The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, July 13, 1939, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THE NEBRASKAN, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1939
PAGE THREE
Safety meeting
is annual event
Iowa State conference
success brings decision
AMES, Iowa. The "accent on
safety" became a little more pro
nounced this week when it was
announced that the safety educa
tion conference at Iowa State col
lege, which closed recently, would
be made an annual event.
So great an interest was shown
by the 250 persons attending the
three day meeting that a continua
tion to include a wider scope of
safety activities was decided upon.
Lauer said that requests have
been received from the University
of Iowa and Iowa State Teachers'
college for a joint regional safety
conference next year.
It was generally agreed by the
majority of those present at the
conference that states should have
a highway speed limit. Fifty miles
at night and 60 miles per hour
during the day were conceded as
reasonable and practical limits.
Art student ,
(Continued from page 1.)
terpiecea of painting by Rem
brandt, Franz Hals, Peter de
Hooch, Jjn Van Meer, Jan Steen,
and others. And an almost fan
tantic impression of traffic jam
caused, not by automobiles, but bi
cycles some 50 closely crowded
together awaiting the GO signal.
The bicycle is much in evidence in
Holland as a principal means of
transportation, over one million
being in use there.
German refugees too
A Dutch boat from Rotterdam
completed the students' exodus
from Europe to the United States.
On board, in addition to the usual
passenger list, were a number of
German refugees on their way to
a more hospitable land. She found
during her short stay in Holland,
that Hitler is ardently disliked and
that the people were greatly agi
tated by the threat of war. with its
added threat of German troops
forcing their way thru the little
Dutch Republic.
Arrived in New York, the brief
expatriate, with scholarship duly
transferred to the New York
Shcool of Fine and Applied Art.
settled down for the remainder of
the school year.
And so the school vear and the
art classes ended. A portfolio full
of beautifully executed fashion il
lustrations is the tangible proof of
the value of the year which Miss
Schwake spent in study in her be
loved field. A year begun wonder
fully in Paris, and ending, just as
wonderfully, in New York.
Hoopei
(Continued from page 1.)
Last year he designed and con
structed an electric ice cream
freezer. The machine chipped the
ice and turned the freezer.
His prize invention, one that
has afforded him the most amuse
ment, is a grapefruit spoon, which
is guaranteed protection to the
consumer. As the spoon is inserted
in the fruit, a small umbrella un
folds, completely shielding the
user.
Wish now-
(Continued from page 1.)
Stuart theater symphony, and was
guest concert master with the Om
aha Symphony several years ago
when the eminent pianist, Guy
Maier, was soloist.
The Lincoln violinist graduated
from the University of Nebraska
in 1932, with a bachelor of fine
arts degree. He studied for seven
summers with Jacques Gordon at
Falls Village, Conn., and has ap
peared in several public perform
ances with the Gordon string quar-
Diers to study script
writing with Corwin
Theodore Diers, university radio
director, will attend a writers con
ference at the University of Colo
rado, Boulder, July 24 to Aug. 12.
He will study radio script writing
under Norman Corwin, director of
the "Words Without Music" pro
gram heard each Sunday after
noon over the Columbia network.
tet, two of them being broadcast
over the NBC network.
Mr. Wishnow received his mas
ter's degree this June from New
York University. He majored in
musicology, which is a scientific
study of music embracing history,
acoustics, and a phase of history
concerned with the authenticity of
manuscripts.
Mr. Wishnow will leave Lin
coln later in the month for Music
Mountain, Falls Village, Conn.,
where he will teach and continue
his study of the violin with Gor
don. He will return to Lincoln
Sept. 1 in time for the opening
of classes.
Broken Bow Rotary
hears museum man
C. Bertrand Schultz, assistant
director of the University of Ne
braska State Museum, addressed
the Broken Bow Rotary club
Tuesday on fossil collecting in Ne
braska. He illustrated his talk
with movies taken at various fos
sil sites over the state.
BULLETIN.
Any softball team interested
in an out of town game is re
quested to write to Tommy
Wright, manager of the Goeh
ner, Neb., town team. His club
is open for night games at
Goehner on almost any night of
the week.
Steak fry-
(Continued from page 1.)
and publicity are Normr.n Thorp.
Walter Beggs, Allen Lichenberger,
and Chester Carkoski. Tickets,
priced at fifty cents per head,
may be purchased from any of
the members of this committee or
at the student union office.
Near girls cabin
The site of the picnic will be
the Pioneers picnic grounds near
the brown girls activity cabin.
This is located just west of the
circular paiking area.
The committee is putting up
posters to explain the program,
and to serve as a constant re
minder of the date. "Buy tickets
that more concrete estimates of
nt once," Farrow urges, "in order
the attendance may be made."
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
10 PER LINE
WANT round trip tuKwuffri to Cali
fornia or New Vmk. Slwrp ntX'tiM
NVw rttr. Addre. Sup!. Jonald Hxtv
Mllloi d. N. br. Phone 184-W. or 14-ifi
I'lum. Lincoln.
iWVING to Boud-r7 Coluiado." Julv 12
Wili tkp two paswrineis. Phone
jrWKI.EO I'all.tdwn iin lot Saluid.iv
on mrnim. phone I-il!4. Reward.
University Men's
Steals Fry
Tuesday, July 18
PIONEERS PARK
Games Start at 2 P. M.
Tickets 50c at t'nion Drsk
SUMMER
SHOE SALE
$)95
and $3
95
Broken Lots Odd Pairs of Former
H $5, $6.50 and $7.50 Styles
WHITE BLUE BROWN TAN
PATENT JAPONICA
131 S. 13,
ulver:
kFINE FOOTWEAR
May enlarge air corps
orK. U. to 100 in fall
LAWRENCE, Kas. July 5. The
Civil Aeronautics program of the
federal government, which was in
stalled at the University of Kansas
this spring, may be enlarged, and
from 80 to 100 students will re
ceive the pilot's training next fall,
according to Prof. Earl D. Hay of
the K. U. School of Engineering.
Twenty students completed the
course early this month.
Serving Students for
21 Years
YOUR LENSES DUPLICATED
EYES EXAMINED
Dunlap Optical Co.
120 No. 12th St.
J
V m Nil
Mr
THRIFT BASEMENT
3-JhhecuL Chiton,
SILK HOSE
Pair
2 Prs. 1.35
TR REGULARS of a higher
price line. Popular, full
fashioned (silk hose, constructed
ith a "heel-within-a-heel" and
angle knit loe guard. A very
practical hose for dress and
street vear.
Thrift Rntmnl.
Iflil-l-EP L PAfOr
T ID DEN IP n USE
PRESENTS "S.
V?NV SY ,.-.. !rAWMV-teV Starred in
fj-r i , ss4r "Svr - - s 8 ri,urfs in Ls a
f - JtD U "iLVH llii I vi!k !fS Croy in ' Pennies From Heaven"
LK XW-SS ISllt " .Vilify and "Doctor Khlhm." Mm West 1
jiyr ' ' -u. I in "Goin Plates." Jack Benny's 1
J K v sj;r fZi'- I "Artists and Models." I
AZ f A til C rw M ill Highest Paid Colorfd Leader I
yyOt lrm " -"- Has Made More Decca
V1 SY K V f ITl M -J Kccordinfs Than Any
T If rri rl Pr X rr Orchestra 1
'L N
V
In a 40 Minute Floor Show
Advance tickets 1.00 ea. at UnL Drug Store,
14th & S, or Danielson Floral Co., 1306 N St.
Adm. at the door 1.25 ea.