The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 18, 1937, Image 1

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Ah- Good DckKI
Mr. Hiffri Joiich!
We note with sorrow new evi
dence, of the tlaslflcatlon of the
athletics of the school. In John
Berkley's Inimitable "I May Be
Wrong" column In the Nebraska
State Journal he extols at length
the potential prowess of one he
calls Jack "Good" Dodd. We
have no quarrel with Biff Jones,
his staff, his rigorous practice
sessions. Red blood and brawn
build great gridiron squads. But
we must decry, deplore, censor,
If you please, this Indication of
deterioration In morale and es
prit de corps shown In Player
Dodd's nickname. Baby talk on
the gridiron!
Eyes and See Not.
There are some of us ho "blind"
Hint when Anything happen to
our spectacles vc arc very much
at a loss. Of course we vain wom
en learn to perambulate with rea
sonable efficiency, glasses-less, and
to undertake simpler mechanical
tasks. When there's something Im
portant to be seen, we can always
ask someone of sound sight. But
it's a terrible thins: in a crisis
when the only person near is as
"blind" as your self.
Janet Caldwell and this myoptie
peered across the street by Sosh
in vain t'other noon in an en
deavor to ascertain if the girl in
one of the -ears was Mary Gavin,
or even If the grey car were a
Chevvie. It's an awful thing not
to be able to tell who your friends
are from ten feet. And to those
who think the remedy for the sit
uation is so obvious as not to war
rant discussion, let them remem
ber the words of wisdom from
Dorothy l'urker.
"Men seldom makes passes
At girls who wear glasses."
Hut poor sight may not be an
asset for a man, either. Paul Ward
tells us of a rare example of hu
mor found in Kdgar Allen Toe. 11
is the story of a man too vain to
wear glasses who married his
grandmother, thinking in his near
sighted way, that she was young I
tUHl IIL'JIUUl 111. 111:11, nuti
ceremony his bride gleefully ex-
posed her artificialities of hair,
teeth, limb and the like, he re
pented remorsefully of his blind
vri::i, and reformed sufficiently
to tc told that the marriage was
(Continued on Page 2.)
IN ILLUSTRATED TALK
State Extension Agent Will
Show Developments of
Foreign Plans.
Basing his address on his re
cent tour of Europe, James F.
Lawrence, state extension agent in
marketing, will speak this after
noon on "Co-operatives in Europe"
at a special convocation at the ag
college auditorium.
Sponsored by the agricultural
executive board. Mr. Lawrence will
Illustrate his lecture with slides
of pictures he took while abroad.
Student of Co-opcratlves.
The speaker economist has spent
much time In the study of co-operatives
and Is ably qualified to
, speak on this interesting subject.
Mr. Lawrence, who spoke earlier
In the week at a meeting, of the
International Relations club, cited
the co-operative in Denmark.
Sweden and Norway, where a light
bulb manufacturing plant is jointly
owned. More agreeable relations
among the three countries has de
veloper! because of this co-operative.
Mr. Lawrence pointed out.
Anyone interested in co-operatives
and their development Is in
vited to attend the lecture at 4
o'clock Thursday. Althea Barrada
t and Vincent Jacobsen. members of
the board, are in charge of ar
rangements for the assembly.
LT . -
Junior Makes First Visit to
Meeting of Student Council
Daddy Attempts to Explain
Procedure as Motion
Meets Death.
By Willard Burney.
Setting.
A Minimi Onmrll niwtlne In dudrtrr-
,,, Train bndr h
.bllllr of rikln 'r,1,,n "k" Jh. C
In Ihr roimcll. Tho fnllnln I. n un-
hark of the room tlurlni I onimlin
tfiM'UftAlnn.
Daddy, what are politics?
' Quiet, son. The gentleman in
the striped suit wants to know if
he can borrow a comb.
But who is that man. Daddy?
He is one of the men who is
getting ready to make a plea for
the votes of the sewing bee over
there by the windows.
What are they voting on, Dad
dy? Thev arc trying to decide
whether or not they should take
the names of political parties off
EHF
VOL. XXXVI NO. 109.
UN SELECT
Martha Morrow,
Pascoc Elected
Other Posts.
Helen
to
Jane Harbour was elected to the
presidency of the A. W. S. board
yesterday In one of tho largest
women's ballotings that tho cam
pus has ever known, with 650
women students appearing at the
polls to cast their vote.
Martha Morrow, senior board
member with the highest vote, be
came the vice . president ; Helen
Pascoe totaling the highest num
ber of ballots for Junior member
was elected to tho position of sec
retary; Janet Lau, favorite candi
date on the list of sophomores, will
be treasurer for the ensuing year.
Senior board members chosen
from a field of eight were Maxlne
Durand, Katherinc Kilbuek, and
Kathryn Wlnquist. Betty Chcrny,
the other candidate for president,
automatically became a senior
board member.
Marjorle Crabill, Velma Ekwall
and Phyllis Hoblnson were chosen
along with the secretary for jun
ior board members. Sophomore
members elected were Mary Jane
Hendricks, Patricia Pope, and
Elizabeth Waugh.
Retiring president of the A. W.
S. board, Barbara DePutron, out
going A. W. S. board members,
and members of Mortar Board
presided at the polls.
OVER KFAB TODAY ON
PI
Students to Give Views on
New Structure, Sports,
Building Drive.
First of the series of three
broadcasts scheduled by tho pub
licity committee of the student
council will be presented from 5
to 5:15 o'clock this afternoon over
station KFAB. According to Bill
Clayton, chairman of the commit
tee, tho program will deal with
tho student union building, the
building campaign conducted by
tho Daily Nebraskan, and athletics
at the university.
Arnold Levin, president of the
Student Council, will give a brief
resume of the Student Union
building progress. Several letters
from alumni will be read and
Thurston Phelps and Kay Hendy
will carry on a dialogue concern
ing tho Union building.
Inquiring Reporter on Air.
Two types of sports at Ne
braska will bo discussed by Ed
Steeves, sports editor of the Daily
Nebraskan, and the Inquring Re
porter will interview several stu
dents on "What Doe3 the Cam
pus Think of Biff Jones?" Wom
en's organizations and elections
will be discussed by Virginia An
derson. Although plans are not
yet definite, the presidents of tho
A. W. S. Board and of the Coed
Counselor Board will probably
speak.
Initiating a drive to draw pub
lico attention to outstanding events
and persons connected with the
university, tho publicity commlt
teo has scheduled this series of
three fifteen minute broadcasts.
Those making up the committee
which will appear on the program
today include Bill Clayton, Vir
ginia Anderson. Arnold Levin,
George Pipal, Thurston Phelps,
Kay Hcndy, and Leslie Boslaugh.
Arts, Sciences Faculty
To Honor Dr. A. L. Candy
Arts and Sciences college fac
ulty are sponsoring a dinner hon
oring Dr. Albert L. Candy Thurs
day evening at the University club
at 6:15. Dean Charles Oldfather
is In charge of arrangements. All
members of the faculty and their
wives or husbands have been in
vited to make reservations.
of the ballots for political elec
tions.
Who wants to take them oil,
Daddy?
There They Are Sonny.
Th.. cnoil-lookiiiBr man over
there reading the Awgwan, and
the short fellow in the brown suit
sitting beside him want to take
them off, son.'
what la the fellow in the brown
suit saying now, Daddy?
He is explaining me new piaa,
and the benefits that will come
from it, Junior.
Does he reaUy think it will do
some good. Daddy?
Why certainly, sonny.
Who is that man who asked
them to explain the problem.
Daddy?
He is an Innocent, sonny, ana
isn't interested in politics.
But why did the chairman let
the man in the brown suit talk now
Instead of his fraternity brother
back here in the striped suit with
his hair all combed, Daddy?
1 (Continued on rage 2.)
I1E BARBOUR AS
MVS A D HEAD
Official
KconomiHl Speaks Today
On Co-OpcruliveH Abroad
fx' F "" S 1
:
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NT H j
Vrom Hit Lincoln Journnl,
JAMES F. LAWRENCE,
Addressing a special ag college
convocation, James F. Lawrence,
state extension agent in market
ing, will spen k on "Co-opcratlves
In Europe" at the ng auditorium
this afternoon nt four o'clock.
OF H. GANTZ' TALK
TO BIZAD COLLEGE
Senator to Compare Former
System With Present
One-House Body.
"Giving the-unicameral a fair
trial" is the by-word of Senator
Harry E. Gantz, Alliance attor
ney and present Nebraska state
legislator, who will address mem
bers of the blzad school at a con
vocation in Social Sciences audi
torium at 11 o'clock this morning.
Speaking on Nebraska's innova
tion in state government, pro
posed and carried into effect thru
the efforts of United States Sen
ator George W. Norris, Gantz en
titles his address "Our Unicameral
Legislature."
Senator Gantz will compare the
present one house legislature with
the two chambered system used in
previous years and In other states.
He will also present his views as
to the various improvements and
changes that the inauguration will
effect.
Thruout the current session, the
senator has been the leading ad
( Continued on Page 4.)
UNICAMERAL TOPIC
After 50 Years, Cheap Construction llegins
To Show Signs of llulgiiig, Cracking, Decay
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These photographs need no detailed editorial interpretation.
The top picture, the entrance to University hall, effectively displays the many Iron braces in
stalled in 1925 to keep the building from caving in.
The lower picture, the two floors of Nebraska hall, shows the cracking in the walls from a slip
ping foundation and decaying materials. On the roof of the same buflding are faults ix inches deep
where one wall has sunk in its foundation. Bars are also necessary to hold this classroom building
together. i;op floors of both buildings were torn off over ten years ago because of construction cavelns.
AILY
Student Newspaper
LINCOLN, NKMtASKA, THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1937.
FIRST UNIVERSITY
GRIDIRON DINNER
SET FOR APRIL 1
Faculty Members, Students
Will Appear in Mock
Senate Session.
Mocking the staid sessions of
the university senate, students will
hold a grldlron'dlnncr April 1, to
hear professorial personalities
argue profoundly on fHr reaching
changes In the university curric
ulum. Sponsored by Theta Sigma
Phi and Sigma Delta Chi, Journal
ism honoraries, the university's
first gridiron dinner will also
elude student parodies on
senate.
Entire Campus Bidden.
All students and faculty mem
bers will be given the opportunity
to purchase tickets from ticket
captains assigned to each college
and all large organized groups.
The ticket price Is seventy-five
cents.
"We are giving the entire
campus an opportunity to partici
pate In the establishment of a
tradition in Nebraska university
life," stated Sarah Loulso Meyer,
general chairman of tho dinner,
"and as gridiron dinners have
proved repeatedly successful on
other campuses, we are attempt
ing to present a humorous pro
gram which should bo of great
(Continued on I'ago 4.)
VARSITY DAIRY CLUB
TO
COMPETITION TODAY
Ag Group to Award Medals,
Ribbons to Winning
Contestants.
A dairy products judging con
test sponsored by the Varsity
Dairy club, will be held in the
Dairy Industry building at five
o'clock this afternoon. All students
In ag college are eligible to com
pete. Contestants will be asked to
judge samples of ice cream, butter,
cheese, and milk. The group will
be. divided into three parts, junior
and senior divisions for men; and a
(Continued on Page 4.)
feBRASKAN
of the University
COED COUNSELORS BOARD
INSTALLSNEW MEMBERS
Jean Marvin, Virginia Nolte,
Fern Stcuteville Take
Office Friday.
New members of the advisory
board of the Coed Counselors were
Installed at a service presided over
by the retiring president Marjorle
Bannister, Friday afternoon In El
len Smith hall. Miss Klslo Ford
Piper and Miss Letta Mao Clark,
sponsors of the Counselors, were
guests of honor at the Installation
which was arranged by tho out
going senior members.
Members who took office were
Jean Marvin, president, Virginia
Nolte, vice president, and Fern
Stcuteville, secretary and treas
urer. Senior members Installed
were Frances Seudder, Kay His
seer, Helen Ann Howie, Mary Jean
Blrk, and Mary Prlscllla Stewart.
Junior board members nro Virginia
I 'lectwood, Lois Cooper and Phyllis
Chamberlain. Faith Medlar took
i ffice as a fophomore member.
EDUCATION THEME
OF Nl PROGRAM
IN NORFOLK TODAY
Representatives of Eight
Departments to Aid
In Entertainment.
"The University at Norfolk" is
the title given to the two day pro
gram which officials will present
In Norfolk today and tomorrow
following a request of the cham
ber of commerce, civic organiza
tions and school officials of that
city.
Opening this evening in the high
school auditorium and continuing
with various lectures and enter
tainments Friday, Chancellor K. A.
Burnett, Professors Carl Frederich
Steckelberg, Dwight Kirsch, O. E.
Edison, Karl H. Bell, James M.
Reinhardt, W. K. Pfeiler and John
M. Matzen will take part. Miss
Marjorie Shanafelt, curator of vis
ual education, and Thomas Mc
Mnnus, violin student, are also in
cluded In the program. Prof. R. P.
Crawford, assistant to chancellor,
is in charge of general arrange
ments for the program.
Opens This Evening.
Professor Steckelberg, professor
of violin, will formally open the
program at S p. m. with a violin
recital. "Seeing Color Around You"
(Continued on Page 4.)
j:v(-.:v.:v;
of Nebraska
Council Decides
To Keep Faction
Names on Ballot
-o
HoikIh dominium for
'Univrrnily in Norfolk'
Krnm Thf Mnmln .Tmirnal
PROF. R. P. CRAWFORD.
Prof. H. P. Crawford is heading
the committee in, charge of ar
rangements for the "University in
Norfolk" program which Is being
sponsored in that city this eve
ning and tomorrow by faculty
members of various university de
partments. FRATERNITY DEBATE
Delta Theta Phi to Meet
PAD's, SAM's Oppose.
Sigma Nu.
Second round intramural debate
activity will get under way this
evening at 7 o'clock when repre
sentatives of Sigma Alpha Mu
take the affirmative against Sig
ma Nu, and the Thi Alpha Delta
pair upholds the affirmative
against Delta Theta Phi. Kappa
Sigma drew the second round bye.
As in the previous intramural
debates, competition will be held
In the fraternity house of the team
taking the affirmative side of the
question. Judges will be present
at 7 o'clock, and if any team fails
to appear within a half hour, the
debate will be forfeited. One of the
winners of the second round will
compete then against Kappa Sig
ma and the winner of that com
petition will debate the other win
ner of tomorrow night's contest
for the finals.
In the non-fraternity section of
Intramural debate the two teams
scheduled to compete Tuesday eve
ning both were found to be unpre
pared. If either of these teams, the
Toreadors or the M M's, are un
prepared by next Tuesday, the
championship will go to the Lincoln
Boosters comprised of . Otto
Woerner and George Mueller. Ar
rangements are being made so
that the winners of the non-fraternity
section will meet the win
ner of the fraternity competition.
THE WEATHER.
Fair and colder is the predic
tion for today, probably light
rain and snow flurries.
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Youth Can Produce Needed
Changes, New Yorker Says
Today Is Period of Many
Social Problems, Noted
Woman Comments.
"Although we may blame the
older generation for creating chaos
that exists today, youth has the
ability to change conditions if it
will only have the courage and de
termination." believes Miss Lena
Madesin Phillips, president of the
International Federation of Busi
ness and Professional Women,
world traveler, writer lawyer, and
associate editor of Pictorial Re
view. Miss Phillips was the guest
speaker at the Axis dinner honor
ing Mrs. H. H. Wheeler Tuesday
evening at the Chamber of Com
merce. Citing vocational guidance and
a study of trends of employment
as vitally necessary to aid youth
in preparing for jobs. Miss Phillips
deplored the lack of vocational
directors in high schools and col
leges. "'What's the use''" says youth
on leaving college and emerging
into the world to make a living."
the business woman commented.
"What can we do to change exist
ing conditions? We might just as
well try to make as much money
as we can. and forget about the
evils of our economic system."
Signs Are Encouraging.
We spend four years preparing
; ourselves for jobs in fields that are
j overcrowded or aren't open to us.
I We have to bear the brunt of the
IMUCK 5 CENTS
Reform Measure fai':
To Pass by Narrow
One-Vote Margin.
ballots for the spring cleelnni
will have the names of the faction;?
following the names of the re
spective candidates If the student
council has its way. This, after
a tense and heated session, was
the decision reached by the coun
cil as it met late yesterday after
noon with Ideas of ending once and
for all the controversy of restrict
ing campus political factions.
But the vole on the propo.su I
was close. Like a four to five
decision of tho supremo court, the
council was split, one more vote
being needed to pass tho measure
by the required two-thirds ma
jority. Fifteen votes were required
but when the. final count came,
several members either changing
or having their minds changed
several times, only H could be
found.
Having delayed action on the
proposal for several weeks, and
having alieady vetoed two other
reform bills, the council attempted
to end (he faction squabble by its
action yesterday. According to two
members of the three man investi
gatory committee, however, a pe
tition asking that faction names
be omitted from the spring elec
tion ballot will be circulated im
mediately. With one hundred sig
natures the petition will become
effective without the sanction of
the council. If completed, the pe
tition will be the first ever pre
sented to pass over the heads of
the student representatives.
Two Issues Involved.
Two issues were involved in th
reform bill which evolved several
weeks ago as a perfection to the
abolition and modification plans
tabled by the judiciary committee.
The first, which involved an
amendment to the student' council
constitution, provided that faction
names be eliminated from the bal
lot. The second, which drew littli?
argument, provided that the ju
diciary committee of the student
council pass on the eligibility of
the respective candidates befor-i
they are submitted to the .-nu-(Continued
on Page 2.
CHANGES IN CHARTER
Pep Club Accepts Both
Modifications Made
By Innocents.
Stamping approval upon the
charter with the suggested modi
fications of the Innocents Society,
the Corn Cobs accepted the two
minor changes at their meeting
Wednesday evening. Suggestions
made by the Innocents were selec
tion of Corn Cob president by in
coming and outgoing members of
the senior honorary and adoption
of committee on committees tak
ing charge of co-operation, mem
ber attendance and discipline.
President Web Mills named four
sophomores Corn Cob pledges to
take charge of the annual spring
party. With Morris Lipp as gen
eral chairman, Ed Steeves, John
Brownlee and George Rosen are
members of the committee.
Party plans were discussed, in
cluding preparations for the ban
quet, bid list, bids and other de
tails. mistakes that oui parents have
made. We aren't considered im
portant to the world until after we
are out of college and are suppose 1
to take our parent's place"! :n
business."
'rmhoezz. etaoin hidlu aoin rahlar
A god sign that youth will do
something about existing condi
tions is the fact that they are
more aware today of political,
economic, and social questions
than they were in my generation.
Miss Phillips' encouragingly re
marked. "Today is the most exciting tinv
for youth. It is a period of pre.i.
social changes. For regardless ot
the inclination of succeeding ad
ministrations, the social reform.
of the Roosevelt administration
cannot be readily abolished." ?!v
said.
Notices Youth Movement.
Having traveled extensively
abroad, Miss Phillips commented
on the existing governments on
the continent, "We must not con
demn existing governments in
Kurope without realizing their
good points," for they have in
stigated Some noteworthy re
forms'." Miss Plullips noticed particularly
the youth movements abroad, and
when she was asked her opinion
of the future of the youth move
ments in American colleges, she
warned. "It Is the radical element
in youth movements in this coun
try that prevents the constructive
action of the more conservative
members."
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