The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 06, 1935, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    FOUR
TIIE DAILY NEBRASKAN
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6. 193.".
CAMPDJSOCHETY
M
ORE
ably the page that takes the prize is the one written by Duke
Xolte entitled "As Thousands Char." To neglect reading it is
to lose half the value of a college education, and we suggest
an earnest perusal of the Awgwan with an aspirin if you dou't
like puns.
w w J
AT THE PI K. A. house tonight,
members o the active chapter and
the pledges will entertain their
Hates at a Duller, supper, auuui
thlrtv couules are expected to at'
tend, and Joseph A. Pavelka is in
charge of arrangements ior me
Affair. The house mother, Mrs.
Margaret Davis will chaperon.
MRS. MARY Love Collins, na
tional president of Chi Omega, and
chosen as one or tne six outstand
ing Greeks at the last national
Panhellcnic council, visited the
Nebraska chapter over the week
end.
HONORING Miss Zoe Gore, ra
tional province deputy, actives and
alumnae of Tri Delta will enter
tain the house mothers and presi
dents of campus sororities and fra
ternities at tea this afternoon from
3:50 to 5 o'clock. Mrs. E. H.
Barbour, and Mrs. W. H. Oury
will pour for the affair, and Miss
Gore, Mrs. C. E. Keefer, Mrs.
Paul Ream, Mrs. A. L. Smith, na
tional scholarship chairman, Row
ene Miller, president of the active
chapter, and Frances Knudtzon,
vice president, will be in the re
ceiving line. The house will be
decorated with autumn flowers.
KAPPAS who went to Omaha
for the Ak-Sar-Ben ball include
Charlotte Huse, Mary Heaton,
Mary Fran Hughes, Ruth Mallory,
Ruth Newell, Dorothy Lindquist,
Betty Moss, Margaret Blaufass,
and Elizabeth Hedge.
AND FROM the Tri Delt house,
Margaret Moran, Helen Henning
son, Betty Van Horne, Ruth Lud
wig, Frances Knudtzon, Helen
Lawrence and Jo Davisson went.
ANNOUNCED recently was the
marriage of Mildred Root of Bas
sett and Allison Climeburg of Peru
which took place in Iowa City July
fifth. Mrs. Climeburg is a former
student of Nebraska and a mem
Last Chance
Poetry Contest
Closes Oct. 12th
Write your verse and deposit it
in the poetry box at Ellinger's.
Simply write a verse using the
name Ellinger's at least once.
$2
PRIZE
IN CREDIT
VISIT
SALON CONTINENTAL
The Success of Any
Party Is Due to
the People Attending!
And when those people are attired in
Evans carefully cleaned clothes any part)'
is a WOW.
Keep immaculate the Evans way. Ladies
apparel form-pressed.
333 North 12
PUN, MORE FUN, AT LEAST
that's what the guiding forces of
Awgwan seem to think judging from the
latest product of Beta Edwards, D. U.
Jarmin, and staff. And though Shake
speare or someone says that puns arc the
lowest form of humor, we're inclined to
agree with the editor's of Nebraska's hu
mor magazine. Never, in the short span
of a lifetime, have we seen assembled in
one publication so many words and ideas,
some recognizable, and others not, with
letters misplaced here and there. Prob
ber of Tri Delta, while Mr. Clime
burg is a graduate of Peru normal
The couple will live in Bassett.
WHY THE pledge officers of
Sigma Chi received the official
mail was a mystery to the chapter,
until someone remembered that
the "Rag" had run a little ditty
annuoncing their names. We hem
with submit to you the real offi
cers of the fraternity; Bernie Mc-
Kerney, president; Verne Anderi,
vice president; Floyd Baker, treas
urer; and John Heinke, secretary,
to whom all communcations should
be addressed.
KAPPA SIGS who went to Iowa
for the game were John Becker,
Howard Commons, John Lowe,
Jim Ivins, Carl Ernst, Harry Ham
mer. Bob Conrad, Dean McKenna,
Frank Cudrna, and Donald Siem-
sen.
POUND TO RESIGN AS HAR
VARD DEAN; ENTERED
N. U. WHEN 12.
(Continued from Page 1).
In 1889, the university granted him
a master's degree, and commended
him for his botanical research.
No Bookworm.
Young Pound was no bookworm.
True, he could rattle off chapters
of Bible verses after one reading
at a tender age, but he could also
carry a pigskin around left end
during any corner lot scrimmage.
Much of his excellent condition he
attributes to a daily mile trot,
which he faithfully practiced past
his fiftieth year.
Nor did his collegiate interests
stop there. During his undergrad
uate years he was captain of Com
pany A in the R.O. T. C. unit,
member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sig
ma Xi, Phi Delta Phi, and Alpha
Theta Chi, social fraternity. When
his lodge joined the national or
ganization of Chi Phi in 1932, he
returned to Lincoln to be initiated
at the chapter house. At the in
ception of the Innocents society,
he was one of the first of former
graduates to be made an honorary
member of the organization.
Interested in Botany.
Formerly his chief interest, bot
any still holds his attention as an
avocation, and he still makes sci
entific contributions to the field.
Gasol
iene
135
Motor Oil
10c to 30c
Heating Oil &2c Gallon
Holms "w
.GuenzeiCo
OUR
for your individual
Hair Restyling
See
MR. BEN MR. WALTER
Jacquet Facial Manicuring
Permanent Waving
Consultation without charge.
Phone B7141 Second Floor
Close to the Campus
Movie Box
Lincoln Theater Corp.
STUART
"BIQ BROADCAST" and
"MARCH OF TIME"
LINCOLN
"ALICE ADAMS"
ORPHEUM
"THE MURDER MAN" and
"STAGE SHOW"
LIBERTY
"WEST POINT OF THE
AIR"
SUN
"GO INTO YOUR DANCE"
COLONIAL
"THUNDER MOUNTAIN."
Westland Theater Corp.
VARSITY
"SHE MARRIED HER
BOSS"
KIVA
"AIR HAWKS"
While still at Nebraska, he con
ducted a botanical survey of the
state, and floras list a species of
lichen named roscopoundia.
Not until 1897 did Pound get his
doctor's degree, but since that time
he has been awarded fifteen of
them by leading American univer
sities. From 1901-02 he served as
commissioner of appeals for the
supreme court of Nebraska, and
was appointed professor of law at
the university in 1903, soon assum
ing the deanship. In 1907 he left
Nebraska to teach law at North
western, then moved to Chicago
university in 1909.
In 1910, Harvard university
made him Story professor of law,
and in 1913, Carter professor. He
assumed the deanship in 1916, and
has held that position in spite of
numerous offers to join staffs of
other institutions.
Because of an extremely good
nature that accompanies a ponder
ous bulk, he has long been a fa
vorite of students, who will feel
most sharply his relinquishing of
a long and wise rule at Harvard.
Murmurs
(Continued from Page 1.)
just another worthless item of
frozen capital. But someone is
going to be sniffing and howling
when that smelly stuff is strewn
on the mall again next spring.
V TINETY percent of the books on
IN the reserve shelf in the main
library are education books. The
important thing nowadays is to
know how to teacn the coming
generation, never mind what you
teach them.
A BUNCH of ag college actives
are Dlannine to revive a relic
from the ancient annals of auto
mobiles. It s the fad. These bugs
and open air busses go faster and
kill more people tban an incon
spicuous 1936 . model, but the peo
ple riding in them are always smil
ing and having the proverbial good
fun. And everybody in the block
smiles when such an auto passes.
And smiling is very good for peo
ple.
AO COLLEGE STAGES
LIVESTOCK PROGRAM
FOR FARMERS GROUP
(Continued from Page l.J
to the women on new develop
ments in meat cookery and uses
of lard. At the same time the
men will be hearing and discussing
numerous problems related to the
hog business and to all other kinds
of livestock and livestock industry.
William J. Locffol of the animal
husbandry department who is In
charge of the affair, has this to
say, "This year has brought its
full share of problems and our
program has been built up with
the thought of maximum service to
the swine industry in meeting
these problems."
Prof. M. A. Alexander of the ag
college will discuss the practicabil
ity of the farm in Nebraska. Dean
W. W. Burr will give the address
of welcome. Other members of the
ag faculty who will discuss the
studies being carried on at the col
lege and the outlook for the hog
man at the present time include,
Prof. H. C Filey, Dr. S. W. Al
ford. Prof. R. K. Thalman and
Prof. H. J. Cramlich.
V FRIED
CHICKEN
35 and 50c
Also
Tatty Sandwiches
The WHITE HOUSE
CURB CAFE
A neve type of
Car Tray
56th and Harelock
Comhuiker Hifhwty
"III" Hamilton
fjgm: was)
flip?
Earth's Development Story
Related in Morrill Exhibits
Few Nebraska ns, including the thousands of students at
tending the university each year, realize thut the world's long
est and most interesting story, the story of the earth's develop
ment, is revealed and pictured in surprising detail in the class
rooms and along the corridors of Morrill hall. It is a story that
oegms wun rne nrsi appearanceo-
of life in the newly formed oceans
upon the "baby" earth, and ends
with well preserved animal and
plant specimens of the modern era,'
Scientists tell us that the earth
began about two billion years ago,
and as incredible as It may sound,
there are on display at Morrill hall
well preserved fossil remains of
some of the sea plant life alive
those many years ago.
Starting with the Archeozoic
age, in spite of all the recent
scientific discoveries, there is i
pitifully meager amount of evi
dence of animal life existing at
this time. Those wno have spent
the greater part of their lives
studying the world and its inahbi
tants from the first dawn of day
to the present time theorize that
the universe was started by
streaming masses of molten min
eral matter pulled from the sur
face of our sun, which chanced to
pass close to another similarly
heated body. The pull that was
exerted by the proximity of these
two heated bodies were similar to
the effect that the moon has on
the ocean and the subsequent
change in tides. These particles
of mineral matter later aggre
gated together to form our planets
as we know them today.
First evidence of animal life is
found in the Proteroboic period,
but only a few fossil specimens re
main to tell the story. All animals
at this stage lived only in the wa
ter and continued to live in this
fashion until the beginning of the
Devonian age when evidence was
found in Pennsylvania some years
DacK mat definitely indicated that
a sea going animal made his first
migration to land. A cast of "the
first foot print" now is a feature
of the Morrill hall display, and it
is believed by scientists to be that
of a salamander, which. In leaving
its ocean home, left its imprint
upon me oozy mud bordering the
water.
This general period from Cam
brian thru the Permian, known as
the Paleozoic era, is also of im
portance since the reptiles began
in the Pennsylvania age. The
world today stares in wonder at
the enormous skeletons of these
prehistoric animals mounted in the
larger museums of the country.
While the reptile family began
back in the Pennsvlvanian. the
giant of them all, the dinosaurs,
some of them 100 feet in length,
did not attain this stature until
millions of years later, in the Cre
taceous age.
After the Cretaceous period the
reptiles became extinct, however.
and never appear again. Still mil
lions or years later thruout the
Eocene to and including the Plio
cene period, known as the Tertiary
age, anotner horde of giant ani
mals populated this country, par
ticularly thruout the middlewest.
In the Tertiary age we see the
forerunner of our present day ani
mals, including all the common
varieties today, as the lion, tiger,
elephant, cat, dog, etc.
Ruler over the earth's dominion
during these millions of years
were the shaggy haired mam
moths and mastodons, whose
bleached and massive bones fea
ture many a museum exhibit thru
out the country.
Morrill hall has largely gained
its world recognition thru the com
plete and well arranged elephant
display developed principally thru
the genius of Dr. E. H. Barbour.
It's Good Food It's Weber's
Our appetizing Dinners, served in our attractive
clean modernistic dining room, are the talk of
the campus.
Also Lunches and Short Orders
Mixers
Weber's Cafo
BROWN I
rx SHOES
I ""v. 1'ie tf""c fr
j''"''"'' wardrobes!
All Styles
i r $4
Widths
AAA to E
6 to 12
A New Development
FORTune shoes
"BROWN" the boom color for Falll
. . . in three shades
C DHA,.m bleni1 beautifully with
oaadle Drown :igbt tone u.u
fJJ D ' ' warm nd nlddv br'ght-
oriar Drown en uP dark clothing
Gun-Stock Brown
U)C
JOLD' Mo'f
In fact, the largest fossil mam
moth in the world was found in
Lincoln country, and now stands
towering high above his rivals in
Elephant hall here.
Practically all the vertebrate
fossil remains from the Tertiary
age on display in Morrill hall come
from western Nebraska. Practi
cally every age is represented in
the chronological display along
the corridors of the Nebraska mu
seum. ,
Lloyd C. Mills, graduate student,
who has assisted in arranging the
display depicting the story of the
earth's development, says man
first appeared in the Pleistocene
age, that is, during the glacial
period. The exhibit in the west
corridor of Morrill hall is a story
in itself. With the glass case
are casts of several skulls, each
supposedly representing progress
in man's development. The last
chapter in the story, as told in the
university museum, reaches its cli
max with a display of the tiger
and lion families, the famed buf
falo, bears, and, in fact, most of
the circus animals as we know
them today.
It's a story not only of the
earth's development, but even
more, it is a tale unfolding the life
work and aspirations of Doctor
Barbour, who more than anyone
else has been instrumental in
buildine and developing these
many and valuable fossil exhibits.
EXTENSION SERVICE
GIVEN RECOGNITION
New Hampshire Installs
Nebraska Method of
Correspondence.
Preparing more courses for cor
respondence study at high scnooi
level than any other standard
post-secondary institution, the
university extension division has
given thoro and detailed study to
organization, administration and
correction of correspondence
courses for high schools, according
to a recent bulletin from New
Hampshire. The eastern state has
recently adopted the Nebraska
plan of correspondence stuay,
which is directed by Dr. A. A.
Reed.
James Scott to Head Psi
Sigma Alpha During Year
Following officers were elected
at the fall meeting of Psi Sigma
Alpha, honorary political science
organization: James Scott, presi
dent; William smitn, vice presi
dent and Willa-Clare McQuillan,
secretary-treasurer. All are from
Lincoln. -
HOT LUNCH
at NOON or EVENING
LIBERTY
DRUG CO.
Formerly Rector' Phocy.
NW Cor. 11 & N
in
Store South Eleventh HI reft.
Try Our
15
T
First English Edition Is
Commemorated in
Program.
With a presidential message de
livered from the White House by
Secretary of State Cordell Hull,
an address by Commisioner Frank
J. Loesch of Chicago, and a con
tribution by Dr. Robert A. Milli
kan, a radio service designed to
interest the entire Christian wori
will be broadcast over the b.
network of the National Broad
casting company on Sunday morn
ing, Oct. 6, at 11:30 a. m. The
program will be held in connection
with the nation wide celebration of
the 400th anniversary of the print
ing of the first English Bible.
This book from which all other
translations are said to have got
ten their inspiration was tran
scribed in Switzerland and issued
on Oct. 4, 1535. The translation
was carried on by Myles Cover
dale. Scriptural text will be read
In New York from the original
Myles Coverdale book for Sun
day's program.
The commemoration of this
event is being directed in the west
ern states by a committee of na
tionally known persons, all of
whom are purported to be lovers of
this important book in the English
language. This broadcast and
other commemoration activities
are under the auspices of the
American Bible society. The pro
gram may be gotten over KOA or
WREN at 11:30 Sunday morning.
MISS FAULKNER TO
SHOW OIL PAINTING
Miss Kady Faulkner, member of
the fine arts faculty, has been in
vited to ehow her oil painting "The
Quick and the Dead,' 'at the an
nual exhibit of the Kansas state
federation of art. Miss Faulkner's
picture will be on display along
side the works of several nation
ally known artists. The pictures
will circulate thruout the state of
Kansas. 1
MISS FEDDE REPORTS
JOBS OF GRADUATES
A wide variety of positions in a
wide variety of places are being
occupied by those who graduated
from the department of home eco
nomics of the university last year,
according to a report from Miss
TH6 BICr
LLECTED AS
CAMPUS
"Favorites
"to
Mark Urmcn ISaty
Meie FmttbM CtAtm
College girls themselves
elected these three by
making them our College
Shop's best sellers. Girls
from campuses all over
the country , seized upon
these and bought them up
In their alma mater colors.
Your particular campus
will approve. Please note
how easy the price Is on
the long suffering allow
ance. GOLD'S Third Floor
(DtLQ)(D
3 mv
295
Margaret Fedde, chairman of that
department.
Three dietlticians are graduate
assistants in hospitals, one in De
troit, another in Ann Arbor, and
another in Boston. Five of the
graduates are homemakers; sev
enteen are teaching, chiefly in the
Smith-Hughes d e p artmonts of
home economics in high tchools;
four are directors of tea rooms,
cafeterias, or residence halls; three
are doing graduate study;, and
three are working for commercial
firms.
FRESHMAN HONORARY
PLEDGES NINE GIRLS
Betty Cherny Announce
Meeting Thursday
Evening.
Nine girls will be pledged to Al
pha Lambda Delta, freshman scho
lastic honorary Thursday night at
7:15 in Ellen Smith hall, Betty
Cherny president of the organiza
tion, announced Saturday.
The girls who will be pledged
at this time have made a scholas
tic average of ninety per cent dur
ing their entire freshman year, or
during the first semester of their
first year.
Following is the list of pledges:
Margaret Cushing, Enid June Gil
lett, Jean Eleanor Gordon. Rosa
lyn Lashinsky, Muriel Elaine Line,
Mary Jane Mitchell, Alice Lenore
Nielson, Helen Margaret Reynolds,
and Wilma Harriet Stutt.
News FLASH!!
Many New Items Each Week!
Ladies'
Cigarette Ash Tray
Dresden Style. b p .
2 or 3 sizes
ZIPPER STYLE
Sewing Cases
Photo Holders
Ring Book, with name on.
Bill Folds, $1.00.
All prices in comparison.
Haloween Decorations
Black Cats, Moons, Clever
Cut Outs in all Grotesque
Figures, Favors, Tallies and
Place Cards.
"Everything for the Party,'''
hut the Eats and the Music.
George Bros.
Printers Stationers
1213 N St.
Three words thai iell
you volumes about your
NEW FALL FROCK
lis sleeves and skirl
give it a Paris dale
line. The French spun
jersey comes in gor
geous colors and ior
added sparkle the
neckline and bow are
. done In multi-colored
spaghetti silL Just an
other example of the
clothes magic that
travels under the
name "Towndale." In
all the new colors.
Sizes 12 to 20.
Tliiifl Floor
(BCDQLtD t .
ir .',-44. s VS
j A
km
)