The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 22, 1939, Page SIX, Image 6

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    DAILY NEBRASKAN
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1939
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SIX
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PURDUE
SI 7 a week
enough for
married start
"Love makes the world go
around, but it is money that oils
the bearings,1' quoted C. K. Gan
ong, of the history, economics,
and government department, pre
senting the "Economic Aspects of
Married Life" in the marital lec
ture in rowler hall yesterday aft
ernoon. After Mr. Ganong talked over
the points on on outline handed to
each of the 300 who attended the
lecture.
"How much money should a cou
ple have to get married on de
pends upon the individuals" stated
Mr. Ganong. "If the income is as
sured and the couple vant to,
they can get along on 17 or 18
dollars a week to start with."
Budget Expenses.
"While the income can not be
controlled to any great extent, ex
penses can be budgeted so that the
young married couple will realize
where their money is going," con
tinued Mr, Ganong. "Control of
the money should rest with the
person best able to take care of
the responsibility, whether it is
the husband or wife. Both should
have a small personal allowance.
Should Wife Work?
"Should a wife work? It de
pends upon the individual case. If
the income Is large enough to pay
for house work to be done by
someone else it is perfectly per
missable for the wife to work.
However, if the income is not suf
ficiently large to cover this con
tingency, and the wife is going to
work, the man should help wipe
dishes."
"On the whole the economics of
marriage is an individual affair
that must be decided between the
partners," concluded Mr. Ganong.
. Exponent.
CALIFORNIA
Influenza epidemic
reaces peak with
09 cases reported
A peak in the campus influenza
epidemic was reached when ap
proximately 90 cases received
treatment at Cowcll Memorial his
pital, Dr. Willialn G. Donald, uni
ersity physician, announced.
Patients crowded the wards and
i'v,py wore placed in rooms in the
1)3 ,.-ment of the hospital.
"The cpid 'inie is a respiratory
iniVction similar to influenza
w!eh hUhcI.s the lungs," he said.
The infection began three weeks
a;.o in Chicago, appeared in Los
Angeles two weeks ago, and is now
spreading on the campus.
Daily Californian.
Opinion
realize that the best way to win
it would be to nominate Mr.
Dewey. Without doubt, he will he
given increasing consideration for
the nomination.'
WAP But while Wlfit Vir
YV'Uii ginia university stu
dents were giving un a laugh as a
pleasant interlude in all of this
talk about war, armaments and
diplomacy, other collegians were
becoming more and more con
cerned over the stale of our rela
tions with other nations. With
opinions ranging nil the way from
"mind our own busings" to "pro
tect democracy," students as a
group expressed no definite opin
ion. A quick suivey will illustrate
the point:
I From the Villanova college "Vil
lanovan:" "America is . . . disre
garding the sacred traditions of
our Monroe doctrine, and is lead
ing the world in protesting against
foreign atrocities . . . The favorite
comeback from the targets of our
denunciation is the request to mind
our own business and straighten
out our own domestic affairs be
fore we try to tell others how to
run theirs. There Is food for
thought in that retort."
From the Indiana State Teach
ers College "Statesman": "The
United States Is going to war.
There can be little doubt of It. The
rest of the world is preparing for
battle at breakneck Bpeed. We are
MINNESOTA
Regents probe
(redf teachings
A tentative date for the meet
ing of the Board of Regents
with members of state senate
finance committee has been set,
but announcement of the date
is being withheld, Senator A. J.
Rockne of Zumbrota, chairman
of the committee, said yester
day. Rockne said the meeting,
summoned to discuss matters
relating to the "teaching of
communism" at the university,
will be closed to the public and
reporters.
Daily.
LEHIGH.
Student press
begins radio
news service
The Brown and White will In
augurate this week a special radio
news service with universities in
the middlewest thru a system of
short wave transmission by which
late campus news will be sent, via
short wave radio, to Purdue uni
versity and hence relayed to other
schools.
Last minute news dispatches,
prepared by the editors of the
Brown and White, will be trans
mitted during two scheduled broad
cast periods each week thru short
wave station W3HVM, owned and
operated by Robert Girdler, Ch. E.
'39, and located at 447 New street.
First broadcast Thursday.
The first broadcast in the series
will be sent, in Morse code, at 9
p. m. Thursday. By special ar
rangement, station W9YB, oper
ated by students in conjunction
with the Radio club of Purdue
university, will pick up the broad
cast and relay ft to other midwest
ern colleges who have shown an
interest in the plan.
Plans are underway to make
tli3.se broadcasts of campus news a
reciprocal agreement, that is, to
inaugurate a return broadcast sys
tem whereby news from distant
campuses would be received by
Gii'dler's station on the eve of pub
lication of the Drown and White.
Brown and White.
PURDUE
Bureau records
frosh activities
Typed records of freshmen in
terviews are now being filed away
by the Activities Bureau.' These
records, about 1,300 in number,
are kept in the Activities Bureau
office, and they are to be consid
ered private records to be used by
the bureau only.
At the same time the interviews
wore being hold, letters were sent
to the heads of the various ac tivi
ties informing thin of the fresh
men interested in their activities.
Exponent.
forced to keep pace. We may talk
of isolation and non-interference,
but when war comes it will be
public opinion, yours ami mine,
not the initiative of those in
charge of the government that
forces us in."
From the Middlebny College
"Campus": "Now under discus
sion in Washington is the removal
of the embargo on aims ship
ments to Spain.... The American
people have frequently reiterated
their intention of non-intervention
in foreign affairs, no matter what
issues are at stake. The only way
to maintain our isolation, if indeed
it is possible to do so, is to remove
the embargo on Spanish war ship
ments." The college press most of all
urges caution in deciding the
merits of any possible cause for
war. Typical is this statement by
the MaeMurray College for Wom
en "College Greetings:" "Wars arc
fought and won in the minds of
the people before the first army
begins to maneuver. Let us be
careful, very thoughtful and very
reasonable before we start throw
ing any mental bomtyfl."
Loyola university (New Orleans)
has a student group known as the
Brotherhood of the Pipe Smokers
Association.
MINNESOTA.
Victim wW jumped three
stories in DU blaze dies
Ward Weber Gresslin, the most
seriously injured of three students
who leaped from the third floor of
the blazing Delta Upsilon frater
nity house early last Monday, died
at 6 p. m. Fridcy in the university
hospital. .
Death came a.'ior a five day bat
tle with pneumonia, which set in
Tuesday as a result of exposure
the morning of the fire. Gresslin
was placed in an oxygon tent
Tuesday and two blood transfus
ions were given the second at 5
pp. m. yesterday.
Eleven fraternity brothers and
a friend volunteered to give their
blood for Gresslin. Don Palmer and
H. Lemogine Olson, both frater-
INDIANA
Doetors give
health advice
According to Bloomington doc
tors and university physician, flu
and other contagious diseases are
no more prevalent this year than
in previous years.
Yet to be healthy, doctors advise
one to:
1. Get plenty of rest and more
fresh air.
2. If you don't feel right, re
main at home where you won't
endanger other persons by your
coughing and sneezing.
3. Eat regular meals, and keep
your system clean.
4. Keep away from persons who
seem ill.
If you have not been vaccinated
for smallpox within two or three
years, it would be wise to spend
25 cents at a drugstore for small
pox serum, and be vaccinated by
our university physician at no
extra charge.
Daily Student.
PURDUE
Stephens beauty
counselor talks
at Charm School
Coeds will got now hints on
grooming and use of cosmetics at
the Charm School sponsored by
WSGA and Y. W. C. A., Wednes
day and Thursday, at 4 o'clock in
the faculty lounge of the Union.
Pauline Crook, beauty counselor
at Stephens college, Columbia,
Mo., will speak. Miss Crook will
give 15 minute personal interviews
to any girls who desire them. To
give every girl an equal opportu
nity, two girls from each soroiity
and five from the Women's Resi
dence Hall may sign up in the
WSGA office for interviews.
Those who plan to consult Miss
Crook may bring 15 with them.
Coeds are requested to bring a
eomb and brush. Exponent.
COLO. A. & M.
Students-suggest
Union room names
Names for the rooms in the new
addition to the Student Union
building are needed so that the
rooms may be decorated appropri
ately, and for that reason students
are urged by the Student Union
committee to hand in suggested
names to Mrs. Whitney or Mr.
Simonds.
Rooms that ore to be named Ule
the main dining room, the lounge,
and the three smalbr dining
rooms on the first floor. On the
second floor will be the largo
dance floor, two smaller danc?
floors or banquet rooms, and a
lounge that faces we.-t oft the
dance floor.
Rocky Mountain Collegian.
Eighty percent of the Harvard
univesity student body claims af
filiation with some religious or
ganization. Since 1930, Gl percent of the
Rhodes scholars have entered ca
reers in public life.
Fordham university has a
world's fair personnel course to
train workers for the .New York
exposition.
The name of Columbia college in
Dubuque, Iowa, has been changed
to Loras college in honor of the
pioneer bishop and founder of
Catholic higher education in the
northwest.
nity brothers, gave blood for the
two transfusions.
At his bedside last night were
his mother, Mrs. Cora Gresslin,
and his brother, Robert, who also
escaped from the D. U. fire early
Monday. Many of his fraternity
brothers gathered at the hospital
in the afternoon.
Gresslin was a graduate student
and would have received his mas
tor's degree this June. He received
a H. S. degree with high distinc
tion from the College of Education
in 1937.
He pledged the fraternity Oct.
3, 1930 and" was initiated Jan. 25,
1937. Born August 11, 1914, he was
a resident of Ackley, la.
Funeral anangements had not
heen mado Inst niobt.
Another victim of the fire, Wil
Ham Pappas, who was admitted to
the Health service Thursday with
bronchitis, was found yesterday to
have a light case of pneumonia.
His condition is not serious.
Lloyd Briggs and Vietor, who
also suffered injuries in leaping
from the third floor of the house,
arc making rapid recovery.
Minnesota Daily.
OKLAHOMA A. & M.
Aggie wrestler
seeks secretary
They tell us that Clay Albright
that rassler who rated that pic
ture in Life mag is badly in need
of a stenographer since said like
ness of his mub appeared recently.
He hase being receiving fan-mail
from all over the dear old U. S. A.
and furtherest being from Newark,
N. J. With exams ana Bluff to at
tend to he- just doesn't have time
to answer all those letters. Noth
ing but blondes need apply for the
position we hear and even they
should know all the holds.
Daily O'Collegian.
INDIANA
Socialist head
talks at foiruni
Making his firut appearance be
fore an Indiana university au
dience, Norman Thomas, thrice
candidate for United States presi
dent on the socialist ticket, will
speak at the Union open forum
Tuesday, March 28.
Dr. Frank O. Beck, director of
the open forum, in announcing
that Thomas is to talk here, said
the topic of Thomas' talk will be
chosen by a referendum through
The Daily Student.
A ballot offering a choice
among four possible topics will be
printed in the Student today,
through March 22. (Today's bal
lot is on page 2.) Students and
faculty members, after having in
dicated their choice, should mail
or bring the votes either to the
Union desk or The Daily Student
office, Dr. Beck explained.
The topics to be voted on, and
one which Thomas will discuss,
are:
Are Wc on the Road . to Dic
tatorship? Wanted: A Foreign Policy for
the United States.
The Forces Opposing Civil
Liberties in the United States.
Why Are We Not Solving the
Unemployment Problem?
Daily Student.
KANSAS
Kansas regent name
chancellor eaiulidates
TOPEKA, Kas.. March 15. The
board of regents, charged with the
selection of a now University of
Kansas chancellor, was rumored la
have narrowed the field to throe.
No member of the bond would
discuss the mutter however.
Lester McCoy, a regent, con
ferred with Gov. Payne Ralner
earlier this week. It is reported
that the men selected by the pres
ent board would not be overturned
by the board Ratner may name
shortly.
Dr. J. M. Morrill, vice president
of Ohio State university, and Dean
Malott, Harvard, formerly of Abi
lene, Kas., reportely were two of
the three now under consideration.
Dally Kansan.
SO. CAL.
Radio doesn't
slow up study
efficiency
Even if you do listen to the radio
while studying for tomorrow's
quiz, you'll still be able to learn as
much as if the house was quiet, or
at least, your brain will be as
capable of remembering what
you're concentrating on.
Research in this field was car
ried on last week by Dr. Neil
Warren's class in psychological
demonstration, the results of
which were nearly the same as
those obtained by surveys made
at Stanford, Northwestern, and
Michigan universities.
Dr. Warren took 15 students in
the class, and had them doing
mental arithmetic for two minutes
at a time. When he had obtained
the results, of their mental capac
ity, he subjected them to outside
noises, such as playing "Gloomy
Sunday" on a phonograph record.
They continued their mental arith
metic for the same period of time,
and when the results were tab
ulated, the statement that the
mind can continue work at the
same rate of speed, was again
proved.
Daily Trojan.
WASHINGTON
6U. S. outgrows
capitalism'
Because government estimates
indicate that the United States
will reach its highest population,
153 million, about the year, 1980,
Ricard G. Tyler, professor of sani
tary engineering forecasts the out
growth of the capitalistic system
and vast social changes.
In the department of civil en
gineering Professor Tyler recently
has studied government population
figures in relation to sanitary en
gineering, and came to the follow
ing conclusions:
"Under a stable or decreasing
market which will accompany the
present declining population trend
it would be Impossible for any eco
nomic system based on profit to
survive.
Fewer Immigrants.
"Because capitalism can function
satisfactorily only with expanding
markets in which profits can be
reinvested for additional profits,
we will have much more serious
business depressions in the fu
ture." Recently a report of the United
States public health report pub
lished an article which showed
that the United States birth rate
is decreasing, and that we are los
ing more citizens than we are
gaining by immigration.
Reports of the census of 1390
showed the preceding decade had
an average yearly increase of 2.3
percent. From 1920 to 1930 the in
crease had fallen to 1.5 annually,
and since 1930 the yearly gain has
been but 0.7 percent,
been but 0.7 percent. Daily.
KENTUCKY
(larnegie grant to aid
new graphic art course
Completion In the near future of
a plan of appreciation will make
UK the only university in tlv
south to offer a comprehensive
course in graphic art.
An additional Carnegie grant of
$1,000 has been made for the pur
chase of a lithographic press and
complete equipment for the litho
graphic unci wood cut processes.
The plan of appreciation, formu
lated by Edward W. Fisk, assist
ant art professor, was endorsed
two yea i a ago by the Carnegie
Corporation when the original
grant was made.- Kernel.
MARYLAND
Debaters argue uilli
coed from Iticlunond
University of Richmond and lo
cal coed debaters will discuss the
pump priming issue tomorrow
night at G:30 in the old library
lounge.
It has not been decided whether
the campus due will defend the af
firmative or negative side. Eliza
beth Powers will argue for the old
liners and her colleague will be
selected when the sides of the
question are settled.
Diamondback.