The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 14, 1930, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THREE
TtlKSDAY. OCHHtrH II. I'i.'Ut.
M ini litii l' M'llDtvt l!
I -
SOCIETY
Mitrhall atmteint trand
maeler of llta Higma llle. I
. visiting Iho local Beta Heta chap
' ur of that fraternity. Monday
morning he as entertained at
hreaklaat m the Lincoln hotel.
8eventy-flve members of the ae
live chapter and alumni greeted
him. He was also ll"t l hn'
quel el the chapter house in the
veiling. Approximately aeventy
five were at the banquet.
Mr. Mitchell 1 one of the two
living charter member of the fra
temiiy. Ht home la In Monte
Carlo, Frame.
Mary Sutton. Lincoln: Hetty
Ward. TeVumseh. and Naula Tor
trr Neodesha. Ka., became mem
bers of Delta Delta Delta Friday
night.
Kathrvn Ourle presided over a
tea, for the pledge of Delta Delta
lta on Sunday afternoon In her
borne al 1W0 South Twenty-third.
Mm. Talcott of Croft on ' the
weekend gueet of her daughter,
Marjorle. at the Trl-Delta home.
Among the Trl-Delti who apent
the weekend away from the cam
pus were Mercedea Flsk. Beverly
Martin. Beth Gregg. Lucille Davie.
Kathryn Kuhl. Iorothy Jensen.
Dorothea Mason. Betty Ward and
Naldn Torter.
Bonita Ivlns waa the weekend
client of Dorsle Jacke of Dodge.
k Other Alpha Chi Omegaa spend
Ing the weekend at their home
were Myrtle Thomaa and Helen
rfesler. Omaha: Margaret Swen
on. Oakland; Arleen Steeple. Os-
I ceola. and Leona Folda, Howells.
CHEMISTS HAVE PICNIC.
Graduate atudenta In the depart
ment of chemistry picnicked at the
Lincoln Auto park Saturday. The
outing was sponsored hy Phi
Lambda Upsllon. national hono
rary chemistry fraternity for
men.
Have You Tried the
New Greens
AT TMg
Circus Gol!
RECTOR'S
L
1) and
"The Student's Store"
LEARN TO DANCE
Will guarantee to teach you to
dance in six private lessons.
Ballroom and Tap
Special Course In
Ballroom Variations
fl danra for sltirtrnta.
t.e.n morning, afle moon sun
rvriiint: hy appointment.
Lee A. Thornberry
I. KM . Prlvats Studio . 2:10" Y St.
She ria..Ufi
when th.""- .
...en wnat.
CLARA
BOW
lei U .
Oellelou.iy Homannc
"HER
WEDDING
NIGHT"
Charlts Hugglej
Skeets Gallagher
"'Ph Porbet
' STAGt
The levtett.
youthful itari-.
THE
CRAY FAMILY
JIMMY LUCAS
Uitk
,r. ana roof
of 1930"
CTI I A
STAGE BAND
Harriet Cruse
Afty Pox
STUART
9 .
V H ' if
V v .'1
0, J.
- - I
r i n "
Matinee
r L.
Itth snd "O
"" ---" ?7T"I rTTTi
I Lunch j
J AT
i
one (a -v
AW
A.
AW.
'younger generavwn a iw
12 to!
tries '
Admission
10c
y i io o W &v
6 to 10 lOc-SOe
re
E
Wilbcr Waldcn Is Field
Representative of
Organization.
MEET SET FOR NOV. 11
Wilher Walden, repreacntlng the
Nalior.at Interfraternlly confer
ence, will Mxk here on Nov. S at
a meeting ( all (iteek men ort the
campus. Mr. Waldm is one of fif
teen field speaker sent out by the
conference each year to explain
the functions of the group.
In an interview Mr. Waldcn ex-
plained t lint the confrtencs Is ills
linguihcd from the Nntlonal In
lerdaternily council In that It Is
purely advisory. "We do no legis
lating." he stated. "We have meet
lnj; in New York every year the
day after Thunkag iving and all
soils of fraternity problems are
discussed. Committers work all
through the year on these prob
lems; maning. pledging, htiildlng
new houses, and even diet and
menu questions. They iepoit the
results of their Investigations at
the annual meeting and much
benefit Is derived from them.
"The whole Is a matter of sug
gestion." Mr. Walden continued.
No rules or anything or inai aon
are ever suggested. They are not
In our province.
The suhtect of Mr. Walden's
speech will be "The American Col
lege Fraternity and the Inteifra
temlty Conference." Announce
ment will be made later or in
place where the meeting will be
heid.
Mr. Walden is a member of Al
pha Chi Rho fraternity.
WARE UPHOLDS NEBRAS
ANS STAND ON ATH
LETICS AND SCHOLAR
SHIP IN WORLD-HERALD
COLUMN DISCUSSION
l Continued from race 1.1
the desire for culture. hHve grown
weak and anemic, although under
no particular duress.
"Times of marked materialism
usually have been accomplished by
disinterest In real education. In
deep study.
"Wneiner tnese ciays are pan 01
such a time. I leave to others to
declare. The fact is evident that
the vast majority of matriculants
at any college are not inclined
toward scholarship. They are there
to reap the glories or the amieiic
field with a minimum of attention
to proceedings in the classroom.
Or they are dominated by the yen
to make Sappa Htlgma. or Hadda
Holt Data, thereby gaining mem
bership in a sort of goofy, illusory
campus peerage. Or they endeavor
to skim through four years of pipe
courses to one of those degrees
which they feel elevates them
above the buck or gal who finished
his formal education the night he
delivered the valedictory for the
senior class of Creaking Spring
high school.
"So the efforts of the larval jour
nalists in whose keeping is the
Daily Nebraskan for the present
semester, to my way of thinking,
art well timed. -
"There has been little of the In
tolerant, crusading spirit in what I
have read in The Ncbraskan's edi
torial columns. Athletics have not
been damned; there has been no
suggestion that sports even should
be minimized.
"Somewhat to the contrary, the
editor has suggested that the
method of obtaining proficient ath
letic scholars, which has been
shown to be very successful, be
applied to the task of recruiting
freshmen with a great a yearning
for Phi Beta Kappa as Benny
Whoof, all-county fullback In 1929.
feels fqr All-American distinction.
"I do not believe that the editor
of The Nehraskan thinks mem
bership in Phi Beta Kappa is any
certain mark of real culture any
more than election" to the grid
iron elect by several sclfconati
tuted experts means that a foot
ball player so chosen is a greater
practitioner of that strenuous sub
ject than scores of contemporaries
whose names were omitted when
candidates were considered.
"The campaign of The Nebras
kan, as I see It. Is for a scholastic
renaissance, and Phi Beta Kappa
might be said to be a symbol. I
hold that actually a good many
narrow, intolerant parties dangle
NO DOUBT!
The best Barber
T rf . . . 1
anup in iuttii
MOGUL
BARBER SHOP
127 No. 11
LINCOLN
NOW
Proudly
, PRESENTS
GEORGE
ARLISS
IN
"OLD
ENGLISH"
I
y Jl
-S.
nwnnA Mttlinr.1 Of
.man Af the old
uihA Tinnni inc
- .
Johnny turkt
In
"You'r in thi
Army Now"
Sound Newt
- 35c
'aT I
fiom their watch chains P. B. K.
keys gained only through nut
gift of memorising.
"The Ntbiaakan would Inleieal
alumni and other friends of the
rhool In a movement to evangel
ise bright high school students
who greatest athletic gift n '
be to whittle lead pencil. Ten
prep school kids with a desire to
learn of the opHrtunity Nebraska
offers."
at
Tha Nsbiaakan would inters
employer of student, or "Chinese"
labor in student who have regis
tered because of hot uige to gel
themsalves educated. The Ne
hraskan would have faculty men
a Interested In obtaining jobs for
such students as the football start
is Interested In 'lining up' Its frosh
apprentices.
"The Nebraskan. If possible,
would generate campaign to
populaitte scholarship, rather
afler the procedure that has made
athletics, rather than learning,
stand in tha averaee mind for
campus.
"The apprentice acrlhhler will
find sympathy among the faculty,
as I have said before. But I fear
that they will discover a lamenta
ble Indifference among the ma
jority of alumni, among a pre
dominance of the friends of the
university.
"Next summer there will be en
thusiastic lay workers a-plenty for
the department of athletics. But
Susie Swivel, wno led the Wop
pington Valley senior class, and
Willie Fotirglims. who did brilliant
woik during all his four years at
nrle Center high school, will
nardly be visited by delegations
and committees of alumni who
orate first tearfully, then with
steaming patriotic fervor about
the great opportunities Nebraska
offers boys and gals who yearn to
learn. Susie and Willie will prob
ably matriculate elsewhere un
less Willie comblnea with his in
tellectual accomplishments the
more readily appreciated ability to
hula hula through a broken field;
unless Susie is a potential winner
of a campus beauty contest that
would reflect honor and glory on
the Hadda Hott Data sister and
set the Sappa Stlgs and Tanpa
Kegs and the rest of the Orlk
brethren to battling for parking
space on the overstuffed In the
sisters' living room.
"I find myself In warm sym
pathy with the larval jojurnallsts
at Lincoln, but I orrer no encour
agement because a guy who pro
fesses to see roses when he beholds
only ragweed Is Just aa big a hypo
crite as bird who bawls for
prohibition publicly and puts on
benders In the privacy of his home.
"It is too easy to find a sort or
bogus happiness, too easy to make
a living without knowing the devil
of a lot, for people to bother about
academic affairs, about scholar
ship. A great many college alumni
are proving that every day.
"But I applaud the larval Jour
nalista anyway, and hope none of
them ever become Brisbanes or
jjS3a.
-w;i i
4MsaMAjaq mm it m.. . . .nmnmm& " Jim-imi.um , t-ttiiiiih n. i iiun wmm in .imi - ij r "wrnni -i .wasu rr-i- -n -im. t, L i .w.4.irMaTwm'j'-' mmm' hmupH. .'-T1s
'ir
Qusrterly Eaaminatlona ; tlfkf TT "V X-
' Are Your OPP0RTU- , , .ZjZ Ss
NITY. Make The Most rl JfTlV -y'WJ''
i
A
occtn.
Lssgue I.
Tau Kappa Kptdon 1, Alpha
Gamma Rho 1. game contesttd.
League III.
Farm House 1. Delta Sigma
Lambda 1,
League II.
That XI 2. Delta Chi 2 (two
aatra periods).
TINNIt
(igma Phi llgma v.. Delta
Tan Dalts Hgma Phi Sigma
won by forfeit.
Oernarr McFaddena or sports
writers and- sport columns a
hell of a plar to be printing (his
sort of stuff."
8TUDENTS PLAN
PARTY WITHOUT
PROPER CONSENT
(Continued from Tsge 1.1
ganlatlons as the council may we
fit. Subscription dances shall bo
conaldered to Include all university
dances for which admission la
charged."
Council May Changs Rule.
The Rtudent council rule. It was
pointed out by Hob Kelly, presi
dent of the council. Is effective
only on organisations but wss In
tended to include all subscription
dances. If neceaaary a change will
be made at the Student council
meeting to be held Wednesday
which will make It applicable to
subscription dances sponsored by
Individuals, he said.
According to the plans an
nounced by Stone and Lancaster
part of the profits are to go to
fraternities to buy libraries. Rep
resentatives In about a do.en frat
ernities are selling tickets within
their own group.
"If there is iinv need for a Corn
husker fall paity." Kelly stated,
"I think It should bo sponsored by
some recognized organisation. If
It is limited to fraternity men It
should be sponsored by the Inter
fraternlty council with the permis
sion of the Student council."
Orau Disapproves.
Fred Craw, president of the In
terfratemlty council, also cxl
pressed himself aa opposed to the
party because he feels that too
many of such affairs will censtl-
Fred Grau. piesldent of th In
students." "Since the ticket campaign la
staged within the fraternities," he
said, "We will take up the mntter
at the meeting of the Interfrat
ernity council Tuesday night."
Oct. 18 is also the data of the
second All-l'nivcrsity party under
the direction of the Barb council.
LEARN TO DANCE
Can leach you to lead in one leaion.
Guarantee to teach you In aix pri
vate leatona. Classes every Moncl.iv
and Wednesday. Private lessons
morning, afternoon - and evening.
Ball Room a)-! Tap.
MRS. LUELLA WILLIAMS
Private Studio:
Phont talM 1230 D STREET
Victory
In the business of education,
the only victory that can come
to you is the achievement of
an education.
It, is easy in college to forget
that simple truth. But your
parents have not forgotten.
For t' ' -kes, take this quar
terly accounting seriously.
LONG'S
BOOK
w-4Vm,:4X.
t
mi
FIRST ROUND ME
Initial Games in Women's
Paridlc Snort Will Be
Played This Week.
Fut round entries in the worn
en's Intramural puddle lennu tour
nament m hi'ilulnl In Iw lnv. I "If
Una week lisve been annorni ed by
the intramural office. hiuI a ltt is
po.ited al the eal full it me if the
gymnasium.
Participant aie lilted to
liicinter that only twelve guinea
are to be played, ihe winner to be
determined by (hat (earn whuh
has Ihe mot games to his ciedit
A lecord of (he winners name la
to be plnced on a slip and put
In the office. Only the team v. huh
whs originally signed up msv
piny, no substitutes being allowed.
Schedule.
The schedule is a follows:
Wednesday at ft u'clot k
1. Margaret Slever and Helen
Wilson, Alpha Delta Theta. vs.
Maigiet Leonard and Ruth Chur-1
nev. Alpha XI Delta.
2. Mane Hokeya and Alice
Rookstmm, Kappa Delta vs. Car
olina riulippl and Merman Mr
Mali. in. Alpha I'hl.
3. Martha Haketthau and Cor
nelia Fehner, lambda tSamma vs.
Maiy Uilmore and Anne Cramer,
Chi Omega.
4. Ada McJames and Ruth
Smith, Kappa Phi vs. Viola Mul
csliy ami Helen Dahlman, Dormi
tory A.
Thursday.
1. Maijoiio Cass and Daisy
Schoeppel. Alpha Delta Pi vs
F.leiinor Summons and Aartze
Pools. I. X. L.
2. Hester Mary Dutch and
Martha Kvans. Kappa Alpha
Theta vs. Bernice PalmqtiiHl and
Georgia Wilcox. Chi Omega.
3. Wllla N'orriss and Fdna
Kummer, Gamma Phi Beta vs.
Frances Bross and F.Ida Utihl.
4. Gertrude Clark and Cather
4ne Jensen, Alpha XI Delta, vs.
Leona King and Maude Lenmnn,
Kappa Delta.
Friday.
1. Jane Wickershnm and Mar-
it 'WU
COLLEGE
STONES
A , D
i urtiinocos.
Jl WJf:m.M.
, ts- t;'-- .... :? ; jvy i ii r?. .' t m
I .
Socio! Calcndai
ialu'day, Oct. II.
All I'nivetailv parry at Col nail in
Delta Theta Phi. house party.
Thl Urriifi PI house patty.
gartl' Wilson. Alpha Omn r n Pi
a. Ruth Bernstein and llattle
Met k. Mgrna Delia Tan.
3 Mae Lnnpilt and Hetty
Shield. (Uinnia Phi Beta v
IVrothy Thurlow and L. M Dn
coll. Delta Usmma
3 Cloila Ftri'n and - Marian
Stamp. Alpha XI Delta v Ade
laide Phllpot and lorothy Cbaile
son, Phi Mil
4. Ruth Itohrmsn anil Cynthia
Vnuell v. Huaniie Harlan and
Veta Fouler. IjuiiIhU G.nima.
SELLECX WARNS
STUDENTS ABOUT
YEARBOOK SALE
(Continued from Tsge I I
statement, reaffirming the conten
tions of meinlier of the Corn
huaker staff, appears below ver
batim. The publication board statement
follows:
To the ttudtnls:
The polity of th 1931 Corn
hutker staff to print only a suf
ficient number of annuals to fill
orders received In advance Is be
ing adopted at the request of tht
student publication board. This
courso has bn dtemed the only
possible solution to the difficult
situstion which has arisin In the
past two or three years duo to
tht Increasing number of stu
dents who havo put off purchase
of their book until distribution
of tht Cornhusktr In Msy.
Tha purtuanct of this policy
meant that those students who
do not express thtlr desire to
have a Cornhutker and their In
tention to purchttt ont by or
dering a copy this fall, will be
unable to obtain a copy when
the Cornhutker it distributed.
It la honed that all Students
who desire a copy of this year's
annual will tako cognlianca of
TYPEWRITERS
Ra ii fur th Royal portable typa
wrltur. the lileal nieihln tr Ilia
aiii'lriit. All niake of machinal
for rent. All maku of ud nil
chlnea easy payments.
Nebruka Typewriter Co.
cm B its? mi o tl.
Tomorror
Tomorrow today's class
grades will be scrutinized.
Show them to anyone with
just pride.
4 V r ... .1 1
rooi o me ciass u vuu were
employing a surgeon, a law
yer or a business associate.
Grades do count TOMOR
ROW more than they do to
day.
fj.v facing y'rfi'
n. campus o L
"i-rQ , iiwii
7f'fil Aiming
ComMiny Cvti Voy
for (,ridiron Cmtr
a . h It f..r (4 Sort i.avtnenl for
Nebraska's new gridiron rover,
waa mailed today (o Ihe Lincoln
Triil and Awnihg company, mak
er of the rover, hy the athletic
depart ment.
The new cover, for ue on tbe
football field on days befuie games
when rai'i threatens, I made In
tight sections. ean ninety fret
aipiaie The total weight of lbs
cover la approximately four tons.
11 la inaiin ft green wairr
proofed army dm k aod Is rrpupped
with rope hsndlts lo facilitate
handling It I aimllar to covers
Used at other si hools.
. --4
thl notice and mast eVmltt ar
rangtmtntt with tht Cornhusktr
Staff for thtlr Cornhutker.
JOHN K. ttLLCCK.
Secretary Publication Board.
Dr. MirrniMii Vl ritr
l or Srliuol Hiillrliu
Dr. Lucius A. Hherman. chair
man emeritus of the department
of Knliah. haa contributed a dis
cusaion of character education to
tbe bulletin just published by tha
Henry C. Frak educational com
mission. Dean Sherman's eaaay la
on "School Betterment" and will
be followed by other of bis educa
tional atudie.
IRedDXC
EdDdDirS
I'ull grniii nut
lio"iiny v a I f
skin, blfiicltcd
rnlfskin linlnif,
ncn onk soles,
nnrl width t
fit. Special nt
Drill Shoes
They're serviceable and
above all they re com
fortab e. narrow am
wide widths.
fiuGENHET
No Matter How Well
You Have Don This
Quarter Make Th
Second Quarter Sitter.
It ... -