The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 21, 1935, Page FOUR, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    FOUll
THE DAILY NFJWASKAN
THUILSDAY, NOVKMBEU 2U 193.1.
CAMPBJSOCDETY
If you rent a Car
you will find
GOOD CARS
CLEAN CARS
WARM CARS
and the lowest rate at the
Motor Out Company
1120 P Always Open B6819
pOYLAND, TOYLAND, DEAR LIT-
I tlo girl anl boy land is 1 lie theme
song for the Cornhuskcr Costume party
tonight at the Armory. Dressed as all
varieties of toys from dolls to teddy
hears, the girls of the Nebraska campus
will forget for an evening that they arc
beyond such things . . . and have the
kind of a good time that we Had wncn
we were six, or so. Marge Souders.
Knnna. will be master of ceremonies and
Marv Yoder, Theta, is general chairman
for the uartv. Put on your ankle socks
favorite doll . . . ana
come to Toyland, tonight 1 .
SEEN on the campus: Lois
Rathburn and Sid Baker walking
In the general direction of the Ad
ministration building, and count
ing Kosmet Klub tickets. . . Jean
Ketter and another Pt Phi hunting
frantically for a match in "Unl". .
. . . Mary Jane Munger taking her
bridge very seriously. . . Bill Bald
win very long faced, and all by
himself (where were the gals that
follow him around most of the
time?). . . Pick Shofstall writing
letters home in one of his more
Important classes. . . A Mr. Cur
tis (there's one like him in every
crowd) "muttering in his beard"
about something or other. ... A
boothful of Delta Gamma's doing
the Chinese toast. . . a law senior
drinking a "break down" in the
Moon. . . Faith Arnold approach
ing her winter home the Corn
husker office. . '. Toby Eldridge,
light headed and green hatted, en
route to the third floor of "sosh,"
two steps at a time. . . and Whi
tey "Cheer Leader" Reed saying
that the selection of lipstick is
just a matter of taste!
AND THIS is what happened
when Northwestern beat Notre
Dame. . . The day that the team
came home, classes were dismissed
and the school, en masse, escorted
the team from the depot. . . with
a police escort of forty-five. . .
and a morning dance in the gym.
. . . sorority open houses from 1
to 3 and dancing at the Aragon
ballroom to Joe Sanders and the
Black Hawks at 3! . . And most
important, . . everything was free!
Maybe. . . some day, when we
beat Pittsburgh. . .?
TOMORROW night the Ag col
lege Boarding club will entertain
at a fall party at the Lincoln ho
tel. LeRoy Hansen, social chair
man of the club, is in charge of
the arrangements for the affair
and the chaperons will be Dr. and
Mrs. F. D. Keim, Dr. and Mrs. G
Rosenquist, and Prof. P. K. Crowe
THIS afternoon the Alpha Chi
Omega mothers club will meet at
the chapter house for a dessert
luncheon and a business meeting.
Hostesses for the afternoon are
Mrs. Clark Jeary, Mrs. Frank
Rowland and Mrs. Willis Brainard.
Twenty-five members are expected
to attend the meeting. The deco
rations will be carried out in pastel
shades.
ARE YOU a blase sophisticate?
If such be the case . . . .you are not
invited to the Estes Co-operative
blowout at the Armory tomorrow
night... so say the handbills dis
tributed to the organized houses
today. Something out of the or
dinary for parties.. . .in these parts
....with square dancing, a floor
show, movies of the Estes confer
ence last year.... it promises to be
a party worth looking into!
FRIDAY the Tau Kappa Epsi
lon auxiliary will meet at the chap
ter house for a dessert luncheon.
Hostesses for the affair will be
Mrs. A. R. Gilman and Mrs. H.
Kirshner.
ARTHUR Boyle, Victor Eitel,
Roscoe Heins. Waldemar Mueller
and Hermit Rosenberg have been
WHAT'S DOING
Thursday.
Phi Kappa Psl mothers club,
at the home of Mrs. Robert M.
Jovce, 2 o'clock.
Zcta Tau Alpha mothers club
luncheon at the chapter house,
12:30.
Kappa Delta mothers club, 1
o'clock luncheon at the chapter
house.
Friday.
Alpha Omicron Fi mothers
club, tea at the chapter house.
Delta Tau Delta house party
at the chapter house, 9 o'clock.
Pi Kappa Alpha dinner dance
at the chapter house, 7 o'clock.
Ag college Boarding club
party at the Lincoln hotel, 9
D'clock.
Saturday.
THANKSGIVING FROLIC
at the coliseum, 8:30.
Delta Delta Delta Founders
day banquet, 6:30.
Mortar Board alumnae at the
home of Mrs. Joe W. Seacrest,
2:30.
Kappa Sigma house party at
the chapter house, 9 o'clock.
Delta Sigma Lambda house
party at the chapter house, 9
o'clock.
Alpha Omicron Pi house
party at the chapter house, 9
o'clock.
Alpha Phi tea dance at the
chapter house, 4 o'clock.
Sigma Chi house party at the
chapter house, 9 o'clock.
KOSMET KLUB FALL RE
VUE, 9 O'CLOCK.
Sunday.
Sigma Alpha Iota musical at
the home of Louise Magee, 5 :30.
TIME AND TIDE
ABROAD
by
BOB ZIMMERMAN
initiated by Beta Sigma Phi.
TUESDAY evening Coach Bible
entertained the football squad at
dinner at his home. After dinner
pictures of the Nebraska-Pittsburgh
game were shown.
IN Omaha on Tuesday after
noon Marjorie Northrup and Don
ald Havens of Villisca, la., were
married. Miss Northrup lives in
Omaha and is a former student of
the University of Nebraska.
GUESTS AT the Theta Chi
house last night were Tubby Ran
dal, brother of Ernie Werner from
the University of New Hampshire,
and Jamsey and Renee, the cele
brated musical mermaids. This
trio of singers accompanied by
Nap Gagnon did specialty numbers
at an informal after dinner entertainment.
Freshman Ag Commission
, To Stage Parly Saturday
The ag freshman Y. W. C. A.
commission group will hold a
party at the student activities
building Saturday, 23. Chaperons
for the affair are to be Mr. and
Mrs. T. H. Goodeling, Miss Evelyn
Metzger and Miss Ruth Eloise
Sperry. Emma Mauch is the group
leader.
KEITH RATH BUN TO
STUDY AT ILLINOIS
Keith L. Rathbun, president of
Sigma Gamma Epsilon, geology
fraternity, left Nov. 15 for the Uni
versity of Illinois to study Pleisto
cene Gastropods under Dr. Baker.
Mr. Rathbun is studying this sub
ject with a view to basing his
theses for his master's degree
upon it.
TODAY days ON STAGE
At
3:30
7:20
9:20
vJ i. -'-4 y' Li iJ I - .--A
LjjlJuu lIM
y$TARS0F
IfxJ MELODY
C 3mWf , tW: JaJeV
THE HOTTEST,
PEPPIEST, FAST
EST COLORED
MUSICAL SHOW;
IN AMERICA!
Featuring
BROOM FIELD
& GREELEY
8cree" Lau eht-Ch uckles - Th rills
"Tli3 CASE f to L'iSSL'tG MA!i
with Eager Pryor Joan Perry
COME EARLY FOR CHOICE SEATS
MM
Looking nt the news in retrospect, nrnl
viewing tho developments gleaned from tho
progression of contemporary and quite rele
vant world policies and tendencies, it is cer
tainly apropos for the students in the younger
generation to arise in challenge of the subtle
forces nt work which inevitably, unless wo do
express ourselves, shape and form our destiny.
This may all sound like so many words meant
for the literato group, on any campus or walk
of life, who arc characterized by the disinter
ested as "horn-rimmed, straight-jacket, ortho
doxist prudes." I doubt that anyone, prude
and prig alike, would treat a situation indif
ferently if the outcome they knew to be ulti
mately a deprivation of their personal inter
ests, or a subjection of their individuality to
coercive forces working against it.
It is high time to find out just what is
what about communism, fascism, llitlerism and
socialism in general, which are all making
their plea to the world. Do we want commu
nism, do we want fascism, do we want social
ism in any form, or do we want anything but
our present endangered democracy? All these
"isms," and even democracy, arc without
meaning until the effects of each have been
noted.
In Rome, on the day the sanctions of fifty
two nations went into effect against belliger
ent Italy, 2 million students protested at for
eign legations against sanctions. The British
embassy was under heavy guard. In Cairo,
Egypt, the news tells of students renewing vio
lent anti-British rioting. The most pertinent
is that of the Cairo students. Going anti-British
looks, from the surface, anti-fascist. But
perhaps it can be explained by propaganda.
And what do we care, or in what way are we
affected by the possibility of some country
"going fascist" or "going communistic"?
Just in this way, if the present Italo-Ethiopian
war should by hook or crook succeed in
spreading the fascist paste over a wider mar
gin of the earth's surface it is difficult to say
where it will run next, and the United States
is pie for anyone's fingers.
"Ye are sitting pretty in the United States,
pretty conspicuous however, in the eyes of all
the "isms" afloat. Much has been omitted
and much overlooked in regard to press reve
lations of developments in social and economic
trends, that is, in the kinds of publications
which reach the majority of people, the daily
newspapers.
But at large in the United States are hosts
of propaganda which seldom reach the eyes
and ears of college students, and it is this
group which is the most ultimately affected
by the results of propaganda. In other words,
the students today are having their futures
secured by just the type of propaganda which
our elders are beine subjected to.
''
Xot that they are necessarily or poig
nantly prone to shaping the student's des
tiny, but that it is they, our elders, who are
the most affected by propaganda and they
who pass it on to the younger generation
probably unwittingly but naturally and log
ically in the form of laws, enactments, cus
toms, and all that goes to shape our social
structure.
It should rest with us then, as students, to
find out about the things which indirectly af
fect us in the future. To do this we should
start at home, in the United States, and right
off the bat ask Undersecretary of Agriculture
Rexford Tugwell why he stated in Los An
geles a short time ago, expounding on the
ideas of a co-operative and socialistic state,
that "man will advance more 'once he gives up
the sterilo morality of individualism'."
Coming from ono of our more or less
prominent burenucrntists it may nppcar to be
an attack ogainst tho present administration.
Decidedly no, because tho promise of an argu
mentative attack should always bear substan
tial proof, and this question is neither an nt
tack nor a premise. It is merely a plea for
explanation. Maybe we do want a socialistic
state, and if so wo surely want good sound
reasons for it. And if not, our reasons against
socialism, or. any of its contingents, mu:;t be
proclaimed and repeatedly invoked. And as
long as wo, the students, have to live in it, let
us build it according to our own plans.
BROWSING
Among the
BOOKS
(In the absence of Maurice Johnson, who
regularly conducts this column, it is written by
Old Harry, a familiar campus character.-Punctuation
has been added to OKI Harry's manu
script.) DY cracky, here's a book that warms my
heart. I want to stop right now, though,
and say what I don't like about it: 1 don't
like the pictures. Most of the pictures remind
you of musty old parlor albums or ladies'
genealogies; they don't mean much except that
they prove there really were such people, you
see. There's one pretty fine photograph of a
sand dune, though, all piled up quiet-like, and
I wish all the pictures'! been that kind. All
except one: that's the picture of Old Jules him
self, and it's a good one. His eyes gleam right
at you, part fierce, and part sad, and part
watching, and part thoughtful.
Some writer-fellow, making out how "Old
Jules" probablv wouldn't sell very far and
wide claimed there's too much burr on the
story to go down smoothly. Burry: that's i
llhink Miss Mari SandozM like that herself,
think she wanted to write a burry book abo
her father, Old Jules. And that 's what she d
all right. ?
I know something about pioneering
Nebraska mvself; I know something at
that mostly arid, high plain, upper Xiobri
countrv Old Jules lived in.
(The reviewer's personal reminisce!
have had to be deleted on account of laci
space. The Editor.)
IN FRATERNITY SOCCER
Eight Extra Periods Fail to
Break Deadlock Between
Two Elevens.
Sterna Cht and Sigma Alpha
Kpallon are still in a deadlock
from their 0-0 game on Monday,
though right extra periods have
been played in an attempt to
break tho tie. Their skirmish Wed
nesday ended still 1-1 as did the
periods Tuesday. Two ties between
other teams were broken and one
postponed game played to help
Director Harold Petz clear the
field for the water polo and rifle
shoot beginning soon.
Matteson of Phi Kappa Psi
scored in the last period to beat
out Sigma Nu 1-0. Pi Kappa
Alpha and Sigma Phi Epsilon
battled it heatedly for four periods
before Fager kicked the goal that
won 1-0 for PI K. A.
The regular scheduled game of
Sitrma Phi Epsilon vs. Acacia was
won by Acacia after Heillg booted
the ball for the only tally in the
fourth quarter. Tomorrow the Slg
Chi-Sig Alph tussle will be re
sumed in an attempt to break the
deadlock.
season tho Whites outplayed the
Hlucs in a scoreless game. The
Blues arc hoping for a better show
ing in this game,
Many of the freshmen have JobH
on Saturdays and tho ranks of
both teams will suffer losses.
FROSH ELEVENS TO
PLAY GAME NOV.
Whites, Blues Clash
Play Off (M)
Dratr.
23
to
The Whites and the Blues, two
divisions of the frosh football team,
will stage a regular game Satur
day at 2 o'clock. This is the big
e of the year for tne yearlings.
'ahe team will use the Oregon
iate offense principally.
i In a regular game earlier in the
Returned by Special
Request for your
entertainment
DON
SHELTON
AND HIS
KENTUCKY COLONELS
The same orchestra
you enjoyed at the
Minnesota Game Dance
with many new
arrangements for
the winter season
at the
THANKSGIVING
FROLIC
Saturday in the
COLISEUM
STAG - - - DATE
The season's last
non-inhibitory prices
Men 40c Ladies 20c
Couples 60c
Well, these things that happened
those days were like party games
compare them with the things that h
in Old Jules bandoz s lile. He co:
domineered the whole blamed territo:
where he lived, lie met up wth dr
storms and soldiers and Indians and
despair. He had to kill men. He ha
ish his wives and there were four
one after another.
Miss Sandoz hasn't written a p
about her father and about those
neer da vs. But she's written a re:
me tell you. She's written it witho
ing about the bush, too: simple
that's what I like.. It's as straigh;
Old Jules himself.
to
book
pio-
let
y beat-
direct:
rd as
Thov tell one talc that didi;
book. One night when Miss Mai
a dance was a fine tall young
took her aside and told her, "1
an Indian." But Old Jules tool
said. "Go back and dance with J
a rich Indian."
Xo blood and thunder in
but it. lets vou see Old Jules
They tell, too, about prizl
"Old Jules." I don't know,
do know it's a book I like.
ret m Ihe
Partner at
ler mother
I hat man's
aside and
'Mari. He's
little story,
17..
d things for
t that, but I
y, J call it.
COLLEGE
WORLD
Greatest "thief in football an
nals was Princeton's Arthur Poe,
who wrenched a ball from the
arms of a Yale runner Nov. 12,
1S98, and ran 100 yards for the
day's only score.
Enrollment in Haverford's
courses for the college janitors
and kitchen men jumped this year
from 11 to 25. Subjects include
civics, French and algebra.
Leaflets advertising a nazi book
were found inserted into a stand
ard German text at C. C. N. Y. re
cently. They were removed and
ordered destroyed.
Indication of returning stable
"Your Drug Store"
Special Thit Week
IIXKN'S" FEAMT
BKITTI.fc. Pound lfV
The OWL PHARMACY
1U .. HI f Nt. 1-tMMM B10M
Mt OtUVt-B
business conditions is seen in the
increasing amount of gifts to col
leges and universities.
Famed soloists and some of the
world's finest musical organiza
tions will be heard by an immense
music appreciation "class" 2,000
strong offered at Northwestern.
Credit toward a degree may be
obtained by Alfred university stu
dents who participate in certain
extra curricular activities.
Standardized education, with
little allowance made for the in
dividual, is contributing to crim
inal delinquency, says Lehigh's
dean, Dr. Max McConn.
There are two. and just two,
reasons why freshmen flunk out
of college says Dr. L. L. Click of
the University of Texas.
1. Either freshmen get too
scared of their studies.
2. Or they don't get scared
enough and go to sleep.
For the workingest college stu
dent in the world we nominate a
certain junior at Miami university.
This man is carrying 20 study
hours a week and auditing one
course. To support himself he
works 50 hours a month on the
NY A, is an assistant in the phys-
KOSMET KLUB
FALL REVUE
'14 Original Acts With
Numerous Curtain Acts
Presentation Nebraska Sweetheart
Beck-Jungbluth Orchestra
Stuart Theatre
Sat., Nov. 23rd 9 A. M.
Best Entertainment of the Year
Tickets On Sale 50c
ics departmer
the mathemaf
works from I
every day U
company !
Former
Imprt
fades papers for
department, and
pn to midnight
office of a taxi
Starting Today!
Heroes gay and
dangerous . . .
as Dumas
must have
dreamed
them!
jswf- ; . . , x --w sir-
D'Artajnan,fictiC'n'
fondct ao-to-thc
devil lover . . . reborn
in a stirring iym
phony of steel.
on-tcel I
"1 ivM- - y
7m
with WALTER ABEL,
the audacious D'Artagnan;
m. m m m mm mm m. "
PAUL as
the heart-breaking Athos;
MARGOT CRAHAME,
as the lovely Milady de
Winter; HEATHER.
ANGEL, IAN KEITH,
Moroni Olsen, Onslow
Stevens, Rosamond Pin
chot,JobnQualeiv,Ralth Forbes, Nisei de Brulier.
iicellor Said
After Injury
Conditii
Lean, 5,
Nebrasl
of Iowa
improvec
Wednesc
Washing
an auti
fering
now a
period!
repoi
age.
Dr. Georg-e Mac-
jer University of
cellor and president
jrrsity, was reported
iattending physicians
br. MacLean, now in
X. C. was injured in
lent last October, suf
I fracture. Visitors are
1 see him for short
fiough his progress is
jw because of advanced
All New Maj. Bowes
AMATEURS
Scrartplay hy Pudlty Nich
ols and Rowland V. Lea.
DincUd hy Rowland V. Lea.
AnociaU Producer. Cltfl
RewL Thrillinc fencinf r
Tongtmrnti by Frarf Cauciu.
Added
Fun!
"Crime )wnl for" Mrttrrrrttr
"DESERT DEATH"
Added
Fun!
I
MICKEY MOUSE
20c till 6 P. M.
LBNCOLM
Lino1
Too"
pan
mayo
Acrob,
tlct
tU0
t4tf
Gino
sGano
Continental
mcera
uw
to-
?fffa
.. . -"td
tssxt wars
ccssri...
6$
r
1
i
I