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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1943)
DAILY NEBRASKAN Sunday, January 10, 1943 New Cream Cosmetic Gives Glamour Glow BY HELEN GOODWIN. Your skin, if cean and free of blemishes, can be made to glow with beauty if the use of proper makeup foundation is employed. Experimenting with several form ulas may be necessary before de termining the foundation which will do most for your type of skin but the result Is worth the effort. Making its debut most timely for the chapping weather is a new triple-duty formula, it is a lu scious, liquid cream which is tinted in a pearly flesh, and spreads on the skin easily. It provides a per fect base for blending paste cheek rouge or for powder and then pow dered rouge. As a lubricant and protective it also serves to keep your make-up looking: nice for many hours. This inexpensive cosmetic will help the co-eds who make up in the morning and not agam until late afternoon. A make-up foundation which comes in cake form serves for normal skins, or slightly oily one. This is applied with a piece of dampened cotton all over the face and neck and then blended with the fingertips. Your skin has a lovely film and your beauty is en hanced. Pat powder over it rather generously and then even it with a powder brush to whisk off any excess. The coed who has a dry skin may use this lasting base, but she should first use a bit of light cream on her skin for the product is slightly astringent. This base is obtainable in four exquisite com plexion shades that accommodate nearly all natural skin tones. Polish Is Lighter. As in years before the coeds will notice that there is a tendency to more natural lipstick and rouge antt nail polish shades. Deep true roses, pink-fleshes shades seem to UNEB Receives Bulletin on War Aid Broadcasts Station UNEB will soon begin direct co-operation with the Army and Navy in broadcasting new programs of particular military interest. Tne Collegiate Station announced mis atter receiving a special bulletin from the Inter collegiate Broadcasting System of xsevv York City. All eighteen college radio sta tions affiliated with IBS will co operate in a nationwide program of assisting the War Department and aiding tne war effort. Specific details as to the exact nature of the military programs are not yet available. Chesterfield Begins New Advertising Campaign Theme Urging its readers and listeners to send cigarettes regularly to men in uniform, Chesterfield is opening us i43 advertising campaign with a series of ads with a "buy war bonds-write letters-send Chester fields" theme. The advertisement is illustrated with the picture of an attractive young woman dressed in the uni form of the American Women's Voluntary Services. In one hand she holds a sheaf of war bonds and stamps and in the other a letter and a carton of cigarettes. UNEB... 1600 SUNDAY: 5:30 Jam Session Newman Club Sign off Prairie Schooner Campus Gossip by Marg Christensen and Bill McBride Mystery Melodies by Bud Levinson and Dave Rosenburg Daily Nebraska n of the Air by Hank Lee UNEB Sports Parade by Bob Hyde Popular Music by Harry James Good night. MONDAY: 10.30 Popular Music Campus Gossip Music Makers Daily Nebraskan of the Air UNEB Sports Parade Special Basketball In terview Popular Music ' 5:45 6:00 10:30 10:45 11:00 11:15 11:20 11:30 12:00 10. -45 11:00 11:15 11:20 11:30 11:45 be high in favor. For evening be neath artificial lighting, some of the more exotic make-up ia worn. When buying make-up, buy it assembled that la with lipstick, rouge and nail polish from the same firm. These harmonies are carefully planned. If you shop wisely, you will discover three make-up sets of -iifferent shades that will harmonize with every thing in your wardrobe. There should be no clashing of colors then and glamour you will have! Trinity May Admit Women Trinity college, Hartford, Conn., is debating a proposal to admit women for the first time to coun teract the drain on the student body growing out of selective service. A poll taken by the Trin ity "Tripod, college weekly, re veals that undergraduates and in structors are almost evenly di vided on the idea. Urge Journalism Schools to Speed Training of Coeds A plan whereby Journalism stu dents could be fitted for Jobs in as short time as one year to relieve the critical shortage of trained newspaper men who have entered the armed services was recently suggested by the national council on professional education in the Journalism field. The council, which represents the "big five" newspaper a"Kcia tions. urged the nation's journal ism schools to inaugurate "con centrated" courses in journalism in a new "speed-up" program. The plan contemplates that these stu dents mostly girls would return to complete their Journalism courses at the end of the war. Prof. I. U Sharfman, chairman of the department of economics, has been named Henry Russel lec turer at the University of Michi gan for 1942-43. ChiO Announces Betrothal . . I - I X v I '2 y H. Courtesy Lincoln Journal. Miss Dorothy Miller announces her engagement to Barton Baker II. Miss Miller is affiliated with Chi Omega sorority and Baker is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon. ;.'..r.v. " . . , - -T- J. A . I .afSXt APAl G-UWftS 7fi 3 at cwf rotm 77v?ca S HOW DO 7?fy MOW WH0S BUlTS MV S MAP Mrs? 9&p A 1 aftcx srrzrs TRAWMAT7 AtfAPV TO ClASTTVSAVS FJiOAfTA SAZtff ft Time To Sponsor Student's Current Event Quiz Here . Register at Union r!hrftfor Identification, multi ple choice, map identification, quo tations no, it isnx a nnai in nis- tory. It ia Time magazine's semi annual current events quiz. Time's current events quie a contest will be given on the cam nim Sundiiv afternoon. January 24, to a limited number of contestants. Fifty undergraduates or graduate students mav enter this contest on world affairs by registering at the Union check stand Derore January ift If the limit of fifty contes tants is reached and any organ ized house does not nave a repre sentative In the contest, that house may enter a contestant even after the limit is reached. The contest covers only present- day current event questions on world affairs with a few question on current literature, art, and; science. Questions will include character identification, multiple choice, map identification, quota tlons, and picture identification. Replacing the team system which was used last year in the contest, individuals will work sep arately on the written questions during the hour required for the quiz. A contest suggests prizes. Win ncr of the quiz will be entitled to receive either a world globe or any $5 book he may choose. The runner-up will be given a $2.50 book he may pick out. ROCT Status . . . (Continued from Page 1.) Army Specialized Training Pro gram is initiated at UN these stu dents will be called to active duty and will continue their studies here until graduation in May. After graduation they will be sent to their respective branch schools and then be commissioned. Present luniors in advanced drill in the ERC. like the seniors, will be called to active duty when UN begins its Army Specialized Trainine Procram and will remain in school until the end of next 6emester. Receive Commissions. After this, they will be sent to replacement centers and will re ceive training corresponding to senior advanced drill. Officer candidates school are next on tab and after successful completion of raining they will receive their commissions. Details for the actual induction of those senior and junior ad vanced ROTC students who are not in the ERC are being worked out between the university and the state selective boards. After induction they will follow the same procedure as ERC students. Regarding courses for next semester Dean Thompson advises students to follow prescriptions outlined in the joint agreement of the Army and Navy in its joint ERC program. There are no course requirements for those in the Army reserve. Transfer Later. The Army plans to discharge students pledged to the Navy, Ma rines, and Coast Guard so that they may enlist in the branch of their choice. The actual trans ferring will occur when such groups are called to active duty. These students must follow course prescriptions. Those in V-l of the Navy must have one year of college math, in cluding trignometry, and a year of physics. There are no require- Shc'i GtafcU Ob Anything Bat LlTt-4i( iki woald.1 rUk her V . Fftur j I 1:;-S:S ,,n. .V fi:34-7:4S with Geerre Prise Dla BRENT LANE jagg r 1 Mrrj- J "Our Russian Ally" A News TODAY 30c til t P. M. College Coeds Aren't So Dumb Census Reveals One out of every seven Ameri cans over 25 years old 10,104,000 of them are "functionally" il literate, according to the 1940 U. S. censusmore than three times the number of college graduates. The definition of "functional" comes from army standards which require the equivalent of a fourth grade education and the ability to read a daily newspaper for the admission of selectees. By this definition, the illiterates are barred from the army, have a re stricted usefullness in war indus tries and cannot fulfill their duties as citizens. The largest number of illiterates come from states with the great est population: New York, with more than 1,000,000; Pennsylvania with 696.000; Texas with 642.000; and Illinois with 462,000. By races, the breakdown is 7,300 whites, 2,700.000 Negroes and 100,000 all others. Of the white total, 4.200, 000 are native born and 3,100,000 foreign born. ments for Naval Air Corps reserv ists in V-5. Those in V-7 must complete two semesters of math, including trig. Marine reservists must take courses leading to graduation and obtaining of a de gree. , Col. J. P. Murphy stated no more contracts to new advanced course students will be let How ever, next semester students may take advanced drill courses, he added. Those pre-med students in the ERC will probably have taken screening tests, but their status has not definitely been decided. ,H7;..i,.i.im s -.Wife m-: l-:U: i!:et" JANE 7ITHERS M " f 2 w DOC3GE3DOY HUI W M-im M Mr"JMMff MWHWrJ A thi S Serr. Mra 0 Co-Feature T Bamnr Hit at tha Smsaa Iff Dynamlta WEAVER BROS. and ELVIRT The Old Homestead" U3QSRY STATE 'd f,