The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 04, 1932, Page FOUR, Image 6
-.IL .-J Jt tUai - a ova f FOUR THE DAILY NEBRASKAN FRIDAY. NOVUM HER 4. 1931 i a o o li i a t z I t r f t I a a li c 1 1 J e f t ii y F I t :B TEAM OFF F ! FOB CHADRON BATTLE ' foung Picks 22 Players for Saturday Game Against Eagle Outfit. - Twenty-two B team players were named Thursday by coacnes Young: and Koster to make the trip to Chaaron naay wneie o urdav afternoon they will meet the Eagles In the Nubbins' third game Undefeated In the first two starts, the B eleven is expecting its hardest game to date in going up against the Chadron Teachers. Coach Red Young's team has squirmed thru with 60 to 0 vic tories over Kearney and Cotner. Those making the trip are: EndM ArmMroni, fVmlrr, Sun. Tackle; IptrsTOVf, Krlkrdr. Garl arr. Guard) Junllrf. rrterson, Don Hul bcrt. tirrn, .McBvth. Outers: Jonrn, HurrJirni. Barks: White, KMrMfe. Thoma, le- laney. Chase, Bailor. Bkenri. Murllrr. Mlllfr. Services of Lincoln Churches to Be Held Sunday Particu larly for University of Ne braska Students. (Continued from Page 1). held at the University club. The Evangelistic churches will have special services for All Uni versity Church Day with a special program adapted to Dotn me stu dents and the congregations. There will be special recognition of students with responses from student representatives, special music, and messages fitting for the occasion. Rev. William ii. Rembolt has extended an invita tion to all students and states that transportation will be furnished to all who wish free of charge. Call M-3141 if transportation is de sired. Student Speaker to Talk. Woodrow Magee will speak on the republican platform at the voung peoples club Sunday night at the First Baptist church. This is the concluding talk in a series of three on the political parties and their platforms. Virginia Larsons commission will have charge of the meeting. The social hour will be under the direction of Annabell Stannard, Margurite Phillips, and William Banner. Marjorie Rystrom will have the devotions. Rev. Clifford Wallcott of the First Baptist church has prepared a special sermon for the students Sunday. The choir, which is com posed of university students will sing. One section is being reserved for the university students and the Baptist student council. Politic and Moral Subject. At the Second Baptist church. Rev. James McPherson will preach on "Politics, Morals and Religion." After the church service Mr. C. H. Patterson will speak at the noon university class on the origin of NEW V-8 FORD Now available for rent All our ears are equipped with heaters. Don't forget eur speclala and trie new da- nrmaulnn ritM. MOTOR OUT CO. 1120 P St, Alwiya Open B6819 VOTE FOR ft JOHN K. ILEB0CK FOR YOUR TAILOR TOE ALL PARTIES And ever occasion. He promise! and gives you better clothes and Taxes You Less. Hi Platform: Clothes Satisfaction and Economy. THE WELL-DRESSED MAN'S CHOICE Orpheum Theatre Bldg. 10c Per Line Minimum 2 Line rFLere lo Flat TOR THE EEPT meaJa and ttie tent price so to Mr. Luh a. YJA P u Lot and Found rovyx) white roia ris with nc- tae-oa lena. Found In Former Ma rum. Oner may rlalm by calitna; t the Kebraakaa office amd tylr.2 fr tnl i. rorb Pjr A ladwa' t atrf-ll 7y ttrr-i g",--riK. tjmxtrr may fiaim by eaiiir.f at the Xebraj-kan office. rOTTND A ref and blark fountiin tn. 0nr may call at .Vrbraakan IST L4ir hron vuC belC Cail T'r : b-j. ftti'SJi Rrnan and hite Krhrp tnriX. found la Beaaey HaiL r.r - . the new testiment. This Is Mr. Paatersons second talk on tnis subject. All Lutheran students are urged to attend their respective churches on All Church Sunday, Nov. 6, according to Reinhold Carlson, Lutheran student secretary. Each church will hold an 11 o'clock service and a 10 o'clock class for students. At the Friedens Lutheran church on 6th and D. Dr. M. Koolen will speak on "The Joys in Distress." At th trs-of r on l.th and A there will be a communion service, with Rev. G. A. Elliott cnnHnofnn. ,v. V, - i, " "3 service. ' ? r Rubrecht will speak u" -"imn progress" at the Grace Lutheran n K. There will be special music by tuuir ana soloists. Luther leae-ue held at 6:15 at each church with the Luther Leaguers and the students leading the discussions. A suecial srvi u planned at the University Episco pal church at 13th and R streets where a special sermon has been prepared for the students at the morning sermon. raa-innnn. i , o clock. Rev. L. V. McMillin. pas tor has extended a special invita tion to all students. TASSELS DRAFT LAWS L Constitution Is Submitted To Govern Pep Clubs Of Big Six Group. WILL CONSIDER EMBLEM At the meeting of Tassels, wom en's pep organization, held at El- jen fcmun nan this week, the char ter for a national pep organization airong the schools of the Big Six was submitted and approved. Anne Bunting was chairman of the committee which drafted the constitution. She was assisted in this work by Margaret Chevront and Alice Quigle. The constitution consists of seven articles dealing with membership, jurisdiction, elections, officers, and uniforms for the national organization. Each of the six individual chapters will work out its own bylaws, it is planned. Tassels I Instigator. At the instigation of Tassels, representatives from the pep clubs of each school in the Big Six met in Lincoln last spring to consider the formation of a national organ ization. The constitution is the first step in the realization of such an organization. Emblems and suitable names for the organiza tion are now under consideration. , A new member of Tassels. Fran- j ces Rice of Gamma Phi Beta, was , introduced at this meeting. ICAL Delta Omicron Actives Hear Instrumental, Vocal, Program. The pledges of Delta Omicron, musical sorority, entertained the actives recently at a musicale. The program was as follows: Pipe or gan solo, Second movement to Sonata by Borowswki, Helen Joliff; contralto solo, O Divine Redeemer by Gounod, Dorothy Kunze; soprano solo, Come Down Laughing Streamlet, by Spross, . Arlie Jackson; metzo-soprano solo, Pine Tree by Salter, Winifred Shallcross; contralto solo, Sapphic j Ode by Brahma, Calista Cooper; ; saxaphone solo, Valse Vanitee by i Wiedolph, Editha Long; and sevj eral impromptu numbers by Jean ette Arnsburg. i After the program the pledges ! were presented with their pledge pins by Harriet Daly, president of the sorority ,and Ruth Johnston, ; secretary and treasurer. 1 DEPRESSION BOOSTS GRADES Uni President Says Students Now Look at College More Seriously. The depression is listed by Presi dent M. Lyle Spencer, of the Uni versity of Washington, a one of the three major feature in boost ing the universities' grade average each quarter during the last two years. Students now look at their col lege careers with ft more serious attitude. Dr. Spencer aid. Unem ployment has also forced students to look ahead and prepare for the competition of the business world. NATiONA i Decreased allowance for enter tainment ha increased the tu- dent time for studying, which also help to raise the scholastic stand- Higher entrance requirements are resulting in a better type of student. Kr hilarshlD awaras and the comilation and publication of the relative scholastic standings of fraternities and ororitie also tend to put student on the honor list who did not try before. RAMSEY PLANS TO FLY TO IOWA CITY FOR ANNUAL GAME Weather permitting. Ray Ram sav. secreta.rv of the Nebraska Alumni aaHOciation. will fly in hi plane to Iowa City Saturday to take motion picture of the Hawk-eye-Huker game. Ramsay will be accompanied by Boyd Krewson who will take "till" of the game from the ideline- They pln to , return Sunday. j Kenneth W. Brighton, student at,' John Hopkin uninverit3-, this week waa recovering from eriou bum uffered when a chemical f solution be wa mixing in a lab oratory burnt into a uddn fUme Hi clothe caught fire ani h wa severely burned lx-for he was ruhe'l to a nearby ho-er bath. He waa taken to the 1'nion Ma. mortal h'7pluL ' j NONPARTISAN TALKS GIVEN BY PETERSON Instructor of Political Science Addresses Ttco Groups. F. ValUemar Peterson, Instructor in political science at the Univer sity of Nebraska, addressed two hundred students Wednesday morning, November 2, at Luther College, Wahoo, Nebraska. He gave an analysis of the political presidential campaign of 1932. Mr. Peterson will speak again on the same subject before tho Lin coln DeMolay meeting Tuesday evening, November 8. He gives from a non-partisan viewpoint the records of the three oustanding candidates, and points out that never, In the history of the Ameri can government, have the contem porary voting peoples considered the two major parties to be of def inite difference. "This is due to the fact that a candidate, in order to bo elected president, must ap peal to all the various different OCCUnational and color jrrnuns nnrl can therefore deal only in generali ties. f 'isit Our Basement Lincoln's Busy Store 1 1 A Smart Wrinkle Proof! Dust Proof I Moisture Proof! Fur Trimmed With Swagger Raccoon You'll like the "Hirshmaur" We know...Style and Value at Eighty-Four Eating Offer Variety With eighty-four different eat-inc- places in Chanel Hill. the University of North Carolina ia UK.-H.iea, me- siuuenis snoui l not want for variety in their diet, even the most exacting of them, 'lhat is the conclusion drawn hy tho Daily Tar Heel, campus paper at Chanel Hill, which recently rnn. ducted a survey of all tho board ing iiouses, caieienas, restaurants, fraternity house dining looms, sandwich shops and the two uni versity dininir rnnmn. These eating establishments ca ter to about 2886 students and give employment to about 200 more. The survey revealed that ninety-five students are employed as managers. Many Miss Breakfast. Concerning the eating habits of the students, it was discovered that about twenty-five percent regularly miss one meal a day, which is, almost without exception their breakfast. One reason ad vanced is the preference for uleep ratner tnan toast. Another is the saving: affected by going without breakfast. In mott places the question of Corner Eleventh & O Streets S. & H. Green Discount Sporting tosh Coat CA ND does this tricky Coat go places! You'll see it dashing about the campus or town . . . riding merrily in a smart roadster ... or doing a lot of "grandstand playing" at the big games . . . warmly lined and interlined . . . flaunting a big Raccoon Collar . . . that snugs to your ears and keeps you warm. Establishments at North Carolina U money was uppermost and the collection of accounts furnished trouble for many establishments. A great number of complaints were made aoout me poor man ners of students in general. One lady declared, "Students are any thing but gentlemen and have no manners whatsoever." She addel that the appearance of food on the table was always a signal for a free for all grabfest. Another manager stated that all of her boarders had been driven away by medical students. Fresh from the dissecting room their conversation was anything but conducive to a healthy appetite. The breaking point came when one of the would be doctors proclaimed lamb chops superior to cadaver meat. Over $15,000,000 has been re ceived by the University of Texas from oil royalties during the last eleven years. The receipts run as high as $260,000. The entomology department at the Idaho university is experiment ing with the pea weevil, hoping to exterminate it. To Wear Gadabout" Ames Grad, Who Worked Way Thru College, Heaches AMES, Iowa. One September day eight years ago a Louisiana lad, Wallace C. Walker, drove onto the Iowa State college campus in tent upon acquiring an engineer ing education. He came in a stripped flivver he called "Miss Be havior." The trades and Industries course, now reorganized as indus trial arts, attracted him and he en rolled in It. tte nan iiuluwk in ins iavor au a prospective college student ex cept an irrespressible desire to learn. No high school diploma lurked under his arm. He had no preparatory school credits on file in the registrar's office. Without a cent in his pockets he settled down to the serious busi ness or tinuing a way oi eating regularly. He washed dishes for his meals and performed old jani toring jobs for his room. Mean while he made an excellent record in class and laboratory work. Several days ago, Walker, this same boy, announced his entry into the general contracting field in rsew uneans unuer nis own name, at a time when every ad vertisement for new construction brings a flood of bids which fairly swamp the engineers. He left the Stamps Are Always a Substantial Saving Here! I Jung O -7 Top As Contractor safe haven of a partnership, one ho had acquired without canital th years ago in tho contracting fin of J. V. & R. T. Burkes, inc.. t branch out for himself. Between his departure from Iowa State with Pull man fare paid ? .Nw "rleana by the company that hired him while still in colle-'a and his contracting partnerslifn. he worked on the construction of the funiod Lake Pontchatrnin bridge. First he was a concrete in spector. Then he advanced rapidly until he was offered, a partnership with the Burkes brothers. Varsitv Caie Plate Lunch 25c You'll Like W 1127 R 0 fl(tnl Section m GOLD'S Basement