I HF D N AILY EBRASKAN Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska VOL. XXV 10. 13. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1933. PRICE 5 CENTS HDSKER TO BOWI PIT 500 EXPECTED AT ANNUAL PARTY OF A CAMPUS CLUB Eddie Jungbluth Orchestra Scheduled to Play for Dance Tonight. DAIRY GROUP SPONSOR Hundreds Colored Balloons Decorate Activities Building. Hans arc complete for the annual Tri-K-Club party, one of the most important social affairs on the college of agri culture campus, to be sriven Friday, Nov. 16 in the student ac tivities building. Eddie Jungbluth and his orchestra, will play for the affair, sponsored by the Dairy Club. Over 500 students are expected to attend the party, unique be cause the entire building will be decorated with hundreds of varied colored balloons. "The Dairy Club extends a welcome to stu dents on the city campus as well as those enrolled in the college of agriculture," stated Al Pearl, chairman of general arrangements for the dance. Chaperons for the party will be Miss Martha Park, in charge of the agricultural college cafeteria. Prof. L. K. Crowe, associate pro fessor of dairy husbandry, and Mrs. Crowe, and Prof. Martin A. Alexander, associate professor of animal husbandry, and Mrs. Alex ander. Special guests who have been invited are: Prof, and Mrs. Downs, Prof, and Mrs. H. P. Davis, Prof, and Mrs. E. I Reichart, Prof, and Mrs. I. L. Hathaway, Prof, and Mrs. E. C. Scheidenhelm and Prof, and Mrs. Milton L. Fleck. Assisting Pearl with arrange ments for the affair are Dick' Lar son, Don Joy and Don Raden baugh. Students Invited Attend College Affair Nov. 20. Plans for the engineering barbe cue to be held at 6 o'clock Wed nesday evening, Nov. 20, in the Coliseum N club rooms were com pleted at a meeting of the engi neering college student executive board, Wednesday evening, it was announced by Ted Schroeder, pres ident of the board. Program for the evening In cludes a talk by Herb Yenne of the dramatics department, a wrestling exhibition by members of the university wrestling team, and a horizontal bar performance. Card playing and a general get together will conclude the eve ning's activities. "All engineering students and professors of the college are urged to attend the barbecue," Schroeder ktated. "A very entertaining pro gram has been arranged and it is the hope that many will be pres ent .7 The barbecue Is one of the events scheduled in a plan to re juvenate student Interest In the engineering college, Schroeder ex plained. DEADUSE FOR BARB TOURSEY ADVANCED Team Given a Chance To Atone for First Defeat. LVadline for fillnjs In the barb intramural basketball tournament Is noon. Friday, Nov. 22, according to Director Harold Petz. Two tournaments will be held this year. Instead of delaying the barb's most powerful sport until fraternities start playing. The play will begin immediately after Thanksgiving. Barb team will be given a chance to see what would happen "if e only had it to do over again, for the second tournament will be a nance to prove the merits for the winners of the first Players may check out basket balls for prattle from the Intra mural office. A student has been employed to stay there at all times for their convenience. Teams may practice la the coliseum at any time when they may procure the floor. I). G. Koch to Study Soil MoUture l Macl'hrreon D. G. Koth has been assigned work on the soil tnolstuie studies at MacPberson. Kas. He has been working at Carrington, N. D. Miss Mari Sandoz Guest of Honor at Tea in Book Store When Miss Mart Sandoz first re ceived notification that her biog raphy "Old Jules," was winner of the Atlantic $5,000 Non-Fiction Prize, she could not believe that It was authentic. Indeed, it was not until one week after she re ceived the first letter on June 13, when the announcement appeared in the papers that she felt certain that she had actually won the prize. Thijse facts the former Nebras ka student disclosed at a tea given in her honor Thursday afternoon at the Lincoln book store where members of Chi Delta Phi, honor ary literary society, served. The author can sympathize with striving young writers because she has so recently had the experience of trying to sell a book. "Old Jules" was rejected by fifteen pub lishers before it won the prize. In 1933, it was also submitted in the Atlantic contest In 1925, writ ing under a pseudonym. Miss San doz won honorable mention in the Harper Intercollegiate Short tSory Contest. Miss Sandoz is a member of Chi Delta Phi, Thcta Sigma Phi, pro fessional journalism sorority, and the Quill, an organization of city writers. She plana to spend some time in Lincoln writing on her next book. 515 WOMEN AHEND COED COUNCIL PARTY T Plantation Theme Features Dinner Honoring Little Sisters Thursday. Five hundred seventy-five uni versity women were present at the Coed Counselor plantation dinner and party which was staged Thurs day evening in Grant Memorial hail from six to eight o'clock. Those who attended Included Coed Counselors ani their little sisters and sorority women and their sor ority daughters. In keeping with the theme of the party decorations me program carried out the plantation idea. The first number on the program was a skit entitled, "In the Throes of Registration," and was pre sented by representatives of the dramatic hobby group sponsored by the Coed Counselors. Those who took Dart in the play included Ramona Porter as a freshman girl; Haseldoras Olsen. Coed Coun selor; Nona Jane Moore, Tassel; Jane Winnett, Cornhusker sales man; Betty Lau, Awgwan sales man, and Margaret Werner, Ne braskan salesman. Groups Gives Dance. Members of the tap dancing hobby group furnished an addi tional feature on the program by giving a dance. Those who ap peared in this number were: Vir ginia Lea, Barbara Hart, Mary Catherine Davis, Mary Davlason. and. Betty Brown. Barbara Jeary also gave a tap dance, accom panied by Louise Magee. Marjorie Thomas gave a mus ical reading entitled 'The Waltz." She was accompanied by Irene Reimers. George Anna Lehr, Louise Ma (Continued on Page 2.) lEliDlENO Tl Rev. Stimson to Speak at Annual International Friendship Dinner. o v w. Stimson. pastor of the first Presbyterian church of Sioux City. Ia.. will e ieaiuru .n..ifr at the Annual Interna tional Friendship banquet Fridaiy J evening from n First Christian church. About zoo are expected to attend. -Nationalism, the Greatest En m t.t Peace" will be the subject of the address on which Rev. Stim on will speak. Rev. Stimson stu died at Washington college in St. Louis, Presbyterian Theological Seminary In Chicago, at Marbourg. Germany, and In Palestine. He has traveled In fourteen foreign coun tries. . Stimson lirsl paaioraie wh si Gales jurg, 111, which he began the year after graduation from the Chicago Seminary In 1930. Hester Freeman win maae mt welcoming address and Dr. H. O. Werner will respond for the fac nitv with Albina Nemvoca, ex change student from Czechoslo vakia, responaing jot uic iwtiu students. DEMAN UNION CROUP 10 CONVENE TONIGHT There will be a regular meeting of the Dellan L'nion literary ao rMy thu evening at :30 o'clock. Dr. John Clark. Professor In the rronomi' i department, win apea before the gioop on "Experiences : In Russia." I ONAL BANQUET NEBRASKA GRIDDERS CLASH WITH PANTHERS SATURDAY; VICTORY SPIRIT UPPERMOST SCHOONER ISSUE INCLUDES 19 NEW STORIES POEMS Literary Magazine to Be Issued Monday or Tuesday. Presenting nineteen stories, ar ticles and poems taken from over 700 manuscripts, the Prairie Schooner. Nebraska's well known literary magazine, will be Issued Monday or Tuesday of next week, Prof. L. C. Wimberly of the Eng lish department and editor of the magazine announced. Approximately 2,500 to. 3,000 manuscripts are sent in to the Prairie Schooner a year, rroreasor Wimberly stated. The material in this Quarter's issue wps taken from approximately 700 manu scripts, which came from all parts of the United States and several foreign nations. Writers of other nations who have contributed ma terial to the magazine have been from India. England, Philippine Islands. France and Canada, the editor said. Considered outstanding by the staff because of its cosmopolitan content, this issue contains five stories, six articles, and eight poems written by university pro feasors, former students and au thors from thruout this country and foreign lands. Two biographical sketches writ ten by two university instructors aDDftar in the magazine. Dr. Mar tin S. Petersen of the English de partment writes of William Allen White, and M. S. Ginsburg of the classics department presents bioeraDhical sketch of Horace, a Roman poet. Poems and sketches by former Nebraska students include three sonnets by Wilbur Gaffney, arts and science graduate; a sonnet by Loren Eiseley, graduate student in the arts and science college, and a sketch of dust storms of 1935 entitled "Sprine of the Black BMz sards" by Rudolph Umland of Eagle, Nebraska, who is a former student here. A poem entitled "Me morial" by Charles Sloan of Colo rado is also in the Issue. In view of the present advocacy of paci fism In this country, "Memorial" is very appropriate for Armistice day. Professor Wimberly stated. E Journalism Senior Leaves Thursday for Meeting at Urbana, III. Eugene Dalby. senior in jour nalism school, left Thursday for Urbana. 111., where be will attend the national Sigma Delta Chi con vention as official Nebraska dele gate. He will be accompanied to the opening session by Jack Fischer, president of the Nebraska chapter and Daily Nebraskan edi tor. An Inclusive professional organ ization that would unite journal ists not only in newspaper work, but those in press association, syn rllrjlj and marazine fields will be considered by the convention body. Although such a step would neces sitate reorganization of the entire fraternity, the nronosal has been aruently urged to make possible a united professional group. Three days of discussion on various Journalistic topics are planned from Nov. 15 to 17 at the Urbana-Llncoln hotel. Featured speakers include John E. 8 tern pel of the New York Sun; Paul Scott Mowrer, Chicago Dally News; Phillip Kinsley, Chicago Tribune. Those topics to be considered are research problems In Journalism, creation of an alumni association, and a symposium "Municipal Gov ernment and the Press." Bible Talks Over SBC Hookup Tonight at 7 Coach Dana X. Bible will peak ever ths National iroad casting tyiUrn en a nation wld hookup tonight from Pitts burgh. From 7 to 7:30 Central Standard Tims tha Kellogg program will hava Coach Bibit discuss th different phases of tomorrow's game with Coach "Jock" Sutherland's Panthers. Several Nebraska songs will be played by Fed Nichols or chestrs, with Ruth Ettlng ren dering vocal selection. Biblemen Determined Repeat History and Down Foes On Home Field. PITTSBURGH IS FAVORED Scarlet Backs Hold Answer; Can Their Brilliance Trip Line Power? By Dick Kunzman. .Everybody's picking Pitt. Not a single dissenting voice does there appear above the Panther-veneered horizon m fa vor of Dana Bible's Cornhusk- ers, gone east in an attempt to "crash Into "big time" football, via Pittsburgh. That, when you recall some of the power dynamos that Jock Sutherland has turned loose, and some of the things that have thereby happened to Nebraska, is probably only natural and to be expected. Much Has Changed. But there's no time like the present on a football field, where things happen fast and frantically. Those unpalatable occurrences when Nebraska had all she could do to hang onto the Panther's tail, much less outrun him, are a long way removed from Saturday after noon, and a lot of things have happened since then. Nobody ever remembers what happened before the depression anyway, so it might not be a bad idea to forget that well worn phrase about Nebraska not having beaten Pitt since 1921. In that event, after you've forgotten that Nebraska and Pittsburgh were ever seen In the same stadium to gether, things take on a slightly different aspect. There's a Possibility. It might even be possible to hazard a guess that maybe, witn a little luck and the breaks, and the right frame of mind, and other such essentials that aren't always in appearance, well, don't laugh, but Nebraska might Just possibly win. That possibility assumes some. thing like popular toleration when you recall what Nebraska almost did to Minnesota earlier in the season. Few people outside Min nesota like to remember that game or anything connected with it, but the fact remains that the Huskers ought to have, and nearly did. capitalize on George Roscoe s fum ble on the 2-yard line to carry the ball across in four downs. Break Did It. Nebraska got in that position with the aid of an unexpected piece of good luck, but they also got out of it the wrong way on an unexpected piece of bad luck. Disregarding the subject of whether Sam Francis, Jerry i-a-Noue, or Mussolini should have granted that they could have crashed thru that Gopher line, and forgetting whether it should have been done on first, fourth or tenth" down, there's little question that Nebraska would have made those two yards but for a bad break when Lloyd Cardwell got a poor pass from center and couidnt get started on that end run. Pitt can't be any stronger than Minnesota was. and with the aid of a bit of luck going their way the Huskers (Continued on Page 4 1 PFEILER SPEAKS AT PALLADIA MEETISG Literary Club Holds Open House Tonight at Temple. Dr. Wilbelm K. Pfeiler of the German department will speak at an open meeting of the Pailadian Literary Society at 8:45 this eve ning. Also on the program are Mar garet Cannell who will sing, ac companying heraelf on the piano, and Ruth Hill, who will play sev eral selections. This is an open meeting and students are invited to attend and stay for the social hour following the program. Lenore Teal ana Lwri Kiisness made arrangements for the pro gram. REV. HESRY SPEAKS AT MEETISG SUSDAY Student - Pastor to Talk To Students on Hymns. Rev. R. B. Henry. Presbyterian student pastor, will speak at the university yoiing people's meeting at Westminster church Sunday evening at 7 o'clock on the sub ject, "The Origin of Hymns." All university students Interested are Invited to attend, according to William Holliater, ia charge of arrangement. E Board Officials Give Rules Governing Final Competition. Coll-Agrl-Fun skits must be filed in Dean Burr s office on the agricultural college campus, by 5 o'clock Friday, Nov. 15, in order to meet the deadline set by the Coll-Agri-Fun board which spon sors the program. The annual en tertainment will be given Satur day, Dec. 15, in the student activi ties building. Representatives of the groups giving skits will explain the na ture of their programs to the Coll-Agri-Fun board, Wednesday, Nov. 20. The present board members are: Don Joy, manager; Bonnie Spanggaard, assistant manager ; Ruth Carston, secretary; John Bengston, treasurer; Virginia Keim, and LeRoy Hansen. Rules governing the skits have been revised this year, and were announced recently by Bonnie Spanggaard. In effect they are: 1. The maximum amount of time taken by any one skit shall be ten minutes. Organizations may enter curtain acts with few prop erties. The maximum amount of time allowed for curtain acts shall be five minutes. 2. Skits and acts must be ap proved by the Coll-Agri-Fun board of managers. Final decision of the classification shall be made by the board. 3. A plan or outline of the act or skit accompanied by names and phone numbers of two persons qualified to represent the act shall be presented to Dean Burr's office by 5 o'clock, Friday, Nov. 15. Groups enrolling in the college of agriculture following the above closing date but before the time of the performance may present an outline cf their act up to Dec. 7. 4. Any college of agriculture student or graduate major or any organization are eligible to take part. Freshmen carrying heavy schedules should not take respon sible parts. 5. Skits and curtain acts will be Judged largely on quality of performance, time required, and (Continued on Page 2.) 11 COEDS ENTERED IN 1 Cornhusker to Announce List of Entrants Today. Twenty-seven entries in the Ne braska Queen's contest had been made at the Cornhusker office late Wednesday . afternoon, the final date of filing, according to Eugene Pester, yearbook business man ager. Each sorority was entitled to one candidate for every twenty annuals which it purchased. An announcement of the, com plete lUt of candidates will be made today when a checkup on re sults of the sales campaign will be complied. Pester stated. "Judging from the large number of candidates which have been carefully selected from over 2,000 university women, the Cornhusker staff is sure that an outstanding queen section will be had for the 1939 yearbook." Faith Arnold, edi tor stated. Carl Laemmle. Jr., Hollywood producer of Universal Pictures, will Judge the beauty queen sec tion and pick the six :)nt beauti ful girls on the Neharska campus. MUSIC CLUB PLASS RUMMAGE AUCTIOS Program Scheduled for Sunday Afternoon, Dec. 8. Plana were made for a Christ- mas meeting of Sigma Alpha Iota honorary music sorority to be held Dec. 2, at a meeting of the group held recently. Alumni will be in vited to the affair at which a while elephant sale will be con ducted. A mu -ileal mas also plann ed for Sunday afternoon, Dec. 8. Lola Rath burn, president of the musical organization, and Ruth Fret attended the musical Pan- heltoilc meeting at 5 o'clock Thursday in Ellen P-uth hall. Inez Heaney la Junior dclejatc to the council and Marjorie Kcott. senior delega'' FRIDAY DEADLIN ON COLL-AGRI FUN RDM QUEEN Three Netv Electric Clocks Keep Watch In School Buildings For the benefit of those people who are unobserving, for those who have not had the chance to be unobserving, and perhaps those who have been observing, the uni versity is the proud possessor of three absolutely new 1935 stream line model electric clocks. The prestige and efficiency of the Social Science library. Library hall, and the Daily Nebraskan of fice have been enhanced by the addition of new timepieces. When the present school year was in the first few weeks of its existence, students using the So cial Science library were placed at a disadvantage by the prom inence of an old dusty clock that never ran. Now students can be entirely at ease while studying without experiencing fears of be ing late to class. The reactions in the Nebraskan office are still in the experimental stage as the luxury of an efficient clock is so unusual that surprise has so startled the staff that co herent opinions will, undoubtedly, not be ready for the Thanksgiv ing consumption. According to John Seaton, uni versity superintendent, any time an old clock .breaks down a new electric clock is Installed in its place as it is more reasonable and economical than fixing the old clock. FINAL WORKOUT FOR CONTEST AT CHICAGO Kansas Squad to Participate In Ag Campus Contest This Weekend. Nebraska Animal Husbandry Judging Team will have its last major workouts Friday and Satur day, Nov. 15 and 16, in prepara tion for the Judging contest held in connection wth the internation al livestock exposition at Chicago starting Nov. 30. Kansas state Judging team will be on the Nebraska ag college campus this week end to partici pate In a practice contest with the Nebraska team. Placing s and rea sons will be given on twelve class es of livestock, three of horses, cattle, hogs and sheep. On Monday, Nov. 18, the animal husbandry teams from Wyoming, Colorado and Utah will arrive in Lincoln for workouts before con tinuing their trip to the exposition at Chicago. The Nebraska team, coached by R. R. Thalman, consists of Ward Bauder, Verne Hirscb, Vincent Ar thaud. Burr Ross, Lawrence Con don and Paul Pierce. The team will leave for Chicago Thursday afternoon, Nov. 28, and will return Tuesday, Dec. 3. Nebraska has been represented in the Judging contest at the In ternational livestock exposition every year since 11W8. During that period the Nebraska team has been In the top half every year except two end has won the contest three times. Competing for the world's cham pionship in livestock Judging wil be 21 or 22 teams from the major agricutural colleges in the United States and two teams from schools in Canada. Tl Theta Sigma Phi Discusses Sending Delegates to Convention. Possibilities of sending dele gates to national convention of Theta Sigma Phi. professional Journalism sorority, were dis cussed when members of the or ganization convened Thursday at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith hail. Jean Walker, president of t h e group, presided at the meeting and opened a discussion on pos sible projects which the organiza tion might undertake. Nothing definite was decided upon and the discussion will be continued at the next meeting. It was dec Wed to bold an eve ning meeting In the near future and to invite a guest speaker to discuss certain phases of writing. Dorothea Fulton was appointed by Mlas Walker to arrange for the speaker. The group heard a report on the concession endeavor undertaken In conjunction with Sigma Delta Chi, professional Journalism fraternity, and talked of holding a ush party this fall. After some discussion, however, it was decided the so ciety would do no rushing until after Initiation which is planned for sometime in the near future. Kohler Transferred l Texas Shellerhell Area E. J. Kohlor, In charge of labor atory work for the shelter belt la being transferred to the shelter belt area In Texas. HOUSES 10 SHOW HUSKER LOYALTY Thirteen Fraternities, Ten Sororities Plan Send Messages. KFAB BROADCASTS GAME Rally Committee Initiates Campaign to Encourage Players at Pitt. Ilubker team members will know that they have strong support in the student body ou the Nebraska campus when they meet the Pittsburgh Panthers on Saturday afternoon, since a large number of the organ ized houses on the campus have signified their intention to send telegrams to the squad on Friday evening. Fraternities who will send their message to the Huskers will be Delta Upsilon, Alpha Sigma Phi, Sigma Nu, Zeta Beta Tau, Beta Theta Pi, Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Al pha Epsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sigma Chi, Delta Sigma Lambda, and Beta Sigma Psi. Ten sororities are Included on the listing to send telegrams. They are: Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Om Icron PI, Sigma Delta Tau, Delta Gamma, Chi Omega, Alpha Xi Del ta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Pi Beta Phi and Alpha Phi. Fred Chambers acted as chair man of the rally committee which initiated the campaign for each organized house to send their en couragement to the team.. Saturday's game will be broad cast by telegraph report over sta tion KFAB and also in the lobby of the Cornhusker hotel. Reports will also be available at the office of the Journal and Star. GIRLS' SWIM GROUP PLEDGES AT PARTY Various Skits Pantomimed For Entertainment of Members. Active members of Tanksteret tes, girls swim society, entertained the pledges at a party Wednesday afternoon. For the entertainment of the actives the pledges who came in costume, pantomimed various skits such as "The Greedy Dog," "Angling Bunnies" and "The Fox that Fished with his Tail." Addis Cole. Adrienne Griffith Vera Wilson and Cora Fox were com plimented on clever costumes. After the pantomiming the pledges were Instructed to swim across the pool like the animal which they had been assigned. They were also to make the char acteristic noise of the same animal. Following this a crew race was held. In this the girls sat on long planks and went across the pool. Pledges were then taken to tha W. A. A. room on the third floor of the Armory where a picnic was held for them. The room wa dec orated to represent an old-fashioned picnic. During the picnic each pledge told where she had learned to fcwim and of her experience since she had learned to swim. The girls were formally pledged after having passed a series of try-outs given since the beginning of school. They were told about plans of the club for the remain der of the semester and of the or ganization of committees of th club. Pl'dge ribbons were a scat let fish on a cream background. FIRST FRESCH MOVIE AT VARSITY DEC. I t Yvonne Prin temps Stars In Film; Announce Mete Date. Presentation of the firrt Fiewh movie, given In collaboration with the university French department, will be made at the Varsity the atre on Saturday morning, Dec 14, at 10 a. m. "La Dame Aux Cam lias, has been selected aa the picture. Yvonne Printemps, celebrated actress and well known in both France and the United States, star in the title role of the fea ture. The part which she will por tray has already been made fa mous by many leading actresses. Three other productions, "Prenei Garde a la Peinture." "Pechor d Inland" and "La Matemellc" will probably be brought to tn Varsity according to present plans and each movie will be shown on a Saturday morning. Reason tickets for the four cr formancts will be sold by Le Ccr cla Franca La al reduced rates. wTH TELEGRAMS 3 I 3 i