The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 08, 1933, Image 1

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    Daily
ebraskan
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
vol. xxx u MO. in.
Lincoln, l:lSKA; w:l)l::sl)AV. march a. "vm7
PRICK f GLINTS.
HAEIN WILL SPEAK
AT ALL-UNIVERSITY
Lecturer to Talk About
Scientific Displays at
Exposition.
Mr. John Haein. nationally fa
mous lecturer, will address the
fourth all-university convocation
to be held at the Temple theater,
March 14. at 11 o'clock, according
to J. O. Hcrtzler, chairman of the
committee on convocations.
Mr. Haein, who is the official
representative of the committee in
charge of Chicago's second inter
national exposition, will use as the
subject of his talk, the scientific
displays which may be seen at the
exposition.
The speaker is brought to the
ctuj.-rits and facultv of the uni
versity highly recommended. For
many" years he was connected with
the Roger Babson Institute, VVcl
lesly Hills. Mass., where he was
engaged in vocational guidance
service in business. In this work
Mr. Haein gained invaluable
knowledge in dealing with students
and their problems.
Immediately after leaving the
institute, Mr. Haein was engaged
by the board of lecturers of the
Chicago exposition.
In his talk, Mr. Haein will em
phasize the social and natural sci
ences on display at the Chicago
show, with the aspects that will in
terest the student and faculty
members given especial attention.
MISS LAMOUR is
;s rav says
MOM COMMITTEE
Featured Singer With hay
Orchestra Is Beauty
Contest Winner.
Dorothy Lamour, slim, youthful,
French-Irish brunette, who will be
featured by Herbie Kay and his or
chestra when they play for the Junior-Senior
Prom at the Coliseum
Frioay evening, has created a sen
sation in orchestra circles where
ever she has been heard and seen,
according to Bob Tilling and Jean
Aldcn. committee members in
charge of publicity.
In fact, a New Orleans newspa
per characterized Miss Lamour as
the "biggest nine day sensation
since the president visited here."
Nebraska men are cautioned
against losing their hearts to the
attractive beauty Friday night, al
tho according to Miss Lamour's
own version, she has as yet no
glamorous past, is not yet married,
engaged or in love, as has been
rumored.
A native of Alabama, she later
made New Orleans her home, at
tended high school there, and was
for a time, a student at Tulane uni
versity. Entering a beauty contest,
she became "Miss New Orleans,"
and later competed in the Galves
ton world beauty contest in which
she was runnerup.
Miss Lamour joined Herbie Kay s
orchestra as a featured entertainer
shortly thereafter, and has since
appeared with him. At the present,
time, she has been offered several
movie contracts, which she has so
far refused.
Lincoln ArtUts Cnild
Will Convene March 9
The Lincoln Artists Guild will
meet Thursday, March 9, at 8:00
o'clock in room 204 of Morrill hall.
The feature of the evening will be
a lec ture by Dwight Kirsch, chair
man of the fine arts department,
on "Indian Design and Pottery of
the Southwest." Miss Blanch Gar
ten will preside.
Salesmen Requested to
Meet This Afternoon
All ticket salesmen for the
Junior-Senior prom are asked
to meet in 100m 107, U HaU,
at 5 o'clock, by Lloyd Loomis
and Lucille Rcilly, committee
tickets. It is very important
that all salesmen be present,
at that time.
MEETING MARCH 14
GROUP HEARSJMRS. FLEMING
Head Women Voters League
Tells of Bills Before
Legislature.
Mrs. William Fleming, president
of the league of Women Voters,
spoke at a meeting of the "Know
Your Legislature" staff of the Y.
W. C. A. held Tuesday at 11 o'clock
in Ellen Smith hall. Mrs. Flem
ing discussed various bills that
have been passed by the Nebraska
legislature and explained the tech
nicalities of passing a bill. Lucille
Hitchcock, chairman of this staff,
presided at the meeting.
FINAL SALES DRIVE
Closing of Banks Causes
Extension of Closing
Date.
"The deadline of the final sales
drive for the 1933 Cornhusker has
been extended one week to Wed
nesday, March 15," Charles Skade,
bvisiness manager, stated Tuesday
afternoon.
"The national bank holiday has
made the financial status of some
students so uncertain." he stated,
"that many desiring to purchase
books at the last minute will be
unable to do so until after the
banks have reopened. For that
reason, we are granting the sales
extension."
Skade stated that only the exist
ing emergency prevented the con
clusion of the drive Wednesday,
and that next Wednesday's dead
line is absolute and final. The
contract for printing the exact
number of copies sold will be sent
in Thursday, and no further books
will be available.
Skade added that checks would
be accepted for Cornhuskers dur
ing the holiday. The yearbook sells
at a cash price of $450. or it may
be purchased in installments of $2
down, $1 April 1st, and the balance
of $1.75 upon delivery of the book.
Members of the business staff
stated that it was impossible to
determine what effect the bank
holiday had on Cornhusker sales,
as sales at the booth in Social Sci
ence have been Tip to average, and
many Tassels have reported good
sales.
n
re-.iet is n iff iioki
Banquet Wednesday-
There will be a banquet of the
Fre-Medical society Wednesday
evening at G:00, in the Grand ho
tel. Following the meal Dr. Latta
will address the gathering. All
pre-rnedical students are invited to
attend. The cost of the tickets is
one dollar.
YEARBOOK EXTENDS
Professor Am fit Disagrees With
Press on Present 'Bank Holiday9
Expressing h i s disagreement
with some of the statements of the
press concerning the present
"bankers' holiday," and declaring
them to be misleading. Prof. Karl
M. Arndt of the economics depart
ment stated in an interview Tues
day afternoon that the present
bank moratorium is principally a
matter of giving the country a
breathing spell and that several
drastic measures will probably be
placed in operation.
"One of the principal points
brought out by the newspapers,"
Arndt said, "is that it is idle to
speculate whether or not the coun
try has gone off the gold standard.
I think the way in which they
speculate certainly is idle - at least
ihc-ir speculations are beside the
point." He declared that their)
supposed proofs that we are on
the gold star.da--' because we still
have mor e gold than any other j
country is really no proof. Al-1
though we lead in the world in au
tomobiles we are not on the auto
.-tandard. 1
L.
TALKS AT STUDENT
Y.M. Worker to Tell About
American Interests in Far
Eastern Crisis.
"American Interests in the Far
Eastern Crisis" will be the subject
of a talk by Russell L. Durgin,
fourteen years a Y. M. C. A. work
er in Japan, before students and
faculty at the second luncheon
meeting sponsored by the Student
Forum committee in the Temple
cafeteria at noon today. Tickets
are on sale at the Y. M. C. A. of
fice and will be available at the
door for 35 cents.
Mr. Durgin was sent to Japan
about 1919. Following brief service
at Yokohoma during an emergency
he spent four years in Manchuria.
Following the great earthquake of
1923 he was summoned to Tokyo
to help direct reconstruction oper
ations. During the past seven years
he has been in Tokyo, organizing
associations and building up the
Y. M. C. A. in Japan. He was a
special member of the committee
(Continued on Page 3.)
TO SUMMER FACULTY
University Instructor Will
Teach Zoology at
Wyoming.
Dr. Irving H. Blake has recently
accepted an appointment to the
faculty o." f.he Wyoming Summer
Campin the Medicine Bow Nation
al Forest, where he will instruct
classes in elementary zoology with
particular emphasis upon the ecol
ogical side of the subject.
This appointment has grown out
of the advances made by two or
three institutions in Colorado and
from the University of Wyoming
who have been seeking co-operation
of the University of Nebraska
to give zoology courses similar to
the elementary and advanced bot
any courses which Dr. 11. J. Pool,
chairman of the department of bot
any has conducted at Camp Olym
pus in Estes Park, Colorado.
Very little progress was made to
offer such a course of study to Ne
braska zoology students until last
summer when Dr. Otis Wade of the
zoology department accepted an
appointment and conducted classes
at the Wyoming Summer aCmp.
Dr. Blake and Dr. Wade will in
struct the classes this summer of
fering both elementary and ad
vanced courses. Dr. Blake is also
prepared to conduct advanced work
in ecology.
"We are still on the gold stand
ard," according to some state
ments, "because we have the full
gold reserves required by law,
back of our money. The mere
maintenance of adequate gold re
serve does not establish our gold
standard," Arndt stated, "nor is
the country on the gold standard
so long as people can obtain gold
coin. Even in cases in which the
public has no gold coin the gold
standard may exist. The true test
of the gold standard is whether
free trade in gold is permitted."
Regardless of all other consider
ations a country is off the gold
standard as soon as it places an
embargo on gold exports. The
chief thing is whether it permits
free trade in gold.
Contradicting some reports that
clearing house certificates have
not been used since 1907, he stated
that they were last issued in the
United States in 1914 shortly after
the opening of the World war.
"Many people are convinced that
(.Continued on rage 3. )
RUSSELL
DURGIN
FORUM TODAY NOON
BLAKE APPOINTED
ZOOLOGIST 'TO SHOW SLIDES
Pictures Illustrate Doctor
Wade's Experiences in
Summer Camp.
Slides showing the experiences
of Dr. Otis Wade, zoology depart
ment, at the Wyoming summer
camp in Medicine Bow national
forest, where he conducted classes
last year in elementary and ad
vanced zoology, will be shown at
the meeting of Phi Sigma, honor
ary biological society, in Bessoy
hall 118 Wednesday evening. March
8, at 7:15 o'clock. The public and
anyone interested in the subject
are invited to attend.
COLONEL OURY WILL
Results
To
of First Inspection
Be Announced
April 3.
The companies of the cadet regi
ment will be inspected by the uni
versity commandant, Colonel W. H.
Oury, Cadet Colonel Howard Mix
son." and the Cadet Adjutant of the
regiment Charles Husbands. The
inspection will begin March 20.
The companies will be inspected
once on squad and platoon dr ill and
once on company drill. Each com
pany will be given the same move
ments before the inspecting offi
cers. Attendance and the leader
ship of the commissioned and non
commissioned officers will be con
sidered in the rating.
The company placing first in the
competition will receive one per
cent on its score in the final com
petition of the year. The second
and third places will be awarded
one-half and one-fourth of one per
cent respectively on their final
competition ratings.
The purpose of the inspection is
to place the companies on their
standings in outdoor work. The re
sults of the first inspection will be
announced on April 3 and stand
ings on the second inspection on
April 17.
awe in tic m: tns
GIRLS' PEP SOCIETY
Mildred
As V
llufj h
iee-Pn'sidi
Tassels.
Chosen
lit of
Anne Bunting. Pi He!
elected president of Ta
H
se
In. was
. girls'
pep organization,
meeting held Tu
at their regular
sdav evening at
Ellen Smith Hall.
The other new officers are Mil-
Idred Huff. Alpha Delta Thta. vice
i president: Maxine Packwood. Kap-
: pa Delta, secretary
I Klotz, Alpha Delta Th
Val
ta. tr.
ntme
HTliI momi e i 1 .
Zeta. notification hair-man.
Anne Bunting is succeeding
Jane Youngson. Kappa Alpha
Uoia Mil.lrod Huff succeeds Mar-
garet Cheuvront as vice president. :
Maxine Packwood as new secre-;
tary, is succeeding Anne Bunting ;
Valentine Klotz was re-elected to j
the treasurer's post, and Thelma I
Sterkel succeeds Mildred Huff as j
notification chairman.
IOWA STATE GETS 'LOAN
Aviation Instruments Valued
At $1,200 Given to
College.
AMES, la. Aviation instru
ments valued at more than $1,200
have recently been "permanently
loaned" to Iowa State college's
mechanical engineering depart
ment by the field service section
of the army air corps at Wright
field. Dayton. O. The collection,
to be used for instructional pur
poses in aviation courses, includes
tachometers, altimeters, a com
pass, pressure gages, and air speed
indicators.
Th mechanical engineering de
partment has also recently re
ceived ps a gift from the Pratt &
Whitney Aircraft company, thru
the courtesy of the United Air
Lines. ,i -cylinder radial airplane
engine ot
j2j horsepower.
INSPECT COMPANIES
COMMITTEE PLANS
NEW CEREMONY TO
IL
HI
Both Juniors
and Seniors
Part in
Will Take
Presentation.
A cei
emonv much more im
pressive than that of past yeai.s
and one that will be truly repre
sentative of the junior and senior
classes will be witnessed when the
1933 Prom girl is presented at the
Junior-Senior prom in the coliseum
Friday night, according to John
Gepson and Ruth Cherny, commit
tee in charge.
Promptly at 11 o'clock, the time
of presentation, all juniors and
seniors present will form two lines
about twelve feet apart and facing
each other-, beginning at the steps
at the south end of the hall and
extending to the throne on the
north. The Prom girl will appeal
on the steps where she will be met
by the junior and senior class pres
idents who will escort her between
the lines to the throne.
At the conclusion of the pres
entation ceremony, the or -chest i i
will play a number dedicated esp -ciaily
to juniors and senior s.
The committee asks that all jun
iors and senior s, and other s vh -
escorts are either juniors or sen
iors, co-operate in forming
(Continued on Page ?,.
.i
; sn:( ime or
LIO. IS EXHIBITED
AT MOIiniLL II Al l
Mount Is Consideretl
One of Most Per feet in
L niteil Slates.
11 s
A large and beautifully m unt-. i
specimen of the king of the jungle
and his mate has been recently re
ceived by the Nebraska State Mu
seum and is now imposingly "in"
for visitors in the north corridor o:
the basement floor of Morrill Ha1!.
Considered by museum authon
ties in the east to lie one of th
most beautiful and periect mount
in the United States, the two gp-:,:
cats are valued at fifteen thousa:.-i
dollar-!.
Thev are creamv yellow
m
without visible sear-, or flaws; an i
stand graceluliv on a
reaiiM
nr.. I
stone sl.-tb
brush, their
t
in junglt
ars cocke.
1 paths b
, their ey.
fore th-:
mvste,) !
searching the
as tnougn suooci
some alien noise.
A part of the A
lection, the mount
museum from the
lam Eree,
was sent
James L.
to 111'
Clark
Studios in New York. Adam Breeds
was a Hastings man whose sev ial
'expeditions to South Africa for
; wild animal specimens won for him
world wide recognition.
I He bequeathed his entire colioe
tion to the Nebra.-ka Mu.-eum. and
. it is being brought here in sections
i as quickly as finances will permit.
; The beautiful giraffe of unusual
; longitude and the largest .os.-dle.
! elephant in the world, both of
which are on exhibition in Morrill
Hall, are the other most recent ac
quisitions from the Breede collec
tion. ( xnnniox (;koit
TO HK AH TALK ON
PKKIOD I I HMTl Ii!"
Miss MiMred Overholser will
talk on "Period Furniture" at a
meeting of the Home Development
staff. Wednesday. March s. at 5
o'clock in Ellen' Smith Hall. This
commission group is led by Dor
othy Cathcr. All girls interested
are invited to attend. "This mat
ing will prove very interesting to
those interested in home furnish
ings" declares Dorothy Cathers.
Student Council Will
Meet Ths Afternoon
The Student council will
hold its rcqu'ar meeting at 5
o'clock this afternoon in U
hall 106. All committees are
asked to be ready to give re
ports and present plans for
completion of their wo'-k be
fore the first of May.
Student Cou cii r.-es'dent.
P T PROM 11
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