The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 18, 1933, Page THREE, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18' 1933.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THREE
OCl ETY.
b
GREEKS SELECT NEW
SEMESTER OFFICERS
Preceding the opening of the sec
ond semester of school, fraternities
and sororities are electing new
officers to hold positions in their
various houses. Today's column
contains announcements of some
of the recently elected officials.
Other groups will not make their
selections until a later date. In
some cases major officers will be
held by the same ones in office
the preceding semester.
Pi Beta Phi's Elect.
Newly elected president at the
Pi Beta Phi house is Virginia Ross.
She will be assisted by Jane Ed
wards, vice president; Edith Hay
nie, secretary, and Naomi Henry,
treasurer. Ann Bunting is the re
tiring president. The new officers
will be installed Jan. 30.
Chi Phi Initiates.
Chi Phi fraternity initiated nine
alumni of Alpha Theta Chi Sunday
afternoon at the chapter house. A
third alumni- initiation is being
planned for the spring.
Alumni who were inducted into
Chi Phi were Alden E. Henry,
Pawnee City; Charles A. Cooper,
Humboldt; Fred N. Wells, Lincoln;
Maurice Akin, Fairmont; Willis R
Hecht, Lincoln; Guy L. Cooper, jr.,
Humboldt; Donald K. Howe, Oma
ha; Warren T. Roberts, Lincoln,
and Donald Thornton, Lincoln.
Morton W. Rhoades, a member
of Chi chapter at Dartmouth was
present at the initiation.
Henrion Reelected.
Walter Henrion was re-elected
president of Phi Kappa Psi. John
Gepson, vice president; Charles
Gruenig, treasurer; uon xoung,
recording secretary; Alfred Adams,
corresponding secretary; Harold
Dahms. historian: Jack Thompson,
chaplain are the other officers
who will assist him.
Second Cornhusker
Installment Is Due
The second dollar Installment
on the Cornhusker due Jan. 15,
is now payable at the Corn
husker office. All students not
having paid their Installment
are requested to do so at this
time. CHARLES SKADE,
Business Manager.
land college in Fremont. Her home
is in Emerson. Mr. Grimm is now
enrolled in the medical college at
Omaha where he is affiliated with
Phi Rho.
Mothers Meet Monday.
The Delta Upsilon Mothers club
entertained informally Monday
afternoon at the chapter house.
Tea was served at the close of the
social hour. Feb. 20 a luncheon
will be held at the house.
Announce Engagement.
Evelyn Haase, Alpha Omicron
Pi, and Hayes Grimm, Delta Up
silon, announced their engagement
Monday evening by passing the
candy and cigars at their houses.
Miss Haase formerly attended Mid-
"Long's Trade Slips" are good
for anything at any time at Long's
College Book Store and Buck's
Coffee Shop. Adv.
TYPEWRITERS
All makes rented or sold on
easy payments.
Nebraska Typewriter Co.
1232 O Street Call B-2157
RONALD
COLMAN
KAY FRANCIS
'aim'
Added
Oliver and Hardy
in "Their First Mistake"
Mills Broi. In "DINAH"
STUART
: -m
He Made This Girl
a Star Over Might!
lek TRACY
VELEZ
"ThenHalf
Naked Truth"
Added
Thelma Todd Zaiu Pitta
in "THE SOILERS"
LINCOLN
In Lot at 9!
Indiscreet at 12!
In Bad at 8!
In Jail at 6!
Wotta Day in
"Central
Park"
with
JOAN BLONDELL
WALLACE FORD
GUY KIBBtt
Edgar Kennedy Comedy
ORPIIEUM
Two Are Pledged.
Sigma Phi Sigma announces the
pledging of Laurence Sites of Lin
coln, a freshman in the fine arts
college, and Edward Beatty, also
of Lincoln, sophomore.
Officers Are Chosen.
PI Kappa Phi held election of
officers Monday evening. Louis
Zinnecker was elected president;
Roy Smidt, secretary; Charles
Owen, historian and Charles Wer
ner, chaplain.
D. U. Chooses Heads.
Officers for the second semester
were chosen Monday evening at
the Delta Upsilon house. George
Hutton was elected president;
Charles McCarl, vice president;
Addison Cady, secretary; Deane
Webster, treasurer; Leslie Rood
and Carlyle Sorensen, business
managers.
BEAVEN, ADDRESSING
CONVOCATION, TALKS
OF BOYS' PROBLEMS
(Continued from Page 1.)
ment. Included among them was
first, that democracy expects the
average person who holds a fran
chise on it will and can do some
thinking. "If this is not true," he
asserted, "there would not be jus
tification for our public schools, no
ballot to persons over twenty-one
years of age and other privileges."
Consider Public Good.
The second fundamental re
quires a certain proportion of this
thinking to be directed to the com
mon tax, the public good, he de
clared. Third, the mass of the peo
ple are expected to appreciate the
individual who thinks soundly of
the public good and single him out
for leadership. Fourth, the mass
will then support and work for
the leader for the welfare of the
greatest number of people, accord
ing to Doctor Beaven.
The least developed of these Is
the second, according to the speak
er's opinion. "We have gone far in
developing the scientific, the in
dustrial and intelligent side and
someone must now bring up the
humantarian, sociological or spir
itual phase," he declared.
Doctor Beaven urged open
minded thinking and charged the
youth of today with the duty of as
suming political responsibility to
ward American citizenship, in conclusion.
His appearance was sponsored
by the university council of re
ligious affairs and the faculty
committee on convocations. He
was recently elected president of
the Federal Council of the
Churches of Christ in America and
is the author of "The Fine Art of
Living Together" and "Life's East
ern Window."
NUTRITION CLASS HAS
EXHIBITION THIS WEEK
Posters, Pamphlets, Part of
Display Arranged by
Ag Students.
The Child Nutrition class on the
Ag campus is closing the semes
ter's work with an exhibition of
material on child health and nutri
tion. This is the first attempt to
gather material for such an exhi
bition. Many of the pamphlets that
have been collected were sent free
by various companies, and the rest
were secured at a nominal cost.
The exhibition is intended to
show the progress and wide inter
est in child health and nutrition.
About 200 pamphlets and books on
all subjects, diet, habits, first aid,
child disease and guidance are
being shown. Many colorful and in
teresting posters are exhibited,
some suitable for use in schools
to teach young children - health
habits.
The exhibition will continue un
til Friday, Jan. 20.
Long's pay the highest prices
for your books. Adv.
COLLEGE WOULD.
A couple of Lehigh students
picked up some girls recently.
Imagine their embarrassment
when they discovered the young
ladies to be members of the fac
ulty. ,
Students at Texas university are
requested to throw all waste paper
arou; d the grounds in order to
give varsity athletes employment.
A Wisconsin professor has come
to the defense of the maligned
practise known as "cramming. He
maintains that matter learned
rapidly is retained better than
that gained after hours of appli
cation. According to him all
powers of concentration are at
low ebb after a half hour.
Coeds at Missouri have devised
a novel way to keep in touch with
their dates. They make pajamas
out of the handerchiefs of their
admirers. We suppose the dateless
gals haven't even a handerchief to
their backs.
With only a few exceptions, all
students of the University of Chi
cago will, beginning this quarter,
be subject to the new two-grade
plan. Under this system the stu
dent receives a grade of S (satis
factory) or U (unsatisfactory).
Trinity college has a Braille
club. Evidently the girls want to
get along with their blind dates.
A sign on the door of the dean's
office at Creighton reads, "Get
your grades here" and beneath it,
"Pass out quietly."
A student dance carrying out the
idea of a 49'er barroom was held
recently on the University of Idaho
campus.
Freshmen at Grinnell, college
must take their Friday and Satur
day night showers before 5 o'clock.
The reason for this action is that a
better distribution of the hot water
will be obtained, according to the
council of house presidents, who
made the law.
Y SPONSORS STUDENT
ECONOMIC GATHERING
(Continued from Page 1.)
liance between -big business and
government," "Is our present eco
nomic system conducive to inter
national conflict," and "Is our
present economic system incom
patible with the highest develop
ment of human personality.
Plan Debates.
One session of the conference
will be devoted to each side of
these topics and it will be debated
by two representatives irom a col
lege. At the clof iag session the al
ternative dans for our present sys
tem will be suggested. All the
meetings of tne conference win De
ht-ld in Ellen Smith hall.
The schools DarticiDatine in the
conference are Doane, Peru State
Normal, Kearney State Teachers
rollefre Midland colleere. Hastings
college, Wayne State Normal, Wes
leyan college, York college, Agri
cultura college, and the Univer
sity of Nebraska.
The University of Nebraska Y.
M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. are mak
ing the preparations and Alfred
Adams and Viola Vail are in
chaige of arrangements.
Six hundred fifty-eight dances
were held on and off the campus of
Ohio State university last year by
campus organizations.
Seventy percent of the inmates
of the Minnesota state prison en
rolled in university correspondence
courses receive grades of "A" or
"B."
A 13,000,000 international house,
dormitory for foreign students was
recently presented to the Univer
sity of Chicago by John D. Rocke
feller III, on behalf of his father.
Of the University of Kentucky
basketball squad of fifteen men,
only four are under six feet in
height.
A senior at Georgia Tech took
the same course in the same room
under the same professor, receiv
ing the same grade both times, and
did not discover his error until re
cently. It must have been an 8
o'clock.
Miss Catherine Dunn
Speaks lo Baptist Group
"Social Relations between Men
and Women" was the subject of
a talk given by Miss Catherine
Dunn of the Sociology department
of the University Sunday before
tlie Baptikt SttCent's Organization! I
Spectator Shocks Columbia University
By Proposed Abolition of Fraternities
By Ruth Newman.
College News Service Staff Writer.
NEW YORK, Jan. 17. Colum
bia university this week was re
covering from the shock of the
latest bombshell exploded by edi
tors of Spectator, undergraduate
daily, which proposes that all fra
ternities on the campus be abol
ished. For weeks, Spectator has hinted
that the university Greeks should
not be taken at their face value,
but should be considered as politi
cal groups, bent on controlling the
student government.
These hints were crystallized in
the form of direct charges when
the paper alleged appointments
and elections to student offices
were dictated by a group of ten
leading fraternities, which sup
ported certain candidates as the
result of political "deals." These
deals, the editors charged, reached
a low point when members of the
houses combined "cold bloodedly"
to auction off student offices "to
the highest bidder."
Liken to Tammany.
Likening the situation to "the
sins of Tammany" and the ma
chinations of the notorious "Tweed
Ring," Spectator boldly proposed
as a logical solution that the Greek
societies be competely abolished.
Now the editors are sitting back
waiting for a storm of indignant
protest to develop into the type of
editorial and news copy on which
the paper thrives.
Perhaps they were a little sur
prised, however, at the meek com
ment of Dean Herbert E. Hawkes.
who last year expelled Reed Har
ris, then editor of Spectator.
"I think it is a wise thing to
have this agitation on this mat
ter," said the dean.
Commends Controversy.
And although he would not de
clare his stand on Spectator's de
mand for the abolition of fraterni
ties, he nevertheless indicated his
belief that the entire controversy
should be thoroughly aired with a
view to purifying the campus po
litical atmosphere.
Spectator's world-famous edi
torial policies, which have many of
the elements of crusading journal
ism, were supposedly tempered by
Dean Hawkes' action last spring in
dismissing the editor. Harris at
that time was engaged in an edi
torial war against a student dining
hall, which assertedly served poor
food and underpaid its waiters, but
many said that it was his cam
paign against "football profes
sionalism" which really caused his
suspension.
If the many followers of Specta
tor, numbering both enemies and
friends, thought that a mere
change of editors would serve to
check the crusading spirit, they
were wrong, for under the new
editor, Arthur J. Lelyveld, little
difference has been noted in its
policy of handling all news, partic
ularly controversial matters, with
out gloves.
Consequently, the paper is hailed
by some groups at Columbia as an
enterprising organ of student serv
ice, while others curse it as a
meddlesome, blatant and undigni
fied "second edition of a yellow
journal."
The latter now are wondering:
"What next?"
"Long's Trade Slips" are the
same as money. Sell your books
at Long's and get some. Adv.
A
TEAKS
and CHOPS
tender, juicy and delicious
steaks and c hops . are served
from our fountain S " til 8 p.m.
Try them!
5 Course Dinner 35c
Try Our Tasty HOT 4
PLATE LUNCHES. . 5f
Boyden's Carry Out Ice Cream
Pint 20c. Quart 39c.
B3WEN'S
IPDnarmacy
H. A. REED, Mar. 13 & P
Phone B7037
More New
Spring Arrivals
BLOUSES
1
PRINTED LAW N S
AM) VOILES in
checks, stripe, plaids
and navel designs.
Puffed sleeve. Student
collars and flat collars
in unusual effects. Also
long sleeved blouses in
tailored slvles. Spring
colors that brighten
up! Size 31 lo 38.
Second Floor.
STRAIGHT LINE SKIRTS
'The newest line to smartness in ROUGH CKEPES and
FLANNELS. Styled with low kirk-pleats, buttons down
front pleat and smartly molded treatments. Navy, black
green, red and grey, Practical, jaunty and trig as can
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2.75 and 2.95
Se.ond Floor.
MllerSPam
j