I THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Husker Star Hurlers "Dutch" Witt Two sophomores who displayed veteran ability in the aerial game in esterday's contest were "Dutch" Witte and Clair Sloan. "Dutch" started he scoring in the first half by tossing a long pass over the line to Lee for Nebraska's first touchdown. Sloan, who recently made the longest scor ing run of the season, hung up another seasonal record by tossing a 45 rd pass to Brown in the final few minutes. enn tnns of steel are to be used in i - making the automobile license plate3 for the 1929 year in Iowa, according to a report from the' State Board of Control of that state. The plates wll be made in the Anamosa prison shops. Husker fans driving to the game yesterday at Manhattan report the road conditions as being excellent Ihis condition is due largely to the efforts of the Aggies in having the roads in the best possible condition. The Real Inside Story of the Mail Robberies THE GREAT MAIL ROBBERY THE U. S. MARINES IN A SPLEN DID DISPLAY OF THE WAY THEY GliAROFn THF MAILS ACTION DYNAMITE LOVE. COMEDY NEWS SHOWS I -3-6-7-9 MAT. 15c NITE 25c THIS WEEK LIBERTY For the Family Starting Monday Night MATINEES TUES. THUR. SAT. Pierre Watkin Players A fare which stmt Broadway critics in te perfect transports f praise. It ail started harmlessly enough a pallor car hut honeymoons aa4 former ftasnes do not mix very well AW AW WITH DULCIE COOPER J. GLENN McFARLANE PIERRE WATKIN AND A DISTINGUISHED CAST OF FAVORITES Same Popular Prict MAT. 25c, 60c EVE. 25c, 80c, 75c Revelers at All Shews NEXT WEEK "SCANDAL" A" 0 V . ... -.v. . ?, i. Clair Sloa'n Pilots Team "Bud" McBride, another sopho more who showed future greatness by his performances against Bach man's Kaggies. McBride went in at quarterback and piloted the Husker eleven in a very commendable fashion. Typevrriters For Rent All standard makes special rate to stu dents for Ionic term. Used machines portable typewriters monthly payments. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 1232 O St. B-2157 Imafina cominf horn to the lava nest to find it cuDted by sweetheart 1 Here is an avalanche oi innocent lauhter th Bora spice ia it than the richest Tnanksfrvinf pud dint I A. SPECIAL FOR THANKSGIVING WEEK tiiii (i Wisconsin Survey Shows Graduates Do Not Fool Language Study Useless Madison, Wis., Nov. 19. Al though from thirty to fifty per cent of the graduates of high schools and colleges in the United States who responded to questionnaires sent out in a recent survey reported that they have read nothing in the foreign lan guage since graduation, few consid ered their time spent in language study wasted, Prof. M. V. O'Shea of the University of Wisconsin School of Education comments in reporting the results of the survey. Of those who studied modern lan guages in high school, eighty-six per cent considered their time well spent, and larger proportions of the college group reported benefit from their study. French Proves Valuable Of the graduates of the Univer sity of Wisconsin who submitted da ta in the survey eighty-eight per cent agreed that their study of French was valuable after gradua tion and seventy per cent that their study of German was valuable after graduation. Other investigations now in prog ress, Professor O'Shea remarks, are trying to find the possible benefits other than ability and inclination to read the literature of the lan guage studied in these three fac-' tors: spanking the language, under standing it when spoken by another, and understanding and enjoying English literature and speaking and writing the native tongue than would otherwise be possible. Reading for Enjoyment In this connection it is interest ing to note, Professor O'Shea points out, that most of the graduates who read foreign languages after grad uation do so lor "personal enjoy ment." A fact which should be considered in interpreting the data gathered in the survey of reading of foreign lan guages by former students. Profes sor O'Shea adds, is that "similar data would probably be secured from an investigation concerning the use that graduates make of most sub jects taught in high school and col lege. Change of Methods Suggested "It may be students of educa tional procedure quite generally be lieve that methods of teaching in vogue in high school and college have largely failed to give the stu dent such a grasp of the subjects he has pursued that he actually employs ,them in solving the problems of daily life after he quits school or college." Some procedures in the teaching of foreign languages which might in duce more voluntary reading on the part of those who have finished the class room discipline. Professor YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THE COLLEGIATE LAUGH-MOT. VAUDEVILLE WALTER VERNON Sinning Comedian BABE-BEE-MARY WILSON SISTERS & WASHBURN Versatile Entertainers Pictures Nebraska-Kansas SHOWS 1-3-7-9 MAT. 35c NITE SOc THIS WEEK jf " A Universal Picture MIDNIGHT Ihe witching hour on the epoolcy old country estate. Mad mysticism unfolding before your eyes ia the most sen sational mystery screen play EVER pro duced. New sensations await you in this sHir ry, palpitating drama that'll cause your nerves to tingle chill you as never a picture has before. A real adventure in th cinema don't miss it. with LAURA LA PLANTE and an all star cast THIS ORPHEUU WEEK SHOWS, 1.2,1,9 . O'Shea suggests as follows: Would it Violate Proprieties? "Would it violate the traditional proprieties in the teaching of mod ern foreign language if pupils wero not required to become familiar with grammatical details, provided that they could grasp the meaning in large verbal unities? "Would it not be possible and also desirable to train our pupils in cor respondence rather than in literary composition? "It may be suggested that it might be better to ' initiate the pupil into the conversational aspects of a for eign language before attacking read ing, so that he. could gain some de gree of automatic control of the oral form before attempting mastery of the visual form of the language. "Would it not be adivsable to give pupils in high school and students in college experience in the reading of contemporary more largely than classical literature?" Peacock Dead; Mourning and Relief Result Partly because of a broken heart, partly because people chased him away from their shiny new cars, partly because so many people tried to pull a feather from his tail, and partly because of some internal di sease, the widely known peacock at the College of Agriculture is dead. In his better days he was a proud and stately bird. In those times he had a peahen for a companion. But four years ago she died of blackhead. Since then he has been declining in beauty, health, and spirit until he finally died. Miss I sa belle Dunman, daughter of the landscape gardener of the University of Nebraska was his fos ter mother. She fed him and was one of the few persons upon the campus from whom he received kind treatment. Answered Call "He used to depend entirely upon me for his feed," says Miss Dunman. "And would always come for it at my call of, 'Oh boy.' " However, in these latter years he preferred to go to the corn crib for his grain and look for worms and insects in the grass. He would still come and eat bread from my hand. He used to follow me for rather long distances across the campus; but, during the last few years he was tormented so much by other people that he even failed to trust me any longer." Miss Dunman has in her posses sion a largo bunch of feathers from SCHOOL UNTIL YOU SEE NOAH FERRIS and HARRY ELLIS Character S infers Beaver and His Monarchs Featuring "SHE DONT WANNA" Football Game BABICH and his Orchestra Playing AN INTERPRETATIVE MUSIC SCORE WITH EFFECTS! MAT. IScj EVE. SOc z3 Farmers Fair Head B : WW -';s ARTHUR M. HAUKE. Wood River youth, senior in the college of agriculture, who will be the manager of the 1928 Farmers' fair. HAUKE APPOINTED MANAGER OF FAIR Senior Selected to Handle Tenth Annual Farmers Fair in Spring of 1928 Arthur M. Hauke, Wood River, is the manager cf the tenth annual Farmers' Fair which will be held the last (Saturday m April or the first Siuroay in May. Hauke i a senior and was a member of the junior fair board last year. The Farmers' Fair is conceded to be the most important activity on the College of Agriculture campus and requires a great deal of work on the part of every student of the Agriculture College, stated Mr. Hauke, manager. The purpose of this fair is to advertise the College of Agriculture and to give agricul tural students experience in an im portant activity, a3 -well as to pro vide amusements for the people, he added. The fair will consist of a parade down O street in the forenoon and a miniature fair on the agriculture campus in the afternoon. There will be educational exhibits from every department on the campus. A dance will also be held in connection with the event. Between six and seven thousand persons attended the fair last spring. his tail. She plans to make a fan from them in the future. "I knew where to look for them in the bushes," she says, "but many other people tried to pull them out of his tail." Bothered Auto Owners One of the favorite hobbies of the peacock was to perch himself on some nice new shiny automobile. There he would see his reflection and think that it was another bird. Then he would peck and scratch furiously to attack what he thought was another peacock. Many a new car was scratched up in this way, and as a consequent the peacock had some narrow escapes from the own ers. Crowds of people used to gather at the College of Agriculture camp us to watch him. Upon being sur rounded he would become very in dignant and "spread" beautifully. Although many of the automobile owners may breathe a sigh of relief, the old peacock will be greatly missed by the students at the College of Agriculture and many of the vis itors. Live a Life Time foots MAT. 2Sc SHOWS -t-S-S-7-9 Tomorrow ALL WEEK EVERY EVENINCI HOME AT 8:30 P. M 47TH SUCCESSFUL WEEK JOY SUTPHEN PRESENTS GEORGE M. COHAN'S MASTERPIECE " The Song and Dance Man DRAMA ROMANCE COMEDY TEARS To a certain extent "THE SONG AND DANCE MAN" is the story of Cohan's own life as he had lived it, and in writing it, he placed upon the stage an entirely new sort of story and plot. It is known as his masterpiece, and never did Cohan bring out the heart and soul of his characters to present an ever Increasingly story to draw down a record of clean laughs and to inject a little heart throb with more tolling effect- JOY SUTPHEN. THREE PERFORMANCES THANKSGIVING, Mat. 3:00 P. M. Ereninj 8:03-10:03 PoouNr Prlcis: Evary Evn!n' At "? P M. BOe and 7c M.tn ?V an SOc NO ADVANCE IN PRICES THANKSGIVING OK SATURDAY MATINEE Prof. Bengston Makes Comments On Venezuelan Weather Conditions According to the Venezuelan na tive, tropical weather may be divided into two all-inclusive classes "wet ter than hell" or "drier than hell." This is the observation of Prof. N. T. Bengston of the University of Nebraska geography .department, who is studying there while on leave from the university. He writes of his interesting experiences since leaving Lincoln. After studying for a doctor's degree, he spent some time in London before going to Venezu ela. He will return here in January. His letter: "As expected, this engagement is t'iving me a rich variety of exper iences. In London I lived 'midst silk hat aristocracy and rubbed elbows with some financial giants; here I am out on the edge of culture (some times I think I am considerably be yond the edge) where 'he-men' live, work, eat, and cuss, especially cuss. I am in a camp where the entire white population consists of three drillers, a steam shovel operator, a rig builder, and a camp boss. There are some negroes, in their own quar ters, of course; they are the happiest of the lot, and as I write I hear them singing and carrying on. But all in all the contrast in vocabulary, in customs, and in 'atmosphere' when compared with London or with that of serene and scholarly Clark uni versity is great: Far From Civilization "Camp C is an outpost of civiliza tion in a very real sense. It is the camp farthest south in this part of Venezuela, and although small it is equipped with all modern conven iences. We have two bunkhouses and a mess hall for whites, three bunk houses for natives, a power plant and an ice house. Thus we have shower baths, electric lights and ice cream (occasionally). Around us on every hand is impenetrable jungle and this camp is an island of modern ity in its midst. "The camp is located on a crest of sharply dipping sandstone. Look- ' ing eastward we see at the base of Tarra Ridge a broad expanse of flat Maracaibo lowland, much of it swamp, and beyond it the Sierra Nevada de Merida, a snow capped range of the Andes rising to altitudes of 16,000 to 18,000 feet. Looking westward we have a strip of lowland through which the Tarra river flows, and beyond that only a few kilo meters away are the foothills of an other Andine range the Sierra de Perija. In those foothills are the vil lages, of the Motilones Indians, sav ages who still use the bow and ar row and who kill whites whenever they can. Natives Frightened "Just after lunch today our atten tion was drawn to a small column of smoke in the Tarra flat below us, which was evidently caused by a party of the savages probably cook ing some game they had killed. "The Venezuelan natives here are in mortal terror of the Motilones. During the past week we have been working south of camp near the Col ombian boundary. Our party con sisted of two writes and three na tives, all armed, and each evening "YOUR DRUG STORE" "Our warn lunches sura tasta food tbesa cold days." Owl Pharmacy S. E. Cor. 14 P. Phone BIOoS of Thrills with Vlflety&sfc tkW" NITE30C THIS WEEK R I A L T 0 SObAYHOUSE' E joy SUTPHEN - MGR. OF THE SPOKEN KtnTFWnPTHY ARTISTIC PRODUCTIONS as we would return in sight of camp, the natives would shout hurras of gladness. See No Indians "Although we were in so-called Indian country we saw no Indians, and only on one occasion did we run across one of their trails and an abandoned temporary camp. The Motilones never attack in the open, they shoot from abush, and it is that characteristic which makes them so feared. During the past year two par ties have been fired upon, a white man killed each time, yet even then no Indian was seen by any of the' others of the party. "And now let me add a word or two' about the weather and climate, subjects always for conversation, whatever may be true of interest. Maracaibo is dry and hot, day time temperatures in September are 29 to 31 degrees Centigrade, while nights, about 10 p. m. are only .about one degree cooler. But little rain falls, only about 20 inches a year and that mostly in light showers. Due to the all-year high temperatures evapora tion is rapid and rainfall efficiency low, with the result that the vegeta tion consists of scattered thorny bush and cacti givin the landscape the ap pearance of a semi-desert. Variability in Weather Camp C is in the Maracaibo basin of southwest Venezuela, and climatic conditions are in marked contrast to Maracaibo. This is a wet country. No rainfall records are available, but the oi! men working here have their own unique way of describing conditions. According to their testimony the months from December to March are relatively dry but in some years "wetter than hell," while April to November are usually wet but some times 'drier than hell.' There you have the variability of tropical rain fall effectively, if not poetically ex pressed. "The jungle hereabouts is dense, perfectly so great Ceiba trees, some ebony, tangled tianas, shrubs, vines, saw grass, thorns, and thistles, room for no more. The jungle is thickly populated, one sees evidences but seldom the animals. Yesterday We saw more than a dozen monkeys, a few turkeys and chickens, tracks of tapier and wild hog, nothing else." The associated students of the University of Washington are plan ning a student owned 18-hole golf course to be laid out on the edge of the campus. Golfing facilities for 10,000 students will be provided. TURKEY TROT HARK! YE COLLEGIANS! Ye Modern Turkey Trot on Wednesday Night at the Hour of Nine November 23 Music by Oklahomans Matinees TUESDAY, THURSDAY AND SAT. DRAMA 9 i r '0