The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 13, 1936, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    FOUR
S(DCDAD WDiDKljL0
WILL YOU BE
MY VALENTINE?
The buying and sending of val
entines In the form of elaborate
boxes of candy, gorgeous cor
sages, touching little romantic
verses, or else Jaat downright Joke
affairs, is campus business today.
Academic disappointments are
being placated, partially, at least,
by the dispatch of various and
sundry comic remembrances to
professurs, who were understand
ing but firm. On the other hand,
we find great pleasure in antici
pating the certain successful re
sults that will come to those
thoughtful swains who are send
ing a more romantic type of rem
brance to their "valentines."
Strange as it may seem to the
cynics in our midst, there has been
much more ado than usual, this
year, about cupid's holiday.
SIGMA NU Mothers club met
Tuesday at the chapter house for a
luncheon. The decorations used
were red roses and red candels.
The afternoon was spent planning
the Valentine Sweetheart dinner
to be given for the actives, pledges
and their respective dates Sunday
night.
PERSONAL mention was made
of our prominent Jane McLaugh
in in a report sent out concern
ing the white house reception
Monday night. The clever white
bow she wore in her hair caused
considerable attention at the af
fair. NEWLY elected officers of Pi
Kappa Alpha are: Frank Chris
tenson, president; Sirman Selts,
vice president; Bernard Smith,
treasurer; Willard Burney, secre
tary, and Warren Thompson,
steward.
MOTHERS club of Alpha Xi
Delta will meet at the chapter
house Friday afternoon. Mrs. A.
O. Gronquist and Mrs. Grace
Probascoe will serve as hostesses
at the meeting.
TODAY the Sigma Phi F.psilon
auxiliary will meet for lucheon at
the chapter house. Assisting host
esses will be Mrs. Homer Srhott,
Mrs. Guy Green, and Mrs. M. L.
Johnson.
MEMBERS of the active chap
ter of Phi Delta Theta and their
dates will be entertained at a
Valentine dinner Sunday at the
chapter house.
MARI SANDOZ COLLEGE
ESSAY REFLECTS STYLE
OF 'OLD JULES.'
(Continued from Page 1.)
a pioneer one, found himself with
no geographic frontier to try his
mettle and to offer him laurels. But
the restless urge to push on was
undiminished. For want of a bet
ter outlet he turned his tremendous
racial energies into industry and
business and accumulated the more
tangible evidences of achievement
wealth, property. If he failed
here he failed entirely, completely.
"There was. of course, no train
ing school for the pioneer. He went
out and was one or wasn't. In
either case he seldom embarrassed
his friends and relatives further.
Perhaps our impatience with care
ful planning and long preparation
for a profession grew out of the
immediacy of pioneering. Instead
of taking up an occupation or a
profession as the culmination of
early parental preparation or the
gradual development of a particu
lar bent as in other countries, most
Americans get jobs or go to col
lege as they go to movies drift in,
with only a hazy notion of where
they're going or what it's all about.
Our Secret of Success.
''We seldom, it seems to me.
stop to consider the advantages
and disadvantages of the various
professions, to weigh what each
offers economic security, per
haps even affluence; fame, pow
er; or the opportunity for sen-ice
and the joy of congenial work
well done. We may take up fine
arts because someone about the
campus tells us that dacir.g and
china painting are 'pipes," or that
engineering pays big, or that law
offers special social and political
advantages, on and off the cam
pus. Later we find we do not like
a lab instructor or we develop a
crush for this or that student or
professor, or hear where we can
get a "hot" history note book for
the copying. We clamour at the
registrar's window, charge
courses, perhaps colleges. And
when we are finally graduated we
diift into this or "that thru pull,
thru accident, or thru necessity,
and if we accumulate a gfod liv
ing, a big house, a car that over
awes the traffic cop, and mem
berships in certain clubs of stand
ing we are placed, and pointed out.
Young people and repot ters for
the popular magazines interview
lis and let us tell them what was
the scoot of our auccess.
Pioneer Went West.
'But just recently the pretty
picture has been a little blurred.
Thousands of college graduates,
some even from the upper quar
tile and with connections lately
Influential, are jobless, in a few
cases very near actual hunger.
Angered at first, then bitter and
finally dull and confused, they
can't undei stand what has hap
pened to the world and to them.
Theoretically i't least they are
fitted 'to do some job well. The
world owes them an opportunity
to do it. The world always deliv
ered before.
"But did it? Until recently,
when the American found his
world disintegrating under his
feet and opportunity unreasonab.y
reticent, he piled bis belongings
Into a covered wagon and pushed
westward, whcie homes were com
paratively free, wnere litigation,
disease and violence provided work
for the doctor, the lawyer and the
grave digger. The pioneer endured
hardships but they were leavened
by adventure and apparently
everyon made good in a big way.
At least all we ever hear about
did. At the worst the migration
relieved the charity organizations
WHAT'S DOING
Thursday.
Sigma Phi Epsllon auxiliary
luncheon at the chapter house,
1 o'clock.
Phi Mu mothers club lunch
eon at the chapter house, 1
o'clock,
Friday.
Pi Beta Phi formal at the
Cornhusker.
Delta Gamma mothers club
luncheon at the chapter house,
1 o'clock.
Alpha XI Delta mothers club
meeting at the chapter house.
Alpha Tau Omega auxiliary
luncheon at the home of Mrs.
R. M. Walt.
Mortar Board alumni lunch
eon at the Cornhusker hotel.
Sigma Alpha Mu pledge
party at the chapter house.
Saturday.
Chi Omega formal at the
Cornhusker.
Mu Phi Epsilon alumnae
luncheon at the home of Mrs.
Lawrence Lindgren.
Sunday.
Sigma Nu sweetheart dinner
at the chapter house.
Phi Delta Theta Valentine
dinner at the chapter house.
Chi Phi buffet supper at the
chapter house.
AT the Chi Omega formal Sat
urday night, the chaperones will
be: Governor and Mrs. Roy Coch
ran, Prof, and Mrs. Karl Arndt,
Dr. and Mrs. Spencer, and Mrs.
M. W. Halley.
SECOND semester freshman
women will be entertained by the
Coed Counselor board at a taffy
pull at Ellen Smith hall, Sunday
afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock.
Special guests at the party will
be Miss Piper and Miss Clark,
sponsors of the organization.
Other diversions of the afternoon
will be games conducted by the
sports hobby group. Jean Marvin
is in charge of the invitations,
Theodora Lohrman refreshments,
and Beth Taylor games. About
fifty guests are expected to at
tend. AN open meeting of the Pala
dian Literary society will be held
Friday night. Arrangements for
the affair are being made by the
new members, under the direction
of Dean Worcester, jr. A program
of various skits, plays and mu
sical selections has been planned.
and unemployment in the older
communities, built up new con
suming areas, later producing
ones. Hard times were followed by
waves of population into the most
convenient wilderness.
Consider Permanent Values,
''Out here in the middle west we
are selected and reselected wan
derers. At the slightest provoca
tion we pick up and go, whether
it be from a class, a school, a po
litical party, or a profession. This
unique ability to cast off all ties
and depart is an asset if we use
it to desert what has so often
failed us and search for greater
permanence. It is a liability if we
become professional wanderers.
"The man or woman choosing a
career will do well, it seems to
me, to consider this business of
permanent values, something out
side of money, social position, and
power, all of which may be and
sometimes has been swept away
between suns. The young person
choosing a profession may well do
a little advice seeking and self
searching to discover his handi
caps, his special abilities, his
physical, mental and spiritual
equipment. But most important,
it seems to me, is to discover
wherein he finds most joy and
self approbation. Then, if vicissi
tudes come, as come they will in
a society whose economic struc
tures are always rebuilt upon the
old crumbling foundations, and hi.
profession become less remunera
tive, he will still have the joy and
the approbation. These things are
at least of comparative perma
nence. Choose Profession Carefully.
"And if he should find his great
est satisfaction in the manipula
tion of things, if his choice seems
to be the ax or the monkey wrench
rather than theories and abstrac
tions, should he hesitate? Not
for a moment if he have the shoul
ders and th zest for the ax or
the wrench. Not even if it were
sonnets or the palette should he
hesitate. Those who have no
wealth and property to lose are
strangely undisturbed by the
swing of the economic pendluin.
"Altho there is no frontier to
speak of outside of the individual
himself today, no retreat from the
vagaries of nature and the un
wisdom of man other than the re
gions of the intellect, let t h e
young man not be appalled. Let
him choose his profession with
caution: weigh it carefully, make
his decision judiciously and with
what allegiance he can muster.
Let him insist upon the thing he
wants to be. And when the spade,
the sea pel. or the brief is laid
away for the day, let him. if he
likes, push out into the one fron
tier that is left to him, the broad
est, the most mysterious, the
land of things men are and have
been. It is not cntireiy unchar
tered. A great drama here, a
symphony there, a painting, a
poem snow capped peaks to
guide him. And between them are
deep canyons and foaming rivers
and waterfalls, waiting for the
eye and the ear.
"Let those who are choosing a
profession consider carefully what
they are to do but even more
carefully whai they are to be."
A cub reporter on the S. C
Daily Trojan performed a miracle
and was admitted for an interview
with Leroy Drake, the 19 year old
elf-confessed slayer, whom the
city news hawks had futilcly been
attempting to see. Drake's story
so touched the feminine heart of
the reporter that she refused to
publish it despite the offer from a
city paper to give her special rater
and a by-line.
SEEN ON
THE CAMPUS.
Dick Mosman trotting fro md
the campus in mammoth galoshes
. . . Buzz Fonda still "fonda"
Charlotte Huse . . . Pat Lahr wild
ly celebrating her eighteenth
birthday. . . Arlene Orcutt with
the usual male attendance. . . Dave
Deakins amusing the campus
"cakes" with a whole basketful of
new parlor tricks. . . Janet Cald
well and her usual following, Don
Moss and Bob Leadley, debating
about the desirability of "cutting"
the next class. . . Mary and Jack
Gavin avidly discussing the good
and bad points of the swimming
team. . . Eleanor and Jackie Rey
nolds never seen about together. . .
Helen Lawrence Ames and Fran
ces Ireland frequenting the old
hang-outs together. . . Bill Sawtell
and Clayton Schwenk sporting the
wildest looking woolen shirts of
the year. . . and everyone specu
lating about the approach of an
other blizzard.
CHAPERONS for the Pi Phi
formal Friday night will be: Trof.
and Mrs. L. B. Smith, Proffcssor
and Mrs. Koffman, and Mr. and
Mrs. Jul Petermichacl.
CANDY was nassed Tuesday
I niphr to the pirls at Carrv Belle
Raymond hall when Mayma
Longeor, of Norfolk, and James
Gregory, of Omaha, and member
of Alpha Sigma Phi. informally
announced their engagement.
RECENTLY elected officers of
Alpha Phi are: Bonnie Bishop,
president; Betty Beck, vice presi
dent; Margaret Collins, treasurer,
and Virginia Amos, guard.
CHI Phi Mothers club will enter
tain the activies, pledges and their
dates at a buffet supper at the
chapter house Sunday night. Mrs.
Raymond Pool is chairman of the
committee in charge of the affair.
SECOND semester officers for
Phi Delta Theta are: George Bas
tian, president; Donald Clark, vice
president; Robert Hutton, warden,
and Paul Hart, secretary.
PHI Mu Mothers club meeting
which was announced as meeting
Wednesday will take place Friday
instead.
AMONG oth- guests at Bar
ney Drummond's birthday dinner
celebration in Beatrice Wednesday
evening were several Nebraska
coeds and their escorts.
aprrlht ItM. Tut lHna Tabtmt Compwf
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
WW TOPIC
OF WAINS' SPEECH
Former CCC Supervisor in
Talk at Regular ASAE
- Meeting.
Clayton W. Watkins, former
state supervisor of CCC camps,
presented an address on the
"Shelterbelt" at the regular meet
ing of the ASAE Tuesday evening,
Feb. 11. He pointed out the vital
importance of the Shelterbelt in
the conservation of soil and mois
ture in Nebraska, the Dakotas,
Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas,
which is necessary In a state to
preserve its wealth. The speaker
is at the present time teaching in
Ag college.
According to Watkins, work on
the shelterbelt is being advanced
a.q rnnldlv as possible. AnDroxi-
mately 40,000 acres of trees will be
set out next month if the weather
permits. Such a project demands
the fullest co-operation of the
farmer with the government for
the project to be a success, said
Watkins.
Following the, lecture, plans
were discussed for a party to be
snonsored bv the ASAE on Feb.
21. Pete Burns announced that
Dave Hauns orchestra had been
engaged for the affair.
NEBRASKA COLLEGES
SEND DELEGATES TO
CHRISTIAN CONCLAVE
(Continued from Pago 1.)
general "get-acquainted" party,
also to be held In the basement of
the St. Paul church.
Saturday morning session of the
conference, which will begin at
8:30 at the Plymouth Congrega
tional church, will consist of an
address and forum led by Kagawa.
The subject will be the "Spiritual
Life." At 11 o'clock informal dis
cussion groups will be held. The
discussion will be centered around
the topic "How Can We Carry
These Ideas Back to our Own
Campus?" At 12 o'clock, lunch
eon will be served at the church.
Kagawa Speaks at 1:30.
Speaking on "Co-operatives"
Kagawa will open the afternoon
session at 1:30. Following his
speech another informal discus
sion period will be held.
The Estes banquet, sponsored by
the university Estes Co-operative,
will begin at 6 o'colck in the base
ment of Plymouth church. Ar
rangements for the banquet and
evening's entertainment are in the
hands of Row :.a Pwenson and
John Steinhouse. A short skit de
picting life at Estes will be put on
.
'mfcA
o 0$PhS '
M-&m mil m
OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO-"IT'S TOASTED"
Movie Box
STUART
"MAGNIFICENT OBSES
SION'' LINCOLN
"KING OF BURLESQUE"
0RPHEUM
"SANDERS OF THE
RIVER"
LIBERTY
"CLIVE OF INDIA"
SUN
"NO MORE LADIES"
"THUNDER IN THE EAST"
COLONIAL
"WE'RE ONLY HUMAN"
and
"FIGHTING COWARD"
Westland Theater Corp.
VARSITY
"MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S
DREAM"
KIVA
"THE OLD HOMESTEAD"
"PUBLIC ENEMY NUM
BER 1"
by the Estes co-operative mem
bers, under the direction of
Francos Scudder and Lloyd Mc
Grew. Evening Program.
Following the dinner, an eve
ning of creative leisure has been
planned. Folk dancing and games
will provide the entertainment,
with a song fest concluding the
evening. The conference will come
to a close Sunday morning. At 9
o'clock a worship service will be
held at the Plymouth church, fol
lowing which delegates will attend
the church of their choice.
The Student Christian confer
ence is an annual affair. Last year
it was held at Kearney. Schools
represented at the conference in
clude Doane, Kearney, University
of Nebraska, Wesleyan, Nebraska
Central, York, Peru, and Wayne.
W1SIINOW, IIAKIUSON
PRESENT 1'KOGRAM
Emanuel Wishnow, violinist and
Earnest Harrison, pianist present
ed the sixteenth Musical Convoca
tion Wednesday afternoon, Febru
ary 12 at the Temple Theater.
Selections from Bethoven's and
Brahm's Sonatas were played. The
three movements of Beethoven's
Sonata. Opus 12, No. 1 were Alleg
ro conbrio, Andante con moto, and
Allegro. Brahm's Sonata, Opus
100 was played in the three move
ments Allegro amabile. Andante
tranquillo, and Allegretto grazioso.
-r-.-
RTHURSDAY
Supporters Confident of
Husker Win at Rocky
Mountain Meet.
Veibal long shots may score
points today, when Nebraska de
baters open fire ' in the Rocky
Mountain tournament in Denver.
The engagement will continue un
til Saturday, Feb. 15. Nebraska's
lineup is Eugene W. Pester, Ar
thur L. Smith, Jr., and Frances
Johnson. Veteran of the squad is
Pester, who was in last year's
tournamt-.nt, placing third among
extemporaneous speakers. Both
other men, however, have had
plenty of previous experience.
Team supporters confidently ex
pect Nebraska to win hands down.
Johnson and Smith will be fea
tured in a panel discussion on
whether allowing congress to
override supreme court decisions
Remember Her With the
Most Appropriate Valentine
FLOWERS
from
Rosewell Floral Co
124 So. 13th
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1036.
would have any effect on the AAA
question. Pester will be In the ex
temporaneous competition, and
will participate in a panel
cussion on the utilities problem
with reefrence to congress .,nu ;k
supremo court.
Sponsored by Denver university,
the tournament will include all
types of debates, discussions, ora
torical, and extemporaneous con
tests. This is Nebraska's second
appearance in the tournament.
A bright Illinois columnist sug
gests that, "Sing Sing ought to
get a game with army to prove
that the pen is mightier than the
sword."
We heard that there's a 16 year
old girl who learned to pilot an
airplane. First thing you know,
the fair sex will be learning to
drive automobiles.
$1.00 Wrought Iron 2f)
SMOKER'S STAND 39
If Accompanied by
This Advertisement
LIMITED SUPPLY
The OWL PHARMACY
148 No. 14th and P Street
B7021
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