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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1933)
The Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Associated &oUaatt $rrS0 . -m I93J (iWLffrKcJ owimaQ 1934 M- Entered aa second-elms matter at tha postofflct In Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congress, March 3, 1879. and at special rate of postaage provided for In section 3103, act of October 3. 1917. authorized January 20, 1922. THIRTY-THIRD YEAR Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings during tha academic year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE $1.60 a year Single Copy 6 cents $1.00 a semester J2.50 a year mailed $1.50 a semester mailed Under direction of tha Student Publication Board. Editorial Off Ice University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4A. Telephones Day: B-6891; Night! B-6882. B-3333 (Journal) , Ask for Nebraskan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Laurence Hall Editor.ln-chlef Managing Editors Bruce Nlcoll News Editors Burton Marvin Jack Fischer Margaret Thlela BUSINESS STAFF Bernard Jennings Business Manager Assistant Business Managers George Hoiyoke Dick Schmidt Wilbur Erickson 'Jeering at Cheering. JUTUMN'S big collegiate show, football, made its introductory bow Saturday as Cornhuskers Jnill-dogged the Texas Longhorns. Another season, pother team, made a good start toward upholding the tradition of Nebraska grid prestige. It was a game full of surprising moments, fast breaks, and an unexpected display of Nebraska re serve power. The crowd reflected the color of '"football days," and the weather accommodated it self to the opening season over which football is King. There was, in short, a football game Saturday. Satisfactory tho the score was, there was an element that marred the perfection of the game, and that element might well be charged to Ne braska students. It was the anemia that caused Cheering to lack any sort of real fervor. Aside from the spontaneous medley of sound that always (irises from an excited football crowd, yells were Jjreak and without heart Student cheers were dead. Yell leaders themselves may be partially to blame, for all are relatively experienced, yet to them cannot be attributed the whole of the weak ness. Students made comparatively little effort-to raise their voices above an inaudible mumble, and the result was pitiful, for the students themselves toast act as nucleus for the generation of enthu siasm in the other fans. After a whole-hearted and very successful Fri day night rally it was a bit disheartening to find ' Saturday's spirit at such low ebb if vocal results are an evidence of spirit. Corn Cobs were notice able, as usual, for their lack of any kind of ade quate cheering organization, and perhaps they jnight be prevailed upon to exert themselves a little inore. In any case, as things stand now, student enthusiasm, specifically student cheering, needs an injection of something calculated to improve it It's more than a little futile, of course, for the Nebraskan to raise its voice in this matter, for tfter all, we won didn't we?" Unfortunately, that Blisses the whole point, but to convince the student body that it does is in a class with the beating of jflgad Jiorses, for both are extremely futile. At any rate, the open season on football has be Tin, and the Nebraskan has had its little say. On ward, steam-roller of Cornhusker prestige! We take satisfaction in telling you to go on. Oh Thou Pemson, for we know you will anyway. Cross Section Of Youth. rCTTYTTY almost spectacular at times was the ; distinguishing mark of the week Just closed. A Wealth of things were happening, and now on the pause that Sunday affords a backward glance is Cull of interest, for it constitutes a view that is Blmost a cross-section of university work and play. Today marks the close of school's fourth Week, and the first football game is over. What ClW the week hold? Actual schoolwork, the constant business of (passes and assignments, stands at the bead of any juch list proposing to reveal a cross-section of the Undergraduate life of a university. Always to be teckoned with as the primary and fundamental Concern of every student, the steady work of for fnal education dominated this, the fourth week, aa ft ultimately dominates the whole of all the school jyeeks. Last individual adjustments were well out Df the way by the beginning of the week, and both students and professors took a new grip on their tyork as the prospect of first quizzes loomed not Car in the future. ftf the realm of less constant concerns, in extra-,-curricular activities and all the other fields in dent in university life but not formal classwork alone, the week 1 uror that was to extend almost thruout the seven- fiayv period. Football was the dominant noU, and A, movement for studunt participation In the Che athletic ticket drive started tha week wltb a ftigorous push. T GIVES JCTOBER TEAS Purpose to Acquaint New Girls With Work in Organization. The first two of a series of teas to be held during the month of October for the purpose of inter esting new girls in Y. W. C A. work were held In Ellen Smith ball Thursday and Friday. Old members of the vesper choir and vesper staff entertained twenty-five new girls at the Thursday tea. Friday members of the pro gram, office and social staffs en tertained for fifty girls. Up to date thirty-two new girls have signed for membership In the Y. W. C A. The plan is to have each staff of the Y. W. C. A. give one tea during the month of October, and to this tea each member of the staff will invite two girls. How ever, any girl interested may be romo a member by seeing Miss rornlce Itiller at the Y. W. C A. 'nice La FJien Smith hall. Mem bership U required to participate in active staff work. IiELL PHESIDES OVER CAPITAL CONFERENCE Farl H. Bell, professor of an thropo!ory at the University of J"e)ifc..3ka, presided over a confer NRA consumer's attention, and their campaign That Rhodes the week, and nerves. Violet Cross time. Work week, and a was reached in hall Tuesday John" when the five. The list of the beginning food and other on the campus, students; block Climaxing Included unuer opened with a ence of Indian explorers and col lectors In Nebraska Saturday morning In the state cspltol. This group la a part of tN Nebraska State Historical society. Color Blindness It Beyond Relief From Training or Practice OKLAHOMA CITY. Okl. Color blindness Is one defect now defi nitely listed as beyond relief from training or practice, optometrists declare. "Color blindness is caused by formations of the eye structures." says Dr. E. B. Alexander, secretary of the Oklahoma state board of op tometry. "It would be no more sensible for a color blind person to recognize colors that for a deaf person to recognize sounds. Fortu nately, few people are color blind. Many merely have weakened per ception for one or more colors, fre quently red." Besides true color blindness, thrre is a temporary incapacity to establish color, produced by dis ease and occasionally by the use of certain drugs. In some diseases of the brain and spine, the loss of color vision Is an early and import ant symptom and probably occurs more frequently than is supposed in temporary disturbances of these parts, optometrists have found. "Many who are color blind have been so for long periods without being conscious of the defect," Dr. drive came In for its share of in an allied field, the university divi s'.on of the community chest workers entered into for funds. scholarship candidates could file their applications was an announcement early in a perfect contrast between serious ness and absurdity was seen the same day when Mortar Boards announced plans for "Hello Day." Directory copy was posted in Social Sciences building thruout most of the week, and the hall was crowded with students checking their names and addresses. In the military department Junior R. O. T. C. officers received their appointments, as did members of the staff for the year's Corn husker. Yell leaders were picked, and a faculty member of the psychology department advised the reading of detective stories to soothe Jangling The Nebraskan presented the ffrst issue of its new rotogravure section on Sunday, and the next day coliseum drapes were glimpsed for the first on the decorations progressed all climax to early Tassel ticket sales a rally at Carrie Bell Raymond evening. The same evening the Interfraternity council met and passed drastic reorganization plans, and the Interclub council took steps to perfect its organization for the year. John K. Selleck, ath letic department head, was revealed as "Uncle Tassels cheered him at one of their noon pep luncheons. Tuesday brought the total of fraternity houses reporting robberies to delegates to the new alumni Inter fraternity council was released Wednesday, and on the same day it was learned that plans were under way to provide Junior chamber of commerce mem bership for men belonging to the commercial club on the campus. Work on Cornhusker picture-taking began, and Prof. E. F. Schramm was elected to represent the Nebraska Interfraternity council at the national Greek meeting in Chicago over the coming week-end. Intramurals got under way with of soccer games, and the Ag col lege's dairy cattle Judging team placed ninth in an intercollegiate contest at Waterloo, la. Student council meeting brought announcement that election of Junior and senior class officers and the honorary colonel will be held Oct 24, and the University Players announced the cast for their first play, opening Monday. gO it went thruout the week. The first rally was held; an administrative order pointed out that petty supplies, could not be sold while some protest was made by seat reservations in the stadium were drawn Thursday night; freshmen were re minded to wear their red caps, and the brown derby was awarded by law freshmen. the whole turmoil of activity, the week-end brought the first ag mixer, several house parties, and of course above all the Nebraska- Texas football game. , It's not a fair sample of a university week, perhaps, for some of the things happening come only once during the year. But the review of this last period, the fourth week of school, approaches a glance at the campus life confused and intense. The week, like all the other weeks, was charged with a pulsing fervor that is the mark of the under graduate, the eternal youth. Wanted: Able Seniors. YITH the Interfraternity council reorganization at least approved, the next step for the Greek chapters is selection of the senior men who are to represent them on the revitalized council. With out careful selection of able men the whole scheme fails to fulfill its purpose to the best advantage and the council is left not much better off than it was before. Each fraternity chapter, then, has the respon sibility of naming for its delegate a senior man to serve actively on the council, and a Junior apprentice who will attend meetings with his senior associate and serve as an alternate. Both men, obviously, must be capable, intelligent, and above all elc must possess foresight enough to be able to see beyond the immediate problems of their own fraternity. Both men, too, must be willing to work. Since committees will be filled by senior men they must be seniors who have not succumbed to the lament able habit of "taking It easy" during the last under graduate year. A good example has been and is being set by this year's seniors who have attended meetings thus far, and with that good example bofere them, there is no reason the tradition of idle seniors can not be replaced once and for all by the tradition of seniors interested enough in their work on the council to make it an efficient and praiseworthy body. An excellent beginning has been made in that direction, and to make it a permanent part of council work it Is only necessary that each Greek bouse on the campus select for its council repre sentative the best possible man. When you meet Monday night, Greeks, get your men selected. And make them capable uf rising to the new standard that has been set on the Inter fraternity council. Alexander said. "It Is very import ant that a defect which handicaps a person for certain positions in life be discovered esrfy and it Is desirable thst parents should test the color vision of their children from time to time. No systematic test Is needed. It will be enough to see If the children can match colors correctly." TRANSUTIONWILL APPEAR Publish Dean Oldfather's Version of "Diodorus" of Sicily." Dr. C. H. Oldfather, dean of the college of arts and sciences at the university, has received notice that the first volume of his translation of "Diodorus of Sicily" will appear this fall. Dr. Oldfather expects to translate nine more volumes of the work, all of which will be pub lished as part of a classical library. When finished most of the great works of Greek and Latin litera ture will be included, each with a page for page parallel translation. Dean Henzlik Addresses Valentine Teachers Croup Dean F. E. Henzlik of the teach ers college at the University of Ne braska gave several addresses at Valentine during the county teach ers institute there Oct O and 6. CONTEMPORARY COMMENT Decline of the Socialist Party. The recent desertion of the so cialist party by two of its leading members, Upton Sinclair ana wey' wood Broun, is a very striking in dlcation of the trend cf the times as well as an echo of the resound ing defeat administered to the so cialist party in the campaign last fail. For the past decade, there has been agitation in the United States for a strong third party, a party of the proletaria sucii as the labor party in England. The trend of the times has, however, been other wise. In both England and the United States, the trend has been toward a two-party system with a strong liberal party lined up against a strong conservative party. In England, the party of the middle, the liberal party, has dropped out of sight and the con servative labor parties have come to represent the two points of po litical viewpoints. In the United States, the liberals have seized control of the decadent democratic party and the third party, the SO' clalist, has faded into obscurity. Last fall, a heavy vote for the socialist candidate, Norman Thorn' as, was predicted: it did not ma terialize. The masses, discouraged with the leadership of the conserv ative republican party, did not turn to Thomas but to the new demo cratic leadership under Roosevelt. The democratic party has largely lived up to the expectations of the liberal element. Greater changes in the direction of liberalism have taken place in the last few months than at any time in the history of the country. The true liberals in the socialist party have begun to realize the change and have turned to the party which can translate their views Into political action. xne cnarges of Sinclair and Broun that the socialist party has Decome a closed group in the na ture of a religion, with a certain number of persons considering themselves among the "converted" and everyone else being "on the outside," are largely true. This spirit is evidenced in socialist meetings everywhere and in the socialist press. Not long ago we witnessed a Mooney mass meeting in which the tactics used were much the same as those .used in a religious revival meeting. The so cialist party, the answer seems to be, has been driven into a corner and is trying desperately to keep itself alive. The tactics uod are those which are always Indicative of a dying faction. It's beginning to look as though socialism is dead long live socialism1 Michigan uauy. A Pestilence Isolated. Now that the term is well under way, the Binder-Snapper is again hard at work. He sits next to us in lectures and uses this method to notify the already enlightened pro fessor that there are but five min utes left in the hour. All the methods of extinction long asso ciated with the house of Fu Man chu might well be applied to this tiena. Not only does this uncensored undeleted demon get on the nerves of the frantic professor and lead him to believe that all college stu dents are ill-mannered boors, but he (the Binder-Snapper) is also fr blame for preventing us from catching that last important state ment, which will undoubtedly fig ure in the next mid-term. Snuf fing his feet, furiously rustling papers, and snap-snapping, he is in the height of his glory. The nefarious Binder-Snapper fails to gain his object, anyway, for the very simple reason that the" professor ceases talking until the noise subsides, then savagely pro ceeds, adding some for good meas ure. Some of us never learn. Dally Californian. High School Girls Confide in Chums; Fear Their Parents AMES, la. High school girls don't confide in their parents be cause they fear their parents will think their problems "silly." This is the conclusion drawn by Dr. Elizabeth Hoyt professor of economics and home management at Iowa State College, from a study recently completed by Hazel Hatcher of Chillicothe, Mo., grad uate student. Though mothers ranked highest as confidants, only 30 percent of the girls represented In the study put them first. And father was far down the list eleventh among twelve, between the family doctor and the minister. Chu ids were second, then "parents," sisters and teachers. Another black mark for father as the advisor to the high school girl was registered by rural girls, who left him out of their lists al most entirely. Rural girls were shown to prefer teachers as confi dants, tho girls In cities ranked mothers first. Relations with parents was the problem most frequently listed by girls of both classes as major. "Occasionally girls are worried by the relation of one parent to the other," Dr. Hoyt said, "and they ought to feel able to talk with parents about so personal a prob lem. If parents don't recognize this need the child Is left to suffer, often needlessly." LACKEY TO SUPERVISE GEOGRAPHY RESEARCH Prof. A. B. Clayburn of Peru and Fred G. Dale of Wayne visited the geography department last Sat urday to arrange for special re search on geography in education to be carried on during the current year under the guidance of Dr. E. E. Lackey, professor of geography at the University of Nebraska International Peace Is Discussed by Commission Breta Peterson gave a talk on international peace at the Sopho more commlsHion meeting Friday at 4 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall. Cathlecn Long was In charge of the discussion. Dorothy Cathers is leader of the group. Ag College By Carl lo . Hodgkin FARMERS FORMAL. Two big events occur on Ag campus annually. One is Farmers Formal and the other is Farmers' Fair. The date for Farmers' For mal is Oct. 27. Phillip Henderson was elected chairman of the Farm ers Formal committee at Ag club's meeting last Wednesday night. Assisting Henderson in prepara tions for the big student party will be Helen Smrha, president of Home Ec club. The formal is spon sored co-operatively by the two clubs, the girls being particularly concerned with selecting the Farmers' Formal queen. It is no small responsibility to organize such an activity as the Ag student formal. Henderson and Miss Smrha will have their hands full, even with committees ap pointed, for one of the big Jobs of tne cnairman is to keep the com mlttee at work. Who the students appointed to committees will be, no one will know for a few days But whoever they are, they are in a large measure responsible for tne success of Farmers Formal, If every one of the committee, from the chairman down, is alert and on the Job, we will have a Farmers' Formal as good as in the past. If they go to sleep on the job.... 7 MIXERS THAT MIX. Student social activities on Ag campus began last week. The Ac tivities building was the scene of a 4-H club party Friday nlsrht and of the first mixer Saturday night. Ag club sponsored the first stu dent dance. What the mixers and parties on Ag campus will actually bring to the students this year in the way of entertainment and enjoyment is yet to De seen, it depends, perhaps, on whether they get off to a good start, wnetner a democratic and congenial spirit prevails at the first view. And there are many de grees of that thing we call con giniality or friendly spirit. Once last winter there was a kid party, or maybe it was a rag- and-tatters party, at the Activities building which, I think, was un precedented in the history of Ag college. The students, of their own accord, put on special dances, played games between dances, pulled stunts and tricks. So un usual was the enthusiam of the group that Prof. H. P. Davis, who has probably chaperoned as many parties as any faculty member on the campus, was led to remark that he had never before seen a group of students, entirely on their own initiative, get out on the floor and play games between dances. It is hard to tell Just what was the source of all the enthusiasm. Perhaps it was the novelty of the customs. Perhaps the students were Just feeling good. At any rate, the more of the that friendli ness, and spirit, and enthusiasm that are present at parties and mixers this year, the more actual good times there will be for Ag students. THE WEATHER. It's so grand that one almost has to say something about it, and yet one scarcely knows what to say except that it is grand. And everybody knows that. But these early autumn days, with the leaves Just beginning to take on new shades of color, and the days warm and quiet, and the night and early mornings cool and brisk, are one of the things that people can and do enjoy. It doesn't matter if you have a Tackard or have to walk, you can enjoy these days Just as much. In fact, you can enjoy tho excellence of the day more when you walk then when you have to drive. Such autumn weather as this has one of two possible affects on the several thousand students who are just getting established or re established in university. It may make them drowsy, give them spring fever, make them dream out of the window Instead of lis tening to the instructor rave on about simple reflexes, or over tones, or ameobold motion, or predicate adjectives, or coefficients of variability, or bills of rights, or atomic weights, or quilt design, or what not. They decide that the weather is too nice to work, and so they don't work. And then there are students who will be so inspired by these beau tiful days that they will want to get out and turn the world upside down the football players will be smong these. There will be soma students Inspired to work harder by these splendid autumn days, but likely their number will be de cidedly In the minority. And when one is discussing the Influence of weather on the stu dents, the Influence of these moon light nights must not be over looked. For that Is tremendous. Two moods may dominate one as theae autumn days wane away Into winter. The one is a mood of quietneHH, of restfulness, of con tentment after the summer's work Is done. That is the mood of a farmer whose fields are ready for winter, whose barns and sheds are well filled with hay and grain for the stock, and whose house Is well filled with food snd clothing for him snd his family thru the winter. It is akin to the mood that one feels after doing an honest and hard day's work. The other mood is less pleasant to contemplate, tho perhaps It may be almost as common. It Is a feeling of goneness, of empti ness, of lonllness. The year is dy ing. The leaves are dying. The flowers are dying. Everything is dying, and there is kind of a sin ister dread in the wole atmosphere. This Is the mood of a farmer whose crops burned in the hot wind, or were ruined by ball, or are almost worthless "because of the low pice. It is tbe mood of the man who, viewing the com ing wlnler, knows that his barns and sheds are not full, and that his cave and pantry are not full. This Is, very likely, the mood of a stu dent who is back in school with out visual means of getting food ten days hence, who knows that In order to get thru the year he will have to sacrifice all parties, dances, shows, snd dates, who will be lucky if he can get thru at all. . but my" subject was weather, and what I had to say was that the weather la grand. German Professors Exiled by Hitler Nmn Arc Tenrhinn in United Strttpsn NEW YORK. (IP). At least eighteen of the many liberal' minded German university profes sors exiled bv the Hitler govern ment are to teach this year in the United States. Three of them Prof. Otto Stern, experimental physicist; Prof. I. Estermann, his assistant, and Prof. Ern&t Berl, chemist are to join the faculty of the Carnegie Insti tute of Technology at Pittsburgh, where they will divide their time between teaching- and research. Fifteen others, five of whose names are still withheld to allow them to wind up their affairs in Germany with as little trouble as possible, will become members of the faculty of the University in Exile of the New School of Social Research, to be openad Oct. 1 at Princeton, N. J. The New School of Social Re search, planned to open this year bv Dr. Alvin Johnson as an ex periment in higher education with out athletics and otner extra curricular activities, last year had signed un Dr. Albert Einstein, xamea uerman sciential, aa iw mai and outstanding faculty member. Master Citizen's Degree Suggested By Ohio Educator OXFORD. O. (IP), a college de gree of M. C. (master citizen I for young college alumni who make good in public life was suggested by President Alfred tt. upnam oi Miami university in his opening address to Miami students, an ad dress in which he deplored the lack of intellectual living on the part of graduates. "Through all this scathing cri ticism directed toward higher edu cation." Dr. Uoham said, "there runs an unpleasant thought which must come to all of us. Are we sending out into life young men and women who use their brains in matters of public concern? "To my mind the gravest reflec tion on our American education is the pitiably small number of our graduates who continue to lead anything like an intellectual life. I am not asking for prigs nor highbrows, but merely for people woh read good books and enjoy them, who have opinions of their own which go deeper than nsws paper headlines, who take a re sponsibility for the welfare of their community and state which goes further than crabbing about the baseball team and taxes." The Miami president asserted that the curricula of American colleges needed a thorough over hauling. Miami this year opens its lzotn year as an institution or nigner learning. PROF. VOLD JREVISES BOOK Law Instructor Inserts New Material in "Cases on Sales." Professor Lawrence Void of the college of law at the University of Nebraska is the editor of a new edition of Woodward's "Cases on Sales" just published. About half the muterial in the 850 pages Is new material selected and inserted by Professor Void to replace ma terial less wen auapteu tnac nas been In earlier editions. This is In tended to bring the subject abreast of current court decisions, and af ford students a chance to be famil iar with business practices as car ried on at present, besides present ing a more functional perspective for tho application of the law of current controversies arising. GRAIWLICH ATTENDS LIVESTOCK TOUR H. J. Gramllch, professor at the college of agriculture at the Uni versity of Nebraska, attended a livestock feeders' tour of Dawson county, Wednesday. The all day tour, sponsored by the Dawson county farm bureau and the Daw son county livestock feeders' asso ciation, Included stops at a number of farms through the county. POYNTER WILL SPEAK AT PRE-MED MEETING Dr. C. W. M. 1'oynter, dean of the college of medicine of the Uni versity of Nebraska, will speak on Wednesday night at the Grand ho tel at the first banquet of tho year fur pre-mediral students. All Makes TYPEWRITERS Sala or Renl General Typewriter Exchange Phons B62SS US 6s. 13th St. Lincoln, Nsbr. Sunday Menu B COURSE DINNER Served from B to 8 p. m 4CV Fruit Cocktail or Shrimp Cocktail Chicken Noodle Soup Choice of Fried Spring Chicken T-Bona Steak 3 Pork Chops 2 Lamb Chops Pork Tenderloin Asparaicus Tips Mashed Potatoes Shoe String Potatoes Coffee Tea Mlk Dessert Choice of lea Cream or Plea BOYDEN Pharmacy 13th & P Sts.. Stuart Bid;. H. A. Reed, Mgr. The new institution's University In Exile was planned this summer when It became evident that a large number of distinguished Ger man educators "furloughed" by Hitler would be available and could ut banded together in one of tha most distinguished faculties a scholarly student could hope to study under. Here are ten of tbe fifteen who will make up thia faculty: Prof. Max Wertheimer, experimental psychology, logic and philosophy; E. Von Hornboste, musicology, psychology and ethnology; his son, J. Hornboste, physics; Frieda Wun derlich, economics and sociology; Karl .Brandt, agricultural eco nomics; Emil Lederer, labor and social problems; Gerhard Colm, public finance; Arthur Feller, In ternational politics; Hermann Kan torowlcz, Jurisprudence, and Ed uard Heimann, economics. Dr. Johnson asserted that "the University in Exile is not a charit able venture," inasmuch as all of the fifteen could have obtained po sitions elsewhere, nearly every one having had offers of chairs in uni versities outside Germany. mm class ASSEMBLES STORIES Nebraskan Study Group Is Instructed in Art of Organizing Facts. Assembling facts Into a story, with particular emphasis on the writing of lead paragraphs, was discussed by Bruce Nicoll, manag ing editor of the Daily Nebraskan, at the nevswriting class sponsored each Saturday morning by the staff. Following the cooperative writ ing of a story from odd facta, Nlcoll stressed the importance of accuracy in quoting. He announced that at the next class two staff members would demonstrate the right and wrong ways to conduct an Interview. Nineteen students attended the reporters class. - formerbqmsthere dies Dr. Faris Passed Away in Washington, D. 0., on September 24. Dr. James A. Faris, who re ceived his master's degree In bot any from the University of Ne braska, died September 24 at Washington, D. C, according to the Washington Post. Dr. Faris had become a government patholo gist of it .11 .tlonal reputation, be- sei : p" hologlst In the divis ion of cereal crops and diseases, bureau of plant industry. LEATHER AND SUEDE JACKETS CLEANED These garments are difficult to clean propertly But we are renewing them right along When your jacket needs cleaning send It to Modern Cleaners SOUKUP A WESTOVER Call F2377 for Service "29th Year In Lincoln" III CfcS VR Yc OUR personal elephant. Sitting around And waiting To break in Your shoes. Is no longer needed Since Florsheim has cured Those "too-hard-To-break-'em-ln" Bluest PED-FLEX Fhrth,im$ Mvan nsfanfaneoui ond Lotting COMPORT '85V10 First floor a