rouK LINCOLN. NFMUSKA, FRIDAY, DF.CI.MIU.Il 2. 193K FIVE FULL DAYS FINISHED ...weekend welcome ... a n d a cheery cheery happy birthday to AOPi Charlotte Utt. who expects to Ret- a bar of candy from DU Jack Nelson. . .advent last night of Suzy Harrison, Theta, to pass candy with Dick Smiley. DU, may be. . .clamorings for candy and screeching for cigars heard cam puswiue. . .Kappa Delt's tub Mar jory Schick, going with an out-of-town boy, and Ann Sotikup of the Soukup-Francis Wrieth combina tion .. .Theta's think Marnell and Swoboda, Sigma Nil. should come ficross. as should Mary Vogel and Bus SN Tremont.. .from Lou Ben son and Phi Fsi Boo Ball, as rrom Jean Woods and Francis Loctterle, ATO. do the Kappa's call... Delta Gamma gives the timely hint to Ernie Jones and Bill Rernulst, DU, Frannie Marshall and George Rosen, Delt, and several seniors. . . Alpha Chi Omega tubs Imogene Holster, gal of a med student Ken ny Lamb, and Marion Hoppert, wearer of Earl Heady's AGR pin . . .to get to more incidental dating-, we see plans for big dinner parties before the bad. . ATO George Joy, his date Mary Rosborough, Theta, and a party of eight more will be at the Lincoln, as will Chi Phi Ed Segrist, George Lyons, and their dates Martha Whelan, Tri Delta, and Beatrice Andrews. Alpha Phi . . .Phi Gam Carl Olenberger now has steady dates with Kappa Delta pledge Gail Ferguson. . .while girls who said in yesterday's Rag the going steady was no good have been getting ye razberry from all sources ... and as this big day has approached, trot your tails, or fuss with your formal, as the case may be... Dance.Classes Held Fridays Miss Bennett to Give Ballroom Lesson Series Miss Shirley Bennett of the phy sical education department will conduct a series of ballroom danc ing classes for persons who ar able to dance a little and another for students who are advanced This series will be held in Grant Memorial every Friday night for six weeks, beginnig tonight. In the elementary class the stu dents will be taught the fundamen tals of dancing and in the advanced class the students can choose tne popular steps which they wish to learn. Six lessons win ne onereu for 50 cents, and identification cards must be presented. The :"irst class will be held at o clocK una the advanced at 8. Males Don Drab Rags But Girls Flash New Glad Rags Tonight aha, comes the revo-' lution in social circles! Or, if you want to particularize on the appearance of female rai ment, comes the revelation. This weekend, as anyone who is old enough to tell a corsage from bouquet or a tux shirt front from a bit of display cardboard knows, rolls up the curtain on the 1938 University of Nebraska for mal season. And with this figura tive bit of curtain-rolling come several bits of saitorialistic phenomena. For instance, campus males who have been draping their ankles in multi-colored socks that would make a peacock look like an ama teur, their necks with ties that would turn modern interior deco ators green with envy, their chests with multi-colored and striped shirts that look like high way danger signals, and other parts of their anatomy with efful gent fabrics that would make the end man in a minstrel show shud der, adopt black and white for mal clothes. No longer will the male be able to express what rug' ged individualism he has left. The weekly game called "Don ning the Soup and Fish" or -But ton, Button, Whereinell's My Col lar Button" will be played by mas culine party-goers from now on till March. The display of colored raiment will be confined to week days. Various tortures will be bourn throughout the winter by martyrs in tuxedos as they flash foolish grins above stiff collars and wonder why the shirt man ufacturers did not figure out a way to rid the sweat trickles down under cover of stiff car board shirt fronts and stiff collars. But there is a ray of cheer. Ev ery cloud has a silver lining, in this ease, society can be consoled by the fact that coeds blossom forth in beautiful formals sweep ing clear down to the metatarsal arch and drawing forth glances of admiration, ejaculated "oh's" and "ah's" and whistled bits of appre ciation. Particularly prominent on the 1938 formal horizon are th strapless gowns held up by means of faith, hope and carefully de signed stays. The usual eye-pleas ing strapped gowns are also back, or should it be backless? It is undeniably true that femi nine formals fulfill the estheti requirement very, very satisfac torily. See one man in formal tux and you've seen them all, but see one girl in a gorgeous gown and you have yet to run the plcasur able gauntlet of gazing at the other different creations from Sihiaparelli or Sadie's Sewing Shop. In conclusion, may it be pointed out that clothes make the man look. No More Class Cutting, Says Omaha U. Head Because Nebiaska students are hardened to the grueling experi ence of attending classes regularly, most of them will never be able to realize the shock received by students attending the University of Omaha, yesterday, when it was announced there that professors will begin to keep attendance rec ords. Until now that institution al lowed the student an unlimited number of cuts as long as he main tained a reasonable scholastic av erage. Younger students at the university, however, have been taking advantage of the ruling, according to President Rowland Haynes, Who is cracking down in order to maintain the scholastic standards of that institution. From now on, according to the new ruling, professors must take a record of attendance in all class es and make a report to the dean. Czechs To Hold Informal Party Group to Exchange Gifts, Dance Beseda Comenius club will hold a ten cent gift party and informal dance Saturday night in parlors XYZ of the Union. Students of Czech des cent and their friends are Invited. Under the direction of Mrs. Julia Breuer. alumna of the organiza tion, the entire group will do the Beseda, a Slovac folk dance. Members of the committee In charge are Robert Kubicek, Doro thy Morava, Lillian Blazkovec and Libbey Blazkovec. A $6,000,000 expansion program has been announced by Cornell university authorities. Diary Comes to Its Own ot Elmira Collea ELMIHA, Neb. (ACPl. The!,, fashioned diary is coming jnt0 i, own again at Elmira college A professor of English is r'eauiv ing his students to keep a 1 ' journal to stimulate their inri vidual natural styles of prose .,(,'" ing. He has found that it Riri them In destroying the stiff, w J conscious, false literary style th use in writing ordinary themes. ItENT-CAKS Good, clean and available at an hours. Rates reasonable. Cnnven lent location. Always open .". years In business. ' "v MOTOR OUT COMPANY 1120 P St. B6819 A llrklrr In Every I r Werner Buch to Talk on German Life Sunday Werner Buch, exchange student from Germany, will talk before the First Plymouth Sunday eve ning club, this Sunday night, 7:00, at the First Plymouth church. In his address, Buch will discuss idras in Germany. The First Plymouth Sunday Evening club is made up of univer sity students of that church. Dancing Classes Aid Social Life Western "Wallflowers" Blossom with Rhythm BERKELEY, Calif. (ACP). The effort of the University of Cali fornia to induce "wall flowers" and "stay aways" to participate in the social life of the institution, as an aid to intellectual fitness, IS ucilig mri. vwiu iu,,c.. .; affair success this semester, according to " . Drama of 'Sleeping Beauty Promises Wide Awake Show Hope Drummond, A. Stevenson Take Leads An evening backstage during the dress rehearsal of the insom nia laden fairy tale, -bleeping Beauty" was really quite an awak- f ills the esthetic standard sleep ing or awake, while Aubrey Stev enson as Prince Charming, '39 model, is all that one fellow can be. But to get to the talc end of things, this fairy production, with , its splendid cast and direction, i should provide a big afternoon for the "kids" Saturday. rroi. f ranK l.. rueeoerger, tnan- . . . k f . man of the department of physical -j" , dramatjos, 8nd the al- Along with a few very unusual education Scores of young men who here tofore did not seem to be able to stop tripping over their part tiers' feet, and voung women who were all too conscious of their dancing faults and suposed lack of popularity, are finding them selves'" in the beginners' dancing classes. Dr. Kleeberger says. Classroom instruction in popular dancing to overcome the embar rassment of clumsy lirst attempts or the determination to stay away from social affairs altogether, is now engaging the attention of some 200 male students and scores of voung women twice each week and manv of these are finding a much greater interest in univer sity affairs generally, and a stim ulus to study. The movement was inaugurated r.y the University Mothers' club tome years ago in the endeavor to provide social dances for the men ftudents who could not afford cor-.-ages, taxieabs and dance tickets, and the girl students who found the "formal" beyond the reach of the collegiate purse. most startling beauty of princess, we manage to glean a few facts of incidental value concerning fairy tales. This streamlined aim modern ized tale of kings who smoke ten cent cigars as a result of a sue cessful election to the throne while princesses romp hither and yon. in ' swing skins wouin provme an entertaining two hours lor any adult, regardless of the fact that it is a Children s Theater project. Perhaps outstanding among the talented players is Tommy Cork in the rart of Boggs, the manservant. Cork bobbs in and out of the scene in a manner which does full iustice to his name. The third act gives us a dis tinctive study in snores which not only have harmony, but a definite rythm. Here again, we must stop and marvel at the nasal quality obtained in Cork's tenor G. dur ing the last moments of the hun dred year slumber. Fairy's Tail. And then we come to the old caretaker who liecause of his cue missing habit has been appro priately tagged as the fairy's 'tail'' by other members ol the cast. Contrary to public opinion, the beauty does not snore. Perhaps it's the Emily Post influence. As for Hope Drummond in th'- role of the Sleeninc Brautv. wo can say onl yf one thing; she f ul ! I r-a m m m. r n I I Clyde RicCov . I .1 M fl I'd I tatiicl cut To acquire gay. cay feel ing of nonchalance, it is necessary to knew that you are well turned out. . . . Before your next formal, call on the Arrow dealer and re quest an Arrow dress shirt, collar, tie, and handkerchief, and be assured of authentic, correct style to the lait detail. How to pick up a good-looker! W hether or not you are having glamour trouble, Arrow Shirts have a way of stepping up jour appearance. They not only make you look better but jcel better. They have the Mitoga tailored fit, smart new patterns, and the best-looking collars that ever graced a neck. Sanforized Shrunk. Pick up a few of these good lookers today, at your nearest Arrow shop. S2 to S3.50 ARROW SHIRTS YOU CAN After the Ball Is Over... drop around for relaxation and a lot of fun at the Cot lee Lounge . . . where there'll be soft, soothing music by Ken Nelson Hnd his bund. . . by request. . . and all the eol- lepe Ronps yon en sing... pood food, as usual. . .in ensc you want to tret started celebrating- right... before the ball... how About a private dining room for 4 or 6 or 8 of vou...for dinner, wilh music: nut do make your reservations for a dinine room . . .call Mr. fledges and he will be glnl to help you plan your parly for before ...or rtrr...the ball. At liny rate... have yourself i time. . .tomorrow iiiirlit . . and have it at, the llople Capital, before and nfUr yoi enjoy yourself at the hall. HOTEL CAPITAL Professor Asks Classes to Give Him Criticism LEXINGTON, Ky. (IP . Have ou ever heard of a college pro fessor who asked for criticism . Well, there is one at the Univer sity of Kentucky, by the name of Dr. I C. Robinson, associate pro fessor of geology. Pr. Robinson has been anxmus for several years to know just how he was "going over with Jus stu dents, so he prepaifd a question naire for each of his students to ill out, omitting, however, the names or other means of identify-1 ng the students. What did Dr. Robinson Icttrn from his student? Mainly that he had an accurate knowledge of his subject, that hr rtuck to it, nd that he had a sense of humor. Oh yes, and that he was terrifi- cslly sarcastic. A leaf-raking holiday Is sched uled every year at Illinois college. STIAIIT Sum Showing! The Great Waltz llil M! KIM n I I HMMI I.NN T MIIJI. HlKJl ft r 1 L1XCOLX JOS RAWTORn ROni RT lOIM. Mi l IN POK. 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