Friday, November 10, 1939 lilt uaili nr,uuwiii iiiMwmrrr-"'" mmmwm aw mmmmmmmmm mm mmmmmimsmmsimmmm Lmiunimu:i!iuT:MuiM?i:uHi:nuu::::jt)iu;ni!;muiiHUMuiiiTriUMmami(Mitiiur!iiJmm! LWj;rKa(!mutMiTSiuiHtii:;irMuni?mnu;uuMtiiMu:!niiiiuiKmiunMiuiiii!i!mitiimut the women M SOCIETY Pep queen takes center Homecoming Homecoming la the signal for Corncobs and Tassels, Innocents, sororities and fraternities to entertain tonight and tomorrow with a round of open houses, dances, and house parties. Biggest event of the weekend is the Corncob-Tassel carnival and dance tomorrow evening in the Union ballroom. Climax of the eve ning will be the presentation of the new Pep queen. Good luck to the six candidates: Jane Shaw, Marian Bradstreet. Betty O'Shea, Betty Jo Smith, and Margaret Krause. HOUSE PARTIES will begin tonight with the AOPi 'Harlem Swing." Tomorrow the Tri Delts will entertain at a "Milky Way" perty. Some of those attending are Alice Blackstone and Sigma Chi Don Hartman, Cay Deurmyer and Beta Ted Welton, Charlotte Kouba and Sigma Nu Jim Roberts, and Frances Breed and Phi Psi Tom Dredla. The Sigma Nus will have a "backyard" party, with the music of Jonesy, the campus piano player, and his orchestra. Attend ing together will be; Bob Moffett and Pi Phi Susan Shaw, Neal Hilmes and Alpha Phi Nancy Halligan, and Bud Buzard and Theta Barbara York. "TWELFTH STREET BLUES" is the theme of the PiKA party. PiKA's and their dates are: Dwight Burney and Kappa Mary Beeson, Bob Malsten and Theta Virginia Stoddard, Walter Simmon and Delta Gamma Louise Malmberg, and Carl Bartule and Pi Phi Betty Baker. The Chi Omega will have foot ball as the theme of their party. Vivian McCauley and Lucille Cox have dates with Kappa Sigs Dick Bisgard and Bob Rothwell. Joan Green will attend with Rex Bessire and Alyce Hackman with Bob Bar ber, Farmhouse alum. Another couple who will be cele brating homecoming together are beauty queen, Betty Cox and Ralph Ludwick, S. A. E. Xi Psi Phi, honorary dental fraternity, will celebrate with party at the Lincoln hotel tomor row night. ATO alumni and their wives will be guests at a 6:30 homecoming dinner tomorrow eve ning in the Union. Banquets will be held by the Gamma Phis and the Sigma Kap pas tomorrow evening. Sima Kappa announces the pledging of Carroll Petersen, Au rora. Sigma Chi initiated Cal Parmele, Don Hartman, Don Mar ler, Art Kleinhaus and Fred Schneider last night. Province president Mrs. Leslie Deal of Denver will arrive this evening for a three day visit at the local chapter. Mrs. H. M. LeSourd, of Boston, grand sponsor of Kappa Phi, will arrive today to visit Kappa This here. With Mrs. Cecil Molzen, na tional program chairman, she will be honored at a dinner this eve ning at the Union. Alums and K. U. students will take over the various houses this weekend. The Kappas expect 27, the Pi This 20, the AOPi's 10. The Homecoming Pep Queen Will Be Presented Advance Sale 85c per Couple WORST DRESSED OF THE WEEK (Kdltor's note: This comment on Nc hruski clothes Is ft satirical protest regis tered by Holly Bhurtlcff, with apologies to Daphne du Maurler. ) Last night I dreamt I was at Manderley University. The best dressed girl for the year of our Lord, nineteen-hundred and forty, was being presented to a group of gaping spectators. The best-dressed girl was Rebecca. Rebecca was rolled from the wings of the theater and onto the stage in a wheel-chair designed by the great master of surrealism, Dali. The unique vehicle had ap parently been conceived by Dali when in his most ingenious mood, for it consisted of an over-stuffed Panda bear on wheels. The poor bear had been decapitated and in the place of its own head were the two heads of worn college coeds who had been shopping two months for formals to wear to the Mili tary Ball. Ker-plunk! Rebecca stepped heavily from her throne. (She could not step lightly because she was wearing 20 pounds of jewelry which had cost her a dollar the pound.) Rebecca walked towards the front of the stage in her platform-soled, wedge-heeled shoes. It was then that I saw why she had been chosen as the best dressed girl of Manderley College for the year nineteen-hundred and forty. Rebecca evidently held a high regard for the "unusual" in dress and had created a new phase in surrealism of combination which Paris had not even thought of. She stood before us acclaimed, ad mired and respected for her stylish originality. Rebeccas facial make-up was the first unusual characteristic that I noticed. She had painted two lips around her eyes, two eyes on her cheeks, a nose on her fore head, and a mustache across her nose, all of which caused a mild sensation in the audience. Just too, too ! Rebecca was wearing Balenci- aga's formal infantana head-dress with a plaid tarn o'shanter cover ing the exposed part of her lovely green hair. She wore a charming cardigan sweater which was the height of bad taste, and the length of her knees. Rebecca "bustled" around the stage sporting a caudal plumage of ostrich feathers which has never been equalled by dame or beast. The winning point. But now as I reflect upon Re becca's winning costume I realize that it wasn't the dress or the make-up which won for her the notable distinction of best-dressed girl. The articles of clothing to which I attribute her success were the popular half-stockings which she wore so well. She had cleverly chosen the type which looked most like long winter underwear. Re becca wore them with an air, the air of a hockey player. Sad truth. As I awakened this morning with a splitting headache, 1 thought that I had left Manderley forever, so I blithely walked around the Nebraska campus com pletely free of Rebecca. Then sud denly I saw them. A pair of red ones, a pair of white ones, a pair of blue ones, marching marching. You'll Be Sorry If You Don't Come to the Corncob Tassel Party DUSTY ROADES and HIS ORCHESTRA Featuring HELEN NASH, The Four Dusters, Mixed Quartet Heard from Hotel Muehlbach, K. C. . . . Hotel Jefferson, St. Louis . , , Edgewater Beach Hotel, Chicago . . . Chez Paree, AT THE STUDENT UNION BLDG., SATURDAY, 9 to 12 GET YOUR TICKET FJ10M ANY CORNCOB OR TASSEL Men advise lovelorn coeds Here's how (Editor's note: The fullo'.lnK article was printed In the Minnesota Pally, Minneiip olls, as the result of a questionnaire cir culated by the women students governing association.) Coeds - do you want to know how to get your man? Colleee men can tell you, or at least they can give their opinions as they did in the questionnaire given out recently by WSGA. The average girl lacKS Drains, 75 percent of the men said. Fif teen percent said she lacks per sonality and 10 percent were of the opinion that conversational ability is missing. In order to be successtui ai man-catching, a girl must, accord ing to the men: 1. Raise her mental standards. 2. Improve her conversation. 3. Smoke and drink less. 4. Dress simply. 5. Above all, do these things naturally. In addition to presenting this five-point program for getting the man, the men answered a number of questions on the Ideal Girl. "Do you like girls to accompany you in smoking and drinking?" was one of the questions put to them. "There's nothing more objec tionable than a drunken girl," was Music sorority sponsors recital First in a series of Sunday fac ulty recitals at the Union will be Sunday at 3 p. m. It is presented by the fine arts school and spon sored by Mu Gamma chapter of Mu Phi Epsuon, national music sorority. Miss Marian Wolfe, cellist, Mr. Frank Cunkle, organist, Mr. Her mann Decker, vocalist, and Mr. Earnest Harrison, accompanist, are to present selections at this faculty seres program. It is the intention of the sponsors to make faculty talent available to the students. The program is open to the public. Gollomb's spy story purchased by library Armies of Spies, by Joseph Gol lomb, forms a thorough study in up-to-date fashions in spydom, to say nothing of mayhem and mur der. Md. Gollomb is the only Am erican journalist ever to get past certain doors in Scotland Yard, in the French Surete and detective schools, and ether undercover agencies. AmonK the timely books are two new ones, Annies of .spies, by Joseph (iol l(.ml). and ln-llr (irnnuny, by Albert C. (irzt'sinskl. Kor those tired of war the hooks llnlliidn and Solus from Ohio, by Mary ). Kdily and Drawing with I'rn and Ink, by I.. Oll'llll. Other bonks on the list are: HrM Klfty, by Ijiwrenie Bulieock. Koitrr Sherman, by R. 8. Honrdmiin. liCHtrr K. Ward, Anierlrun Arlntolle, by Samuel Chut-'orman. When social Work was Young, by Ed ward T. Pevine. How ( ongrc Makes Ijiwr, by C. C. Dill. lanrM Italy, by William Khenatrtn. Muni hdncatlonal Opporliiiiltlr for Yonth, by Newton Kdwarcls. Trice (nut nil, by K. W. Orether. Inoide Asia, by John (iunlher. IHoliilin iif lie Hiipxlitirc Monarchy, by () ar Jas,1. Ability ii ( I lie States In uppe.rt Kd il eal Inn, iy John K Noiton. Kean, by lilies I'layfair. Mandorlev is cone but the mem ory of Rebecca and her half-socks is still present for I see them every day on the u. of N. cam pus. I aso have a headache. if to get a fel la the opinion. The majority of the comment were not so strong against smoking as against drink ing. Opinions on the girl who asks a man to parties when he has never dated her were divided evenly. "How much do you like girls to talk?" brought forth the answer "as long as she has sometning interesting to say." Small talk not the silly kind men empha sized as a very Important part of conversational charm. Men advised girls to read the sports page. Forbidden topics of conversa tion, as far as the men are con cerned, are clothes and the girl's other dates. Switching the subject from the girl to the man, the questionnaire asked if he would ask the girl to go on the street car if his car broke down half an hour before time to go out. Most of the boys said, "No, you can't park a street car." In considering the relative merits of dancing and conversa tional ability, 97 percent of the men asserted that conversational ability is much more essential SILK 3 and 4 Tiread Gcnuina CREPE - f W if VAiLUf 4 VI 3 Pairs for $2.95 A new experience In hosiery satisfaction for our legion of Bijou customers! TLASTICIZING a newly developed process makes the silk threads in these stockings SMOOTHER, MORE STREAMLINED thus assuring more wear more snag-resistance more value for every dolVir you spend! A full range of exclusive "Powdered Illusion" shades to choose from. Sizes 814 to 11. Short, Medium or Long. If You Have Enough Sense to Come In Out of the Rain, We Know That We'll See You at the Homecoming Carnival BEST DRESSED OF THE WEEK Chosen as representing the best in campus clothes thiB week is Shirley Russell, for her sleek and casual green wool garb which she designed to win second place in Madomoiselle's "Design for a Living" contest in August. Distinctive are the side welt seams (like those on polo coats) which hold the dress together, up and down front and back and the loose, bracelet-length sleeves as well as around the reversed col lar and arm holes. Plus these it has: snug waist bound by wide green girdle, fiared skirt, pockets below the shoulder, and brass but tons on the waist and sleeves. She is adding an ascot scai-f to her own version. Similarly smooth is the soft green wool crepe dress which Shirley won as a prize for her de sign. 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