The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, June 14, 1949, Page PAGE 4, Image 4

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    PAGE 4
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
Tuesday, June 14, 1949
I
He WAS TTOO DUMB TO PASS THE COURSE, SO
1 rvDC HIM A "READER J
Tickets Available for Aspen,
Colorado, Goethe Festival
Tickets for single days and for
series of three days at the Goethe
Bicentennial Convocation and Mu
sic Festival, to be held at Aspen,
Colorado, this summer, are now
available to university and college
students and professors.
Formerly the reservations could
be made only for the entire ten
day series. According to official
announcement, however, reserva
tions can be made for single days
on June 27, 28, 29 and for pack
ages of three days on July 1, 2, 3
or July 4, 5, 6.
ALBERT SCHWEITZER, world
famous physician, musician and
Exhibit Features
Drawing by Pool
A drawing by Dr. R. J. Pool,
University of Nebraska botanist,
will provide the basis for a
featured exhibit at the Inter
national Horticultural and Gar
den Exhibition to be held in
London, England this summer.
Exhibition directors are using
a drawing by Dr. Pool to pre
pare a working model of how
plant life works. The drawing,
prepared by Dr. Pool for one
of his widely used university
textbooks on botany, is designed
to show in a graphic manner the
structure of the world's greatest
factory the green plant which
combines air, water and sunlight
to produce its own development
and seeds or fruits which feed
man and animals and provide us
with other essentials of living.
The same drawing has already
appeared in several garden club
publications and in bulletins of
the soil conservation service of
the U.S.D.A.
author, will head the lecture
group. His subject will be "Goethe,
His Personality and His Work.
More than 30 other eminent schol
ars will take part in the convoca
tion program.
The music festival will feature
concerts by the Minneapolis Sym
phony orchestra, Dimitri Mitro
poulos conducting, and recitals
by Erica Morini, Herta Glaz, Mack
Harrell, Jerome Hines, Dorothy
Maynor, Artur Rubinstein, Gregor
Piatigorsky, Victor Babin and
Vitya Vronsky.
Also scheduled are two round
table discussions "Goethe and
Art Today" and "Ethics and Poli
tics." .
SPECIAL RATES for the con
vocation have been arranged for
students and professors as low as
$65 European plan for a ten-day
period, including all lectures and
concerts. Rates for the three-days
series will vary between $21.50
and $30,000, depending upon
choice of accommodations.
The second Tuesday series of
the festival will be held July
through July 16. All reservations
can be made through the Goethe
Bicentennial Convocation and Mu
sic Festival, Aspen, Colo.
All States Need
360 Quarts
Of lee Cream
Topflight high school students
260 of them arrived on campus
last Thursday to begin the ninth
annual three week All-State
course in music, speech and art,
Their payments of $65 in fees
touched off a chain reaction.
IN FIVE sorority houses, one
fraternity, and .one university
dormitory, 548 clean sheets were
flipped on 274 beds to help house
the students and their advisors.
From the Union's catering offi
ces, orders went out for 14,750
half pint bottles of milk, 1,000
loaves of bread, 5,400 eggs, 360
quarts of ice cream, 200 dozen
sweetrolls, 1,789 pounds of meat
and a ton and a half of potatoes.
A score ol prolessors and in
structors began the job of regis
tration. Toots and tones fairly
shook the sober faculty lounge as
instrumental and vocal try-outs
were held.
Carefully sounding their d's and
g's, instructors outlined courses
for more than 50 speech students.
AND FOR the first time, 17 stu
dents four of them scholarship
winners were scheduled for
courses in painting, drawing and
sculpture.
Meanwhile, the young people
themselves were busy renewing
acquaintances and making new
friends The bookstore did a
booming business in All-State
T-shirts and beanies and the ping-
pong room in the Union basement
began to look like the Coliseum
during a basketball game.
An open rehearsal of the band,
chorus and orchestra Sunday aft
ernoon was the first public per
formance of any of the groups.
The first student recital is sched
uled for Friday, June 17 at 7:30
p. m. in the Union ballroom.
Football
Schedule
The Nebraska Cornhuskers
will play 9 football games this
fall, five of them in Lincoln.
The schedule, as announced
Friday, is as follows:
Sept. 24 South Dakota in
Lincoln.
Oct. 1 Minnesota in Lincoln
(Dad's Day).
Oct. 8 Kansas State at Man
hattan. Oct. 15 Prnn Slate at State
Collete.
Oct. 22 Oklahoma in Lin
coln (Band Day).
Oct. 29 Missouri at Co
lumbia. Nov. 5 Kansas in Lincoln
(Homecoming).
Nov. 12 Iowa State at Ames.
Nov. 19 Colorado in Lincoln.
Classified
TUTORING math, physics, German Call
5-5831. $1 00 per hour.
FOR SALE Portable Underwood type
writer 125. Call 5-3631 after 5.
Moll a Father's Day
Card
TO your -favorite
Male
JSC , J ' 3 'i
AHeo'l 8ttt-lovd Creating Co'dt
IMORCROSS
Sold by the
GOLDENROD
21S North 14th Street
(Open Thursday to 9)
CORNHUSKER SPECIAL
FOR U OF N STUDENTS ONLY
0)231
AW'--
St
-- -Si
Don't leave money lying around. Come in and 'see
our new type of check designed esepcially for you.
We would like to have you see it at our bank
located conveniently at 13th & "O".
National Bank of Commerce
Member of Federal Depoiit Imuran Corporation.
Union Craft
Shop Opens
At 7 Tonight
Make it yourself!
That's the slogan of the Union
craft shop which opens at 7 o'clock
tonight.
The shop .located in the base
ment, of the Union, will be under
the direction of Miss Snell, for
mer university instructor and
crafts expert.
Students will have an oppor
tunity to work with textile paint
ing, block printing, cork, jewelry,
dresden craft and metal in the
shop.
The session will open with sev
eral demonstrations. Mrs. Meek,
president of the Nebraska hand
weaver's guild, will demonstrate
weaving and the construction of
looms. Mrs. Ruth Coleman will
demonstrate working with cork.
Mrs. Lynn Cosgrove will display
and explain working with tooled
metals.
After the display periods stu
dents will be asked to select the
type of materials they would like
to work with. Materials may be
purchased at cost. Equipment is
furnished free of charge by the
Union.
Then there was the cannibal's
daughter who liked the boys best
when they were stewed.
Your College CIolliinr Stor
Father's Day is June 19th I
f '
? Vf7 . y j
fn I
r iiwiiii
for expectant fathers
ARROW ARAZEPIIYR
ENSEMBLES
fhe summer scoop on how to keep Dad really happy
and cool. Arazephyr shirts and sports shirts are de
signed of a special broadcloth fabric with thousands
of tiny "windows"! The famous Arrow collar keeps
them smart looking. In white and summer colors.
Sizes 14 to 18 . . . some 36 sleeves.
x ' w f.ix,. r a. r. ii- r ..!
M J . - -
3
7 ir ,
i -' i
Shirts
Ties 1 and 150
Sport Shirts 00Kf
Handkerchiefs 65c
MAGEtrS Firtl Floor