EBRA Official Student Newspaper of. the University of Nebraska LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1933 PRICE 3 CENTS VOL. XXXV NO. 39. BIG TITLE COM OM H i J3 A.X.LY SKAN J HF SIX VARIED THEMES FEATURE PRAIRIE E Literary Magazine Appears Next Week; On Sale About Nov. 15. FACULTY CONTRIBUTES Publication Receives 100 Percent Rating by O'Brien. Nebraska's internnliunally recotfiiized literary magazine Prairie Schooner, will bo off the press next week, ami on sale about Nov. 13, although the date has not been definitely set, according to Prof. L. C. Wim berly, editor of the publication. "Because of the number and va riety of types and themes, the staff considers this issue one of the best ever published," stated Wimberly. Not only is the Prairie Schooner one of two magazines out of six teen which received 100 percent rating by the famous O'Brien lit erary critic, but it is also listed among those nine magazines which have published four or more stories with three-star rating dur ing the year 1933. Ginsburg Writes Article. Occupying the first page of the magazine is an article by Prof. M. S. Ginsburg of the Classics de partment on "Horace," the Latin poet. The article was written in commcration of the 2000th anni versary of Horace's birth. Two odes from Horace also appear in the magazine. "Roman Winter" was translated by Margaret Mor row of St. Mary's high school of Omaha. The other "Roman Spring" was translated by Ruth Harron of Doane college. Other Nebraska contributors are Dr. Harold Stoke, with an article on De Tocqueville democracy in America, and Dr. Martin S. Peter son who has an article on William Allen White, the Kansas editor and author. Miss Mabel Langdon, of the Fine Arts school, has a poem appearing in the issue named "These Things Are Ancient." Students Contribute. Students of the university also have contributed. Paul H. Rogers has written an article on "Ants; Central American." Loren Eisely is the author of Sonnet, while Ru dolph Umland of Eagle, Nebraska, has an article appearing entitled "Spring of the Black Blizzards." Wilbur Gaffney, former Nebras Uan, now with the American Book Co. in New York City, has con tributed three sonnets to this issue. Outstate Contributors. Contributors are not limited to Kebraskans as many stories are written by people from Minnesota, Illinois, Massachuetts, and poems with authors from California, Ohio and Colorado. Manuel E. Arguilla, from Ma nilla, Phillipine Islands, has a story in the magazine entitled "Midsum mer." Another author, not from the United States is Clifford Gess ler, of Honolulu, Hawaii, with a story named "Awa Song." I PREPARES FOR TESTS Members Will Visit Office Of Federal Grain Supervision. Preparing for intercollegiate crops contests, the crops judging tom will visit the office of fed eral grain supervision in the Fed eral building in Omaha on Thurs day, Nov. 14. The annual trip is made in or der that the team may receive actual experience in grading grain under the supervision of federal officials. Coach A. L. Froliks team con sists of John Bengston. John Cly mnr, Don Kilmer and Dayton Klingman. The team will journey to Kan sas City, Nov. 22. to participate in crops judging contest and will attend the International Hay and Grain show held in conjunction with the International Live Stock exposition in Chicago, Nov. 13. HARPER ADDRESSES A.S.C.E. THURSDAY Discussing the "Paper and Pulp Industry," Robert E. Harper, sen ior in chem engineering, addressed members of the American Society of Chemical Engineers, Thursday evening. The process of making paper was traced from the time the timber was cut to the finished product. The speaker, who has had con siderable experience working in a Paper mill in Wisconsin, told of transporting the wood to the mill find the methods used to develop the pulp into paper. SCHOONER ISSU CAMERA CLUB SHOWS PHOTOGRAPH EXHIBIT Art Galleries to Be Open Nov. W From 2 to 5 O'Clock. Phntnsrranhic efforts of Lincoln people, including work done by university faculty members, will be on display in the third annual Lincoln Camera club exhibition at Morrill hall, Nov. 10. The art gal leries will be open from 2 to 0 p. m. Subjects shown will include na ture studies as well as scientific onrt nnu'n nhntneranhs. Pictures of unusual scenes will feature the exhibit. Amon? facultv members whose work will be shown are W. F. Weiland, D. H. Harkness, Dr. A. L. Lugn, R. F. Richmond and Dwignt Kirsch. m REGIMENTS ARMISTICE DAY Band and Tassels to Take Part in Review and Celebration. Two regiments from the R. O. T. C. unit at the university, the band and members of Tassels, women's neD organization, will take part in the Armistice day parade Monday afternoon, coi. w. H. Oury announced. The univer sity units will form in line of march in front of Nebraska hall when the first call is sounded at 1 p. m. Richard L. Rider and Sherman Cosgrove, both of Lincoln, will command the first and second reg iments respectively. Members of Tassels, who will carry the me morial flag, will march in front of the provisional battalion. Follow ing the parade the regiments will form on the athletic field in the stadium where a parade rally and review will be held in honor of the football team and the coaching staff. Parade order of inarch is as fol lows: Colonel Rider and staff, regi mental colors, band No. 1, memori al flag, provisional battalion, first battalion commander and staff, colors, band No. 2, first battalion, second battalion, third battalion, Lieutenant Cosgrove and staff, band No. 3, first battalion, second battalion, Lincoln high school band, third battalion. A.W.S. BOARD INTENDS GIVE WW PARTY Theme of Annual Cornhusker Affair Centers Around Toy Shop Setting. Releasing the theme for the an nual Cornhusker costume party, to be held from 7 to 8 o'clock Thursday, Nov. 21. in the Armory, members of the A. W. S. board, in charge of the arrangements, re vealed that they intended to make J.he women's gymnasium into a virtual "Toyland." "With the setting a toy shop and the entire party based on the toyland theme, we. expect to give an entertainment entirely new and different from the parties of pre vious years," said Mary Yoder, A. W. S. board member in charge of the party. The Cornhusker costume party is an annual party open to all uni versity women. All women are expected to come in costume and three prizes are given,- one for the prettiest, one for the funniest, and one for the cleverest costume. Molly Carpenter will preside as the "Toy Shop Keeper" at this year's costume review. A pro gram, and, of course, refresh ments, are featured parts of the evening's entertainment. Elsie Buxman is in charge of the refreshment committee. She is assisted by Virginia Fleetwood, Helen Jennings, Patricia Meyer, Marjorie Crabill, Jean Fetter, and Martha White. The committee in charge of selecting the favors is headed by Hazel Bradstreet. as sisted by Patricia Lahr, Barbara Selleck, and Francis Baldman. Jean Walt is the chairman of the entertainment committee. Working with her are Rebecca Oldfather, Jane Dimir.ery, and Betty Mayne. tmcha Kllbourn is working on the costumes. Pub licity is in the hands of Betty Cherny and Regina Hunkins. Jane Barbour and Betty Ma gee are managing the ticket sales, and Dorothy Taylor is in charge of selecting the prize and inviting tha chaperones. Dr. Henzlik Addresses Phi .Delta Kappa on Progress Phi Delta Kappa members met Saturday evening to bear an ad dress by Dean F. E. Henzlik on "Freedom of Speech and Profes sional Progress." Dr. A. R. Cong don led a round table discussion on proposed fraternity rcorn-'zation. PARADE LAEMMLE JR. TO SELECT BEAUTIES E Producer Agrees Choose Six Coeds for 1936 Yearbook. QUEEN SECTION LARGER Every Sorority Now Eligible Enter One Candidate, Says Pester. Carl Larnmile, jr., Hollywood producer of Universal Pictures, will judge the beauty queen section of the 1J36 Cornhusker, it v-as revealed Saturday by Faith Arnold, year book editor. "We feel wc are fortunate in havine Mr. Laemmle act as our judge," stated Miss Arnold. "He is well qualified to pick the six most beautiful glrla on the iMeDrasKa campus because of his close asso ciation with the nation's film beauties." In choosing a judge Miss Arnold said that an out of town judge al lows no partiality to any of the contestants since pictures of Ne braska girls are submitted by num ber only. This year each of the six winners of the contest will have a full view picture with a novelty double page layout, thus making the queen section larger than it has been in previous years. In order to have an entrant in the contest, each sorority house must buy twenty Cornhuskers. Gene Pester, business manager of the year book, stated that thus far every house is eligible for one can didate, five houses may enter two candidates, while three are eligible to enter three candidates;. COUNSELORS REVIVE PLANTATION IDEA AT Sorority Daughters, Little Sisters to Attend Annual Affair. Memories of the old southern plantation will be revived by the Coed Counselors on Thursday eve ning, Nov. 14, when they stage their annual dinner and party for all university women at Grant Me morial hall from 6 to 8 o'clock. Coed Counselors will attend with their little sisters and sorority women will be present with their sorority daughters. Plans for a program to carry out the theme of the evening have been made, according to Marjorie Bannister, program chairman. Numbers on the program will in clude a tap dance by the Y. W. C. A. tap dancing hobby group and a play by the dramatic hobby division. George Anna Lchr will assist in carrying out the mo tif of the affair by playing such selections as, "Old Black Joe" on the piano. Chairmen Announced. Chairmen In charge of the party include Gladys Klopp, food; Jean Marvin, waitresses: Erman Bauer, tickets, and Rowena Swenson, gen eral arrangements and closing tables. Special guests who will attend the affair will include the two sponsors of Coed Counselors, Miss Elsie Ford Piper and Miss Letta Clark: Miss Amanda Heppner, dean of women, and Miss Mildred Green, Y. W. C. A. secretary. Hold Ticket Check Up. Elizabeth Moomaw, president of Coed Counselors announced that a ticket check up would be made on Friday at 5 o'clock at Ellen Smith hall and that every board member should be notified by Tuesday eve ning concerning the number of tickets sold. She also added that scholarship reports of barb girls should be handed in on or before the time of the dinner. Brenke Receives Position on Engineering Committee Dr. W. C. Brenke, chairman, of the department of mathematics at the University of Nebraska, has been appointed a member of the committee on mathematics of the Society for the Promotion of En gineering Education. New York Book Sections Feature Sandoz Studies Portrait studies of Mari Sandoz, Lincoln author, taken by Prof. Dwight Kirsch, were featured in the book section of the New York Herald Tribune and the Saturday Review of Literature. Three photo graphs of the sandhills region in northwestern Nebraska, also by Kirsch, illustrate the author's re cent book. OR CORNHUSKER A.A.M.E. COMMITTEE CONVENERS A TURD A Y Group Discusses Problems Considered at Meet in St. Louis. Executive committee of the Ne braska section of the American Association of Mechanical Engi neers met Saturday to consider several pioblems discussed at the regional meeting held recently at St. Louis. Prof. A. A. Luebs, associate pro fessor of mechanical engineering is secretary of this section and Prof. W. L. DeBaufre, chairman of the department of engineering mechanics, is cnairman. .several Omaha members were present, in cluding C. F. Moulton, who gradu ated in 1927. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Wins Trophy for Best House Decorations. Approximately 600 couples danced to the music of Tom Gen try's orchestra, witnessed the awarding of the cup for the best homecoming decorations and pre sentation of the autographed foot ball, at the annual homecoming ball, i sponsored by the Innocents society, -held in the coliseum Sat urday night. Sigma Alpha Epsilon was awarded the cup for the best home coming decorations while Delta Upsilon and Delta Sigma Lambda won honorable mention. The prize winning decoration depicted a huge spider web with Nebraska taking the form of a spider and the Jayhawker becoming hope lessly enmeshed. At the D. U. house decorations represented a museum with the Kansas Jayhawk as one of the extinct animals. The Delta Sigma Lambda house won honorary mention with its theater with the one day attraction "Plucking the Jayhawk." Judging of decorations was done by Maurice Gordon, Richard Ern esti and Ray Ramsay who agreed that the decorations were the best they had seen for many years and that competition was the closest it had ever been. Decorations at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house were torn down Fri day night by eight college boys supposedly from another state, who ripped the spider from the web. The Sig Alpha captured the boys, took them to the police sta tion and then brought them back to repair the display. F YJ.C.A. Group Composed of Officers Elected by Members Of Commissions. With the elections held in the freshman Y. W. commission group meetings this week, members of the freshman Y. W. C. A. cabinet were selected. Each group named a president and a secretary, the two officers to represent the group in the newly formed cabinet. Although the officers for all the groups are not yet available, a majority of the members of the cabinet are listed. Frances Bald man, president, and Eleanor An derson, secretary, were the officers elected in Kathryn Wlnquist's group. Caroline Kile's commission elected Pat Lahr. president, and Virginia Fleetwood, secretary. Jane Ostenberg, president, and Donna Belle Fletcher, secretary, will represent Caroline Kile's group in the cabinet. Officers of Betty Cherny's group are: Margaret Jane Pyle, presi dent, and Frances Spencer, secre tary; of Hazel Bradstreet's group, Helen Ericksa, president and Madeline Hodgson, secretary; and Emma Mauch's group, Lois Coop er, president, and Martha Long, secretary. Dr. Bengtson Speaker at Scandinavian Club Meet First meting of Ccandlnavian club will be held Tuesday night in Morrill hall auditorium at which time Dr. Nels A. Bengtson. chair man of the geography department, wil speak on scenic Norway. Meet' lngs of the evoup are open to the public. The progTam will get under way at 7:30 p. m. Exchange Professor Here in 1922 Pays Campus Visit First meeting ot Scandinavian the philosophical department, re ported the recent visit of Fror. s. L. Josh!, professor of comparative relirion at Dartmouth. Professor Joshi, who Just completed a trip around the world, was an ex change professor here in 1922 from the University of Baroda in India. PARTY CLIMAXES CELEBRATION FOR HOMECOMING DAY REGENTS ASK FOR STUDENT HELP ON UNION DISCUSSION Faculty, Undergraduates, Alumni to Consider Problem. GRAD SUPPORT NEEDED Completion of Plan Calls For Added Financial Support. Advisability of asking the federal government for a loan und grant to be used in the erection of a student union building was discussed by the university board of regents Satur day. Certain members of the board ovnrAooPfl themselves as opposed to assessing additional fees against students sufficient to nquiaaie me loan of 55 per cent covering a pe riod of the next twenty years. After some discussion it was agreed to request the students to committee of three or five to consult with the regents relative to the feasibility of spon soring the student union ounaing. A committee of the alumni associ ation onH n committee of the faculty were authorized to sit with the board and the student delega tion for the furtner discussion oi the problem. The view was also expressed that if the building should be erected, the alumni ought to be active in the nroiect and be willtnsr to subscribe a considerable propor tion of the cost. The request was made that this conference be held before the Christmas holidays. L HELD BY PRESS GROUP Enrollment at Convention Is Largest in History. Minder trophy for the best news- naner written in the annual news writing contest held in connection with the Nebraska mgn acnooi Press association, meeting at the university, was awarded to Louis Hartz of Omaha Tech hijrh school. The trophy was awarded by Fred Minder of the Nebraska Press as sociation. Don Fritz of Jackson high school, Lincoln, took second place; Katheryn Holleye of Omaha Tech. third, and honorable mention was given Ruth Kinkinon of Fre- mom, Hiowara rvoterua vi ouum Omaha high, and Jean Sanders of Superior. 302 high school students repre senting all parts of the state at tended the two day session of the association. It was the largest en rollment in the history of the con ventions, according to Prof. Gayle Walker, director of the university school of journalism. Nellie Ging'.es, Beatrice, w a s elected president; Bessie Fisher of Lincoln, seretary-treasurer. a n u Supt. L. M. Hauptman of Alvo, vico president. The next meeting will bo held at Omaha. Highlights of the convention 'n- cluded the news writing contest, address of welcome by Chancellor E. A. Burnett, and talks by J. E. Allison, W. E. Chrlstenson and Oz Black, who are connected with Nebraska newspapers. Prof. David Fellman, instructor in political science at the university, dis cussed the facts behind the news In Ethiopia. Round tables Satur day were led by John S. Bentley and J. R. Duff of the Journal; Barbara Roscwater, Gayle C. Walker and Robert Crawford of the university, and members of the Daily Nebraskan staff. KIRSCH ANNOUNCES MUSEUM EXHIBITION Art Department Sponsors Display Print Making Processes. Prof. Dwight Kirsch. chairman of the fine arts department, an nounces an exhibition from the United States national museum at Washington. D. C, which will be on public display along the third floor conidors of Morrill Hall through November. The display shows the various processes of making prints and the tools used in making the plates for prints. Lincoln is the second city to have this exhibition which is the first of a series sponsored by the national museum. Third annual Lincoln' camera club show will be on exhibtt in gallery A of Morrill hall this month. At least one of the galleries will be open to the public throughout the school year. NEBRASKA DOWNS K. U. HOPES 19-13 Francis Goes Over Twice, Up Pins for Touchdowns With Scintillating Dashes Thru Kansas Line. WILLIAMS, HELDT, M'DONALD SHINE IN LINE Jayhawks Score Early by Zone; Second I ally Comes on fc-nd Around Play After Scarlet Fumble. By Dick Kunzman. Kansas university learned a lesson in Memorial stadium Saturday afternoon and learned it well. Much to their enlight nitimmrli vnpv niiifli in t li oi r il isn (1 vfl li t n ito in i fl dis.iDnoint- NIHIL, iALivyi,,i VAJ 1 1 1 ' ' ' 1 ' " v...-. nient, Coaeh Adrian Liudsey 's title ' ...... that thev d been tricked into basing ineir nopes on n groundless : : ,3 , 1. - 4U-A ..n oil ' t- PLAYERS ANSWER PLE IN 'LET US BE GAV Rachel Crother Hit Opens In Temple Theater Monday. By Willard Burney. "We want more comedy" "and you shall have it." Such has been the continual demand of Players' patrons and such is the Players' reply as they complete the final preparations for the opening of Rachel Crothers latest hit, "Let Us Be Gay," Monday evening. With a play that Broadway critics declared "sensational," in the midst of an otherwise uneventful season, settings that literally reek with difference and originality, and with a cast that reads like "all star" week for the university campus, the second Temple pro duction of the season promises to fulfill the fondest dreams of a humor seeking audience. As the title suggests "Let Us Be Gay" is just that from the opening curtain of the introduc tory prologue to the final exit cf the growly Mr. Bouccicalt whose spacious Long Island estate forms the setting for the main part of (Continued on Page 2.) Mrs. T. J. Thompson Main Speaker on Program Tuesday. Y. W. C. A. vespers will be sponsored by the Coed Counselors on next Tuesday afternoon at 5 o'colck in Ellen Smith hall. Mrs. T. J. Thompson, assistant principal of Jackson high fchool and snonsor of the Girls Reserve organization in that school is scheduled to be the main speaker m 1 UU of the program on juesuay wuu "Why Have Friends?" as her topic rf riisriiRSinn Elizabeth Moomaw. president of Coed Counselors is in charge of le votionals Drecedinir the address She will also introduce the speaker. As xnprial music for the Esther Inir Marearet Phillippe will sing a solo and Eileen Powell will play several musical numbers on the niano. Each Coed Counselor is urged to be present with her little sisier in addition to any other women stu- dents on the campus wno migui uc interested in attending. PAGE NAMED CHIEF OI RECLAMATION BUREAU TrVin r Pno-e who graduated from the civil engineering depart ment in 1908. has been appointed fhinf nf the enelneerine division of the bureau of reclamation to succeed George O. Sanford, Dean O. J. Ferguson announced. Page, whose home was at Syracuse, Neb- was a memoer or Sigma lau nere at the university, has been with the reclamation bureau more man twentv-five vears and was super- intpndent of the Grand Valley project for six years. More re cently he was ornce engineer the Boulder canyon project ORFIELD WRITES FOR STATE LAW BULLETIN Prof. L. B. Orfield is author of the leading article in university section of the November issue of the Nebraska Law Bulletin. "Criminal Misrepresentation: Ob taining by False Pretenses," is the subject of his contribution. He is also author of an article on con stitutionality of a state statute providing for jury trial as to con tempts not committed in the pres ence of the court. AS FOR HUMOR COUNSELORS TO GIVE VESPER SERVICE Cardwell Once; LaNoue Sets Recovering Kickoff in End - - - n A i chasing Jayhawks discovered . 1 Jl J BUpCl B11UUU, auu tliaw luic nan" even a glimmer oi irum in mai statement about cnampions not coming back. When Dana X. Bible's Cornhusk er speedcar, stream-lined and su per-geared, had finished its iJo conference race Saturday, all in one momentous afternoon Kansas University's title bid had been sidetracked into a 19 to 13 defeat. Kansas State's last Thanksgiving entry was lost in the dust, and Ne braska had written in the Big bix records her sixth championship in the last eight years. Title Comes Back. A fter Kansas had built ud a too position in the standings by con quests of Kansas State and Okla homa, it remained for the husk ers to convince them that their no tions were out of the question, and that the rightful resting place of the Bia- Six crown is inside the Cornhusker football vaults. It develoried. however, that the Jayhawk is an extremely obstinate and difficult to convince specimen of the bird kingdom. The Huskers had to use no little iorce in per suading him that his efforts were futile and he might as well con sent, for he coulda't have wnat no wanted. His resistance was very mnrh a crucial test for the Hitslt- ers in their last conference battle. which brought nearly thirty thou sand fans into Memorial stadium. In fact, the efforts of the Jay hawk were almost too much for Nebraska. The referee's whistle hart scarcely died awav before Kansas had gone out and scored a. touchdown for hersen, ana is wasn't until late in the third quar ter that the Huskers could breathe freely and feel fairly confident of victory. Here's the Play. Clarence Douglas3 kicked off for Kansas, and the ball rolled out of hounds. Douelass kicked again, and it carried far into Lloyd Cardwell 's territory once more ciose 10 me right sidelines and only two yards from the goal line. Cardy waited for it to roll out again, but it bounced crazily across into the end zone, where Rutherford Hayes pounced on it for the first Jay hawk tally. Tom wcL:au mcKeu goal, and Kansas was leading by seven points. Cardy set out to reuecm nimseii with a vengeance, and exactly cpven minntos later had done lust that. The Hapgood-Hayes passing combination failed to worn anu ji. failed consistently the rest of the nftomnnn and Sam Francis and John Peterson, Lindsey's kicking specialist, exchanged punts in miu i.aNoue eot under one of those punts, and assisted by a fine bit of biocmng on me pan. Cardwell, sailed twenty-nine yards to the Kansas 45-yard line. Touchdown Pass. A lateral. Francis to Cardwell to noi netted five vards. And then Bauer' let loose his passing arm, ... a. . i i . . i i AV shooting tnc Dan to uruma (Continued on Page 3 ) PREPARING FOR PEACE TOPIC OF STOKE TALK Baptist Students to Hear Political Scientist Sunday Night. i.d. ...sointr fnr Peace" will ha the subject discussed by Prof. Harold W. Stone oi me science department of the univer- sUV wnen ne pctiivsi iv vwv, jv-..0 at the First Bapti'.l church on Sunday evening. Nov. 10 at 6:30 p. m. tiis iam is ,,,on,rato . series of three ad dresses on the topic of peace. Ap proximately tony Siuueuu mu pected to attend this gathering on Sunday, according to Miss Grace Spacht, Baptist student secretary. Professor Stoke's speech will deal with the present world situa tion and include a summary of tho danger spots in the world today. Clarence Summers, member of the student group is in charge of the meeting at 6:30 and will introduce the speaker. Preceding the address a social half hour followed by the worship service will be held at 6 o'clock. Miss Dorothea Noble and Mr.. Ralph Reed is in charge of Unso cial period and Miss Mary Provost will lead the worship scrvtcf. .1- it i i t A i !:; 1 i