The Daily Nebraskan "Be campus conscious" "Read the Nebraskan" Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska VOL. XXXIV NO. 15. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 193 J. PRICE 5 CENTS. LEAVE JAY SQUAB FOR riLT Cornhuskers Entrain PEP CLUBS LEAD RALLY AT KANSAS Hundreds of Loyal Football Followers Will Parade St roots of City in Hugo Demonstration Scheduled for BIBLEIWEN LEAVE TONIGHT AT TEN O'CLOCK Hurling Challenge to Title-Hungry Jayhawks, Corn Cobs, Tassels, Frosh Grid Squad, Nebraska Band, Will Aid in Enthusiastic Display. Hurling a challenge at the of Corn Col)S, Tassels, frosh grid squad, R. 0. T. C. band and aundreds of other Cornhuskers, Cream banner through Lawrence, Kansas, streets Saturday noon when Union Pacific's Student Special arrives at the Mt. Oread citv. o This will be the only Nebraska rally for the important Kansas Nebraska conference clash. But every available Nebraskan will be there, in a pep demonstration that Is expected to rival any display of Husker enthusiasm on another campus. Jayhawks, roused by sev eral days of spirited rallying, vill have a chance to see what several hundred migrating students can do to stoke their team's pep fires, just a short two hours before the game. Coach Ad Lindsay's varsity has Its eye on the Big Six crown. They are anxious to upset the dope and wrest the championship from the team that has swept the confer ence in five out of six years past. Coach D. X. Bible's Huskers, with two cdnference foes out of the way, are determined to add another tro phy, and more than 500 Nebraska students plan to travel more than 200 miles to see them do it. Leaving Lincoln at seven o'clock Saturday morning, the train will carry none but university students, according to offficials of the uni versity. Student Council's own chaperones will supervise the spe cial. Two faculty members are to make the trip, but undergraduates have the entire responsibility of handling the victory seeking crowd. Reports from fraternities and sororities indicate that one of the largest migrations in years is about to take place. Besides those who will travel by train dozens leave Lincoln today and tomorrow by automobile. John K. Selleck has receiveed a block of 500 tick ets, in a special section reserved for Nebraska. More tickets will be available at the Kansas stadium. According to officials of the railroad round trip fare on the stu dent special is $4. The train will start for Lincoln Saturday night one minute before midnight and arrive in Lincoln early Sunday morning. Game tickets, on sale at the of fice of the athletic department in the Coliseum, sell for $2.20. Coach Bible and his squad will leave here tonight at 10 o'clock. E PLEDGE Nautical Waitresses Serve 350 Girls Attending Affair. OFFER ENTERTAINMENT Aboard the good ship S. S. Big Sister, harbored in the armoi-y Thursday night, the passengers. Little Sisters, were attended by the Big Sister crew. Supper was served to 330 girls by nautically inclined waitresses and after dinner enter tainment followed the same ship board pattern. Breta Peterson, skipper of the ship, was master of ceremonies. Reading "Brothers Bereft." Jean rette Osborn opened the program. Jean Swift accompanied by Dor othy Anderson, was in an Egyptian acrobatic dance. Clad in white "ducks" and shirts, Elma Williams. Mary Gavin. Betty Romans, Bar bara Ann Murphy, Lelarine Moore, Louise McGee, Phyllis Richey, Jane Bell, Gertrude Grosvenor and Doris Burnett participated in a sailor dance sponsored by the tap danc ing hobby group, which is headed by Lois Rath bum. Mary Hall Thomas, accompanied by June W'agener, Irene Rimmers and Margaret Kimmel. who sang "Amaryllis," "Smiling Thru" and "Goodnight Vienna." A short pe riod of dancing followed the pro gram with George Anna Lehr play ing the piano. During the supper Betty Van Horne, Desta Ann Ward. nd Helen Joliffe provided the music. Little Sisters attended the sup per with their Big Sisters and sorority mothers brought their daughters. Several organized houses closed their tables for the occasion. rne snipDoara crrecis . cre achieved by a committee nuaaea ny cireia reiemon; uckpis uiMnnuiF'i ny inrraine rjiu n- cock; Rowena Kwenson was i Continued on Page 2.) in : Noon Tomorrow. title - hungry Jayhawks. members will earry the scarlet and FORMER STUDENT BACK FROM CHINA Miss Pearl Nelson, a former stu dent in the botany department at this university, has just returned from three years in Canton, China, where she was connected with the publication of a botanical magazine at Ligman university. Miss Nelson gave an illustrated talk of her experiences in China, to a group of people in Bessey Hail on Wednesday of this week. Record Attendance Expected At Opening Event of Formal Season. THREE TICKET PRICES Committees at work on plans for the military ball and presenta tion of the Honorary Colonel Dec. 7, reported rapid progress in their work Thursday. Three thousand tickets checked out to salesmen, with increased interest in the for mal ball this year, presage a rec ord attendance, it is thought. The identity of the honorary colonel chosen in Tuesday's elec tion will be kept secret until'the evening of the ball when as a cli max to the military program, she will be presented in a novel and impressive manner. Ideas submit ted by university student contes tants in a prize contest to select a new and spectacular method of presentation are being culled by the committee in charge and the winner will be announced the first of the week. A large number of ideas were suggested to the military depart ment this year and it has been dif ficult for the committee on presen tation to select the best one from among the many good ideas, ac cording to the department. The number of possible winners has now been reduced to two and the person with the best idea will be informed next week, the com mittee stated. Tickets issued to company com manders last week have now been subchecked to a large number of salesmen including all students of military science. Tickets are es tablished this year at three differ ent price levels. The $2 admit tance price will be for all couples other than those in which the cadet wishes to wear his uniform, in which case the cost will be $1.25. Spectators may attend the func tion for 35 cents. Each salesman who sells $20 worth of admission tickets will be given a $2 complimentary pass, and those that turn in at least $16.00 wi'l be given one of the lower priced tickets. Downtown ticket sales are han dled by George Brothers. Latsch Brothers, Guggenheim's and Golds, it was stated. American. Colliers Run Dead Heat In Race for Magazine Popularity With Students Here, Survey Shows By CAROL CLARK. Illuming aje. to pnge will) each other in popularity as the favorite magazine on the campus, the American and Colliers divide fii' place as the periodicals most widely read by Ne braska university students. According to several hundred "men on the street," Headers Digest claims a close second with McCalls, strictly a woman's mag-o azine. and Cosmopolitan tying for third place honors. Altho the campus commentators were rather startled by the eb nipt query "What is your favorite magazine? the majority oi mem rPpijed with a decisive promptness wmcD showed that magazine read- injr whether for entertainment or for educational purposes, in a fair iv nnnnlnr nastime. Colleee men , -.- r i i i I disclosed themselves aa being more , Largest Nebraska Band in History Set Make Laurence Trip Showing real Nebraska spirit in the last practice before the trip to Kansas Saturday, the Nebraska R. O. T. C. band made final prep aration for the annual trip to a Big Six football game Thursday. The band, under the direction of W. T, "Billy" Quick, will number well over one hundred, the largest num ber ever taken on a trip away from home. Arrangements have been made for the band to travel on the stu dent special, which will arrive in Lawrence Saturday noon. The band will lead the rally from the station through the down town dis trict from where they will go out to the stadium for the game. "All eligible members may make the trip, and indications are that most of the band, including the big bass drum, will be at the game," declared "Billy" Quick. T Corn Cobs to Handle Drive; Number Ducats Limited Declares Kosman. Ticket sales for the annual Homecoming party will be limited in number due to the popularity of the band secured for the affair, Ace Brigode and his Virginians, according to announcement made Thursday by Henry Kosman, mem ber of Innocents society in charge of tickets for the party. The an nual event will be held on the night of Saturday, November 24, bringing to a close a Homecoming Day of unusual activity. Corn Cobs, men s prep organiza tion, has been placed in charge of ticket sales for the dance, Kosman stated. Members of the organiza tion are instructed to check out ducats from the Student Activities office in the Coliseum. Each man who sells twenty tickets will re ceive a complimentary pass. The ticket chairman stated that eacb man selling twenty tickets must check in his money at the above office and receive In return the complimentary ducat rather than using one of the original block of tickets for admission. Ticket pricj is $1.10 a couple. Bill Usher, chairman of the In nocents committee in charge of the party, stated yesterday that indi cations point to a record attend ance for Homecoming dances. In his opinion attendance will reach new heights because of the popu larity of the nationally-famous or chestra that will offer the music. A number of innovations in the Coliseum decorating scheme are being planned for by the commit tee in charge of arrangements. Permanent decorations with some new lighting features will be in use at the party. Preceding the party, Homecom ing Day will be packed with activ ity staged for the entertainment of returning alumni. Fraternity and sorority houses will entertain with luncheons and dinners, Kosmat Klub will present its annual Fall Revue in the morning at the Stu art theater, and in the afternoon Coach Bible's football team will meet the Missouri Tigers in a Big Six clash at the stadium. Dr. Patterson Speak Before Lincoln Women Dr. Charles H. Patterson, as sistant professor of philosophy in the university, gave a talk before the Bible department of the Lin coln Woman's club last Tuesday afternoon at the Y. W. C. A. The subject of the discussion was the "Heresy of Antioch" and con sisted in the main of an analysis of the book of Galations in the New Testament. style conscious than women, for nearly half of those questioned fa vored Esquire, the sole magazine of men's fashions. Favor Current Events. Current events as presented by Times are favored by many stu dents. Liberty is upheld by a faith ful few. but Colliers and American are generally conceded to have tne (Continued on Page 3.). ICKET CAMPAIGN FOR HOMECOMING FROLIC LAUNCHED for Lawrence KLUB ANNOUNCES PRINCIPALS KING ROSIER COURT Lee Young, Bertha Hausner, Tom Davies, Ray Ramsey Form Royal Ret.nue. 14 SKITS ON PROGRAM Groups Busy Rounding Acts Into Shape for Annual Fall Production. Principals for King Kosmet's court, feature of the Fall Morning Revue scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 24, were announced yester day afternoon. Lee Young, junior in the college of law, who last year served as president of the senior class, has been named prince of the court. Bertha Hausner, last year's Nebraska Sweetheart, will reign as queen, opposite the king's throne, to be occupied by Tom Davies, Kosmet Klub president. Ray Ramsey, for several years master of ceremonies at the annual production, is to again appear as Prime Minister. As official an nouncer and introducer, his keen wit and ready humor play a promi nent part in the show. A year ago principals of the show were George Sauer, prince, Pat Miller, queen. Jack Minor, king, and Bertha Kaussner, prin cess. Announcement of his year's princess, elected Nebraska Sweet heart at Tuesday's election, will not be made until the morning of the show, when she will be pre sented to King Kosmet's court in the finale of the Fall Revue. Fourteen skits have been se lected by members of the Klub for the annual show. Skit masters are busy working with their groups, rounding the skits into shape for the Nov. 24 production. Full re hearsal of the entire revue has been scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 20, according to members or the Klub. While entrants in the show are getting their skits ready for the re vue, KOSmet 1S.IUO worKfia mi busy canvassing the campus in their ticket sales drive. At a meet ing yesterday afternoon workers reported that sales have been good. The show is to be given in the Stuart theater, where there are accomodations for an audience of two thousand. PEOPLE BUY FOOD FOR EYE APPEAL LAU TELLS CLASS "People buy food primarily for its eye appeal, ever, tho the proof is in the eating," Mr. h. r. i-au, Dresident of the Lau Grocery com pany told the Food Marketing clas.i at ag college Thursday, Nov 15th. Mr. Lau spoke to the class in re lation to their study of problems in the purchase of canned gooos. He discussed the problems of the wholesaler in selecting foods which will appeal to the housewife. The whole country donates its most palatable foods to the grocer's stock of canned goods and the bet ter they look, they better they sell, is Mr. Lau's experience.' Tho peo ple prefer the home canned peaches they won't buy them, when they are canned by that process because they aren't as nice looking, he says. The class tasted samples of various kinds of canned goods. FIRS! GERMAN CLUB Oberammergau to Be Topic Of Lecture by Prof. W. K. Pfeiler. University German club will hold its first meeting of the year Wednesday evening. Nov. 21. at 7:30 o'clock, in the basement audi torium of Morrill hall. An interesting program has been arranged for the initial meet ing of the organization, according to Mr. Wahlgren of the Germanic languages department Highlights on the evening's entertainment in clude an illustrated lecture on Oberammergau by Prof. William K. Pfeiler of the German depart ment and a number of songs sung in German by Mr. Herman Decker of the school of music. Mr. Decker will also lead in group singing of several German songs. , All students of German and all others interested in the club's ac tivities are invited to attend the meeting, according to Mr. Wahl gren. Plans for the future, includ ing a Christmas party in true Ger man style, will also be discussed, he stated. MEETING WEDNESDAY EDITOR POSTPONES BLUE PRINT ISSUE Wednesday Date Set for Next Appearance of Publication. Issuance of the Blue Phint, en gineering student publication, has been postponed until Wednesday, Nov. 21, because of a delay in the printing, Marvin Nuernberger, edi tor of the magazine, has an nounced. The publication was to have gone on sale Monday. November's issue of the Blue Print will contain an article en titled. "The San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge," by C. H. Purcell, uni versity graduate, who is chief en gineer in the state of California and also engineer in charge of the bridge project, Nuernberger stat ed. A directory of all engineering students, containing approximately 550 names, will be presented. An added feature will be a humorous page portraying characteristics of various professors, the editor said. Entire Issue Devoted Theme Of Football; Man of Month Featured. Feminine curiosity of Nebraska coeds may be partially satisfied next week, when they discover who is the man of the month on the campus in the forthcoming issue of the Awgwan, which will go on the stands Monday morning. The pop ular male is featured with a full page sketch drawn by Terry Town send. Built around the present student fancy, the November issue had been entirely turned over to the football theme, by Miss Alice Beek man, editor of the magazine. Prominent among the features of the forthcoming issue is a story written by Don Wake, titled "They Gallop Again." While this is the first story Wake has contributed to the Awgwan, its serious nature to gether with an occasional touch of humor may recall fond memories in the minds of many loyal stu dents. Other articles written expressly for this issue include, "Tale of Two Pities," written by Burton Marvin; "The Man Who Spoke," by an un known who writes under the name of Meredith George: "Book Re views." written by Howard Doh son and Jean Gallant. According to Miss Beekman the Gore for this issue contains some choice bits of gossip and scandal among Nebraska's social hounds. And in much the same vein a fea ture, titled "Innocents and Their Broads" discloses the private life for the first time cf members of the Nebraska senior honorary group. In the way of art work, in ad dition to the full page drawing of the man of the month, is a full two page spread of typical Amer ican spectators seen everv Satur day afternoon in the Stadium. Drawn by Bob Pierce with Lines by Weldon Kees. the feature pre sents a realistic light on how peo ple act when the game is in proc ess. A three color cover portraying the theme of the book was drawn by Pierce, managing editor of the maeazine. Other cartoons include sketches bv Thorrtrn and E'eas. A full page for editorials in this Issue of the magazine, a portion of which is devoted to the why and wherefore of the Y. W. C. A. fi nance drive mav raise an eyebrow or two over in the women's activ ity center, according to Miss Beck- man. These features, plus additional original jokes and the best humor from other magazines, complete this issue of the magazine. AMMAN MAKES APPEARANCE STANDS MONDAY Knowledge Comes Most Easily When .Not Trying So Hard to Learn States Christopher Morleyf Popular Writer By Marylu Petersen. "Read detective stories the night before an examination if you have studied the subject consistently during the semester." was the ad vice to students of the genial, mild mannered Christopher Morley who visited Lincoln Wednesday. The popular essayist and novelist Justi fied his statement by savin? that we learn best when not trying so hard to learn. Speaking to an audience of over 500 people assembled in the Corn husker ballroom Wednes lay eve ning, Mr. Morley declared that in his opinion literature or an appre ciation of literature cannot be taught. Mr. Morley deplored the modern, 31 HUSKERS MAKE TRIP TO BIT. OREAD Bihlemen lrepared Meet First of Three Consecutive Conference Championship Threats; Kansas Has Lost Every Home Mix With Us Since '96. ODDS FAVOK SCAN LET Opponents Out for Revenge as Invading Nehraskans Seek Annex 1th Title in Tour Years; Weight Advantage With Coach Lindsey Eleven. Prcparul to meet the first of three consecutive threats to (heir Big Six grid supremacy, thirty-one Cornhuskers leave for Lawrence, Kansas, tonight, where they will engage Coach Ad Lindsey 's Kansas Jnyhawkers in a resumption of their race to a conference championship. Not since 1S9G has Kansas emerged victorious over an invading team of Cornhuskers, but this year, pinning their faith on a slew of veterans and weight, they hope to drop Nebraska from their position as ''king of the hill.'' Big Six attention is southward bound again, for Saturday, on the playing field below Mt. Oread at Lawrence. Kansas, an- Oother conference school takes up KNAPP, '22, RECENT VISITOR ON CAMPUS Dr. Joseph G. Knapp, a graduate of the Bizad college in '22, was a recent visitor on the campus. At present Dr. Knapp is with the farm credit administration, having taken the position last summer. He was formerly a member of the faculty of the North Carolina state college. Besides receiving his B. Sc. from the College of Business Adminis tration in 1922, he took his Mas ter's degree in 1923, and received his Ph. D. from Leland Stanford university in 1928. F Dr. R. J. Pool One of Opening Speakers at Iowa State College Wednesday. HONOR WORK OF BESSEY Celebration commemorating six decades of the modern era in bot anical science opened at Iowa State college Wednesday, Nov. 15, with Dr. R. J. Pool, chairman of the university department of bot any as one of the opening speak ers. Dr. Pool spoke on "Evolution and Differentiation of Laboratory Teaching in the Botanical Sci ences." Work started by Pmf. C E. Bes sey at Iowa State college more than sixty years ago is being hon ored by a large group of well known scientists at the two-day meeting. .Prof. Bessey, for whom the building housing the botany department here is named, came to Nebraska in 1884 and taught here until his death in 1915. Dr. Ernst A. Bessey, son of the university's former instructor, also j spoke at the morning symposium, discussing "Teaching of Botany Sixty-five Years Ago." Dr. C. E. Bessey introduced the use of the ; compound microscope in modern laboratory work. Various graduates of the uni versity botany department are speaking on the morning and aft ernoon programs. They are: Ernst A. Bessey, head of the botany de partment at Michigan State col- , lege: Dr. H. L. Shantz. president I of the University of Arizona: Dr. J. M. Aikman. professor of botany at Iowa State college: and Dr. E. W. Lindstrom. professor of gen etics at Iowa State. Six rooms are filled with dis plays of botanical equipment, plants, charts and pictures. A book describing in detail the microscope used by Dr. Bessey while-at Iowa is on exhibit as well as the mico scope. Dr. E. N. Harvey of the University of Minnesota has on ex hibit a rare collection of 300 pic tures of botanists and plants. A trunkful of microscopes made in the '70 s in the University of Illi nois laboratories are also on ex hibit. morbid trend in literature. This tendency, that of concentrating on the trivial ills of a people, Mr. Morley illustrated by pointing out, to the amusement of his audience, some of the advertising that ap pears today. He said that subjects that receive a great deal of atten tion in the modern world, would have been too petty to notice in Shakespeare's day. He notes how ever, that there had been an im provement in the past year due, in part, to economic conditions. "Literature is the handmaid of economics," he stated. According to Mr. Morley. the lit erary artist, like all artists, at tempts to go below the surface ac (Continued on Page 2.) AND CKEAM VICTORY on itself the hitherto ne er accom plished burden of stopping Ne braska's pennant bound Huskers. Kansas is the champion of the val ley, daring the Huskers grid prow ess on their home turf. For the Huskers, it is the last journey onto a foreign turf for the season, and opens a three game se ries of conference meets that will end with the Big Six crown either tucked away safely in the Husk ers' trophy bag for the fourth con secutive time, or being proudly displayed by soma other confer ence contestant. Odds favor the Huskers by a slight margin, tho they give way in weight and experience to their southern rivals. Competitive scores, however, seem to indicate that Nebraska should come away with another conference win, its twenty-first. But the professors of footballology are quite likely to disregard competitive scores when they figure the prowess of two contenders, and reduce it to a mat ter of cold figures. In such a case, the advantage must surely lie with. Kansas. Their line outweighs the Nebraskans, their backfield is composed of veterans. But very few spots in the line are occupied by men who weren't in there last year, when the Huskers triumphed 12 to 0. As has been the case in every game this year, Nebraska looks to the center only when vet erans are mentioned. Frank Meier is the only starter who was in th lineup when the whistle sent off the 1933 tussle. But that has so often been the case this year. Every opponent, (excluding Wyoming) on paper at least, has had a distinct advan tage, but the final scores in all but two cases have been in favor of Nebraska's Scarlet and Cream. Young blood has displaced the age and experience of opponent's foot ballers. So there will be no mate rial liability on the Husker's sida because of lack of weight or expe rience. Kansas has always had the notoriety of turning out big men, and the Huskers will match speed against weight. In past years this speed has always come out on top, (Continued on Page 3.) E OF Theory to Be Demonstrated By Graduate Student Thursday Night. DISCUSSION TO FOLLOW Speaking to the recently or ganized physics club at its regu lar meeting this evening. Wilbur W. Hansen, graduate physics ma jor, will explain and demonstrate several phenomena of magnetism, placing special emphasis on the Barkhausen effect. Bruce Heater, club president, stated that anyone who is interested in physics and has not yet joined the club is in vited to attend this meeting. In outlining the Barkhausen phe nomena. Mr. Hansen explained that it is obtained by changing the mag netic field in a bar of iron thus altering the magnetic pressure in the iron. This change produces audible pops in the bar which are comparable to the popping of corn, but not quite so loud. These noises are attributed to the rearrange ment of the molecules in the iron, and this movement by groups of these minute particles is thiught to be accounted for by the molecular theory, Mr. Hansen stated. In another experiment the speaker will demonstrate that iron can be magnetized by rotation, and he will also explain briefly the magnetic effects resulting from change in temperature and stress. He further plans to indicate the in sight into the understanding of the atom contributed by the study of magnetism. h ollowing Mr. Hansen's talk, an informal discussion similar to the one held on the galaxy at the last meeting of the club, will take place. according to Heater. In dividual question's will be answered and any new ideas on the subject (Continued on Page 3.)