The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 04, 1932, Image 1

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    Daily Nebraskan
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
TPf
Jul
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VOL. XXXI NO. 79.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1932
PRICE FIVE CENTS
FORUM SPEAKER
HAS SLIGHT HOPE
OF DISARMAMENT
Workmeister Thinks Geneva
Conference Doomed to
Failure.
CITES OPPOSING VIEWS
French and German Position
Will Block Agreement
Says Professor.
That disarmament is a mere
dream and can never be more un
less existing conditions are radi
cally changed was the substance
of Dr. William H. Workmeister's
talk before the World Forum Wed
nesday noon. The attitude of the
European countries presages fail
ure for the present conference at
Geneva, he believes.
"France by demanding security
has been largely responsible for
this situation," declared Mr. Work
meister. "She maintains an army
of our four and a half million men,
with efficient air forces and naval
resources. Germany, on the con
trary, has an army of less than a
hundred thousand men and this in
cludes her forest reserves. In ad
dition, the industrial region just
east of the Rhine has been abso
lutely demilitarized, leaving Ger
many considerably weakened."
France opposes reduction of
armaments and Germany wants
none but the most necessary, and
these conflicting points of view
will partly account for the. failure
in which Dr. Workmeister believes
the conference will result.
France favors hasty action at
the conference during the present
crisis so that the conference will
be protected against criticism, al
though undoubtedly such action
would be unsuccessful in prevent
ing war between China and Japan.
Germany wants a continuous ses
sion until something definitely
constructive is accomplished, but
as Germany would oppose any but
the most drastic measures, the
speaker prophesied that the con
(Continued on Page 2.)
RAMSAY ELECTED 10
Will Lead Sixth District
Of Alumni Secretaries
During Year.
At the yearly convention of the
alumni secretaries of the sixth dis
trict which was held this year in
Kansas City, Ray Ramsay, Ne
braska alumni secretary was
elected director for the district
As representative from the Ne
braska university, he invited the
secretaries to convene in Lincoln
for their next meeting which will
be held in 1933. This proposal
was accepted by the members of
the council.
The sixth district includes the
universities located from the north
to the south borders of the United
States, extending east at far as
the Mississippi river, and west as
far as the Rockies. There were
about fifty members of the Ameri
can Alumni Council of the alumni
secretaries of the sixth district
present in Kansas City during the
convention days, Jan. 26 and 27.
COEDS WATCH WEATHER
Government Kiosk Attracts
Much Attention as
Line Drops.
The little gray box-like structure
facing the main entrance of U
hall, la attracting attention
aplenty. Coeds scurrying to and
from classes, bundled in furs un
til only the tip of very pink noses
may be seen, stop, look, and then
rush madly to their class. The
male sex aia display an Interest
in the structure, thus proving that
it is not a fashion display. To be
brutally frank, the little gray
structure contains only instru
ments, but they have a big story
to tell.
One instrument tells of the gen
eral weather conditions, and
whether one may expect warm
weather, cold weather, or a change.
Incidentally every one seems to
be hoping for a change. Another
instrument denotes the tempera
ture. Under current weather con
ditions, despite the accuracy of the
instrument, one is prone to be
lieve that it Is at least 5 degrees
colder than Is registered.
Student Volunteers
Start Meeting Again
The Student Volunteers will
have their first meeting of the
second semester this coming Fri
day, Feb. 5, from 12:15 until 12:45,
In the lower floor of the Univer
sity Episcopal church. Mr. Claude
Gordon will be in charge of the
devotional service.
Important Meeting
Of Sigma Delta Chi
Igma Delta Chi, professional
journalism IrkUrnlty, will meet
In the Dsily Nebraskan office
at 4 o'clock Thursday. The
meeting Is important and all
ctlvfl and pledge members
must be there.
C WILLIAM McGAFFIN,
President.
CLUB WILLJJEAR ALEXIS
Instructor to Speak Before
Lutheran Student Group
On Feb. 5.
The Lutheran club of the uni
versity will rr.eet Friday evening,
Feb. 5, at 8:15 in room 203 of the
Temple building. Dr. J. E. Alexis,
professor of romance languages, is
the evening speaker. The program
will include music, games and re
frerhments. Committee chairmen are as fol
lows: Program, Louise Peckham;
refreshments, Lyle Haack; enter
tainment, Marvin Trautwein.
The first of a series of eight dis
cussion group meetings by Luth
eran students will be held Monday
night, Feb. 8, at 7:15 in room 203,
Temple building. Topics of prac
tical interest to students will be
considered under the leadership of
Relnhold Carlson, Lutheran stu
dent secretary.
FIRST CLASS RATING IS
'31
Classed Among Second Best,
Minnesota Department
Of Journalism.
K. GAMMILL EDITS BOOK
The Cornhusker for the 1930-31
school year, edited by Kenneth
Gammill, has been given "First
Class Honor Rating" by the Na
tional Scholastic Press association
of the department of journalism of
the University of Minnesota. The
1931 AU-American Yearbook Criti
cal Service classed the Nebraska
annual among the second best pub
lications of its kind for that year.
The judging of the yearbooks is
based on nine considerations,
among which are the plan of the
book and the theme, the organiza
tions, the activities, the school life,
the editing and makeup, the me
chanical considerations and the fi
nancial status. The Cornhusker
was rated as perfect for its plan
and theme and for its financial
status and as nearly perfect for its
school life, mechanical considera
tions, and organizations. Out of a
possible 1,000 points, the Corn
husker was given 895.
The National Scholastic Press
association has been in existence
at the University of Minnesota
since 1921 and has published nu
merous manuals and score books
for editors and staffs of year
books, scholastic newspapers and
scholastic magazines.
Winter Going Back
To Normal as Cold
Weather Predicted
A report from the government
weather bureau indicates that the
temperature this year is much
lower than at the same time last
winter. T. A. Blair, meteorologist.
states that last winter no zero
temperature bad been experienced
in February.
The weather thus far this win
ter indicates that a return to nor
mal temperatures will undoubtedly
occur. During February last year
the maximum temperature was 52
and the minimum 31, and in all
the month was much warmer than
usual. The weather forecast for
today, according to a report from
Mr. Blair, is "very little change in
temperature and continued cloud
iness." MARK PARKER IS
CONFINED IN PEN
FOR FIVE YEARS
A five year term in the Minne
sota state reformatory was the
sentence recently given Mark C.
Parker, former University of Ne
braska student, when tried at
Minneapolis on a charge of cash
ing a forged check. Members of
the Wisconsin branch of the Delta
Upsilon fraternity were responsi
ble for his arrest.
Department Gels Many
Requests for Material
The geography department has
been receiving numerous requests
from high schools in the state
asking for outline materials and
suggestions for a more effective
teaching of the geographic phases
of their local environments, ac
cording to Dr. Nels A. Bengston,
head of the department. The de
partment has been answering in
detail and with the materials
available on local geographic
aspects.
Financial Worries Bother Coeds Who
Plan to Take Joes to Leap Year Party
At the approach of Feb. 20
that red letter day in the campus
social calendar the Nebraska co
ed rattles her penny bank and re
grets ber haste. But it has already
been done she weakened and got
a date and now that the Leap
Year party is nearly here, she
f'nds ber funds in a discouraging
condition.
Tickets to buy and they cost a
whole dollar and she bears mur
murs that the house is going to
have a dinner first and heaven
knows how much that will be.
Rumors have reached her that all
the- college Joes are planning to
run up gigantic bills scorning the
simple cokes with which they ply
her. And then the cigarettes.
The pleasant smiles with which
she has wooed the "town sister"
with designs on her car have
availed her nothing and there is
FOLLIES MODELS
I'll I CHOSEN
WEDNESDAY
Three Girls From Organized
Houses to Compete in
Final Tryout.
JUDGES SELECT WINNERS
Ruth Palmer, A.W.S. Board
Will Select Eighteen as
. Revue Models.
Final selection of models for the
Coed Follies fashion revue will
take pace Wednesday, Feb. 10, in
Social Science auditorium at 7
o'clock. Three candidates for the
honor were selected from each or
ganized house and will compete in
the final tryout.
A committee, headed by Miss
Ruth Palmer of Lincoln, style con
sultant, and representatives of the
A. W. S. board, will review the
model candidates and make the
final selection which will probably
be about eighteen models. Vary
ing the customary formal presenta
tion of the models as in past years,
a typical campus scene will be en
acted by the group.
Candidates Listed.
The candidates are Dorothy
Stanley, Miriam Kissinger and
Lenevieve Boyd, Pi Beta Phi; Bar
bara Hall, Audred Whitman and
Polly Ann Lutz, Alpha Phi;
Blanche Carr, Dorothy Davis and
Gretchen Gaeth, Deta Delta Delta;
Jean Beachly, Roma DeBrown and
Mary Jane Swett, Kappa Kappa
Gamma; Thelma Paulson, Geral
dine Moses, Aileen Miller, Delta
Gamma; Louise Morton, Lucy Lar
son and Roberta Showalter, Alpha
Chi Omega, and Lola Recknor,
Ruth Duensing and Madeline Wes
toupal, Alpha Omicron Pi.
The list also includes Jane
Youngson, Elizabeth Struble and
Helen Drummond, Kappa Alpha
Theta; Esther Stutheit and Martha
Davis, Sigma Kappa; Garnett
Mayhew and Pearl Holmes; Alois
Johnson, Margaret Sievers and
Marian Veseley, Alpha Delta
Theta; Marian Bartlett, Jane
Rundstrom and Irene Mauer, Al
pha Delta Pi; Norma Ailes, Mona
Humphrey and Marian White, Phi
Omega Pi; Thelma Uter and La
Verle Herman, Gamma Phi Beta;
Ruth Loomis, Blanche Bartos and
Mae Eckstrand, Delta Zeta; Ger
trude Taylor and Mildred Rom
berg, Alpha Xi Delta; Josephine
Buol and Josephine Hubbard, Chi
Omega; Mary Dowd and Viola Mc
Cahy, Theta Phi Alpha; Gertrude
Ellis, Ruth Reuben and Ruth Bern
stein, Sigma Delta Tau, and
Evelyn Lyons, Augusta French
and Evelyn Schoonover, Phi Mu.
Tryouts Set.
Tryouts for skits and curtain
acts are being held during this
week when a committee of drama
tic critics is reviewing the acts to
make a final choice. These selec
tions will be presented during the
style review which will be cli
maxed by the presentation of the
best-dressed girl on campus.
Candidates for the best-dressed
girl will meet Friday at 12 o'clock
in Ellen Smith hall where they
will meet members of the A. W. S.
board.
TRYOUTS FOR RIFLES
PLANNED NEXT WEEK
Group to Pick New Members
From Applicants on
Feb. 10-11.
Tryouts for membership in Per
shing Rifles, honorary basic mili
tary fraternity, will be held Wed
nesday and Thursday, Feb. 10 and
11, at 5 o'clock in Nebraska Hall
according to an announcement
made yesterday by J. K. McGea
chln, captain of the company.
All basic students in military
science wishing' to try out should
turn in applications at the office
of the military department in Ne
braska Hall, McGeachin stated.
Applications will be received up to
the time of the tryouts.
Approximately fifteen men will
be taken into the company, the
captain declared. The number is
not definite, but it is planned to
keep the company at its present
strength. The group will lose sev
eral men for the semester who
have finished the basic course.
nothing to do but to rent a car or
walk. The first has financial dis
advantages and the latter is liable
to prove a dangerous precedent.
Tassels In Despair.
Tassels, official saleswoman of
everything with or without sale
fble qualities, are wringing their
bands in despair and can count on
one finger the number of tickets
they have sold to the affair. It's
early yet, however, and since the
dates are ail made, the tickets are
sure to go. The difficulty is to find
the sheckles with which to procure
them,
Betty Coed may shake her bank
and bewail her poverty, but she
will no doubt let ber house bill go
for another month or so and stage
the affair with great splendor, in
spite of the depression, cold
weather, the ground bog and
Model T Fords.
Modern Portia
P 1
t
Courttay of Journal.
MARIE HERNEY.
Who recently won acclaim in
Pacific coast newspapers as sne
won her first case, defending a
Roy W. Davis who was charged
with beating his wife. Miss Her
ney was graduated from the Uni
versity of Nebraska law scnool
last spring. Following her gradu
ation she went to California where
she passed the state bar examina
tion and began the practice of law.
"The quality of mercy is not
strained." Such is the creed of the
young "lawyeress."
Miss Herney was complimented
on her able presentation of the
case by the prosecuting attorney.
She freed her client on the plea
that he could not have committed
the act of which he was accused
without leaving marks on his
wife s neck and by producing a
witness to prove their marital life
had been happy.
In school Miss Herney was a
member of Phi Mu sorority.
T
W. H. Brokaw, Director Ag
Extension Service, Says
Aid Adequate.
NAME RELIEF OFFICIALS
The federal money available
again for feed loans in northeast
Nebraska will take care of only
those who are financially able to
borrow, W. H. Brokaw, director of
the agricultural college extension
service said in commenting upon
the Tuesday afternoon message
from Washington.
"While we are pleased to have
the money available for north
eastern Nebraska and there will be
a real demand for it, the people out
In the state should not feel that
this money will take care of the
situation," Brokaw stated. Hun
dreds of farmers in the area will
still need livestock feed, food, and
clothing for the rest of the winter,
and the work that is being done
over the state to take care of these
needs should not let up in the
least.
Brokaw called V. H. Petersen
Tuesday afternoon and asked him
to go back up to Grand Forks, N.
D., to represent Nebraska in the
distribution of the new feed loan
money from that office. The same
county committee will function
and exactly the same plan will be
followed in the distribution of the
new money, Brokaw stated. Del-
bert Carter is the representative ot
the extension service and the U. S.
department of agriculture located
in Lynch. Neb., and Charles Car
roll and George Wilcox of Lynch
will continue to function as general
chairman and general secretary of
the committees. Farmers who
want to apply for the money
(Continued on Page 2.)
CIVIL ENGINEERS TO MEET
New York City Water Supply
To Be Topic of Talk by
John Hossack.
"The Catskill Water Supply for
New York City" will be the illus
trated talk given before the Amer
ican Society of Civil Engineers at
its regular meeting Thursday, Feb.
4. John Hossack, a Junior civil
engineer in the University of Ne
braska will deliver the speech. The
meeting which starts at 7:15 will
be the first one held since Christ
mas vacation.
The preceding meeting held
shortly after the vacation period
featured another junior civil engi
neer, Marion Ball, who spoke on
the subject of the Coolidge multi
ple dome dam.
CAMPUS CALENDAR
THURSDAY, FEB. 4.
Sigma Delta Chi meeting (mem
bers and pledges), Dally Nebras
kan office, 4 o'clock.
Dramatic club (members and
pledges), Temple, 7:30.
Home Economics association,
Ag hall, room 306, 7 o'clock.
Pi Sigma Alpha, Lindell hotel,
evening.
FRIDAY, FEB. 5.
Deiion Union, 7:15.
Sigma Xi-Phl Beta Kappa, Joint
meeting, 6:15, University club.
Y. M.-Y. W. party, Ellen Smith
hall, 7:30 to 10 o'clock.
Vespers choir tryouts, Ellen
Smith ball, 6:30 to 11 a. m.
Student Volunteers, University
Episcopal church, 12:15.
Sigma Xl-Phi Beta Kappa lec
ture. Temple theater, 8 o'clock.
SUNDAY, FEB. 7.
Estes camp reunion, Chi Omega
bouse, 5 o'clock.
R. O. T. C. band concert, after
noon, coliseum.
Wesley Players, "The Barter,"
Sunday evening.
PLANS COMPLETE
FOR GREEK BALL
T
Decorations of Modernistic
Trend Announced by
Zeilinger.
BLACK AND GREEN USED
Flood and Spot Lights on
Dark Hangings Will Add
To Effect.
With the announcement of the
decorations scheme by John Zeil
inger last night, final arrange
ments for the Interfraternity ball,
leading midyear event of the cam
pus formal session which will be
held in the Hotel Cornhusker Sat
urday evening are complete.
The sidewalls of the ballroom
will be hung with alternating yard
wide strips of black and green
cloth, stepped up toward the cen
ter on each side where a center
piece will be placed, Zeilinger said.
All lighting will be by spot and
flood lights, the regular ceiling
lights not being used, he said, in
order to obtain unusual effects
against the dark hangings. The
entire decoration plans follow a
modernistic design. It has been
worked out by Norman Hoff, uni
versity graduate with the January
class this year.
Stencil House Names.
Around the bottom of the hang
ings all around the room will be
beaver board stencils of the names
of the Greek houses on the campus.
These will be done in black and
green and carry out the general
design which has been chosen.
Hoff has taken charge of the
decorations and work has begun.
Wire from which the side wall
hangings will be hung has been
put up. Work of actual placing of
the decorations will begin Friday
night following the formal party
scheduled there in the evening.
Work will be continued Saturday.
Following a check-up of ticket
sales at the Interfraternity coun
cil meeting Tuesday night, Charles
Skade announced that sales will be
continued, but will be carefully
checked to avoid oversale, since
the number of tickets has been
limited to the capacity of the ball
room. Skade said the advance
ticket sale as indicfted Tuesday
night was very satisfactory.
Two Bands Booked.
Two fifteen piece bands, Leo
Beck's and Eddie Jungbluth's,
along with three special entertain
ment acts, featuring the Kvam
sisters, Lyle DeMoss and Harriet
Kruise-Kemmer have been booked
for the affair.
Sponsors for the ball, announced
this week, are: Professor and
Mrs. E. F. Schramm, Professor
and Mrs. C. J. Frankforter, Dean
and Mrs. T. J. Thompson, Dean
and Mrs. W. C. Harper, Chancellor
and Mrs. E. A. Burnett, Colonel
and Mrs. W. H. Oury, Dr. and Mrs.
C. H. Oldfather and Dean Amanda
Heppner.
Tank Permits Required for
All Wishing to Use New
Natatorium.
Schedule of free swimming
hours beginning today was re
leased by the women's athletic de
partment Wednesday. Special pe
riods for women and faculty
women and wives have been ar
ranged.
The hours are as follows: Fac
ulty women and faculty wifes: 6 to
8:30 Monday with instruction the
last hour and a half; and 12 to 1
Tuesday and Thursday. Open
periods for women students with
swimming permits: 4 to 4:45
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs
day; 6 to 7 Wednesday; 6 to 8:30
Friday; and 12 to 3:30 Saturday.
Life guard supervision of tee
pool is provided during all swim
ming periods. Swimming permits
issued upon examination by the
student neaitn autnonties are re
quired of all wishing to use the
pool.
The New Semester
Of Professors to
"Professoratorial" eccentricities,
oddities, peculiarities, and Christ
mas ties again for the first few
days of the new semester startle
the unbelieving eyes of the few
rash students who nave taken a
chance on new professors. First
Impressions seem to be ever domi
nant in the minds of the learned
men and many take full advantage
oi tnese urst glimpses.
One instructor on this campus
Is said to have a special suit of
clothes which be wears the first
week to either create a favorable
or startling impression. It is still
doubtful as to which side averages
highest. Another sparsely built
individual wears a dashing suit,
chews gum, tmokes cigarettes, aad
likes Ballyhoo and Hooey, In con
trast to cunveutioual type of per
son usually depicted as a college
professor.
Quaint Individuals.
Then there are those few quaint
individuals on the faculty who
nave a set routins of Jokes and
SATURDAY
NIGH
GIVE MUSICAL CONVOCATION
Feature Student Soloists in
Wednesday Performance
At Temple.
Aenone Poston, pianist; Mary
Hall Thomas, soprano, and August
Molzer, violinist, were featured as
soloists in the thirteenth musical
convocation held in the Temple
theatre Wednesday afternoon at
4 o'clock.
The program consisted of Bal
lade, No. 2, b minor by Liszt,
played by Miss Poston, selections
from numbers by Schubert, Llszt
Schipa, Bemberg, Curran and
0'H8ra, played by Mrs. Thomas
and a concerto in A minor by
Viottl, played by Mr. Molzer.
Accompaniment for these solo
ists was furnished by Emmanual
Wishnoe, first violin; Abe Hill,
second violin; Lee Hemingway,
viola; Kenneth Loder, cello, and
Eugene Ellsworth, piano.
BE
A.W.S. Council States Rules
That Organized Houses
Must Enforce.
SHOULD ELECT HEADS
"Since the first semester this
year closed with a greater number
of girls than usual having condi
tions and incompletes it will be
necessary to enforce the rules as
to quiet hours, stated Bereniece
Hoffman, president of the A. W. S.
board at a special meeting of the
A. W. S. council of presidents of
dormitories, sororities and orga
nized houses. "It will also be nec
essary to see that all girls having
delinquent hours are prohibited
from dating week nights." The
latter is an A. W. S. rule and the
various houses have no alternative
but to accept it. "It is the duty of
every president to enforce these
rules," said Miss Hoffman.
Urge Definite Plans.
It was suggested that definite
arrangements should be made to
elect a president in all houses hav
ing more than three university
girls living in them. The person
elected then becomes a member of
the A. W. S. council.
House rules were discussed, par
ticularly the rule which prohibits
card playing and dancing in houses
on Sunday. It was suggested that
if this was done it should not oc
cur on the first floor of the houses
where it would become public.
This is a Student Activity rule and
comes from a city ordinance.
It was suggested that if profes
sors are reluctant to give slips
showing that a girl has removed a
delinquency the house mother
should report this to the Dean of
Women, who will call the professor
and clear the girl's record.
Tassels Seed Time
To Dress; Cannot
Attend Ball Game
The next basketball game will
not see the Tassels in their cus
tomary togs and section, it was
decided at their meeting Tuesday
night. Since the Interfraternity
ball is that night the peppy coeds
decided to waive patriotism for
beauty and spend all their time
arraying themselves in their
formal frocks.
However, the following Wednes
day will see them again arrayed
in scarlet and cream, cheering the
cagesters on.1
BERTHA DEBUS IS
ELECTED TO HEAD
BIZAD HONORARY
Bertha Debus, junior, was
chosen president of Phi Chi Theta,
womens' honorary association of
the College of Business Adminis
tration, at the annual election of
officers, Tuesday, Feb. 2. Maxine
Wullebrant, senior, will serve as
vice-president, Tressie Fitzgerald,
Junior, as secretary, and Alfreda
Johnson, sophomore, as treasurer.
Gerald L. Pliillippe
Has Attack of Flu
Gerald L. Phillippe, senior in
the college of business administra
tion, has been sick for the past
two days with the flu. His illness
is net serious, according to doc
tors, and he will return to school
within a few days.
Reveals Oddities
Startled Students
slightly stale expressions which
are unloaded on his classes as
soon as possible. Heaven help the
poor soul that sits through them
twice.
Another not-so-sparsely-b u i 1 1
member of our school of higher
learning sidles into bis class and
dalntly but firmly makes the
rounds of his room announced by
the squeaking of his shoes.
And who hasn't Bat through a
whole year some time in his col
lege career led by one of those cold
air fiends who throw the windows
wide when be enters the room?
And the one who never has his
book and borrows yours to find
your nice little crib-sheets secreted
between the pages?
Of course one could go on for
ages about everyone's habiu, but
peculiar is they are, it seems a
welcome relief to have the profes
sor enter class, park bimse:f on
the back of a seat and open t!i
discussion by reviewing the rotten
movie be saw the night before.
QUIET
ALUMNI OFFICE
ANNOUNCES DAT
OF CHARTER DAY
Celebration of Birthday of
University Is Planned
For Feb. 15.
ADDRESSES SCHEDULED
Professors Will Speak
Groups in Several
Cities of State.
to
Charter Day, the sixty-third an
niversary of the university, will bo
held Monday, Feb. 15, Ray Ram
say, alumni secretary, announced
yesterday. As some of the profes
sors of the university will be
scheduled for two addresses in dif
ferent localities, some of the state
groups will hold their commemora
tion on Feb. 16.
San Francisco Bay District,
Denver, Chicago, D e s Moines,
Sioux City, Minneapolis, St. Louis,
Bozeman, New York, Salt Lake,
Spokane and Milwaukee will all
hold evening meetings in honor of
the birthday of the university.
Phonograph records and moving
pictures will be sent from the Lin
coln office for their programs.
Professors of the university will
address different groups out in the
state. The schedule for meetings
on Feb. 15, with the lecturers fol
low: Boone county at Albion,
R. P. Crawford: at Alliance, G. C.
Walker; at Exeter, Henry F.
Schulte; at Alma, S. E. Aylsworth;
at Superior, E. W. Lantz; at Hol
dredge, T. J. Thompson; at Mc
Cook, Wherry. On Feb. 16, Chan
cellor E. A. Burnett will also give
an address at North Platte, and
Ray Ramsay, alumni secretary,
will talk at Broken Bow.
The entire schedule for pro
grams has not been completed yet.
E
TO
MEET THURSDAY NIGHT
War Debts and Moritorium'
To Be Subject of Two ,
Talks Given.
"War Debts and Moratorium"
will be the subject of two talks
given before the Economics Round
Table at their next meeting which
will be held in Social Sciences,
room 105, at 7:30 Thursday eve
ning. K. B. Douglass and Herbert
Casey, both ttudents in the univer
sity, will be the speakers.
The Economic Round Table is a
comparatively new organization,
having been in existence only
since last semester when Lrome
Petre was elected president. The
group is under the supervision of
the economics department.
The recent meetings which were
held shortly before the Christmas
vacation featured as speakers
Dean J. E. LeRosignol and Prof.
Karl Arndt.
HONORARY TOJIVE DINNER
Gamma Epsilon Pi Plan to
Entertain Women Next
Tuesday Night.
Gamma Epsilon Pi, national
honorary commerce sorority for
university girls, will sponsor a din
ner Tuesday, Feb. 9, 5:45 p. m., at
the Harmony library and tea room.
1320 N street. All girls registered
in the college of business adminis
tration are especially invited and
urged to attend. Dean J. E. Le
Rossignol will talk to the group.
His subject will be "Canadian
Habitat." He will also read one
of his short stories.
Tickets are on sale for 60 cents
in the Business Administration of
fice, Social Sciences 310. Tickets
should be purchased, or reserva
tions made by Saturday, Feb. 6.
Don Carlson Returns
To Complete Course
Donald Carlson has returned to
the Nebraska campus to complete
his journalism course this semes
ter. Carlson spent the first part
of the year in Hollywood, Calif,
with his parents. When in school
he was a member of the Innocents
society and Kosmet Klub. He is
a member of Alpha Sigma Phi
fraternity.
Dr. Bengston to Address
Junior High Convocation
Dr. Nels A. Bengston, chairman
of the department of geography,
will address a convocation at
Irving Junior high school this
afternoon on the subject of the
geography of Central America.
Dr. Bengston will illustrate bis
talk with slides made from his own
photographs.
Teaching Candidate$
To Meet With Moritx
All candidates for high school
teaching positions who havs
registered with the Teachers'
Bureau sine December 15 will
meet with the director, Mr.
Monti, in room 200, T. C en
Thurtaay, February 4, at 3
p. m. Those for grade positions
will meet at the time hour and
place on Friday, February 9.
Attendance is Important.
R. D. MORITZ.
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