SUNDAY. JANUARY 11, 1931 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TTTTJtTT' . - -, i - v... w iiihmw i a aM aav a sm w m mm " 11 , 1 1 MLUUAvm AMV I Am I. Ill SOCIETY Four Greek letter groups have scheduled formal for the roming week end. On Friday evening Delta Gamma and Sigma Alpha IoU wll Lc lioaleae, while Delia Delia Delia and 4amnia Thi Beta have reserved Saturday evening for their formal affairs. During the Week a number of informal lunch eons and dinners will be staged. Perhaps the most outstanding of these is that to bo given Wednesday noon at the Annex to honor Kirby Tage, editor of The World Tomorrow. r.olleae Club ta Plav , For Delta Gamma Formal. Four hundred invitations have been issued for the Delta Gamma formal which is scheduled for Fri day evening at the Cornhusker ho tel. The college Club orchestra will play for the dance which Mr. and Mrs. O. Stepanek, Miss Pauline Gellatly, Mrs. H. Chauncey Smith and Mrs. Bertha Fenn, house mother, are chaperoning. Delta Gamma Alumna Entertains Actives. Alumnae members of Delta " Gamma entertained the active chapter at a buffet luncheon Sat urday noon at the chapter house. .Fall flowers decorated the tables. "Mrs. Edson Bureett, Mrs. Nelia Quick, Miss Blanche Garten and Miss Fanchon Hooper, assisted by the alumnae chapter, were presid ing hostesses at the affair which eighty-five attended. The alumnae held a short business session after the luncheon. Sigma Gamma Epsilon Elects New Officers. Twenty-two members of the Ne braska chapetr of Sigma Gamma Epsilon, national geological frater nity, held their first meeting of the new year Saturday evening in the chapter room. Plans were dis cussed for the annual faculty din ner and spring party. At the next regular meeting, Jan. 22, Dr. C. G. Lowe. will address the group on "The Origin of Scientific Nomen clature." Members are working on special articles pertaining to va rious phases of geology to appear in the Delta issue of "Compass." This publication is the national periodical of the organization. After the business meeting the i group elected officers for the sec ond semester. Leon William Ash- ton of Lincoln was re-elected pres ident. Other officers are Oliver Sherer, vice president: C. B. . Schultz. secretary-treasurer; Day ton Vallicott, historian. Many Will Hear Kirby Page Talk. More than one hundred persons will attend the luncheon at the Annex Wednesday noon at 12 o'clock when Kirby Fage, editor of The World Tomorrow, will give an address. The University Y. W. C. A. and Y. M. C. A. are sponsor ing the affair. Mr. Page will be on the campus for only one day. Prof. Swezey Is Given Surprise on Birthday. In honor to Prof. G. D. Swezey on the occasion of his eightieth birthday, forty men gave a sur prise party for him Thursday eve ning at 7:30 o'clock in the lounge , of the Y. M. C. A. Mr. Luke, gen eral secretary of the Y. M. C. A., ushered Prof. Swezey in and pre- i sented him with an honorary ticket ! to the new solarium. The hosts gave him a silhouette lamp. I Following a talk by the guest Social Calendar Friday Delta Gamma formal dance at Cornhusker hotel. Sigma Alpha Iota formal dance at Lincoln hotel. Methodist student and patron dinner from 6 to 7 at Wesley foundation parsonage. Saturday. Delta Delta Delta formal dance at Lincoln hotel. Gamma Phi Beta formal dance at Cornhusker hotel . DANCE CLASS PLANS. MEET ON SATURDAY Sessions Will Last From 7 Until 8:30 Every Week in Armory. The social dancing class of the Y. W. C. A. met Friday evening last week due to the failure to properly schedule the meeting. In the future the class will meet each week from 7 until 8:30 o'clock on Saturday evenings in the armory. Members of the class who wish to attend basketball games which are scheduled for Saturday eve nings, may leave the class early. There will also be an opportunity for those who wish to gain more experience in dancing or who wish further instruction, to re main later. Miss Beatrice Richardson of the physical education department has been giving instruction to those members of the social staff of the Y. W. C. A. who are in charge of the dancing classes. Recently a new Majestic radio combination has been purchased for use by the class. SYMPHONY AND CHOIR PLAN CONCERT TODAY (Continued from Page 1.) violin and orchestra; Anthony Donato. UL The Great Cathedral Choir. IV. Wagner; Prelude to Lohen guin. V. Strauss: Overture to "Fled ermaiiF." Fifty-four members of the choir, twenty-four women and thirty men. all students of the uni versity, rehearse five times each week and reecive no credit, nor does any member accept any fee, according to John Rosborough, di rector. A cathedral council was chosen as a first step to making that wnicn once seemed only PART IN 11 DEBATES Tryouts on Unemploymen Insurance Scheduled For Thursday. WILL TALK OVER RADIO University of Nebraska forensio teams will engage In eleven inter collegiate debates during the com intr semester, according: to an nouncement by Prof. H. A. White, debate coach. Two subjects, free trade and unemployment Insur ance, will be used in the debates. Tryouts will be held next Thurs day evenine- at University hall. The Nebraska debate schedule as outlined by Professor White is as follows: Feb. 16 Iowa State university, free trade. This debate will be broadcast over radio station KFNF at Shenandoah, la. There will be one Nebraska debater and one Iowa debater on each team. The broadcast will start at 9:30 p. m Feb. 19 Drake university in Omaha, free trade. Feb. 25 Albion college at Lin- coin, unemployment insurance. Feb. 26 Noon, Drake univer sity, before the Junior chamber of commerce at Des Moines, unem ployment insurance. Feb. 27 Northwestern at Chi cago, unemployment insurance. March 3 Kansas State collere at Lincoln, free trade. March 5 North Dakota at Omaha, free trade. March 16 South Dakota at Omaha, free trade. Week of March 30 to April 4 Denver university at Denver, free trade. Week of March 30 to April 4. Colorado university at Boulder, free trade. Week of March 30 to Aoril 4 University of Wyoming at Lara mie, free trade. Trials on the free trade question will be held Thursday evening, a mvth ical case come true that of bav of honor, there was group sineine ng a cathedral in Lincoln. It will and an informal evening. Mrs. Longcar composed a poem for the occasion. A feature of the party was a huge birthday cake with candles forming the figure 80. Prof. Swezey celebrated bis birth day until Saturday, but he spent the week end in Chicago, lit, as the guest of his daughter. National Inspector Honored At Dinner. Zeta Tau Alpha entertained Miss May Youngberg. national inspec tor, at dinner at the Lincoln ho tel Saturday evening. Decorations were carried out in blue and grey, sorority colors. Edith Woodruff, chapter president, gave a welcom ing toast, to which Miss Young berg responded. Miss Hazel Davis welcomed the guest on behalf of me aiumnae. Zeta Tau Alpha initiated Louise Windhusen of Hooper, senior in home economics department on Friday. Merle Zuver, who has been play ing professional football for the Green Bay, Wis., team this fall. be a place where music dominates and sects are unknown. The Lincoln Symphony orches tra, under the direction of Rudolph Seidl, now has seventy pieces. It has grown from twenty-six pieces, the number at its inception, five years ago. It was then known as the Lincoln Little Symphony, and mnce nas gained renown. MAUL TIGERS BY COUNT OF 42 TO 32 (Continued from Paee l.i while Huhn, the Missouri center, contributed seven. During the final momenta of the second half. Black shoved hi sec ond string into the game and be- rore the final gun sounded an en tire second string crew was play ing for Nebraska. Conklin. Mauch, Lackey, Stipsky and Davison all saw action before the game ended Summary. The summary: Missouri 32. CALIFORNIA HONOR AWARDS DISPLAYED IN 3IORRILL HALL On exhibition in the Morrill hall galleries this month is a display of honor awards from the Southern California chapter of the Ameri can Institute of Architects. These awards, given annually by the American Institute of Arch itects .fall into twelve major groups, including single dwellings, multiple dwellings, commercial buildings, quasi-public buildings, public schools, governmental build ings, memorials, group design, city regional and community planning, landscape architecture, and arts allied with architecture. Forty designs, some of which merited exceptionally favorable comment from the judges, are on display here. THEY HAVE PASSED CANDY AND CIGARS Mildred Dole, Lincoln, .Alpha Chi Omega, and aHrley Urbach, Lincoln, Delta Upsilon. Charlotte Lawson, Hastings, Kappa Alpha Theta, and T. C. Meter, Oklahoma City, Okla., Delta Tau Delta. Doroil Jaeke, Dodge, Alpha Chi Omega, and Toby Chandler, Crescent, Okla., Lambda Chi Alpha. Gladys Mae McCormick, Den ver, Colo., Delta Delta Delta, and Joseph C. Reeves, Omaha, Phi Pappa Pai. Kathryn Rleschiik, Falls City, Sigma Kappa, and Art Wengel, Omaha, Tau Kappa Epsilon. Carolyn Cooper, Milford. Kappa Phi, and Charles Greer, Greenwood, Sigma Tau and Phi Tau Theta. Dorothy Olmstead, Zeta Tau Alpha, and oDnald oHdder. Delta Sigma Lambda. Jeannette Cassidy, Lincoln, Sigma Kappa, and Georee Gant. Lincoln, Delta Sigma Lambda. LARGER YIELD GAINED FROM PURE SEED USE T GETS 10,000 PLANTS Collections of Late Rev J. M. Bates to Be Displayed Soon. Through the department of bot any the university has acquired a large collection of Nebraska plants gathered by the late Rev. J. M. Bate3 of Red Cloud. The collection, which includes more than 10,000 specimens of Nebraska flora, was made by the Rev. Mr. Bates dur ing his pastorates throughout Ne- DrasKa since frontier days. Adding the Bates collection to the state herberium, there are now 40,000 specimens available for study. This collection is but small part of the complete univer sity collection of 400,000 sped' mens, illustrative of the plant life in all civilized countries of the world. The Bates specimens were brought from Red Cloud by Dr. T. J. Fitzpatrick during the holidays ana win be mounted and displayed in ucssey nau soon. Colorado Farmers Increase Return by Not Planting Common Stock. MONTE VISTA. Colo. Consid erably larger yields were obtained by San Luis Valley farmers from pure seed than from seed of com mon origin, according to a survey reported by A. A. Goodman, Rio Grande county extension agent, to Book Reviews KW EMPIRES, by Karl A, Rickel. J. P. Llppincott and Co, $1.30. In "New Empires," a scant hun dred-page volume. Karl Bickel. president of the United Press asso ciations, makes some concise gen eraiizations with respect to the American press. He contrasts its functions with those of the press of iuiy ana seventy-five years ago, pointing out the rapid expansion of its interests, the decline of its lut v-uiuinuo Agricultural conere dom nnt ntr inflnn- in iifi.i extension service. nnd social owniro .n it. A record of yields was kept bv Charles Mahl, prominent Monte Vista farmer and thresherman. and four others who operate threshing outfits during the past season, Goodman reports. This report on the fields threshed showed that seventeen farmers who had planted certified or clean barley seed on a total of 419 acres obtained yields averatrinsr 53.8 bushels per acre, compared with an average yield of 25.8 bushels obtained by twenty farmers who had planted 478 acres with mixed seed. Certified oat seed planted by tea farmers on 218 acres gave an average yield of 40.2 bushels pre acre, compared with an average of 28.9 bushels from eighty-five acres cn seven farms, which had bee- planted to common seed. Wheat showed a difference of two bushels per acre in favor of clean seed, probably due to the fact that very little registered wheat is grown and new varieties have not been introduced, it is stated. The wheat yields were as an advertisine medium all consequent upon the development oi popuiar intelligence. While he comments upon the present lack of opportunity for personal distinction in the newspa per field comparable to that of Greeley, Medill, Pulitzer, and eth ers, he does give educational advice to students in journalism. The velue of cultural education he min imizes, although he points out thi increasing- news value of event in the worlds of literature and the fine arts. It is important that the journalist should understand the larger play of current economic, political, and social forces, their recent history and development, and more important still that he should recognize the significance of current events in relation to those forces. Manifestly rather difficult in view of some of the doubtful preoictions Mr. Bickel chooses to make when discussing international politics. A large part of the book is given over to a discussion of the uncer tain relations between the newspa compared on approximately equal! per and the radio in their conflict- was a visitor at house this week. the Pi Kappa Elmer Strayer of th Pi Ksppa Phi fraternity will enroll in the University of Louisiana at Tulane, La., the second semester. Zlnn. rf .. Pollock. If Huhn. r , . CamphHI, Iavi. lc Pajfreyman. Warner. i Muller. If ... Boenmeler. If f fg ft lp 2 A 1 11 2 0 3 1 1 O 1 O 1 V 1 O O 0 o Total 4 14 4 3: Ruth Jane O Neil. Omaha, and j u Esther Beckard Harry attended Maciay. r the Chi Omega formal dance Fri day evening at Lincoln hotel. Nebraska 42. Kenneth Randall of Spencer. Ia., a graduate of the A. tc. S. college tin "28. was a visitor at the Pi Kappa Phi house Wednesday and Thursday. M ILLINEKY EXPEKT WILL ADVISE COEDS Zena Moore Miner, new manager f the Band Box millinery, has had varied experience iii advising the coed shopper just what type hat is bent suited to her individu ality and needs. The Band Box hats are exclusive styles and best quality and making special orders gives a new service to all and at ne price always $5.00. Everyone will want to take advantage of the t clowe-out sale of all fall ani win ter hats at $1.00 and $1.95 from 9 to 11 o'clock on Monday. Adv. Rosier, rf . Hokuf. Ik .. StiDskv. rf Davlwin. rg Conklin, c it Mauch. rf o Lac key, If ft tp 1 13 0 12 0 S 1 7 Total 6 20 2 42 Official: Wulf fcjxi Jack North. Running score: Nebraska: 2 2 4 5 7 7 7 7 9 11 13 15 17 Mimr1:' 000 0 0 2446 6 6 19 21 21 21 23 2525 V, 25 27 29 2 31 8 8 10 10 10 10 11 13 14 14 14 16 17! 33 33 33 33 35 37 37 37 37 3fl 41 41 41 VI 17 17 19 21 21 21 21 23 25 2 ZH 2H 32 32 ' , - i STARTER IS PICKED I FOR K. U. RELAYS! CORNHUSKER STAFF PLANS 'D0PESHEET' (Continued from Page 1.) word or two about things in gen eral will be incorporated into the gazette, it was hinted by the edi tor. Will Give Final Facts. Final information relative to pic tures for junior and senior and fraternity and sororitv sections will be conveyed in the news sheet iotices have been sent to the ma jority of senior and juniors in forming them that Jan. 17 will mark the close of picture-taking for their section. Since the list was not entirely complete Editor uammiii urges all Juniors and seniors to take care of their pic tures immediately, even though uiey aia not receive a notice. "There are still a few fraterni nes ana sororities wnicn are poorly represented," the editor as serted. "We hope every orraniza tion president will check up on his group immediately and send all those who have not been photo- Krapnea to riauck s or Townsend's before Friday, the day on which picture sections will be closed." Announcements from frianHp Gillespie, military editor of the iji jornuusker, reveal that pic tures for the military section nf tne annual will be taken at the campus studio during the week Beginning Monday. Pershing Rifles will be pbotographed-Monday. spo- sors pictures will be taken on Thursday, Scabbard and Blade members are to appear at the stu dio Wednesday, and battalion and staff pictures are to be taken on tne same day. AG REGISTRATION EXTENDED; WILL WIND UP MONDAY (Continued from Page 1.) 30. They will see the registrar at the south door of social sciences, see their adviser and dean as in structed and pay fees at the east door of Memorial hall the same day. Id LJ"PI1IH 1 1 1 .. LAWRENCE, Kan. John C. i Grover of Kansas has again ao ! cepted the invitation to b the ; starter for the Kansas relays, j which are to be held April 18 here. I Mr. Grover has been starter at ! seven of the previous eight relays ! carnivals. I popularity speaks for itself ance tonight! . . at the . . PLA-MOR A Bin Tinie always in n Uig Way. You'll enjoy it out here where the Col lege Crowd meets every Sunday night. If You stay away, you are miss ing; the good times. Tonite JULIUS LUDLAM And Hit Music &i hue PLA-tllOR acreages. The improved wheat seed had been planted in ninety five acres, and the common in ninety acres. The threshermen found the in formation they had secured to be very interesting and valuable as striking evidence of the funda mental fact that "it pays to plant pure seea. SIGMA XI TO HEAT, ANTHROPOLOGY TALK (Continued from Page 1.) the state. Nebraska, Dr. Strong declares, is a little touched field rich in ma terial for anthropological research. Me nas round two types of archae ological remains, one relating to plains Indians still here and a sec ond to pre-historic cultures, re mains of which have not yet been excavated. The work of the archaeological survey last year in this state shows promise of revealing note worthy scientific results as well as considerable material remains, Dr. Strong says. He will illus trate his talk with lantern slides showing the survey at work last summer. At a short business meeting af ter the lecture, delegates to the national convention of Sigma Xi at Cleveland during the holidays will give their reports. ing fielas of news reporting and advertising. Mr. Bickel foresees a possible struggle, though he is not at an antagonistic toward radio as it is now managed. He is inclined to expect, however, an eventual amalgamation or tne newspaper ana radio mausines. without doubt the best of all the popular books which have ap peared. If it were nothing more than a collection of true stories of the author's strange adventures the book would yet be among the most fascinating of its kind. Ex citing tales of the bold, dangerous sport of pig sticking, the pursuit ot wim Doars, or coDra cnarmmg, ambush bv rebellious mountain clans, air observation behind the TurVi?h Hiteq durln? the wsr. lif in Turkish prison camps, visits to the quarters of the seductive nautch girls, and of fast nolo maicnes an sKiuruuy told make tne dook interestinir as entertain ment. Jntrlguinjr as they are. these stories serve but to beguile the reader to listen to what obvlouslv lies near the author's heart, hia approacn to the inevitable mysti cism of the Hindus. The Dhilos ophy, or rather the practices, of the Yogi interested Major Yeats- crown tnrougnout the twenty-odd years of his interrupted Indian service, ana ne made several at tempts to place himself under f teacher. Something of what he learned ne describes, never with any attempt to proselyte, but with a sympathy which betrays the ex tent to which he is moved and convinced by what he saw. On one occasion he sat on river bank lookine across toward the Taj Mahal, talking to a young asthetic, the pupil of a famous guru, when the body of a vounsr girl floated past among funeral wreaths. "The Jumna was carry ing down the white flowers and tne yellow flowers that ara tha daily tribute of India to her gods uu goaaesses. Amongst these flowers rose an arm as if wavintr a gooaoye. it sanK under the even waters, without sound or rinnip. but the turtles had seen it and were coming from every direction, making tracks like the periscopes of submarines. A big white turtle reached the body first, and raised Its obscene idiot's head, with a ribbon of flesh in its mouth, snan- ping and gobbling. Others arrived. Soon there was a red foaming and scuffling where the body of a girl had been. I turned away, but Sivanand did not flinch. 'All this.' he said. is indeed God.' " When one remembers that he writes as an English soldier with a first class European education. Major Yeats-Brown's sensitiveness and his strange emotion and intel lectual reactions become consider able and our curiosity about India leaps on to questions which his restraint, underestimating our ere dulity, forbade him to raise. ENGINEERS COLLEGE GRADS VISIT HERE Ten Former Students Spend Time on Campus During Past Three Weeks. Ten former students of the col lege of engineering were among visitors on tne campus during the holidays and the past week. These men are employed in various parts of the country, ranging from Washington, D. C, to Bartles ville, Okl. The visitors were: Frank C. Summers, C. E. '29. junior engi neer for the interstate commerce commission at Washington: Wal ter J. Wohlenberg. M. E. '10, pro fessor of mechanical engineering at the Sheffield Scientific school at Yale, New Haven, Conn.; Ralph N. Tracy, C. E. '21, resident engi neer for the R. Haidesty company, Grand Junction, Colo.; Myron O. Johnson and Walter F. Sturek, C. E. '30. Phillips Pipeline comnanv. Bartlesville, Okl.; Malcolm D. Lin- deman, C. E. '29, foreman for the Vnited States Gypsum company of Chicago: Avery A. Batson. Arch. E. '27, Santa Fe, N. M.; James D. Marshall, C. E. '25, of Kansas City, Mo.; Alvan L. Hyde. Arch. E. '25. Riverdale-on-Hudson, New York City; Glenn'' F. Sundman, C. E. 26, Oshkosh, Neb. Two hundred and fiftv-six stu dents were enrolled in the univer sity in 1900. A "neatly built ticket office- at the entrance of the athletic field was suggested as a fitting memo rial for the senior class to leave the university thirty years ago. Registration in the universitv increased in 1901, much to the sur prise of officials who feared the attendance would be cut down be cause of a crop failure and a new incidental fee of three dollars. The Lives of a Bengal Lancer, py Alaj. F. Yeats-Brown. The Vik ing Press. $2.75. Ever since the publication of "Mother India" five years ago, wide section of the western world which had hitherto been little in terested in India has been alert for books about that incredibly myste rious land. Major Yeats-Brown's "The Lives of a Bengal Lancer" is BUCK'S COFFEE SHOP (FORMERLY DAVIS) SPECIAL STUDENT LUNCH 30' Hct Rolls and Drink Included "Your Drug Store' Kor the New Year we aim to rive you the bft in Soda Fountain and Luncheonette Service. Try our noon lunches. The Owl Pharmacy Phone BlOfiS 118 No. 14th and P St WE DELIVER Shoe Sale FOR THE LADIES Prices slashed for our January Clearance Sale on 1.000 pairs of beautiful Shoes. Every Shoe in the house in eluded. They Are Going Fast At These SALE PRICES $A95 All Sizes 3 to 9, AAA to C Combination Last Mr: W- VIZ' J! SSmmW . ft) 1, 6.5 J I i vnR 4 - , , MOM tyftlk' : I I Joan I J II I I ft CRAWFORD l .r.-r I M pin mm 3 - . jtca- Pl I I W J jj J Remember 12 to 1 25c Travelogue and News 3 . . eoti , . xclieii . . jotjcoosl beyond word . r 4 rrk by fJ tw ywtea . . ho cWvemen . . r. sr cmprets J emotcn. . . Never brf-rt hvf you seen THIS Jor Crawford . . neve 3n tucK 4 vttxde.. ths westea p!y oi tKc Koldyj..9f5P.'s ..spey. . tWl Pa I MklH TW mvmv w4 be U. to nk6 . , btyonrf 'Jo te new, m. ROBERT ARMSTRONG MARIE PREVOST JOti MLIAM tBTM DOUGLASS ON THE STAGE THE INTIMATE BANJOKESTER "JACK 'i NORTH" Singing and Playing: Mis Own Exclusive Songs. MLLE BEBE MOFFIE "Vogues of 1931" with . CURRY k. DE SYLVA and J.VIMY BYRNE Gtoea coom &rctf 4 fey i Shows Continuous 1 to 11 P. M. Vaudeville 3-7-t , .v sr t VA ifr I Mat. 40c Log i Eve. 60c Logs 7c tasty pastry shop hotel cornhusker 'CLUnciln j ""'nrrTtnmniriiiiiissiiasiwiij.. iimnm1 TUART SYMPHONY 5 Miles West en "O"