Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1930)
t I t ti 1 s. " - - The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Ltneoln, Nabraaka OFFICIAL 8TUDINT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NKBPAtKA Publlahad Tuatd-y, Wedneaday, Thureday, Friday and Sunday mornlnga during tha academic year. THIRTIETH YEAR BntereJ at aecond-eiaaa matter at tha poatoffiee m Lincoln, Nabraaka, undar act of na.raaa, March . and at aptclal rata of eoataae provided for n Motion 110J aot a October S. 1117. authonwd January W, 1a. Under rflreotion of tha Student Publication Board SUBSCRIPTION RATE II a vaar llnold Capv ft canta S1.S6 a eemaMer M a yy' .r mailed ' 1.V6 aamaatar n.allad Editorial Offleo Unlvoralty Hall 4. Bualnaaa Off lea Unlveralty Hall A. Telephenea-Oay! B-Mtli Nlght B-88S2, .ri33 (Journal; Aak for Nabr.ukan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF William T. MeCieery Edltor.m-cliiet Managing Kdltora Robert Kelly E,nt Wi,te Newe Edltora . , ,,, Unlvaka Arthur M.tcheil Francea HoiyoKa , u.uim William McGaTTin . i Rex Wagner rp..n:::::::::::::::::::won;;AvK gg B.r.nlac. Hoffman........ ' -'" Charlat Uewlor Acting Bualnaaa Manager Anlitanl Bualnaaa Managers h.. And Nebraska Held the Panthers. Battling one of the country' strongest loams to a standstill, Nebraska kept her ban ners firing high yesterday afternoon. 1 ltts Inirgh and her wily Panthers are. being sent home wih a no-count game and the. Corn huskers arc crying for more. Student spirit was whetted to a keen edge for the Pittsburgh game and it broke loose with strength to spare for Saturday's battle. Any football team needs this drive if it is to hold its morale. The Pittsburgh game, despite its U-0 seme, was a victory for the Cornhusker. When Ne braska's line held and held and held against the futile rushes of the opposition it showed something more than football. It evinced the spirit that will make Nebraska. Things are looking up for the Cornhusker school. Sons of the prairie are beginning to pick up the thread of school spirit where it was carelessly allowed to trail along in the dirt. Win, lose or draw Nebraska is ready to go! . . , ... Football is an exciting, entertaining, thrill ing pastime. When it ceases to call forth spou taneous spirit on the part of students, how. ever, it is no asset to a school. ou; You See It And A'otc Vow Lose It. Editor Gammill of the Cornhusker expounds his views on the priee of pictures today. His letter in Morning Mail is an attempt to justify the yearbook's charge for junior and senior likenesses in the university annual. We sym pathiie Mith the Cornhusker staff, but wonder just what logic is employed in the distribu tion of expense. Every student should have his picture in the yearbook. But many of us are combing silver dust out of nocket linings now to provide nec essities. Though we would like to have our blushing mugs reproduced on the glossy pages of our yearbook, we cannot afford it. We are paying for pictures of the faculty, administrative, military and athletic speci mens. Is this square! Must the Cornhusker appeal to vanity or publicity-thirst in the stu dent body to publish its bookt The staff nods ii head in sorrow possibly. If the yearbook attempts to get the athletic department to pay for the sheaf of pages re quired for its publicity, it is greeted with a chillv glance. And who would he bold enough to ask administrative and faculty high-ups to pay for their pictures! As usual, the poor unsuspecting student is bled. The Cornhusker has a hard time making ends meet in its financial huddles. Why must it plod along with the university on its shoub ders! The student body is poor enough, every, one knows, without an unreasonable assess ment for the yearbook. Why not let the fav ored departments drop their nickels on the drum! They Want You They Usually Invite You. Once more the hilarious student body rushes into fall party season. Fraternities and soror ities invite certain guests and the rest of the fluttering dim-wits flock in droves and road sters to. the parties. They, in social vernacu lar, are known as "crashers." You get the meaning! They are dashing in where they are not wanted. Fools rush in where angels fear to tread without a bid. These uninvited guests usually constitute the majority of the crowd at downtown parties and can be distinguished by their look of com placency and satisfaction. Perhaps Emily Post forgot to mention one fine point of etiquette in her pleasing booklet: at invitation parties, those who do not receive bids are not wanted. Let that soak in. The Dad Looked Um Over. Tall, short, heavy, thin, bald and otherwise, the fathers of university students dropped in yesterday to be guests of their college heirs. Thev were adopted into the Cornhusker family liy virtue of their close relationship with it s j student body. c hope that they were well impressed with the university and that they carry into this and other states the idea of Nebraska. Dad's day should be a large occasion on this campus. Students apparently do not realize the significance of this day its possibilities and its virtues. It is one of the finest tradi tions that has been carved on the wnlls of Oornhuskerdom and is deserving of vigorous student support. The Innocents, society, assisted by the Mor tar Board, . attempted to make the noon luncheon yesterdy an affair worthy of its honored guests. What happened! About 300 students and parenta attended the gala event. Some unconscious fraternities and sororities, ignoring the school's endeavor. to entertain its dads, held luncheons for them at ihe Greek inns. This spirit of competition might be sat isfactory ami commendable in regulation hash houses, but it is a dirty trick for supposedly sympathetic organizations to compete with a ' THE DAILY NEBRASKAN SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 2 . IQM The Boy Steps Out. as well as the m1 nun units to monev ocs. niimt's is $4. for taking the ciate the task cinie mi: i in iv vearbook ot tlie Nebraska. Herman : Sherman : Sour Owl. lie: She : M. A. He: Why, I married. Juggler. university function. They need a strong dose of common sense and loyally. I like to go to football games I get so darned excited There are so many spiffy dames And fights that must be i'ighted. The Corn Cubs sit down by the trnek. The Tassels sit behind them Due C'ondra paces forth and hack. The players I can't find them. The chicl ing section raises curds And Schulto raises the dickens. Maybe Pittsburgh's line retards I'm busy I just can't tell. MORNlNC MAIL The Why and What tor. TU Till-: KHITOK: A great deal of complaint has been rcjiisl ered about the cost of 4'inior-scnior pictures in the Cornhusker. That is a natural complaint and one which which everyone feels a certain amount of sympathy, for in order to obtain his hook, the student must pay for the initial cost cost of the pictures which in the itrmrnximatelv M To the miestions fired by the students, the staff can onlv show where all this money goes, j under the direction of the council whv Mich a 'price must be charged and then I art being aummariied. for a re xry to .how' why the students should co-1 Potobe the operate. international friendship banquet, The first of these considerations is Hh"'re tin; Which is to be held at the First VM, .2 .!........ .... d.ililill. ! PltJalliin nl.ll.nll .M M.I 7 TV.A I lie price 01 a junun- ui my. Of this KOCS to tile s of t h s Jtoes to the stumo picture and $3 goes to the Corn busker to cover expenses. I he fraternity r sorority picture is $1.50. $1 of this goes to the studio and fifty cents to the Cornhusker. V or a combination of both, the price is $4.3(1. irl.D goes to the studio for the. picture, and the ex tra print and $3 to the Cornhusker. The first thought that comes to mind is that 3.00 per picture is too much to go to the Cornhusker. With this, we come to the sec ond consideration : why such a price must be charged. A few statistics can show this. To begin, there arc: Seventeen administration pages with pic turfjji of deans and buildings. Twcniy-four pages of snapshots of events. Six pages of military. Thiity-four pages of athletics, action pic tures of all sports and individual pictures of athletes and coaches. A total of eighty-one pages of engraving ami printing, the cost of which must be horn by the Cornhusker since no source of revenue can be found for these. In other words, the Corn husker must bear the expense of eighty-one pages of expensive engraving, printing, and paper so that the book may be complete. The entire funds to finance the book must be raised from four sources. First, from ad vertising, second from the sales of books, third from organizations and fourth from the junior and senior pictures. The cost to the Corn husker to produce each book is approximately , 10.50. The book is sold for ". The remain ing $5.50 must be raised from the advertising, organizations and pictures. And o to the last consideration. The Corn husker is the book of the students of the Uni versity. It lives only when the students de Hire such a record of their activities while in school. If that body believes the expense too much to warrant putting out a book, 1hen it would be better to abolish the institution and let Nebraska become entirely an institution of football teams and a few classes as so many people now believe it to be. The students buy the Cornhusker as a memory book. They want the pictures of their classmates with whom they associated while in school. In fairness then to their classmates,, each person should include his own picture for it is selfishness to reap the benefit of having your classmate's pictures without being-willing to afford them the same pleasure. It is therefore believed to be folly for the staff to attempt publication if the students arc not behind it enough to do their part in record ing the personages and events of the school year. And too, only in the face of auch figures a g ntPfl nhnve. can the student body apprc- of the staff of their book the i' i. lf: siuucnis oi me uuuni KENNETH (JAMM1LL. Editor, 1931 Cornhusker. COLLEGE COMMENT Meet Mr. Penopiliosotiosky the boy's go ing to make a name for himself. Purple Parrot. Prof: Are you doing anything this evening. Miss Riffle? Clara (hopefully) : No not a thing. Prof: Then try to get to class on time to morrow. Exchange. What were Webster's last words! Zvmase, Zvme and Zymotic I'm going to be an A. H. in June That's nothing. I'm going to be a didn't even know you where Snudy, whose very good friend, Mike Alc Closky, had just been run over and kilied by an auto, was elected to the unpleasant job of breaking the sad news to Mrs. McCloiky. He rang the bell and upon being admitted to the house inquired, "Is this Mr. McClosky's widow!" "I am Mr. McClosky's wife," the lady ex claimed. Sandy, inwardly delighted, exclaimed: "How much will you bet Princeton Tiger. Kxauiiiiatioiis are a means employed by un intelligent professors to assure iheinselves that students are even more unintelligent. Zip 'n Tsnir. REPORT ACTIVITIES Representatives of Various Churches Tell Results Of Affiliation Day. DR. BRUMBAUGH COMING ! Mathodlst student council held ! its first fellowship luncheon at the : Temple cafeteria at noon, Friday. I Bsreniece Hoffman, president of the council presided, and the var- 1 ioui cabinet members reported ' plans that had been worked out ! by their churches. St. Paul church reported a suc cessful response on the part of the jludenU on affiliation clay. Kp- 1 worth church reported the largest attendance at league services, with over 100 being the average I mHrk. Grace church reported an initiation service, at which fifty nsw members were taken In at the last meeting. Second church I also told of student work. Reports Given. A report was made on lue progress of the religious educa tional pioject of the council, which purposes to follow up the work began last under the direc tion of Dr. Charles F. Boss, Jr.. the research secretary of the re ligious board of education, of Chi cago. The testa which were given iiu .i.u...n, Methodist group is co-operating with the religious welfare council is sponsoring this event, and all efforts are being made to get a large group to attend. Speaker Here Nov. 8. Attention was also called to the vidit of Dr. T. T. Brumbaugh, the lerJor of the Wesley foundation work in Japan, who will visit the campus on Nov. 8 and 9. He will appear at four local churches dur ing the day, and a tea is being planed in his honor, to be given at the Wesley Foundation parsonage, on the afternoon of Nov. 9. The council adjourned to meet on Nov. 14, when the objectives of the council program will be presented by the cabinet members. TO GET MUSEUM HABIT Exhtbits Aid Youngsters' Imaginations, States Miss Shanafelt. "We want all the school chil dren to cultivate the museum habit," said Marjorie Shanafelt, director of visual education at the university museum, in a re cent Interview. "We want them to come now and later in life to find in actuality things which they have heard about, yet can not picture to themselves. For, after all, there aren't many thing! which people can't find in our museum. The real plume in the museum's cap is the fact that ao many children come of their own free will to our edu-i caiionai programs. Uses Slides. Miss Shanafelt makes an aver age of 700 slides annually to 11 .ustrate her talks. For these she garners pictures constantly from all manner of books and period icals. Then she goes through the photography, coloring and binding necessary for the finished slides. A good slide maker can only complete about twenty slides a day, ao Miss Shanafelt must spend the equivalent of thirty five days yearly on this manual side of her labor. Program Vary. In order to sustain interest, Miss Shanafelt must vary the na ture of her entertainments. The year's series usually includes one or two biographical talks, four all-cinema presentations, one or two "standard stories," and a holiday performance Intended solely for amusement. Qn thrM or four occasions juvenile entertainers are ob tained, and have proven to be highly appreciated In the past. Three such youths are scheduled for the current season. One Is a sylophonlst, another performs on the mcuth harp, and the third is a magician. AG V. M. C. A. WILL CONDUCT SERVICES Y. M. C. A. cabinet of the agri cultural campus is to be in charge of the evening aervices at War ren M. E. church. Forty-fifth and Orchard street tonight at 7:30 i o'clock. Greth Dunn, president of the organization will be in charge of the meeting. Ted Menke, secretary, will speak on "The Underlying Pur pose of the Student Y. M. C. A." Plans for the meeting will be re ported on and perfected at a meeting of the cabinet at 2 o'clock todav at the Kpworth M. R church at 30th and Holdre g.?. WANTED! 1000 picnickers at picnic headquarters'. LINCOLN DELICATESSEN 1439 "O"' B5583 Open till midnight & Sunday. Wlanara Sandwiches & complete request!! Wlanara Rtd Hot Bona S We Suggest ttzZVXu1 M 1 BEHIND 1;- W 'Roland Miller .ODE (After Homer) Tanalac linoleum alto duco, Pyrene adenoids, Ipana petrol PanHtroupe: automaton Cuttcura pantorium spud Kleptomaniac ad; snpolio Buirk Dietitian electro sal hepatlca Vox populi campus; Hangar nebulae sulu. Bromo quinine! nux chrysanthe- mum Rialto Chevrolet: psx rex coll- seum, Presto marathon roastblf. Chukker auditorium Pluto! -Pluto! Them there sad days are upon us and it be getting cold, stranger. Which serves for nothing else but to remind us of a story. Up in the hills of New Hamp shire, in Hanover town, Is & col lege. If you belong to the upper ultra you'll know that this college is the home of the famous yell, "Wah-who-wah," meaning Dart mouth. Before it produced a good football team nobody in Nebraska ever heard of the place. Neverthe less it finally got a team that brought home the bacon (pig-skin if you insist) and gained such fame as to bring atewgents from all over the country flocking to Ita doors. Plenty of rah material, and the college needed It. One lad (raccoon edition i espe cially wealthy came up from the south, no cigar, but a gentleman, suh! As an attendant he brought hia man Friday, (It may have been Saturday) and engaged a suite of rooms In one of Dart mouth's famous halls near the campus. After a month's residence the college officials discovered the chap, valet, suite and lo! decidedly against the college rules they said and back home went the valet. Came the winter! how do you do and with it bitter cold weather. The man from the south shivered and shook. His blue blood ran bluer than ever. Not ao much did he mind the cold days, nor the cold nights. But the agony of dressing in a -cold room every morning was the direst of torture. For he had no man to close the windows and turn on the steam at 7 in the morning. But eventually he hit upon a plan. A clever one. too, colonel, most clever. He chanced one morn ing to receive a special delivery letter, in the first delivery around 7 o'clock. As In a dream he asked Western Union to close the win dows and turn on the steam, and then lay abed until a rosy, luscious warmth permeated the room. Imagine his relief. After that it was simple. Every evening he posted a special de livery to himself and when the boy brought it the next morning, as he inevitably did, he obliged by clos ing the "windows and turning on the steam. Now go home and try that on your radiator. Epitaphs Here lies P.ob A. Dubbs.x He slapped his girl For smoking stubbs. Here lies Henry Duff. He said his girl Should learn to puff. Moral: As the eppletree is bent, so shall the epples . fall. Judging from the appearance of some of Nebraska's gridiron per formers there's something to this "athlete'a foot." "Father," queried the little girl at the game, "who are all those good-looking boys down there with the red sweaters and white pants?" "Them's Cobs, daugher, Cobs. Heh! heh! heh!" "But what have they done that you should laugh so. Father?" "Nothing, child, nothing. Heh! heh! heh! heh!" V Nebraska football games are putting on the "Rits" they're get ting to be card affairs. (Time out while the cheering section stands to take a bow.) CHEMICAL SOCIETY ELECTS OFFICERS Officers of the local section of the American Chemical society re cently elected are: Dr. Samuel Avery, councilor; E. R. Washburn, chairman; H. A. Pagel, vice chair man; Mary L. Morse, secretary treasurer. Next Thursday evening Dr. H. C. Sherman, noted author ity in chemistry from Columbia university, will addre'ea the society at ar. open meeting at 8 o'clock in the Chemistry building on "The Recent Advances in the Chemis try of Nutrition." A Chinese Student club has been organized at Washington State college. "Peruna." played by the South ern Methodist university band at the football game two years ago is not the school song. It is a pep I song. Kid Hot Buna Staaka Marahmal. Salad Fiehiaa picnic lunches put up at I'll O.N K B."38. E Two Skeletons of Unusual Species Will Compose Natural Group. Skeleton of a rhinoceros of the species rhino teleoceras has just been mounted as an exhibit for the university museum by Henry Rieder. Work has been starteil on assembling a like skeleton which will form a group with the first one. Elizabeth Dolan will paint a background for the set in the character of the other backgrounds in the museum. Commenting nn his work, Mr. Rieder said, "This species la new to discoverers. Nothing like it has ever been found or de scribed." Unearthed In 1926. The specimen is considered small for a rhinoceros, and is remarkable for its short legs. It dales from the pliocene age, and was unearthed in Brown county, Nebraska, in 1926. Both of the skeletons are complete In all their bones and very welt preserved. The next skeleton to be mounted after the rhinoceri will be that of the titanotherium ro bustum, which in English is tit anothere. This animal lived In the oligocene age, and comes from the bad lands of western Ne braska. OCTOBER BLUE PRINT Martin Writes 'Painting! With Light'. A. H. Zioh Contributes Article. 1 "Painting With Light" is the ti- ' tie of the featured article in the j October Blue Print which was re leased Saturday. It is written by i David Martin, sophomore civil en gineering student. Andrew H. Ziph, mechanical en- j gineering '30; Marvin Von Seg-1 gein, civil engineering '32: Ferd ! Bing. civil engineering "23; Thomas : Wier. mechanical engineering '25, j and D. W. Iutrenhelser, civil en- i gineering '31, are authors of other articles appearing in the October i issue. Futuristic Cover. The. cover is in green and black. a futuristic drawing of a modern industrial plant with skyscrapers . looming in the background. Regu- I lar features of the magazine, in- i eluding editorials by Dean O. J. I Ferguson, are in the October issue. Andrew Ziph has a report of the 1930 engineering inspection trip which took students to Chicago and Industrial cities. "Small Bridges for Beauty" is the subject on which Marvin Von Seggcrn, managing editor of the publica tion, writes. t Contains Illustrations. His article is illustrated with pictures of picturesque stone bridges. Von Seggern also has a story on the civil engineering camp held this year at Ashland. Fcrd Bing, a former university student, writes abcut patents and methods of procedure in getting them. Willard J. Dann is editor of the Nebraska Blue Print. COLORADO MAN VISITS MUSEUM P. G. Worcester of the Univer sity of Colorado at Boulder in spected the university museum last week with the idea of incor porating some of its unique fea tures into a new museum building to be constructed at the University of Colorado. A New Austin Coupe Is now added to our line ot Quality Rent-a-Cars. You can rent it on the same basis as Fords. No special guarantee. MOTOR OUT COMPANY 1120 P Street Phone B 6819 Win A Learbury Suit I In the 1930 Lesrbury All tional Foctbsll Selection Conttit 21 learbury Suits will be awarded without coit or obligation. One will be siven to eich of the three perjoni whose selection it ntureit to that of College Humor lor the followlnj All. Sectional Football Trami: 1 ... The All-Mid western Eleven 2. ..The All-Southweitern Eleven. 3... The AII-Misourl Valley and Big-Six Conference Eleven. 4. ..The All-Southern Eleven. 5.. .The All-Eaitern Eleven. 6. ..The All-Roclty Mountain Eleven. 7... The All-New England Eleven. Wmntn wHI f tmmumd In tht hhrutrr t ln CoHtM Humor n tf( ntndi Jmutrr I CatVaurOfflalal Kntry Blank PREC Mar MtESiniKN COUNCIL WILL MEET TONIGHT Members of the freshmen coun cil discussion groups will meet to nlffht from 0 to 8 o'clock at the home of C. D. Hayes. 852 North Fifteenth street. They will meet for a buffet supper and for a dis cussion of plans for freshmen work for the remainder of the se mester. Willard Spence, chair man of freshmen work, will be In charge of the meeting. E SPEAK AT MEETING Grau Urges All Greeks to Hear Interfraternity Council Secretary. Wlbur Walden, traveling secre tary of the National Interfrater nity conference, will address an nll-fraternlty men's meeting at the chamber of commerce Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. The subject will be. "The Fraternity and Its Problems." Mr. Walden is a member of one of the older eastern national fra ternities, prominent In national fraternity wo.-k, and knows fra ternities thoroughly. Fred Grau, local Interfraternity council president, urges all frater nity men In the university to at tend this talk. The aim is to get the national viewpoint in fraterni ties at Nebraska. It Is hoped, said President Grau, that the Nebraska Interfraternity council may send a representative to the National In terfraternity conference this win ter. Nebraska has never Dad a representative at the conference. 1930 Christmas Cards .R now on display. Best Selections Early Latsch Brothers STATIONERS 1118 0 St. Some Humorist Said--- that to make the pants last 'you must make the coat ; first. But, to make the whole suit lust send it to Modern I Cleaners often. A telephone call will bring jour truck to your door. Modern Cleaners Soukup (r Westover Mgri. F2J77 WILBUR WALD