The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 21, 1936, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    FOUR
NEBRASKA CAMPUS n
0 S(DCDAIL WDiDDLL.i5
THINGS WE'D
LIKE TO SEE. .
Ed Stceves with a moustache. . .
Harold Lcdford with his hair
combed .... Loren Zook with Mar
garet Munger. .. .Something tan
gible in the way of a new book
store. . . .Bob Leadly with a bunch
of fellows. .. .Charlie Brook with
a shirt on Janet Caldwell dat
ing Bruce Kenney. . . .practice kid
naping case in Law college....
Toby Eldrldge without a haircut
....Herb Palmer in a hurry....
Bill Clayton without a camera. ...
Margaret Straub hitch-hiking....
Lois Rathburn smoking a cigaret
.... Marie Kotouc cavorting about
with the campus "cakes."....
Jane Holland swearing. . . .D. U.'s
Sackett indulging in an inferiority
complex. .. .Jane Kcefer playing
hop-scotch. .. .Elsie Buxman call
ing hogs Chi Phi's going in for
wholesale car buying. .. .and the
spring weather appearing.
FORMAL SEASON
LOSES INTEREST.
Eormals seem to bo getting
more space every day, Hnd as we
view the calendar for the remain
der of the season, our hearts arc
filled with sadness for soon the
"top hat, white tie and tails" cus
tom will far from prevail on ye
olde Nebraska campus. We feel
sure there will be a great deal of
weeping at this development on
the part of the campus Romeos,
who find nothing more pleasing
than barging around all evening in
a shirt that feels like lead armor,
and a collar that is usually several
sizes too small. But the poor coeds
will doubtless suffer the most, for
with the approach (we hope) of
warmer weather, when they find
that they are forced to wear long
sleeved winter dresses to dance in
at night instead of the practically
invisible creation of the formal
season, they will surely die of the
shock and subsequent suffocation.
At any rate there is still the ap
proaching excitement and expecta
tion of the annual Junior-Senior
prom, which promises to be one of
the best dances of the year and
if, as Irving Hill would say, "If
the orchestra committee ever de
cides who will play for it, campus
locieties will have that to discuss
l between the waning parties.
I? . - 11 - -1-
fe Mrs &n JS
qS&B Mf 'ffe
The Kit Kat club revue will appear in a midnight show Saturday
unit that appeared in the London night club.
Inexpensive Inns to Cater
To Travelers of Limited
Means.
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 21.
(CNS). Youth would be served
with special attention and special
care If the campaign which Miss
.Ifwpnhinc D. Ranilull. director of
the San Francisco recreation de-
SYRACUSK SENIORS GET
MARITAL INSTRUCTION
Ilanlly hn.l Ihr ink dried on the edition of the Daily Ne
Lrnskaii v.liich recently iintiirci of Hie students iind faculty
uicinlxMs, "Would you favor the inauguration of a series of
marital lecture nni oeation, open to id I students, conducted )y
psychologists and physicians?" limn the interest inj? news ar
rived here that Just such a course u
had been inaugurated at Syracuse
university as the result of student
petitioning.
The course, consiting of a one
hour lecture and discussion period
weekly, favored by faculty mem
bers of sociology, psychology, bi
ology, and home economics at
Syracuse was recently adopted
after 600 men and women students
had signed the marriage course
petitions.
According to the plans outlined
at the university the discussion
will b open to seniors only and
for the first semester no credit
will be given to those students
participating in the course activ
ities. If details of the plan work
WHAT'S DOING
Friday.
Theta Chi auxiliary 1 o'clock
dessert luncheon at the chapter
house.
Lambda Chi Alpha 1 o'clock
luncheon, Mrs. A. T. Lobdell,
1845 Euclid.
Saturday.
Delta Delta Delta formal at
the Cornhusker hotel.
MORTAR BOARDS
HAVE HONORS TEA.
Honor.nf high scholarship
among women, Mortar Board will
entertain at tea Sunday afternoon
at Ellen Smith hall. Lorraine
Hitchcock is in charge of ar
rangements for the affair, which
promises to be one of the most
charming and elaborate teas of the
season. Assisting Miss Hitchcock
will be Virginia Selleck, Phyllis
Jean Humphrey, Lois Rathburn
and Elizabeth Bushee.
Mrs. F. D. Coleman, national
president of Mortar Board, Miss
Amanda Hepner, and the officers
of the active chapter, Ann Pickett,
Phyllis Jean Humphrey, Mary
Edith Hendricks and Alaire Barkes
will compose the receiving line.
About five hundred invitations
have been issued to the party,
which is an annual Mortar Board
event.
Ferns and spring flowers will
be used for decorations, and the
entertainment for the afternoon
will consist of musical selections,
which are being arranged for by
Lois Rathburn.
Two alumnae members of Mor
tar Board, Miss Elsie Ford Piper
and Miss Ada Westovcr, will pour
during the first hour, and during
the second hour two of the organ
izations advisors, Miss Margaret
Fedde and Miss Florence McGa
hey, will preside over the table.
AN addition to the list of new
officers of Acacia fraternity is
Mark Owens, who has been elected
secretary.
ALUMNI of Delta Upsilon held
their regular weekly luncheon and
meeting Wednesday at Beati-mont's.
Here From London Kit Kat Club
s.ys,, trim.-.: :
paitment, is successful. She pro
poses the establishment of a spe
cial chain of Inns or hotels, simple
and inexpensive, which would caler
to vnunr iiennlf! traveling in the
... b t i .
west. !
The chain of inns In the west i
would link up those already in ex
istence in the east, where 35 such
hotels have been constructed since
the idea was brought from Europe,
she said.
The youth hotels, Miss Randall
declared, already have become an
integral part of IS different Euro
pean countries. There it is possi
ble for young people to travel
widely by bicycle, foot and canoe
in six weeks at a total cost of
$20. These inns had their incep
tion in Germany but now have
out as r.re now being formulated,
the course will eventually be run
on the credit basis. For this sem
ester, however, according to the
report received, technical difficul
ties made the institution of the
course with credit, as originally
planned, possibly as a seminar,
impossible.
At Purdue university, as re
cently announced by Dr. E. C.
Eliot, president of the university,
a highly successful system ot con
vocations, supported by student
activity tickets, brings prominent
authorities to lecture and conduct
open forums on problems of mar
ital relationships. The question
now remains, ''What do you think
of the idea?"
SEEN ON
THE CAMPUS.
Kitty Dewey and Chuck Wool
ery lunching, as usual, in the
Campus Inn.... Ruth Fulton and
Hazel Bradstrect taking a breath
ing spell from their anatomy class.
. .vireinia Anderson wondering
who next and when. . . .much spec
ulation on the part of campus
Romeos as to how to entertain
their dates Friday night.... Rex
Patterson finally leaving the ranks
of the women haters society....
Margaret Phllllppe managing to
cake with Tom Cheney between
activities. .. .Blanche Gore trying
to find a meeting to attend ....
June Waggoner having a bit of
trouble with slippery streets....
Bill Marsh back to work again...
Kitty Adams discussing D. U.'s in
general Roy Kennedy playing
tricks on his Acacia brothers....
Beta pledges already getting dates
for the Miami triad Carol
fU.qninvinr John Groth's
pin Damon Sanden flirting
with Velma at the Moon.... and
everyone glad that the formal sea
son is almost over.
HOUSE jesidents of Alpha Xi
Delta will entertain their dates at
the chapter house with a fireside
party Friday night. Dancing and
bridge will be the chief diversions
of the evening, and arrangements
for the party are being made by
Carol Emery, social chairman for
the group.
UNIVERSITY of Nebraska
Dames will meet Friday evening
at Ellen Smith hall. Hostesses for
the evening will be Mrs. E. B.
Schmidt, Mrs. M. T. Frederickson,
and Mrs. V. B. McClure. The pro
gram will consist of an illustrated
lecture by Marjorie Shanafelt on
the "Pantry Shelf."
iii
SIGMA PHI EPSILON an
nounces the pledging of Bill Diers,
Greshen; James Simonin. Lincoln;
Bill McCowin, May wood; Lavelle
Van Home, Pawnee City; John
Enyeart, Hays Center.
ANNOUNCEMENT was made
of the marriage of Mercedes Ruth
Mullikcn of Fremont to La Verne
Christensen of North Bend which
took place in Fremont, Saturday.
Mrs. Christensen is a former stu
dent at the university.
at the Orphcum, with the same
spread to nearly all European
countries.
The idea was introduced in the
United States by Monroe and Isa
bel Smith and has proved a suc
cess in the east. Miss Randall
hopes to complete the system thru
out the western states.
The general plans will always
be the same separate dormitories
for hoys and girls, with community
kitchens and recreation halls.
The hotels provide beds, mat
tresses, blankets and cooking
utensils. The charge is 25 cents
for a night's lodging with 5 cents
to 10 cents added occasionally for
fuel.
Miss Randall hopes as the first
step In her program to have the
national park commission con
struct a "loop" of such hotels over
a suitable area that will enable
young travelers to make the en
tire tour by foot In 15 days. With
this as a demonstration, she ex
pects to be able to link up not
only a complete western but na
tional system of such inns.
Geography Instructor
Here for Consultation
Superintendent Ray E. Collins,
1931 graduate of Nebraska, called
at the geography department Wed
nesday for consultation regarding
the course in high school which he
is developing at Waco. Supt. Col
lins was formerly an assistant in
the Nebraska geography depart
ment and later in charge of the
geopraphy department at Kearney
Junior high school.1
You Cct Good Cleaning at
Modern Cleaners
Soukup & Westover
Call F2377 for Service
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
Movie Box
STUART
"BARBARY COAST"
LINCOLN
"RIFF-RAFF"
ORPHEUM
"ANOTHER FACE" and
Stage Show
LIBERTY
"TOP HAT"
SUN
"CALL OF THE WILD"
COLONIAL
"BULL DOG COURAGE"
Weitland Theater Corp.
VARSITY ;
"DANCE BAND"
KIVA
"TRANSATLANTIC
TUNNEL"
"THE CASE OF THE
MISSING MAN"
YALE PHYSICIST DENIES
II
Page Believes Einstein's
Views Too Restricted
For Use.
NEW YORK. Feb. .20. A new
conception of the theory of rela
tivity, disagreeing fundamentally
with ' the findings of Dr. Albert
TTinutoin is nrivRnced in an article
written by Professor Leigh Page
of Yale university lor me jr-nyBiuai
Review.
nr Pno-p said he offered his
views with the hope that they
would lead to a better understand
ing of the motions accurnng
within the atom.
"Tho fundamental assumption
underlying Einstein's theory of
relativity is that the physical in
terval between two near-by events
(the square of tne element oi
measured distance minus the
square of the product of the ve
locity of light by the element of
measured time; is an invariem.
having the same value for all ref
erence systems," said Dr. Page.
"This assumption has led to
cosmological predictions which
have been verified by observation.
"Nevertheless, the author of the
present paper believes that Ein
stein's postulate is too restricted
to include all possmie mouons vi
material narticles. In this paper
he will present an alternate theory,
and will give reasons for believing
that it, rather than Einstein's
theory, represents a proper formu
lation ot relativity in an enecuve
ly empty world.
"it is shnwn that in an effective
ly empty world Einstein's assump
tion of an invarient pnysicai inter
val and an absolute four-dimension
timp is in contradition with
the underlying principle of the
relativity of motion, ana tnere
fore either the one or the other
must be abandoned.
"The significance of the present
contribution lies in the discovery
of a new category of reference
avRtoma with Kiiclidean geometries
and constant light-velocities which
nave constant reiauve accelera
tions (in the relativity sense) and
for which the physical interval,
contrary to Einstein's fundamental
assumption, is not an invarient.
"In all probability there are
many other such categories as yet
unsuspected."
In his conclusion, following
mnnv hitrhlv enmnlex mathemati
cal formulae, Dr. Page states as
follows:
"Hence the conclusion seems in
pvitahlp that the fundamental as
sumption of an invariable physical
interval, wnicn unaemea nau
steln's relativity, is untenable.
Either the postulate of an absolute
four-dimensinnnl spare-time, or
the postulate of the relativity of
motion in an effectively empty
world, must be abandoned."
(SNS).
Women make better lawyers
than men, according to every com
parative measurement of those
rharicteristics of lawyers studied
by the Human Engineering Labor
atory of Stevens institute.
"The stark staring realism and
mounting suspense of this story
are simply incredible"
That'e what the March liie of Photo
play Magazine haa to say of thia amaz
ing atory of one lovely woman and 3,000
men.
1
OF
FELLOWSHIPS
Harvard Dean Wants Prize
Plan to Be Made
Nation-Wide.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Feb. 21
(CNS) Extension of Harvard
university's prize fellowship plan
throughout the country was urged
this week by Dean A. C. Hanford
of Harvard college.
The prize fellowships have been
effective in bringing students of
a high type to Harvard and fa
cilities should be offered whereby
students in many parts of the
coluntry could compete for the
fellowships, Dean Hanford said.
"It is the unanimous opinion of
the scholarship committee that the
prize fellowship plan should be
extended as soon as more funds
for the scholarships and their ad
ministration can be obtained," he
8t&t6(l
"It seems possible to select
young men at the age of 10 to 18,
when they are just completing
secondary schools, who have suffi
nerior intelligence and
general promise to justify spend
ing as much as m.uuu or i,iuu
a year apiece on them in case they
are without funds for their own
education," it was declared.
"We feel convinced, as the re
sult of the experiment with the
prize fellowships, and also as a
result of following a somewhat
similar practice with a limited
number of able upper classmen
already in college who hold regu
lar scholarships of large size, that
it is wise to give a student of out
stnniiine' nbilitv and promise a
sufficiently large stipend, if nec
essary, to relieve mm irom navmg
to carry outside work."
All ten of the members of the
class of 1938 who received prize
fellowships established honor rec
ords in their courses in the first
year, Dean Hanford reported.
Scientist Sponsors
Onion Marathon to
Find Tearless Bulb
ITHICA, N. Y Feb. 20. (CNS).
Nearly every day for three years
Dr. Hans Platen'lus. a German
born scientist on the faculty of
Cornell, has been cooking onions
in his basement laboratory at the
university. Who eats them, or if
no, what becomes of them after
the culinary marathon, is not
made clear by the Cornell Alumni
News, which tells the story of
the doctor's unflagging research
into onion reactions.
The real objective of this pun
gent pursuit is purely scientific.
It has to do with the ultimate dis
covery of the "tearless" as well
as the "most tearful" onion, and
the American housewife, it is ex
pected, will be the beneficiary of
the experiments. In three year,
more than 200 specimens of this
strong-scented sister of the lily
family have been put thru the
laboratory cauldrons to yield their
oil for analysis.
Doctor Platenius says that he
has already determined the pun
gency of at least fourteen different
onion varieties by testing tne sur
plus content of onion oil derived
from seperate steam distillations.
These varieties he explains were
collected from different parts ot
the world, and their concentrated
oil has such a vehemently asser
tive odor that but one drop, un
guarded in the basement where he
works, would quickly permeate the
four floors of the biulding with
the homely fragrance of a rotis
serie. To produce a half pint of
such oil more than two tons of
onions are required.
"My investigations," Doctor Plt-
enius declared, "indicate that tem
perature, particularly during the
ripening period, plays an impor
tant role in determining the rela
tive strength of the bulbs. Humid
ity, to, might be a deciding factor
as well as the quality of the soil.
Greenhouse experiments, in fact,
suggest that sandy sell; with
$1.00 Wrought Iron
SMOKER'S STAND
If Accompanied by
Tliis Advertisement
LIMITED SUPPLY
The OWL PHARMACY
148 Mo. 14th and P Street
vJ
OF THE
DAMNED
Conrad Veidt Noah Berry
Helen Vinson Huge Cast
Harry Langdon comedy Novelty
Cartoon Metrotone Newa
NOW PLAYING
l. i ail Waaa mdWaiii
FRIDAY,
plenty of moisture, will produce
milder onions than those grown in
drier loam.
"Both tho mild and the strong
onion have a respectable- place in
HOSPITALITY NITE . . . Stuart, Lincoln and Orpheum Tonlte
"S5fKSI wnfrecelv. . ticket "i"fl J? Vh.c'oN
after theater treat of a bowl of piping hot HORMEL . CHILI CON
CARNE at your own favorlto Restaurant . . . compliments Geo.
A. Hormel & Co.
Last Times Today BARBARY COAST Miriam Hopkins
The Vlay That Thrilled Hroadway or a Yeart
i """" r-s """"h
JAMES
cfionsV'-'O'
June Travis Stuart
Tomorrow 25c
Hospitality Nite Tonite!
Hospitality Nite Tonitel
Today!
- tlll
v Jb p- If Mai. Bowes
If"! Jk j II Amateurs )
i t 4 -'mZy i Hospitality 11 Latest Winnert If
TShti
'
3 DAYS FRL-SAT.-SUN.
Prices -Thia Show Only:
25c Mat. 40c Eve.
Carloads of Scenery and Eu
ropean Coatumea ... Special
Lighting Ef'ecta ... 10 Star
tling Scenes ... 5 Tantaliz
ing Song Hlta ... 13 Stun
ning Steppers! II
High Powered Screen
T3
mi
Wallace Ford
Phyllis Brooks
Erik Rhodes
Ml n N ITE Saturday 11:30 P. M. . . . Special Stage Show
Jr.5; Presenter, Entire KIT KAT CLUB REVUE Ek-
SHOW actly as Featured In London plus Screen Preview
FEBRUARY 21. 1936.
tho cuisine," Dr. Platenius ob
serves. "Housewives will doubtless
Insist on tho milder onions. Can
neries will demand tho stronger
varieties."
rcmreraiiiiiiiiiwi
7
PAT
Erwln Barton McicLane
Mat.
onfl for Good
Measure
EASY ACES
Teonerville Cartoon
"The Slav
Mart-
"Corklallf
In Ihr
Clouds"
Nl l . . The
Sultan's Hlave
Comedy! f .
lUnctr
"Tha Taradt
t Iba
riaoru"
U-nmrn"
7
Emm
Stage 't$bj TO
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7s fyirmvn7 anniM7
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