The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 19, 1931, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1931
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THREE
SOCIETY
Interest in Y. W. (J. A. and Y. M. C. A. circles is ccnlewl
at the present time on the iinhiNtriHl conference which will be
held in Ellen Smith hall Feb. 17, 128 and March 1. A banquet
t th Anne cRfe will feature th o?i forme? Saturday cveniji".
It is expected that more than thirty out of town ruonIh will
attend the affair.
Officers Elected for
Honorary Art Sorority.
Sigma Lambda, honorary art
sorority, held a meeting: Tuesday
evening. Election of officers took
place.- Lyda Burry was elected
president; Betty Shields, vice pres
ident; Margaret Sowles, recording
secretary; Elizabeth Pettijohn, cor
responding secretary; Sara Green,
treasurer; Ruth Eby, chaplain; and
Adlyn Moeller, reporter.
Pershing Rifles Plana
Party for March 7.
Pershing Rifles is making plans
for a spring party to be held Sat
urday, March 7, at the Lincoln
hotel.
Frat Colors to Form
Motif for House Party.
Members of Sigma Alpha Mu
are entertaining at a house party
Saturday evening, at which the
Persian band will play. Fraternity
colors, purple and white, will be
used in the decorations. The
pledges are planning the enter
tainment, which will be kept secret
until staged at the party. Mrs.
Madeline Baer, housemother, and
Rabbi Harry Jolt will act as chap
eroncs. Ellis Island Party
Planned on Friday.
An Ellis Island party will be
given Friday evening at the First
Baptist church at 8 o'clock. All
students are invited, and have been
asked to come in a costume repre
senting a foreign country. Dec
orations will carry out the idea of
an immigrant station. Custom of
ficials will direct foreign guests.
The charge for "passage" will be
fifteen cents. Typical American!
games will be played, and a pro- j
gram consisting of songs and
stunts of different countries will j
be given. The committee in charge: :
Miss Maxine McNecs, Lincoln; '
Miss Helen Dahlman, Gothenburg; J
Miss Ruth Randal
Belleville, j
Kas.: Mrs. Ralph Gemmell. Lin
coin; Charles Rowand. Tecumsch;
and Clinton Woodward, Sioux City,
la.
Kappa Phi Gives
Fireside Meeting.
Kappa Phi will hold a fireside
meeting for new gifts nt Wesley
house Thursday evening from 7 to
8 o'clock. All Methodist girls are
invited.
Mervin Cooksey of Kansas City,
Mo., spent Tuesday evening at the
Delta Upsilon house.
Resume of Charles
Daruin's Life (riven
Hy Curator Colling
h redbrick Collins, curator or tne
Nebraska state museum, in his
last weekly radio address gave a
brief resume of the life of Charles
Darwin, whose birthday comes on
the same day as Abraham Lin
coln's, Feb. 12. Both of these
noted men were born in 1809, the
year in which such famous men
as William Gladstone. Alfred Ten
nyson. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Ed
gar Allen Poe. and other promi
nent men of letters and science
were born.
Charles Darwin started first to
DON'T MISS THE
STAR YOU LOVE
JOAN
CRAWFORD
In
Dance Fools,
Dance"
with
CLIFF EDWARDS
STACK
DON GALVAN
Stuart Stage Band
WHITE AND MANNING
THREE BERNIE BROS.
ARTHUR PARENTS
STUART
GRETA
GARBO
In
"Inspiration"
with
Robt.
Montgomery
Lewis Stone
. AddJ " "
Ford Sterling
In
-COME TO PAPA'
L1HC0U1
Curtoon
NOW1
J
Social Calendar
Friday.
Kappa Sigma formal dance at
the Cornhusker bote.
Ellis Island jmrty, First Baptist
church, 8 o'clock.
Saturday.
. Pi Beta Phi formal dance at the
Cornhusker hotel.
Sigma Alpha Mu house party.
Methodist Student council din
ner, 6 o'clock, Wesley Foundation.
follow .his fath- i footsteps and
become a doct , t later decided
to become a cl vi. n. This idea
he discarded, c.iu as everyone
knows, he became one of the most
famous of naturalists. After his
famous voyage on the Beagle,
Darwin married his cousin, Emma
Wedgewood, and settled at a house
called Down, twenty miles south
of the city of London. It was
there that he carried on his fa
mous experiments with animals
and flowers and there at last In
the year 1880 he died.
OFFERS HOME COURSE
Includes Color Instruction,
Arrangement, Design for
Furnishings.
MADISON, Wis. Teaching how
to make a satisfying home by at
tention to harmony in arrange
ment, desimv nnd rnlnr lritvin
means of the mistress of the hum-
hlest coltrge or of the more well-to-do,
a newly written course 'n
home decoration and furnishing is
now given by the University if
Wisconsin extension division.
It is adapted not only for home
makers and teachers of home eco
nomics, the extension announce
ment says, but for dealers and
salesmen for furniture and house
furnishings, painters and deco
rators, and others capable of mak
ing use of the fine points in home
furnishing and decoration.
The course is giver, by corre
spondence study in eight assign
ments, conducted bv Mrs. Lola D.
j Zander, a graduate of the home
i economics department of the Uni
I versity of Wisconsin, and a teacher
i of the subject at North Dak' i -.
! state teachers' college. Valley City.
N. D., Bradley college. Peoria, 111.,
and the University of Wisconsin.
In adapting this study for home
makers of many types, the exten
sion division s:ks to show how
skillful adjustments, made by rear
rangement of existing furnishings
and adding others in harmony,
may yield satisfying results. It is
emphasized that in a home where
much of a lifetime is to be spent,
any extra effort and often a liberal
expenditure are abundantly justi
fied to supply the elements of i
harmony and beauty that serve to
distinguish a home from just an I
abode or a shelter.
In this course the topics treated
include design and color; walls,
backgrounds and woodwork; car
pets and rugs; curtains and drap
eries: furniture; accessories; and
furniture choice and arrangement.
Copious reading lists supply incen
tive for further study of con
temporary literature on a variety
of home subjects.
Nolan's Land
ox
U3fLBILiai!
AD VICE to coeds if you have a
little brother coming down here
and you want him to be a class
president, pledge him blueshirt. If
you want him to also run, pledge
him yellowjacket. The election
racket is over for the time being
and all we can do now is to s--it
down and html about il. The blues
outnumber the yellows about two
to one and yet they claim that the
best man wins. Well, maybe once
in a while he does. Class officers
are such important things any
how! Of course there are a few mU
guided people who would like to
say something about who is to talk
on Ivy day but alter all, does
anybody ever listen to him? Four
teen people voted intelligently for
the office of Ivy day orator.
There, were six votes for Chick
Sale and eight for Will Rogers.
We have heard about tempests :n
teapots before. We would like to
say something about brain-storms
in crocks.
"THIS being a guinea column, a
remark about biger and better
prom girls is scarcely out of place.
Somebody has come to at last with
the realization that Nebraska
wants a good-looking prom girl
and it appears that Nebraska may
finally get one. There's always a
question of ethics in voting for
her. Should she be popular with
both 3exes or just the sterner and
more gullible one? Should she be
an activity girl? Or should one
vote just on external appearance?
There are better chances of voting
for a combination of one or two
of these things chan theie have
been for several years. It's too
bad none of the candidates inter
viewed the movie man when he
was here.
But listen, Georgiamargaretdor
othyalice! Please dont wear a
black dress to the prom. It's not
the proper color for prom girl to
wear And it doesn't show up very
well in rotogravure . sections.
DOSALIE LAMME is a new
pledge to the Prince-of-Wales
club. We wonder why the aversion
of Lincoln horses to Lincoln coeds.
A Nebraskan headline tells us
that Franklin college's dean of
women is a high-flyer. Some of
WISCONSIN EXTENSION
SCHULTE EXPECTS BIG THINGS FROM JERRY LEE
-C0PTO IN TAB MlU
TAar MEET Trtl YE Aft.
IN AHMV 6A16 MS SroLt
THS. 4ov0 NOW HOL0S
tooll OP THE St R6C
OK0, MtF AD IS
co-Motoea or a fifth-
SO V0. DASII-5.7SEC.
Ml-JUMP-3 FT. 8 IN.
SrtOAO J0MP-2I FT. 3 IN.
OAIE LAP(2SlY0)-2').4
(CO-H0106R)50 YO.Lows-6.6
these little colleges have all the
luck!
We wondered why there were so
many bottles piled up In back of
various fraternity houses before
we heard that there were twenty
prohibition agents in town.
Coed Follies was a good show.
It really deserves a post-mortem.
The style part of it was worked
out cleverly. But it brought bad
news. Who wants to wear for
mals all spring anyhow? Espec
ially with gloves. Maybe girls will
strike against the idea this year.
Just about the time we stumble
over the cornerstone of the new
student union building in the dark.
WE REFUSE to devote any more
A : . A il..AyM tn.
Utile Ul itll.c lu llic uciugntui j
expostulations of che sports editor.
He really doesn't deserve all the
publicity we have already given
him. After all he is an illegitimate
columnist. He admits he doesn't
even have a name.
LJERE boginneth the scripture
lesson. Guinea politics is afoot
today. The system of balloting on
the girls deserving of the honor of
Mortar Board is supposed to make
known to the present members of
the women's honorary just who
are considered most representative
by the most people. But some
sororities try to make a regular
whizzer out of it. They put down
their own girl, if they have one,
and then write in as many no-bodys-r-speaking
from the stand
point of campus activities as the
ballot will hold. The idea would
seem to be that of emphasizing
one's own prominent girl and the
devil take everybody else's fore
most. Blue shirt speed! Why not vote
for the girls who we all know are
the most outstanding and really
help the Mortar Boards out in
their quest of campus opinion. W3
used not to have any voice at all
in their elections, and now that we
get a chance for a small chirp,
half of us abuse the privilege, such
as it is. The male politicians
around here cut our throats
enough. Why should we go in for
the extra slashes? And now shall
we rise and repeat the benediction,
etc.
BY TEACHER
Intercollegiate Game Goes
To Schoolmasters in
45-13 Tangle.
In an intercollegiate basketball
game in the coliseum Tuesday eve
ning a hot teacher's aggregation
swamped a team of lawyers by the
count of 45 to 13.
The teacher's quintet was com
posed mostly of men from the
freshman squad. Masterson at
center did the honors for the
schoolmasters collecting eight bas
kets and two free throws to total
eighteen points. The burley Sauer,
played at forward and dropped
seven shots from the field for four
teen tallies. Bauer and Cook func
tioned at the guard positions.
The lawyers were nearly blanked
the first half. Krause from his
position at center managed to
snag one archer and Snow flipped
in his free toss so that the score
stood 22 to 3 at the end of the
initial period.
During the second stretch
Krause delivered for another goal
and Perry surprised the schoolboys
with three markers playing for
ward. Kelley and Mellon worked at
guard for the brief case lads while
Lindberg and Snow were forwards
before Perry entered the game.
OKLAHOMA A. & M.
SETS TENNIS DATES
WITH 5 SCHOOLS
STILLWATER. ( Special (.Al
though curtailed as are other mi
nor sports this year, tennis for
varsity men at Oklahoma A. and
M. college will- include two at
home meets and three trips, one of
which will involve three or more
meets, a total of probably eight,
as planned by E. C. Gallagher, di
rector of athletics, and Louis
Armstrong, coach.
The Aggies are trying to get
dates with Southern Methodist,
Texas Christian, Baylor and Texas
universities on a prospective
southern trip from March 23 to 28,
thereby opening the season.
Home and home meets with
Oklahoma university, Oklahoma
City university, and Arkansas uni
versity are on the tentative sched
ule, too, for April and May dates.
Orville Vogel Will Be
Stationed at Pullman
Orville Vogel, who graduated
from the College of Agriculture in
1929 and received a Master of
Science degree in the department
of agronomy in January, has ac
cepted a position with the office
of cereal crops and diseases of the
United States department of agri
culture. He will be stationed at
the state college of Washington at
Pullman.
Offices for all student activities
and organizations would be pro
vided in a student union building.
SQUAD
-HE APPEARS
HAVE
Title holder in four and co-holder
of a fifth out of a possible six
events not an Alger story but the
record of Jerry Lee in the annual
R, O. T. C. track and field meet.
And that's one reason why Coach
Henry Schulte is predicting great
things for the lanky Bassett cinder
ace, who begins competition with
the varsity track squad this spring.
Despite the fact that over five
thousand men have participated in
the annual military meet, some of
them former Husker track stars,
Lee has taken over four records for
his very own and shares one with
another cadet
He holds the 50-yard dash mark
AT MADISON TOTAL 40
Russians Most Numerous of
Foreigners; Germans
Close Second.
MADISON. Wis. Parents rep
resenting forty nationalities sent
their sons and daughters to the
University of W iaconsin in the fall
of 1930, according to statistics
compiled by Miss Annie Kirch,
university statistician.
Excluding Americans, there are
more students in the freshmen
class of Russian extraction than
any other nationality, since the
survey shows that there are 108
fathers and 93 mothers, a total of
201 Russian parents.
Running a close second, the Ger
man parents include 109 fathers
and 88 mothers for a total of 197.
Norwegian parents rank third with
a total of 93, 51 fathers and 42
mothers.
After a sharp decline, 49 Swed
ish parents, 27 fathers and 22
mothers, rank fourth. England
contributes 27 fathers and 21
mothers, Poland 24 fathers and 23
mothers, Austria 38, 24 fathers and
14 mothers. Canada and Switzer
land each have 33, Italy 24, Den
mark 23, Lithuania and Ireland
each 20, Hungary 19, Bohemia 18,
Scotland and Czechoslovakia 13,
Rumania and France 11, Jews 10,
Wales 8, Philippine Islands and
Finland 5; Croatia, Cuba and Hol
land 4, Syria, Jugoslavia and Ar
menia 3.
Albania, Alsace-Lorraine, Bul
garia, Greece, Mexico, Serbia and
Sicily each contributed one father
and one mother; Ukraine and Bel
gium one father, and Dutch
Guiana, one mother.
DEAN SAYS COLLEGES
TEACHING FREE TRADE
Sees Action as Eventual
Solution of Present
Tariff Problem.
SYRACUSE, N. Y. The real so
lution of the current tariff prob
lem which will eventually result in
free irade will come thru teaching
the free trade principle in the na
tion's colleges and universities,
the Daily Orange was told by
Dean W. E. Weld of the Univer
sity of Rochester in an Interview,
following his address on tariff to
freshmen Political Science stu
dents In Slocum hall.
When asked if there Is not a
tendency at the present time in
most American universities toward
persuading the college student to
the free trade idea, the Rochester
tariff expert replied emphatically
in the affirmative.
"Not only now but for the past
decade or more the free trade prin
ciple has been stressed In most in
stitutions of higher learning,"
Dean Weld declared. A short time
before in his address to the students
the Rochester educator had stated1
his unqualified stand on tariff as
that of a "free trader." However,
he laughingly admitted that for
the most part there has been no
visible effect of the teaching of
free trade in the colleges.
Dr. Weld went on to say that he
believes the free trade educators
are nevertheless making headway.
Through teaching the free trade
principle in college, the younger
generations are becoming ac-
LEABN TO DANCE
Will tech you to dance in six les
sons. Correct any fault In one
Usson. Private lessons daily by ap
pointment. Results guaranteed.
LEE A. THORNBERRY
Private Studio
hon L 8291 2300 Y St.
QUITE A FUTURE JH TRACK?
of 5.7 seconds; the lap record, 252
yards, 29.4 seconds; the high jump,
5 feet 8 inches, and the broad
jump, 21 feet 3 Inches. He is co
holder in the 50-yard low hurdles
with a 6.6 mark. All events are run
in full military uniform, coat and
cap excepted.
Schulte expects Lee to be ready
for the broad and high jumps for
varsity competition, as well as the
sprints and possibly the low hur
dles. Lee has done better than 23
feet in the broad jump and has
cleared 6 feet in the high. He is
a consistent 10 second man but
may develop into a quarter-miler
on the outdoor cinders.
quainted with the theory and its
advantages, and through this me
dium free trade will eventually
win its way to the fore,
"Protection is at its peak," the
Rochester dean continued. "The
free trade principle being taught
college students is taking root and
with the decline in protection will
thus after a while become the tar
iff policy of the nation."
SOONER MEN TRAIN
FOR BIG SIX MEET
Winnings at Kansas City
Indoor Games Prompt
Jacobs' Team.
NORMAN, Okia. Scoring two
firsts and three seconds against
sizzling competition in the K. C.
A. C. indoor games at Kansas City
Saturday night, Coach John Ja
cobs' Sooner track team today be
gan training for the important Big
Six conference indoor meet in
Brewer Fieldhouse, Columbia, Mo.,
March 7.
Two events not listed on the
K. C. A. C. program, the broad
jump and the 50-yard low hurdles,
will be contested for in the con
ference meet and in each of these
the Sooners are comparatively well
fortified. Clifford Mell, McKinney,
Tex. and Harold Morris, Tulsa, al
ready having neared 23 feet in the
broad jump while Robert Hildt,
Tulsa, has done the low sticks in
6.1 seconds, just .2 seconds behind
Jack Carmen's Big Six indoor rec
ord. Coach Jacobs can also place at
Columbia a new sprinter, Jesse K.
Hill, of Muskogee, who has al
ready run the 100 yards in 9.9 sec
onds this year and is fast becom
ing proficient at the shorter dis
tance, alongside Don Adkison, of
Tulsa, and by using the crack
members of his mile relay team in
the 440-yard dash and inserting
the veteran Bruce Choate in tbe
pole vault, may finish higher than
the fifth position Oklahoma won
last March. Hill forsook the K. C.
A. C. meet to stay home and take
the state pharmacy examination.
Jacobs, previous to last season,
established the Sooners as eafy
peers of the conference in indoor
track, his men winning the cham
pionship three years consecutively
from 1927 to 1929. Lack of re
serve performers, and of weight
men and pole vaulters appear to
be the outstanding Sooner weak
nesses this season.
Mell's achievement of conquer
ing bv five yards rangy Bob Oster
gard.'of Nebraska, the 1930 cham
pion, in the 600-yard Shannon
Douglas cup race at Kansas City,
means that the little broad-jumper
may be called upon to race George
.Tones, Kaneas phenom who won
the K. C. A. C. open 440 in tne
fast time of 52.5 seconds, and also
compete in the broad jump and
perhaps anchor the Sooner raile re
lay team at Columbia, a strenuous
night's labor for any track man.
At Kansas City the Sooner mile
Filen's Ties
Cleaned - -3
for 25c
12 for $1.00
SEND THEM NOW
Save 10 For Cash and Carry
Soukup V Westover, Mgri.
Main Office 21st and G.
Branch Store, 227 So. 27th.
ODERN
CLEANERS
Soukup V Westover, Mgr.
Call F2377 For Service
OF BASSETT
-CLEAdSO 6 FT. IN THE
Hi&rt jump At a retctAJT
INOOOR MEET ALSO
&0.OAO JUMPEO rjSTTEO,
THAW 7 FEET
relay team's mark of 3:33, regis
tered in defeating Missouri by
twenty yards, was superior to that
made by any other Big Six school,
Nebraska submitting a time of
3:34.2 in outlegging Kansas and
Iowa State one of 3:38.2 in dis
tancing the Kansas Aggies.
Charles Potts, leading off for
Oklahoma, out-jockeyed his Tiger
opponent by retaining the pole and
turned over a lead of five yards
to Fred Cherry. Frank Abbott and
Clifford Mell, each of whom wid
ened the margin perceptibly.
Moore Is Second.
Warren "Bus" Moore, who won
his heat in tbe half-mile in 2:03.2
was delegated to second place
when his time was surpassed by
that of Lydic, Kearney, Neb.
Teachers, in an earlier heat, the
race being decided this year on the
always questionable method of
time comparison, nevertheless ran
aggressively.
So did Capt. Glen Dawson, who
took rather a poor second in both
the mile and the two-mile yet
made more points than any other
man in the meet, Penthalonets
Jim Bausch and Buster Charles
excepted.
Charles M. Hewitt, Norman,
drew an outside lane in the second
line in the open 440 and was de
feated before he started. Bill New
block, Norman, had a bit of diffi
culty with his high-jumping form
on the slick floor and didn't place.
Sprinter Don Adkison was barely
nipped in a fast heat of the 50
yard dash while Hurdler Bob Hildt
won two heats and was leading the
winner, Hager of Iowa State, in
the semi-final when he struck the
last hurdle and was eliminated.
Victory of Harold Adkison, of
Tulsa, who competed for the Lake
side Country club of that city in
the 50-yard dash, was really an
other triumph for Coach Jacobs
who developed Adkison Into a for
midable sprinter while the latter
attended this university trom 1927
until 1930.
HOME OWNERS IN
IOWA WILL STUDY
LANSCAPE PLANS
AMES, Iowa. Forty Iowa home
owners will gather at Iowa State
college Thursday and Friday to
study home landscape develop
ment in the annual short course
conducted by the department of
landscape architecture.
The enrollment is limited to
permit intensive work on the plan3
of the home or farmstead of each
student. The mornings will be de
voted to lectures followed by dis
cussions of various problems of
landscaping and the afternoons
will be spent in drawing up land
scap3 plans. The individual will
I noticed this scribbling on a co-ed's note
book "... wool crepe sportswear . . .
high and bright colors . . . two-piece ef
fects . . . and only $10.75 at the Campus
Shop."
(And she's one of those plenty smart
looking girls who certainly does get
around.)
Magee's Co-Ed Campus Shop
1123 R Street
be assisted in making his plan by V
members of tbe department of
landscape architecture and exten.
sion workers.
Making a basic survey map,
principles of design, what lfnd
scaping Is, selection and use of .
plants, and maintenance of land
scape projects will be discussed.
IOWA STATE MEN -ARE
INITIATED TO
HONOR SOCIETY
AMES. Fifteen Iowa State col
lege students, faculty members
and alumni have been initiated
into Psi Chi, national honorary
psychology society. The faculty
members are Dr. A. H. Lauer and
Dr. H. B. Gaskill, both of tbe psy
chology department. i
The students initialed are: Ellis
Cram, Ames; Mary Mumford, Ur-
bana, III.; Q. M. Ressler, Ames;
Florence McLauchlln, Grenfell, .
Sask., Can.; Helen Peck, Ames;
Hugh Hickox, Omaha, Neb.; Helen
Ruggles Loy, Ames; Lucy Mer
rick, Boone; Prudence Tomllnson,
Des Moines; and Emily Conklin,
Ames. The alumni are: Iris Moles-
berry. Clarksville; Mrs. Vivian
Foiyer, Ames; and Lawrence V.
Loy, Ames.
Your Drujr Store
New Books at Cut Prices
Special Lunches
Whitman's Chocolates
The Owl Pharmacy
148 No. 14th ami P
We Deliver Phone B106S
Beezely Smith f
And His
N. B. C.
Orchestra
at the 4
PROM
January 27th
Their music is mighty
good and their reputa
tion on the NBC chain
is nation wide and
mighty. In spite of all '
that they are not
Blacksmiths. It is a
1,
?
i
colorful white orches
tra, which id bound to
please. f
If you haven't heard
of them, your radio is .
rotten.
Tickets Now Selling
at $2.50
See a Corncob t
Prom Girl? ':
y
-4
(
y
'
'S '
-t -
ti'
4.