page two THE DAILY NERRASKAX, W FONEDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 19.17 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TIIIRTY-SEVENTH YEAR EDITORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF Kdltof E4 Mnrrmj ftnulnrn Mnnnrer flub Wn.lhnin. Aod( I'd I lot Ioii Warner AMlatnnt Mannireri Frank JohiiKiin. Arthur Hill Mannglni Idllnrt Wlllnrd Bnrney, Hrlen ram-n Clrcnlatlon Manager Slnnlr, MlrJiiwI Nrni dlltnra Morris Llnp, Howard Kaplan. Barbax Roaewater, Ed Bteevea, Marjorla Churchill. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATE ON THIS ISSl'K (I. M) year Minnie copy HI. 00 a eemetcr Dealt Mltcr Borne, ,,M m,M e'n, i't Nlsht Idltor Roaewater mailed I'nilrr direction of the Htndent Publication Board. Krtltorlal Office l'nlverlt Hall . BiuincKi Office I'nlvcrnltj Hall 4-A. Telephone Day H7181. Mtht: B719S, DISS (Journal!. Entered ai rcond-clni mutter at the pomofflcc in Lincoln, Nobrnnka, andrr art of contemn, March 8, IKIt), and at ipeclnl rota ol pontain provided tin In acrtlun 1103, act ol October V, 1017, aulhorlicd Janunry SO, 1V-3. 1937 Member 1938 Plssocidod GolleCicite Press Distributor of Collo6ia!oDi6Gsl PiibllnhHj erri? Turf iny, UedneidM, Thurmlny, Prlflnv nd Hunct mnrnlnKt of thf nirtrmlf rear by nturtentu of thft l1nl vanity of Nehrnaku, under thr minervMim nf (h Rnurd of Tub llmtloni. MPRMtNTtO Won NATIONAL AOvKNTtfllNS BY National Advertising Service, Inc Coltrgr Publishers Reprtsrntatfat 420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y. CHtCAOO BOSTON SAN FRANCtBCO Lei Anoeli Portland skattlf by Mrrrill Lnttlu ml ttlEEETlN j RECITAL. ! Students of the School of Music are reminded tlint Herbert j Schmidt will present a piano program iit the sixth convoca tion in Temple theater Wednesday afternoon. All interested are invited. Ail Opportunely For a Few Students The university docs not have nil artist scries, yet. Many of the torpor schools do have such a scries, providing their students tlie opportunity o hearing the best music. Trobnlily the most famous oC these university artist proprnms, in the eentral states nt lenst, is presented nt Minnesota in conjunction with the Minneapolis symphony orchestra. Nebraska just hasn't got around to this necessary phase of cultural education. But the Lincoln Symphony Orchestra association under the management of Florence Gardner provides two encouragements for those who hope for an artist's series on the campus. The orchestra association's program and price to students keeps alive the taste for such programs and demonstrates the need for such an opportunity for students by showing the large student interest, A month ago Mrs. Gardner had sold 5n0 Season tickets to the seven concert series nt the remarkably low price of $3..ri(). The price to non-students was $7.50. As the ticket sales closed temporarily, Mrs. Gardner had the names and addresses of 150 students who could not be accommodated because of the limited capacity of any available hall in which to give the programs. , The Liberty theater and St. Paul's cathe dral have now been obtained for the series, which is to begin this month. Consequently, Mrs. Gardner has 200 student books for sale. The 130 former reservations will be honored if they nre called for in time, and the re maiudcr of the student books will be sold to iirst comers. The adjunct to education offered by seven 'excellent musical proprnms, including five world renowned artists, cannot be piven a Monetary evaluation. Because of a desire to bring the series to students nnd to stimulate ;their interest in this phase of culture, Mrs. Gardner sets the student price at 50 cents a concert. print the best letter ever submitted to lhe Xe brnskan against the Union. Missing 1'irc on 1he question of ""Why the Union When "We Needed Other l'uildinss?" since it was n mat ter of Union or nothing and not Union or other buildings, the letter does, however, pre sent very emphatically certain evils that the Union may engender on the campus, 'if not checked by intelligent direction and co-operation. Here's the letter. 'Renicinber that the Union didn't hurt the cause of the library, or if it did, the thing to do is forget it. AVill someone refute the avowals lhat the Union is to be a glorified pool hall nnd an indictment on the university? A Challenge to Faculty and Students For the remainder of the week it will be the main editorial purpose of the Daily Ne braskan to get some talk started on the uses, the value, and the purposes of the Student Union building. The corner stone laying cere mony is slated for Friday night. It is the feel ing of the Innocents, who nre sponsoring the formality, and of other leaders on the campus that if the Union is to accomplish iis main function of establishing an esprit de corps in the student body, a great deal of enthusiasm and intelligent student thinking on the Union is necessary. The Inquiring Reporter's query in yes terday's paper concerning the benefits ex pected from the Union revealed a good deal of enthusiasm, but not much solid thinking on the purpose of the building. The Ne braskan would very much like to get a num ber of student and faculty letters today and tomorrow on the value of the Union. This morning for several reasons we re- Let Them Eat Cake To the Editor: Nebraska is to have a Student Union. Over its doors should he inscribed the famous words of Marie Antoinette, "let them eat cake." This is not meant to be a pun on 1 br eaking which will take place in a Student Union. It is a most fitting inscription for a building conceived by petty political ambition and -born of folly. Such is the history (if our Student Union. Ts the University of Nebraska to lie an institution of learning or a matrimonial bu reau? When a school needing a new library, dormitories ami new scientific equipment spends money for a place of recreation, a meet ing place for the socially minded, one is in clined to wonder. When a school of over .Villi) with dormitory accommodations for npprosi mntely 200 spends money for a place to spend daytime hours and ignores the housing prob lem, something is wrong. When a school with a library so small that over one half of 1he books nre stored in tunnels underneath the campus erects a place for students to bowl nnd play pool, there is n large colored person under a small woodpile. Not that there is no good in a Student Union. There is a great deal. But our pres ent project is untimely. The idea is a good one the removal from this campus of the big city attitude, the "you go your way and I'll go mine" attitude. The trouble lay in the fact that a group of campus politicians seized on this idea and the new deal freedom of funds to create an ill timed monstrosity. The building will, in the eyes of the gradu ates and parents of students and prospective students damn the university as playground and damage its reputation as an educational institution. ' The students of the university, 1he lax payers of the state, and the taxpayers oT the nation are erecting a monument 1o the herd instinct of 5.000 supposedly free thinking, edu cated students. Ignoring our inadequate li brary, our lack of decent housing and our dearth of scientific equipment, thev have turned their misdirected energies 1o the erec tion of a combination pool hull, bowling alley, dance hall, ami meeting place for the more frivolous of the students. The bread of uni versity life has been neglected to supply lhe trimmings. Truly the inscription over the door should be: "Let them eat cake." Signed. IT. .7. M. $LaAL cuuL Skif& By Dean Pohlenz. Shakespeare hits the local screen In a re-do this week of classic "F.omeo and Juliet" with Norma Snearer, she of immortal "Smilin' Thru." and Leslie Howard. The film featreg Basil Rathbone as the heavy. Here before at un-populur price as a roadshow attraction, thla is the first time the picture can be seen for common dough. The hol-polloi will not go for it, I fear, aa it's pretty Shakespeary In parts Ju.st the sort of thlnp Howard revels in. Which brings on the spasm about the electrician who shooed visitors off the set during a temperamental outburst by Howard with "Don't mind him, folks, he's been doing 'Hamlet' on the legitimate stage and he isn't used to having people vatch him at work." Like that other star-spangled oner, "Midsummer Night's Dream," Juiiet isn't doing so well at the box-office. Dream however paid back better dividends. Coming up at the Lincoln in the near, near future are features of the really best type, offspring of the best season of the year from an entertainment standpoint. Among them rang such notable dramae as: "Big City" with Spencer Tracy nd Louise Rainer, "That Certain ! Woman" with Bette' Davta and "Topper" featuring Cary Grant, Conntance Bennett and Poland I Young. Mvrna Loy and Lucky Armur Hornblow have been married a year now and still it goes on. Would that I were alloted a shekel for every man that dreams of him self In Hornblow's slippers. He you know is a producer.. . .And I'd say he had something to blow his horn about. To Barney Oldfield, flickercrit for the Lincoln Journal goes un ending thanks for his services to this budding enterprise. If ve aren't nipped In the bud, it will be his fault ediica'ion from actine as punnls at the penitentiary to working as dishwasherh, chauffeurs, waiters, and Ktenogruphers. In Kharp eontia.st to last year'fc annual, special artists from SU I Joseph, Mo., havt worked out the j lay-outs for the special sections ! of the book. "1 have been work ing on plans for this anniml since la.st August and expect to nmke it the best annual we have ever put out," said the editor. We know that you ro faking, tor we have seen you jamming i ti- to the booths nt the Drug, the Inn and the Moon. We think that vou hnve a good tin., for we hiive heard your laughter and seen you sit for hours - talking. But do you get nnvthlng prac tical out of it ? Po you feel that caking forms a necessity nnd use ful part of yuor college life? Is there a "Case for Caking?" Mary Louise Spcidell, Bizad soph omore. "Personally, 1 think it's n good iden. When a shim II group of stu dents gels together to talk over some mutual problem, they gain a great deal from the exchange of ideas. They see the question in the 'light of someone's experiences, other than their own. "The practice is especially bene ficial to those who rlo not live in an organized house. Those students rarely find themselves in a discus sion group, and seldom talk over their theories with anyone. "Of course, it should not be in dulged in to the extent that you cut classes, but every so often it can be very beneficial." Fredrick Cheuvront, Bizad sopho more: "It's a waste of time. The peo ple who do it sit around talking about nothing, mt getting any where, losing a lot of valuable time. "I don't think that very many serious discussions of student ideas are carried on then: the atmos phere is not that which is con ducive to serious discussions. Most of the people who go caking do it juFt to he seen, anyway." Milada Kriz, Bizad freshman: "You must have some social en tertainment added to your educa tion to make it complete, nnd there is where I feel that caking plays its part. "Thru conversations with oth ers you get a different slant on things, you modify your own opin ions by the addition of the ideas and opinions of others. "Getting together ami talking things over provides a good out let for ideas. When you know so few people ,it helps to have some one with whom you can talk. Thus, it selves to bring the stu dents closer together." Wilford Clark, Engineering Col lege freshman: "1 think it is very worthwhile. Almost any topic is liable to come up in such a discussion it teaches yon to converse intelligently, to talk on a variety of subjects, to organize your ideas quickly and to present them clearly. "Vou make your real friends by talking to someone. I would think that a large percentage of the last ing friendships formed here in school arc begun by exchanging ideas over a coke. "The way things are now, you have a difficult time finding a place to meet someone to really talk things over. It will really be fine when a place is made available to us." Mildred Freeman, Teachers college freshman: "In a way. I feel that caking has its benefits. You meet more peopie. Ey talking things over with those whom you already know, you be come better acquainted with them. Many lasting friendships are formed over coffee or cokes. "The best thine that caking does is to give one an idea of what someone else is thinking on a certain subject you get the opinion of other people, and you learn that there are other sides to a question beside your own. "It is a necessary part of your education, as it broadens your knowledge by giving you an im partial view of the subject." Ronald Brodrick, Arts and Sciences sophemerc: "A waste of time- if that time YEARBOOK TO STRESS PICTURE SECTIONS, BEAUTY QUEEN PAGES (Continued from Page 1.) girl with Just a beautiful face cannot win. Pictures will be sent to one of the finest judges in the country." More prominent members of the faculty will be given space. Sports will have more space devoted to them. Alumni Rate More Space. There will be more real fea tures than ever before. One sec tion will be devoted to Nebraska graduates. Letters have been sent to all parts of the wo-.;i to alumni to see what they are doinf An other feature will sho.r to what extent students will go to get an Misses McAllister, Fillcy Take A.W.S. Positions. Marion McAllister and Kdith Filley, Juniors in ag college, have been appottited recently to fill the vacancies on the barb A. W. S. Doard. Barb girls are invited to attend the barb breakfast this Sunday morning at Ellen Smith from b to 9:00. Chairmen in charge of ar rangements are: Marion McAllister tickets; Edith Fillcy. decorations; Ruth Green, entertainment;; Helen Scvera, menu. Tickets have been distributed to the barb houses and may also be obtained from the board mem bers. After the rally Friday, barbs will dance at the Armory from 8 to 10. TYPEWRITERS All tlandird make for or rant. (Jted and rebuilt machines en taty terms. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 130 No. 18 St. B21S7 Lincoln, Nebr. KENNY NELSON T0NITE "12 KINGS of SWING!" Annthir tiutNUinttlng blind knd thry notintl rvrn bltrr brrauic of thr prrlrct wruiilc nt King'. R0LLO SISSELL Coming Friday Thy till talk ol hl lt plr hurt Don't ml.i him thla Mm. Cm iit arr linn, anS aim thrrr't no crowo'lns at hlni i. A wnnnrrul floor With rrrry rmmmodn Un. onUnaotif Bua hmtte. OEM t Mi :U4 0) i - . , Nebraska -M & ,'t 1 KS,-At THs J ii.'.tlJ Friday i ri--1 Nov. pr.t ; 5th "f liw V" and his ORCHESTRAf In Person s t urnout Pitniit, Composer, Conductor i Distinctive!! , I Original!! Versatile!! , XTesturlnr, FRANKIE SAPUTO, Comie Gullnrlst, and jf i V MARGIE DEE, J f Swlnt Stylist mC i ts'Pi iii HOBBY GROUP. The dramatics hobby of Coed Counselors will not hold their regular meeting Thursday night because of the "Coed Counselor dinner. Next week they will meet when Prof. Jean Tilche talks to them. can be used profitably on lessons, nnd perhaps even if it cannot. "If properly treated, it can add to your education, in the sense lhat it develops, your conversa tional ability. You benefit from hearing the ideas of others, you learn the facts about a thing by mulling over the ideas of your friends, "You may, however, gain all these advantages in other wavs than caking, so its value is largely a matter of personal opinion." Ruth E. Gree.i, Teachers college sophomore: "Caking, with the assumption that those participating are talk ing about something worthwhile, is an excellent idea. "You learn to express your own Ideas in a logical order, "you hear the other side of the question ex pressed by another person, you discuss die relative merits of both views, and you find out that the other fellow has a right to his own opinion, and that it may he Just as good or better than yours. "The surroundings help a lot they are so much less formal than that of a library. You feel freer to express yourself. "A very necessary part of your college training is learning to meet people, to talk to them, and to get along with them. One of the better ways whereby you may gain those things is through caking in the sense that a group of conscientious students gathers over cokes to discuss some new idea." Jean McAllister, Arts and Sciences freshman. "It CRM be a good thing. . .if all the group nre of about the same intelligence, they can help one an other by presenting different opin ions on the subject, by picking apart the various ideas, and by stimulating one another into some active thinking on the subject." When coeds at the University of Washington nre, through reno vating the manners of the mascu line contingency on the campus, there won't tie a man who will dare to keep a girl talking on the telephone more than five minutes when she should be studying. The coeds arc being subtle about the thing though. "It Is Pone," new l'l" edition of the campus etiquette book, Is going to be part of every man's library if coed sales-girls have anything to say about it. Among the un-Emily Tostian things Joe College will have called to his attention is lhe habit of monopolizing the sorority's only davenport, breaking blind dates and letting frail coeds open heavy campus doors all by themselves. Vaaaa tftiHand 9titr mil mtmm I on or k I omurroK 2 Big Features John loftier In "The Tenth Man" IVt.T K. H "One Man Justice" Greek Restaurant Floorshow, Hotel Cornplaster Employ ees Entertain at Kosmet Preview (Continued from rage 1.) tics. They do everything from hog calling to a duet on a mouth harp and "sweet potatoe." It's all good rowdy fun with plenty of amusing pantomime and dialogue, and a solo rendition by Parks of "If You Knew Susie Like I Know Susie Wow!' or words to that effect. Super Accordion Music. Beta Sigma Tsis have built an act about the super accordion playing of Don Meixel. Meixel por trays a blind accordionist making his living on the campus, and he offers several numbers including the very popular and current "Vieni, Vlenl, Vienl." That seems to be that, as far as advance looks at the revue are concerned. From where we sit, it appears as though it might well be the best show to be presented in a number of years, and those on hand when the curtains part Rat- 5 CHEAT STARS!- JOAN CRAWFORD ROBERT TAYLOR FRANCHOT TONE with LEE TRACY LIONEL BARRYMORE MELVYN DOUGLAS THE GORGEOUS HUSSY plus "BEHIND THE HEADLINES'' SUN Mat. 10c urday morning should enjoy a morning of outstanding campus entertainment. ilTTiv ii a ITomnn ud,:oi by Her W eahett Moment? IT? !:'Vi 1 I Bette Davis Hen-y Fond .S'fnri. FKM1 LINCOLN t... II.. s... I X wn) asiia,iiri 'fc V i V I 0 PLUS Freddie BARTHOLOMEW Mickey ROONEY Jackie COOPER "The Devil Is A Sissy" she sore! ?. ' She ser . . . "Have you thought any about what we're goln' to do next weekend?" "Nothin special," I sez. "I don't suppose you knew," she remarks in her sweet, sar castic way, "that Varsity Show is com ing to the Stuart next Saturday?" "Yen, 1 knew," I comes back, "but I hadn't given It much thought . . ." "That's just your trouble," she snaps. "It's about time you thought a little about our future happiness!" . . . and in the house she goes slammin' th door and leaving me feelin' smaller than Tom Thumb! Yeh . . , wimmin are like that!! Thursday lor 3 Days 2 FEATURES 2 '"" " py g f ' 1 LITTLE CAESAR i ' ip'v" blue-blooded -?V? Itaitt of - Li 3 r.d blooded e A' I 1 r "Boots of I I of ! Destiny" with N Mnll Order A Advance nale Tlrke ea. at nimrnon Floral Co., 14U N bU with Ken Maynard III flllYl.t 2 -. na a Weatlnndl tkaotr M 'I 0 S Z I!:l3g 3 b eft s o p ssas z go it Any Scat ) 1 15C - Time , t ' ' Tr,,!-- n0i'W'y ' . ."'"'. ,h" i ii r i i watm 1 1 i v nvx ' i i " V I A V W I At I I N 0 W mm am - LULI DESTE NIGEL BRUCE .Centtinc Collir 'ii.ii'a with RONALD C0LMAN JANE WYATT EDWARD EVERETT HORTON Starts Fritlnv, 12:00 lon JAMES CAGNEY The Klnr .if Sivk Tlicnme The Vlnp n( Swinn! Hep a Khylhin RhhpuI Inatead ol a Touch Guy. STARTS FRIDAY Another fig Knur!! IN PERSON ON OUR STAGE! talented entertainers STORK CLUB SCANDALS" 8 Headline Acts! v THE THREE LAMPIN0S Comeir llliuinnitti BARRETT and WRIGHT Amerlra'a hamploa Skalrra THE GALE SISTERS Orlltlilful Ilanrlna Trio MURRAY Champion ln-Ya h pinner RICE AND SHAFFER Willi l lertra (iallnn MARGIE AND PEGGY Afarhatte Adormblft WAYNE AND ROBERTA Kvrnlnf at the Rlti THE SCANDALETTES Ilanrliit Darilnta Swim. ?UL! "Dangerously Yours" Cear Romero Phyllis Brooks 'Something; To Sinjf About" - Z7