The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 24, 1933, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    SUNDAY. SFJ'TEMHER 21, Vm
FOUR
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
Week's Social Calendar Includes
Honor Tea, Parties, House Dances
Honoring their new housemother,
the Alpha Phis will entertain at a
tea this afternoon. Future teas
will be given for other newly in
stalled housemothers at the va
rious other organized houses.
Courtesys for autumn brides still
hold the center of the Lincoln so
cial calendar. Fraternities and
sororities are making plans to
honor their new pledges at house
dances this coming week-end.
Afternoon Tea
tor Housemother.
Mrs. Lee O. Schmittel, new
housemother at the Alpha Phi
house, will be honored this after
noon at a tea from 2 to 5 oclock
at the chapter house. In the re
ceiving line will be Mrs. Basil
Boyd, president of the alumni;
Lois Patterson, president of the
active chapter, and Elaine Fon
tein. Tea will be poured by Mrs.
Robbins and Mrs. William Newens
during the afternoon. Tea table
appointments are to be of brown
and orange.
Announces Early
l all Wedding.
Announcement has been re
cently received here of the mar
uage of Kathryn Rieschick, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. William F.
Rieschick of Falls City, to Arthur
Wengle of Indianapolis, which
took place Sept. 4. Mrs. Wengle
is a Nebraska graduate and is a
member of Sigma Kappa. Mr.
Wengle attended this university
where he was affiliated with Tau
Kappa Epsilon.
Announce Marriage
Of Phi Psi.
On Wednesday, Sept. 20. the
marriage of Miriam Wiley to Ly
man B. Mead was solemnized at
the home of Mrs. Mead's parents.
Mr. Mead received his degree from
the university and is a member of
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.
Annual Tea for '
Mid-Keek.
The annual activities tea will be
held at Ellen Smith hall next
Thursday afternoon. At this time
all activity groups on the campus
will explain to freshmen and new
students the purpose of their organizations.
Margaret Soules
Is llonoree.
Mrs. C. L. Clark will be hostess
at her home Monday evening for
Margaret Sowles, Alpha Xi Delta,
whose marriage to Kenneth Ayers
will take place Oct. 6.
As Courtesy to
Jean liathhurn.
As a courtesy to Jean Rathburn,
Betty Pringle was hostess at a
bridge party of three tables on
Thursday evening. Following
bridge, supper was served at small
tables.
Oltumua Guest
Artist Returns.
Mar y Katharine Throop re
turned last Thursday from Ot
tumwa, la., where she was assist
ing the Community theater com
mittee in selecting the cast for
"The First Mrs. Eraser" which
that theater is presenting Nov. 1
and 2 with Miss Throop as guest
artist. Miss Throop was formerly
with the University Players.
I acation for
Local Actress.
Miss Gertrude Moran, a former
student at the university and mem
ber of the University Players, is
in Maine where she has been
spending the summer. Miss Moran
has nothing definitely planned for
this season but last year she had
major parts in various Broadway
shows and has had several good
roles in attractive productions
since she started her theatrical
career.
Honor Sigma
Kappa Alumnae.
The Sigma Kappa alumnae were
entertained at the home of Mrs.
Leslie Prickett Wednesday after
noon. Fall appointments were used
in decorating the tables where late
refreshments were served.
Miss Margaret Deming, Nebras
ka graduate, left Wednesday eve
ning for New York where she will
study at Columbia university.
STUDENT OPINION
FAVORS COUNCIL
REORGANIZATION
(Continued from Page 1.)
.-hould help a lot and can do much
to bolster the cause of fraternities
in general."
"Whatever reorganization plans
may be decided upon," John Gep
.,on, president of the student coun
cil, stated, "there must be more
work and less politics. I favor the
senior-junior plan of representa
tion and believe it will be accept-.
The alumni council may
help, but I believe the problems
it proposes to discuss are not
truly interfraternity matters and
should be left to the individual
fraternities."
President Should Be Delegate.
"The president and junior alter
nate form of representation seems
the best to me," Frank Musgrave,
president of Kosmet Klub, said.
"The president certainly has the
interests of his fraternity at heart,
and I believe he should be the
delegate. The alumni council is all
right, but it should not infringe
on the bounds of the Interfrater
nity Council's work."
"The reorganization of the In
irfrgfcmitv Council is the first
hig step toward eliminating cor- j
nipt politics on me campus, ;
Lloyd Loomis. secretary of the
council, statea. "i Deueve me senior-junior
plan of membership is
the best submitted thus far. and
if senior men are appointed on
committees, politics will most cer
tainly be removed from the coun
cil. The alumni council should give
a business-like and unbiased ap
proach to general fraternity prob
lems, if fraternities will only bare
the facts to it."
Should Eliminate Politics.
"Reorganization of the council
and elimination of politics is an
excellent idea," Otto Kotouc, mem
ber of Innocents declared. "The
senior-junior plan seems the most
satisfactory to me. I doubt if the
alumni council win worn as iu-1
tended; in my opinion, the under-:
graduates should take care of
these matters themselves." I
"The fraternity snouia cnoose
either a senior or junior man as
its delegate, but all committee
workers of the council should be
seniors," Fred Nicklas. council
representative, asserted. "The
alumni council's intentions are
good, I believe, but I am some
what skeptical as to the results
of its work."
Efficient Plan Necessary.
'The plan of reorganization
doesn't matter so long as it ful
fills the ultimate purpose of form
ing an efficient organization free
from politics," Larry Hall, editor
of the Daily Nebraskan, said.
"Politics have dominated the coun
cil too long and hampered its
work; they must be abolished im
mediately. The alumni council is
a good thing, but it must work
in its own province. I feel sure the
Interfraternity Council will co-operate
with it in every possible
way."
"I favor the junior-senior plan
of membership," Dick Moran
stated. "The council needs reor
ganization, and I think this plan
is what has been needed for a long
time."
"Politics have predominated in
the council for too long a time,"
Woodrow Magee, editor of the
Cornhusker, declared. "It is time
for the council to wake up and
take care of the urgent business it
has neglected for so long. Frater
nities have been too much afraid
to talk about themselves and I be
lieve the advent of an alumni
senior plan of representation,
would do much to simplify the
council's work and solve many
fraternity problems."
GIRLS ORGANIZATIONS
TO INTRODUCE WORK
(Continued from Page 1.)
ested in that paiticular activity.
Organizations which vvil' h "e
charge of the room in the
Wofnn'a P th'-tic .-sociati( n ui
the A. W. S. board, the Y. W. C.
A., the Big Sisters board and the
Nebraskan. the Cornhusker and
the Awgwan. Cine ro'in '''l t
devoted to honorary sororities and
a new feature ot tue tea win o- .i
room devoted to religious groups.
Tassels Will Be HosteJS33.
The Tassels will be hostesses to
show girls from room to room
where representatives from the
various girls organizations will ex
plain and discuss activities of their
own group on the campus. A ten
tative program has been planned
by the Big Sister board and the
A. W. S. board Is In charge tf re
freshments, which will be served
by members of the Lambda Delta.
W A. A. has charge of the deco
rating and posters are being pre
pared by the Y. W. C. A. The re
ceiving line and servers will be an
nounced later.
The all-activities tea is a com
paratively new feature in girls' ac
tivities, instituted for the purpose
of offering freshman girls the op
portunity of acquainting them
selves with university women's ac
tivities. After the purposes and
doings of each group have been
explained, the girls may, if they
wish, choose and join the activity
In which they are most interested.
NAZIS SEEK PURE RACE
(Continued from Page l.i
lated and governed by a pure Ar
yan stock. Anyone applying for i
political position In Germany now
must furnish proof that his father,
mother, grandfather and grand
mother on both sides, are Aryan.
"You cannot understand the sit
uation in Germany," continued
Pfeiler, "if you do not realize that
communism' was very close to seiz
ing control of Germany before the
arrival of the nazi resrime."
I Hit lor hn nprnrrmli.shed what
many before him have tried to do
but Vailed, Pfeiler continued. He
lias forged and molded the Ger
mans into one nation by doing
away with the power of the indi
vidual states. Germany is now
one uniform empire.
Outcome Uncertain.
Professor Pfeiler refused to
make any predictions about the
outcome of Hitlerism in Germany.
He believes that "the proof of the
pudding will be in the eating." And
he also thinks that it will take sev
eral years before anything definite
can be ascertained.
"As Professor Fling, in an in
terview with a Berlin newspaper,
has recently pointed out, it is the
je-awakening of nationalism, the
turning away from the idea of real
international co-operation which
can be witnessed today in Ger
many. The national idea has be
come stronger not only in Ger
many but in all countries," Pfeiler
stated.
In four countries he has seen
evidence of this fact. In France
the French people buy only French
goods, in England they buy Eng
lish goods, and in America we are
to patronize American industries.
World-wide trend toward economic
nationalism is now in progress, he
believes. From world co-operation
we are headed toward "Autarkic,"
a current German word meaning
national self-sufficiency.
Germany Stands Alone.
The Hitler government at first
isolated Germany from the world.
The stress of military form and
display and racial prejudice an
tagonized all of the nations of the
world. This feeling was strength
ened by additional false rumors
until at the present time Germany
stands quite alone, Mr. Pfeiler be
lieves. The leading men in the govern
ment knew little about foreign at
titude and psychology, in fact few
could speak any language but Ger
man, he said. Realizing the in
advisability of this situation, Mr.
Pfeiler believes to see signs that
Hitler is beginning to change his
foreign policy. His first aim is to
get equality of arms as an expres
sion of the fact that Germany is
to be considered the equal of other
nations. "A nation of sixty-five
million people cannot be kept
down and will not be content to
remain a pariah," Professor Pfei
ler stated.
Favor Socialism.
Hitler makes a sincere attempt
to remove class prejudice and dis
tinction. In this he apparently
shows genuine socialism. One
method which he has proposed to
this end is that every German
i serve one year in the labor army
: doing manual labor. Professor
I Pfeiler reiterated his inability to
! predict the outcome of the Hitler
regime with the exception of the
fact that he stated his firm belie
: that Hitler will remain in power
; for some time to come.
The new Nazi salute was quite
' interesting to Dr. Pfeiler. It is a
form of greeting required of ev
eryone in Germany. In the courts
I of law when the judge enters, he
raises his right hand In the ap
proved manner and says, "Hail,
Hitler." The members of the court
rise and reply in the same way. A
school teacher, when entering his
classrooms, greets the pupils with
these words, and they answer in
kind. So it is everywhere in the
country, although individuals can
not be forced to use it In their pri
vate relations.
Professor Pfeiler concluded:
"The purpose of the Nazi regime,
according to their statement, is to
establish a pure racial stock in
which everyone shares rights and
duties, in which there is social jus
tice, and special privileges for
none. In short, the only want as
they say. 'Peace, freedom, and
bread.' "
to nun- Oology Sliuleiits
I'iiv Yiit to Department
Former university students who
have visited the geology depart
ment recently are: Edward Par
melee, Buffalo, Wyo.; Kenneth A.
Simmons Houston, Tex.; Paul
Phillippe, Brandford. Pa.; Victor
Sylvan, Gothenburg; Frederick
Burchard. Falls City, and Roger
Sprague. of Fort Worth, Tex.
Addresses Walton League.
Dr. G. K. Condia spoke before
the state meeting of the Izaak
Walton league, held at Omaha
Tuesday.
NEBRASKAN STARTS
SUBSCRIPTION DRIVE
(Continued from Page 1.)
and a great number of the houses
are taking advantage of this of
fer," he added.
Price Is $1.50.
The price for individual sub
scriptions to the Nebraskan is one
dollar and fifty cents for the en
tire year, while the price for blocks
of twentv-five is thirty-seven dol
lars and fifty cents. Mail subscrip
tions of the publication sell for two
dollars and fifty cents for the year.
"Due to a considerable increase
in advertising revenue this year,
the subscription prico has been
lowered over the cost In previous
years," Jennings declared. "It will
cost the students less than one
cent an Issue, and it is the lowest
priced college daily paper in
America."
Distribution booths for the Dally
Nebraskan will be located in the
first floor hall of Social Science
hall and In the finance office in
Agricultural hall on the college of
agriculture campus. Subscribers
will be required to present receipts
for copies of the paper until they
become known at the booths. The
booths will be open from 7:45 p. m.
until 12:05 p.m. After that time
copies must be obtained at the of
fice of the Daily Nebraskan.
Numerous subscriptions have al-
Security Mutual
Barbers
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WHEN THEY NEED
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ready been received from former
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In addition to others scattered
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kan maintains a large exchang,
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order to keep abreast nf the ovent!!
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office. U. Hall.
Have You Ever Tried a
Left-Handed
Kam Sandwich?
What? You don't know
what we mean? Then
lets talk "pig." When
pigs wallow, they lean
on their right sides. So
their left sides are ten
derest. Our ham comes
strictly from the left
side.
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