The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 13, 1935, Image 1

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Daily
N EBRASK
campus I 1L1h
AN;
"Be
Read the
Nebraskan"
conscious jfv w i
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
VOL. XXXIV NO. 86.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1933.
PRICE 5 CENTS.
10 AND 1 1 0'CLOCK
CLASSES LET OUT
FOR CHARTER DAY
University Grants Honorary
Degrees at Celebration
Friday.
SENATOR IMORRIS SPEAKS
Several Thousand Students,
Faculty, Alumni,
Expected.
Classes meetincr at 10 and 11
o'clock will be dismissed Fri
day, Feb. 15, in ovder that stu
dents may attend the sixty
sixth charter day celebration oC
the school to be held at 10:30
o'clock In the coliseum, according
to university officials. Senator
George W. Norris, who has been
scheduled to participate in the cel
ebration, will talk on matters of
political and public interest.
Senator Norris will also be one
of three persons who will receive
an honorary degree from the uni
versity at the exercises. The other
two who wil be granted the hono
rary Doctor of Laws degree in
recognition of their work for Ne
braska are Dr. S. Avery and J. W.
Crabtree.
Dr. Avery is recognized as an
educator and university adminis
trator, and also for his work in
chemical research, his scientific
articles, and because of his dis
tinctive work as a teacher. He was
chancellor of the university for
nineteen years, during its period of
greatest growth.
Crabtree is known as an edu
cator, scnool administrator, and
secretary for many years of the
National Educational association.
Now serving his fourth term as
United States senator from Ne
braska, Norris is the author of
many reforms in government, and
is well known as a liberal states
man. He came to Nebraska as a
young lawyer in 18S5 and served
as prosecution attorney for three
terms. He then was judge of the
fourteenth Nebraska district from j
1895 to 1902 and a member of the
fifty-eighth to sixty-second con
gresses from 1903 to 1913. He is!
sponsor of the one house legisla
ture plan which recently carried in
Nebraska.
Several thousand alumni, stu
dents, faculty, and friends of the
university are expected to be pres
ent, at the celebration here, and
thruout the state and the principal
cities of the United States similar
celebrations have been planned by
groups of Nebraska alumni.
FOR PENNY CARNIVAL
r ru r
BOrS ChOOSeS Committees tO
Dfin fnr Annuo) Rin
nan lur wmudi Diy
Sister Frolic.
Committee chairmen
of the plans for the
Board penny carnival
announced by Ark-ne
.Sister Board president,
in
charge
Big Sister ,
have been ,
trs. Hig
' ' r
tion for the annual fiolic.
to be i
staged ;n the Armory, Saturday.
Feb. 23. were begun last week, tho
those in charge refuse to divulge
entire plans
Announcement ot the committee
chairmen includes Breta Peterson,
who. will have charge of a Kang
aroo Court: Ruth Matschullat, the
Haunted House: Elizabeth Moo
maw. Freaks: Barbara DePutron.
Fortune Telling and candy: Mar
jone Smith, f ish Pond; IXiris P.iis
ness. Games of Chance; Breta Pet
erson. State Show: Elizabeth Moo
maw, dancing: Marjoric Filley,
food: Rowena Swenson. tickets;
Maxine Packwood. posters: Max
ina Packwood. Dancing Fingers,
and Arlenc Bors. favors. Tickets
for the affair, priced at fifteen
tents, ate being sold by all Big
Sisters. A special invitation was
Issued to the young men of the
campus to attend the carnival, as
dancing Is scheduled to be among
the main attractions.
PHALANX INITIATES 13
JUNIOR R.O.T.C. CADETS
Military Fraternity
Formal Function in
Rooms Tuesday.
Holds
Thirteen juniors of the R.O.T.
C. regiment were ushered into the
ranks of the Fpsilon chapter of
Phalanx, national honorary mili
tary fraternity for advanced drill
students, at a formal initiation held
Tuesday, Feb. 12, at 5 p. m.. in the
N" club rooms In the coi.aeum.
Those initiated were: Fred
Hawkswortb, Lincoln: U C
Strough, Beatrice: Norman H. By
kerk, Lincoln: Jack Stafford. Om
aha; Clare Wolf. Lincoln: Chester
Beaver, Yankton. S. D.: Ramon
Colvert, North Platte; Carl Ull
strom. Lincoln: Sherman Cosgrcve.
Lincoln: Ben Mariska. Crete: Louis
Schneider. Lincoln: Charles Glbbs.
Ceresco, and Adrian Tolen, Ord.
Dr. Fitzpatrick, Herbarium Curator,
Finds Late Omaha Mining Engineer's
Hobby of Value
i lie soicutuic value or. me
engineer was dramatically demonstrated to Dr. Thomas J. Fitz
patrick, curator of the university herbarium, recently when he
discoverey in a dusty, long-stored box William Cleburne's own
complete index to his extensive
which are now being mounted anco
put in the files of the school s
Doianicai museum,
tion set forth In
bound volume In
own handwriting.
The classifica
the large, red
the collector's
is described by
Doctor Fitzpatrick, an expert In
botanical nomenclature, as "won
derfully accurate."
The terse facts so carefully set
forth in the faded black ink prove
that Cleburne's botanical research
is far above the realm of a mere
avocation. Only an expert botanist
can discover between the lines of
the 482 pages o closely written
script the unr k ble evidence
of the infinitely i ms labor pre
ceding each the endless
plant gathering and painstaking
dissection, the making of copious
field notes, the attention to detail,
the skillful organization of ma
terial. But even a layman is im
pressed by the numbers and va
IM. SPEER UPHOLDS
NECESSITY FOR ARMY
IN RIFLEMAN ARTICLE
R. 0. T. C. Instructor Points
To Fallacy of Arguments
For Disarmament.
Upholding America s need for a
more efficient military policy, and
refuting the prevalent arguments
presented in favor of national
disarmament. Major Charles E.
SDeer. infantry instructor of the
R. O. T. C, has presented ms
views in an article, "Mimary
Policy," which appeared in the
February issue of the fersning
Rifleman.
In defending the policy of na
tional military protection, Major
Speer points out the fallacy in the
arguments of those who desire
complete disarmament and the
settlement of all international dif
ficulties thru world courts.
Experience has proved in every
country in the world that force is
necessary to execute me juag-
mcnts of the court. Major fcpeer
states. "People fail to realize that
the court order is supported by the
sheriff, backed if necessary by the
police, and further supported by
the army if need arises.
Tracing America's military
career thru the many wars of its
history. Major Speer points out
that in this case "wars have made
armies," rather than "armies mak
ing wars." "In the past this coun
try has entered every war, not
only without any army to speak of,
but without any modern weapons,"
he observes.
Major Speer argues that -in
army is as essential for maintain
ing peace as education is for earn
ing a living, fire departments for
protection of property, and insur
ance for security. America cannot
keep the "Wolf of War" from
'i-ne uiior nv ifmnung u py me un-
j protected wealth of the nation, the
'article maintains.
, Ma)or Spepr concIude8 hia argu.
Imenta with the statement that,
I A II rt r'im miT f muat hA aitatalnAl
i rtr fnrre rr
it will fall before the
'
loutrtU'tinn U'Viothnr
,h ( foreign or domestic
be of
oHgin. Strong and efficient as is
tne pojjeg ot America, it has to be
sunnorted bv troons on several
hundred occasions."
LAW COLLEGE POSTS
Harry P. Letton Gets Highest
Grades in Class With
Average of 93 1-2.
Semester returns awaited by
freshman law students for the past
week were released yesterday by
law college officials. As a result
of higher scholastic requirements,
19 of the class of 89 were dropped
from the freshman role. Fourteen
of those dropped will be unable to
reenter this year while five of the
number will petition for reinstate
ment. Leading the ten highest aver
ages in the freshman class was
that of Harry P. Letton with a
grade of 93 1-2. The other stu
dents among the ten highest, ac
cording to their rank, are, George
P. Sawyer, Loren G. Olson. Russell
M. Struthers. Marjorie M. Shastok,
John V. Clemens and Harold E.
Spencer, who tied for sixth place,
Theodore S. Cruise. Pauline Van
Brendenfels. Jack Potter, and
Frank E. Landis.
EDUCATION CLUB
HAS OPEN MEETING
Mr. Beechner Gires Talk
On Community Play
Education.
Pi Lambda Theta, national hon
orary educational sorority, will
hold an open meeting in Ellen
Smith hall on Wednesday. Feb. 13.
according to President Dorothy
Frankforter.
Speaking on "Educating a Com
munity to Plsy." Mrs. Frances Ash
Beechner of the City Recreation
department will address the meet
ing, after which a social hour will
he held. AH junior and senior wom
en in Teachers College are Invited
in Botanical Science
nobby oi a late uniana mining
plant collection, specimens of
rieties of species represented in
this essence of a free time scien
tific pastime.
Every specimen in the Cleburne
nerberlum was gathered by the
engineer himself, in contrast to the
usual practice of exchange dupli
cates with other collectors. Mr.
Cleburne's work took him to all
parts of the United States, and he
gathered plants in every region he
visited. The supplement to the in
dex, which the author calls the ap
pendix, is the classification oi
plants collected in the vicinity of
Cincinnati, Ohio, and Newport,
Kentucky, in the years 1905 and
1906. The collection also contains
many species from Ireland, where
Cleburne spent numerous vaca
tions with relatives.
Although a vast majority ot the
detail work was done by Cleburne
(Continued on Page 2.)
ADVERTISING GROUP
INITIATES THURSDAY
Gamma Alpha Chi to Give
Dinner Following
Ceremony.
Gamma Alpha Chi, honorary ad'
vertising sorority, will hold initia
tion services Thursday at 5 o'clock
in Ellen Smith hall, according to
Virginia Selleck, president of the
group. Catherine Stoddart, vice
president, is in charge of the
pledge tests which precede the in
duction.
Following the ceremony, an ini
tiation dinner will be held at the
city Y. W. C. A., when guests of
honor will include Prof, and Mrs.
F. C. Blood, and Miss Marie Wees-
ner. Valentine colors and decora'
tions will be used in the appoint
ments. New initiates will be an
nounced Thursday, it was stated.
L
SELECTS 30 PLEDGES
Pershing Rifles Chooses Men
By Vote and for Grades
In Competition.
ED D'KLOTZ HIGH SCORER
Thirty new pledges were ae-
lected for membership in Pershing
Rifles, basic drill honorary, at a
meeting of the local company
Tuesday afternoon at Nebraska
hall. Thirty-five candidates were
selected from the forty-five that
tried out last Thursday according
to their grades in competition. Fi
nal selection was made by a vote
of the members.
Ed DeKIotz, Lincoln, received
96.7. the highest grade in the pre
liminary examinations. Second and
third places were won by Bob
Martz and Charles Reilly. The low
est grade of those in the final se
lection was 78
Other new members are Grant
Lemmon, C. Coyner, C. Christo-
pulos. Bill Schneiderwind, Everett
Chittenden, Harold Major, Harry
Hanie, Leo Drennan, George Davis,
Jim Elmore, Rufus Lyman, Bob
Avery. Joe Snyder. Harold Nootz,
Harry Langston, Dwight Lord, Ed
Schmid, Stanley Dolezal, Eugene
Allen. Joe Redfield. Lavoris Rose,
Webster Mills. Robert Shepard.
William Crittenden. Wosley Wink
er, Jeff Broady, and Jack Mc
Kinzie. Tests were conducted by army
instructors and members of the lo
cal Pershing Rifles chapter. Selec
tion was based on courtesy and
bearing, dress and appearance,
close order drill, organization, and
movement, according to Ealon
Standeven, company captain. New
members will attend their first
meeting at Nebraska hall next
Tuesday, Standeven added.
KURZ TO ATTEND IOWA
E
University Professor Gives
Three Lectures at Feb.
15, 16 Conference.
Prof. Harry Kurz, of the univer
sity faculty, will leave Thursday
to attend the language and litera
ture conference to be held at the
State University of Iowa, Feb. 15
and 16, in Iowa City, where be is
scheduled to deliver three lec
tures.
In commenting on his trip. Pro
fessor Kurz stated that he hopes
to see a conference of the same
type at the University of Nebras
ka, in the near future. He stated
that such action on the part of the
university is entirely probable, as
there has recently been a great
trend upward In the interest taken
in literature, art, and the classics.
Morton Will Address
Superior Kiwanis Club
Dr. W. H. Morton, principal of
teachers college high school at the
university, will address the Su
perior Kiwanis club at a noon
luncheon. Friday Feb. 15. He
speaks on "Why the Free Public
High School:"
T
EDI
ON SPRING SHOW
Davies Reveals Committees
For 1935 Presentation,
Given April 1 to 7.
SELECT PLAY THURSDAY
Tryouts for Cast Positions
Follow Selection of
Winning Play.
Nine committees announced
Tuesday by Tom Davies, lvos-
inet Klub president, will begin
work immediately on the pro
duction of the 1935 Kos.net
Klub spring show, which will be
presented at the Temple theater
from April 1 to 7.
Davies will head the production
committee, assisted by George
Holyoke and Clayton Schwenk.
The business management of the
show will be handled by Chairman
Henry Kosman, Bill Garlow, and
Carl Wiggenhorn. Publicity is un
der the supervision of Charles
Flansburg.
Duncan Sowles was named
chairman of the stage and scenery
committee, with Robert Pierce as
assistant. Commercial and busi
ness publicity will be directed by
Frank Crabill. Art Bailey heads
the music committee, and Taylor
Waldron will assist him.
Properties for the spring show
will be managed by Charles Gallo
way, and Charles Steadman will
drect the pony chorus. Owen John
son was chosen chairman of the
costumes and makeup committee,
and Richard Schmidt his assistant.
Selection of the winning play to
be used n the spring show was
postponed until Thursday at the
meeting Tuesday afternoon.
Scripts have been submitted by
Bernard Jennings, Art Wolfe, Wil
liam McCleery, John Edwards,
William Hollister, and Chauncey
Barney. The report of the manu
script committee, composed of
Charles Galloway, Owen Johnson,
Henry Kosman, and Charles Stead-
man was held for further consid
eration at the Thursday meeting.
A fifty dollar prze will be awarded
to the author of the play finally
selected.- -
All Kosmet Klub workers who
assisted with the fall show may
now file as workers for the second
semester in the Klub office in Uni
versity hall. Tryouts for positions
in the cast of the spring show are
scheduled to follow the selection of
the play. Nearly fifty men will be
needed for the all-male cast.
CHILD LABOR STATUTE
Welfare Worker Addresses
Legislature on Work
Reform Bill.
Miss Grace Abbott, former
graduate of the University of Ne
braska, who recently resigned her
position with the Child Welfare de
partment of public welfare at the
University of Chicago, discussed
the Child Labor amendment De-
fore a joint meeting of the House
and Senate yesterday morning.
In tracing the history of the
bill. Miss Abbott said in part: "The
bill was first proposed in 1906, at
which time it reached the floor of
the bouse, where it was killed. Al
tho firmly backed by President
Wilson, a law prohibiting child la
bor was declared unconstitutional,
in 1916, and again in 1925.
"Supporting the amendment,
have been such men as Roscoe
Pound, dean of the Harvard law
school, and Warden Lawes, of
Sing Sing prison. (It has developed
that over 30 percent of the crim
inals in Sing Sing worked during
their childhood.) The large manu
facturers and industrialists have
opposed it.
"A great change has taken
place since the coming of the
code," Miss Abbott concluded, "but
the code Is not permanent, and def
inite action must be taken to pre
vent child labor."
BENGTSON TALKS TO
SCHOLASTIC SOCIETY
Phi Beta Kappa Members
See Colored Slides
Of Customs.
At a recent meeting of Phi
Beta Kappa, arts and science
honorary, held at the University
club, Trof. Nels A. Bcngston gave
the principal address on the cul
ture and agriculture of Central
America.
Using colored slides from photo
graphs which he took himself. Dr.
Bengston showed the customs and
conditions of the present day and
revealed several of the successive
movements of the native tribes.
Dr. P. J. Guilford presided over
the meeting, at which Chancellor
and Mrs. E. A. Burnett were hon
ored guests. The high fifty stu
dents from the university honor
roll of ?334 were asked rpccla!
guests of the organization. This J
the first time the chapter has ex
tended an invitation to under
graduates.
MEM
BEGINS
M
Alt WORK
Reporter Kicks Over Traces and Goes
Wandering Thru Hearts and Flowers,
For Valentine's Day Is Close at Hand
BY ED MURRAY.
.Spring is a time for love. (Original stuff, eh? As fresh as
the Xebrasknirs daily features attempting to make news out of
n reporter's half-baked ideas by finding someone who doesn't
care if he's quoted in the newspaper.) The cause of the cub's
constant gripe, which as you shall see saves the reader much
misery, is based on the sacredo
canon of the esteemed profession
of journalism that the only thing a
newspaperman writes is news and
he doesn't know anything except
that he doesn't know anything.
But bo and a lass (pun) today
the subject for the ever-necessary
copy is St. Valentine's day, which
will be with us tomorrow, and
rather than print some sage peda
gogue's hallowed and rusty remi
niscences on the romance and lace
anniversaries of his or her youth,
we set down our usual brain storm
without the professional quotas.
This elongated explanation is
thought necessary because the mo
notonous "according to" is absent
for once from the slave's galley.
Valentine An Old Story.
Many moons and many warm
spring nights before Bishop Valen
tine was clubbed and beheaded on
OWEN JOHNSON GIVES
TALK TO A.W.S. GROUP
Innocents Society Leader
Explains Activities of
Honorary.
Owen Johnson, president of the
Innocents Society, will speak be
fore Freshman A. W. S. group at
the regular meeting Wednesday at
5 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall. He
will tell of the purpose, activities,
and membership of the senior hon
orary which he represents.
A short business meeting will
follow the speech, at which Jane
Barbour, president, will preside.
Alaire Barkes, group sponsor, has
announced a vocational guidance
program for the next meeting,
which will be held Feb. 20.
IN PRACTICE DEBATE
Team Meets Iowa State Men
In Return Engagement
Within Week.
BROADCAST ONE CONTEST
Following their creditable show
ing made in the Rocky mountain
forensic tournament last week, the
Nebraska debate team is to engage
in a practice debate with Nebraska
Wesleyan university on Friday,
Feb. 15, and then will meet Iowa
State college in a return engage
ment on Feb. 20.
The debates with the Wesleyan
teams will be on the subject, "Re
solved. That the nations should
agree to prevent the international
shipment of arms and munitions."
Eugene W. Pester and John C.
Landis of the Nebraska team will
speak on the Wesleyan campus
while Charles W. Steadman and
John F. Stover will represent Ne
braska in the debate to be held in
University hall 106. There will be
no decisions.
The debate with Iowa State col
lege is a return engagement with
the Nebraska negative team which
appeared at two points in Iowa last
week. The speakers for Nebraska
will be Herbert Z. Kaplan and Har
old Soderlund, and the subject will
be the abolition of the AAA pro
gram after the crop season of 1935,
Nebraska will defend the present
arrangement of the AAA program.
One debate will be held at 10:40 a.
m.. at KFOR, and the second will
be at the Lincoln high school at 3
p. m.
AG Y.M.C.A. CHOOSES
New Officers Assume Duties
Feb. 15; Cabinet to Be
Named Soon.
Wark Bauder, Glenvil, was
elected president of the ag college
Y. M. C. A. Tuesday by members
of that organization. The other
two officers chosen were John
Wagner, Minatare, vice president.
and Howard Peterson, Oakland,
secretary. Between now and Feb.
15 when the new officers will as
sume their duties, the president
elect will form his cabinet.
According to C. D. Hayes, cam
pus general secretary, all of the
elected officers have been active in
the Y. M. during the past semes
ter as well as in their earlier se
mesters in school. Mr. Baudre was
chairman of the freshman council
and also served as head of the pro
gram committee. Wagner was in
charge of the China project com
mittee, and Peterson worked as an
officer of the freshman council.
Ag College Agronomists
Warn Farmers of Smut
A warning was issued by the ag
college agronomists to state farm
ers to treat their seed as a protec
tion against smut infestation next
summer. Because of the importa
tion of large supplies of seed into
the state, the smut infestation may
prove to be a grave danger to the
small grain crops, ag college offi
cials stated.
the Feb. 15 of the year 270. there
were Valentine festivities in the
spring. In fact it was merely a co
incidence that this levered saint or
some other Valentine (history is
very indefinite on the point) was
martyred on the old pagan feast
day of love and purification.
Tennyson's Locksley Hall says
something to the effect that in the
spring a young man fancies more
his love. Rut we must remember
that since Tennyson's day the mak
ing of love has been facilitated in
the winter months and that pent
up love in this aftermath of reli
gious restrictions has lost some of
its potency. It may be safe to say
that the remnants of Valentine
sending among adults today are
the product of wool pulling, high
pressure advertising rather than of
(Continued on Page 3.)
THETA SIGMA PHI 10
BE
Journalism Sorority Takes
Charge of March
Awgwan.
Picturing interesting campus
people, ana tilled with surprises,
me Aiarcn Awgwan will be super
vised by Theta Sigma Phi, hono
rary journalism sorority. All of its
editorial content will be the work
of university women, most of them
Theta Sigma Phis, who have indi
cated the magazine will be dedi
cated to men.
Editorial duties for the next pub
lication of the campus humor mag'
azine fall upon Betty Segal, who
will serve as managing editor; Vio
let Cross, assistant managing edi'
tor; Frances Brune, in charge of
editorials; Elizabeth Bushee and
Jean Walker, handling features;
Harriet Rosenfeld and Ruth Mc
Nally, in charge of poetry contri
butions. Helen Kropf has been
placed in charge of art work. Jane
Cleary and Mary Lou Motz com
plete the editorial staff.
Bob Pierce, regular Awgwan
staff artist, has promised to design
the cover.
Staff members for the March
issue have already begun work.
According to Betty Segal, manag
ing editor, iheta Sigma fm ex
pects to have the publication ready
for campus distribution by the first
week of March.
Members of the journalism so
rority declined to disclose informa
tion about contents of their special
issue, other than the statement
that it would contain many pic
tures and surprise features.
BLOCK, BRIDLE CLUB
FEB. 23
Junior Ak-Sar-Ben Is Annual
Event on Agriculture
Campus.
Junior Ak-Sar-Ben, sponsored by
the Block and Bridle club of the
university will again be made the
spotlight on Ag campus, featur
ing a pet and hobby show, and a
fitting and showmanship contest.
This traditional event will bo held
in the Equine auditorium. Satur
day night, Feb. 23, according to
Charles Rochford, manager.
Students in the Ag college will
be eligible to compete in the fit
ting and showmanship contest, in
each of the five classes of horses,
sheep, beef cattle, hogs, and dairy
cattle. Each student may show in
more than one class but not ex
ceeding two. All drawings are en
couraged to be in early for a bet
ter choice of animals.
As in preceeding years, there
will be several special features.
Due to the interest in the pet and
hobby show last year they have
been retained. Exhibitors of any
pet or hobby, who must be of
grade or Junior high age, shall be
responsible for their entry during
the entire evening. There will be
only one class each of pets and
hobbies, witn' appropriate prizes
for the best entrants.
Another main event of the eve
ning will be the Junior Ak-Sar-Ben
ball, which is to be held In the
Student Activities building. The
music will be furnished by Mel
Pester and his orchestra.
W.A.A. HAS AWARDED
TWO SCHOLARSHIPS
Board Will Announce
Winners Next
Week.
Two W. A. A. scholarships of
$75 each have been awarded, but
names will not be disclosed for a
week, according to an announce
ment made by Jean Brownlee,
presldint of the women's athletic
association.
Any girl who has attended the
University for one semester was
eligible to file for the award. Se
lection or tne winners was mace
on the scholastic standing of the
applicants and also the interest
shown in sports and W. A. A. the
president said.
UNIVERSITY GIRL
I
Physicians Hold Little Hop2
For Recovery of Miss
Jeanne VanBrunt.
EVERETT MEADE INJURED
Auto Crashes Over Bank Two
And Half Miles South
Of Penitentiary.
Jeanne VanBrunt, Sioux.
Falls, S. Dak., arts and science
senior was critically injured,
and lOvciet Meade, 1:J27 li, suf
fered laeeralions about the face,
chest injuries, and a broken nose
when the car in which they were
riding crashed two and one-half
miles south of the state peniten
tiary, shortly after 8.30 Tuesday
evening. Little hope is held for
Miss VanBrunt's recovery, accord
ing to hospital attendants.
Both Meade and Miss VanBrunt
were taken to St. Elizabeth's hos
pital. Full extent of the girl's in
juries could not be determined, but
attending physician described her
condition as very serious. She sus
tained two fractures of the skull, a
fractured leg, and severe cuts and
bruises about the face and body.
Her chest was crushed in the acci
dent and fear of internal injuries
was held by her doctors.
Meade, who was dazed by the
accident, was unable last night to
give details of the crash.
The car, which was going south,
according to Deputy Sheriff Davis,
who investigated the accident,
plunged over an embankment on
the east side of the road, turning
end over end. It was badly demol
ished. Meade apparently lost con
trol when he struck a dog, 'and the
car followed a ditch for about seventy-five
feet before rolling over
on the incline.
Miss VanBrunt is a member of
Kappa Kappa Gar ma. Her parents
in Sioux Falls were notified im
mediately of the accident. Meade
attended the university a year ago.
He lettered in football in 1933. and
was a member of Sigma Nu. Hi.s
condition was reported by attend
ants as "fair."
Reports from hospital attend
ants at one o'clock Wednesday
morning described Miss Van
Brunt's condition as "increasingly
worse."
DALE LARSON PLAYS
AT V AiENlE PARTY
Informal Dance at Coliseum
Saturday Sponsored by
Barb Council.
Music of Dale Larson's orchestra
special entertainers, and a colored
lighting arrangements will feature
the varsity Valentine party to be
held Saturday night, Feb. 16. at
the coliseum. This will be the last
varsity party of the year to be
held on the downtown campus, ac
cording to Wilbur Erickson, chair
man of the Barb council, spon
sors. "An informal party should be
more than welcome at this time,"
stated Erickson, "and we arc ex
pecting a large crowd. The Valen
tine party is the first popular
priced varsity party to be held
since last November."
For the past several seasons Dale
Larson and his band have played
regularly over a circuit of mid-
dlewestern citie3. including Lin
coln. This year the orchestra has
had engagements at the Frog-Hop
ballroom in Kansas City, at Peony
Park in Omaha, and at Pla-Mor i;i
Lincoln.
"Despite the fact Valentine day
occurs two dajs previously," said
Erickson, tins Valentine party
will be a most appropriate ceebra
tion, an event within the means of
the entire student body."
The Valentine paity is the fifth
in a sorirs of oight varsity parties
scheduled for this year by the Barb
council. Remaining parties will be
held in the Student Activities
building on the Ag campus.
FOR MILITARY AFFAIRS
Cadets to Assist in Planning
Sponsors' Tea; Arrange
Annual Dinner.
Two committees, one appointed
to assist in planning the entertain
ment for the sponsors' tea, and the
other to arrange for the annual
cadet officers' dinner were ap
pointed late yesterday afternoon
by the military department.
Cadet Lt. Col. Elmer Brackett is
the chairman of the first commit
tee composed of Cadet Major Jack
Wickstrom. Cadet Major Richard
Dier, and Cadet Major Tom
Naugbton.
Cadet Colonel Charles A. Gallo
way was appointed chairman of
the alumni dinner committee and
Cadet Major Charles Steadman Is
the vice chairman of the group.
The other committee members are
Cadet Major Tom Davies and Ca
det Major Henry Kosman,
CRITICALLY
HUR
IN CAR ACCIDENT
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