THURSDAY, MARCH 12. 1936. TIIE DAILY NEBRASKAN TWO Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln. Nabraiki. 1935 Member 1936 Associated Collegiate Press Thia Dinar la reprasentad for general advertlalng by tha Nebraska Praia Aatooiatlon. Entered as tacond-claia matter at flc Lincoln. Nebraska, under act of congress, March and at epeolal rata of postage provided for In ""I0" 1103. act of October S. 1917. authored January 80. 192S. THIRTY-FOURTH YEAR Published Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday Friday and . Sunday mornings during the academia year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE 1 50 a year Blngle Copy 6 cents 11.00 a semester also a y"r mailed 1.S0 "me.tor mailed Under direction of tha Student Publication Board. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall A. Telephonea-Dayl B6891: Night: B6882. B33J3 (Journal). Official atudent publication of the University of Nebraska In Lincoln, Nebraska. IRWIN RYAN ". . EDITOR-IN-CHIEF TRUMAN C3ERND0RF BUSINESS MANAGER EDITORIAL STAFF MANAGINO EDITORS George Plpal Arnold Levin NEWS EDITORf Johnston Snipes R'JK-Mr Jane Walcott Eleanor Clube Don Wagner cut.. Louis Magea wlmen'. Edwr-:::V.... "' H-nkin BUSINESS STAFF ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Bob Funk Bob Shellenberg m.?SllitfefiS3S Circulation Manager Stanley M.cnaai Foundation For Our School. MOBILIZATION of material for the adequate presentation of a foundation program which is to be promulgated at the time of com mencement is still the task of university offi cials. "Working diligently in order to gather and assimilate the necessary information, these persons are strivin? for the erection of a most laudable achievement, that of carrying this in stitution beyond the narrow confines of its now almost penurious straits. Universal is the recognition accorded the belief bv Nebraska alumni that this institution is failing in its highest ambition, that of becom ing one of the more outstanding educational enterprises in the nation, largely because of lack of money. To the university in its entire ty, to its friends and to its alumni the estab lishment of such a university foundation sig nals what all hope will be a new and prosper ous era in the history of the school. The drive must not die a natural death. Vigorous and persevering must be those ad ministrators in charge. If a single recidivist ic step is taken at this crucial time, failure can be the only result. Students should lend their time and endeavor, though at the moment such a step must necessarily take the role of inten sified interest with constant inquiry into the progress of the administration's plans. It is only fair that the difficulties involved, before the completion of the project can take place, are placed before interested parties. First, formal incorporation under state law will have to comprise the initial step prior to release of the program in June. This consti tutes a major obstacle. If submission of plans are not accepted they have to be revised and altered until finally a suitable leeal one is found that can successfully hurdle all barriers. Long neglected in the matter of endow ments, gifts and bequests the university may then receive through the foundation considera tions enough to carry on work in its many fields where backing has heretofore been seri ously lackine. That these improvements may easily take the form of something other than new buildings can hardly be denied. That new structures are badiy needed can well be ac cepted as a fact but other situations must bear remedy. Class organizations, to do something of worth for a slight deviation from past perform ences, might lend themselves to the more phil anthropic purpose of raising funds for educa tirnal facilities. While the erection of pillars, fountains and sun dials is nice it hardly con stitutes a worthwhile function. Funds for carrying on research in the de partments of history, social government, psy chology, ehemistry. phyiK-s and innumerable instances of the same sort can be obtained if the foundation program is successful, ft is these cau.se that ned espousal. It is th"e functions that it is the duty of a university to primarily serve. Merely keeping its head above water with out advancement i not a desirable university activity. Or"at innovations and discoveries in science and social education are made by th-se researches and until a means of inculcating tbern into this particular school is found, it will continue its present policy of mediocrity. An admirable program is being launched, which if it does not succeed wi'j very probably place the school in desperate circumstances. Its success or failure may well be termed the school's success or failure. Interest in the foundation proposed must be kept alive. indicate that Great Britain will back France in demanding at least a "symbolic" withdraw al of the German army from the Rhineland. In order to obtain Mussolini's support against Hitler, Britain and France may lift sanctions against Italy. It is believed that the French foreign min ister, Flandin, has convinced English diplo mat Eden, that Britain has been as much in sulted as France when Hitler tore up the Lo carno treaty. Locarno discussions were suddenly trans ferred to London from Paris and a meeting of the league council was called for Saturday at the British capital. Such action was inter preted as meaning that French and English diplomats were close to an agreement. Strike Smashers. Twenty-five thousand strikebreakers are being imported from other cities to put a stop to the New York building workers strike, union heads claim. Workers in over 3,000 buildings, who have been called out on strike are swiftly replaced by imported workers. Substitute elevator operators run the lifts with three or four associates standing guard. Strikebreakers have refused municipal authorities' arbitration plan and continue to demand a closed shop, a $2 a week raise, and promised resumption of the 48 hour week. Un less they get that, they threaten to call out more elevator operators, bell hops, telephone girls, maids, janitors, and superintendents, in cluding those in the Empire State building and Radio City, which heretofore have been un affected. Right. "Turn the right cheek," is the advice giv en by Dr. Ernest Sachs, noted brain surgeon, for anyone about to dive through a windshield. Any subsequent skull cracking would then be on "the right side of the head and so not so dan gerous, since it is the left side of the brain that controls the speech nerves of most persons. Bravery. George Washington was a brae man. Such a conclusion was reached by historians many years ago but such a fact is further im pressed upon the minds of visitors to the Na tional museum this week where the first presi dent's false teeth are on exhibition. (Inciden tally, they are insured for $10,000.) Two blocks of ivory, grooved to make them look like teeth, were what Washington used to chew his food. When he wasn't using them he kept them in a glass of port wine to improve the flavor. Hell Week Vanishing Practice In Most Colleges Says Survey Despite Objections Many Pledges Absorbing Usual Dose. MADISON, Wis. (ACP.l Hell week is dying, but the traditional fraternity initiation period still has loyal supporters, according to Associated Collegiate Press corre spondents at middle western, Pa cific and southern schools. Despite the annual barrage of criticism, plenty of pledges absorbed the pre scribed doses of punishment and indignity this year. "And why not?" demanded the anonymous and slightly ungram matical forestry student who de nounced Penn State Collegian edi tors for the paper's anti-hell week policy with: "The foresters are more of a gentleman in their crud est moments than you are. A self especting fraternity wants men in its membership, not 'sissies'." Slightly at variance with this view, was the stand taken by nine Penn States fraternities. Alpha Chi Rho. Delta Chi. Delta Tau Del ta, Delta Upsilon. Lambda Chi Al pha. Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Nu and Triangle, after listening to a plea by Wilbur M. Walden, national secretary of Alpha Chi Rho, de clared a permanent ban on hell week. Similar action was taken by the university disciplinary committee at DePauw, with social probation the penalty for fraternities declin- j ing to abolish outlawed initiation practices. "The fraternity world is changing," said The DePauw, student paper, in commenting on the decision. "If we contemplate for long the fraternity of 10 years ago we shall find ourselves hold ing a mess of pottage." The University of Tennessee's Orange and White asked the In teifraternity Council to order dis continuance of hell week. "Many of our fraternities have gone be yond the limits of reason, and even respectability in their application of this pre-initlation custom," says The Orange and White. Consid ering the violence to which some of our fraternities have resorted, Tennessee is lucky that more 'ac cidents' have not occurred." Meanwhile, the National Fra ternity Council planned a national campaign. The council has re peatedly gone on record as oppos ing every hell week piactice. Unmoved by all this, however, are the editors of The Golden Ga ter, San Francisco State College publication. Remarking the trans fer of freshman "discipline" from an association of men students to the sophomore class in an editor ial headed "Must Staters Always Mind Their Manners?" they say, "It's time for us to forget our 'high-falutin' philosophy and get some collegiate color in our veins. Let the bulbous-browed individ uals pursue their one-track aca demic ways. We ll take a little fun and spirit with our medicine." i. HERE and THERE CONTEMPORARY COMMENT E The I News Parade j Veme'f Orders to ecw firing aie sent to Italian soldiers on the northern war front in Ethiopia and for the first time in five months no bomb ing planes leave the ground. Troops continue to sail from Italy, however, and with both countries having different ideas as to peace terms, it would seem that final peace is still several months off. Fearing trickery. Ethiopia takes Mus liii's acceptance with a grain of salt. Al taotjfh Haile Selassie rta!izs that the dicta tor's willingness to d:scuns peace might be due to the pressure of sanctions and a desire to complete the war before the rainy season sets in, he suspects that some other consideration has influenced the duce. Diplomacy. Tension in Europe continues as reports On the Company T e Keep. People are known by the company they keep. This old adage has been proven time and asain. The other day a student on this campus was suspected oi a very sei iuu men im.au he was known to be constantly in the company of those who were not above such activities The student proved his innocence and absolved himself of any connection with the entire mat ter. And. although his record was spotless he admits that authorities had reason to suspect him because of the company he kepi. Association wild weiik. ill-tempered, self ish people is bound to affect any indiv idual. The old vere. . . "If thou are mated to a down. The irrossnebS of his n;.tiire shall iiaxe weiaht to drag thee dow:.." has proved itself true time and auain. An example of this influence of the people with whom one associates is found in one s every day lanimaiie and mode oi speech, t'cr tain wise-cracks and witticisms, accents, and manners of gesture are ouiekly picked up. It does not take long for one person's manner of speech to become easily discernible in an entire group. Kspccially b this noticeable mi frater nities and sororities and other groups that art bound close! v together. A student would do wiselj to lake time out to pick those with whom he associates. .Not al ways can this be brought about because jobs, class rooms, and other thiti's of a similar nature where one cannot pick his associates. But one can certainly pick those with whom he wishes to associate during his hours of recrea tion. It will pay as well as anything the. ordi nary individual can do. Association with people of lofty so.ti ments. bit'h ideals, people who love culture i bound to be of benefit to any who choose U. associate with them. Selection of associate will pat dlid-fi.s ;.s Ion if as one lives.Daily O Collegian. My Father. The loan whose name I l.ear. who fed and clothed the boy 1 was. who sent me through grade and high school, is not XIV father. lie is the father of my body well enoujh and bears some kinship to my character and mind. Vet at that boy of his gradually spent less and less time with him parenthood slowly waned. Xly father gave me the right to live this life, and started rne along with more or less ad vantages. Now his relation to me is not as it n then. I seem to have developed a desire to solve my own problems, rather than merely taming 'them over to him. Xly ideas and ideals are vastly different from those with which be impressed his son. Evidently there has come into my life a directing force entirely foreign from his thinking regarding my life and events associated with it. Inasmuch as he was the father of a small lad, and directed his thinking for a certain length of time, he is rny father. Still it is more as if he were my grandfather. That lad, who was his son, has been directing rny living and not ha. In other words I, at present, am the father of the man which I shall become. If I an) a sot now that roan uill become a sot. If I develop character he will have character. I have the same responsibilities toward him as my father (legal) had toward the development of the lad he called his son. Thinking of college life in such terms as these is apt to make an individual weigh more carefully than otherwise the activities in which he eneaee. snd the use he makes of his time. Daily O 'Collegian. Statistic. A Cigarette is two and three quarters inches long. The average smoker consumes approximately fifteen cigarettes a day, or over three feet of cylindrical tobacco. During a college student's day of higher education he smokes enough cigarettes to stretch ten miles, were they placed end to end. Over a period "of forty years, a nicotine fiend puffs into smoke fags to stretch from Lexington far beyond Cincinnati. Over a period of four years, the girls in one sorority alone smoke enough coffin nails to reach from Lexington to Wash ington, D. C. so what? Excessive morols Gets no laurels. The Kentucky Kernel. If all the printer's devils were put in one loom, they would have a hell of a time. The Daily Cardinal. If thev can now devise a way to attach to this instrument a dicta phone for the sleep-talkers it should be possible, by these noc- lurnai rangements. The Daily North- lZ L If. ... .-on a i western. told a Rotary club that the rea son professors were absent minded was because they concentrated on the wrong thing at the wrong time. The Butler Collegian. LOST: Will the gentleman who lifted my black loose-leaf note book Thursday from the Chem istry I class kindly return the same to Bill Gentleman, as soon as possible. McGill Daily. Natural History. The bunny is A funny cuss Who doesn't make A lot of fuss. And tho he's never Naked bare, He never never Has a hare. Bob Vollmer The Oklahoma Daily The Wisconsin dames have been making plans for neighborhood and special group meetings for this week. The Daily Cardinal. WANTED: Date for junior prom by good looking male commerce student without social contacts. Meet in front of U. H. at 11:50 a. m. Wednesday to make ar- will the divorce courts .as w ell as j ostricize our enemies. The Daily Tar Heel. ... j Tn t hp Editor: I I quite often hear teachers tell students. "I don't give you a grade. You niake it yourself, and I enter it into your record the im plication being that the student's grade is an entirely personal mat ter, and the professor functions UNION'S FUTURE RESTS : RADICAL STUDENTS SCARCE SAYS DEAN Head of Midland Claims Interest Lacking. (By Associated Collegiate Press.) CHICAGO. (ACP). Frequent charges of campus radicalism made thruout the country are strikingly belied by the average college student's utter unconcern about social and economic matters, according to Dean William F. Zim merman of Midland College, Fre mont, Nebraska. "The students of today are in capable of entertaining radical ideas because of their utter dis interest in the problems which Communists and Socialists do all tthe shouting about," Dean Zim merman told a group of educators here recently, adding that it was his opinion college students can not even understand these prob lems. Dean Zimmerman gathered data on "spontaneous student conver sations from many campuses, de rived not by questionnaire, but by listening in when young persons were unaware of being studied." The college girl's first interest, as Inferred from the frequency with which she chats about it, Is in the doings of her college friends, while the male student gives first place to his studies. Public affairs attracted only seven-tenths of one per cent of the concern of men and two tenths of one per cent of the girls' remarks, according to conclusions drawn by Dean Zimmerman's sur vey, FELL MAN (Continued from Page 1.) Yesterday it was rearmament, today it is the Rhineland, tomor row it will be African colonies. Will Britain disgorge? Mussolini brings civilization to the benighted African: Russia and Japan grimly await "Der Tag:" central Europe seethes with dissatisfaction. The curse of inflamed nationalism makes international understanding an impossibility. In these circumstances, one may venture to say that the question to the precise pretext and time for the next war is perhaps an aca demic question. TEAMS FILE FOR INTERCOLLEGIATE DEBATE TOURNEY (Continued from Page 1). dropped from the tournament. All freshmen and upperclassmen are eligible to participate who are not at present or have not in the past been members of the varsity debate squad. A bibliography listing available books and pamphlets containing valuable information on the sub ject of the debate is posted in the library. Copies may also be ob tained in Prof. White's office. Judges for the tournament will be chosen from present and past varsity debaters who are ineligible for competition. Safety Film J George .Walcott in M-G-M'a ;Hit.and Run Driver V Saftey reaches the screen m "Hit & Run Driver" which is of fered at the Lincoln Friday with the feature "The Lady Consents." "Hit & Run Driver" is the latest issue of the Crime Does Not Pay Series and is dedicated to safe driving. This subject will be shown during the entire run of "The Lady Consents" with Ann Harding and Herbert Marshall. CONNING THE CAMPI By Arlen Crenshaw The University of Texas thru its Bureau of Research in the social sciences will begin early in March a salvaging expedition. The waste in this case is men. Men in stripes. Convicts. Under the direction of Dr. W. E. Gettvs, the bureau, with the co-operation of the state priscon board, has set up as one of its projects a division of classification to oper ate at the central prison in Hunts ville for at least one year. Com petent men have been chosen to head this unit. They are scientists well tried in the study of social case problems which this pioneer attempt at penal classification in Texas will demand. The hope of the new division is to reclaim, rehabilitate, some of the individuals who have been branded as criminals. placed among "the lost." Classification does this to a great degree by en abling prison officials to take not neecssarily a sympathetic but an understanding attitude toward the inmates. Understanding their charges, the officials are able to deal with each individual accord ing to his needs. Thinking of the convict in terms of a human be ing who may be reshaped to find a usefut place in society, will be heresy to many, but these few a '. not to be considered. This is 1933. When that fact has been accom plished, Texas will have squareiy faced one of her most serious so cial problems. (From the Daily Texan, University of Texas: dis tributed by College News Serv ice, i Thirty-one Columbia students were made ill recently when con taminated ice-cream made a mys terious appearance in John Jay Hall dining rooms. WITH WORK PROGRAM'S PROGRESS. i Continued from Page l.j these grants will not be considered according to the dates of their I Yale anthropologists report the i filing, and if our congressmen will j discovery of unusually rich cul kecp at the administration, the tures among certain Eskimo tribes, grant may be made in the near j a seven year experiment by! luture. MEN'S HATS Cleaned and Blocked Cash & Carry 68c GLOBE LAUNDRY 1124 L B8755 oniy as a i. . , . . - !,,... Vi-,wi.. ,ii., Well, if that's the only function j " iu iui " J, '"""""' ' whv mUBt they Hroun,i ir.i,w. ine remaining i imn jjiifvcj uic ni'.r "'" s-zzu.u'JU to dc oDiamea tnru gins, , preventive aim luumr iui pledges, and funds received thru 1 anemia in children. the sale of bonds. According to present plans, the site of the new buildinc 'i!l be on the northwest corner of 14th and P.. where Ellen .Smith hall now stands. of a professor. worry aoout their any 17 year old noie ? Ph. kid D.'h when ' can keep ; The Skiff. great inven- A ro: r.i,c jaf.-r i tion: The coli.-Ke gets all the fame: The prii ter ets all the money And the staff gets all the blame. Purdue. ... Th ic- niav be suiiie beautiful fim:i.-a dLSolavcd at the Beaux Aiti! hall. All honor to feminine pulchrituoe. And it wont be a relax vanity eithei University Uaiiv Kar.MHii. Moi.drtv evening. Mis Pod! Mil mt. oiattiKt of i.ole. displayed her talerts to a fair sized Detroit audi ence m Orches'ia hall. Our ole elaun to the rol of music cntie is that we weie preent at the con cert The fact tnt our musical tiainn.S extended thru and cot much i u i t h e i than William' Five Liltl Pieces for Five Little FniKtrs" hi we relieve, nothing to do with the fiilje't. John Ha harty. The Vai.aty New. li trim l'i rfood ,oetiv? "My love ha flew. 1 1 i m did !' d'lt Me did not kii-.. H:in vks a fliit 'Jo they in I' ve Let I forbid. Let iney be wji-i Like I been did," -The Hdyrc.aXer. A ,rofeevr at McGill university Witn the co-operation of the' pn.son board and the officials of ; the prison system, the university ; can point the way for the state to inMail a permanent classification ' unit fo rail prisoners. Laal Ihir: "Th MmW bv -Ro4" Last Day "Rom of the Rancho" TOMORROW AS STRONG AS THE SEA. lul taffy f HIRE'S DRAMA HAT STRIKES LIKE A TYPHOON) GEORGE BANCROFT ANN SOTHERN em. THf. I UTOOOt Hi "MnrM Maawo" fttarlllfttt napMU Meal prices at Harvard will le i upped 75 cents a week next yeai Wesleyan University students aie fighting the formation of an Am erican Student Union chapter on the campus. Is Your Frat or Sorority Giving a Dance? Let us furnish the music with our public address ygtems LOWEST prices Latest dance numbers. Acorn Radio Eng. B6119 Co. ff :is ';o srsp Rs ' Si As 1 1 ' 1 I ,,, I .-' iCafl' ' '--- - - ' - - ar? ' A: Fri. Sat- Son. Huge Double Bjrraietf Stag fchow In fetton Carletpn COONoVc' In Vrrum JACK PEPPER aV Company Piut Complete Stage Show Cholea Serean Feitura . "MY MARRIAGE' Last Day "Ah Wilderness' Gy Sl Glorloua Erf Cornea y frethmg mnc. Re- R 0 - a i finikin 17 n : J; XSis 1111 iry , avV Paulina V H, I I ! I H f I A fine woven mad i contracting ueeptune colore atnpe. TLeae cl hirt with i i lored tape it I ear-cut, well paced t-ripcj are authentic is itylr and favored by men who lead in fuhioo. .fVLajiy- collar tylei from wkich. to choo. Sanforized runk...a new ahirt if on rrer akrioLa. $2