The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 08, 1930, Page THREE, Image 4

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KIM' WII.I. ItAMO
M:niasK.nirKi:
I1 n V 1 1: 1 Ml KM) AY
(li.lxtta lten tli t'itutit(y
Nrt.iak4 and liiake univrraily
tixtiH t 1tuiUy at a
p. m. oirr alali.ii Kr-NF el Mien
n l.Mli. la atii.Iiug In auuouuce.
,. ent I y l'r. II A hue nf tit
j.Jlctl lit ai ! lac III.
jitl kuld u il U iiptrariited ly
i Illy one -rtt . Nrbiaaka will l
tepreaeided Mttrniallvrtv hv Cart
1. J ilitaut f Mieliandoart, la,
lid nepaturly ty Jtlt I. Mc
Klilll of Auburn. Nrb.
FACULTY MEMBERS
HOLD CONFERENCES
llVuinucd nni Page I l
I do Aiiriuan iiirteondi -glial aocl
riy on "Summer an. I Autumn Pres.
uie A'l.-inallea A Met tin Winter
l'rtllx IftlUlf in the I'li-T Ml-
iil Valley." lri-r.'r Marvin
wu I at Gnniirll. I, In-roi re
tin nine 1 Liiuoln.
Kiomi the department of botany
in atii-iidnnce at IVa Molitea rre
lr. I:. J. iwl. lr. J. E. Weaver.
ir. W. J. 1 1 limn. I. lr. Elda It
WVk.tr an, I A. E llolch. Vr. Pool.
wli ia than man of the depart
Hunt, prciM-nted a paper before tlia
Uilanital society of America in
Experimental Modification of
Plant Hiiive!i(n hv Fire and
i.iaxin' lli iited at IVa Moinca
and In Ames. Iowa, where he at
tended inert mre' I at Iowa State
college, before rntng.
Weaver LA Petition
Vr J. E Weaver u elected
president of the ecological society
..f Amenta to mhlth. society lie
lend a paper on "Relation of Un
.lergrtmnd Plant Parta to Kane
and Pasture Management." lie
Im prepared a paper In conjunct
ion with Pr. W. J. Ilimmel on
Aeration and Hoot IVvtlopment
.n Hydrophytes." Thta a pre
sented to the association of Amerl
t an plant physiologists. Pr. W cav
ed alo attended the meeting at
Iowa State collage.
Mr. Ilnl.h. a representative of
the Nehiaka arademy of science
n the council of the A. A. A. 8.,
eead a paper on "Hoot Develon-
merit of Forest Tree Seedlings," to
f the ecological society.
Karl her Studies of Eoul.-etum
Oanu-tophytfa" la the titl of the
MYSTERY! UYSTEItYU
The
Bis!.:p Murder Case
WITH
BASIL RATH BONE
PHILO VANCE
"Burt" presents en the stags jj
Five High Flyer B
Bobby and King G
Johnnie Payne I
Symphnny p'yieg Uuutplal" I
A. J. BABlCH. Directing. II
MAT. : CVC. 60; tOQe 79c.
SHOWS: 1, 3, S,
IN TECH. WARXBIMOS !
t NICOLOR
? 1,000 Beantiesl
l AH talking. Sing
ing, Dancing
thowi: 1-3:05-5:1-7:Z4S:I0. 4
Mit 40c: Eve. 60c: Ctiildren 25c-
In Stars! VC I
T
C, iTh Star of 'The Uit of Mt$.
1 Chrvnfy" in poignant irama
J I of hryrlt otr.H.
llotmf
SHEARER
JLZ M
WITH j
ROBERT MONTGOMERY !
LEWIS STONE j
Also Short Subject.
5WS-1. S. 5. 7. 9. I
S Eva. SOc; Children 10c. j
SHOW
Mat. V.
- i-IRoaDtt'
GRETA GARBO
With Conrad Naffel
"THE KISS"
A II tiro CoMuy Xoyer
P.itnic With Hound
Hat. S5e Ciiid- "t
-CoSosiEal-
urn Poat
a ii a in " "
A . . . . - r M
Boarding House Belts and
Wary C''t-yrt
with
Mae Clarke-Robert Ames
m v
a a ! ii ai I I a v- I
i
n, vm
Instructor Dtn-m!
Knoir 'rtrifd C7iiii,
Student Dimnt-rt
llnMM 1W I II 1 1 H MU I
This rtappaned la a Univar
ily of Nebraska clroomi
A last was given In a cartain
mathamatics iUm en the Frt.
day batars the Chriatmas hell
dajrs. There vai but a single
Outttion, and the studtnt, be
lieving it le be an unimportant
uu answered (hull "God
anews. I don't. Merry Christ
nas." His paper whan returned
Monday read: "Cod gets a hun
dred percent You get lero.
Happy New Year."
paper read by Ir. Walker befor
the Ki-ilrral arttloti of the botanical
atM itiy. Ir. Walker la firt natl.m
al lt e-premdent f Snw IVUi.
Ppailtot. gradual vtniiirn'a aoclety
In ttliuh menilwr lup la baard oil
advanced decrees and reaeanh.
Kissclbach Reads Paper
Dr. T. A. KlcaarlWh of the
agronomy department read a pa
per befoi the afiliulture aecUuii
on "Moiphuloty nf the Corn
Plant" Tins i an Invitabon
paper aa part of a sympoaium
011 coin. !r. KirkM-IUaili la a
member of the committee for this
act t ton of the rneetinj.
At the meetlnr of the Ameri
can aocirty of paraaltologlata In
lies Moiiiea, lr. II. W. Manter
read a paer o "A PliwaM of
A.aria Lumbricoidfa.
lr. IK A. WorceMer read t-0
papera before the education aec
tuin and the pxhology action
of the IVa Moines meetings.
"The Permanence of IeamlnK in
High School Kubjet-ls." waa road
to the fitTl named section and
"The Value of the Photograph
In the Selection of Teachers," to
the aecond.
Others who attended the AA.
AS. meetings are LVan O. J.
Perguaon. Prof. M. G. Gaha, ITof.
W. C Prenke and Prof. T. A.
Pierre. Profe.r Gaha read
paper before the American math
ematical aoclity on "A Set of
Axioms in Terms of Point. Ordi
nary and Ideal." Profewor
Pierce read a pajier to the same
group on 'Matrices Whose Char
acteriKtic K.quHtiona are Cyclic."
Dean Ferguson is a council mem
ber rcprenentinjr A.I.F..K.
Other Meetings Attended.
Included In thojie who attended
meeting elsewhere are Dr. Nels A.
Bengtaon. Dr. Julia M. Shlpman
and K. E. Lackey of the depart
ment of geigraphy. who were
prewnt at meetings of the national
council of geography teacher and
the AnjtocUtion of American Geog
raphers In Columbus, O. Dr.
Bongtson was president of the first
named group l;tt year and pre
alded at the meetings. He was
elccte.1 to a position on the execu
tive committee of the organization
for the eominc vear. Mr. Lackey
was elected wcretary of the na
tional council of peography teach
ers. "A Statistical Study of the Cor
relation Between Geography and
llivrtnrv in the Hirh School." was.
the subject of a paper presented to
the council 01 geoprapny leacnera
by Mr. Lackey. He was one of the
A,rxfr,i-m nf the e-roim and is ajtso-
clate editor of their official publi
cation. TDS JOUmav OI oe'Krapuy.
Dr. Bcnjrtson nsited in Washing
ton. D. C. where he did special
work in the library of the depart
ment of commerce, before return
ing to Lircoln. Dr. Shipman spent
Christmas with friends at the Uni
versity of Indiana, at Bloomington.
Senning Visits New Orleans.
Dr. J. P. Senning- and Dr. C. M.
Kneier of the political science de
partment attended the annual 1
mectinp of the American t'oiuicai
...Ai.UIAH In Vaist 1
i c 1 r 11 l r irtuwi, ,i. ... " .
rirlonna Dr SenninS' lead a round '
table discussion on the theory of j
state administration ana vr.
Knficr was director of a round
table discussion on county govern
ment.
Th mtir.e of the American
Historical association at Duke uni
versity, Durham. N. C. was at
tended by Dr. J. D. Hicks, dean of
the colleVe of arts and sciences.
Dr. Hicks alo stopped t the meet
ing of the Modern Language asso
ciation at Cleveland, O.
Gayle C. Walker, acting director
of the school of Journalism, at
tended the annual meeting of the
American Association of Schools
and D?partments of Journalism, at
liatron nouge, la., ana ic; Amer
ican Association 01 leacners 01
Journalism, held In the fame city.
Mr. Walker was vice president of
the first named group. Memphis.
Tenn.. New Orleans, and Ft.
Worth. Tex, are ether cities that
oor visited Mr. and Mrs. Walker
joined Prof, and Mrs. C. E. Rogers
of tne department. 01 inausinai
t I Vio ICanftAl State
agricultural college at Manhattan,
LIBERTY"
Us.
-VvV XC-v-
i t -
iiJi Tr4E Queen of Ail
282 Musical Comedies
N.qht Orch. UX. Boxes 3XW. Bal. 2JM-2M-.V. Gal. SI.CJ
BARGAIN MATINEE: Orch. $130. Bal. S1.50-1.00. Gal. 50c
TEtE. NO. J003.
IM THE FLESH AKD BLOOD, ROTA MOVING PICTURE!
THE DAILY
STAR OF
L a
e- J
I ' f'ZX 17
llllcii Keller, premier ilansoiixe aiul poumlii inu' with "Kio
Rita," coining to the Liberty theater on Jnn. 0, matinee au 1
night.
Frosh Football Star Answers Attack
of 'Buddy9 McBridc on Grid System
Jack Miller, flaahy freshman
football player who was one of
the outstanding- yearling grid
ders during the 1929 season, of
fers an answer to the newspaper
interview o.' Clark "Buddy" Mc
Brlde, whli b appeared In the
Omaha World-Herald on Dec 14.
It seems that Miller, who aspires
to a avrsity position next season
under Dana Bible disagrees with
all that McBride stated In the
Omaha paper and In a letter to
the sports editor of The Dally
Nebra.tkan answers the Interview.
His letter follows:
Football makes bums out of
plavers"? Well, you know best.
Buddy. It la unfortunate, how
ever, that after eight years of
football limelight you should have
to "grandstand" In this particular
manner.
"I haven't learned a damned
thing that will help me earn a
living when I get out" Eight
years of football and you can't
earn a living at It? Too bad.
Buddy. You bhould have gone to
a vocational school.
if I can overcome the repu
tation of being a football play
er" do you think that will be
so hard. Buddy?
You claim that a football
player hasn't time to accomplish
anything scholastically. Buddy,
haven't vou heard of a scholar
called "Chris" Cagle? Buddy,
don't you know that "Dutch"
Clark is an honor student? And
Prom Committee
Applicants Asked
To File by F riday
Applications for positions on
the Junior-Senior Prom commit
tee must be filed with John
Selleck. manage- for student
affairs, by 5 p. m Friday, Jan.
10. Six junior men and six
junior women will be selected
for this committee which will
be In charge of all arrange
ments for the prom. No seniors
will be included on the commit
tee. Students seeking membership
on the committee must comply
with the regular university re
quirements for activities. They
must have made twenty-seven
hours with an average of sev
enty in the two preceeding se
mesters and must be carrying
twelve hours in good standing.
No announcement has been
made as yet concerning the date
or detailed arrangements for
the Prom.
driving from there to the Dixie
land. Condra in Washington.
Dr. George E. Cor.dra spoke be
fore the geological society of
America, in Washington. D. C, on
JAW. 9
SEATS NOW ON SALE AT THE
BOX UM-llfc
i x x ii
i I f f l I A il
i II 1:1 I f f ;
NKIUtASKAN
'RIO RITA9
.7-1 !
eaa.i ' W
don't you know that it would
take a full column to li.-t other
scholarly football plavers?
Buddy, did the Athletic De
partment use physical force to
get you to play on Nebraska's
great K urns 7 Or was it black
mini? Since you duslike the game
so. did you play for the same
reason that you wrote your arti
cle? to be in the limelight?
Buddy, you'd letter wring
yourself out and hang yourself
up to dry. If you are a bum, it
is your own fault Bums, Buddy,
are bums because they are bums,
not because they happen to
play football. Some bums blame
booee. Some blame women.
Some blame money. Some blame
poverty. Some blame football.
But no real bum ever blames
himself.
Buddy. If you had spent ;our
afternoons seeing movies, "cak
ing." plaving bridpe, or doin?
some of the other useless things
that most students do, would you
have been less of a bum? I doubt
It. Buddy.
Because I love the snort as
such, because I believe in It as
a maker of virile manhood, and
because I find bo few bums en
gaged at it, I intend to continue
devoting my spare time to foot
ball. Then, If I haven't sense
enough to do the things I came
to the university to do. I shall
not blame football. Only a bum
would, do that Good-bye, Buddy.
JACK MILLER "33."
"Correlation of P e n n 8 y lvania
Strata from Iowa to Oklahoma."
Dr. Condra is chairman of the com
mittee on correlation for the north
ern midcontinent He also at
tended the National Association of
State Geographical Survey Men
In Washington. While m the east
he visited the United States geo
logical survey. Yale university at
New Haven, Conn, United States
bureau of soils and national mus
eum at Washington, University of
Iowa and University of Illinois.
Miss Mabel Lee of the depart
ment of phvf.cal education for wo
men, attended the executive com
mittee meeting of the middle west
physical education society, of
which group she was president, in
Chicago, the meeting of the coun
cil of the American physical edu
cation association in New York
City, meeting of the state directors
of physical education and various
other related group meetings. Miss
Lee visited in Milwaukee and Law
rence, Kas, In addition to attend
ing the national meetings in Chi
cago and New York.
Physical Education Meet
The university was represented
by Herb D. Gish. Henry F. Schulte
and R. C. Clapp at the national
collegiate athletic association
meeting in New York. Mr. Gish
and Dr. Clapp also attended the
sessions of the society of directors
of physical education. Dr. Clapp la
a member on the committee on
nomination of officers for the N.
C. A. A. He read a report as chair
man of the wrestling rules com
mittee of the N. C. A. A., and also
made a motion that the next meet
ing be held March 28 and 29 at
Penn State university. Coach
Schulte was retained as a member
of the track rules committee of the
N. C. A. A. Dr. Clapp attended
several other related meetings in
New York during the week.
j FEATURE ON TRAVEL
HEADS AG. MAGAZINE
(Continued from Page l.i
long beer intermissions. Even
school children from ten to twelve
receive dancing Instruction and at
the end of the school year must, at
tend a Kmderfesf or children's
jail. The elderly people usually
it at tables and sip beer and chat
while the younger people dance.
: The movies are well patronized,
also.
Encourage Athletics.
Athletic training and competi
tion have taken the place of mill-
CLASSIFIED WANT ADS.
AFTER UU. IU I TantaA prxXotrapS
jxm vant.
OF COl'RfK roar phrtocraph
Kmack'a asado Kill ptaj-
Ul-T-UM i mt.nr .! nl ;r.r !-.
' b'.'.'T.
' 1lfT- A la tX Irr.-mr It.'r tto
I MaHioc l ItmM TreL. ilnui.
laiy tralnlnf and womeu as well
aa men enter into alhletua frvely
and with teat. The dreas and man
ners of the German iieople are la
general unite similar to lhae of
US Americana,
Another elory "IlittU-llikinn
leKgern ! klao featuied In the
art.und Nebraaka" by Byd Vun
CHmntryman. He hitch hiked the
entire state In a month and It coat
Itiin a pair of Ihick-eoled alioea
and forty-five dollais. He, with a
companion, left hie home at West
point and started for Denver. They
stopped at iad the first day, but
made the 12U miles In three days
and each spent forty-five cents.
They carried packs of about twen
ty pounds apiece and elepl on the
ground. They spent two weeks In
Kates Park roaming around. Ilia
partner went directly home but be
continued on alone and ent his
first night alone on the plain twenty-eight
miles south of Cheyenne.
Interested In State.
He arrived at Kimball, Nebras
ka tne heart of the wheat country
and continued on to Sidney to
upend the Fourth of July. He then
went to Brl Igeport and Scotta
bluff. Here be saw sugar beet
fields everywheii with Mexicans
and Russians working In them. He
wanted to visit the Af ate fields of
wen tern Nebraska, but the scant
traffic caused him to take the road
to Alliance. On this part of the
trip be crossed th edge of the
sand hills. Soon he entered the po
tato domain of which Alliance Is
the capltol. He then traveled
through the Pine Ridge country to
Crawford. He took a short trip
to Harrison and Fort Robinson and
returned to Crawford. He passed
through the famous pralrie-do
town of Chadron and on to Clinton
where he visited the proprietor of
the Lyonda curio shop, the world's
largest distributor of Indian goods.
Mosquito Horde.
He again entered the sand hills
while travelling through Cherry'
county. Moequilos aeeru to be the
best crop In existence In that coun
ty, Yon Seggem declared In his
article.
He reached West Point after
one month of hitch-hiking during
which time he covered nearly 1.P0O
miles. He actually walked sixty
five miles and the greatest Ilstanco
he covered In one day was slightly
le than 49 mile.
E. N. Bressman. a plant orceder
from Oregon agricultural college
at Corvallis, discusses some pro
blems confronting graduating
seniors In his article "After Com
mencementWhat Then?" He Is a
graduate student taking his doc
tor's degree in crops.
"Women Versus Drudgery."
Other articles appearing are by
John I'ospisil; Arthur Hauke,
graduate student from Wood River
and Cyril Winkler. '31. Ixjxlngton.
Thev discuss "Box Butte Points
the "Way;" "No Place Like Home"
and "Chicken Changes Come," re
spectively. Pictures of all the Judging teams
for 1929 are given promimnre in
this fcsue, also. George Round,
32, Ord, has an article on " Home
Made Farm Relief which deals
with the organized agriculture
meetings. "When Women Oust
Drudgery," by Elviia Benne, '32,
Lincoln, discusses what the house
wife Is doing today to do aay
with drudgery in house work.
Every type of home equipment is
discussed.
a
mm
1 1
ihirty-five miles from the rail
road
UP on the Gatioeau River, with the mercury
clear out of sight, a huge winter con
struction job was going forward! Here was
a story the industry wanted to know ... a
McGraw-Hill editor covered it-
The railroad ended at Maniwaki; thirty-five
miles north lay the job. His "paper"' was going
to press, so the editor mushed through thirty
five miles of snow-choked forestlaod.
Whether in the frozen north ... in tropic areas
laid bare by a hurricane ... or in flooded re
gions where army trucks are the only form of
transport; if there's a story that industry should
know . . . McGraw-Hill editors get the fa as
first hand.
Business men, industrialists and engineers 600,000 of them regularly reed the McGraw-Hill
Publications. More than 3,000,000 use McGraw-Hill books and magazine! in their business.
The Busioets Week
Srstem
Harvard Business Review
Aviatioa
Factory and Industrial
Management
Power
Industrial Engineering
McGRAW-
I'
York
Can no
Philadelphia
Saa franciara)
MEDICAL
COLLEGE
ACTIVITY
PAUL C. PLATT, Editor.
SCHOOL OP MEOIC'Nt OPENS
AFTtR VACATION.
Monday, Jan. the School of
Medicine resumed Its student
work after the vacation of two
weeks. Practically all the students
were back la Omaha Sunday ntht
ready to start on the rush of
work jual before the mid-ermealer
evanuuallous.
A. K. K. INITIATES.
Beta Gamma chapter of Alpha
Kappa Kappa national medical
fralernlty initiated the following
men on Tuesday evening lVc. 17:
Kay Ii. Fsrne worth, '31, MadUon,
Wis.; C Robert Oaborn. '3a.
Crsnd Island; P. A. Kelts. -32. Ke
serve, Kas.; I Rtwenbladl, '32,
Omaha; Donald L. Anderson, '33,
f)
Salle 5
NOW i the time to buy that much lonfed-for
FUR COAT wliilo yon have the aJvantago of
our January clearance with the lowest prioea
of the year. IV.y garment in onr collection is
high grade smartly styled ami well-made of good
quality furs. Many arc maikc.1 .100 to $150 below
their regular price.
Here are a few of the values:
HUDSON SEALS (dyed muskrat) $200 and
up.
NATURAL MUSKRATS, $175 and up.
SILVER MUSKRATS, $175 and up
ALASKAN SEALS, $450 and up.
PONY COATS, $75 and up.
LAMB COATS $50.
CARACULS $175 and up.
Kura Fourth Floor.
'JrVy
the editor got his story
American Machinist
Product Engineering
Food Industries
Textile Vorld
Coal Age
Engineering and Mining
Journal
E.&M.J. Metal and
Mineral Markets
Engineering and
Mining World
Electrical Torld
Electrical Merchandising
Electrical Vest
Radio Retailing
HILL PUBLICATIONS
aaaiaama
Detroit
Grtcaille
THREE
Chamber. Howard J. Black. 13,
w-nvr, Col; Albert IL rechner,
'3 Wanton; Lester C Krotcher,
'3S. Wyne. Kennel J. Luder, '33,
Unctila; John J. McCarthy, Jr, '13,
OK alia; U. L B-ara, 'si, Mantl
Utah; Norman C tlitoemakea. '33,
Omaha; lavi4 It. Waterman.
The meeting v. as presided over
by John H. Waterman, prealdeut
lite follow, mg of (icers were sleeted
Aadfrsou, '32, vice president,
for the coming year, I Conoid C
Harvey It. Kuoty, 'IL treasurer.
Cart K. Utile waa elected aa dale
natloual conveatio) of Alpha
KapM Kait'l l I 1
iwnjamln Franklin hotel, Phila
delphia. Pa, Jan. . S. 4, 1930. The
firvl convention waa held In 1H93,
seven years after the founding of
Alpha chapter at Dartmouth Medi
cal college in )&&,
Typewriter
For Rent
Kovala Rinltha Kamlnftoo
I'hiieiv.iiHta. flr-e'al raie te etu
tlrnia r lnf Irrm.
Nebraska Typewriter Co.
IM3 O Ptraot. LUioola, Nebr. M JI&7
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Industry and business look to McGraw-Hill
Publications for news and guiding opinion
because they know that these papers are edited
from the field. For leaders of industry realize
that they must keep contact with progress . . .
or fall behind.
The college man, who now looks forward to
the day when he too will enter business, can
profitably spend an hour a week reading the
Eublication which covers the field in which
e is to work. From it he will learn what busi
ness and industry are thinking and doing to
day . . . before he leaves the campus.
Copies of every McGraw-Hill Publication are
or should be in your college library.
Boa Traaspoftatioe)
Electric Railway Journal
Engineering News-Record
Coostraoioa Methods
Chemical ft Metallurgical
Engineering
St-Umia
Loedoa
Clmiaad
.-