WEDNESDAY. MARCH 4. IQ.'H THE DAILY NERRASKAN TWO 1 - ? 1 t 7:1 if. The Daily Nebraskan Station A Lincoln. Nebraikt OFFICIAL STUDINT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NIBRASKA Published Tuesdav, Vdnidy, ThgrHy, Friday Snd Sunday mornlnet during th academic ytar. THIRTIETH YtAR Entered aa aacond-elaaa matter at the pottoffice in Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congrese, March 3, 1879. and at special rate of poitage provided for in lection 1103 act of October 3, 1117. authorised January 10. 1M2. Unuer diicklien el the &.uuent r-uuiicanon Board SUBSCRIPTION RATE $2 a year Single Copy 0 cents $1.23 a semester $3 s yesr mailed S1.7S semeeter nulled Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Off lee University Hall 4A. Telephones Osvi -6491; Nlghti B-J333 (Journal) Ask for NebraaKan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Elmont T. Waite... Editor-in-chief Robert J. Kelly Associate manor Managing Editors William McGaffin New Editors Arthur Wolf Evelyn Simpson Leonard Conklin Sports Editor Frances Holyoke Women Editor BUSINESS STAFF Chariee 0. Lawlor Business Manager Assistant Business Managers. ( Norman Galleher Jaek'Thompsorr Edwin Faulknsr Harold Kube C. Arthur Mitchell Boyd VonSeggern Eugene McKim MCMBC 1931 Tata Is mnMilH fr fetter edrenitla ST Tke Nebraska rreaa JUeeciatJoa. Panhellenic Comes to Life. Some time ago The Nebraskan, tired of list ening to eoed grievances on sorority rushing rule weaknesses, printed a few of the move unreasonable and more unenforceable of the present restrictions. In fourteen separate points, jotted down after a casual examina tion of the code, we commented on a few of the more silly regulations. Monday evening, the Panhellenic board came lo life after a long period of dormancy, and heLI a spirited discussion of the practice of spiking," almost universally employed about the campus. This time, there may be some re sults. Methods of enfroeing severe penalties were suggested for violations of the spiking rule. If the Panhellenic board does not go back t sleep, the situation may be improved by action. Spiking is not conducive to an order ly, well regulated rush week among the soror ities. There is no question but that it can be completely eliminated, if proper penalties, and methods of enforcing these penalties, are de vised. If every sorority were forced to drop all its pledges for a semester when convicted of spik ing, there) would be no more of it. This is a severe punishment, we admit, but the situa tion demands such a penalty-. Panhellenic can apply such a penalty, and enforce it, if the group so chooses. If they do. we shall doff our hats and applaud from the sidelines. If they do not. we shall grow even more disgusted with the silly, unenforceable regulations that have restricted (in a purely nominal sense) sorority rushing upon the cam pus for years past. There is every indication that some such action may be taken. "We hope it is, for we are sure that no other more will secure the desired results. There is one other point, equally essential, however, that Panhellenic did not discuss Mon day evening. That is the number of useless and outworn rules remaining in the code, the "deadwood."'. Many such items are found in the present eode, and many others which, by no stretch of the imagination could be prop- eriy nioreea. unese must De eiiniinaxeu jj. a workable system w to be achieved. Disrespect of one sale breeds disrespect of another, per haps mora important. . . Telephoning of rushees, for instance. For bidden by the rules, except to rushing chair man or "her assistant." How can all calls be traced, without stationing a detective in the telephone office? Why the rule, when any girl in the honse may eall herself "the assistant' ? Kither devise practical enforcement, or remove the rule. Servioef o men forbidden in sorority rush ing. Enforce it or remove it. No rushing registration week. Hardest thing to enfore ethat could be devised, we think. Severe penalty might help. .'o "conspicuous rushing" on campus at any lime. Remove it. "It's merely another rule; no particularly definite method of Raying who violates it and who doesn't, or of enforcing it at all. During semester, a rushee may be only an "occasional guest" at any one house. What's "occasional" and what isn't? How enforced? "Why not remove it altogether? Would sorority rushing go to the devil? No rushee may pledge who was a member of local high school sorority. Why not, may we ask? Remove it. It's universallly disre garded. vv,rurties must submit expense accocuuts. for rnsli nerk period. Reasonable, but disregarded or evaded. Enforce it or remove it. expose our own lack of knowledge, but per haps someone else may care to answer who is better equipped than we to do no. Says the first of the heap: " Why i it that the university retains the present drill field, when new land in u less conspicuous place wax purchased for drill purposes last yenr? Its tmxight lines is a crime. Why continue the thing in its preseut barren state, when it may as we II be decorative as not?" We do not know. The second decries the "tough luck" of the. University of Nebraska in athletics. "Why," says the 'writer, "do wo have what appears to' be at times a champion football team, only to end tip the season hopelessly outclassed by a few less excellent teams?" We do not know that either. Number three grows piite wrathy over the prospect of crowning a May Queen, and hold ing Ivv Day Ceremonies in general, in April. (Well.'we do not really care much when they crown the May Queen.) Says the writer. Why not have it in' J one, or the last of May?" We do not know. Number four leaps upon the administration for its failure to do anything about the parking situation. "It's terrible." she says, "to try to find anywhere within seven or eight blocks of the campus a place to leave my car. any day or lanvtime. Whv haven t they none anyuuug aooui it? Don't they care at all about the conveni ence of the students, or would they prfeer that the 'beautiful' drill field remain unhidden by a few "ugly' cars?" We do not know. Number jive airs a few more or less personal racks. "Why do officials of the administra tion speud most of their time at the state house?" Aha! There's one we can answer. Because the legislature is in session! Number six returns to campus beautification I Oh, outworn phrase!) with a request for in formation on purchase of a number of marble columns from the old station in Omaha. "Didn t the university purchase $3,000 worth of these columns for use in the campus planning proj ect? Why don't they use them, then?" Well, well. We can answer that one too. It's be cause they luven't begun to consider what to do first! 'incidentally, it'll take lots of money. The legislators are a bit shy on some questions, and cannot be easily approached. .Seven says: "I noticed in the editorial col umns of the first issue this semester that you said Innocents might have a more difficult time picking members this spring, since the crop of good juniors was a bit small. Isn't there enough juniors in this university that a worthy membership can be selected for next YELLOW JACKETS HEAR MEN FROM OTHER FACTIONS (Continued rrom Page 1.) held a week ago In order to con sider a student union building. At that gathering, he pointed out, the Blue Shirts expressed a unanimous desire to participate in a drive for a student union building. Neal Gomon. who was present, ad dreaaed Mi bodv from a Yellow Jacket standpoint, and at that time formulated plani. with Blue Shirt leadera for a Tri-Kactiou gathering which is to be held Thursday evening in Social Sciences auditorium. Delphian Nash, acting at offi cial Barb representative in hla ca pacity as president of that group, expressed the opinion that this unison of campus tactions In the hopes of makiri a successful stu dent union drive is one of the big gest things which has happened at this school since the stadium campaign. He commented favor ably upon the student unicn build ings which he had seen at Iowa City and Lawrence, Kans., and de clared that the barbs were willing to work on any workable plan in complete harmony with other cam pus political groups. MeCleery Speaks. The crying need of a union building for this campus was ade quately illustrated by William Me Cleery, president ol the Innocents society who spoke before the Yel low Jacket group: "Unless on makes a serious mental survey of conditions of this campus the need of a union build ing is apt to escape attention." MeCleery said. "It is exceedingly dangerous when students Jack a place where they may gather at will. As things stand at present our social relations are largely split up into different departments and fraternal groups. Such a situ ation is a social injustice to Uni versity of Nebraska students. It isn't tair that we should be with out a facility which so many other good schools are provided with." Jack Expresses Need. LeRoy Jack, treasurer of the Innocents society, further ex pressed the need of a union build ing. "It is our duty," according to Jack, "to make University of Ne braska students "school conscious" instead of fraternity and sorority conscious. This can only be done through a student union building if it is to be done rightly. Some in dication of the unifying effect it would have was illustrated at the senior class meeting last Thursday." year's Innocents? Is there any reason for them ; wjjqjj SPEAKS to plav politics in picking their successors No. no reason at all. Hut then, politics are always a bit unreasonable! lncidenatlly, re mind us of it some lay and we'll tell you the strange but childish tale of T. X. E. It's an interesting lodge, even if it doesn't mean much of anything any more. Number eight grows practical, with a reas onable suggestion. "Why not close Twelfth street? Then the campus beautification project might be carried a bit further with the addi tion of a memorial mall across the drill field, and the parking situation would be solved! Can't ihe. administration close it?" We do not know. And sometimes, tearing our hair, we wonder if they do either. Number nine, the bottom letter of the pile, requests information on the construction of union buildings upon other campuses. Ah, maybe we can answer that, prettj' soon. We are about to bust loose and run a series of feature stories, wiih a few photographs of these other buildings, so you and all your brothers and sisters may get a fair? idea of how it is beinp done. At 1 hat. our score was answered four out of nine, take a hand at it now ? not so bad. Wc Will someone else Funny, isn't it? One can never understand why another person should come all the way from California, or Xew York, or the south seas, to attend the University of Nebraska! AT ENGINEERING MEET TUESDAY (Continued from Page 1.) for all engineers." "Tie up to these older men for you will need them." Mr. Wright also pleaded with those students attending the meet ing to master the English lan guage. The older engineers, although thev know their subject extremely well, usually have a difficult time to put their thoughts across and sell their ideas to others. That is because they have specialised in engineering and have not realized that a mastery of English is a fundamental basis for men in every profession." 'Would Increase English. When questioned by one member of his audience he explained that he would suggest decreasing the number of required hours now in engineering and replace them by English and literature courses. "This would enable the engineer to make plain all ideas he tried to sell, and make him a better execu tive." be said. Mr. Wright also spoke at a luncheon at the chamber of com merce at noon yesterday. He was a truest of the members of the faculty of the college of engineer ing. He is now managing editor of Railway Age. He has served as honorary editor of the mechanical engineering: magazine and has con tributed to many engineering and i railway publications. K. U. REGISTRAR PLANS TALK 10 GRADUATES George 0. Foster Picks High School Seniors As Theme. LAWRENCE, Kaa. High school seniors and their college problems will be the theme of a series of talks to be given Thursday morn ings through March over station KFKU, by George O. Fc"ter, reg istrar of the University of if.ansas. Literally thousands of stcdents of the University of Kansas, have conferred with Mr. Fooler about their college courses, and his talks will be based on his years of experience at the university. The talks, which are to be from 11:15 to 11:30 each Thursday, will be as follows: March 5: A word to parents who will send a son or daughter to col lege. March 12: A four year college course; Why? When? Where? March 19: Preparation for col lege. March 26: The college campus. y Men Students Are to 1 1 old Join Meeting A Joint meeting of men stud ents will be held Thursday eve ning In Social Soiences auditor ium for the purpose of promot ing the student union project. All fraternities are to be repre sented by a member of each class, and all non-fraternity men are urged to attend the affair. A tentative program has been worked out which wilt call for several talks and a round tabel discussion of the plans for the Nebraska student' building. RE inar held by Young, who recently outpointed Atlla Tomlinson. an A. A. U. national champion ot ivm. Divine, too, will have a hard battle to defend his rank against Sher man Stephenson, a veteran 135-pounder. In all three-years ine w. a. a. has conducted a wrestling tourna ment. Oklahoma Aggies have won the team title, annually rolling up many individual championships. VanBebber was 165-pound cham pion in both national events in 1930. with Caldwell winning in the collegiate and Pearce in the ama teur. Another Aggie. Earl Mc Creadv. now professional, won both titles. Oklahoma A. & M. Team Will Enter Two National Tournaments. STILLWATER, Okia. (Special). Thirty wrestlers at Oklahoma A. and M. college are on their toes. trying for eight places Coach E. C. Gallagher wui nil in choosing tne Cowboy team to enter the two na tional tournaments this spring the national collegiate athletic as sociation event on March 27 and 28, at Brown university, Provid ence, ft. I., and the American ama teur athletic union championships. April 8, 9 and 10, at Grand Rapids, Mich. Although the regular season has been finished, marking the close of a decade of consecutive dual meet victories for the Aggies, the thirty grapplers have not broken training and are practicing daily. Start Challenge Matches. Challenge matches through which Gallagher will selcet the eight men for the trips east and north will be started next wecK. In reality, the choices are made by the wrest lers themselves, as Gallagher in sists that the No. 1 man in each of the eight weight classes must de fend his position against all the challengers. The eight ranking Aggie matmen now are Andy Hesser, 118 pounds; Bobbv Pearce, 126; John Divine. 135: 'Walter Young, 145; LeRoy McGuirk. 155: Capt. Jack VanBeb ber. 165: Conrad Caldwell, 175, and Joe McCrary, heavyweight. Dotter is Out. Chester Dotter, regular 175 pounder in the regular season, is out because of an injury- Cald well, who has appeared as a heavy weight in most of the matches, will be reduced to fill the light heavyweight berth. Strongest competition in the challenges is expected in the 145- i pound class. No. 1 ranking now be- j WISCONSIN 0 GETS NEW RADIO MATERIAL Equipment Makes WHA Most Powerful Madison Station. Additional new equipment re cently provided for WHA, the Uni versity of Wisconsin radio station, has made this station the most powerful of the Madison units. With 750 watts at its disposal, a 50 percent increase, the university station, is now in a position to assume a prominent place in the Wisconsin radio field, for its lane of 940 kilocycles is a favorable one. To keep pace with the mechan ical efficiency of the station, H. B. McCarty, newly appointed direc tor, is planning to develop the programs acocrdingly. Among other ventures in the way of serviceable programs planned for the near future are a series especially interesting to par ents of University of Wisconsin students, and a vocational guid ance series. The exact nature of these programs will be announced later. The increased power that WHA now enjoys is especially favorable to the reception of farm and home programs sent out at midday when reception in the outlying regions of the state is more dif ficult. These programs of great value to agricultural interests will be continued at a greater advantage. Engineering Students Still Work on Nine Hour Day Basis. The general impression created by talkies of alleged college lire that the college student spends his days annoying the fac. Uy and his nights roistering over the country side will have to be revised in the light of an investigation recently made Into the working hours of en gineering students at the Univer sity of Wisconsin, Figures collected by the faculty show that the engineering student is still on the basis of a nine hour day and a six day week. The faculty of the college of en gineering last spring sampled the working hours of the students, and a special committee, studied the re sults and prepared a report that has just been released. The report shows that in the sophomore year the students av erage from 48 to 54 hours a week spent in class room and in outside preparation. Different courses make varied demands upon the students time. In the junior year the averages range from 50 to 62 hours. The committee recommends that time requirements be kept witiiin the limit of 52 hours a week, which is considered a rea sonable upper limit, HARASS GRANTS REQUEST Kansas Coach Co-Operates With California Head For Movies. LAWRENCE, Kans.- H. ' W. "Bill" Hargiss, football coach at the University of Kansas, has been asked if it will be agreeable to him for a representative of the University of Southern California to call for the purpose of obtain ing material for an educational scries of movies to be made tnis spring. The request came from Coach Howard Jones of Califorms. Hargiss has replied that he is willing to co-operate with Joccs as spring football practice will be on at the time the representative will be here. This film will take into consid eration the various types of foot ball as it is played in the differ ent sections of the United States and will appear as a series shov ing the different styles of gridiron tactics as used by the colleges of America. Today's Special Wed. ) Bmana Testette Head Lettuce with Dressing Any Sc Drink ALSO FOUR OTHER SPECIALS HECTORS 1- and P 25' r 1 1 jAlTsousUni ISS SUBJECT MARCH 8 I "The Organization of the Self T t t t !? Art Craft Press Under New Management L6465 M3 Little Bldg. llead'j'iiiirters for Sociul Stationery. Menus. Pine, ('a nls. Programs. Fiat & Sorority Papers, in fact, everything the student nec.ls in the printing lino. Charlie Jones, Mgr. The height of something or other is the case of a newspaper correspondent who wired the story of the medical convention to the Chris tian Science Monitor. 200 BOYS WILL VIE MORNING MAIL Wfl aif not condemning Panhellenic board. We are a jijilauding them for their evident inten tion to set. To mske a practical code from the present system will be hard to do. We wish the board luek. Jt mav succeed. So Tired of It All! TO T11K KblTOf!: "Whv ix it that everv last one nf the di. lend ers of compulsory drill stand up and shoiil :! 'f of this ?? i . . i I clasKes. have eimnjiiimsiii. una raie oji i liirdi iriigui : Examinations Are Planned j For Graduating High School Men. LAWRENCE. Kan.-More than t 200 names of Kansas bovs. mem- ; year's graduating , been submitted to : the Summerfield scholarship corn- about the '"great Russian menace.' instead nfmltlte at the university for con-! Chicago civic opera coining soon ihe usual "SJy dear, wasn't it woiid' rfiill ! it eame as anything else but world-J.imous opera, wc wonder how it would be received . . . On eujting classes: "There is no such thing as eutting," one instructor reported the dean of men as saying. Dean, where have you been? Exposing Our Ignorance. "We dislike extremely to appear ignorant. Nevertheless, we are about to do that very thing. -During the past few weeks, a pile of student letters has accumulated upon our desk. They are all queries for information upon some point or other, and queries for information that we did "riot have. We have decided, however, to print a resume of the lot. It will rather arguing the merits of the dn!' ipiestion its-J . They all say communism is directly related to the anudrill agitation that is being felt over the United fetatei, and let it go at that. They offfer carloads of anti-Hed propaganda, and not one ounce of anti-elective drill matter. Did .someone so fill 1hcm up with Red-menace fear over in the military department that they think i'ue whole government of the country will fall if Ihe University of Nebraska decides in a sensible and sane manner that elective drill is better in the school than compulsory! The colonel himself said he could not prove the. effect of any communistic influence. It's evident h- just a wild idea that is instilled into all advanced course R. O. T. (J. studenls in j order to avoid too many questions. Why they (all soak it up is beyond me. Lxpect i Time was. perhaps, when the Auurican pub- I' i lie fimlil he e.-iuilv tri-cn in nv kurt. of action desired by a simple waving of the flag, or a single shout of ''Red! Communist! Russian menace!" We hope, for the future of civiliza tion, that the time is past. "We are reasonably certain that it is. Today should be an age of reasou. If the world advances sufficiently to reason for itself, rather than accept stray militaristic propaganda, there is no reason to expect that there will be another war. Connections traced between communists of Russia and sane American pacifists are in tended merely for those unfortunate individ uals who cannot reason for themselves. They are used as an emotional appeal, to persons who have no intelligence with which to accept or reject a reasonable statement. Knough of it, in a college daily. It's a silly waste of space. A .SENIOR, federation for the ten or more t scholarships to be awarded for : next year. Preliminary examinations will be held at Lawrence, Parsons. Wicb- i ita, Great Bend, Concordia and . Hoxie, and from the 200 prelimin ary candidates a group of about fifty will be selected to come to the university for final examina tion. First Summerfield scholarships were awarded in the fall of 3929, to ten boys, and eleven more were selected last fall. The scholarships, established by Solon Summerfield, New York manufacturer, and Kansas univer sity alumnus, provide necessary ex panse money for a four-year college course for outstanding boys of Kansas. When the plan is fully in opera tion, about forty boys each year will be receiving the scholarship. Mr. Summerfield has provided a fund which will continue Indefin itely to provide for the scholar ships. ft ' i I P I r. i i After the Party or Show There'i Just ONE PLACE TO CO TASTY PASTRY SHOP Hotel Cornhusker Ask for the 1 VfpJV Nebraskan Jf ii NeLraskan ads have brought results to others and they can for YOU!