The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 21, 1936, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    TUESDAY, JANUARY 21
FOUR
THE DAILY NEBRARKAN
, 1936.
C4MLPUSOCIETY
:iud out
one had
fire or
homo from
cccniiiL' warm business has boomed. Ways and means have been
discussed and tried . . . with varying "degrees" of success, but.
most of us, with chattering teeth, say bravely, "Oh, do you
think it's cold?" and go shivering on our way, wishing fer
vently that we Avere in Bermuda or Florida . . . trying to keep
cool !
SEEN on the campus: Al Clark o
"Thumbine'' his way to school
the new Agwnn nil dressed up In
blue niul wnite, mis time. . .m
Siuvielln renmrkimr that he saw
nothing "fungi" about fungi, as he
wanted out uf liefiule nan . . Harry
Haynie escorting Leah Carlson
somewhere or other. . .three em
bivo engineers in a heated discus
sion, about a formula, at least six
inches long... One ten gallon hat,
a pipe, with a buffalo's head
carved on the bowl and an enorm
ous balck bearskin coat, walking
down the street on Chuck Wheeler
...What no boots? .. .Burr Ross
visiting the rag office. . .Flora Mae
Rimmcrman seated on the Agwan
sales table in "Sosh" at 5 o'clock
...Four men diligently scraping
the ice from the sidewalk beside
the girls gym... and the library
chuck full of these last minute
paper writers and text book read
ers. AND MUCH to the gteat relief
of the long hopeful Chi Omegas
and Delts...Jean Walker and Bob
Zimmerman notified the public of
their very evident interest in one
another. . .by passing the candy
and cigars, Modi.y night.
JAN. 13, Mary Katherinc Mc
Hugh of Murrioci? was married to
Dr. Otis R. Piatt of North Platte.
Miss McHugh is a graduate of the
University of Nebraska school of
nursing at Omaha. The couple will
live in North Platte.
ANNOUNCED Sunday was the
engagement and approaching mar
riage of Gladys Alvord and Myron
Barber. Both are former students
of the University of Nebraska.
CHI Omegu alumnae will meet
tonight at the home uf Mr. Edgar
A. Cole. A business meeting will
be held and refreshments will be
served. Assisting Mrs. Cole as
hostess are Mrs. Paul C. Poppe,
Mrs. AVilbur E. Deacon and Miss
Dorothy Jackson.
ALUMNAE of Delta Gamma
will be entertained tonight at the
home of Miss Ruth Hovland. Plans
for the coming year will be dis
cussed and a short business meet
ing will be held. Hostesses assist
ing Miss Hovland are Mrs. Clar
ence Swanson. Miss Mariel Jones
and Miss Genevieve Wilson.
DELTA Delta Delta alliance will
meet tonight at the home of -Mrs.
C. K. AVard for a pot supper. Mis.
J. Knox Jones v. ill give a book re
view and the assisting hostesses
are Mrs. A. P. Cowgill, Mrs. Earn
est Harrison, Mrs. C. W. Hyland,
Mrs. M. L. Menthornc. Mrs. H. S.
Yost, Miss Valeria Bonnell, and
Miss Jane Boos.
ANOTHER alumnae meeting
will be held at the home of Miss
Janet Smith, who is entertaining
the Sigma Kappa group. Twenty
members are expected to attend j
and the business meeting will be ;
followed by bridge. Assisting host
esses are Mrs. Guy Phillips and ,
Mrs. Mervyn Downs.
MONDAY noon the Chi Phi
auxiliary met for a dessert lunch
eon at the home of Mrs. Thorn"
Brown. A business meeting wa.-.
held after the luncheon and plans
for the coming semester wen
made. Assisting Mrs. Brown as
hostess was Mrs. Herbert Potter '
v I
AND Monday noon the Delta
Upsilon mothers club met for
luncheon at the Edith tea room.
Hostesses for the affair were Mrs.
Li. H. Pauley, Mrs. H. H. Urbach, !
Mrs. C. L. Stanley and Mrs. E. R. I
Jarrmn.
KAPPA Phi alumnae will meet
tonight at the home of Miss Mar
garet AViener. Dr. O. H. AVcrner
will speak to the group on "The
Temporary Challenge to Intelli
gence." Devotion Trill be led by
Miss Alice Williams.
f
KAPPA Sigs braved the icy
winds last night to invade the
portals of the Pi Phi house when
Ruth Brown and Carl Earmst. . .
passed the candy and cigars, re
spectively. And tis rumored that
the wohle thing was a complete
surprise.
W II ATS DOING
Tuesday.
Chi Omega alumnae meeting
at the home of Mrs. fcdgar A.
Cole, 8 o'clock.
Delta Gamma alumnae meet
ing at the home of Miss Ruth
Hovland, 8 o'clock.
Delta Delta Delta Alliance
pot luck supper at the home
of Mrs. C. K. Ward, 6:30.
Sigma Kappa alumnae meet
ing at the home of Miss Janet
Smith.
Thursday.
Alpha Delta Thcta mothers
club luncheon at the chapter
house 1 o'clock.
Saturday.
DELTA GAMMA formal at
the Cornhusker.
GRAND HOTEL
Ccod Coffee Shop Quick Service
European
Corner 12th and Q Streets
STUDENT r-fi
Special Tables for Prcfcstors
Mr. c. Rccke
KEEPING WARM IS OUR PROBLEM
for this week niul what a job it hns
turned out to be. This eolleginto fuss wo
make over everything in general lias cul
minated the last few days into a real out
grouch about the Avon t her. If all
to do avs to sit, at home by the
the radiator and never venture
without. . . . the temperature avouui bo a
matter of little importance . . . but Avith
rushing hither, and to eight o 'clocks and
fonuals Avhen the thermometer
has sneaked down to 1G beloAV . . . the
CONNING THE
CAMPI
By Arlen Crenshaw
Tho news that the high moguls
of the Pacific coast conference
have dropped some of the private
universities from football compe
tition Is both welcome and unwel
come. It is unwelcome because it shows
poor sportsmanship for tho "big
schools" to refuse to play the
smaller universities, when the lat
ter have for so long a time fur
nished such keen competition. .-It
can not help but create ill feeling
between tho various educational
institutions of the state, which is
bad for both the schools and the
state.
However, the news lias its wel
come side also. The colleges that
have been left high, wide and open
can now get together and form a
league of their own, as has been
proposed. This move certainly
would be a fine one especially if
the ideas of some of our legislators
were considered and colleges such
as Fresno State and San Jose
could be placed in such a league.
Such a conference, called what it
may, can have just as fine a foot
ball schedule as was possible to
obtain under the present setup.
The private institutions, together
with the state colleges, some of
the latter of which have teams
that rank among the best, would
have all the football that they
could handle.
More than that, the state col
leges can now come into their own
and demand recognition as uni
versities, as they logically should
be. It is high time that this state
have more than one "university"
,4
O 17M. LttctTT fc Alnai Tosamb Co.
Movie Box
STUART
"THE DARK ANGEL"
LINCOLN
"FRISCO KID"
ORPHEUM
"WAY DOWN EAST"
LIBERTY
"STEAMBOAT ROUND THE
BEND"
SUN
"KID MILLIONS" and
"PENTHOUSE"
COLONIAL
"THREE LIVE GHOSTS"
Westland Theater Corp.
VARSITY
"FIRST A GIRL"
KIVA
"ATLANTIC ADVENTURE"
and "SING SINNER SING"
nnd if the sentiment of some of
the lawmakers who have been "fed
up" on the game that is being
played by the University of Cali
fornia means anything, it may
not be very long before we will
have several more adequate insti
tutions of higher learning. Fresno
state college is singularly fortun
ate in being situated as it is, in
the center of the state, and should
unhesitatingly be made into a uni
versity. The stage is set for such
a move.
SEATON MAKING
PLANS TO SET UP
NEW BOOK STORE
(Continued from Page 1).
50 percent of the original cost and
will be resold at a 25 percent in
crease. The store will be a second
hand exchange and is to be op
erated on a non-profit basis, the
operating superintendent declared.
Only books to be purchased, how
ever, arc those that are to be used
the following semester.
Support of the whole student
body in the new book store is be
ing sought by the student council
book store committee. A house-to-house
canvass seeking the co-operation
of all organized houses
was opened Monday evening. A
publicity campaign will also be
commenced soon.
Project of the student council.
"OH, BOY-JUST MADE IT!"
I p
FsCMfy J . m5
1 tMma
the book store will be under the
supervision of the student govern
ing body. A paid manager will be
in charge of the store and Oper
ating Superintendent Seaton of
the university will co-operate with
the student council in its manage
ment. COLLEGE
WORLD
9.
li . H H B H. 5.
From rallapin, Spain, comes the
annminivmpnt. that 50 students
locked two professors in a room
until tliey nad promiseo 10 pass me
entire class in ineir respective suo
jects. No sequel has as yet been
reported but it is an idea.
In the opinion of the serious
minded class of 1939 at Princeton,
tilings to be desired at that univer
sity arc music with dinner and
dinner without scrambled eggs,
larger cream pitchers at all times,
mum. dr1 i
From Rockelelltr Ltittrt H'trllj
the addition of coeds, and the
abolition of classes. Otherwise, say
the frosh, the place is all right.
Students at San Diego State col
lege voted for an increase in
armaments in a recent Scrlpp
Howard poll and in the same poll
voted not to bear arms in case the
United States declared war.
In answer to a question in the
abve mentioned poll asking wheth
er or not the student would bear
arms in the event that the U. S.
declared war, a State Aztec col
umnist replied, "AVouldn't you if
a couple of top sergeants grabbed
you by the neck?"
$1.00 Wrought Iron
SMOKER'S STAND
If Accompanied by
This Advertisement
LIMITED SUPPLY
The OWL PHARMACY
14S No. 14th and P Street
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
MAKES OXFORD PLEDGE
Students Endorse Sentiment
Refusing to Support
U. S. in War.
COLUMBUS, Ohio. (ACP). De
spito heated opposition from with
in its own ranks, and in the face
of "communistic" and "revolution
ary" charges from the American
Legion, the American student un
ion endorsed the "Oxford pledge,"
refusing to support the United
States in any war it might con-'
duct, at its convention here.
The union, recently formed by a
merger of the national student
league and the student league for
industrial democracy, adopted the
endorsement resolution by a 244
to 49 vote. Meanwhile, meeting at
Kansas City, tho national student
federation voted, by 49 to 13, not
to bear arms outside the United
States.
Ed Kinney, member of tho of
ficers club of the R. O. T. C,
CCNY, and a member of the reso
lutions committee of the student
union, asserted that "passage of
this resolution definitely labels the
student union as a 'radical' organi
zation. Kinney and others fought the
resolution on the grounds that the
"Oxford pledge" should be optional
with the individual members, and
that its endorsement would keep
prospective members from enroll
ing. JAYS OUT LOOSE IN
SECOND HALF, 45-23
(Continued from Page 1.)
in the last two minutes, Coach
Allen's second stringers slipped
through for two more baskets. The
Jayhawks called too many recess
es late in the game and George
Preview!
Stitiirday iVifiif
11;30
Regular Prices
STUART
Wahlqulst connected Avith tho lonp
Nebraska point in the dying mo
ments. Fouls were numerous in tho last
quarter of tho game, Hank Whlt
aker receiving a bad fall. Wahl
qulst missed 3 free throws in quick
succession, raising his total fi?c
the game to 5. Summaries:
Kansas
Allen f
Holllday f
Kbllng f
Shaffer t
Noble c
Holmer c
Kappelman g
Rogers g
Pralle K
Dutton g
Cox I
fg It
;i 2
Nebraska
WaM'qulst f
linker (
Whltaker f
fg ft
1 a
1
8
0
0
1
Nelson c
Ebaugh c
Dohrmann c
Parsons g
Kale g
Widman C
Lieacox c
Totals 18 0 11 Totals 7 0 11
Score at half: Kansas 16; Nebraska 14.
Referee: E. C. CJulglsy. St. Mary's; an5
E. C. Jones, Kansas State.
TWO POSTS OPEN ON
STAFF OF BLUE PRINT
Engineers May Apply for
Positions During
This Week.
Applications for two positions
to the Blue Print staff will be re
ceived this week by Fred Cham
bers, cditor-ln-chief of the student
engineering publication. Position.!
open are assistant circulation
manager nnd assistant business
manager.
The Blue Print office has been
moved to new headquarters in 103
Nebraska hall. The former loca
tion Avas on the fourth floor nf,
the MA building. v
Correction.
Stanley J. Slosburg was the
AA-inner of the collegiate car last
Friday night. His name Avas in
correctly spelled in Sunday's Day
Nebraskan.
Mflvrn Douglas Oall ratrlek Tala
nlrrll in the thrilling; romantic com
edy by Ionls Joseph Vance
Added
"Voice of Eiperlence" Comedy-News
I VARSITY
1 I Mrnrall him danrernos!
i iB vmSm
I