The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 23, 1933, Page THREE, Image 3

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    ii HSDAV. FEBRUARY 2X 19,13.
THE DAILY NERRASKAN
THREE
FOUR PARTIES ADDED
TO W EEK E1SD EVENTS
Lambda Chis and A.G.R.
Plan House Dances for
Saturday.
Four parties have been added to
the lit (,f social affairs for this
week-end. Lambda Chi Alpha and
Alpha Gamma Rho will give house
parties, the Newman club will en
tertain and the Ag students will
pive a party in the Student Activi
ties building.
A. G. R 's to Give Dance.
Mpha Gamma Rho will enter
tain at a house party Saturday eve
ning. Helen Hampton's orchestra
will play for the party for which
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer K. Young.
Mr and Mrs. Roy R. Thalman will
le rhaperons.
Plan House Party.
Harold Jones will furnish music
for the Lambda Chi Alpha house
paity which is to be held Satur
day night. Trof. and Mrs. P. K.
Slaymaker and Mr. and Mrs. D. L.
K.nner will net as chaperons.
Announce New Pledges.
Alpha Sigma Phi announces the
pledging of luA lunn, tremoni;
Henry Feusner, llunUey; Chester
Kozh and Gilbert Koza, both of
Clarkson. George Muiphy, Lin
coln: Walter "oysen, Creighton;
h!m1 Martin Lewin. Arcadia.
Newman to Entertain.
The Newman club members will
1 . id a party Friday evening at the
Si. Klizabeth's nurses" home. Chap
. roiis will be Cel. and Mrs. F. A.
Kidwell. Rev. Lawrence Obrist,
hnd Mrs. Alice Cornish.
Phi Kappa Psi Pledges.
Phi Kappa Psi announce the
pledging of Charles Smith of Or
leans, Nebr.
Actives Are Guests.
Phi Omega Pi alumnae will en
tertain the active chapter of the
sorority at a 6:30 dinner Thurs
day evening at the home of Mrs.
W.' V. Burr.
Former Student Weds.
A marriage of interest in uni
versity circles was solemnized Feb.
15 when Miss Charlotte Clark,
STUART
8 drat Stars in One Piclutt
Jsnet CAYNOR Will ROGERS
Lew AYRES Sally EILERS
Norman Tosut ' Leub &rr
Prtnk Craven Vktoc Jocf
r w a
STATE" teMR
Coming Mondavi
f i
SH
17R0HG
LINCOLN
EDMUND LOWE
VICTOR McLAGLEN
LUPE VELEZ EL BRENDEL
"HOT PEPPER"
Xcxt Week!
Gcor& nnuss
in
"King. Vacation"
!fc OnPIIEUM "fi
Bav "Hart Ttjpef"
won tirat
fooa tasctT
"THE
Crash"
rltb
ruth CHATTERTON
GEORGE BRENT
Aiiitrk't for mart ActreM aixJ Htt
Sua.Uonai Hue Land I
CAJUOON COMEDI THA Wl
DONE
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. D.
Clark of Gibbon became the bride
of Royal E. Heacox, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Clifton Heacox, also of
Gibbon. Mr. Heacox is a former
student at the University where he
joined Acacia fraternity.
Ag Students Give Party.
A party for Ag students to be
held in the Student Activities
building Saturday evening is being
planned. Chapeions for the affair
will be Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Filley,
Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Douthit and
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hathaway.
Mothers Group Meets.
The Alpha Chi Omega Mothers
club will meet Thursday afternoon
at 2:30 at the chapter house. Mrs.
K. J. Fler t wood and Mrs. C. L.
Fahnestoek will be hostesses.
Entertain at Dinner.
A dinner will be given by the
Alpha Phi's Friday evening from
6:15 to 9:00 preceding the Mortar
Board party, v'haperons will re
Mr. and Mrs. William Newi-ns. and
Mrs. O. C. And'.MSon.
C0HIIIEE CONVENES
TO
Joint Group of Y.M.C.A. and
Y.W.C.A. Workers Select
Two Leaders.
Saturday noon and Sunday aft
ernoon. Feb. 19. and 20. a commit
tee of University ot Nebraska stu
dents from the Y. W. and Y. M. C.
A. met with an F.stes Flanning
committee consisting of Miss
Stella Scuiloik from Kansas City.
Mo., and Harold Colvin from To
peka, Kans., the two field secre
taries of the Estes Conference, in
order to make plans for the an
nual Y. W.-Y. M. C. A. Conference
to be held in Estes Park this sum
mer. Nebraska has charge of the con
ference this year. Bob Bowers of
Kansas Wesleyan, chairman of the
Y. M. C. A. Rocky Mountain Field
Council was also present at the
meeting. Ehzabein senwanz nuu
Rae Kinney of Doane attended.
Name Two Leaders.
Two leaders have already been
secured for the conference this
summer: Powers Hapgood, Har
vard graduate, whose interests
took him into the coal mines of
Colorado, Illinois, and England,
and who is now with the Columbia
Conserve company of Indianpolis,
an experiment in Industrial De
mocracy; and Bruce Curry from
the Union Theological Seminary,
New York City, a stimulating
speaker on the Life of Jesus.
One of the special emphasis of
the conference will be on the eco
nomic question, although a great
many other present day problems
will be included on the program.
Conference this year will be self
entertaining. Students doing their
own housekeeping in cottages
rented at seven dollars per student
for the conference period of ten
aays. ims wm reauce coses so inai
the total expense for a Nebraska
student should not be more than
nineteen dollars for the ten davs
exclusive of traveling expenses
fc-iuaenis usually mane comoina
tions for travel so that the car ex
pense is comparatively small.
Because the "Tutors. Just Tut
ors" latest issue of the Harvard
Lampoon resembled the general
appearance of "Babies, Just
Babies," new children's magazine
edited by Mrs. Franklin D. Roose
velt, too closely, it has been ban
ished' from the mails, a recent
press dispatch stated. Citizens of
Cambridge protested in such num
bers that the enure issue of 3,000
copies was held up until an opin
ion could be obtained from univer
sity authorities.
Judge Ben Lindsey will confer
at New Haven this week with Yale
authorities. The judge early last
fall started a campaign to influ
ence college students to marry for
emotional stability.
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Hotel
D'Haraburger
SHOT-GUN SERVICE
1141 Q St. 1718 0 St.
o
P
CONFERENCE
I0NAL
TALKS TO DRILLERS
Brown Speaks Before Joint
Meeting National and
State Groups.
K. M. Brown, Fairmont, Minn.,
who was elected president of the
American Well Drillers association
Tuesday night, addressed that
group in a joint meeting with the
Nebraska Well Drillers association
in Morrill hall Wednesday after
noon. Praising the woik of the state
geological conservation and survey
departments, President Brown told
the delegates that neither he nor
anyone else could forecast what
the future will present. It is up to
the individual.
Referring to well drilling, he
stated that prosperity is up to the
drillers themselves working as a
unit. He warned that there were
hard times ahead and that in the
pa.st there had been too much
stress on geological formations,
rather than on how the prestige of
the well drillers might be raised.
Other officers for the national
association elected in a meeting at
the Lindell hotel are H. H. Brown,
Blair, Neb., vice president: L. J.
Faust, Kankuna, Wis., treasurer,
R. O. Monroe, South Bend. Ind..
secretary, and P. W. Thrope, Des
Moines, la., secrttary of commit
tees. Following the election, the well
drillers .saw a three reel motion
picture showing the manufacture
of well casings and pipes. Then
they were entertained with a
Dutch lunch at the Lincoln hotel.
The Wednesday afternoon meet
ing in Morrill hall was opened by
the president of the state associa
tion, Olson, welcoming the mem
bers. Brown responded and R. O.
Monroe of South Bend., Ind., out
lined accomplishments to date of
the American association, includ
ing a code of ethics, standard spec
ifications for the drilling proce
dure, contract forms and standard
log forms for distribution to asso
ciation memoero.
In the national association now
are North Dakota, South Dakota,
Iowa, Nebraska, Illinois, Indiana,
Colorado, Pennsylvania and Maine.
Dr. George E. Condra, under
whose direction the university is
sponsoring the convention, was
toastmaster at a banquet at the
Lincoln hotel Wednesday, at which
time other members also spoke.
ARGUERS TO MEET
MISSOURI SCHOOLS
IN RADIO CONTEST
(Continued from Page 1.)
5 o'clock. The time will be seven
minutes for constructive speeches
and five minutes for rebuttal
speeches.
Nebraska To Meet Peru.
Peru State Teachers college will
meet Nebraska in a debate on the
cancellation of the war debts ques
tion in Social Sciences auditorium
on Friday, Feb. 24. The Nebraska
team of Steadman and Hillman
will support the affirmative side
Two Nebraska teams will debate
before the Community club of
Ithaca, Neb., on Thursday, March
2 on the question of the cancella
tion of the war debts. The affirm
ative team will consist of Stead
man and Hillman and the negative
will be defended by Harold Soder
lund and Henry West. This nega
tive team was chosen recently in
the last tryout.
College World
From exchange comes the news
that seniors at Kentucky univer
sity remove corduroy trousers
from underclassmen who dare
wear them, and toss the offending
frosh into trees.
A new venture at Ohio State is
the formation of a university chess
club.
There is one student at Indiana
university whose Dame begins with
v " ArrnrHinp- to records be is the
only person ever enrolled in that
school whose name began with
that letter.
a v,,lt at ihp lTniversitv Of
i- !., ; Kid ma l mm! 140
languages, believed to be all van
ties known in the world.
On University of California "big
game" nights, coeus may may
as late as tney oesire.
At Marquette university, all
in fraternities have
their names, characteristics, and
peculiarities listed wun ine puu.c.
ur, or,i nnivprsitv has enoueh
J J Ul V - J -
t. besides thirty-
A W V -CJt - " J ' - .
six tackling dummies and 300 loot-
NEW
NAT
HEAD
Contemporary
Comment
Most Important Process
Of Government.
Universities are not the only
educational institutions finding it
difficult to maintain their stand
ards in the face of the depression.
High schools throughout the na
tion are confronted with problems
equally pressing and equally diffi
cult to solve. President Hoover re
cently called a conference of
eighty representatives of industry,
labor, agriculture, and education,
which is referred to as the "Citi
zens Conference on the Crisis in
Education." Us purpose is to de
vise means by which high schools
throughout the nation can main
tain high standards of education in
spite of drastic reductions in in
come. Increase in the rate of students
in public high schools from 1920 to
1930 was at the rate of a new class
of forty pupils every fifteen mi
nutes during an eight hour day,
according to the education office.
In the two years since 1930, high
school enrollment has increased
15.13 percent. Current expendi
tures in school systems have de
creased from approximately $1,
068.900,000 in 1931-32 to $1,013,
600,000 in 1932-33, a reduction of
6 percent in one year.
Teachers' salaries in city schools
have been reduced from
$774,500,000 to $734,500,000 in
the past year, a reduction
of 5.04 percent. The average re
duction for rural school teachers in
the last three years has been esti
mated at 9.9 percent for elemen
tary teachers and 9.6 percent for
secondary teachers.
In order that the efficiency of
our public school educational sys
tems be maintained it is vital that
the public realize that money saved
on education is, in the final analy
sis, false economy. Our demo
cratic government requires an edu
cated citizenry and the cheapest
means of educating the citizen is
through an effective elementary
LIBERTY
GLENRAY COMEDY CO.
tn
"SELF DEFENSE
VAUDEVILLE
TONIGHT
Big Amateur Contest
PRIZES
Prices: Mat. 10c - 25c
Nites: 10c - 35c
3M Good Seats - 10c
TTlfonirDgs
hxEDErO iDQUrGlil
And what's more, things are
still being lost. The classified
ad department is maintained pri
marily for the lost and found
service. Watch the column if
you've lost anything. And if
you've found anything, regard
less of how large or small it may
be, bring it to the Daily Nebras
kan office. If after a month it
is unclaimed it is returned to
vou.
AT THE STUDIO.
Thursday
N Club 12:00.
Friday
Publication Board 12:00.
and high school system. As Presi
dent Hoover pointed out in his ad
dress to the conference, 'Education
is the first charge upon all the citi
zens and local governments . . .
The proper care and training of the
nation's children is more important
than any process that is carried on
by our government." Minnesota
Daily.
KEV. HUNT DISCUSSES
FINANCES AT VESPERS
N ife Must Cooperate
Have Family Life
Run Smoothly.
to
"Making Rough Places Smooth"
was the topic of Rev. Ray Hunt's
talk at Vespers Tuesday, Feb. 21.
This talk was the fourth one of a
series of six on "Love and Mar
riage," given by Rev. Hunt.
Rev. Hunt emphasized the point
that both the husband and wife
must co-operate in order to make
rough places smooth. He be
lieves that every family should
have a budget.
This question was raised: Should
girls ever pay the bill, or how
about going ""dutch?" It was de
cided that this problem had to be
worked out individually, but that
at the present time it might be
advisable.
George Washington university
nnints with nride to one of its
graduates who is now installed in
the federal penitentiary at Atlanta,
Go. No stigma is auecnea 10 ms
incarceration, since he has accept
ed a legitimate position as prison
librarian.
Students at the University of
California who receive a grade of
"A" on a course at the end of the
first four weeks do not have to
continue the course and get a five
dollar refund on their tuition.
More than $10,000 is spent an
nually on the commencement party
at Harvard university.
A
TEAKS
and CHOPS
u-nrter, juicy and delicious
cteaks and chops are rerved
from our fountain 5 ttl r m.
Try them:
5 Course Dinner 35c
Try Our Tasty HOT rA
PLATE LUNCHES. .
WATCH FOR OUR
SPECIAL SUNDAY MENU
Pharmacy
H. A. REED. Mgr. 13 4 P
Phone B7037
aire sttnDD
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balls, to outfit men.