sunday afternon and got a ride on
a two car affair that had porthole
Slaughter, Martha Whelan who (windows and a sputtery engine.
taxied Cecil Hallawell. Keith Win
hcin. and Ed Segrist of Chi Phi to
the game.
We Have the Goal Posts.
After the final trim the Nebras-
j kans tore up to the Kansas smoem
Phi Dolt's Culver Brooks Brandy
Baeklund. provided entertainment
for Delta Gamma Nan Talbot
while Franny Williams of Pi Phi
tried to catch up on lost sleep. The
A. T. O. chapter are still watching
and waiting for the return of Bob
Union and had a big rally. One j Ferguson.
Tassels Take Time From Yearbook Drive to Enjoy Game
IV
I v
1
. .y ' .... ... 3
A ,v,f -I - . , y . - .1
iW
& : .. ' y
-1
i lay
1 S r
This group of Tassels, ever 1 p'enty of doming oeneain mu.. " " ; sale. ha, he COn.inu-d- thew will
f'javhawk? With ! around Memorial stadium at since the deadline on Cornhusker , own goal.
How Docs s Kosmet Klub
Fall Revue Skit Originate?
Review cf Old Revues
r. Rereols the Answer
By Bruce Campbell.
How d-xs a Kosir.tt Klub fall
revue skit blossom ir.to being?
You never thought much about
it before, did you. t;me.i you wer
a ski'.F.ast'-r. And if you were a
skitnFter, after you got done
with it. vou didn't think t-o much
of it either. Did you ever thin);
cf all the toil, trouble and mental
and phy.'-ral turmoil thai is at
ter.dant'upon the fir.al production
of a skit?
First of all. tb M'"- I p
source of idtas the vapue limb-,
of creative inu-gir.ation r i it
plagiarise? Aie ideas conceived
or Uirif'Wfd?
Well, we don't nf-d t- atguc
that I'''i'.t tx fause fume body r
oth'-r i.nf s-jid sviiK'tliing i the
itnrt that v.--nt m; h' tlung hk- this:
"Tbue is nothing new under the
Fur." Ktag1! pi f'iu( ti"r:, how
ever, are prMuc-d und'r loot
lighU (rounds like a contortiorin-t
act) so we don't r,ei to worry
about vi hat Bomi-bcdy cr other
once raid.
Artistic talent of som kind usu
ally precedes the coieptmn of a
skit idea. A glance back bt for
mer Kosmet fall revues r .-vc-alj,
clarinet j:tte-ibugs. piano jdayers.
arcordioiii:dj. vocalist or jiwudo-vocalii-t,
and tap dar.f-ers as cen
tralizing thenie around v. hieh the
tkitf were bu.lt.
Tap Dances.
About three year uft't the oun
try was j-vu-pt w.Mi la'jdevilliaii
tap dancers. "T?.p dancer" ji a
term apphed rather Iwly to any
one who had kteel clips in his or
her idws and beat out more or
les, rhythmic tottcj with them.
In fact." if all the tap dar.ors of
that period were hid end to end.
they would either break into a
routine or etre'.ch halfway around
the world.
Dialog with wiserrackn galore
end ikita b;nleMJiiing currently
jfipul.'ir news cvi-hTk have uk.
been good iu!jj;-c'ii ir i-luts in
the pajt and blways v,A be-.
A brief keep Hit t tie UitVt"m
Ir.g Kosinet fho-A' reveals that
likely .appearing h!:eti)i-n will fea
ture Marina p''jyr. nrytf. i )
, Ftnimentali.ts. wisecracker?. hill
' billies, and sophisticated dialogue
or, nvji j ..
puny skits.
flm Viavinir rnnceived an idea.
! on? would think that working the
skit into fhape would be mete
routine. Or would one? Anyway.
it isn't. The hardest pait of whip-
ping a rhit into th?pe is getting
: the members of the skit all l
1 gether at the fame time for piac-
tice. The next hardest part is try
! inj to keep them together for at
' least five minutes.
Ad Libbers.
1 Then, when reading the Ines
' right off the nianusenpt, eaeh
ive-:i:ber of the cast de-i ies that
he knows a better way to say the
i:i;e. thus murdering hje- h cu :
1 nyht and bft. Karh i:i"niber of
' h. r-uut ronwidj iii hirnfccdf a iast
; master at ad libbirg with b"'h
i gestures and lin'";. As a co;i?e-
(juetice the er:d of caeh rehear. -aj
' tindM the (skitmnxter teanng out
huge handfulls l h' or l;er hair
I pti'i wondeiir g what hp or Khe
ever tlid to ie.-eive such treat-
riient.
But by dint of two or thn-e
conientrat'd piaetir-.i. K-nii't
fall revue i-ki's usually round into
tntertamirg tVs-U b-n that display
1 a g'od deal of pulential raiiifw
! talent, at 1 . . l-:ides hhowing
the rkit master just how It re spoil-;
sih his fiwtejnity brothers or;
xororitv tii.t-r are. Ah. we, t
; coin a'phiase, all's well that -nd;
well. '
POULTRY SCIENCE
CLUB TO ELECT
The Poultry Science dub will
hold a meeting in Poultry Hus
bandry hail at 7:20 Thursday eve
nir.T m room 2C5.
Bus:r.eg of the evening will con
Fi?t of the elertion of new meru
; hers and the drawing up of plans
for a mixer to be held Nov. JS.
Library Adds
Hoover Book
Librarian Names
Twenty New Volumes ,
The university libiary has just '
added a number cf new Vx.ks to i
the reference room. H:Vc-it
Hjver, former pre.-id.-nt t th
United States, is the author of
Addresses tlpcn the American
Road, a lxok S politics.
A c ha nee f-r omtiaris' n in
German and American selioohr.g is
offered in the Nazi primer, of.'i. jal
hanlxfik for svh'.oling Hitler
youth. Upanishada. a true Hima
layan, authors a Uxik call'-d
Himalayrs of the Soul.
Among the oth'rs aie:
C Imirw U mien. l!rr!ii) a "I 1'ilj.
IMcllli;.lMU llw Hon. I' ll '. B.
K t ; u I , .
i w sfivl I irrf-. h J. l'l-i':r.
tddri'h, I t'it lli Alr-li'.n llud,
ri.tui.4'. Muvk.I ll. l'MJ. i lll-
p.nn. I Mile M. K t nrtitt U .
I.'lltt Itt. mt t-tu-A H'tvH,
lt I). Inrntmll
i Itll I tiM'tli'k "4 ltidt -1ri.il 4ttlMirl.
b Hrr N . tljMin,
I MMttit.nal I wrrfi.l tn 'ir,rjn II -ln.
I t I M liiiiwm.
Mr lt l riift. )' K fit III I-.
H !.,
( ttmififf ttOr f lit rtft rat j . !
7 trtt in M lM.
NFI I'rl'mr; t.Mi. ,l lnrS''L lot
whwln I lli-r ttttli
tftiMii't irt'r I It.ldrtn. I St n -I'.n
hut Itt it., M It.
1 i,t iir ui Omlt-fwl (iltf'ii. !
f lurk Uillm.
II. m l llfrr. It) YjtMtH I . II H'f
I Ir, ati4 Ml I f'tu-fT. Ii ll. t i'f
I1.. Mmi Jtrlttt'l .
I'ntKllUf n4 I'ltirnvr "Pull, Ii) IV
nard t. Mati
Itrl ttf lltf I .irfirn fol . tl
Mallrr I'll' lt. If. jf u"i
Ft'Mtr N-rlt-. hr ll'U "I. . i .
Iltr I tlibulfr: Hi' i mtrtr t tiil.jurii
4t: i. I l.mrfrttr l.ft-ttw
lltrtu.1 ty a ui lit "ul. ly I lj"li;t'l.i.
Barbs Slate
Convocation
Unaffiliates Get
Programs Underway
An all ba:b convocation was
anr.riun'c) by the Barb t'nion at
its reguhr weeV.ly nif.cting las',
night. One e-f the lnoie promi
nent of the IV ligion and Life weelt
rpeakers will address the nieting
in the ;-rde!:t 1'n.o'i b.'.llmoin
next Monday rM at 7 Barb
gjils aie (.';-e-c;a'.:y invited to at
tend. Barb volley hall con p'tition be
gins Tl.u .-'iay in the oils u:ii
v.di n S'ir ,e t '.vi Ive bai t) ihls play
for th diarr.; :"::s!;:;i. t'l.d-r the
tiii.ction of Han, Id I'cz. intia
n iir d ;:;i;i'es w,:i b - 1. ! 1 -a-li
Tu -sday ?nd 1 liursd y '.:;ng.
Ali Hi" rc-'e I n, en s'i ;'d s.
eitlur I'i'.r., ,r A:l !! n '' kson.
H. l h .ii ),: . - :. o: i. .an.
!', l.i .. d in t!. : :ai p-ograrn
f ,) t',.s i Me t'.'a, l.oai J;:a
or at J:;.v:. oi i 1 .1 J'r ::v at
7 arid i.-n- n tlie y.wl: : '. Vi.'vm
b: : t 7 ' 0.
tawgnMWwrft'PeeMgtcagwaBM
U alrh, ji-utliy, I'm. V.rf.aliiifi
I t d llnnli It' pi.. 'l l0-2'c
Court S. Mullen
JEWELER
Oppoiite VuJ'1 Th1r Lm'.'.ln
MM
K SHAPES 4F illSHEJ
SPECIAL STUDENT RATES
On p.fnUIr t
All Makes cf Typewrite
Service Supplica
TEI-STATE
TYPEWRITER CO.
IT must TASTE BETTER WITH THIS FILTER
"Never bites my tongue. Juices never reoch
my mouth. I never hod to break it in. And
the tobacco's much more fragrcnl! Chang
ing my filter gives mo a cSoan pipe. Medico's
. . . . - M it
Filttfd Smoking it truly stniafionol.
"I -.vrrt to tiie C'.t.i ii" party
at tie Lir.'.oin Hot '.I Saturday
night gri fcy O0" 't wa
'topi. 7so tad Martin Oel-n-h
had a breten arm and
couldn't dsr'.e, but it looked
like he was 'do n' all right'
vith cie am anyway.
Rilph Rccd von the door
prize with h pla'jiarized slo
gan 'No squirt, no ttoop, no
squat.' Tricky rakal that
D.U.
"Dad blame it. To think that
I would have milled that
swtd party if it hadn't been
for EVAN3 one day cleaning
service my 'tuit' was dirty."
id
ee these coats
laden with
A precious fur
09
to
69
Coat values we have
net been able to offer
in years definitely
vcrth a special shop
ping trip! Enviable
luxury and flattery in
rich furs, fine -woolens.
i
v
1
V
t 1
CkM I
km tr
WMWZ
A ' . iij
J
Br
r-x
Persian Lamb
Silky Skunk
Blended Mink
L
The furs alone tell you vhat
grand coat values those
arc! Used lavishly on dun
ning fitted, flared coals, slim
box styles ... fur muff ccats
too! Warm and beautiful in
black, colors. Handsomely
tailored coats . . . we've
sizes for misses and women!
On 12th St. Near the Campus
llllllmiil