The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 18, 1927, Page 3, Image 3

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    Oklahoma University 'Duck Club Is
Composed of Feminine Swimmers
Norman, Dec. 17. If you can't
negotiate a half a dozen different
kinds of deep ant shallow water
dives, prevail upon yourself to swim
from' most any position, and save a
drowning person in a number of
ways, you will never become a mem
ber of the Duck's club.
The Duck's club is the University
0f Oklahoma women's swimming or
ganization. Membership in it con
notes unusual ability as a diver,
GLORIOUS
FAREWELL
WEEK!
Pierre Watkin
Players
Presenting
"The
Unkissed
Bride"
with
DUUCIE COOPER
J. GLYNN McFARLANE
PIERRE WATKIN
THE SEASON'S FUNNIEST FARCE!
MATS. TULTHUR. SAT.
2:30 25c-S0c
NIGHTS AT 8 KM)
25c-50c-7Sc
LIBERTY
ALL THIS WEEK
VAUDEVILLE
Barton St Young
Sinrinf Canadian In
"IT'S ALL IN FUN r
French Sisters
Meloar Twins in Little
"BIT OF THIS AND THAT"
Dorothjr De Vere's
Cirl Revue
A DELUXE OFFERING OF
JAZZ. VOUTH A BEAUTY
BEAVER ana MONAJtCHS
WW.
THIS
I WEES.
SHOWS AT 1. 3. 8, 7. t
AlOHO h
A DWNKOF. I
DbAYHOUSE
EET WORLDMoTfVNIQUE THEATER
HOME OF THE SPOKEN DRAMA
(LINTOLN'S OWN STOCK COMPANY)
NOTEWORTHY APTISTIC PRODUCTIONS
5Ut
SUCCESSFUL WEEK
STARTING MONDAY
We Present
A DELIGHTFUL COMEDY
"PIGS"
By ANNE MORRISON and PATTERSON McNUTT
TWO YEARS IN NEW YORK
. A .tory of tka rUls mi tribulations a snuifl U UmSIr ana th. kar
hoot tho bacon" in a mmmt twoxpoctoaj wi' awl torus
TW. Ut a hr.tW ml tha faatilr cmM a man l tha mmrfMT ana torts
TflnR tub lea aj W f SWK.
- a ni.bt J aft-m -rT joyUTFHE
MATIN EES TUESDAY. THURSDAY AND SATURDAY
POPULAR PRICES EVENINGS 2Sc-50o75c
WE MOVE TO THE LIBERTY MONDAY, DEC. 26
swimmer, and life saver. There are
20 members of the organization, but
with the annual winter trials soon to
be run off, additions in considerable
numbers are expected to be added to
the organization, according to Paul
ine Brooks, president
Each member of the club is en
titled to an emblem of membership,
but in order to retain the honor from
year to year, she must be ablo to ac
complish the same feats and pass the
same tests of the year before. Tests
this year are expected to be harder
than those of last year with the ad
dition of five events, Miss Brooks
said.
Membership Requirements
The requirements for membpraTiin
include: standing spring dive, run
ning dive, racing dive, surface dive,
recovering an object three times in
succession, dis-robing in deep water
and swimming 100 yards with
turns, the American crawl, breast
stroke, side stroke, trudceon crawl.
back stroke using both hands and
feet, treading water one minute.
lifting person from tank unassisted,
hair or head carry.
Cross che1 carry, tired swimmer
carry rrm lock carry, and resuscita
tion. A sw:irming pageant is pre
sented by the club each spring in
the swimming pool ia the university
Women's building. Last year the
club had 75 members.
CLASS B TOURNEY
WILL BE TDESDAY
Fourteen Games Are Scheduled In
Last Basketball Period'
Before Christmas
The class B inter-fraternity bas
ketball tournament will again get
DOLORES
COSTELLO
IN
"Old
San Francisco"
A STORY OF SAN FRANCISCO
BEFORE AND AFTER THE EARTH
QUAKE. X
THE COLD COAST,
THE CHINESE DUNGEONS
A THRILLING MELO-DRAMA!
BABICH AND ORCHESTRA
ORPHEUM ORGAN
SHOWS-
MAT. 35c! i ll I
NITE 50el
CHII 10c 1.
"A MAN'S PAST"
Can A Man Forget?
THRILLING DRAMA AMID THE
SAHARA SANDS
COMEDY
NEWS
Sbows-
RIALTO
I. S. B. t,
THIS
WEEK
December. 19
ONt YEAR IN CHICAGO
ftf nil HUM' l
under way Tuesday evening with
fourteen games scheduled. This will
be the last evening of play until af
ter the Christmas holidays.
This will mark the largest evening
of B class basketball in the tourna
ment, with all but two of the teams
seeing action. The schedule for,
Tuesday is as follows:
League 1 Bete Theta Pi vs.
Theta Xi, 7:25 o'clock, floor 3. Sig
ma Phi Epsilon vs. Delta Sigma Phi,
8:35 o'clock, floor 3.
League 2 Phi Gamma Delta vs.
Alpha Sigma Phi, 9:00 o'clock, floor
1. Delta Sigma Lambda vs. Sigma
Alpha Epsilon, 9:00 o'clock, floor 3.
Delta Upsilon vs. Delta Chi, 9:00
o'clock, floor 2.
League 3 Phi Kappa vs. Theta
Chi, 7:00 o'clock, floor 1. Pi Kappa
Phi vs. Pi Kappa Alpha, 7:25 o'clock
floor 1. Farm House vs. Xi Psi Phi,
7:00 o'clock, floor 2.
League 4 Phi Sigma Kappa vs.
Tau Kappa Epsilon, 7:25 o'clock,
floor 2. Delta Tau Delta vs. Sigma
Nu, 7:00 o'clock, floor 3. Phi Kap
pa Psi vs. Phi Delta Theta, 8:35
o'clock, floor 2.
Survey Shows
Type Teachers
Schools Need
What schools and colleges want
are science, mathematics, and lan
guage teachers, and teachers who
can take charge of such extra-curricular
activities &s debating, dramat
ics, music, and athletics, R. D.
Moritz, director of the university de
partment of educational service said
Saturday after a survey of the ed
ucational situation in Nebraska dur
ing the past year.
In the past year more than 100
calls have beer, received from col
leges needing competent teachers,
while only 59 candidates were avail
able. The call for science, math
ematics and French teachers in col
leges exceeds that for all other
branches of education combined.
In secondary schools the demand
is great for Latin, science, mathema
tics, music, normal training, manual
training, and athletic teachers. In
universities there is a corresponding
overproduction of English and his
tory teachers, according to Mr.
Moritz.
The university educational service
is open to all students, past or pres
ent, and no charge is made either to
the applicant or the college.
Five hundred and eighteen jobs
have been given out to students by
the Y. M. C. A. of Iowa State since
the beginning of school in Septem
ber. GIVE
"HIM"
T5e and jErel
. .---.-am.
The Practical
GIFT
Interwoven Hose
The highest class hose you
can buy. Knitted of the fin
est grade pure silk suitable
for every occasion.
Priced from
50c to 1.50 pr.
r tuani.wri
COLLEGIAN
Try i ir-:.
litWrUra
mm
1W 'Mil
I'jlttCQltt
1
That J
Collegiate CA
12
Influence ,
.. . .A
Derb,e. that fiyW
are Right
Ray Killian '13 Oscur Anderson '23
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
STUDENT FEDERATION
ENDS ANNUAL CONGRESS
(Continued from Pago 1.)
fice in June if the organization's fin
ances warrant such expenditure. Pro
visions for the bonding of officers,
double-check on all vouchers, hand
ling of all funds through the secretary-treasurer,,
and restrictions on
expenditures were also approved.
A questionnaire of four mimeo
graphed pages delving into problems
of student government was prepared
by the discussion group on student
government in larger schools under
the direction of Joe Chamberlin, ed
ltor of the Michigan Daily News.
Results of the tendencies indicated
in this poll will be published within
the next few weeks.
Fraternities were approved econ
mically, scholasti-.ally, and from the
standpoint of extra-curricular activ
ities in the discussion group of fra
ternities. JJreat variations in major
and minor requirements in different
institutions, disapproval of the
award of degrees 'with distinction'
on the basis of marks, recommenda
tion that upper classmen should de
velop a proper attitude towards
study in the lower classes, that the
attitude of upperclassmen today is
largely childish, and that seven out
of ten felt that athletics were the
chief drawing card to their institu
tions were the chief features of the
report of the committee on curricu
lum.
"The Student Heretic" was dis
cussed Saturday morning by Profes
sor Arthur J. Todd of Northwestern
University. That heresy is thinking
and choosing, that a good line of
heresy should be cultivated in stu
dent bodies, that the greatest heresy
is to think at all, that science is be
coming as narrowly dogmatic as re
ligion was formerly, and that stu
dents should entice professors out of
their lair because learning is a com
radeship of the spirit were the prin
ciple points advanced by Professor
Todd.
The new executive council of the
organization will meet this morning
and afternoon in Ellen Smith Hall to
plan the work of the federation for!me of the general subject.
the coming year. Work of the pub
lications committee which will mime
ograph all convention reports and
publish the federation yearbook will
also move forward today.
The National Student Federation
held its first general congress ses
sion, Friday morning in Morrill halL
The meeting of the congress was fol
lowed by discussion groups which
took up six phases of college educa
tion. The two hundred students who at
tended the convention met for a
business session at 9:30 Friday
morning, and heard an address by
Miss May C. Hermes of London, rep
resentative of the International
Confederation of Students. Then
the larger group split into smaller
ones, which took no the aiiPKtinnis nf
the honor system, student govern
ment, fraternities, the curriculum,
athletes, and training for public car
eers. Regional Meetings Are Held
Following the luncheon' at the Lin
coln Hotel meetings of preliminary
regional groups and standing com
mittees were held during the after
noon. The regional meetings, repre
senting six parts of the country,
were held in Morrill halL The
standing committees which met
were: Constitutions and New Mem
bers; Finance and Central Office;
International Relations; Travel; Cur
riculum; and Publicity.
At the opening business meeting
Miss Hermes told of the Internation
al Student Confederation. There
are thiry countries which hold mem
berships in the organization, she
said, and the United States is the
youngest member. Twenty-four of
the countries are in Europe, and six
of them are outbide of the continent, j
Preceeding the address the following
reports were given: treasurer, Jo-
seph Owen of Kansas; international
relations and travel, Stanley VeigeL
Leland Stanford university; speak'
ers' bureau, Willard Eippon, Univer
sity of Toledo; curriculum, Douglass
Orr, Swarthmore college; Miss Mar
v;n Breckenridge, presiden of the
federation, presided at the meeting.
Regulation of student affairs by
faculty and students was the chief
topic of interest in the discission
group of student fonr.iment prob-
ltoj. led by John IL Chamberlain,
edit'.r of the Michigan Daily News,
University of Michigan. Two def-
it.jte types of student government
were catlineri by f LuJent representa
tive one lu whu-h students direct
CLOTHIER
their own rffairs with no faculty
regulation, another where students
have little to say about their own
affairs.
Orr Leads Curriculum Group
The discussion of the curriculum
group, led by Douglass Orr, former
student of the University of Ne
braska, brought out the methods
used in different schools throughout
the country to bring before the fa
culty the views of students with re
gard to courses offered. Some
schools have systems which enable
them to bring about radical changes,
it was brought out, while others
must confine themselves to sugges
tions of changes. The discussion
turned on one difficulty in the col
lege curriculum, where inequality of
credit is present among courses
equally difficult. This objection was
countered by some students on the
ground that students attend college
not for credit hours but for educa
tion. The question of shortening time
of competition for college students
was the main topic in the discussion
of athletics. The general opinion
of the delegates appeared to be that
seniors should be given the privilege
of either competing in athletics or
devoting more of their time to study.
Men are often forced o compete in
more sports than they desire, dele
gates from small colleges asserted,
due to the pressure of student opin
Evils of the
ion and of coaches.
presfent-day college football games
as seen by President Wilkins of
Oberlin university were read and dis
cussed. The importance and the
value derived from participation in
athletics was stressed.
The standing curriculum commit
tee met at 4:40 in the afternoon,
with Douglass Orr, Swarthmore, pre
siding. A presentation of sugges
tions by the executive committee for
the work of the new committee was
made by Mr. Orr and discussed by
the standing committee. From the
suggestions, the body chose the sub
ject of Honor Systems, deciding that
unity of the subject would produce
better results as compared with each
member of the committee handling
Main Speaks at Banquet
The problems of the college of to
day were discussed by J. II. T. Main,
president of Grinnell college, at a
banquet of the National Student
Federation, meeting in Lincoln this
week end, at the agricultural college
Friday .evening. Dr. Main questioned
the right of many critics to level ac
cusations at the colleges. The rush
of young men and women into col
leges following the world war has
brought about an abrupt change of
conditions, he said, and many of
those dissatisfied with higher educa
tion methods do not take these into
account.
Proposals for improvement of col
legiate methods were mentioned by
jDr - Main projects for betterning
the output of students. He favors
a metbod of handpicking ' candi
dates instead of allowing easy en
trance to colleges. He also sug
gested a system of maintaining some
balance between the shifting size of
the student body and the size and
efficiency of the faculty.
The banquet was held in the stu
dent activities building on the Col
lege of Agriculture campus. Stu
dent delegates to the congress were
Dance
Guarantee to teach you in
six private lessons.
Class lessons two nighta
a week
Mrs. Luella G. Williams
Print Stuain
B-42SS 1220 "D
3 fill
ilMpnW
WhyiNot
Let us help you select a pair of BOUDOIR SLIP
PERS for Mother, Wife, Sister or Lady Friend, from
our large and varied assortment,
Priced from 2.25 to 7.50
50
transported from Ellen Smith nail
to the banquet place by Chamber of
Commerce. Dr. G. E. Condra, di
rector of the conservation and sur
vey division, war the first speaker.
He followed Dr. Fling, speaker at
the Thursday evening meeting, in
advising a Temoval of the spirit of
provincialism, to be replaced by a
broader world outlook. He also
spoke of sportsmanship among col
lege students and advised giving as
assistance to new and "green" stu
dents in the colleges.
Miss Marvin Breckenridge, presi
dent of the student congress, Chand
ler M. Wright, chairman of the con
gress committee, and the Dean of
Women, Amanda Heppner were hon
ored at the banquet for distinctive
work in conection with this year's
conference.
Editor Sees
Need For Idea
'Championship9
Dr. Harold de Wolf Fuller, editor
of "New York," a magazine of ideas
for the general reader sponsored by
New York University, says: "Parti
sanship by alumni is understandable.
It is human and, in spite of a mod
icum of the immoral, is wholesome.
And now it has been augmented by
itne eneral PuMic. which falls under
uie speii ox vi via ana excellent
newspaper accounts of contests and
forms emphatic judgments.
"It is a phenomenon upon which
college authorities might build. Sup
pose that institutions of higher
learning could get alumni and the
general public as wrought up over
ideas as they become over football
games! This is not an impossible
goaL An idea is the most exciting
thing in life. Witness the wars and
the peace which ideas have' made.
Witness the contrasting colossuses,
Lenin and Mussolini, who mounted
to eminence of ideas. But to come
nearer to the subject in hand, uni
versity professors and literati once
had the devoted following which
football coaches and college teams
have today. When Erasmus made
the tour of great European cities, it
was ideas, not football, which stirred
the world."
Doctor Fuller also says: "Our
civilization since the war offers sim-
Bigger and Better
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Piea Chili Soup
Sandwiches Drinks
Civs Us a Trial
Hamburger Inn
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clothing needs next Monday.
"BOB" "BILL"
BENNETT&FLUGSTAD
Ground Floor Medical Arts Bldg.
Omaha
assays J VT?fFf,il
SMART WEAR VjJ FOR WOMEN
1222-1224 O STREET
Say "MERRY CHRISTMAS
in a Practical Way
And Stockings Are Always Appreciated
4
im0ENISI!0IEg'
75
95
Attractively Packed in Holiday Boxes
FOOTWEAR SALON
ilar opportunities. Religion is in a
state of flux. Moral values are
waiting for revaluation. Modern
problems of government turn up
anew the whole, question of political
philosophy. Society is looking for a
guide. The chance for a university
to gain violent adherents in all these
spheres is inviting. A national
'championship' in ideas would be
something new and something to be
envied."
FRAZIER PILOTS HARRIERS
Kansas Croas-Coantry Men Ch
Outstanding Runner Captain
Lawrence, Kan., Dec. 17. Bern
ard "Poco" Frazier, little, but out
standing in the cross-country team
of the University of Kansas this
year, was elected captain of the 1928
team at a meeting of the cross
country men Tuesday evening.
"Poco," according to critics, is
well on the way to national fame as
a runner. He won every cross-country
race he entered this season, in
cluding victories in dual meets with
Wisconsin, Kansas Aggies and Ne
braska. Mi.. DoUn Tells of Moral Work
Miss Elizabeth Dolan, New York
artist who is doing the mural paint
ings in the museum exhibits, gave a
lecture to Cotner college students
Thursday. Her talk dealt with ber
work in the museum.
CHRISTMAS
CARDS
A large assortment
from 5c each to
1.00 each.
LATSCH
BROTHERS Stationers
1118 O St.
ft
(50
ft