The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 11, 1936, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    WEDNESDAY. MAUCH 11, 1936.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
SOMETHING
QUITE NOVEL.
11 v rs-.inded who like
something new ami different in
the way of weekend entertainment,
the time has come. For Friday is
scheduled the annual Sir Kp
blues" party at the Cornhusker,
so all ye lad's and lassies pet out
your best ilue bib and tucker and
plan to waltz in the shades of blue
lights and to the best blue tunes
we know. You surely won t be too
tired for more fun Saturday, and
if you can beg, borrow or steal one
rf "those fancy A. T. O. bids, come
along to story book land and keep
company with Popeye, the Dutch
twins a mummy or two. Raggedy
Ann and Andv, and Little Red Rid
ing Hood. Be on the watch for
someone in Doublet and hose and
big game hunters with mailicious
looks in their eyes. The decora
tions will be most unique and will
create an atmosphere most ap
propriate for such an affair, no
doubt new and original nursery
rhvmcs will be composed during
the course of the evening when
the party goers are not busy with
whatever entertainment the A. T.
O'a have planned for them. On
Sundav. books will be opened and
even-one will try to resume their
own' personalities and routines
after being caricatures the night
before.
s.
TRADITIONAL "Blue" party
of Sigma Phi Epsilon will be held
Friday evening at the Cornhusker.
About three hundred have been
bidden to the affair, and blue at
tire will be obligatory. Mr. T. B.
Strain, a national officer of the
fraternity, and Mrs. Strain will be
honored guests of the evening.
Chaperons arc: Mr. and Mrs. E.
N. Van Home, Dr. and Mrs. R. E.
Sturtevant, Mr. and Mrs. John
Curtis, Dr. and Mrs. A. H.
Schmidt. Major and Mrs. Walter
Scott, and Mrs. D. F. Boyles. Ar
rangements are in charge of Nate
Allen, jr., and John Scofield.
ITALY BIOS
Eli
Since Renaissance, Roman
Schools Have Rested on
Past Laurels.
Tt.t. i it. :ir-t h. wri m M-riai ;
m-th-ir wriiii FK'insivHs tor Tiw chr-.
kirn una the .m-ihk-.i lom-KiHir '
i,ll-i:iHI lre- hy
w. .- Uiiinliliun liltllllr IFf'l UIIW
i iiivmity .tuui-iit mi n h .tudrnt at
thr I nivrttUy ot Koine on an .immth-h-
llalifln mMi-H-numi- evil kf fllowlili
of the Aiwrlraii I ntviY.tly and thr Insti
tute of liiHTmitiotiHl Munition.
ROME Italy, mother of univer
sities, bids her own universities
awaken and reassume their world
leadership.
In the days of the Renaissance,
the universities of Italy led the
world to the new learning that
overcame the darkness of the Mid
dle Ages. The universities of Bo
logna, Padua, Florence and Rome
had a large part in the great
movement that brought the new
light.
Italian Universities .
Since those glorious days, how- j
ever, the universities of Italy have (
been often content to rest upon ,
their deserved laurels, while the '
rest of the world takes intellectual I
leadership, i.ven wnen iiai v. known drfuiitelv to fluctuate. Va
unified, her universities exhibited i b) t .p- now (,ountPcj nv
a tendency to remain provincial, j
Their professional faculties were
crowded, their scholarly hails al
most deserted. Science was taught
altogether by the lecture method,
medicine was learned in the clinic;
laboratories wore almost as rare
as in Gallico'.s day. Libraries of a
hundred thousand volumes were
considered Jaige. and professors
had to earn their living outside of
their teaching.
Such conditions could not plonse
tho fascist government. If youtn
was to lead th'' new Italy, it must
be thorn! v and aerefully trained.
Giovanni 'Gentile, who had long
twen a professor, was the first
minister of education under Jlus
nolini. and Ins successors, Kedele
and Ercole, were also schoolmen.
T'nder their leadership and tne
duce's own, a revolution began to
take place.
Science First Need.
Science was the first need, and
laboratories wore built, until imw
there are none finer in Europe
than those in the university eily
t Rome. Italy's great .ricntists,
like Marconi, ere called to help
with the instruction, and 1lie sal
aries of professors were heavily
increased, so that they might fcive
7f
Expert
6
333 North 12
NEBEA$.KA CAMPUS n
DBDAIL WDiDIDjJL?
wii vrs DOING
Wednesday.
Phi Chi Theta alumnae at
home of Mrs. A. C. Reed, 8
o'clock.
Thursday.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Mother's club, 1 o'clock lunch
eon at home of Mrs. J. J.
Snipes.
Sigma Phi Epsilon Mother's
club, 1 o'clock luncheon at
home of Mrs. John R. Bennett.
Friday.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
BLUE PARTY, Cornhusker
hotel.
Alpha Xi Delta Mother's
club, chapter house, 2 o'clock.
Alpha Tau Omega auxiliary,
1 o'clock luncheon at home of
Mrs. Stanley Zemer.
Delta Gamma Mothers club,
1 o'clock luncheon at chapter
house.
Phi Mu Mother's club, 1
o'clock luncheon, chapter house.
Saturday.
ALPHA TAU OMEGA
STORY BOOK BALL, Corn
busker hotel.
Pi Beta Phi alumnae, 1
o'clock dessert luncheon, chap
ter house.
CHI Phi's get-around-man, Al
Clark to you, has placed himself
in quite a predicament, we'd say.'
The gentleman in question is plan
ning to spend the coming week
end in Omaha, so, to make his
stay more enjoyable has arranged
for dates with two charming The
tas for Friday and Saturday
nights. It seems that he will be
double dating each of the gals on
the opposite nights, though. We
hope it won't cramp vour style,
Al.
PI Beta Phi announces the for
mal pledging of Virginia Geister
of Garland, Xebr.
Algal, Brilliant Star in West,
Shines for Time, Then Fades
BV DR. KRNfT HI.RRIM.TON. JR.
Pirwtor of the MoMi-n Ohwrvtr.
A star that winks at us even-
two and three-quarter days may
be seen in the earlv evening by
looking westward half way be-
I tween the horizon and zenith.
Algol is not an extremely brilliant
object, but may be obsen'ed easily
.:. v. ,k. imnj,i,-vi pvp sinpp ir is
ordinarily as bright as the north
star.
For nearly two and a half days
this white-hot star shines con
stantly at second magniture. Sud
denly it begins to fade, and within
five hours it has declined to the
third magniture, sending us less
than one-third its normal light. It
immediately begins to brighten
again, and within five hours more
it hss regained its original magni
tude. Repeated Regularly.
These strange fluctuations are
regularly repeated in a period of
three days. The unusual behavior
of Algol was first investigated in
J7h2 by John Goodriekc, an IS
year old Englishman.
At the opening of the nineteenth
eentnrv there were recorded only
11 stars whose luminosities were
lh(. tlluUfiamls.
Some are easily
unaided eye when
tan be seen only
telescope when
visible to the
brightest, but
with a good
faintest.
Ohsei-vations in recent years
with highly sensitive light measur
ing instruments indicate that prob
their full time to the study of their
problems.
The libraries were impioved,
first thocr in the cities, like the
new (ire h Florence which nouses
a million volumes, then those in
the universities themselves. The li
brary of the Catholic university,
the Sacre Cuore in Milan, is a
rich store of material arranged
for eHKy accessibility. The Ales-
sandnna library in the new uni
versity citv ut Rome is built to
hold more volumes than the fa
mous Vatican collection itself.
Foreign Students.
The heavy migration of foreign
students, even Americans, to Italy
has been increasingly marked in
the past few years and is evidence
of the progress that is lieing made.
Evidence of the government's clear
thinking in leading the movement
B6961
Jtmponnihle
Clvanvr
' SEEN ON
; THE CAMPUS.
! Elspeay Breon tearing reckless
ly around the mall in her little
I given Plymouth . . . .Jim Hoffman
! feeling very unhappy about the
weather .-. . . Betty Christensen
and Bob MeGowan going places
together Bruce Campbell being
true to his old love The Avery
Allen combination still going
strong, despite rumors to the con
trary. .. .Jane Holland looking
very trim in a skipper blue ensem
ble Lynn "Pancake" Ryan skip
ping gracefully thru the halls of
Sosh. .. .Margaret McKay riding
too much of late in that pretty
green Pontiac Lee Young back
in his old haunts John Krause
and Doug Dort having what looked
to us like a good hash session....
Jane Winnett waiting for John El
lis in the drug Helene Wood
jand Jerry Hunt going window
shopping Dee Young wealing
! Bill Gish's Beta pin A. T. O.'s
land their dates for the story-book
'ball nlanninsr costumes for the
'event socialites worrying about
' getting blue clothes for the Sig Ep
! party Gordon Uhri wearing one
; of those Sid Bakerish bow ties
I.... Howard Austin exploiting his
dramatic ability before Ruth Van
Slyke Bobbie Smith telling
Herb ralmer not to be dull
j Jeanne Fetter raving about Jim
somebody and everyone begin
ning to cram for six weeks exams.
RECENTLY announced is the
marriage of Miss Ethel Rupert of
Sioux City to Dr. Kenneth Pres
cott of Bloomfield, which took
place Feb. 15 at Rockport, Mo. Dr.
Prescott is a graduate of the Uni
versity medical college.
ANNOUNCEMENT is made to
day of the marriage of Miss Grace
Sehmitz of Maywood to Eluf An
derson of Curtis which took place
Feb. 26 at Holdrege. The bride
is a graduate of the university.
ably a large portion of the stars
vary their energy output at least
slightly. Even the sun is a variable
star, altering its total radiation by
some 3 percent in a period of
about 11 years. Oddly enough, the
sun emits its greatest amount of
radiant energy in years when it is
covered with sun spots.
Sun's Energy Varies.
Variable stars may be grouped
into two main classes. Stars of
the first class, or true variables,
actually alter the intensity, and
usually the color, of their light.
These changes are accompanied
by a periodic rise and fall of the
star's temperature. Variables of
the second class are double stars
of constant brightness revolving
around each other in orbits viewed
edge-on from the earth. Algol is
of the second type.
One component of the Algol sys- j
tem is a very hot star of high I
luminosity; the other is a star j
larger than the sun but one so
"coo!" that it gives off relatively
little light. The two are separated j
by a distance of some three mil- I
lion miles and revolve in the pe- !
nod fc'ivpn a bove.
When the fainter star begins to
! pass in front of the brighter one, j
; the resulting eclipse causes the !
i apparent luminosity of the system
to fade rapidly. The fainter star1
is not entirely dark. A very small ',
dec rease ni Algol's light occurs ;
' half a period alter the major de- J
crease when the brighter star i
eclipses the fainter one. Syracuse
' Daily ( nange.
is Mussolini's specifications for
the great university city in Rome,
as he gave them to the architect,
Piarentini. in 3 f"32
"Build at Rome, but for Italy,
arm not only fur this liuidiiej pe
riod of architecture, but also lor
the centuries to come; construct
for what is already become the
greatest center of study in the
Mediterranean and which must not
now stop its progress: give,
finally, to the architecture a mod
em and noble text of scholastic
construction, simple, sober, prac
tical, and also relatively economi
cal. Spend nothing, however, for
useless ornament, but build rooms
full of air and light, laboratories
well furnished, offices adapted to
study and research, orderly and
well-furnished libraries; and all
commodious and neat, following
the laws of hygiene and the neces
sities of modern science, in an at
mosphere adapted to research, to
study, aDd to serene meditation."
OF AIDING SOCIALISM
California School to
Investigation of
Situation.
Hold
BERKELEY, March 10 Presi
dent Robert Gordon Sproul. of the
University of California, this week
said an investigation was being
made into charges of District At
torney Leslie Cleary of Stanislaus
county, accusing two university
professors of "consorting; with
i those who would overthrow the
I government."
Cleary. in a letter to Dr. Sproul.
demanded dismissal of FY. Max
Radin. law school professor, and
i Harry Conover, teaching assistant
in economics, on grounds that they
"sympathized with communists
and agitators."
Not Socialists.
Radin and Conover denied
Cleary s charges, saying they "are
not and never have been com
munists' or socialists."
To the counter blast of Profes
sor Radin, in the university law ,
school faculty since 1919. that
( Cleary had "recklessly dissem-1
Movie Box
STUART
"THE MILKY WAY"
LINCOLN
."ANYTHING GOES"
ORPHEUM
"SYLVIA SCARLET"
LIBERTY
"BRIGHT LIGHTS"
SUN-
"CHIN'A SEAS." "POWDER
SMOKE RANGE"
COLONIAL
"SUNSET OF POWER"
Westland Theater Corp.
VARSITY
"THE MUSIC GOES
'ROUND"
KIVA
"ONE WAY TICKET"
"DIZZY DAMES"
inated libel" and should be ques
tioned as to his fitness to hold of
fice, Geary retorted with an at
tack on RaJin's "legal ethics."
He declared Radin attended a
San Francisco mass meeting Feb.
5, called in protest against the
Modesto conviction of eight mari
time union men for "reckless pos
session of dynamite" during the
oil tanker seamen's strike.
Obtain Releases.
Geary asserted thi9 was one of
three meetings called as "a part
of the communist directed cam
paign to exert mass pressure on
the state board of prison terms and
paroles and third district court of
appeals" to obtain release of the
convicted men.
"Professor Radin. being a pro
fessor of law at the university,
should know," said Cleary in a
prepared placement, "that such an
effort to influence the board of
paroles or the district court of ap
peals by mass pressure of radicals
is an activity that should not be
entered into by any ethical lawyer,
to say nothing of a professor of the
university who is paid by the tax
payers of the state."
ileWMs
outcome of hearst
900 Colleges Compete for
Trophy Denoting Best
Sharpshooters.
Nebraska's rifle team and their
coach, Sergeant McGimsey, are
hopefully awaiting the outcome of
the competition for the William
Randolph Hearst trophy for which
they have been firing the past
week.
These meets are held over the
nation among 900 college teams.
Each team fires on its own range
and then turns its score in. The
scores are compared and the win
ners are announced. The nation is
divided into districts, and both dis
trict and national champions are
determined.
In Seventh District.
Nebraska is in the seventh dis
trict. There are thirty-nine teams
in this district. Last year Nebras
ka ranked fifth in the final reck
oning in the district with a score of
902 of a possible 1,000. The win
ning score was 920 and was turned
in by the University of Minnesota.
The' best score fired this year by
the Huskers is 907 and the team is
confident that they will be near
the top with this score. Word on
the final outcome is expected in
the next few days.
Tho Sergeant McGimsey is hope
ful for an excellent team ranking,
he doesn't believe that any of the
individual records will be high
enough to bring home any honors.
The best score in the local firing
squad was fired by John Campbell,
a junior from Lincoln, who tore up
the bullsryc with 387 of a possible
200. George Beyer turned in the
next best score with 184.
Scores Recorded.
The score of 907 was collected
by the Huskers' A team. The
team and the scores are as follows:
John Campell, 187; George Eager,
:75: Jack Avery, 178; George
Beyer, 184; and Bob Brown, 183.
The second best score among
the Husker participants was re
corded by the B team. The score
was 868 knd was accounted for by
the following men: Bob Miller, 168;
John Salvards, 162; J. Jack, 183:
C. Humphrey, 181; and Omar
Heins, 174.
The D team chalked up 857 to
come in a close third. Riflemen on
this team include: Clarence Mey
ers, 165: C. Galloway, 17C; Charles
Gibbs. 171; John Cattle, 176; and
C. Thompson, 166.
The C team turned in the lowest
score of the Huskers with 805. This
team is composed of: Dale Bon
ham 147; Ed Schmid. 172; Art
Boyer. 162; Rob Avery. 161: Bob
Mowbray, 163.
"People will learn better how to
live, how to accomplish their pur
poses with less friction and more
efficiency." Dr. William O. Hotch
kiss of Rensselaer Polyte.ch envi
sions happy days for the next gen
eration. Ultimate in
RECORDED
SIUSIC
Make Arrangements
Early
Edison
L4437
Nebraska Olympic Candidates
Begin Preparatory Workouts
Lloyd Cardwell Bears Down
On Hop-Skip-Jump
Technique.
Olympic candidates from Ne-Hr-a
hre-an their initial work
outs for the Olympic tryouts to be
held in the east this July in con
nection with their regular Corn
husker duties.
Lloyd Cardwell, tutored by
Coach "Indian" Schulte, started
work on the hop-ekip-and-jump
event with extremely favorable re
sults. "Cardy" hopped-skipped-and-jumped
40 feet 4 inches with
only a few yards' run in practice
Tuesday. Last summer in the A.
A. A. meets held in Lincoln, Cardy
did 4i eet 4 inches. The world
record is over 51 feet, made by
Metcalfe of Australia several
years ago.
Coach Schulte refused to name
the other men who are hoping for
berths on the Olympic train, be
cause he felt that if the Huskers
failed to make the team, the pub
lic would be down on them. Fred
Chambers, "Jake" Jacobsen, Sam
Francis, Standley Haight, Glenn
Funk, and several others are prob
ably candidates. The three best
athletes in America will be se
lected by the Olympic board for
each event with more entries in
the various runs.
i. ihh I! nl
JJou -Are 9nvited
Presented by
Students of the Course
of Fashion Economics
Under the Direction of
Miss Morton
... in the GOLD & CO.
Auditorium Friday,
March 13th, 4:00 P.M.
Modes
Lea Pankonin equalled tho rec
ord time of 23.7 seconds for the
220 yard dash established by his
running-mate Harwin Dawson sev
eral weeks ago. Both "Pank" and
Dawson are engrossed in their
workouts for the not-so-far-off
Kansas Relays.
Fred Matteson ran the 3-4 mile
in the fast clip of 3:19.5, which
was the fastest that "Matty" has
ever run the distance. et - -
finished second with Wayne Yar
cho, promising freshman runner,
in third place.
Spring footbalt has made an im
pressive dent in the track attend
ance roll. Freshmen tracksters are
all out bidding for places on next
fall's Cornhusker squad and up
perclassmen athletes are spending
their time this week at footftaii
rather than track. Sam Francis Is
missing from the shot put sector,
but is wry much in evidence on
the "hilltop" showing the yearlings
how to toss those port-aided passes
and crack the line
"Your Drug Store"
If it's drugs you need when
your doctor calls, Phone B1063
for quick service
The Owl Pharmacy
14S No. 14th A P St.
Free Delivery B1068
THIRD FLOOR
CG-EB
REVUE
presentation of the newest spring
odes for Wear on and off the Campus
EVANS REARRANGE PLANT;
PURCHASE NEW MACHINERY
Complete rearrangement of the
Evans dry cleaning department
has just been completed, E. C.
Westvelt, manager of the concern
announced Tuesday. . New equip
ment, including new pressing ma
chines and pants formers, have
been added to the Evans equip
ment. The pants former, according to
Mr. Westvelt, is an interesting ma
chine of latest design which re
stores trousers to their original
shape, regardless of condition
when received.
Complete and more efficient ar
rangement, prompted by an in
creasing demand for floor space
will result in better and more accu
rate service, according to Mr.
Westvelt.
WPA will build a $54,000 sta
dium and athleic field for Em
poria State Teachers college.
AUTO
FIRE
STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUTO INS. CO.
CHARLES E. JENKINS
Student Representative
LIFE ACCIDENT
B1754
Jo Jhe
wr i&'CTO