The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 16, 1936, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    THUKSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1930.
FOUR
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
CAMPUSOC1ETY
with their
verra fine
have the
we're sure that they're not alone in their assumption, lhey do
'it iust south of us in Kansas, so why not here '
i o
SEEN on the campus: Virginia
Griswoki sipping a coke in an
ultra ladylike fashion (sppsp)
Pu Grogg nodding herself to sleep
in ec class R. Douglas Sarsen in
a pensive mood, staring out of the
window Ralph Ludwick smacking
Dick Brown right soundly in the
back of the head Josephine Fer
guson, bloudo hair coated with
snow Huth Dobson (Howard's
little sister) gazing at the profes
nor with those oriental eyes of
hers Mr. Swayzee in the amazing
remark that by the time you're
forty, you've developed the habit
of eating and you just can't get
rid of it Paulino Reynolds talk
ing to some tall, good looking man
in the halls of "Sosh" Harry Ep
person and Margaret Anderson in
one of those good old heart-to-heart
chats and Faith Arnold re
verting to insanity over the end
less wrapping of W. A. A. pack
ages. TOMORROW evening at S:30,
Palladlan Literary society will
hold an open meeting in the Tem
plo hall. The program will include
several musical numbers, and
there will be a speaker. Clifford
Domingo is in charge of arrange
ments. V
ACACIA announces the pledging-
of James VanSant and How
ard Runyan, both of Broken Bow.
ANNOUNCED recently was the
marriage of Virginia Cook of
Kearney and Morrison Lowenstcm
of the same city, which took place
Sept. 14 at Alma. Mr. Lowenstein
is attending the college of agri
culture. JUST a mistake, we trust, was
the organization that Bill Hollister
named for his fraternity in the
senior section of the Cornhuskcr.
Mr. Hollister, it would seem, has
renounced Alpha Kappa Delta for
Alpha Lambda Delta.
1 m a
JUST to show those cynical
souls who doubt that the A. T. O.'s
are worthy, after all we print the
list of newly elected officers. Bnce
Teeter has been elected worthy
master: Jim Erb, worthy chap
lain; Bill Baldwin, worthy- exche
quer; Don Hoehm, worthy keeper
Df the annals; Bob Hillyer, worthy
scribe; George Cullen, worthy sen
tinel; Paul Miller, worthy usher,
and Frederick Wilson, worthy
Palm reporter.
CHAPERONS for the Theta
formal to be held at the Corn
huskcr tomorrow night ate Prof,
and Mrs. Carl Arndt, Dr. and Mrs.
R. J. Poole, and Mrs. Myra Cox.
About 225 bids have been sent out,
and Elizabeth Glover is in charge
of arrangements for the affair.
THE SIGMA Chi mother's club
will meet at the chapter house
Thursday for the annual covered
dish luncheon at 1:30. There will
be no hostesses for the affair, and
decorations are cut flowers.
... . i. i
7 f- n it Dm d- Sarsen who
end for D U. Doug Sarsen vno
cut in just once too often on his
n i.j.iii oi utii'iir iMwi. wi'mk
of tho famous Sunday evening
suppers.
ONE of the more noticeable
couples on the campus, and a very
i i Hint Ptithio
"UOU lUUIViXJft flit. .
Ernst, Kappa Sig. Tho two have
been going together for some time
now, and we shouldn't; be sur
prised if one didn't have the oth
er's pin, or something.
WHAT'S DOING
Friday.
KAPPA ALPHA THETA
formal at the Cornhusker.
Phi Delta Theta mothers club
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Robert Clark, 2:30.
Lambda Chi Alpha auxiliary
luncheon at the chapter house,
1 o'clock.
Saturday.
PHI KAPPA PSI dinner
dance at the Lincoln.
ALPHA XI DELTA formal
at the Cornhusker, 9:00 o'clock.
JANE KEEPER IS
YWCA'S PRESIDENT
FOR COMING YEAR
(Continued from Pago 1).
year, and have at least a second
semester sophomore standing.
Jane Kcefcr, president, is a Lin
coln girl, junior in the college of
arts and sciences. Among her
activities arc active participation
Mnn flnlilnni iif11 fnnim inff
membership staff, program and good many prophets professing to
office staff. In 1934 she won first Kre college football following base
prize in the finance drive, was , ball into oblivion within a few
appointed to head the international years. The sensible, thrill produc
staff and Prairie Schooner drive. I ing pro rules were cited as a bip;
She is a member of student coun-1 threat, and cries for revision of
cil, was sophomore attendant to the amateur rules were loud,
the May Queen, and is a coed j The posts ought to be put back
counselor. She is a member ot
the following honoraries: Alpha
Lambda Delta, Vestals of the
Lamp, and Chi Delta Phi.
Caroline Kile. Lincoln vice
president is a junior in the col
lege of arts and sciences. Her ac
tivities include freshman commLs
sion and cabinet, social order staff,
project staff, freshman finance
drive captain, membership staff,
program and office staff, sopho
more commission and In 1935 ap
pointed chairman cf the vesper
staff. She is a freshman cabinet
sponsor, freshman commission
leader, and a coed counselor.
Maxine Durand, Morrill. Neb.,
secretary. Is a sophomore in ails
and science college. She has been
THE STAG AT EVE AND IT'S
Sntnrdnv eve too that the Phi Psi's
usual iJnir for originality have
evolved the idea ot having a bit ot a party
with dateless males in performance. This
timo it's not going to ha the fraternity
itself that goes without the feminine
touch oh no for other Greeks have been
invited to come stag, and dance with the
Phi Psi dates. Some of the more, shall
we say, prominent S. -A. E.'s think it's a
idea, and the Phi Psi's must
same thought and what's more
active in freshman cabinet, inter
national staff, program and office
staff, vesper choir, international
relation staff. She is a coed coun
selor, and Sigma Alpha Iota, hon
orary musical sorority. In 1935
she was a captain in the finance
drive and winner of first prize,
worked on the Prairie Schooner
drive, international staff, Estcs
co-operative member, and on the
conference staff.
Barbara DoPulron, Lincoln
treasurer, is a junior in the col
lege of business administration.
She has the following activities to
her credit: Freshman commission
and cabinet, sophomore commis
sion, vesper staff, treasurer of the
v W. r.. A. and on the cabinet
of that organization, secretary of
A. W. S. uoarci, t;oea counsellor
board and member of Phi Chi
Theta, honorary Biz Ad sorority.
Ruth Schobert, from Springfield,
is thn new As nresident. She has
worked on freshmen commissions,
is n mpmher nf the Home Eco
nomics association, Alpha Lambda
Delta, university -i-ti ciuo, ag
poster staff, and ag cabinet mem
ber lor two semesters.
Predictions Made Football
Of today Will Be
Dead by '42.
SUBSIDIZATION FLAYED
(lly Aswclatrd Collegiate I'rfM)
mttiw YORK. fACPl. Predic
tions that intercollegiate football
as it exists today "will be dead in
1049" unless drastic stens are
taken immediately, and the loud
est furore in years over me peren
nial problems of athletic subsidiza
tion and snectator drunkenness
marked the close of the hectic 1935
gridiron season.
The "slow wiustic, increased
iiso of laterals, side line rules,
gambling, the black listing of of
ficials and a movement to put tne
posts back on the goal line fur
nished minor headaches at coaches'
conferences here.
Outstanding among 1935 de
elopments was the forthright ap
proval of paid athletes by two
big Southern conferences, the
Dixie and Southeastern. A marked
tendency to follow suit was noticc
ablo all over the country.
The Dixie conference voted that
room, board and tuition were no
more than an athlete ought to get
for his labors on the playing field,
and Southeastern made a sudden
decision in fa'or of above board
athletic scholarships. Despite the
importance of the move, little ex
citement was evident in the com-
merit that followed. It was cen-
w
erally recognized that the southern
m legalizing and
. .. . common under cover
common under cover
practice.
Rose Bowl Clash Alarming.
Maj. John L. Griffith, Western
conference mogul, was one of
those viewing with alarm, as did
officials of Southern Methodist,
one-half of this year's Rose bowl
clash, but the Universities of
Texas and Kansas openly applaud
ed. So did Prof. C. Willett, Pa
cific Coast conference chairman.
The attitude of the eastern schools
was one of indifference.
Blamo for increased drunken
ness and rowdiness was laid
squarely on the shoulders of the
colleges themselves. For incidents
such as Dartmouth's twelfth man
against Princeton, and the tearing
down of the goal posts before the
completion of tho Princeton-Yale
game the schools have themselves
to blame, said such outstanding
footballers as Dr. Mai Stevens of
N. Y U.; and the board of temper
ance, prohibition and public morals
of the Methodist Episcopal church
dealt itself a hand with the state
ment that, "the leading teams arc
invariably followed to the field of
battle by all of the barber shop
sports of their home environment,
including the full roster of village
I idiots."
"Alumni" who flunked out of
grade school are blamed for most
of the disorders reaching a new
peak this season. "If we continue
to accept hoodlum dollars," said
Ma Stevens, "we ought to be
willing to pay for sufficient police
protection."
Tho hotrnv-mnn of nrofossional
competition poked its leering head
I !n( rt jiniflmc' nlitVil mnrno no-flln ri
, on tne goal line, sam cnicK .aiee
hnn nf Manhattan, and the colleire
game would benefit by following
pro sideline rules, moving the ball
in 15 instead of 10 yards after out-of-bounds
play.
BRUNO HAUPTMANN
SHOULD DIE FRIDAY,
SAY LAW PROFESSORS
(Continued from Page 1.)
and advertising in the case," he
continued, Prof. Foster etatcd that
he believed that there was no
question as to the guilt of the de
fendant "Altho 1 am not an advocate of
capital punishment, it is the law
and Hauptmann should be exo-
PROBLEMS IRK
GRIDIRON SEASON
CONTEMPORARY
COMMENT
Ghoast
Walks ...
"An overweening youth who gives himself
unrestrainedly, now to this, now to that, de
sire; who now takes up business, then wnnts to
play statesman, now wishes to go to war, and
then, recumbent upon tho bear skin, wishes 1o
philosophize -such a life, without order, stand
ard or duty, lie calls free and happy; and
ninny will admire n youth and regard him as
.in adept in the 'fine art of living' this is tho
character oil the democratic state."
Plato, sage of. the third century, B. C, had
drulc deeply from the cup of human experience
when lie spoke these famous words. To him,
human nature must have been an amazing un
folding of small truths leading to tho blinding
revelation of the oneness of humun kind in
thought and action.
How well he succeeds in describing the aver
age American of the enlightened twentieth cen
tury a rushing, speed-mad individual always
picking up tag ends and never really getting
anywhere. How completely be pictures the
life of the average college student 'playing
at the fine art of living.'
Ghost of Plato, would that we might drink
still deeper from that cup! Oregon State
Barometer.
A Hoary
Old Untruth.
A communication to The World-Herald
contains this phrase: "The money spent abroad
for imports is lost to the United States and its
people forever."
Notwithstanding the assurance of Thomas
Carlylc concerning the nonendurance of a lie,
this is one of those fallacies that seem destined
to fool at least some of the people all of the
time.
The plain fact of the matter is that neither
the United States nor its people lost a thin
dime on such expenditure. The reason is that
American money is no good abroad for any
thing but to purchase American goods. Any
Movie Box
STUART
"THE DARK ANGEL"
LINCOLN
"WHIPSAW"
ORPHEUM
"SEVEN KEYS TO
BALDPATE"
"BROADWAY HOSTESS"
LIBERTY
"PAGE MISS GLORY"
SUN
"THE GILDED LILY" and
"COUNT OF MONTE
CRISTO"
COLONIAL
"RAINBOW'S END"
Westland Theater Corp.
VARSITY
"FIRST A GIRL"
KIVA
"RIDERS OF THE DES
ERT" and "TARZAN"
cuted immediately," Prof. L. B.
Orfield announced. Prof. M. H.
Merrill hesitated to make any
definite statement as to the action
which should be taken since the
reports carried over to us by the
newspapers were not sufficiently
definite to justify a decision, he
stated. "It is too bad that we have
to make a trial, that is to de
termine the fate of a man, a cheap
radio and newspaper carnival," he
stated.
COLLEGE CIS SHOW ;
Heavy Money Flows
Coffers of Schools
Recently.
Into
NEW YORK. (ACPI. If the in
creased number of gifLs falling j
into the laps of colleges and uni-;
versifies is any indication, Amer
ica leels the surge of returning !
prosperity. Heavy money has i
flown into school coffers during J
the past few weeks.
Harvard tops the list with gifts
totalling over two and a half mil
lions, two million given by Lucius 1
Littauer, retired manufacturer and
former representative in .congress,
for the establishment of a gradu
ate school of pblic administration.
The new school, its objective the
scientific training of men for gov
ernmental careers, may be opened
in September, 1937. A commission
of leading educators and students
of governmental administration is
now considering plans.
Another gift of $500,000 was of
fered by Thomas W. Lamont, New
York banker, for the endowment
of a chair in political economy,
and the Automobile Manufacturers
association gave $54,250 to fur
ther the work of the Harvard
bureau for street traffic research.
You can get your
Shifts done for 9c
at
B6961
333 North 12
The
Com plainer s.
From "Facts and Figures" the most
worthwhile news-service we receive, we find
the following corporations have profited dur
ing the era of the New Deal.
Among those who profited :
American Cvnamid company, profits rose
from $1,542,908 in 1932 to $3,846,720 in 1934.
National Steel Corporation, profits rose
from $1,662,920 in .1932 to $6,050,721 in 1934.
Montgomery Ward & Company, for 13
months ending January 1, 1933 showed a de
ficit. For 12 months ending January 31, 1935,
a profit of $10,807,636 was shown.
Westinghousc Electric & Mfg. Company,
in 1932 had a deficit of $8,903,540; the first 9
months of 1935 showed profits of $S,S22,640
a clear profit of about. $16,000,000.
These four firms arc members of a group
opposing New Deal "extravagance" in relief.
Cincinnati Bearcat.
Johns Hopkins university hos
pital received 5900,000 from the
estate of Albert Marburg, retired
manufacturer, who also left $50,
OOOto Princeton, Princeton's gifts
during the last fiscal year totalled
$569,104. Yale reported a total of
$0,719,840.
About $193,000 came to Notre
Dame recently from the estate of
John F. Cushing, to bo used in the
construction of an engineering
school, and $52,600 was received
last week to establish a fund for
chemical research.
Tho University of Chicago ha3
received $170,500 in recent weeks.
Abolition of states and division
of the country into regions, their
boundaries dictated by economy
and by cultures and traditions,
was suggested by Dr. J. W. Man
ning of the University of Ken
tucky. It took a statement from the
president's office to assure stud
ents of Alma College, Michigan,
WmmmmT!'''immmmmilim'mmm''limm'mmma'l''mmm'mmmm
body suffering under the illusion that Europe
has a lot of our money and likes it can learn
tho bitter truth by going abroad and trying to
spend some of his dollars with European shop
keepers. He will soon learn that the English
demand English money, the I'Vench French
money, the Germans German money, and so on.
When a foreigner sells us something, he
can do nothing with his money save to buy
something from us. Actually what he does as
ft matter of trade convenience is to establish
a credit which he sells to someone else who
wants something from America.
Foreign trades isn't all give and no take. It
is just what its name implies. While it, does
not. balance at any particular moment, event
ually it must. When it gets loo far out of bal
ance, it is settled with gold. Tho United States
has had so much tho best of this gold balancing
that it now possesses a disproportionate share
of tho world's stock of that commodity.
That, is one of the chief reasons why the
United States has little reason for hope of ever
collecting much of the war debt Europe owes
it. We cannot digest the volume of goods it
would take to square these debts, and foreign
nations would rather default than to deplete
their own gold reserves and imperil their do
mestic financial stability. Omaha World Herald.
that the official bulletin erred in
stating the last day of vacation as
Jan. 2. It should have been Jan.
0.
At in the Syracuse (N. Y.) Post
Standard: LADY'S PURSE Con
taining Psi U, Pjht Psi and Beta
Theta Pi fraternity pins. Valuable
to owner for sentimental reasons.
Harvard has a collection of 300
books on the famous "South Sea
Bubble" swindle. It was made by
Hugh Bancroft, publisher of "The
Wall Street Journal."
You Get Good Cleaning at
Modern Cleaners
Soukup & Westover
Call F2377 for Service
I i
Auction
Coming Soon
Details will be
published Feb 4tK
Watch for this important Notice
The
Daily Nebraskan
'The Frisco Kid9
James Cagney and Margaret
Frisco Kid" which will be shown
day, Jan. 17.
COLLEGE CONDITIONS
WORSE, SURVEY SAYS
Educational Expenditures
Shoiv Decided Drop
Since 1930.
WASHINGTON, D. C. (ACP).
While business shows marked im
provement, educational conditions
throughout the country have been
growing steadily worse, according
to a recent government survey.
United States office of education
figures showed schools in 467 dis
tricts failed to open for the last
spring term, affecting 57,000 pu
pils and 1,750 teachers. Enroll
ment increased from zd.oys.ouo m
1930 to 26,700,000 last year, but
were 52,000 fewer teachers.
Total expenditure for education
dropped from S2,017,000,000 in
1930 to $1,753,000,000 in 1934.
TAKE A TIP FROM THE BIRD
WHO KNOWS
If you want a really good way
she means to you, tell her
Danielson
1306 N
Lindsay, who arc starred in "The'
at the Lincoln theater, starting Fri-.
c
LASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
10c per L,NE1
FOUND A fountain pen. Owner ma
have by Identifying and paying for
tills ad. Ad Petreat. B3S43.
"Your Drug Store"
ir it Is wanted In a hurry. Lunches.
Candy, Druss or Toilet Articles.
Phono B1UG8.
The Owl Pharmacy
148 No. 14th & P St.
Wc Deliver
These Coeds
Love
Corsages
to show that girl how mucb.
with a Corsage from
Floral Co.
B2234