FOUR THE DAILY NEBKASKAN Tuesday, octorku r, io.ir (V NEERASfC CAMPUS n 0 (DCDAEL WDiDIDLL o SEEN ON THE CAMPUS. Thetas riled in their black and orange job. . .appropriately named the Hiccup swerlng around the Drug corner. . .Ron Douglas minus the strip Of adhesive tape which has adorned his nose for weeks . . . Mildred Holland running up the front steps at the Tri-Delt house ...the Nebraskan staff exchang ing ideas on the spelling of Tok yo... Les McDonald draped over two seats in history class... Jane Eldridge and Margaret Blaufuss hurrying home to lunch... Army appointments and much clanking of swords and saluting. . .a bright green Ford coupe with N feath ers on the radiator cap... Tat Burns and Lewis Cass discussing cartooning. . .Floyd Baker beam ing like little Mary Sunshine about something or other... Neo gotations for a Cornhusker-Daily Ncbraskan football game... Paul Bradley and his camera. . .the two are practically synonomous . . . Jack Roberts woefully remarking that he was the only one he knew who definitely was not going to Minnesota. . .and Malcolm MeFar- land trying to get 32 tickets fori the game Saturday at Minneapolis j ...for a Minnesota man, there i aren't any loft in the north coun try... and Mary Helen Hustead putting on lipstick. . SCORE ONE FOR SIGMA NU. At the Iowa State game Satur day, Jeanne Rowe sat with three Sigma Nus. At a little after half time... one of the young gentle men arose to leave. When ques tioned ns to his destination he waved gaily and announced "This is where I came in:" Not bad for a college bo v. ALPHA PHI MOTHERS MEET. Toda.i the mothers club of Al pha Phi will meet for luncheon and a business meeting at the chapter house. About 30 are ex pected to attend and the mothers of the new pledges will be honored guests. PHI GAM PLEDGES CHOOSE OFFICERS. Monday evening Lewis Leigh was elected president cf the Phi Gamma Delta pledge class and Floyd Kousil was chosen secre tary. DEMOCRATS (Continued from Page 1.) Third: We would arouse the youth of this country to take an active interest and participation in the "body politic"; to become leaders, not followers. There can be little controversy on our first objective. We are well aware that our party has no mo nopoly on honest men and ben eficial policies. We are broad minded enough to recognize our deficiencies and to try and sur mount them. However, we firmly believe that by supporting the Democratic party the ideals of government honesty helpfulness efficiency can be better served and assured to the American populace. Secondly, we are disciples of President Roosevelt and the New Deal for which he stands. We want to help in the work which he has so ably begun the job of building a better and greater America. True, there has been some jokers and duces in the New Deal but there certainly have been more than four aces. We are primarily concerned with the youth cards of the New Deal: The C. C. C. which has been a moral and mental "up lift" to one million, two hundred thousand men. The National Youth Movement and its mani fold programs. The Federal Em ployment Bureau which has been so successful in obtaining work for those who are just beginning their economic career. That part of the FERA which provides jobs for financially embarrassed students. Students who had the intestinal fortitude to come to college with little money but ARE YOU WEARING ONE OF THE EVAN'S 10c 6HIRTS THIS WEEK. Tuesday. Alpha Phi Mothers club luncheon at 1 o'clock at the chapter house. Phi Mu alumnae buffet supper at the home of Miss Kathryn Dean. Delta Delta Delta alliance at the home of Mrs. J. C. Higgins. Wednesday, Alpha XI Delta alumnae bridge party at the home of Mrs. G. T. Warren. Thursday. Sigma Phi Epsilon omthr's club 1 o'clock luncheon at the chapter house. Friday. Phi Mu mothers club 1 o'clock luncheon at the chap ter house. Alpha XI Delta Mothers club meeting at the chapter house. Saturday. Delta Gamma alumnae luncheon at the home of Mrs. L. R. Ricketts. Alpha Gamma Delta 1 o'clock luncheon at the home of Mrs. E. C. Seng. PI PHI ALUMS HOLD SUPPER. Sunday evening the Pi Beta Phi alumnae met for a buffet supper at the home of Mrs. George Bur gert. Assisting Mrs. Burgert as hostess were: Mrs. Karl Cline, Mrs. Victor Jouvenat, Mrs. Flor ence Bates, Mrs. Walton Roberts and Mrs. Roy Whitham. Forty at tended the supper and informal meeting held afterward. Plans for the coming year were discussed. TRl-DELTS TO HEAR MISS I EDDE. Miss Margaret Fedde will speak on her European trip at a meet ing of the Delta Delta Delta al liance at the home of Mrs. J. C. Higgins tonight. The members of the organization will meet for sup per before Miss Fedde's talk. About 35 are expetced to at tend. plenty of courage, ambition and determination. No doubt some of you readers can thank Roosevelt for your pres ence in school. Do you want to leave college; do you want gov ernment aid abolished? Think it is a good investment? Another ad ministration had the opportunity to take the young men off the streets, the dives of moral and mental filth, and the freight cars. What did they do? Truly, Roosevelt knows that the America of the future depends upon the youth of today. He would train and fit those who do not have an opportunity. The Bible says "all men are born equal." Our president would make us more equal, not by tearing down at the top but by building up from the bottom. Incidentally Landon (in part) balanced his budget (if he didi by giving the teachers a subsistence salary and the schools a "nude" existence. Why should, one place money values above human values ? Think it over. Thirdly: We most earnestly and sincerely hope to stimulate inter est in government. We want to be intelligent and enlightened vot ers. Yes, more than that, we want the younger generation to become active participants in government affairs; office holders and leaders, shaping the "destiny of things." Business needs young men and women and so does the govern ment, that dash, drive an un limited energy of youth. We hope and believe that you should be democrats, but no matter what your political al legiance is, join one of the two major parties and become an active, influencial part of it. Parties are composed of men and women. Good individuals made for good parties. Is that not logical? i elementary i. College students are supposed to be the "cream of the crop." Make it mean something. The voters of this country are notoriously lethargetic and lack adaisical toward public problems. They forget that voting is a privi lege; not an inherent right; some thing that George Washington and j "a few of the boys" fought and ; bled for. This criticism applies ' equally to the young and old. Why don't the youth of America board the ship of state and become a : part of the crew? Roosevelt has gii'en them every encouragement. : The possibilities would be un limited. i These, then, are the reasons why i a Young Democratic club has been : formed on your campus. We want you, all of you, to make it your club. Join it and have a voice in ; its councils, its woik. A job whose first objective is the re-election of franklin D. Roosevelt, but whose underlying and permanent purpose I is the training and educating the younger generation in principles ! of good government, democratic i government, to prepare us for the day to come. The day when we will be the "captain and the crew." REPUBLICANS (Continued from Page 1.) Just what is the American Plan? It is the traditional sys tem of the American Govern ment and transposed to present day problems is involved in the questions of a balanced budget, a government on a business ba sis, lack of governmental inter ference in business except in certain specified fields where the public health, morals, etc., are directly affected, the philosophy of production as against that of destruction, a moderate national debt, an effort to keep as far away from the muddled Euro pean politics as possible, and keeping the federal government from becoming a centralized and confused bureaucracy. Each one of these points will be treated in articles to follow. Today we might as well dispose of the democratic boegy-man of unemployment The record U sim PHI MU ALUMS MEET TONIGHT. Miss Kathryn Dean will enter tain members of the Thl Mu alum nae organization at a buffet sup per at home tonight. Miss Opal Dillon, president of the alumnae, will bo assisting hostess. K APPA PI IPS HEAR F. G. SMITH. Monday evening at the St. Paul Methodist church the members of Kappa Phi alumnae organization heard Dr. Frank G. Smith review Lloyd Douglas' new book, "White Banners." SIGMA KAPPA TO HONOR MOTHERS. This afternoon the Sigma Kap pa Mothers club will honor the mothers of the new pledge class at a tea at the chapter house from I 2 until 4 o'clock. Mrs. F. E. French and Mrs. Frank Shrader will be hostesses for the tea. Officers of the. Sigma Kappa pledge class are Annabel Lee, president: Jeanette Clayton, vice president; and Marguerite Meyer, secretary-treasurer. CI 1 1 PHI PLEDGES ELECT OFFICERS. At a meeting held recently Chi Phi pledges cletced Bill Wade president of the class and Bill Spencer, vice-president and George Lyons, treasurer. NEWCOMERS' CLUR MEETS TODAY. Wives of new faculty members will attend a tea this afternoon at the Alpha Omicron Pi house, given by the Newcomers club. Forty-five arc expected to attend and Mrs. E. A. Burnett will be the guest of honor. Mary Janice Men ery will play several selections on the harp. Tea will be served from 2:30 to 5 o'clock. Hostesses for the affair are Mrs. Fellman, Mrs. Garey and Mrs. Baslco. ple. Since the present adminis tration has taken office, unemploy ment has not only increased, but 3 9.000,000 more American citizens have been put on a virtual dole relief for work described by the eminent president himself as "a few hours weekly work, cutting grass, raking leaves or picking up papers in the public parks." (Mes sage to Congress Jan. 4, 1935). In his Baltimore speech of Oct. 25, 1932, the president complained about the "11.000,000 of honest, in dustrious and willing men and women - tramping the streets for work" in his effort to turn out the republican administration. Yet the democratic-leaning American Fed eration of Labor in March of this year announced the number of un employed at 12,183,000. or an in crease of over 1,100,000 men. On top of this, 19,000,000 people have been put on relief by the adminis tration. (House of Representatives hearings on the First Deficiency Bill). All this increase of unem ployment and poverty was accom plished at the cost of millions of dollars. When one hears friends praising Roosevelt because he has "done something" he can laugh there is no question about it. To increase the public debt 12 billion dollars to achieve only an increase of misery and unemployment is an accomplishment in itself. I think it was Poor Richard who bemoaned the fact that he paid too much for his whistle, but to pav 12 billion dollars for no whis tle at all merits no moan, but a good republican vote. ANNUAL REVISES PLAN FOR PICKING 1037 UNI QUEEN (Continued from Page l.i manner the twelve or fifteen rank ing candidates will he renominated for the final election. "A spectacular presentation will feature the final election which will be held at the Stuart theater," Bakei declared. "The participants in the finals will model the latest in the coming fall fashions." It is ex pected that the presentation will be held about the middle of Novem ber, probably on the 18th. According to Baker, those who present Cnrnhusker sales receipts at the theater the evening of the presentation, will be admitted for fifteen cents less than the usual admission price and will receive three ballots to cast in favor of their choices. All others attending: the theater that evening, students arid Lincoln residents alike, will be allowed only one vote. Book Larger This Year. "This year's book will be very much larger than previous ones, " Baker stated. "Among many other new features we will include a complete roster of students attend ing the university this year whether they are pictured in the book or not." He added that the "1937 Comhuskcr will be the most popular priced book for the benefit of the students ever offered. This will bp found tMC both in the cost of the publication and in the charges for students' pictures in the book." Prices for placing pictures in the junior or senior panels will be $2.25 and in the fraternity and so rority panels, one dollar. For the first time this year's busines staff is offering a combination price for both pictures of $2.50. Baker ad vised that these prices are all sub stantial reductions from last year's. He also mentioned a new offer of a Bard's manual of "American Col lege Fraernitics" to the fraternities and sororities who complete their entire roster, including pictures in the junior and senior sections as well as in the fraternity and so rority sections. The 3937 Cornhusker will be Fold for $3.75 cash or $1.00 down on a $4 25 installment plan if bought before November 1. If bought between November 1 and January 1, the book will cost $4.00 cash or the same down payment on a $4.50 plan. If bought before March 1. the price will be $4.25 cash and $4 75 on the installment plan. After March 1 the book will sell for $4.50 rash and $5.00 by the installment method. MOVIE DIRECTORY KIVA "Too Tough 1o Kill" & 'Panic on 1hc A if' LINCOLN "Girl's Dormitory-' ORPHEUM 'Popper' and 'Silling on 1 he Moon' STUART 'My Man Godfrey' VARSITY "In His Steps" I DISTANCE ACES FOR K. U. MEET Picks Mattcson, Andrews As Lead Men for First Go. Discontented with Friday's time trials, Pa Schultc, veteran Hus ker track coach, ordered his two milers yesterday to jog around the Memorial Stadium track no less than ten times. Coach Schulte is eagerly looking forward to the cross-country meet here Oct. 17, when his pupils face Mentor Ward Haylett's Kansas Aggies' two-mile team. Incidentally, the Aggie two mile team is Big Six champion. Preceptor Schulte accentuated the fact that he has two good leadmen in Fred Matteson and Wilson Andrews both major let ter winners in track, but at the same time added that he is in dire need of good supporting men. Both Matteson and Andrews have been performing brilliantly in practices. With such luminaries as Sweat. Robinson, Redfield, Dills and Eberhardt coming back to the Aggies, "Pa" is sending his prot eges thru strenuous workouts in an effort to discover first-class supporting performers to bolster Matteson and Andrews. To show that they took Mentor Schulte's admonitions to heart, about twelve spry, aspiring mara thon runners donned sweat clothes and trotted around the oval. Charles Stout, assistant to the head coach, clocked some of the performers, but did not divulge any of their times. Kuper Out With Cold. Illness has struck another- run ner on the squad, Alfred Kuper, up and coming sophomore, being a cold victim. He is the second man on the team to be hit by this nemesis, the other patient being Bob Morris, star half-miler. With ten to fifteen potent run ners reporting daily for practice, Coach Schulte will soon have to face the undesirable task of se lecting five men to represent the Huskers in the imminent embroglio with the Wildcats from Manhat tan. With such an array of prom ising performers going through their duties with almost incredible fervor, the ob of picking five men will take a good deal of time and consideration. Mattcson and Andrews, however, are almost certain starters. Bob West, 1935 major letter earner in track, is slated to have one of the starting berths providing he can out-perform the game sophomores. J. MORSTROM ATTENDS NATIONAL SESSION OF SIGMA TAU HONORARY (Continued from Page 1.) eon and a short program, delegates were taken on an inspection trip through the capitol oil fields to observe each procedure of one of the state's leading industries. A visit to the Black Gold Re finery was incomplete because of shortage of time, as the caravan left Oklahoma City for a 90-mile journey to Pawnee Bill's Indian trading post. A buffalo barbecue was hetd at the picturesque re mainder of the "old West" in Ok lahoma. A string band composed of Sigma Taus appeared while the group was at the trading post, and a band of Pawnee Indians pre sented some of their native dances. Activities for the first day of the convention included a welcom ing address by Dr. Henry G. Ben nett, president of A. and M. Col lege, and a model initiation held by the local chapter at which 25 pledges were initiated. Business meetings and a luncheon were also held, and a smoker was given the first evening. A dating bureau was active in securing dates with A. and M. College coeds for the delegates. ADMINISTRATION TO STAY ON TOP, BLACK DECLARES (Continued from Page 1.) characters, the senator spoke first of his opinion of Hearst: "Not fit to publish" were his only words. Of former Governor AJ Smith's repudiation of the present admin istration, Senator Black predicted that it would not make a differ ence in one-tenth of one percent of the votes cast. Senator Black, who has served in Congress since 3927, has been a practicing attorney for over 18 years, and served as a police judge for more than ten. His prenent campaign tour for the administra tion has been in process for over three weeks and will continue un til election time in November. From Lincoln the inator travels to Omaha, then Lo Iowa and Minnesota, SUITE VOGUE OFFERS PARIS Martha Dcwcese Winner Last Year in Magazine Fashion Contest. of Girls enrolled in the senior class of the university arc eligible to participate, in Vogue's second an nual "Prix de Paris" contest, which, according to an announce ment just issued by Edna Woolman Chase, editor in chief of the maga zine, will start November 3st. Martha Dewcese, a Nebraska stu dent, was among major prize win ners in last year's contest. The winner of the contest is awarded a trip to Paris with all expenses paid, where, for at least six months she will hold a position with the Paris staff of the maga zine and will have the opportunity to study fashions at their source. The remainder of the year she will have a paying position with the magazine at the New York office, and will report fashions and learn the fundamentals of merchandising and distribution. There will be a second major award carrying with it six months' employment on the New York edi torial 'staff of Vogue. In addition, other contestants who receive high grades in the examination will be selected for positions in other de partments of the magazine or will be given opportunities to obtain positions with leading retail stores, manufacturers of fashion merchan dise and cosmetics, newspapers and advertising agencies in various parts of the country. Winners are selected upon the basis of grades received in an ex amination consisting of six quizzes to be graded like college examina tion papers, and upon final thesis on a general fashion subject. The second "Prix de Paris' con test starts November 1 and contin ues thru May. winners will be an nounced at the close of school in June. Entry blanks may be se cured at the Ncbraskan office. Cntry blanks will also be found in the October and November is sues of Vogue, and the first quiz will appear in the November issue. It is important that each quiz be mailed on time, and all girls are urged to send in their entries promptly. EDITOR COLLECTS BLUE PRINT COPY FOR INITIAL ISSUE (Continued from Page 1.) titles which will summarize the contents of the magazine. Engineers Contacted. Combination questionnaire and subscription blanks will be em ployed in the subscription drive to be inaugurated the second week in October. Members of the Blue Print staff will contact every member enrolled in the Engineer ing college and see that everyone has a blank. Anyone may sub scribe to the Blue Print, whether a member of the College of Engi neering or not. The subscription price is one dollar per year. Blanks will be mailed to the alumni so that they will have an opportu nity to subscribe. Herbert Reichert is the general manager of the Blue Print. Other momhers nf the staff are Lowell Newmyer, editor, and Emanuel Olson, business manager, jw. i. Evineer. professor of civil engi neering, is the faculty sponsor. In J9U, tne ;eorasKa ciue Print first appeared on the cam pus as a yearly publication. Twen ty years ago, it became a monthly publication and has been published regularly since that time by the students of the Nebraska section of the American Society of Civil Engineers PLAYERS FINISH PRACTICE WORK ON FIRST FARCE (Continued from Page 1.) Clyde Pelton, Waldemar Mueller. The part of Franklin Crawford, Carole Arden's leading man in the play within the play, is taken by Wiiliam Marsh. "The cast is working hard," Miss Howe commented. "The mem bers are veterans in University Player woi k and should turn out sound performances. Margaret Carpenter and Vera May Peterson are particularly delightful in their roles." First showing of the play will take place at the Veterans' Hos pital on Thursday, Oct. H. On Sunday, Oct. 31, the production will be presented at the reforma tory. "Personal Appearance" will be followed by five other plays, in cluding "The Night of January 36," "Valley Forge," "Lost Horizons. "Three Men on a Hor se' and "First Lady." A(; CIA B I'ENS OPENING MIXER; ELECTS 19 MEN Plans for the annual Dairy club mixer were formulated at the first meeting of the club held Thursday evening, arid committee composed of David Carder, chairman. De lores Manary and Ivan Frantz was selected to engage an orchestra and make other arrangements. The date set for the event will be announced soon. Nine men were elected to ac tive membership and ten to asso ciate membership at the meeting. The dairy cattle judging team, consisting of Chris Sanders. Ivan Borman, and David Carder, re lated experiences at the Nation Dairy Congress. Refreshments were provided by Prof. L. K. Crowe, sponser of the club. TYPEWRITERS For Sale or Rental Ud machlnet on eaay tayment. The Royal portable typewriter, ideal machine for student. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 130 No. 12th St. B2157 LEADENS OF PKO TES TAINTS, CATHOLICS, JEWS CONFER Disruss Ways of llrnioving Religious Intolerance Of Nations. BY ALBERT INGRAH AM. Editor, Lawrence College Lawren tian (Associated Collegiate Press). APrLETON, Wis. With reli gious intolerance rampant in a great strifetorn world, leading rep resentatives of America's three great religions gathered on the campus of Lawrence college for a six day conference early this month to discuss problems com mon to Protestant, Catholic and Jew. This Institute of Human Re lations was sponsored by the Chi cago Round Tabic of Jews and Christians. Tho wide disagreement was ex pressed between groups in regard to doctrine, there was unanimous accord when it came to fighting their common enemies: Intoler ance, race and class hatred, athe ism, fascism and communism. Chicago's Rabbi Louis L. Mann summarized the whole conference thus: "We need not fear differ ences but indifference to religion. The struggle today is not a strug gle between religions but a strug gle of religions of all religions against a common foe, the recru descence of paganism and irreli gion. Religions must unite against poverty, human exploitation, un employment, crime, corruption and war." Attacks Dictators. Dr. Preston Bradley, noted pas tor of Chicago's People's church, warned that religion ended where dictatorship began. The battle, he said, was not between any particu lar faith and a state tyranny, but of all faiths against the common foe, dictatorship. Religionists, he contended, must face the pressing OUT Seen on the Ag Campus. Gladys Swift carrying her viol case ... A crowd of girls breath lessly rushing to Ec class ten min utes late. . .Titian-haired Max'ne Trump in a becoming green dr ess ...The usual Monday chem class feeling low after getting back their lest papers. . .Monty Baker, the chem wizard, looking happy. . . Alice Beachell, hat ribbons Hying, dashing to lunch. . .Eleanor Chase with Harry Leibcrs at her side, as usual. . .Wonder what two girls own that black and orange Ford Touring job called "Hiccup?"... Mary Bee Hitchman with lovely braided hair. . .Melvin Meirman trudging along cafeteria-bound... Phyllis Robinson whizzing by in her Buick. . .Students huddled around the student directory list .. .Donna Hiatt waiting for the bus. . .Everyone planning to go to the Phi U mixer. Freshman Girls: Don't forget to attend freshmen commissions led by Donna Hiatt on Thursday noon in the home ec parlors. Officers will be elected at the first meeting. An interesting speaker will be pre sented each time. Ui . . . llvuli Seen on the Ag Campus. Wonder what two girls own that black and orange Ford touring job called the "Hiccup" .... Agncse Novace'k scurring across the cam pus to a Co-ed Counsellor meeting. . . . . Girls in gym class playing soccer baseball outdoors and fer vently wishing that it would turn warmer Melvin Beerman trudging along cafeteria bound. . . . . Phyllis Robinson whizzing by in her Buick Students huddled around the student di rectory list A club being or ganized by Georgiene Stuve Mary Bee Hitchman with lovely braided hair Working in the library was Harold Bend "Carp's" packed as usual Jane Wech trying to persuade the cop not to grve her a ticket 1109 JIG cop not to give her a ticket i 1 current issues of the tiny, "If re ligionists had spent as much time, arid energy in the interest of the future of this world as they have in being certain of tho future of some other world, religion would bo n greater and more decisive factor in the world loday." Turning to the economic side of the human relations problem, Prof. H. I). Lasswell of the University of Chicago said that the presence of a large and prosperous middle class was necessary if democratic American institutions were to .sur vive. Concentration of economic, control in the hands of a few is not only the path to violence., but. to the end of the American republic. He suggested as a possible solution to the problem of concentration of wealth, the organization of func tional groups which might have a program of steeply graduated in come taxes, easier credit for the smaller business man, and the transformation of monopolistic chain groups into democratically controlled chain groups. Leading the discussion titled "Problems of the College Campus," Dr. E. VV. Blakeman of the Uni versity of Michigan stated that tho crying need in the field of re ligious education is for teaching the principles of eastern, Jewish, Catholic and Protestant faiths to all, a "cross fertilization of all cultures that guarantees deep and abiding solidarity." He felt that on the whole American colleges had sadly neglected the necessity of inter-faith education. Suggestions were made at the closing session of the institute that there be in every American university a chair on Judaism and a chair on Catholicism to teach an appreciation of those religions, in asmuch as the general tone of the universities is predominantly Protestant. LUAl Excitement prevailing over the campus because of tomorrow's game. Dr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Nelson of Milwaukee, Wisconsin spent Tues day at the museum. Dr. Nelson is director of vertebrate paleontology in the Milwaukee museum. He hopes to return here later to make collections of the outstanding fos sil fauna in Nebraska for the benefit of his institution. Dr. E. H. Bar bour, director of the Nebraska museum, said the Milwaukee man is also anxious to effect exchanges between the two museums. "Joaquin Miller, Literary Fron tierr.man" is the title cf Dr. Mar tin Peterson's latest hook which will soon be published by the Stan ford University press. It is a biographical and critical treatment of the subject. Members of the dairy judging team returned last night from Waterloo, la., where they com peted in a contest at the Twenty seventh Annual Dairy Cattle Con gress. The boys placed eighth as a team in the contest. R. F. Morgan, coach, accompanied the team. Knit Garments Cleaned and Blocked We specialize cleaning and Mocking Knit garments Send Fall Coats now to be cleaned. MODERN CLEANERS Soukup & Westover Call F2377 for Service Choose yours cf : BLACK SUEDE BROWN SUEDE GREEN SUEDE "O" St.