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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1938)
-r THE DAILY NKWUSKAN. Kill DAY. NOM-MBI'.K f. TOSS TIIREF and. J M -trv' (Duck. (Dovll X3 A,v,vc 1 Form Meet weather wet. as before... and! ,C cirls, teeth-chattering $T time" for all the fixin's of " ' ch?...canlP,1', cal'lly nit tells of Doris Casford's return from he hospital to the TriDclta iaZ and of Martin Oehhich's S?"king hl"arm-...you might H.sk S m how he did it. .at this point everybody is almost packed and vnftlv to go to Kansas, despite v o Shea. Frannic Wrightsman, lr Betty Lou Griffiths, Thcta's, Iron Neville. Betty Ray. Ann Music ad, Kappa's. Pi Phi's Mary K .v Wiles. Catherine Garnand or w'lxlnc Stalon's Delta Gamma's n'cv lane Williams, Virgln.a Wheeler, Marjorie King... and wire names to come later .. .the Ki'iday mgiu Hiiiiiv;ii"in wk Rota SIR Vnue oul .uijr big the .a A,t k'flsscl at the Turnpike t the party will he Laura Kin ney wth Chick Otto, Beta Sig, and DorothV Hcumann, AOPi and Bob Seidel, Beta Sig... and nt Art lvtssol will be Ma,y McLniiRhlin, Theta and Pat Leonnrd, Mnrj Bennett, Pi Thi, and Sigma Nu Howard Marshall, Jane Cook, niio r.amma. and Fred Steiner, Phi Psi...but with all this rush ing around, a fireside with pop corn and apples sounds all right too. . .whatever you do, root for the team, be ye here or thar... game flashes for you in the next edition. GOING TO KANSAS, Beta's John Stoddart, Herb Glover, Bob Kube, Tom Davis, John Wein garten, Bob Gannon, and Jim Wel tlon. Sigma Nu's Gene Richard son, Jack Scott, Curt Ralston, "Dutch" Rcichstadt. Jack Bingcn helmer, and Jack Cole. Chi Omega's Edie. Houston, Phyllis Jensen, Helen Pascoc, Faye Lam bert. Jean Carnahan, and Matilda Halley. Kappa Sig's Frank Kud rna, Gordon Hancy, Bob Flory, Bob Ray, Dick Bisgard, Dean Han sen, John Sullivan, Al Porter, Don Scliultz, Yale Wiggert, and Bus Osborn. Alpha Xi Delta's Mary Steute ville, Anna Marie Ruth, and Bar bara Roscwater. Theta's Louise Alacky. Alice and Marie Anderson, Gwennie Orr, Pris Chain, Janet and Virginia Smith, Mary Mc Laughlin, and Pat Woods. D. U.'s Bob Hunt, Ralph Reed, Avery Forkie, Tom Brown, Carl Nordcn, Harry Piouty, and Bill Lyman. Kappa's Jean Humphrey, Esther Filers. Molly Woodward, Virginia. Knowles. and Suzanne Woodruff. PI Phi's Rita Alger, Mary Belle Bates, Jeanne Fetter, Maxinc Stal one, June and Opal Stebbins, Jean Swift, Flavia Ann Tharp, Agnes Wanek, and Mary Jane Wilson. Alpha Phi's Marion Lydick, ilaxine Wagner, Janice Lee Mor rison, Mary Lou Daly, and Marlon Brcniers. Delta Gamma's Lucy Jane Williams, Nan Talbot, Mar garet Krause, Natalie Rehlaendcr, and Frances Marshall. Delta Delta Deltas Mary Fields, Pris Wicks, Mary Jo Henn, and Gertrude Slaughter. Don't forget the Beta Sigma Psi party nt the Lincoln hotel Friday evening, ny invitation. Members of the Ag Boarding Club will conduct their fall party Saturday evening In the ballroom of the Union with Johnny Cox and his orchestra playing. Janls Richmond and Robert Wilson are in charge of the event. Phi Mu mothers club will enter tain nt a 1 o'clock luncheon and book review at the cl.ipter house today. Mrs. Roy E. Cochran will review "Listen, the Wind" by Anne Morrow Lindbergh. Autumn col ors will be featured in the lunch eon. Theta Xi auxiliary met yester day for a luncheon at the chapter noiisc. Autumn leaves and bit tersweet were used on the tables. The hostesses were Miss Jessie McCiillum. Mrs. L. Etherton, and Mrs. J. V. Risser. Mrs. Arthur Reitter of Hastings was a guest. Delta Theta Phi, law fraternity. formally pledged ten men Wednes day evening after a dinner given in their honor. The new pledges are: Doane Anderson, Monroe Bix ler, Don Horsch, Vance Kilmer. Norman Johnson, Ed Kirby. Irvine Obermuler, Dan Wells, Sumner West and Don Farrens. Bob Pollard and Don Chrlstcn sen enjoying- the tea dance at the Student Union when the lights went out Don exclaimed, of all the dances I would be dancing with my sister but when Bob was asked about It he said, Oh Boy!.... Lois Hammond and Peg gy Sherburn eating at the Cafe teria. . .Louis Klymer looking ever so suck lately, is it that beaulilul blond? Arnold Peterson catch ing up on sleep yet which was lost auring the teachers convention Ann Gerstb, Farmers Formal Queen, happy and smiling as ever People are mill raving about Don Fitz's speech about his ances torsSir Walter Raleigh discover ing tobacco everybody should go to the Home Ec dance bring out your rubbers and overcoats every body because the weather decided to "go wet." Hears Ueii Professor Kneen Furthers Wheat Research Ag Professor Begins Seed Experiments South Platte Session Discusses 'Balanced' Agricultural Operations (altenborn To Lecture New "Com Crib" Inspires Coed to Max Poetic Should the Nebraska fanner continue- to plant Nebraska wheat seed, or should ho procure grain to the north and south? Perhaps this question will be answered, partly at least, within the next Prof. H. J. Gramlich. Nebraska's I T 5Sfc dcsi Known iivcsiock propm-i, spoke Wednesday in North Platte j before an audience of several hun- C6S Commentator Appears Nov. 19 drcd farmers who had gathered at Religion-Life Week Brings Lecturers Young, McCulloch Join Host of World-Famous Leaders on Campus From Indiana by way of Colum bia and the University of Pennsyl vania, and from Williams College thru Harvard come two of the na tion's prominent religious leaders, A new high In college and uni versity enrollments has been set this fall with an increase over last year of 4.8 per cent, preliminary registration surveys reveal. Increase in college registration in VJii over 1936 was 3.9 per cent but the largest sectional increase this year was in the south, where the gain was 5.7 per cent. Eastern college enrollments have increased 5.2 per cent and the west 4.3 per cent. Increases last year were 3.3 per cent and 3.8 per cent, respectively. Most colleges and universities also received a larger number of applications than heretofore, ' but many have set up rigid require ments that limit the number of those accepted. First U. S. college course in quality statistics has been insti tuted by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It will give special attention to quality control of in dustrial products. 1 i I I V S' k- -' J Prof. H. J. Gramlich From Lincoln Jnuni.,1. j is sum-ssful. The project, to ol U'lniine the effect of seed source on winter hardiness of wheat, is under the supervision oi r-i ic Kneen, member of the experimen tal staff, i.nd Karl S. Quisenberry, professor of agronomy at the agri cultural college. Kneen and Quisenberry are ex perimenting with varieties of win ter wheat. Seed of the five varie ties was grown in the university s experiment fields here and sent to six cooperating stations in Canada, Montana, Kansas, Colorado, and Nebraska. By the end of the win ter they hope to see what el feet, if aiiv. the diFcrcnt environments have had on the plants. "To express it in terms of its -:.Hic:.l value." Kneen said, "our iinlhpr or not wheat seed that is produced either to (he north or south of us is supe rior or inferior to that we grow and plant in Nebraska. If there is any opinion, it is that seed grown in the north would do bett"r in this belt than that produced in the south. We shall be in a better position to answer yes or no when this research is completed." lrv, l.r I he clii-ro. 1" M.nUI cflmi. Il.c ur voice- i i. .. ...illcr. make IMOir rlmlir. I iiir li lull "' 'II"' I., I the Kinklli, w V"l,r sinilcni ulih I Or wwiry iv" T iro hclll-r tllll SOU I hocuhiic nr itrw l'y fkf. i .,n, ,... i hv ii ini'oi licit 1'ul.c ii nliUlc In H- ''i' It. kill fa.rl I. Iltltkll i,r.o, it,. kiiiI iriinih Ihc UlMircK cli.nn Hi liny V'vr ul a rlniH mill nml-c l-.iilcr curly, rll ! - friend. piiuw "! Ii viiokr. ' cct or liol. Ice. flute. Kduard Belies, former president of Czechoslovakia, has been in vited to become a visiting member of the University of Chicago fac ulty. : W the South Platte pasture-forage-livestock meeting. Subject of his address, given at the association banquet, was "The Yesterday, the Today, and the Tomorrow of Ne braska Agriculture." Professor Gramlich, know in timately to many stale farmers, because of his direct co-operation with them while head of the an imal husbandry department at the college of agriculture, left mediately after the meeting for Chicago where he will take up his j duties as secretary of the Airier- lean Shorthorn Breeders associa- i tion. i Eastern Progress. ! Also appearing on the program j of the annual convention, which I K. U. Plcms Big Weekend Rival Campus To Set Scene For Homecoming LAWHENCK, Kas., Nov. 3. n.,,. viiiine iMivorn nn nances are included on uic nof;al" Homecoming Friday and Saturday at the University of Kansas. The feature attraction will be the an nual football game between Kan sas and Nebraska Saturday aft ci noon. Organized houses at the univer- lecoraied especially frank Mcculloch. "Wliert did you gt hot smooth number?" For campus and sports wear you'll never find a shirt more durable and better looking than Arrow's Ox ford. Its casual correctness rates it first with university men. Mitoga shaped and Saniorizcd-shrunk, available in smart collar models, reg ular point, button-down, or new rounded collar. Colors white and blue . . . and the new bamboo shade. Arrow Oxfords $2 up ARROW SHIRTS Dr. Herrick Young and Frank W. McCulloch, who will address stu dent audiences during the campus Religion and Life week Nov. 13-18. Secretary of Missionary Person nel of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, Dr. Young speaks from a rich and varied background of years of constant efforts all over the world. He is a oil r ti-ill nr tins year stressed balanced larm : , lomcronlinfr to add to the operations with emphasis on the i .... nf 0(...asion. The down- j town section ol Lawrence also will I be dressed up. i Registration of old grads will necessity of livestock rehabilita tion were other prominent mem bers of the university faculty. M. L. Baker, superintendent of the North Platte experiment sta tion, urged diversification of live stock enterprises as the only pro gram "upon which an enduring civilization in Nebraska can be based." A. L. Frolik of the ng college faculty asserted that proper graz ing is the most important part of rebuilding pastures. He noted a 1 The following poem was s J ' inuitoii as a suggestion or a it i.bU theme song of the newlj n..n Corn Crib" coking room. I BV M.I.AUKTH AI MIVVAY. One of the foremost speakei.-, .,.,..., ,ini! hy. and commentators on world affairs ! n,h,, in vm hmu imn today will exiuind his views to : :''''tt' ,""u? ,n,e n.i iry. I Inrnlnltea Nov. 19 when Hans vo:i ! u. iv ,i,.,n hv H e iimin. Kaitenborn, ace NBC news inter preter, speaks at St. Paul church. A large number of faculty mem bers and students are expected to hear the address. Known better as H. .," Kaiten born attained his greatest heights during the recent Kuropean crisis with his accurate interpretations and uncanny predictions of events in central Kurope. The topic he will choose for his Lincoln audience is as yet unan nounced. Radio stations KFA15 KFOK hope to persuade him to stay in Lincoln over Sunday lo broadcast his comments on Head lines and By-lines, national pro gram of CBS, thru their facilities. Kaitenborn is oi (ierman dcsecn' and in Germany is addressed as baron. He was well prepared for his rattling translations and inter pretations of Hitler's .speeches by , his ability to speak fluent German and his 20 years of newspaper ex perience with the Brooklyn Kagle. I As an extemporaneous speaker, j he has had a great deal of train ing, using only brief notes in his radio broadcasts for the last it; years. Time magazine gives him credit for the first broadcast ever made of war, "his most exciting ad lib from a bullet ridden haystack between Spanish Leftist and Right ist lines, with cannon fire for the sound effects." Kallenborn's appearance is be ing sponsored by the Congregation Bnai Jeshurun. Tickets are $1 and may be purchased from F.d Wit tenberg, F2497 or B3094. The rising consciousness in the western world of the importance of the orient is reflected this year at Cornell university where for the first time an assistant pro fessor of Chinese history has been appointed. The University of Wisconsin will soon begin construction of a new cancer research building, to make the university one of the leading cancer research centers in the United States. begin al 3 o'clock Friday after-! noon and at 7:30 that night the S big Homecoming parade will get under way down town. Thirty or more tloni.-s are cxpecieo to iae part in the parade, along with three or four bands. Students marching in the parade will carry torches. At the end of the parade the crowd will assemble in front of J STUDENTS COMFETE FOR JUDGING TEAM Always a Complete Selection . of Arrow Products at HERRICK B. YOUNG. Fellow of the Royal Geographic Society; a member of the Amer ican Oriental Society, and the Royal Asiatic Society; member of Phi Delta Kappa, honorary educa tional fraternity; member, Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity. One time reporter for the Asso ciated Press in Indianapolis, Dr. Young has done service in many lands. From 1925 to 1935, he was a member of the faculty of Al borz College in Teheran, Iran, serving as Professor of Literature, Librarian, and Director of Resi dent Students. During his first year in Iran, Dr. Young covered the coronation of Reza Shah Pah levl for American newspapers and has since that time been a frequent contributor to American and Brit ish magazines and newspapers on political, religious and social trends in the Near East, In Central Europe, and in Russia. He is the author of "Moslem Editors Say," "Islam Awakens," and a number of English textbooks adopted for use in Iranian schools. But recently returned from in dustrial studies in England, Swe den,, Mexico, and all parts of the United States, Mr. F. W. McCul loch Is well qualified to speak on "Christian Living in Social Rela tions," and "International Rela tions." A member of Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Gamma Delta fraternities, he has engaged in active practice of law in Chicago for five years before accepting hla present posi tion as secretary of Industrial Re lations for the Council for Social Action of the Congregational and Christian Churches of the United States of America. He is t member of the national board of the Workers Alliance of America, and chairman cf that or ganization in Cook county, Illinois. "marked recovery" in grazing land 1 llu. stU(io of ,.a,u0 station WREN during the past years, particularly ,-,. ,Miv will hr hrnarf- in the counties in the eastern part : t,.,sl ovor lnal station. This is al of the state. ..,,, Q ilir, ... A Homecoming Queen will be J chosen by members of the foot ball squad soon from a list of thirteen candidates. The Queen will be presented to the spectators be- j tween halves of the football game. The big attraction of Homecom ing for the old grads will be the football game and the chances of the Jayhawks defeating the Corn buskers. Nebraska failed to win a single game in its first four starts this fall anil Kansas fans believe that this may be the year to put an end to the dominance of the Huskers over the Jayhawks. Last year Kansas and Nebraska tied 13-13 in a thrill-packed game at Lincoln. The Jayhawks scored their two touchdowns in the first half and led 13-6 at intermission. Nebraska trailed until the last four minutes of the game when it pushed over a touchdown to tic the score. Members of the 1908 Kansas football team have been invited to be guests at the game Saturday. That team was undefeated, win ning nine games and defeating Nebraska 20-5 in one of the con tests. Captain of the 1908 eleven was Pat Crowell, whose son Ward Crowell Is a sophomore guard on this year's Jayhawk team. Ten students on the ag campus are competing against each otliei tor a place on the crops judging team which will enter a regional contest at Kansas City, Nov. 21, and at Chicago, Nov. 25 and 2('. A five man squad will be se lected from the ten entered. The candidates are: Harold Benn, Ord; Arnold Carlson, Waverly; Theo dore Johnston, Lincoln; Cordon Jones, Dixon; Melvin Kreifcls, York; John Lonnquist. Waverlv; David McGill, Waverly; Rundall Peterson, Grant; Harold Schudel, North Loup, and Lawrence Treakle, Waco. Competition will fall into three major divisions: (1) identification of about 185 varieties of crops and weeds, listing their scientific names and areas in the United States where they grow; (2) com mercial grading of grain and hay according to U. S. standards cotton also will be included since southern colleges are among the entries; (3) judging of more com mon grains and legumes and grass seeds. Prof. A. L. Frolik, coach, and the five-man squad expect to leave ; Lincoln around Nov. 18. The team members plan to spend a day get ting practice and observing oper ations in the federal hay and grain laboratories at Kansas City. They will go directly then to Chicago. 73 Tonight , 9 to 12 MEL PESTER AND HIS ORCHESTRA 12 Musicians Person STUDENT UNION Tlo. JhnsL Gjv It's double majors- for Betty Meyer, Knn, who ihinUs tliere nng-lit w an mi- vniiliijrp in combining speech courses and jouniaim, m least it would pivc lier two ahccs at a job some day . al'ler she's out of school, but rich! now she s more concerned with classes in the ivtinie. and going places at night, 1'or instance, tonight , . Hetty will probably mi seen with Dick Kvan. Sigma u. at the "hot spot " of the; weekend, llie Bern ma "White Spot" party ... Belty will be whirling about in full gathered nt skirt, topped by a tight fitted basque with jml't'ed sleeves, green suodc sash fringed at the ends, . . . and the under lying purpose, and iiltimat? interest of the dress ... is the starched petticoat of flowered chintz that comes into view at appropriate times uhen Hetty dances . remember, Hetty, a little in termission in your dancing will refresh you . . . and we suggest malted milks, rich, creaniv, and thick at. the CAPITAL COFFEE LOUNGE ... on the house! P. S. Don't forget, nil vow campus people, to drop "in at the HOTEL CAPITAL COFFEE LOUNGE and .find out for yourself about the "irood food'' and the good times we have there . . . singing to the music of the accordion players . . . and. of course, you wouldn't want to miss oifl on being there when pictures are taken, and you can never tell when they will be! ii Win 1,1 Seldom does a comic strip quip become a part of a college yell, but a couple have been adopted with a vengeance at Midland col lege. The student court there has j ruled that on days before football games freshmen must say, "hoo to the goo that plays Midland," whenever pointed at by upper classmen. What's foo for the upperclass men must, be foo for the freshmen! "No matter what your grades are, you still have a chance. Grades, after all, are only an in dication of what a student is learn ing from his courses." A. J. Pur vis, Adrian College, gives a con doling pat-on-the-bnek to those who never stand at the head of the class. Personality led all other qual ities in the listing of male assets by University of New Mexico co-eds. Double Your Money Back if These Can Be Bought Any Low er in Price. 60c Alka Seltzer 50c Tek Tooth Brushes. . . . 25c Wests Tooth Paste 75c Listerine 2 for 2 for Max Factor Lip Sticks 51 59C 1.10 Save H ith Safety Free Delivery DRUG E3771 J YANTED80 STUDEHTS a day to sit for their Cornhusker pictures TOVHDEIJD STUDIO SALE of cW35 Orig. $4 to $10 Orig. Prices QJIIOKT LINES, in dinntinunl mmi Imts, laken from tlio pinion rea son's Mock. A rHE-FOKMAL SEASON OITEKING that yon can't afford to niis! A good rane of sizes, hut not all size in each style. Mostly S tD US, in ox i and closed top types .SifYer or gold kid or hrorade ltlack and uhitc satins SALE BEGINS FRIDAY AT 9 A.M. Wnnii'll'K Nhiw Sr""til Klnnr. I --