The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 27, 1933, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    FOUR
ttarb Council's All-University Dance
Saturday Headlines Weekend Events
The Barb council is sponsoring
the second all-university party of
the season this Saturday night. The
joint "Y" party is scheduled for
Friday evening with various or
ganized houses scheduling' parties
at the office of the Dean of
Women. Formal pledging at the
sororities has occupied the "Greek"
calendar during the past week.
Chaperons for
Party Chosen.
Under the sponsorship of the Y.
V. C. A. and the Y. M. C. A. the
annual Get-Acquainted party will
be given Friday evening at Ellen
Smith Hall. Chaperons for the
event are Miss Bernice Miller, sec
retary of the "Y." Mr. and Mrs. C.
D. Hayes, Miss Margaret Fedde
and Dr. and Mrs. Charles Patter
son. Members of the Y. V. and
Y. M. cabinets, who are planning
the affair, are Jean Alden, Helen
Luis, Louise Hossaek, Ruth Cher
ney. Morton Spence, Faul Griff
and Jack Copeland.
ftarbs Sponsor
Social Event.
The Barb council Is planning
other all-university party for Sat
urday night to be held in the coli
seum" at 8:30 o'clock. Wilbur
Krickson is chairman of the or
chestra committee. Margaret
Medlar will invite the chaperons.
Vernon Filley was appointed to ar
range for decorations and Harry
West is the publicity chairman.
These committees will have charge
of the all-university parties which
wll be given in the' future.
Kappa Beta
Pledges Three.
Kappa Beta. Christian sorority,
held pledging service at the First
Christian church. Sunday Sept. 24.
Pauline Lee, Frances Smith and
Josephine Cronn are the new
pledges.
The new officers for this year
are Lois Nelson president, Maybeth
Ryerson, vice president. Jane Ly
man, secretary, and Margaret
Galuska, treasurer.
STUDENTS
SUPPORT NA-
ZISM.
(Continued from Page 1.)
tion in Germany, Werkmeister re
plied: "I would say that the pre
dominant number of students, par
ticularly those belonging to frat
ernities, are thoroughly in sympa
thy with the Nazi party." Profes
sor Werkmeister talked to a num
ber of students on this point while
in Germany.
Considerable revolutionary spirit
was manifested among the stu
dents last fall and in January and
February of this year. Doctor
Werkmeister said. The impression
now is that the students have more
or less gotten away from the first
radical ideas. They feel that they,
as fraternity men, had been among
the first to supply membership to
the nazi party, and now, having
passed the revolutionary stage,
they are already dreaming of the
evolutionary or peaceful develop
ment of the country.
Before the rise of the Hitler
party, those students not affili
ated with fraternities were fre
quently members of some political
party or youin
strong socialistic
movement with
or communistic
leanings.
When asked about militarism
in Germany, Doctor Werkmeister
declared that there was no com
pulsory military drill there. "In
regard to the militaristic spirit, in
Germany, I would say that it has
been grossly exaggerated," he
went on. "The 'Spirit of Potsdam,'
of which so much has been heard,
is no longer the same."
Professor Werkmeister went on
to say that while the marching
Hitler troops may give the im
pression of a military force, they
were organized for pure political
reasons before the party was in
power. In 1920 they were origin
ated as a means of protection lor
the leaders and speakers of the
nazi party.
"They have had no military
drill, and if they march like tol
diers, that does not mean that they
have fighting qualities. A modem
war would require technical equip
ment which they lack." Doctor
Werkmeister declared. Under the
treaty of Versailles, the German
government is permitted to keep
a professional army of 100,000
mn.
The question of a monarchy does
not even exist in Germany today,
according to Werkmeister. He
asked an acquaintance how it hap
pened that if Hitler does not have
roonarchial tendencies the son of
the former kaiser belongs to his
party. The answer was that he is
there, not as the son of the former
king, but as any member of the
political organization. He has been
duly tried, having been forced to
sell newspapers on the streets of
Berlin, and to live in the barracks
with the unemployed. Even now
he does not belong to the inner
council which directs the party
policies.
Questioned about his personal
opinion as to the success of the
nazi partv. Professor Werkmeister
replied: "No part of Germany is
typical of the whole. Some regions
are still in the revolutionary
stages, while others have advanced
to an evolutionary development If
the evolutionary course prevails,
and if Hitler survives this coming
winter, I feel sure that the most
unfortunate measures now in force
will gradually be abandoned. I be
lieve that Hitler will then remain
in power as long as he wishes and
that the Hitler regime, because of
the powerful constructive in
fluence which it possesses, will re
build the German nation."
Kilander to Teach German.
Carl Kilander. who was at the
university in :?28 as a fellow, has
returned to become instructor of
German language. During the last
few years he has studied at Co
lumbia university.
Alumni Organize
llritlge Club.
Alumni members of Alpha
Sigma Phi have organized a club
the membership of which includes
the wives and sweethearts as well
as themselves. The new club met
for the first time Sunday evening
at the chapter house. The evening
was spent in playing bridge, after
which a buffet supper was served.
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Crandall, Mr.
and Mrs. B. I. Noble and Mr. and
Airs. O. E. Skold include the com
mittee in charge of these Sunday
night club meetings.
Rathburns (live
Prenuptial Dinner..
A prenuptial dinner for .Kan
Rathburn and Edwin J. Faulkner
was given at the Country club
Tuesday at 6:30 o'clock bv Mr. and
Mrs. 'Merle C. Rathburn. The
wedding of Miss Rathburn and Mr.
Faulkner will be solemnized today.
chi phi's iioTF
Initiation.
Earl Taylor, ix '12. and Alfred
Gorman, "24, two Nebraska alumni,
were initiated into the local chap
ter of Chi Phi Monday evening.
While in school, they were mem
bers of Alpha Theta' Chi. and par
ticipated in activities. Taylor, now
associate editor of the Country
Gentleman in Philadelphia was
managing editor of the Daily Ne
braskan. and a member of Sigma
Delta Chi and Phi Delta Epsilon.
honorary journalism fraternities.
Gorman, now employed with a
local concern was a member of
Delta Sigma Pi and undergraduate
honorary fraternities.
Home Economics department on
the Ag campus will entertain at an
afternoon tea on Thursday, Sept.
2S at the Home Economics parlors.
Members of the Gamma Phi
Beta Mother's club met with Mrs.
C. L. Shader Tuesday at 2:30
o'clock at the Delavan hotel.
Chi Omega alumnae association
held a meeting last night at the
home of Marjorie Douglas.
Harvard Research Fellow
Savs Students Healthier
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (CMS I.
College students of today are su
perior physically to generations of
students in years past, according
to the results of studies made at
Harvard by C. W. Dupertuis, re
search fellow.
All students living in fraternity
houses at Marquette university
have their names, characteristics
and peculiarities listed with the
police.
The collegiate note in clothes for
university men has gone out. The
latest fall fashions are dignified,
featuring straight and conserva
tive cuts
Belts have been substituted for
paddles in the hazing of freshmen
at the Colorado School of Mines.
seem
9 193), liccm tMins Tobacco Co.
G
Members of Student Problem
Club Accosted While They
Sell Newspaper.
( From
Th Daily Calitornianl
Tear gas
bombs, used to rout
student salesmen of the Student
Outpost, radical publication of the
Social Problems club, yesterday i
not only caused a hurried police
riot call, but disclosed that a for
mer member of the club had
'turned traitor."
Three students, identified as
Frank M. Freck '34. formerly
prominent in the Problems club,
Stanley R. Moss, graduate student,
and a third student as yet un
known, made two attacks upon
Student Outpost salesmen at
Sather gate yesterday morning.
Alfred J. Van Tassel '34. unsuc
cessful candidate for A. S. U. C.
president last semester, and Julius
Rattner '37, were selling the pub
lication both times. The first at
tack occurred shortly after 10 a.
m. when Freck walked up to Van
Tassel, president of the cluh. and
carried off several copies.
The second attack, occurring at
11:45 a. m.. proved more disastrous
than the first, and will be con
tinued this afternoon when mem
bers of the Social Problems club
file criminal charges against the
raiders in the Berkeley courts.
Salesmen Make Effort to Defend
Themselves.
President Robert G. Sproul. up
on his return from Los Angeles
will be asked to conduct a com
plete investigation of the incident,
according: to spokesmen for the
Problems club, who feel that the
tear gas attack cannot be un
heeded. The later rush began when Van
Tassel recognized three men walk
ing toward Sather gate as the
same ones who had participated in
the earlier attack. "Here they
come again," he shouted.
Both salesmen prepared to de
fend their papers and themselves,
but proved unable to cope with the
added weapon tear gas. which
was squirted into their eyes. Ratt
liet suffered minor bruises when a
tear gas bomb, said by the police
to be homemade, was thrown at
his leg. exploding and spreading
glass all over the pavement.
Van Tassel was struck by the
attackers, and thrown to the
ground, eyewitnesses said. He
vainly tried to save copies of the
Outpost, with tears running from
his inflamed eyes, but to no avail.
As spectators swarmed toward the
gate, the raiders jumped into a car
and sped off.
No Official Complaints Registered
by Victims.
Social Problems club members
yesterday discussed the advisabil
ity of swearing out warrants for
the arrest of the three, upon the
charges of battery, assault, pos
session of tear gas. disturbing the
neace. and misdemeanors. I
Official complaints were not
made to university authorities in
asmuch as the club had not had
time to call a hurried meeting.
Consequently, no statements con
cerning the" university were is
sued. That the gas bombs were home
made was the theory advanced by
Captain Johnson, following hasty
examination of the fragments of
glass. He suggested that they
might have been made in chemis
try laboratories.
Prof. W. M. Latimer of the
rawer smoKes
in a pipe
. . . because it is
made to smoke in a pipe.
It is the right cut. It has
the right flavor and aroma.
Granger is what it says
it is pipe tobacco made to
smoke in a pipe. And folks
to like it.
a
TI1F- DAILY NEBRASKAN
j
; tj 1
! V I !
1 -J
Wilbur Chenoweth .organist at the First Plymouth church and
well known in Lincoln music circles, who played a carillon recital
especially dedicated to the new stu dents at the university yesterday
at the church at 20th and D streets.
chemistry department agreed that
the chemistry laboratory facilities
were ample for the manufacture
of such bombs, altho there would
be little opportunity for students
to get bv without detection.
Possibility that the idea for the
attack might have been obtained
from one of the Junior Fane
scripts submitted to the Warce
judges was suggested last night.
A play, written by John M. Eshle-
man jr. 3o and Louise jescnien
'35. had its second ac t climax j
with a t.a ex attack iinon the So-
cial Problems club.
The scripts of these Farce en-
tries were fairly-well circulated
among judges, class officials and :
friends, so that the novel plot
might have been based upon this
script. j
NEBRASKA BIZAD j
DEAN APPROVES !
NEW NRA PLAN i
(Continued from Fage 1.) j
ment back of it, the NRA may do
much to relieve the present eco
nomic distress.
Cooperation Necessary.
"1 agree with Dean McCrea of
Columbia when he says that co
operation between business men
and the government will eliminate
many business problems." Dean
LeRossignol continued. "I think
that the codes, under government
supervision, are particularly good
points of the NRA. and may re
sult in but-iness groups somewhat
resembling the medieval guilds,
which can solve the problems pe
culiar to the individual industries.
"The NRA must be careful, how
ever, that it doesn't go t'o far in
regulating business. The NRA s
1
sensible package
10 cents
tlie totacco that's MADE FOR PIPES
Courtesy of Lincoln Journal.
plans to raise wages and shorten
working hours "are well-intended,
but it must be realized that the
business man will have to make
greater profits to nit et these re
quirements and still remain in
business. Wages are the result of
prosperity, and the purchasing
power which is the foundation of
prosperity must first be estab
lished. The cost of doing business,
if increased is bound to result in
higher prices, and it is doubtful
whether the market can stand such
i an
increase at present, it is sucn
problems as these which must bear
careful consideration and which
require cooperation of government
and business nun for solution.
"Business .-ehools are making
every effort to give their students
the necessary business training to
avoid or less-n the effects of pos
sibl future depressions," Dean
LeRossignol concluded. "The
charge that they are glutting the
market with students is false.
The business school has no control
of over-population which, after all.
is the caus. of much unemploy
ment. As a matter of fact, by
keeping the student in college in
stead of a home and perhaps, in
unemployment, the business school
and college is really doing much
to alleviate the present emergency.
FISHER APPOINTED
CADET COLONEL OF
R. 0. T. C. REGIMENT
(Continued trom Page l.i
Limoln and Charles H. Zicgler,
Vesta.
Robert M. Woulfolk. Lincoln,
was appointed cadt captain, com
manding offic-T of Company "E"
with Cadet Captain George D.
n
o 1
gut
f-9
li Cut
ynrnvvsnXY.
.... I Irthn
irancia n. . -,,
Charles V. Dukeslaw Pwf 0 g .'
were appointed cadet first heuten
ants.
Henry Keller. Lincoln, was ap
pomtedcadet captain commanding
Kelley. Bennett Little and C S.
Welchncr, Omaha, cadet first ncu
tenants.
The following office", were ap
pointed to Company 'l. .
V Camp, Lincoln, cadet captain,
commanding officer, Elton S Ross.
Gibbon, cadet captam second in
command, Richard D. Joy. Lincoln
Carlvle A. Sorenson, Omaha, ami
Leonard A. Tangney, Lincoln,
cadet first lieutenants.
Cadet Captain, Russel V. Batie,
North Platte, was appointed corn;
manding officer of Company H
with Cadet Captain Walter .
Pailing, Lincoln, second in com
mand. Kenneth Martin, Hugh H.
Schmidt, Lincoln and Edward L,
Witte were appointed cadet tnst
lieutenants.
William F. Boeder, Lincoln, was
appointed cadet captain, com
manding officer of company ' I
with Dan C. Easterday. Lincoln,
second in command. D. M. Fer
guson. Aurora, Samuel E. Gildner,
Longmont. Colo., and Willis J.
Rowe, Omaha, were appointed
roHt first lieutenants to Com
pany "I".
Cadet Captain Leonard C. Dull,
Clifton, Kas., will serve as com
manding officer of Company "K
with Cadet Captain David M.
Kirk, Des Moines. Ia., second in
command. First lieutenants ap
pointed to Company "K" were as
follows: William A. Let son,
Aurora, and Richard A Moran,
Omaha, Richard A. Rice. Tekeman,
and Wayne E. Thursman, Oconto.
Leo A. Hill. Lincoln, was ap
pointed cadet captain of Company
"L" with Mario E. Smith, Lincoln,
cadet captain, second in command.
Everett R. Wood. Lincoln, and
Clarence A. Green, Lincoln were
appointed cadet first lieutenants of
Company "L".
Cadet Captain A. Orville Taylor
will serve as commanding officer
of Company "M" with Cadet Cap
tain. John A. Stone, Omaha s
second in command. Robert V.
Chase. Lincoln. Eldon E. Farris.
Lincoln, James D. hTaser. Council
Bluffs, la., and George W. A. Pen
tico, Lincoln were named cadet
first lieutenants of Company "M".
Roland M. Anderson. Lincoln,
was appointed cadet captain, com
manding officer of headquarters
company with Cadet Captain Ray
A. Murray, second in command.
Karl R. Halter, Lincoln and Will
iam E. Von Seggern. Wayne, were
named cadet first lieutenants of
headquarters company.
Bernard Jennings. Lincoln, was
appointed Cadet Captain of the
band.
Workers on the Texas "Rag"
were astonished to find their news
headquarters occupied by the
band, supposedly practicing. It is
supposed that news reporters have
nerves of iron they came thru
with their daily edition in plenty
of time anyway. Life seems to be
just one injustice after another
for pressmen.
Don't Borrow n Car
Good rental c't are available tor
all occasions, flat rate on evenings,
with insured Cnrs and special rates
for long trips. NRA
Motor Out Company
1120 P St. Always Open B68U
SKITB1HKR 27.
Western University
Has First (lrulll(lt(1
L.ourses I his V
Of
LOS ANGELES. (CNSl.
first time in its history, ti,e
versify of California at Los Ant
les is'offeing graduate work,
Opening of the graduate scWi
this fall climaxes a long fighl '
the part of the local adminlsirati,
and supporters of the university i
obtain authority and funds fnr .
graduate school here. As a rPsu,.
graduate work will be offered bv
twelve departments, with a jnijt
of 150 as the total number of Rr8((
uate students this year, a general
expansion of the work of the Sftl0( .
is planned for future years.
Enrollment at U. C. L a this
fall dropped slightly below fjgllrM
for Inst year, but adnunistratjon
officials greeted this with op.
timism, pointing out that Vst
year's excessive enrollment
was abnormal, because the la of
opportunity for employment lendco
to keep young men and women in
school, especially in the pUBIj(,
schools, and that this year, Mtn
the increasing opportunities tor
employment, we are merely retvirn
ing to normal."
9
TYPEWRITERS
All standard make (,,,
rent. Special rate fm lim;
torm. Reconditioned n
chine on easy terms.
Nebraska Typewriter Co.
no no. 12 st. B?'j;
PEEPING
THROUGH TWE
mat with
Perky Polly
riiuVf intlulitinfl ?i.'.vl
in a fil f loir nrn Murs. . ,
ice hrg you. come in nnr try
on something ncu. 'nti'l
Imtlur f fciiy if ?''" I'lir-v
isn't very fat right mw . . .
but flo look. Vom'J fvrl lnt
trr. You'll fcnmr that lic
shralhr silhouette is inure
than just something to tnlk
about. You'll see that thin
rrnsv little hats are not i
nnav after all. 1 on'' wrk
up. and ire'll be happy.
Sans Rings!
Rings on her fingers, ar.1
rings on her toes. But n it
a single solitary ring i. m
her hose. Set that to mu.-ic
if vou like . . . and be sure
to "buy a pair of rinses
stix kings.
1.00
Hosiery Street I loot.
Granny's Grandeur!
Bless our soul if it isn't ben
paline again . . . and its soft
er sister faille! Back again
after a long absence to make
you as swishy as ever yon'
ancester was in New Fro
19.50
lhiid f loor.
No. we haven't stolen the
boot-black s thunder We're
1-jst telling you that Pars
ays to shine in your acu---sories
this fall. Satin hat'.
hnd bags, and gloves a"1
scarfs and what not. We
have them all . . . including
vhat-not!
2.95
ArcrtMHy Shops. Street f loor
It's Twins
The sweater section i
pleased to announce the ar
rival of twms . . this time
in a tweedy mixture entirely
unlike their cousins of tne
spring season. Slip-over an i
cardigan to match.
2.95
Sports Shop. Third f loor
(DD0IDt CO
.TV
Shine 'em Up!
I