COwuruL cuicL CibouL ISBRA HF JL JUL MLY XL Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska LINCOLN. NEBRASKA, THURSDAY. APH1L 22, 1937 PRICE 5 CENTS Itr Surah Limit Mvyvr VOL. XXXVI NO. 130. Dr. Condra Will Speak In Nebraska (litv Today JUL Tl E He Prefers Beauties to His Duck i, mi WW iu'i'lir 25 NEW OFFICIALS WILL HEAD TRI-K i: D ssssssm. -w- SKAN VARSITY ) INSTALL WARD HEND 0(1 PONTIAC SHOW BROADCAST '"An Jmmi i at I CHANGED 10 8:30 AT MITT TflMIPU AGRONOMY CLUB HI IIILLI IUI1 Ui The Times Are Gripes The Walrus Said. Balmy days seem to have con tradictory effects. For some they spell bliss and serenity, an un troubled state of being at peace with the world. But to others spring time brings forth the re lease of long: pent up scores against the world. And so the air with gripes is laden. One gorgeous girl, with a tena cious but unexciting sweetheart, gets blood in her eye for the de luded soul who admonished: "If at first you don't succeed, try, try again." When a woman says "No" she doesn't always mean "Yes." Another pert bit of 'feminity moaned about the sad fact that it was spring "and nothing can be done about it." A "gentleman" tells us that a really popular girl knows nothing of osculations. We hold that the states of being popu lar and being kissed are not neces sarily mutually exclusive. These deep-seated kicks would perhaps go unvoiced but for the chemical complications of dear old printemps. It is a fortunate safety valve for many to once a year be in the gripes of spring. V The Gentlemen Don't Believe. When it comes to real ear laying back language, we reckon that "The Magazine for Men" approaches some sort of an acme. Our efforts, often alleged to be tottering on the awful brink of libel, seem fanatically Puritanical by contrast. Only "Esquire" would announce what one-half of man's best friends are, or describe what happens to a young woman when she walks, or advise advertizemently "Don't be a Strip Shaver." And that Smart man makes his frankness pay, and plenty. Nothing is too "unseemly" for publication, and the shekels roll in. Filthy lucre in truth. Muddy Rivers. Everyone at some time before he puis his other foot in his grave is fond of comparing his life to a body of water a babbling brook, a sUH calm lake, a mighty surging ocean, a be-frogged or froglcss pond. Eut ours is the plains atti tude : our stay on earth is like the flowing of a muddy river. Rivers are strange things. Over night they may rise drastically, engulfing the little trees along the short, covering lowlands, sweep ing away manmade accessories which pretend to overcome it. Yet its treachery is so quiet, so guile less that the unsuspecting are trapped by it. The surface of muddy rivers is deceptively bland easy-going, lazy, seemingly aim less. A stick cast upon the waters will drift slowly, twisting and turning at will. Yet that which is flung into the current and sinks below the surface may be lost for ever from sight, drawn to an un knelled grave by quicksands or un dertow. Mercilessly, ever so swift ly, the hapless object disappears, leaving no trace. Clear streams are not for us. For life is not crystalline. It is opaque, murky, if you please, and what lies beneath the surface no one can see or fully divine. Good old muddy rivers. Blanket, Book. Bihle Anions Thing Waiting In I-l. Found Bureau Are vou a rabid evolutionist Marching for the rnisisng link? Are you still looking for your name in the upper 10 percent? Have you sought long and vainly for that certain something with out which your life is incomplete ? Then look in the campus Lost and Found Department in the west ttidium, where may be found everything from dime-More Jew elry to treatise on the Elevation of the Human Mini. This seldom viiited department perforins a im'icc a tout which many stu dent know nothing. On its thrives are found articles which have been unclaimed for more than a year. For the comfort of riumtuwi In eight o'clock clause a pillow and a number of blankets are of fered. For the new spring ward- I robe one may find shoes, gloves, oversho-. and more than Zi hat of every shape and size. To the literarily inclined, a library of growing proportion Is available, with a Bible and a copy of Dumas' La Tulip Noire" fraternizing with Animal Biology and Music in th" Primary Grades. And so- if you'te Mill looking for those "Lost Horizons." if you s-p one of thoe overcoatless prfcswori". if you're "gonna lose jour gal" pay visit to 'yoit Iort and Found Department. M-n IVp (..'lub Plana Initiation for Tonight Corn Cob initiation will' be held tonight at 7:30 in the Kosmet Kiub office in Uni versity hall basement. The initiation was to have been held lat night but was post poned because of conflicting activities. The nwn'i pep club will in itiate 25 r.ew member. Web Mills announced. All dues and initiation fee mutt be paid tonight and plan will be di cutd for the spring party. Honorary Names Peterson, Bruse, Domingo to Other Offices. New mesident of Tri-K club, agronomy honorary, elected at a meeting or tne group lasi mgni, is Ward Henderson, a junior in Ag college from Hardy, Neb. Other officers chosen were Ralph Bruse, vice president; Maurice Peterson, secretary; and Wayne Domingo, treasurer. Twenty new members were in ducted into the organization at an initiation held in the crops labora tory. They are: Glenn Kllngman, Myron Keim, Lewis Camp. Rodney Bertramson, Harold Benn, Harry Bell. Melvin Beerman, Robert Daniell, Neil Dawes, Arnold Peter son. Earl Heady, Clifford Heyne, Richard Jackson. Orvin Meier havey. Lester Sherfey. Weston Whitwer, Rundall Pete r s o n , Howard Weibel. Arnold Carlson and Claude King. An open meeting lor ag siuaenis will hp snonsored bv the ETOUD April 28, Wednesday evening, in Ag hall, at which time Mr. Clarence Henry of the Chicago Board of Trade, will give an ad dress. Retiring Officers. Tri-K officers who retired from office at the meeting last night were: Darrell Bauder, president; Ogden Riddle, vice president; Maurice Peterson; and Wayne Domingo, treasurer. Each year the Tri-K club spon sors a student crops judging con test for all students interested in agronomy. It also holds several dinners for students and faculty on the Holdrege street campus at which prominent agriculturalists j are speakers. Another Tri-K sponsored project is the crops judging team which competes at the American Royal Livestock hnw at Kansas Citv and the In ternational Livestock show in Chicago annually. This year's team including Dale Smith, Ward Hen derson, Ralph Bruse and Frank Svoboda, was second at Kansas and first at Chicgo. NINE SENIOR MEMBERS Honorary Fraternity for Art. Speech, Music Elects Group. Nine seniors were elected to membership in Alpha Rho Tau, honorary fraternity for art, speech and music, as announced at the music convocation yesterday after noon in the Temple theater. Ths list of new members, who are chosen entirely upon the basis of their scholastic attainment, was headed bv Richardson Dougall who has an average of 93.36 percent in the school of music. The other members announced are: Margaret Carpenter, speech; Marjorie Mae Hatten. art; Vera Kelley. music; Vance Elmore Lein inger. music; Helen Louise Mc Monies. art; Vera May Peterson, speech; Enua Charlotte Schacht, music, Julia Alice Viele, speech. Auxiliary Members of Weele Foundation to Smc Brunch April 23 Auxiliary' membeis of the Wes ley Foundation, mother of uni versity student who are affiliate I with th" Methodist church, will serve their annual brunch Friday noon in St. Paul Methodist church between the hour of 11:30 and 1 o'clock. Ticket may be purcha-vd at the foundation. ALPHA RHO TAU NAMES Nebraska Art Association Displays 'Aries,' 'Sea Shell' Exhibits Latest Purchase,; Paintings by Kirsch, Schnakenberg. In ufi'-r that the public may see the "Sea Shell" and "Aries." the two painting recently acquired by the Nebraaka Art association, ihev are now on dirplay :n the corridor of the second floor nar gallery A of Morrill hall. The Sea Shell" by Henry Schnakenberg was a gallery fav orite during the Nebraska Art aaaociaUon'a 4"th annual exhibi tion which officially closed Easter Sunday, and was endorsed by the board of trustee of the art associ ation and by the stockholder. Purchase "Arle." Since it u decided to pur chase important work of art by Nebrnkan as a definite part of tbe program of tbe association, the painting. "Arte,- by Dwlght Kirsch. also an outstanding picture In the exhibit, we cboaen for this year purchase. Done in egg tempera. "A he" whkh was pmnted a year ago ha already been shown tn several exhibition including one at Pocke fellr Center in New York and one at the Art Institute in Chicago. Transparent Tempera. Tempera I a mixture c dry You'd hp breathless too if th descended upon you as they have ren Iv m lsn t mittine UD me iea expression ne s more man enjoy thp fnnr chosen to make the trip ful girls on the campuses of four eluding NenrasKa. Mary isiar, f thp rip-ht of the Dicture is Others left to right are: seated, from Oklahoma; Joe Penner; Jun State; standing, Doris Johnson, K University, and Miss iasiar. Aspiring Pools Must Submit Manuscripts All entries for the Ivy day poem contest must be sub mitted to the office of the Dean of Women in Ellen Smith hall before noon Saturday, April 24. Undergraduates are eligible to enter the contest. The win ner will be honored on Ivy day and will read hit poem at the court of the May Queen. Poem must be related in some way to the Ivy day tra dition or activity and will be judged by Dr. C. U Wimberly, Dr. Louise Pound and Miss C. M. McFee. Name of contestants must be placed in a sealed envelope and handed in with the poem. No names may be placed on the manuscript. YWCA, YMCA CABINETS FAST TOGETHER TODAY Dan Williams, Eleanor Eiche, Frances Scndder Arrange World Peace Program. Dedicating themselves to the cause of world peace, members of the Y. W. C. A. and Y. M. C. A. cabinets and interested students will meet and fast this noon in the club rooms of the University Episcopal church, 13th and R streets. Today is the day set aiie in universities throughout the coun try for peace demonstrations and Mnkes by the National Intercol legiate Christian council. The program on the Nebraska campus will include readings, litany, and singing for an hour. In place of luncheon, faster will offer volun tary contribution to the came of peace. Eleanor Eiche and France Studder, Y. W. cabinet members, and Dan William. Y. M. president, will co-operate in the planning of the meeting. A similar fast and meeting are being arranged for the ag campus by Ward Bauder of the Y. M. and Bernetha Hin thorn, president of the ag Y. W. C. A. color, an -riiulsion composed of j egg yolk, oil, water, and a pungent , ingredient to disguise the smell of) the dried egg. : In the hand of the unskilled: artist who understano thi draft, tempera give a transparency not ; obtainable by the use of oils. Paul j Gardner, director of the NUon art j gallery of Kansas City, on a recent j visit in Lincoln, praised the paint- I Ing for It perfect balance and 1 composition and for Its - mooth surface, a characteristic of good tempera painting. i Ram's Skull. Moms. 1 Mr. Kirsch has worked succc- ; fully with tempera lor several I year, although he doe not confine : himself to anyone medium in his j painting. He also use oil. v.alcrj color, and gouache, a well. It wu nearly two year anr Prof. Kirsch found the ram skull and horn from which the picture get it title that he decided he could make use of it in m. painting. He realized their beauty and possi bility in a picture, but he could find no uitabl background on which to paint them. . , Finally he found the perfect setting between two window of ( his attic-stuOio. A growing cactus in an Indian bowl, the plctureo,ue view from these window, and the panU all fitted Into the back-1 ground, and with this material he conceived tbe painting. "Arica." J is quartet of beauties suddenly poor defenseless Joe fenner. out st bit of resistance and from his ing himself. These fair coeds are to Hollywood as tne most oeauu middlewestern universities, in- Nebraska Chi O. shown standing the delegate from Huskerland. Katherine Bretch, Pi Beta Phi e Fleming. Pi Beta Phi of Kansas appa Kappa Gamma of Kansas ALPHA ZETA NAMES 1 POST OF PRESIDENT Ag Group Names Moseman, Riddle, Allaway, Heady To Offices. Don Magdanz. junior, heads the list of officers of Alpha Zeta. national agricultural honorary, who will serve for the coming year. Election of the officers was held Tuesday evening. Those elected to the other offices include: Censor. Al Moseman; scribe. Og den Riddle; treasurer. Hubert Allaway; chronicler, Earl Heady. New members elected into the organization Tuesday incl u d e Wayne Domingo, Claude King, Robert Daniell, Lillard Pratt. Morris Peterson. LaVern Peterson, Ward Henderson, Glenn Klingman, Don Bauman, Loyal Corman, Myron Keim and Weston Whitwer. Graduate students elected to mem bership were Gilbert Webster. Elmer Mahlin. Jeffe Fitts. Willard Gilliam, Frank Miller and Warren McCubbin. Membership in the chanter is t based on scholarship and prom- ising qualities. To be eligible, the student must rank in tne upper two-fifths of his class. Initiation of new members will be held Thuwiay evening April 29. at five o'clock in the Crops laboratory. Retiring officers include: Chan cellor. Howard Peterson: censor. Dale Smith: scribe, Vernon Keller; treasurer. Don Kilmer; chronicler, Flovd Carroll. PI MU ALPHA PRESE Quartet of Singers Appear On Sinfonia Program At Temrjlc. The Master Singers, all univer sity men, will be presented in a recital at the Temple theater this afternoon at 4 o'clock by Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia. honorary and professional fraternity of the school of music' It was incorrectly stated ir yes terday's Nebraskan that tliey gave their recital over the air on KFAH. Members of the 4uartet are liolx-rt Bellamy. William C. Miller, Arthur Barnebey and Walter Kouxch. Tbe quartet appear regularly over KFAB a a means of working their way through school, but their recital today is to be at the Temple. The opening number of the pro gram will be "Song of the March ing Men" by Irothroe, "Dawn" bv Weaver, and "They Did Not Tell Me" by Fox. Kobert Bellamy will sing a solo. "Tell Me. Oh Blue. Blue Sky" by Giannlnl, and Walter P.eusch will offer a solo of "Song of the Open Tioad" by Mallotte. Other solo will be Arthur Barnebey singing "A Spl r i t Mower" by Campbell-Tipton, and William Miller singing a selection from "Son and Stranger." Milan Lam or 1 1 AtXOiiijiaiiy the SOT.gS. The Weather Better make the most of this beautiful, balmy weather, warns Professor Blair, for those clouds coming up today are only a hint of what may follow. Jupiter Pluviua, he esplain, is straining at his traces, but he hasn't received the "go" signal yet. Nebraska to Go on Air One Hour Earlier Because of Time Zones. Hour of the Pontiac Varsity i show to be ' broadcast on the Red network of NBC from the campus May 7 has been changed to 8:30 central standard time. The hour previously set was 9:30 central standard time, but was changed because of the daylight saving system in New York and other eastern and middle western time zones. Final request for talent for the program has been issued and broadcasters and script-writers may for the last time file for audi tions at the Nebraskan office, ac cording to Sarah Louise Meyer, member of the committee. Director Expected Here. Gordon Whyte, program direc tor for the show, plans to visit the campus in a few days in order to eliminate material and defin itely arrange the material for the program. He will hear talent, cast it, and arrange the theme. The show, which will last for half an hour, will be open to the public in the university coliseum. Master of ceremonies will be John Held, jr., author and artist, who is presenting the program as 16th in a series of 17 programs from prominent university and college campuses. A large number of applications, over 60, have been received by those seeking to participate in the broadcast. Considerable interest is being shown in the program, it was reported. The committee in charge, headed by George Pipal, will meet the latter part of the week to com plete arrangements for tryouts. This is the first time that the Pontiac show is broadcasting pro grams of any of the midwestern universities. 130 STUDENTS TO TAKE Schedule Annual All-Day! Inspection Tour for April 24th. One hundred and thirty students in Economic Geography 72 will make their annual all-day field trip Saturday, April 24. The parti will travel by bus eastward over the loess-capped drift hills east of Lincoln, making their first stop at Weeping Water, where they will study the various lands and valley features in relation to structure and land utilization. At the next stop. Louisville, the party will visit a pottery factory and the plant of the Ash Grove Lime and Cement company. Sources of the raw material, processes of the manufacture of cement, and marketing aspe' ts of the industry will be studied. After studying land utili7.ation phases of the Platte valley and of the upland north of the Platte from Springfield to Gretna, they will stop at the state fish hatch eries opposite South Bend where the relation of structure to land form, water supplies and natural vegetation will be considered in some detail. Return will by way of Ashland and the Salt Creek vaJlty. Arbor Dav Tradition Boasts Purely American Ancestry ; Nation Celebrates Today j In Memory of Great ' Nebraskan. Tre planting festivals are probably as old as civilization. Sacred trees arid grove, planted avenue and roadside, shaded academic walk were common in the Imperial day of Home. But Arbor Day, as uch. is purely American in origin, an outgrowth of conditions peculiar to the Great Plain of the West and of Ne braska. Man' well-being arid hajpin' have alway been ;loHy related to trc:, and yet this country in II mad haste for wealth ha ex ploited it va forest and wooded area In ooier to bring more crop acre under cultivation. Thi ha been especially true in Nebraska. Timber Losses, Lonv.-s to native and planted stand of timber in thi state dur ing the past seven year are un precednted. During the firt years of the oepression vast quantities of firewood were taken from the state forest tes'-i-ve. The drouth period of 1931-39 marked an evn greater loss to the timbrlands. But no comparable move has been made to replace the torses Buffered during those jvrtoda. ft DR. G. E. CONDRA Courtesy of Ftate Journal. Dr. George E. Condra. director of the conservation and survey department of the university, will deliver the principal address at an Arbor day celebration in Nebraska City this afternoon, a program given as a tribute to J. Sterling Morton, founder of Arbor day. The celebration will begin at ten in the morning with exercises in all grade schools, and Dr. Condra will speak at 2:30 in the afternoon. 10 AT SOUTHERN PARTY IN Unaffiliated Students Make Spring Dance Plans For Friday. A southern air will invade the Armory Friday night when barbs on the campus will dance to the music of Bob Storer's orchestra. For this all-barb spring party, lan terns, picket fences, a well and the old oaken bucket, in a garden setting, will add to the southern atmosphere. Dance programs will be in the form of banjos. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil W. Scott and Mr. and Mrs. William A. Sturr will chaperon the dancing which will be from 9 to 12. Admission to the armory will be 20c for men and 15c for women. Committees in charge of ar rangements for the party are: decorations. Dorcas Crawford: re- ', freshments, Carol Clark; orches- j tra. Velma Ekwall. Acting as hostesses will be the newly elected members of the Barb AWS board for next year: seniors, ! Mary Bird. Lois Giles, and Eliza- j belli Edison: juniors, Beatrice Ek-; blad. Lois Lichlicter. Betty Cle- . ments, and I'. nth Gie n: opho- mores. Faith Medlar, Joy Pestal, ; and Helen Severa. These member's were formally installed at a meet- ing held Apr'il 21 at Ellen Smith j hal. , Velin.i Ekwall. president of the! board for next year, took over the I duties of the retiring president. Martha Morrow. Other retiring membeis of the board who took part in the installation service ate: Fern Bloom. Ardis Graybiel. lio wena Swerison. Dorcas Crawford. Carol Clark. Edith Fill.-y. Election of officer's for the Barb A. W. S. board will he held Wednesday. April 2H. at U o' lo k in Ellen Smith. Affi'lant SiTiTlar of (!oniHiif Speaks Toda lUil. Monroe Johnson, assistant secretary of commerce, is to speak this no!i at the Lincoln Chamber of (.Vnirmice. He will be introiu--d by Dr. G. E. Condra, and all faculty "rn-n and ktU'ieiits are invitej t attend. Col. Johnson. fi-ad of tlx- I'. S. aviation service, flew to Lineolr. to speak at an afternoon rm-eiing of the American Legion. J. Sieibng Morion, founder of Arbor Day. realized the vital necessity of retaining large forest reserve in a land that was to fee! millions of people arid be habilaWe for their families. That Is why in 172 he introduced a resolution that "Wednesday th" 10th day of April. 1S72 it". . . especially set apart and conse crated to tree planting in the state of Nebiaska and the slat' board of agriculture hereby nam" it Ai tfii Day." Plant Million Trees. The resolution wa adopted and priw were offered It the county agricultural aock-'y and to the Individual planting the greatest number of tree. Wide publicity was given the plan, and more than a million tree were planted on that first Arbor Day. Thirteen year after this first cornmemrnoration. the legislature , designated Sterling's birthday. (April 22, a Arbor Day. This day ) which Nebraska gave to the na j tion is now observed not only t thruout this country but thru half tbe civilized world. Service which trees perform J for mankind are almost as ntimer ous a the dirf-rent species. For 1 the itlfs l affoids an oasis In 'he ; midst of a dew it of hurrying ' peo ple iirid veh.th s. It is a touch j iContinucd on I'ase 2j Misses Katouc. Fu'ton, Bowen, Lalir Assume Head Posts. Introduction and installation of newly elected officers and an nouncement of new members of the council and sports board will feature the W. A. 9. mass meeting to be held in Giant Memorial at 7 o'clock Thursday. Marie Katouc, president: Ruth Fulton, vice president; Pauline Bowen, secretary: Patricia Lahr, treasurer, and Harriet Jackson, concessions manager, arc the five new officers to be installed. They will replace Jeanne Palmer, Mary Yoder end Mary Elizabeth Dickey, president, vice president and sec retary respectively. Marie Katouc and Ruth Fulton, who held posi tions this year were re-elected to new offices. Sitting on the stage will be the new officers and members of the council and sports board. The 12 members on the council and nine on the sports board have not been announced previous to the meeting this evening. Miss Mathilda Shelby and Miss Mable Lee. sponsors, will also be present. Present Awards, Scholarships. Several awards will be made as a feature of this year's mass meet ing. These awards, which arc of a new nature, arr; given on the basis of a point system which will be explained by Vera Wekesser. re tiring points chairman. Three scholarships to junior and senior women will be given on the basis of need, participation in W. A. A. activities and scholastic achieve ment. An award to the individual earning the greatest number of points for sports participation this year will also be given. All university women, who are automatically members of the W. A. A., arc urged to attend the meeting. The officers in charge are especially desirous of having all those receiving awards present. Only Ag Students Ei:jlfc 2 To Enter Snapshots In Competition. Campus Camera club, a member of the creative activities group of ag college, is sponsoring a photo graph contest open to all agricul tural students interested in taking pictures. The conte.1;'. will consist of two sections, one of landscapes an campus seen', s and the other ' miscellaneous snap shots. Picture. enteied in the contest must I enlargements, and five by sever: inches is the size preferied. Entrants must have their mini" and addiess as well as a titl" accompanying each photograph. The contest is open until May .'. and snap shots can be submitted to Ward Bander in room Z')2 z hall or to Morris Peterson Leo Cooks ley, Mary Grace McOadern, Alic: Beachell or Barbaia Bornine I'nzes, to be furnished by ttv East marl Kodak company, will r a photograph alburn, four package of corners, and a white lead per-. to the winners in both sections. Judges will t- -d-A college teai ti ers inter' ste'i iii photograph1 Aim iii aii I lilialion Ol' Tree- Fnrni-he-Mulcrial for Itipley The ,-'ory of the groAtl 01 tic-- an th" t'nited States arid the cve-i greater utilization of this natural resource would furnish excIlct material for the famed ' Believe It or Not" liipley. In fact did you know? 1. That we use fourteen arid A half million cubic feet of wood a year and that fires, dim-as and inserts destroy nearly t.vo billion CUble feet. 2. That every to years enough newsprint is made for a strip a wide as a daily paper and long enought to ren.h to th" sun and back. .1. That North America, with one-twelfth of the world's people, uses about one-half of all the tim ber consumed ni th" world. 4. That something like I.OOO.noO trees are cut annually for tele graph and telephone po'es: that w" us" .'JOO.'MKj.OO'r fence o,ts every year. U. Tnat mostly owing 'o c;rr' l"ssness tin tirin larger ti;n 'l New England was burned orr by forest fires in 1931. ii. That th" railroads of Hi" L'nited State use over I'.'i.O'sl.rs) new wood lies every yrar. 7. That there are more thHn 63 million acre of Idle land In thi country all of which should be put to work growing tree IS. That v.c ar-j using or d utroylng our forests considerably faster than v." are replenishing th.-rn. lilair PiiIIiIm" Hook Pi of. Thorna A. Blair, assistant professor of meteorology, who is in charge of the goverrtnvnt weather huresu station here, h:n a new book "WeatiW Element V , which will soon be fl the pie-m.