I V . v a vrr trr RA.SKAN The Prati-tv chMint-r k mrtlium f publication tor the llnfnl wrtttnc ot Iht pmirle rtmnfrj. It t nrrd by, and publUhrd with the old nf the I l Vfmily f Nfhrk. mhi m Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska VOL. XXXVII. NO. 38 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, TUESDAY. NOVEMBEU 9. 1937 TRICE FIVE CENTS MURDERS NEGRO BOY M7eK c C LI C D FF w v, I ii.. .11 -.c r..ii.,.. I ii........ i?. .11 ..c r..ii.,.. For Schooner Suhscriliors Fop many long years now vir tue and very little else has been its own reward for the Prairie Schooner. Doc Wim berly, dubbed "Gloomy Gus" by the Omaha World Herald, has periodically thrown up his hands in sheer despair at the maga zine's lack of public, and as periodically once more resigned himself to the unrewarded virtue of being the sponsor of a darn good literary bet which has few takers. Today's issue of the Ncnraskan Kims to show just liow pood a hot the "map" is and how you can't possibly lose bv put tinsr vour dol lar on the nose with Bookie W'irn- berly. And the probable returns ; PLI PPIT on this little ramble for cultural I Faculty Conflict Centers About Son Of Wealthy Dean Professors Fight to Get Endowment Through Jack Newberry. DEAN'S AND THE SON. I By Fred Koch. I "I've pot him," cned Professor Smith gleefully, as he marked ! down an extremely larpe 96 oppo ; site Jack Newberry's name in his i trade book. hat Professor Smith really meant was that he had got the new building the philosophy de partment had been needing for so many years. The 06 would result ! in Jack Newberry's specializing in salvation list hiph. But the Ne braskan shoots a hit higher than the mere four-starring of a sure thing: the paper would like to start the actual coffer-overflow for the Sthooncr. We Cover the Schooner Front. So we propositioned the campus. To heads of a number of organized groups we put the query: Would your 01 gaviization as a group be interested in buying a block of ten Schooner subscriptions (in the philosophy, and being a philos same fashion that the house ;opher himself. Professor Smith handles Nebraska n and Awgwan knew that this would make Jack's block subscriptions i. and would father, old Dean Newberry, see the maeszines thus made avail-1 how badly a new philosophy build able at no direct personal cost be ing was needed. Professor Smith read The answers tended to j knew, as did every other professor show that the cause for culture is ; on the campus, that someone had not wholly dead. i left an endowment for Dean New s might be expected, several : berry to dispose of as he saw fit. fraternities issued point-blank ; and that he was merely biding his "no-go': For this lack of inter- ' time before making the choice as est the u.ual alibi was lack of time for anything but the lightest publication reading and news papers perusual. Other spoke men candidly confessed that their men "aren't interested in that sort of stuff." One president, whose house takes the magazine for their li brary, says of it, "Well. I never saw the cover torn off one of them as it is with the very popular magazines." The bead of a fraternity famous for its centers and quarter back ad mitted, in owning his groups' lack of interest in the Schooner. "They are very very illiterate out here." But a few groups felt that "on the house," as it were, their memku would read the literary publication. One officer sug gested that aUho ten subscnp tions would be a pretty big dose for his fraternity, five copies ; would be read and enjoyed. An- j other admitted that there were some fellows in his house that ; would "read the whole thing be- fore putting it down." Sorority interest, likewise, was divided. Significantly or not, the larger groups seemed the least Schooner-minded. One bouse which already subscribes claims the magazine has not more than five readers. Another which boasts ef its achievement in the fields of scholarship and writing is flatly "not interested" in the publication. The presi dent of a group of 160 thought that a block of 10 would be hard to put over. Head cf another house, claimed that the tirls in her group, who take "f htfiii'lry and things like that'' weren't interested in lit erary wntir.g - iidn't knw what the magazine was. por what was in it. Another sorority felt that T t,v h might be a better number cf Shooner than 10. aliho the girls "don't like that kind of mag azine, don't have time to read it. snd jlJKt aren't interested, ano'h'-r J'plored. ' It isn't up like the Awn." Schooner Sale-ing Colors. But s.nie Greek girls displayed Interest in the publication. Ore president, while admit: ir,g th-; present lai k of Hi yiwn' fine with KV.r, timed r,n Page i Comin! Autumn I! rings Nature's . . Let's Dip Our Pens in llie Ink Of Comradeship TO A CONTEMPORARY Alan Swallow. Gradual' Stndrnt of Lonlliin Stat I I do not know by what unsingini way You came at last to song whether the lone Sad drift of youth was lost some vivid day I When sun had burned the dream away from bone; Or whether light was always yours instead Of loneliness, and knowing soon the long Desire for comradeship, you learn ed to tread The way of man's community In song. It does not mattsr now what way you came. Whether the lonely, or the path of fire: For out of loneliness and out of flame We will construct a song of grave desire. And being thus together, let us dip Our pens in telling Ink of comradeship. to which department was going to get a new building. Professor Allen Can Give Him Only a 97. At almost the same instant 1 Professor Allen of the Latin de ; partment was making an even larger 9" opposite the name of ' Jack Newberry. Professor Alien j 'was a younger man than Profes ! sor Smith, and was much more clear headed than the philosopher. Furthermore, he was no optimist, i He saw the competition he was ! against and knew that he would ' have to bid high. The Latin dc ' partment had been housed with , the English department long enough. He would have liked to I bid higher than P". but it was un ; fortunate that young Newberry i had missed a v. hole question on ! the final examination. In justice ' to the rest of the class. Professor I Allen couldn't possibly give him ' more than 97. j A week later, old Professor Crawford of the Knglish depart '. mcrt, who was always that late 1 . l- V:- .1 MAP1,A1 .1..-,. a .Willi III L lUrtllVVJ il a, . . .. for Jack Newberry. The Eng. Churen bt"' t0wr be" 'There Is Never Death for Him--Tis Onlv the Kill THE HUNTERS. Marie de L. Welch. t lmier illfnnila rnitrlhnlor. They bring deaths about In such thrilling ways They can eer fear death. The hound bays: He is better than any bell that rings When a man is born or married or dead. bell That You May Know What Is in llie Schooner (An Editorial) This issue tf the Nrlirasknu is motivate) ly a lrirc 1 correct misconceptions eonecrniii! the Prairie Schooner, liter ary magazine o the university. The Men originated in this way. Schooner lUisiness Manneer Norman llnlker dropped into our oltiec aliout noon vosterdav. He is a new man at the oh. aiot wanted the Nchraskan to mention the Schooner in its columns occasionally to let the students know the magazine existed, to bludgeon them into trying something good. l?olker"s line ol reasoning 'was thai the Schooner is lighter in tone than it has been in former years, mainly because of its humor pieces. He figured that if Ihe people on the campus just knew what kind of material Kditor L. ('. Wimberly used in his quarterly, they would want to read it. lie pleaded, "Tell your readers there "s a copy of the Schooner in the library. Tell them to get the Fall issue on the news stands. They'll like it if they find out what it's like." Instead of advising a visit to the library reading room or a thirty cent purchase at a news stand, the Nehraskau is offer-j ine a generous .sampling of the stories am poems in the Fall j issue of the Schooner, which came off the press yesterday. We i are glad to devote the major portion of one issue to this high caliber of writing which Dr. Wimberly has been offering to the public for the past ten years. It is our belief that this service to the students will be appreciated, and that once the Schooner is known at home as it is in various parts of the world, it will need no herald for its merits on the campus. That the circulation of the Schooner among Nebraska stu dents is nil. despite the fact the most famous things our uni versity has to offer are its football team, its literary magazine, and Miss Louise Pound, is comparatively easy to explain. Wnii berly's pride ami joy issues from the more or less aesthetic sanctum of the Knclish department. Consequently, it automat ically takes on the false flavor of being high brow, lung haired. proiess)irial in tone, and academic in subject matter. The Schooner is none of these. It is the literary effort of writers from all parts of this country and from foreign lands, compiled and published with the help of the university to meet the taste of that portion of the general public having some cultivation. If the adjective "literary" offends in con nection with this magazine which has exchanges with Har pers and Forum and motivates letters of regret from China, the Philippines, and the various states of the U.S. by its perennial threatened demise, it is only because we do not im mediately realize that "literary" implies excellence, not dullness. Prairie Schooner Relates Tragedy Of Racial Conflict Your Lips Drown All Me Willi Their Syrup of Delight Black Lad Dies in Deep 1 South as Drunken Officer Shoots. THE THE RARE SPIRIT. William de Lisle. I shan't compare thee to a sum mer's day. The smile's too tranquil. When your lips Drown all me with their syrup of delight I can but think (before my thoughts eclipse) Of frangipanni heavy on an island The gorged, sweet smell of frangi. panni, Only because you, too, are trop ical. And I, touching you thru darkness, am a man. I never think of you as he did: Face, Dark hair, cream flesh, and subtle yellow eyes; The catalogue is long but you are all Those things and none, a being past surmise, A whole Pacific, warm and uni versal, Engulfing me in waves. Yet I command Your cataclysmic sea, ride out the storm. See fall the perilous wave, and claim new Irnd, Breathing the air of strange dis covery. How can I think of you as such and sjch Of limbs and eyes, and brow and hands, And voice to hear, and flesh touch ? to Wimberly Says Schooner Carries Literary Freight cf .! eternity ll.-.l II I ill I IIJ ill ,11'Jiiv ii o i.-. i building, it was tnie. but there ! iej it ring : was no reason why the endow- i mert could nnt be used for books 'or a new building. j The tongue in a hound's head ral hflP than .jjnvhOW. ' livelier .1 i. .it. v.. 7 . in the meantime. Profes.v,r , The heart follows it and the will, jriinpit of the chemistry depart-! h,intl ,r never hunted; there merit, who felt that the building j had been originally intended fori neve him. tore his hair ar.d stalked j Death for him. There is only the , uround his office in alternate rage : kill. and dejection. j And Processor Plippit is Forced io uc nqncii. j What can I do?" he said ve- j hf niently to the young man in the j athletic sweater, who was also in j his office. "Smith can give him; aimo.n anything he wants to in , philosophy: nobofiy eyer under-! strvxi the stuff anyway, least of, all S.nith r.imself. Allen can say his free translation is pood, and I Crawford can claim that his J ycj themes show individuality or one-1 talk" i ,nil,"y '" fimein.ng. even n nil , tne vora arni spenea riKni. 'n. w.ii-...m ' I S I why the devil did I ever study , Her level brow, lip's curve, and the UJ IOVerS ISOlie fhetristir. Water is HO and! slim, poiteo nana: Her licvrl Bnnv. Lip's CumvW hv Speak of Love? ' That this number cf Prairie j j Schooner should appear may be ; ; taken as an acknowledgment of i the magazine's indebtedness to its ' I many friends on and off the cam-' j rus of the University of Nebraska. ! : And as future issues of the maga- r.ir.e appear our well-wishers arc to think of each new issue as a . i further expression of gratitude, j The editors of the Schooner believe ' that during the past ten years it ' I has carried its share of literary ! i freight into or across the deserts or wastelands of an age in which i things of the mind and spirit are ' likely to find no mode of convoy-; ; anoe at all. Perhaps the phrase ' "literary freight" is not a happy j one, for "freight" is too heavy a j word for such fragile stuff as i poetry, stories, and essays. Butt j in view of the difficulties one en- j counters along the road, the word i is possibly not inappropriate. So ; it may be that the Schooner should WHY TALK OF LOVE. William de Lisle. Tranent nnlrihunr tmm KammH. V 4 You who are not her lover may continue to regard itself as a sort appraise , of literary freighter. Each separate line: Her tark,' '. sweet -smelling hair. 1 Dr. Lowry C. Wimberly. (realel IJe iuly ACTUAL CHANGE. Winifred Cray Stewart. K'-lMr I nlllr. berries: and the chinauaoint Lie tight in their fisted bur. ready for the squirrels, as in "y ! ethr year. I can see but Mile difference, in 1 th way the woods accept the frot Tht follows the long warm rams. The chickaree trits Defiance from his kitchen middle of ravaged cones. The little animals Thit will sleep winter away under that that. No amount of indi-, These qualities dissect, those rauus VKiui-.htv or free translation can I compare. n.ai-e it H O like the fool said on ! I see you have a critic's ee. re- his final xam." ' pose, "I-t's ji-.st overlook it." :;id!An air of fine detachment and Don Pobhins. the yf.iig man in good taste, the athletic sv.atei" He was Pro- ; Observe that I am qite polite, and fcssir Plippit s reader. "The I hear j i.ij.-f-H in my wrestlirig rnaw h( s ; Urbanely what you say. I'm not oveilook worse things than that! disgraced? and nolx-Miy gives a, lioot " i You do approve? Well, well! Let's ' P. it we car.'t." sail Ptofesv.t ! drink to her. Pl.ppit. "They say he takes all i You know, my friend (why talk hi papers home and his father j of love?), reads them. Ja k Newben-y rosy 1 I pity you for your lucidity. rot J:now how rnar.y H i th re are Your self-sufficiency, your meas ure of This voman's beauty. . .Yes. the dahlias grow Bigger than ever. Good-evening, sir. The last tram goes at midnight. (Ah, love sml.es Out in the garden where our I shadows stir.) Smell Sweeter? . . Tears of I) liijit Life Spins Around Phot-W lien Does Xotes of Poets Ring Sour Like Juiec of Limes ballaoe'of the new POETRY. Frederick H. Free. Jr. (,n4aair nf '-? Now 'poets" write without rhythm or rimes Truth and reality their mark. They've bid farewell to verse that chimes And now we can only hsar it bark. This is th of "grim" and "stark" When birds all have the voice of crows. Their stuff makes claim to a beauty dark But how in hell do you tell it from prose ? Their notes ring sour as the juice of limes. Are ceathly weary with cares that cark. They forget the beauty of olden times And sound like a concert from Noah's ark. Lost is the flight of Shelley's lark; It's gone the way of Omar's rose. Their verse holds many a smart remark But how in hell do you tell it from prose ? Loe (;olllmellec?iThe,;lifnI:r, ,re born in dtmi' sweeter 1 How proudly do the rtd !eavs in water, but his father does, uear, 1 cling to the dogwood bushes, Newberry tihed to be head of this; Now that autumn, like any other depart jrent. That itn'l ail the ( autumn gene, is here. young idiot missed, e-ither ." , The r-arel-nut bangs brown and "Wht d:d you give him?" asked i crisp from its branch tip; Dov'b:r. flickers "A "''' yli rrofesnc.r Plippit Are feartma n the hlitk ervite weakly. "It makes me Sick. If (Continued on Page 4 ) This Roaring Decade TTV? Arc Living in Has Splashed ISighl Clubs Wilh the Synthetic Gin I Are armed against surrender, out CONCLUSION. Wi 'im de Lisle. Do lovers ones smell than the rest? I strike the mc:1 cf Donne before the worm Impatiently begins to gnaw, the plamt Of anxious lovers who caress their firm i White flesh, and still stare fixedly. to K( Close on emptiness It change and vanish in the night. Such fear& Torment delight, -id those deliri ous tongues (Like softest music to attending earsi Which ble their untranslatable regrets With music beyond words that is their speech. I know that you (at whom love smiled i LYRIC ELUDING TITLE Ethel Romig Fuller. t MifHtMnftf I idm Pr1Un4. orr. On pivots of intangibles Life spins a casual round None may touch a season: In moonlight is no sound. There's no measure for conscience, No scales to weigh distress. Fingers reaching out for joy Dreams flout definition, Wmd, a boundary fence; Beauty is a point of view. And when does love commence? from a downtown And raised in cellars damp and dark. i Spattered oft with the mud and I slimes i Of language ' park. ' The weary pubic is asked to hark i To a tuneless song that lamely goes. They tell you it flames like white-hot arc. But how in hell do you tell it from prose KILLING AT CARTER'S STATION. Charles Alldredge. An Alfthama Contributor. Carter's Station lay in the Ala bama sun like a hot brick in the sand. No one stirred as the long August afternoon drew to a close. no one except Ames Suttle who occasionally moved enough to spit tobacco juice over the crossbar in front of his store and out into the fine white dust of the street. No one stirred except Ames and no one bothered to listen to the mockingbird whose song, from the tree at the rear of the store, floated slowly like a feather on the still air. Far up the road an automobile horn screeched. Ames looked up. Henderson Porter looked up. It wasn't the note of one automobile passing another; it was a long crying sound. It grew louder and louder and then the car came into sight. It was running very fast and behind it a great train of white dust swirled out. "He's Dead! He's Dead:" Ames got up. The brakes of the car screamed and with a choking sound the car stopped in front of the store. In the front seat under the wheel was a slender boy whose yellowish white hair fell over his forehead and almost into his eyes. "He's dead: He's dead:" he shouted. "Who's dead?" said Ames, and then he looked at what lay crum pled in the seat beside the boy. If Ames hadn't recognized the clothes he wouldn't have known. It was Bub Hannon. or at least what was left of him. Ames moved around the car. A lot of people came out of the stones and walked over to the car where the white haired boy was beating the metal door with his fist an i sobbing. H gasped when he sa . the head. The blood which covered it was thick and dark. "Cod damn." said Ames, "I wouldn't a known him." Zip Reynolds Shot Him. "Who done it?" asked Hender- eff orts son and caught the hands of the boy. "Who done it?" "Zip Reynolds. Zip Reynolds '' the boy shouted. ' He shot him in the face." "You mean the nigger down at Thames's place?" Ames wanted to know. "Yeah," said the boy. "Bub and me was driving him to Hometon and when we got him back horr.r Bub asked him for a dollar and then Zip gM. out of the. car and went into the house. He saii he was going for a dollar hut he car.-.e back with his gun. He told Bub he was going to shoot him for a dirty bastard. Eub told him for God's sake don't shoot, but he shot aid threw the gun back up on his porn and ran. The boy looked at Bub. "God. look at the blood'." he screamed "Get the hoy on home." ta;d Her.deror.. "Git the sheriff." said Ames "He Don't Look So Pretty." They got Eub out of the car and put him on a table in the back room of the store Ben Swyer. the undertaker, and Poc Watson started washing the blonj off his head. "He don't look so pretty," said Doc. I don't reckon it makes much of a difference to him how he looks." Ben said. With the corner of a wet towel he scrubbed around the holes in Bub s forehead. "V ell." he said, "tne only thing I don't understand is how Bub lived as long as he did. He'd a choKe.I his ! grandma if it got him anything." I im. tii:rr mi t.ejKi in the door. "The sheriff said he'd send Jo Marshall and a couple of other dDutis down hre as soon as they 1 Oh, poets, who sought the heaven-, can nf).j c, j0gg They i ly spark ought to b here in half an hour. : That thru the years eternal glows. Tnt Man-Hunt Begins. ' See how there bardlets on epics 1 jt longer than half an hour embark. hefore Marshall and the other dep- But how In hell do you tell it from ljtjof, got dn.iVT, wtn a tmckioad prose ? We've Got to Go Somewhere. Town's Right Far for Walking: Rut at Least Water's There THIS FORTY YEARS. To count the tnufuphs through Edwin Ford Piotr. I which 1 nature inrmeU: the hard ground act as they 1r iltmm Vmnn w4(,4 Ur , I srn but an otatrver of the wind. acTeo im vcieoer; iw mrrvtn h i ru For while a boy is eatirig an iipp' The null of chkr.gt haj ground to mush and scrapple Tiu cvles it burned our brum out to Invent; tun . IV- I beg indulgence. Can a tnr re- ClUK, A rhytrifctcT, focus for a minute's UK The rtraw and cha-'f a separator An theories which And the wild swans follow the sir path southward thru storm spattered skies. If there's any actual change, it s the fact that we take for granted The beauty of tha rti and yellow leaves before they fall: That we cry Inwardly, seeing the frost curled ferns and brackens: And that w mind litt'e more Of spiritual valu. while the mind than we minded last October Nurses regret or having overdined The pry'l f the wind's co'd On nvonhipr. fluff and nutshell, fingers at the crack in roof j heps of nails? and floor and wall. No cynical Maeor nw avails throws Down forty falls, r measure all Lk.e snows Of forty winters, hile our history Shifts Sily sn unstable gravity posed s hats we heaven-sent Hang as out-mod ed know On scarecrows forty deepening years ago. But "we have crossed the mud holes, met lh knocks: Our shock -absorbers sre all full of shocks tOnttrwed en Page X. of reach Of secret philtres, rational and cold. ' Yours is the pattern of a gull in 1 flight, : Your life and arabesque. I envy ' you Th gift of being popularly right. Tht emhteenth was your century; you shun The violent tone where the li animal, An' stnl ths Jul''.. ..Her we mutt part. Among ths ghosts I'll set you. If you dally A little coldly with the scattered! bones. i A scent of frangipanni In the dust '' Will guide you to my portion there 1 preserved. And then we'll talk sgsin, if talk you must. THE FARM WIFE SPEAKS. Legarde S. Doughty. H.ll , fan turn Right well I know your feeling But its's no use to speak; Yoj were not made for wordr, For words are weak. I got the little learning Whii you learned to plough. My words have not been useful Up until now. Don't say thing. Your hands Are rough as water-oak, , And tell far more thsn any Words you ever spoke. You couldn't cool the. sun Or wet the drouth. I've watched the day on day Draw down your mouth Till the cracking of a leaf Against the tiresome sky Would make you act as if A man could almost cry. rour head cf cittle couldn't Live on dust for grass. Ths cornfield's liks a junk yard Of twisted hollow brass. Nights are getting windy. But this year the fall Or even the winter Can't Change things at all That perished in the summer we've got to go somewhere. Town's right r for wsihlng; But at least water's there. of hounds. Bv that time most or the men in Carter's Station were standing out in the street with their shotjjijns in their nands Howdy." said Marshall, when he tot out nf the car. He lol.e. around at Ihe crowd. "'loin' hu"' in ? he asked and laucheil. "Niccer named Zip Hrynol'i shot Run Hannon." somebody said. 'Bub Hannon?" Mamhall asked. 'Sur: he's lying in '.he storo there now. Want to sec him?" Mai shall w alked in rind took n look at the dead man. "It's him b right. Last time 1 h-r him we hi 1 him up fur tapping a filluw in tin head wilh a Coca Cola txittie." He turned and walked out. 'H.e sun hud faiKn U-low the stores i i the other Side of the stmt. Mat shJill looked around at the f'imiliar faces of the men who stood In small stouds and then.' between the stores, st the retreating sun. "Well." he said, "we might as well 1 git goin'." "A Nlgger'll Take to the Swamp." They got going the whole. crowdl They climbed Into nearly a dorn ears' and started out for I (Continued on Tage J.