The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 10, 1935, Page THREE, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY, APRII, 10, 1933.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
TriREE
WEATHER FORCES
fi GRIDMEN
TO DRILL INDOORS
But Hopes Sail High for a
Final Spring Game
Saturday.
REDS SEW UP SCORING
Harold Brill Leads Backs
With Grand Total of
48 Counters.
Old man weather pulled a fast
one on Coach Dana X. Bible's
Husker football enthusiasts lues
day afternoon, cutting into the fi
nal week of spring: practice with a
soggy field which confined Ne
braska touchdown antics to the
confines of the Memorial stadium
basement.
After Monday's outdoor play as
rignment on the practice sod had
started the wheel? turning on the
final workouts before next fall's
campaign, the confinement indoors
Tuesday, throw a monkey wrench
into the preparations for Saturday
afternoon s grand linaie.
Nevertheless, with a midweek
set-to extremely improbable be
cause of the condition of the field,
eyes are already being focussed on
the climax of the spring practice
season this Saturday. The Husker
coaching staff points toward the
best scrimmage cf the year in the
final engagement. As in previous
encounters the star roles will be
given to a varsity Red slutted
eleven and a reserve White clad
unit
Whites Can't Score.
Thus far the Crimson warriors
have chartered a monopoly on the
fcoring honors, hanging up a 78
point record while shutting the
Pale Shirts out in the cold without
a point.
Ralph Eldridge, Norfolk ball lug
ger, paved the way to the first of
the four Crimson victories, crash
ing through the White aggregation
for two touchdowns and a 14-0 vic
tory. Harold Brill, triple threat
from Norton, Kansas, followed suit
in the next interclub combat writ
ing the four touchdowns scored by
the varsity combination under his
name. The Kansas lad displayed
everything it takes to make touch
downs, set up a mighty bid for
starting recognition in crossing the
line four times for the Reds' 24-0
conquest.
Brill couldn't get into the scor
ing money In the third fray, but
the varsity eleven, with Jerry La
Noue speeding all over the field,
didn't have much difficulty plas
tering a 20-0 licking on the White
team. LaNoue swept over the field
to make the first tally, which was
accompanied by two lateral flips
that sent Harold Holmbeck and
Bob Martin across the final stripe.
Last Saturday the Crimson as
sault went to town in the same
manner, sending the defenders to
the showers with another 20-0
verdict ringing in their ears. La
Noue and Brill crossed the touch
flown doorstep for tallies, and Har
ris Andrews, Beatrice punting
king, nabDi'd the final touchdown
with a sixty yard run after snatch
ing Bill Bauer's pass that was
meant for somebody else.
Brill Holds Honors.
Including the midweek tilt last
Wednesday Harold Brill holds the
touchdown scalps pretty well under
his belt, 42 of the 99 Red counters
falling under his name.
But a quartet of White perseyed
mail carriers may spell trouble for
the crest riding varsity footballers.
Harris Andrews, who played a
whale of a ball lugging game on
the Red unit after being promoted
from the White team last Satur
day, and Jack Dodd, Gothenburg
handy man who is being groomed
for a Red back fie Id berth, turned
loose commendable ground gain
ing attack last Saturday against
the first stringers. Art Ball, all
state Fremont quarterback last
year and Marvin Plock, Lincoln
speedster, complete the quartet
which should prove capable of roll
ing up a touchdown to stand
against the Red century mark in
the final game of the spring sea
son. UNION COMMITTEE
SHOWS PROGRESS
(Continued from Page 1.)
nlcal barriers. Since it has been
established that the drive can be
continued without such Interfer
ence, every possible effort is being
spent to push the huge project thru
to a successful conclusion.
The drive, officially opened last
Sunday, in a revival of efforts first
started In 1930. "Present pros
pects of success are the brightest
they have been any time during the
past five years, Fischer stated.
"With the co-operation of stu
dents, board of regents, and the
university administration and fac
ulty it Is believed that we will be
able to accomplish our objective."
A. LUGN TO TALK ON
'DUST WEDNESDAY
Speaker Explains Source
Of Recent Storms in
Nebraska.
Dr. A. L. Lugn of the geology
department will give a lecture on
"Dust," Wednesday. April 10, at
7:30 p. m. in Nebraska ball. Pro
fessor Lugn will discuas the source
of the dust storms recently affect
ing the middle west and also the
Influence of prehistoric dust
storms on the present day Ne
braska soils. Visitors are cordially
invited.
YOUR DRUG STORE
Buy the famous grilled sand
wiches at our fountain. Whit
man's Candles and Russian
Mints.
The OWL PHARMACY
148 No. 14th B1068
Around the
Circuit
with
HARRY BENJAMIN
An historical baseball trophy In
the form of a silver bat may give
the Cyclone nine an inspiration to
play heads-up ball this year. The
bat was given to the champions of
the Iowa Intercollegiate baseball
conference every season during the
gay nineties." In 1893, Grinnell
college, which was then the big
athletic school of the state of Iowa,
and Ames clashed on the Cyclone
diamond. With darkness coming
on and the score tied 3-3, the game
ended in a free-for-all. Dr. Knapp,
late Iowa State treasurer, then
member of the team, slipped out
of the game and hid the bat until
the invaders took their wagons and
went home. In 1894, Grinnell was
avenged and kept the trophy for
ten years. In 1902, the Cyclones
won it back. So when the confer
ence collapsed the next year, It was
put Into the treasury for safe keep
ing, Finally it has been found
again and will probably go back
into the trophy case where the
baseball players and fans can view
it with awe, and probably get the
old spirit to win or "be damned."
Gopher baseballers had not en
gaged In an intra-club game until
last Saturday when Coach MuCor
mick put them through a scrim
mage. Thursday, snow covered the
diamond and practice had to be
called off. The hurlers have had
little chance to show their "stuff"
in actual competition.
Oklahoma, after taking two
games from Texas Christian, is
preparing to meet Missouri on the
Sooner diamond Thursday, Friday,
and Saturday. The Tigers took
two out of three from Oklahoma in
Columbia last year, so Sooner fans
expect to see a hard fought series
Coach Wilbur Knight has two
teams which he might send out on
the field against Minnesota.
one, composed of veterans and '34
reserves who are fairly certain of
their positions, which lacks the
usual scrap of rookies, and the
other made up of sophomores who
have plenty of pepper and who at e
working hard just to get a uni
form. Each team could put up a
good fight with any club of its
own ranking.
BEGIN MEET TUESDAY
Second Round Scheduled for
Thursday; Semi-Finals
Within Week.
With all but one debate for
feited, the first round of the intra
mural debate contest was com
pleted Tuesday. Second round de
bates will be held Thursday, the
semi-finals Monday of next week,
and the finals Tuesday.
In the only contest which went
through as scheduled, Tau Kappa
Epsilon was victorious over Beta
Theta Pi. Harry West was the
judge of the affray, which was
held at the house of the winners,
and Leonard Krueger and William
Hicks were the members of the
winning affirmative team. Two
other debates and two barb con
tests were forfeited. The teams
advancing to the second round as
a result are: Zeta Beta Tau, whose
affirmative team composed of
Robert Stiefler and Bernard White
were defaulted to by Delta Upsi-
lon; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, whose
team of Jack osumvan ana
George Fry advanced by the for
feiture of the Farm House duo;
and the barb nihilist No. 1 team,
and the Delian-Union debaters ad
vanced at the default of the inde
pendent barb team and the No. 2
Nihilist group respectively.
The question under discussion is
'Resolved: That the Federal and
State Governments Should Co
operate in Providing Some Ade
quate System of Unemployment
Insurance for Those Under bO.
NEW COVER PATTERN
DECORATES ALUMNUS
COMING OUT APRIL 15
(Continued from Page 1.)
nancial situation.
Dr. R. D. Scott, of the English
department faculty, la to be the
subject of another article. There
will also be the usual noranan a
page, campus news, an in memo
ram to several of the late faculty
members, an article on the senior
class organization, on Phi Beta
Kappa and Sigma XI, an account
of the charter day meetings which
were not reported in the last is
sue, and class notes, marriages and
births. A full page of pictures of
the Kosmet Klub show will also be
included in the magazine.
Will Rogers, Jr., Wins
Speaking Cobpetition
WALLA, WALLA, Wash., April
9 Will Rogers, jr., representing
Stanford university, this week won
the Pacific Forensic League Con
ference after dinner speaking con
test, a Closing feature of the meet
held at Whitman College. His sub
ject was "The Obligation to Be
Amusing."
Help Your
o Win
Smoke Old Golds, write the name of your fraternity on the
back of the package and place it In the followina ballot
boxes. Only three more weeks to win.
1. Buck' Coffee Shop
2. Uni Drug
3. Taty Pastry Shop
(Cornhusker Hotel) .
4. The Bun
Be sure and write the name of the fraternity
EIGHT FROSH WIN
TITLES IN HUSKER
WRESTLING TILT
Yearling Grapplers Compete
For Numeral Awards
Tuesday.
Eight freshman wrestling cham
plons were crowned Tuesday aft
ernoon as Husker wrestling artists
competed in one of the largest nu
meral meets In the history of Ne
braska grappling competition. The
contest, which was staged Monday
and Tuesday on the sub-coliseum
mats, awarded freshman numeral
sweaters to the first place winners
In the eight weight divisions.
According to Jerry Adam, Hus
ker wiesstling mentor, the fifty
seven entrants in the meet forced
the champions to put forth every
effort to come out on the winning
side of the ledger.
"The winners were very strong,"
stated Adam after the tilt, "seven
of the eight final matches being
won by falls. The hard wrestling
which was displayed in the con
test gives indication of plenty of
available material for next year's
varsity competition."
Six All-University champions
and four state high school title
Holders were entered in the com
petition, with three of the winners
in the All-University competition
last fall repeating to cop numerals.
Those adding numeral victories
to their All-University laurels were
John Ellis, Omaha heavyweight;
Fred Webster, Lincoln 126 pound
er, and Everett Brandt, Rokeby
155 pound tussler. Ellis pinned Sol
Levine, 155 pounder 'Wrestling in
the heavyweight class, in 4 min
utes 44 seconds with a half Nel
son to cop the heavyweight cham
pionship. Webster felled Smith In
4 minutes 20 seconds with a re
verse Nelson and bar arm lock,
and Brandt won a victory over
Hiller in the only decision of the
entire meet.
Bill Wurgler, Omaha 175 pound
er, provided the feature of the en
counter, exhibiting an unbeatable
spirit in subduing Milo Kottas de
spite a serious ankle injury. .
Bill Rowe, Wisconsin lad, won
the 165 pound title in the fastest
bout of the meet, pinning King
ston in 1:55 with a half Nelson and
bar arm. Deloras Malary, 145
pound tussler, furnished the Iron
man performance of the meet, win
ning five matches before Gene
Clare, Lincoln first semester lad,
felled him in the finals.
Dick Schaefer, Omaha, copped
the 118 pound title from Fred
Jack and Julius Whittman, Lin
coln, pinned Verle Wendell to earn
the 135 pound crown in the other
bouts of the meet.
Summaries of the final bouts:
118 lb. class: Dick Schaefer
pinned Fred Jack in 2:25 with a
deep Nelson and a bar arm lock.
126 lb. class: Fred Webster
pinned Smith in 4:40 with a re
verse Nelson and bar arm lock.
135 lb. class: Julius Whittman
pinned Verle Wendell in 5:52 with
an arm and body lock.
145 lb. class: Gene Clare pinned
Deloras Manary In 7:38 with a half
Nelson crotch.
155 lb. class: Everett Brandt de
cisioned Hiller.
165 lb. class: Bill Rowe pinned
Frank Kingston in 1 :55 with a half
Nelson and bar arm lock.
175 lb. class: Fred Wurgler
pinned Milo Kottas in 2:38 with a
deep Nelson and bar arm lock.
Heavyweight class: John Ellis
pinned Sol Levine in 4:44 with a
half Nelson.
Officials Wednesday: Loren Sim
ons, Fred Wallon, Benno Funken;
finals, Neal Hill.
I
COURAGE. GENEROSITY
Problem Faces Colleges of
Preparing Girls for
N on-Employment.
By tollrte Men Brrvhw.
NEW YORK, Apr. 9. The great
problem of the college today is not
in preparing young women for the
business world, but in preparing
them to face the world without a
job.
So Dean Virginia Gildersleeve, of
Barnard college, Columbia univer
sity, declared this week at the con
ference of the Institute of Women's
Professional Relations here.
To an audience of coeds who had
earlier in the day heard other
speakers give cold and candid facts
on their opportunities for employ
ment. Dean Gildersleeve said:
"The troubles of the world to
day are due to selfishness, greed
and fear, and if the world ever is
to be straightened out we have got
to develop in our young people
courage, generosity and honesty."
Raising chickens in their rooms
is the latest fad of students at
Marshall college (Huntington, W.
Va.).
Fraternity
50 t
Annual Orienlai
Full Sway Over Ellen Smith
This week is Nebraska-in-China Week over at Ellon Smith
hall. It hiis been one of the Y. W. spring traditions ever since
1914, when the advisory board and the cabinet voted to support
Grace Coppock, ft Nebraska graduate with the class of 190"), as
National Secretary of Y. W. C. A. in China. That year they
neid tneir first campaign to raise o
funds for Miss Coppock.
Several times during the history
of Nebraska-China week, one of
Nebraska's graduates, doing Y. W.
work In China, has been able to re
turn to the campus for the event.
Often Chinese students have been
able to visit the campus at this
time too.
Word concerning one of the Chi
nese students, who visited here in
1918 and 1919, was received re
cently at the university Y, W. The
girl, Me-Tung Ting, by name, Is
now a doctor in her native coun
try. She has started a school, a
baby shop, has converted an aban
doned temple into a modern hos
pital, has established three clinic
centers, and is specializing in the
cure of children's diseases.
Since Miss Coppock'a death uni
versity support has also gone to
Ting Shu-Chlng, one of Miss Cop
pock's Chinese students, who has
succedeed Miss Coppock as the na
tional secretary of Y. W. C. A. in
China.
Lelia Hinkley is now the Rocky
Mountain Region ambassador to
EMORI,
Council, Sports Board to Be
Announced; Convention
Report Given.
The new officers of W. A. A.
to be Installed Thursday at 7 p. m.
in Grant Memorial hall are: Eliza
beth Bushee, president; Doris
Riisness, vice president; Mary
Yoder, secretary; and Jean Pal
mer, treasurer.
Retiring officers are: Jean
Brownlee, president; H a 1 1 e n e
Haxthausen, vice president; Doris
Riisness, secretary; and Elizabeth
Bushee, treasurer.
During the remainder of the
program the rest of the council
and sports board will be an
nounced. Do;1s Riisness will give a
brief account of the District Con
vention of W. A. A. held in Chi
cago, March 28, 29, and 30. Those
who attended the convention are
Miss Matilda, W. A. A. sponsor,
Elizabeth Bushee, and Doris Riis
ness.
The new W. A. A. room in Grant
Memorial hall, which has recently
been furnished and decorated will
be opened.
Board Takes Action After
Paper Appears With
Columns Blank.
PUBLICATION CONTINUED
(By Ainoclated Collegiate I'rml
NEW YORK CITY. Culminat
ing a long period of strife between
its editors and the university, the
Columbia Daily Spectator, under
graduate newspaper of Columbia
university, has been forced to
suspend publication by a decision
of the Columbia college student
publications.
The action was taken after the
daily appeared with its columns
blank, except for statements pro
testing changes made In its consti
tution by the student board.
The board explained its action in
an open letter to the student body,
which said in part, "Thruout the
year individual students and stu
dent groups have found it neces
sary to protest against mangling
and misinterpretation of news. The
situation has become entirely in
tolerable in a paper subsidized by
students for the purpose of provid-
S.' (, .UillMN.WtWIlTW 'TATE IN TH6 SUM ( TT T J'Aro ct jj HtRE F DOV
ft' yv J UP THE ACTION Of A 0EBT ON OF 1550 fT f I jTJAb 5 err ' JOOy
" J& " r lTT an administration bono s- Utc- ARUMPM-r-r-1 Niv r - 1 IkyETI-
VERraS THE DEFENDANT AS
MOAT 5MCKE5S HftVE DC!.D IN
FAVOR OF PfMKCE AVBtKT - ND
CALL THAT GOOD JUD&fcMENT
P. A. IS ALWAYS MILD
1 MELLOW m - m
i AND THERE ARE
JNl.t5 in fcVtKT I m.j
Week Holds
China, and it is to send her, as a
Y. W. representative, to give to the
Chinese women what the American
women take for granted, that the
university organization is conduct
ing its annual campaign this week.
When asked of ways of giving,
Eleanor Neale, chairman of the
Nebraska-China staff, said: "Just
plain sacrificial giving remains a
pretty good method. It works only
when students come to see the
significance of sharing with stu
dents in other lands."
Lorraine Hitchcock, president of
the Y. W., explained the purpose
of the campaign with: "We are liv
ing in a world in which strong na
tionalistic tendencies and racial
antagonisms must be replaced by
mutual understanding and family
sharing. In this direction the stu
dents of the world have an ines
capable obligation to lead. I be
lieve that Nebraska students are
in the lead, and will continue to be
In the lead, by standing by the
women of China In the midst of the
increased dificultles in which they
find themselves today.
Ing a medium for the expression of
undergraduate thought."
James A. Wechsler, editor of the
paper, announced Immediately that
he would put out a paper under the
auspices of sympathetic friends in
the student body and faculty. This
publication will not use the offi
cial Columbia masthead, however.
R. 0. T. C. OFFICERS
SPONSOR SECOND
ANNUAL BANQUET
(Continued from Page 1.)
committee, will preside and serve
as toastmaster cor the dinner,
which follows upon the military
ball as the second most important
function of the university R. O. T.
C. during the year.
Other speakers on the evening's
program will be T. J. Thompson,
dean of student affairs; State Sen
ator Rolla C. Van Kirk of the Ne
braska legislature; Speaker J. P.
O'Gara of the Nebraska house;
Col. C. J. Frankforter; Dr. G. E.
Condra, director of the conserva
tion and survey department;
Claude S. Wilson, head of the
Alumni Board of Control; Rev. H.
H. Marsden; Rev. Victor West;
Dean W. W. Burr of the ag col
lege; Violet Cress, this year's hon
orary colonel; and Col. W. H. Oury,
head of the university R. O. T. C.
Tables for,the affair will be ar
ranged according to companies in
line of battalions. Decorations for
the tables will appear in the form
of guidons.
Among the honored guests will
be Coach D. X. Bible; John K. Sel
leck; Capt. J. H. Gist of the U. S.
army; Lieut. E. C. Richardson,
president of the Reserve Officers'
association of Lincoln; Edgar J.
Boschult, head of the local Ameri
can Legion post; Mr. and Mrs. E.
J. Faulkner; Anne Bunting, last
year's honorary colonel and George
Saucr. The Regimental Sponsors
club will also be present as guests
of the student officers.
"All final details have been ar
ranged, and the success of this
evening's banquet is assured," as
serted Galloway. "It is a function
to which all cadet officers should
come and should look forward to
with pride as an affair worthy of
the military department of the uni
versity." Cadet Major Henry Kosman re
ported that the ticket sale has been
very gratifying.
GRADUATE STUDENTS
GET APPOINTMENTS
Graduates in Psychology
Obtain Positions at
Other Schools.
Two of the graduate students in
the department of psychology have
recently received appointments at
other universities. Roy B. Hack
man has been appointed assistant
in psychology at the University of
Minnesota where he will continue
his work for the doctorate degree
and the study of medicine. Harold
Dahms will receive a fellowship in
psychology at Cornell University
where he will continue his gradu
ate study.
AND .
- m - m - m
TWO ,
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PR I M CE ALEE
Have You Done Your
Hit for the Colored
I oiks Sanitarium?
A benevolent looking middle
aged colored man with a long sub
scription list and a flno flow of
language has been visiting mem
bers of tho University faculty so
liciting contributions for hospitals
for colored tubercular patients.
The organization represented is
incorporated and Is said to be in
need of funds, but specific Infor
mation such as pictures of hospi
tals and financial statements is
apparently lacking. The appear
ance of the solicitor and his gen
eral approach is reminiscent of the
following characterization con
tained in an article entitled "The
Sour Note of Sweet Charity," pub
lished in the April issue of The
Readers Digest.
"Another lovable figure of the
mooching fraternity is the old col
ored 'clergyman,' 'Doctor' Tyler of
Kerrville, Texas, 'founder and su
perintendent of Tyler's Four-State
Hospitals for Colored Tubercular
Patients and Nurses Training
Schools, Inc.' The only visible sign
of his 'hospital and training school'
is a two-room shack he was report
ed to have had in Kerrville two
years ago. He has been 'working'
the southwest and living for a
number of years on contributions
from prominent institutions and
individuals."
L C. OBERLIES TALKS
AT THIRD El RALLY
Advertising Stickers to
Distributed After
Bonfire.
Be
The third of a series of rallies to
muster enthusiasm for the Farm
ers' Fair, will feature a bonfire to
be held near the Student Activities
building at 7 p. m., Thursday, Ap
ril 11.
L. C. Oberlles, Lincoln, speaker
who has addressed groups at these
rallies for several years, will speak
at Ag hall just before the bonfire.
Immediately after the rally, the
pageant practice and committee
meetings will begin, according to
Barbara Barber, chairman of the
rally committee. Miss Barber also
stated that plans are under way
for a rally dance to be held Tues
day April 16. At this time poster
and stickers to advertise Farmers'
Fair will be given students.
At the University of Arizona
(Tucson) the Pan-Hellenic society
ruled that first year women stu
dents can't date because they are
not sufficiently mature,
Blouses
7
ft
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ft
ft
ft
Miller
"Cotyrtftrt.
GENTLEMEN OF THE JURY !
inurA f TArrM 1 t DA Kl fpACKED (TWO Oil ltT.;:
Professor of Philosophy to
Discuss Vicarious
Suffering.
In a talk at the Y. M. liberal
forum on Wednesday evening,
March 10, Dr. C.H. Patterson cf
the philosophy department will
discuss the principle of vicarious
suffering under the title of "Tho
Meaning of the Atonement." The
usual informal group discussion
will follow the main address, ac
cording to Grant McCIclhin, Y
president.
Dr. Patterson explained that tho
princlplo of vicarious suffering is
that the innocent accept volun
tary suffering for which they are
not responsible. He mentioned
such names as Jeremiah, Socrates,
Jesus, and Livingston as examples
of men who nave realized this
ideal. Dr. Patterson stated that
the principle of vicarious suffering
has been responsible for all of the
moral progress that mankind has
made.
The meeting Is scheduled for
7:15 p. m. The program commit
tee announced that since this
forum will be tho last one before
the spring reress, all members
are urged to hear Dr. Patterson.
The public is welcome.
MEADE TO DO RESEARCH
WORK.
Grayson Meade, Almena, Kas.,
assistant in the university muse
um, started Saturday on a trip to
the collecting grounds, where he
will do some preliminary research
toward finding locations for new
field work.
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boat necklines, Peter Pan collars,
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