The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 29, 1939, Image 1

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    Daily sports staff picks All Bis; Six eleven!
Iebmaskai
1408
ABLY
0cg Newspaper Of Mere Than 7,000 Students
Vol. 69, No. 52.
Lincoln, Nebraska
Wednesday, November 29, 1 939
SL file for Hi pram) coinniinniDttee psitocDons
Bizad school may cooperate
in national business research
Proposed governmental-college cooperation
' depends on passage of Sheppard-Robinson bill
J. E. LeRossignol, bizad dean, age local investigations being made
announced yesterday that the uni- by local men; and finally, to es
versity's department of business tablisll closer sources of business
research plans to co-operate in a information for the benefit of
tentative federal program calling business men where such informa
for the establishment of business tlon is most vital.
The university's department of
business research was founded in
research stations at state univer
sities having schools or colleges of
business administration.
The proposal, which depends on
the passage of the Sheppard-Rob-inson
bill at the next session of
congress, would promote co-operation
between the department of
commerce and state business
schools in economic research, sim
ilar to that now obtaining between
Nebraska's agricultural experi
ment station and the department
of agriculture in matters of agri
cultural research.
Appropriations increase yearly.
The bill setting up the business
research stations calls for an ap
propriation to each designated in
stitution of not more than $20,000
for the fiscal year ending June 30,
1940; $30,000, the next year; $40,
000 for each following year.
Dean LeRossignol also an
nounced that he has been notified
N. H. Engle, assistant director of
me Dureau oi roreign ana domes
tic commerce, will visit the uni
versity early next semester. Mr.
Engle, will represent the depart
ment of commerce in forthcoming 192it wjth F. E. Wolfe chairman
researcn conierences wun univer- prof w. x. Spurr was made act
ity officials. ng chairman, following the resig
rnm.ninr .0,. nation of T. Bruce Robb two years
CommenUng - on the proposed Tft ,t. thtk ,.pnflpf mr ho.
bulletins,
dealt with
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Lincoln Journal and Star.
DEAN J. E. LEROSSIGNOL.
...announces intended cooperation
provide greater service to the Problems of "dependent retailers
29,000 business firms in Nebraska,
and to extend the benefits of our
investigations to every part of the
lUtt,"
Five objectives.
The five principal objectives of
this legislation are as follows: first
to enable the department of com
merce to establish a clearing house
for the nation's business research
activities; second, to establish co
operative arrangements on specific
studies; third, to reduce duplica
tion of effort; fourth, to encour-
Five seek
Long trophy
Subsidized athletics
is f rosh debate topic
Five men have filed for fresh
man debate H. A. White,-debate
coach, announced yesterday.
The proposition Is: Resolved,
that we approve of subsidized
ports in schools and colleges.
Competitors are: affirmative,
Joseph McDermott, George Black
stone, an Robert Guenzel; nega
tive, Melvln Bet see, and Eugene
Bradley.
Each speaker is to make his
own interpretation. Since the com
petition is Individual each man
peaks against those on his own
side of the proposition as well as
those on the opposition.
The winner will have his name
engraved on the Long debate
trophy which he will keep for a
year. There will be one honorable
mention given, but no ties will be
Gee la red.
Any others who care to enter
may still do so. They will be
placed on the affirmative or neg
live side m their names come in. democracy,"
Salvemini
leads convo
here Dec. 5
Critic of fascism
will discuss II Duce's
neutrality, democracy
"The most effective critic of
fascism outside Italy," Dr. Gae
tarfo Salvemini, will address
university convocation and
Union forum on Dec. 5.
"Will Mussolini remain neutral
is his subject for the convocation,
and "What is democracy" hi
topic for the Union convocation.
Dr. Salvemini was for many
years professor of Italian history
at the University of Florence. He
was expelled from Italy because
he refused to take the compulsory
teacher's oath, and came to Amer
ica. Here he has been a visiting
professor at Yale, Stanford, and
the Social Research school in New
York. For one semester of the
year he lectures on Italian civili
zation at Harvard.
Besides his professional activ
ties. Dr. Salvemini is author of
many books, latest of which
"Under the Axe of Fascism.
Others are "The Fascist Dictator
shiD in Italy" and "Mussolini
Diplomat." He has been a fre
auent contributor to such maga
zines as Foreign Affairs, The New
Republic, and The Nation,
Dr. David Fellman. of the polit
leal science department who is
well acquainted with Dr. Salve
mini, describes him as a "very
vigorous sreaker. extremely in
trrested in the Dreservation of
11 women,
10 men seek
political plum
Deadline is noon today;
Council to select group
at meeting on Dec. 6
Twenty-one hopefuls have filed
in John K. Selleck's office for the
11 positions open on the Junior-
Senior Prom committee. The
deadline for filings is noon today.
The division according to sex is
thus far almost equal. Ten men
made their candidacy known and
11 women are looking to the Stu
dent Council for positions.
Political factions began counting
noses early this week in order to
determine their strength for the
final test which la scheduled for
Wednesday, Dec 6, when the Stu
dent Council chooses from among
the candidates those who shall
feast upon the political plum.
3 men, 3 women, may be on council
No more than three women and
an equal number of men can be
chosen from the Council on the
prom committee. However, if the
Council chooses, there need -noM
be any of its members on that
body. I
The Junior-Senior Prom, which
comes early in March, marks the
end of a gala formal season at the
university. Male collegians don
for the last time the starched shirt
and tails and swing out to the mu
sic of some nationally acclaimed
orchestra, or so students hope.
The outstanding event of the
evening la the colorful presenta
tion of the prom girl, who last
year was Jerry Wallace. Tne
method of selection of the honored
senior woman student will be made
soon after the newly elected prom
committee gets into action.
Gene Krupa, the stylistic drum
mer and his orchestra, played for
the dance last year.
Hiram Winnett Orr, .
Former NU man, eliminates
dangers of wound infection
with plaster treatment
While Germany and Italy were arately, provided Dr. Trueta with.
using Spain as a proving ground tne base for his present treatment,
for airplanes and cannons, the "Debrides" disintegrated tissues,
chief surgeon of the Barcelona At Mphrntltn np nrr ,min, that
General Hospital, Dr. Trueta, was if ne treated an infection of the
using the carnage wrought to try fracture first, he endangered the
out the plaster treatment devised knitting of the fracture; if the
. . j- fracture, the infection was liable
by the American army surgeon,
T T? tTTI A. J-V A -
niram winnev urr, iormer iacuuy ture had time to heal.
member or tne university.
The fact was brought out in an
article in the November issue of
Forum entitled "Blood and Bones,"
1
During Thanksgiving vaca
tion the university library will
be open from 8 till 5 p. m.
every day except Thanksgiving
Day when it will be closed all
day.
P.B.K. elects
next Tuesday
Honorary celebrates
163rd year at dinner
Phi Beta Kappa will announce
the election of a selected group of
seniors to membership at a dinner
to be held next Tuesday in the
Union. The newly elected mem
bers will be senior students that
have met all eligibility require
ments, chief of which is comple
tion of the arts college group re
quirements, and a scholastic aver
age nearlng at least 90 percent.
The majority of new members
will be nominated from the arts
college. The fall election of eight
new members was begun last
school year, the first early recog
nition given by the group since
1906.
Tuesday evening's dinner, sched
uled to begin at 6:15. celebrates
the 163rd anniversary of the found
ing of the fraternity at the college
of William and Mary in 1776. C. B.
Schultz, from the university mu
seum staff, will speak on "Fossil-
Hunting in the Great Plains and
the Southwest."
4
Lincoln Journal and SUr.
DR. H. WINNETT ORR.
...solves an evil of healing.
by Leieh White. Mr. White said
that Dr. TrueU, during the Span
ish civil war, minimized mutila
ti6n and death in future wars.
Orr and Dr. William S. Baer,
both attached to the A. E. F. dur
ing the World war, working sep-
Point board
rules on prom
candidates
Overpointed men who
get posts must drop
points within 10 days
According to Roger Cunning
ham, chairman of the Men's Activ
ity rolnt board, any male candi
date for the junior-senior prom
committee who is elected and due
to the election is overpointed, must
prepare to drop activities until he
meets the requirements set by the
board. This action must be taken
within ten days following the elec
tion.
It should be clearly understood,
he said, that this does not prevent
any person from filing for a posi
tion on the prom committee tho
he be overpointed or would be
overpointed if he were elected.
Whether or not activity points
will be counted on a semester basis
has not yet been determined, ac
cording to Harold Niemann mem
ber of the board. Football players
whose activity in the sport ceases
before the semester ends will not
be overpointed thru acquisition of
additional points during the re
malnder of the semester. Niemann
said this means that if a football
player has the maximum number
of points included in which is foot
ball, the player may still be eligl
ble for the junior-senior prom since
the election is not held until sev
eral weeks after the close of the
gridiron season.
Orr solved the problem by "de
briding" the disintegrated tissues
of the wound, removing all the
foregoing matter, packing the
wound with vaseline and sterile
gauze, and when appliying plaster.
He found the patient usually de
veloped a high temperature but
that as the plaster immobilized the
wound that is, kept him from
jarring the limbthe fracture
would knit with comparative ease.
Infection, the former faculty
member found, somehow disap
peared without any direct treat
ment or subjection to anticeptics
or drugs.
Prejudice
analyzed
at symposium
"How do they get that way
asked 150 Protestants, Catholics
and Jews of one another when they
met to discuss race and religious
prejudice with Herbert L. Seamans
yesterday in the Religious Welfare
Council-BpoiiMored symposium.
Seamans, college director of the
National Conference of Christians
and Jews, acted as chairman of a
panel discussion by five university
faculty men, Dean E. E. Taylor of
Doane college and Dean Thomas S.
Bowdern of Creihton.
With David Fellman of the po
litical science department. Sociol
ogy Prof. J. O. Herczler, C. Ber-
trand Schultz, Dr. O. H. Woerner
and G. W. Rosenlof representing
the faculty, problems in prejudice
and its threat to American dem
ocracy, were debated.
Seamans opens discussion.
Opening the argument with the
question of whether or not preju
dices arose through differences in
creed and dogma, Seamans stated
that "I am no alarmist, but this
country is full of propaganda
which is hate-exciting, and if
democracy is to continue, we must
learn to live together intelligently
and effectively."
The conversation ran something
like this:
Bowdern: The Jews in my class
at Creighton can't see a speck of
difference between the creeds of
the various Protestant church
groups. They can't see why the
Protestants don t get together.
Taylor: Did you ask the Protes
tants about it?
Bowdern: Most of the Proles
tant undergraduates honestly ad
mitted they didn't know anything
about it
Woerner: If all the Protestant
churches banded together, three
fourths of the ministers would be
out of a job.
Bowdern: Oh no, they could go
Into social work.
Hertiler: As a sociologist, I ea
say that their salary would remala
about the same. As for the socio-
, (See SYMPOSIUM on page 4.).