Page 2 THE NEBRASKAN CHRIS' GOOD EATS Air Conditioned Chill Hambanren Hot I)os Home Made Pies 244 No. 13th ! I ! On the Way to School Stop in for Breakfast ! t ! RENT CARS For P5 year we have furnished rent cars to summer students, 24 hour service, no red tape, low rates. Your business invited. MOTOR OUT CO. 1120 P St. 2-6819 LEARN TO DANCE Where It Is Cool Call for Appointments LUELLA WILLIAMS 1220 D Phone -42M RECORDS AT WALTS The iarrest stork ef phonograph rec ord! in Lincoln, Victor, Bluebird, Columbia and Orrca included. Also see oar Portable Phonograph. II0..-rfl and lip. 1144 O St. WALT'S Lincoln Tonight's the Night! HENRY rlattison's BAND Playing 9 fo 12 in the CWl -fojtdition&i Union. 10c Per Person ALWAYS COOL IN LINCOLN'S LEADING THEATRES! NOW SHOWING Rosalind RESELL in .1 I KJ THEY Mt. with Peter lRRlus. All Seats T" " LINCOLN TiiiiiliE iiiihiiiium - r . lnV Starts jam'""!; . Jr . Vr Blurt orR HOPE Dorothy Lamour in "Caugnt in the uran STUARl NrJ 7rn" ANNE SHIRLEY "West Point Widow" With Rirhsrd Carl.om . .. .it por YOir iiimiufh CUhLdixi 3sbatL by John Mackey IIito is some mighty tasty news for Husker's running, jumping and throwing funs. Track Coach Kd Weir has re turned from the X. C. A. A. gathering at Palo Alio with the reports that Lincoln is the sjot favored by coaches and athletes for the 1!U2 carnival. Chicago is the only other town listed for a meet which will go the middlewost. So far a sports writer from the Windy City lias guaranteed a 10 thousand dollar gate receipt at Soldier's Field, which looms as the only obstacle. Nebraska's triumvirate of cinder track fav.ie carried the Scarlet and Cream colors and fourteen points to a seventh place in a field of 35 teams. Harold Hunt realized a childhood am bition by jumping over 14 fec-t and tying for first place notice at 14 feet plus two inches with Cumin Smith of California. Harold jumped 13 feet six inches against Smith during Ne braska's first invasion of the oeast conference early last spring, liill Lyda, Oklahoma's masterful 410 v.ir.l ilih ?Vi7ni. down in defeat at the will of Red Littler, as the Kvd Kaoer i.tn.f tiume lourm in a blanket tinisli won bv Southern Cal's Huber Kern in the time 40.(5 second off the world record which California's Oover Klemmcr, Tattler's chief rival this season, etm.-ill. iwohiIv m;i., Cinn handicapped by a seven ikvuik! weight loss due to a recent in nre, uppeti ine scaups at ll'l pounds and finished sixth in a race oxiiertlv handled hv New YorL i:i,;i,;tv', Leslie -MacMitchell. Nebraska's Iir-lKv Adams, who lonn.i ..if .y - ' V.-.1IV,. Ili. v"l VFU till oiled beaches at Grand Island, and who finished second to Hob i raser in tne state tournament last week, qualified Tuesday in the National Intercollegiate tournament with 303." in add ition to his first day's 79 for a total of 153. Robert Hrownell trom Duke who qualified will, a Ul fril'A iklln ......... of l.is fust taste of the caliber of golf as played bv the bigger boys from the eastern schools. Hob r.urruss. as bo w.it i;ii J ; r i i. .. ,i . ' ' - in mi- voiiinusKcr iooinan programs for the past three years, and now 2nd Lieutenant wilh I nele Sam's air force, has earned himself m,itc a sen sational bit of ballvhoo tlir t.-ivt t-.. i i.,.. . , . . !- ii'vi "i uinf dins, jion was (luolod in a rlaMiiir KimH i..nr,,. o, ....... i . r ii . i . . . " - - i i"- -i'"' "i i lie orid Jieraitl as mtu-izmg today s college foolball as a highly commercial- ": ""7; '"M,u "l concealed hv pastime scem-rv " Lieutenan P.ob also took a rap at the lax manner in which the eligibility codes were observed. All in all and in Ihe final analysis of H,p snai.T.er-b.nL- T1..1.V o.t;..i,. i .... ci'iv xi lint lm io i ...i j , i " JO ..mi.. ii ,tnu miiui lie expects to accomplish. fi,l1Ili1ftinSSriTT"I,1-"'JIi1';,'-y f pri,,iron fa,,lc' J'"V out fielder for St. Louis Cardinals are doing their bit to keep the mine town , the sports page headlines. Harry made his con tributions last fall with the aid of a football and his hi -d-j nv.ng legs dohnny , doing his share this .umn.er as a nen.lKT of the gasl,use gang with the aid of his big, heavv .t and a pair .f brawny arms dohnny, who made hccdle l. s ory ln his home town un,1er the tutelage of Thurlo V Ic rrady clouted 1 hymer ami 1 triple against tLe lkitoi' l.raw to bring home four runs in a 13 1 rout Travel Hour series Monday "Matto Grosso," a fuD length movie on the wilderness of west ern Brazil, will be the feature on the Union Travel Hours series, Monday, at 7:30 p. m. in Parlors XYZ. The film records the expedi tion of Capt. Vladimir Perfilieff into the uncivilized regions, where primitive savages hunt jaguars with spears. Oddities recorded are the blood thirsty Piranha fish, the vampire bat, rodents weighing a hundred pounds, tapir, river otter, arma dillo, along with the actual sound record. Bridge tourney starts Saturday Students may register today for the Union contract bridpe tourna ment Saturday niRht in Tarlors A and B. The Union checkstand will take names of couples today, and if any complete couple appears Saturday night, they will be ad mitted to the tournament. The complete tournament will be played off at 8 p. m., and prizes will be awarded. Hiskey talks at deaf school Dr. Marshall S. Hiskey of the department of educational psy chology and measurements will address the national convention of American Instructors of the Deaf at the Missouri State School for the Deaf in Fulton, June 25. His Bubject will be "Testing the Young Deaf Child,- and be will introduce his new performance test for young deaf children which has just been standardized. The BIG Celebration mm I Mr n -rrwfl! likely reveals tear experiences on continent Walter Illsely, an American stu dent caught in Berlin at the out break of the war, told his experi ences at a summer school lecture in the Union Wednesday. Now a student at Michigan State college, lllsley was trapped in the German capital when hos tilities arose, and he was unable to reach the United States until October, 1940. Having inherited some money from a German rel ative he was attempting to spend it by attending school there since he could not transfer it to this country. When the war began, lllsley bicycled to Denmark but was forced to return to Germany with the invasion there. He then went to Norway, but again the German invaders intervened in his plans of escape, escape. After that he vol unteered his services in a Finnish munitions factory and later worked in the American embassy in Berlin. He finally succeeded in getting out of Europe by sailing from Tetsamo, Finland, which is 300 miles north of the Arctic circle. i PLAY AT i S EAST HILLS CLUB C.OLnXG SWIMMING 0 A DRIVING RANGE OTEN A EVENINGS MIIl.KR S Only Slop in NHtRSKa MON.,JUNE30 GLENN MILLER lately, Fratnrinc: 1 ' Taula Kelly I Ray Eberly CJ 23 and the AV T IMVitrrnairrt ' RadlO S: ' L Field Adm I f I 40 Fa. After June i.t $1 05 La. Ni(ht or the Dure Tirketx on Sale at Rosrwell Floral Co , IH So. l:h or I'ni lrc 1 P ILiT Prices Have Been Join the Spree to Capitol Beach Pool! 2:30-P.M. Tuesday, July 1, From the Union FREE TRANSPORTATION! Register at Union Checkstand by Monday Eve. 28c Admission at Pool SMASHED oi, JthsL SstvuaiionaL atile of Music BOBBY vs. CHARLIE F1SEHI at OiJu-ajokiL SSaUhoom. Where Summer Dancing is Truly Comfortable. 5 MILES WEST ON "0" AdiiiissioEn 27c