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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 11, 1930)
1 THURSDAY. DECEMI.KR 11. 1930 TMK DAILY INKItK ASKAiN THREE s SOCIETY brilliant limiting cffi'i-ts hyig on colored kIiciiiikts and artificial hiiow will make llie fourth nil univci-Hity iartv one ;)f tlic most iimmiml mid outManding of the voir. A realistic j- i i . . Hiiim mimiii nun hiiuh mm juvurs nil vt Keen planned to parry mil the siiit ol' jlie winter hcbroh. Double arches of ftlit crept' paper in a red and white scheme break into the white to pro- .. ...... ii:.,.. rr.. 1 luce a startling effect Forty Couples Will Attend Teke Party. A Christ mas house nartv will he given by the pledges of Tau Kappa rcpmion jiauiruay. mere win De about forty couples present. The House will be decorated in Christ- mns colors, and individual favors tiIU h riven in pnrh o-iipat r5h a r- house will be decorated in Christ n " ' crones for the party are Mrs. E. W. Mciienry ana Mr. ana Mrs. e.. w. McCartney PI Kaps Will Honor Founders At Banquet. Pi Kappa Phi fraternity will hold its annual Founder's day ban quet at the chapter house Satur day evening to commemorate the founding of the fraternity. A toast list has been arranged, composed of alumni and members of the ac tive chapter who will speak on the history and progress of the fra ternity. Decorations will be used in accordance with the occasion Many nlumnl are expected to at tend the bunquet. Many Guests Bidden To P. A. D. Formal. More than 350 couples will at tend the Phi Alpha Delta formal dance scheduled for Friday eve ning nt the Hotel Lincoln. Among the out of town guests will be Judge Harold Schaff, David City; Judge William Norton, Osceola; John Misko. Holdrege; J. J. Galla gher, Kearney; William Keeshan. St. Kdwards; Whitney Gillilland, Glen wood, la.: Freeman Des Jar dien, Broken Bow, Norman Dahl, Oakland; H. A. Smith, Superior; John Connelly, Chicago, 111.; Albae Nelson, Blair and Edwin L. Brown, Omaha. Chaperones for the affair will be Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Sick, Mr. and Mrs. W. Ij. Packard, Mr. and Mrs. Kobert Riddle, Prof, and Mrs. John P. Sennlng, Prof, and Mrs. L. Void, Mrs. Edna Snyder. Prof. Lester Orfield, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Black. Eddie Young- Be Smart, Little Girl, Be Smart THIS STATEMENT, attributed to f Patrick Henry, was spoken by I that noble American to his step- daughter on December 11, 1774, re j garding early Christmas shopping, i t I Only 12 More Shopping Days Till Christmas STUART Fast, Funnv and Exciting WILLIAM HAINES IN "REMOTE CONTROL" 9 W BROinnc fBii.'' SIDNEY PACE 4 CO. mm ,17 i we a.n "". . ' fr' mn rrn the rom-. 4 mnnils of this Zitfc-' 2, fc!l darling? -" ... . ..... Sl.e trar.ts you i.,in the fun at the Lincoln theatre where FLORENZ ZIECFELD and Samuel Goldwyn Pre cent Eddie Cantor ZIEGFELD'S MUSICAL HIT "WHOOPEE" With An Array pf Ziegfeld Broadway Beauties A United Artitts Production IN TECHNICOLOR Alio KNUTE ROCKNE Sound News Now Playing LINCOLN HOUSE of HITS 1 - 9 v r Social Calendar Friday, Deo. 12. rla Upsll()n formft, dance Cornhusker hotel. m. '.. . . . Phi flamma Dotfa formal ilinn. . uu.avv, ionium xinici Phi Alnha nlta fnrmal riannn Lincoln hotel. Kappa Alpha Theta pledge party at chapter house. Girls' Cornhusker costume party, women's gymnasium. Sigma Gumma Epsllon party. Lutheran club party. Saturday, Deo. 13. Delta Sigma Lambda house party. Alpha Delta Pi formal dance, Cornhusker hotel. Sigma Nu plgge dinner, chapter house. Phi Kappa formal dance, Lin coln hotel. Phi Kappa Psi house party. Slma Alpha Mu pledge party at chapter house. Delta Sigma Phi house party. . Alpha Sigma Phi 8:30 o'clock breakfast dance at chapter house. Dr. Laurence Fossler Christina? party, Morrill hall Gallery A. Beta Theta Pi house party. Tau Kappa Epsllon house parly. Delta Zeta house party. Alpha Omicron Pi house party. Gamma Phi Beta house party. Gamma Phi Beta house party. bluth and his orchestra will play for the party. Literary Society Honors Noted Irish Poet at Tea. Dr. James H. Cousins, noted Irish noet. now working in India, was honored by members of Chi Delta Phi at a tea given from 3:30 to 5 o'clock in Morrill hall. Gallery A, Wednesday arternoon. ur Cousins read some of his own poetry and spoke on "Poetry and the Irish Revival." Mrs. E. A. Burnett, Mrs. Paul Grummann, Mrs. J. O. HerUler and Mrs. T. M. Ravaftr nrmrari. and Marraret Deming. Elaine Haverfield, Char lotte Wella, Elaine Gibbons, Ljm- dall Brumbach, Margaret Reck mevnr. Maude Scoroeder and Thelma Arnold as active members served the guests. Mabel Langdon, general chairman, had as her as sistant Gertrude Moore. Miss Louise Pound and Miss Margaret McPhee Introduced the guest of honor. Dr. Fossler Arranges Novel Christmas Party. Christ ma a nones and musical numbers have been planned to en tertain nearly idu gueaia wuu iivr been invited to attend a Christmas party given by Dr. Laurence Fos sler, chairman of the Germanic langauge department, Saturday evening. Dr. Fossler has arranged ). affair for all students of the German department and any other persons interested in coming. man games will be a novel feature of the party which Miss Hllde garde Stausa baa in charge. Mght refreshments are to be served the guests. The Beta Tbeta Pi pledge party Saturday will have Prof, and Mrs. C. O. Swayzee and Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Spangler as chaperones. Phi Omega Pi held formal pledg ing for Elizabeth Rowan of Ar vada, Colo. STRICT DANCE RULE E Council at Ohio Votes for Presence of Officers At All Hops. COLUMBUS. Ohio. Strict en forcement of all dance rules was the decision of the Fraternity President's council of Ohio State uniAiersity at their last meeting. All fraternity dances will be closed during the winter quarter unless otherwise arranged. The presence ot officers in plain clothes at all dances will be abso lutely required. Invitations, ror wnicn buuiuwu pirii have been aporoved by the nntmrii must be issued to all out siders who will attend the dances. Fredrick Milligan. assistant dean of men, reported on the Na-iif.Fi-! Tnterfraternitv inference. saying that Ohio State stood first in scholarship among universities Classified Want Ads Only 10 Cents a Line (Minimum oi i unei FOR REM TUXEDOS FOR RENT. Scotch WooUn Mills. 126 M. B71 PHOTOGRAPHS THE HAUCK STUDIO. ,1218 O Street. B2991. Distinctive photographs. AFTER ALL It's a Townsend photo graph that you want. LOST AND FOUND LOST ;ren Sh'sffor fountain ln. Reward. B12S7. LOSTA D." .. L. fraternity pin. Karc. B2S26. IXIST-Brr.wn leather nurse' bet ween Andrews hall nd Bharp building. Ca.l or Nebrankan office. (lliuirinuii of (loiiiiniltce ' IK' 4, C Courtesy fil l.lnriln Jouriuil. MARY ALICE KELLEY. Who is chairman of the orches tra and arrangements committee for the annual girla' Cornhusker costume party to be held Friday evening In the Armory. Graduate Students Aaked I' Mvvt to Form Organization All graduate students inter ested In a graduate club have been asked to meet , In Social Sciences 201, today at 5 p. m. All have been urged to turn out so as to make the club a suc cess. with the same number of frater nities. He announced that "hell week" had been the main topic of discussion. The council will purchase a new scholarship cup to replace the Tuttle cup which has been won by the Acacia fraternity for maintain ing the highest scholarship record for three years. Possibility of a fraternity handbook was also dis cussed. Authority On Policemen Declares New Type of Man Needed. IOWA CITY. Ia. ' If a man had the wisdom of Solomon, the pa tience of Job, the tolerance of Con fucius, the strength of Sampson, the courage of David, and the wis dom of the encyclopedia, he mignt still be want! if one were seek Ing the perfect policeman," August R. Vollmer, noted authority on po lice administration, told The Daily Iowan in an interview recently. Mr. Vollmer is a recognized au thority on police administration, having served aa police chief of Berkeley, Calif., since 1905, and also serving during six months of the year as professor of police ad ministration at the University of Chicago. Police Need Learning. "Education," he declared, "is in evitable in police administration. Police administration aa we have previously viewed it, in its puni tive aspect, has had only to do with the apprehension of the crim inal, and the meting out of punish ment suited to his particular case. "Modern conditions, however, cannot be met adequately by that nhHRe nf the work alone. The policeman of tomorrow must work hand In hand wun science. "The second phase of police ad ministration is in regeneration of the individual, and In preventive measures." Mr. Vollmer does not nrrnrri with the nresent system of courts and penal institutions. Mod em conditions, in nis opinion, m far beyond antiquated law of the past. Wants Legal Change. ire wniilrl favor elimination of the grand jury system, replacing it by a complaint rnea wun me ui trict attorney, to insure speed in legal operation. He would also wish to euminaie me tuuuij jo.ii, and change the court to a place for the determination of guilt. without fixing responsibility. This duty wouia De laneu uv hr a anei ial receiving station, a sort of vocational guidance school. Such a school would determine the particular work which would serve best to restore the individual crim inal in enriptv whollv regenerated and lacking his criminal ten dencies. Death Penalty "Stupid." , Mr. Vollmer would eliminate all brutality or similar cause of ran cor from our penal system. He characterized tne aeain penauy "stupid." Ho would establish an institute of criminology main tained by the state, preferably at the university or siaie cnpiuu. Here by a scientific study of crime, it should be possible to dis cover facts which could be used to determine "which of the kinder garten students of today will be the killers of tomorrow." Mr. Vollmer has made a require ment of one year of college work for any applicant for a position on his force. He freely stated that his "college cops" were better police men for their education. "The primary requisites of a po liceman," he said, "are intelligence and training, so that he may be better able to make reports, look for information, and use scientific knowledge. College men must nec ensnrilv have a sunerior intelli gence, tip do the work required of them in an academic course. & 6.- .,v... . v J Your Manuscript Typed Neatly Quickly Reasonably Improve Your Grades With Neat aid Well Typed Manuscript! Bring Your Paper for Satisfactory Work Lincoln School of Commerce Accredited by Nat'l. Ass'n. of Accredited Com'l P A. 14th Sts. B6774 GRADUATES PREFERRED Raiiroatf Head Says Mind ' Which Is Intensively Trained lias Edge. PHILADHLPHI A, Penn. "There can be no doubt of the. ad vantage to the young man who be gins his work with an intensively trained mind,' declared General W. W. Atterbury. president of the Pennsylvania railroad, in an arti cle written recently for the Penn sylvanian, school newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania. "Other things being equal, he will gef ahead faster and get far ther than the man who lacks that great initial advantage. In the technical branches of railroading, preliminary training of a college course has become a necessity for the young man who aims at a place in the executive forces. Recent 8urvey. In i. recent survey of the 163 principal olflcers and directors of the Pennsylvania system, eighty six were found to be college grad- a u.,ontv.oven not. HOW- ' ever, it must be considered that for every 100 men entering w; railroad service with a college edu cation, there are many thousands who start without one. Viewed in this lischt, there can be no question as to the advantage of the young man with the college education. "As to the best 11 n of training to fit men for entering the railroad service the statistics leave no doubt that they are civil and me chanical engineering, particularly the former. Of the eighty-one op erating officers of the railroad, the civil engineers outnumber by more than two to one all the other col lege men put together. Graduates Preferred. "The operating officers men tioned, including as they did, men of the highest rank and longest ex perience, necessarily embraced quite a few men who were well on in life and were approaching the retiring age of seventy years. If we had confined our study to the younger operatin gofficers, we would have found nearly 100 per cent college graduates. The reason for this is that for quite a num ber of years past it has been a rule of "the company that gradu ates of recognized colleges or uni versities in civil, mechanical or electrical engineering, or their equivalents, have been given pref erence in the service for develop ing into operating officers.' ' LAWYERS EQUIP OWN LOUNGE AT TROJAN SCHOOL LOS ANGELES, Calif. The law school of the University of South ern California has opened a new men's lounge and reading room, entirely equipped by the student body. Samuel S. Zagon, chairman of the library section of the South ern Calif oi nia Bar association, headed the committee in charge of all arrangements. The room is filled with a great number of reference books and will be run on the honor system. This type of lounge and reading room allows greater freedom than ordi nary libraries, which discourage talking, according to its sponsors. Although similar lounges exist in universities throughout the country, this is believed to be the first to include such an extensive library- UNIVERSITY 4-II CLUB PARTY SET FRIDAY EVENING Plans have been completed for the universtiy 4-H club party which will be held in the students activities building Friday evening "Your Drug Store" New shipment of Liidies Compacts just the thing for parties or Xmas present. Whitmans Chocolates The Owl Pharmacy 148 No. 14th & P Sts. Phone B 10o8 You're on the Right Trail to a Good Cleaning Serv ice When You Tele phone Modem Cleaners Some folks do things by intuition. That's fine But the safest way is to watch results and follow them. More and more Lincoln people send clothes to us regularly for cleaning because they're pleased with our work. Modern Cleaners Soukup & Westover, Mgn. Call F2377 For Service . Schools Lincoln. Nebr. Nebraska Historical Society Has Copy of State's First Newspaper In thti library of the Nebraska SUite Historical society, the only placo in the state where Nebraska papers are systematically kept, is to be found tho first newspaper of Nebraska which was published at Bellevue, July 15, 1845. An Omaha paper, ''The Omaha Arrow," pub lished two weeks later, was the second. These papers, both profe&sing to deal with arts, sciences, agricul ture, politics, and general litera ture, were written in very flowery phrases and were taken across the Missouri to iowa to be printed. Tho library receives practically every paper now being published in the state, including dally, weekly, and monthly copies, which on the agricultural co11pp-i rnmniiK according to Jesse Livingston, cnairman or tne committee in charge. The nartv will be in th nature of a kid nartv and nrizes will be awarded for the best costumes. Ralph Copenhauger will be in chare-e of the frames. Kneels! mimlr and readings will he features on the program. All former 4-H club members are inviiea. WESLEY PLAYERS 10 I Will Stage "A Sacrifice One Offered" First Time Sunday Night. "A Sacrifice Once Offered' is the title of the three act drama to be presented by Wesley playera at the Methodist church in Waverly Sunday evening. Practices have been held for the past few weeKa and with the completion of the scenery, everything in in readiness for the opening at tnat place. Mrs. Nancy Foreman Dickey of the university school of fine arts is In charge. Th's plav ueals with the state of offairs in the household of Pontius Pilate at the time he was consid ering the case of Christ. This drama is not to be mixed, up with "St. Claudia," also being presented by this organization. Both deal with the same time and place but with entirely different angles of the situation. It is possible to see both presentations without discov ery of similarities except in time and place. The cast chosen by Mrs. Dickey is as follows: Calpurina, wife of Pontius Pilate, Carolyn Cooper; Pontinus Pilate, Russell Lindskog; children of Pontius Pilate: Julius. Oliver Kibben and Virginia, Inge bo rg Nielsen; Damon, their Greek tutor, Ozro Dean; Procula, aged slave woman, Mildred Johnson; Claudia, a slave girl, Marjoria Dean; John Mark, a young Jew, Irving Walker; Nathan, Annas' messenger, George Schmidt, and Longlnus, a centurion, Norman Peters. African Air Mail April 1. Air mall service between Egypt and Cape Town, South Africa, is to be inaugurated April 1, 1931. It Is hoped to open the northern The Late Shopper EKE) they have bound when sufficient copy is collected. There now f re nearly 20,000 bound books. "One of the greatest problems which now confronts u," said MIjs Martha M. Turner, librarian, "la that the margins of nearly all papers received are too narrow to permit proper binding. "In accordance, we have written to a number of newspaper asking them to issue their copies with wider margins, but from a num ber uf replies it seems they are ex tremely reluctant to Co so." I'apeis received by the library are giftr. of the publishers except for an exchange of the quarterly magazine issued by the historical department which is composed ex clusively of Nebraska history. half oi the route, far as Mwanza, by Jan. 1. The service will connect with the London Cairo air line. The aviation com pany expects to receive subsidies totaling $4,700,000 in the first five years. Mice Fail to Put Fear Into Hearts of Indiana Coeds INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. Unlike their sisters of the gay nineties, Butler university coeds jump with joy instead of fear when they spy a mouse. Girls in the nutrition classes at Butler have recently done much to undermine the old theory that women "scream and scurry" when the small rodents appear. Last week the home economics The most popular ready ' to-eat cereals sorved in the dininf -rooms of American colleges, at-inj- clubs and fwtrai ties are made by Kallogf in Battle Creek. They in clude ALL-BRAN, Corn Flakes, Rice Krispies, Wheat K rumbles and Kel logg's Shredded Whole Wheat Biscuit. Also Kaffee Haf Coffee the coffee that lets you sleep. I PEP 4 IRAK RAKES 1 eaaUjsjM tm imitt L(D(D)K urn Look out for her, she's a terror. She pushes, kicks, and steps on your loes. She didn't get her shopping done early. Do you want her to calcic you in the last minute rush? Get wise - - - DTT NdDWY department of the university' re ceived a consignment of whtt mice on which the girla are tow speculating aa to correct and well bulnnml diets. Much to the aur prlne f those In charge, the sti-, (icr.ts immediately became chummy with the mice and lire now n freoiiently going atout the hallo with mice in their peck et3 petting first hand informal on as to Junt how Mr. Mouse fa thiivw Irif; on his vltjrci'i A. B. or C diet. ' The i1 jjroe of the elation of Ihe girls upon .seeing I.lr. Rodent ilt pciul.i u,.in how .successful his diet . 1m agreeing with him. A 1noue win:-1 dirt crn:?t.; ot jello ai.it ."Uv.'uui causes only a mere sluvr of the . .'.uiilJcii buchti.'ie '.;e U m to be sickly r.?d nciawny, v.licr8;.r a ful iinni.se whone daily meal n;i-' bodies plenty of vitaminea evoked . no i n ! :' lr.t-'it.'.t ei.J ed;i.ii.i-: tiun. In.sUv ! c i .rii : .(. h otb'i with the n. . i.. ' Hp.U f.:!-el. ll(-.V are you " ihe girb now ;uy "He o , there, how's your movsrV" N 't; only I'! '.- ::-,3 :.!.) m:i...iti!nii a high batti.-ig H'evur, Hr cot 11(4 e, but ul. . r.u- m 1 1 ."r.acb out and J;i a i.tl" om "; 1 -rv.iing on rt;s. ! ' Va'-IVf', n To;..,:.-! Ill ',!.' Ft-! ," 1' 'I I" ' ' I t' 'II' am. I .-i'.'-'.-r . :ir IK i.M l..r 1 1ll! ai z, :t r. i r A Art, t it i Y a ;i v.'.? a 5 Milr PEP flavov health! You get them all in Kel!ogg' Pep Eran Flakes. Ycu can't beat the match less flavor that only these bet ter bran flakes have. The quick energy of their crunchy whole wheat. And the health fulness of their bram just enough to be mildly laxative. Ask that Kellogg's Pep Bran Flakes be served at your fra ternity or campus restaurant. PEP BRAN FLAKES Is Duel 4