TWO DAILY NEBRASKAN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1939 Madras--, (Continued from Page 1) Peace." Tickets for the suppers are 35 cents. Manikan outstanding Indian. A noted educator, lecturer and author, Dr. Rajah Manikam is rec ognized as one of India's outstand ing Christian leaders. He received several degrees from both Indian and American universities, and re turned to India to lecture, do re search work in the native Chris tian colleges, and to secretaryship of the Indian Christian council. Miss Minnie Soga, considered the outstanding Bantu woman of South Africa, is called dynamic and colorful by her Madras asso ciates, "unpredictable" by her own admission. "To us Africans," she has said, "Christianity is a white man's religion. The white man regarded as heathen everything he found in Africa. He made us so conscious of this that we thought our skin must be heathen too. He gave us an inferiority complex. " Heads Japanese Christian college. Representative of the younger leadership of Japan, Dr. Hachiro Yuasa was recently named presi dent of Doshisha university in Kyoto, the largest and most influ ential Christian college in Japan. Dr. Yuasha came to America in 1908 as a boy, followed degrees from Kansas state and Illinois uni versity with research work at Cor nell, Chicago and in Germany and France. Kiub--, (Continued from Fnge 1) appreciated on the W. P. A., to help support genuine six foot shov els, or as the Genii of the Magic Lamp. Business pecked wife faints. A lifelike, or deathlike, to state the situation more exactly, faint combined with American original- Virgil Franks, Mgr. 6 Barbera to ? Serve You New Deal Barber C Shop y 1306 0 St, T Penn State scientists prepare time capsules STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (IP). Not one but 72 "time capsules" are being prepared by scientists at the Pennsylvania State college for scientists of the future. Each capsule will be a sample of one of the 72 Jordan soil fer tility plots which must be aban doned because of the expansion of the campus. Approximately 25 pounds of soil is being placed in each capsule. ity and female plaintiveness will satisfy the requirements of the business pecked wife of a hen pecked husband, Mrs. J. P. Throck morton. These short sketches are but a sample of the variety and of the opportunity of success for char acter actors and comedians that "Alias Aladdin" affords. The klub expects a large turnout. Chorus parts will be selected some time next week along with the minor speaking rolls. Spanish club to hear Prof. Van Royen tonight Prof. William Van Royen will tell of his travels in "Santa Do mingo" when he speaks at Spanish club meeting tonight at 7:30 in Gallery B of Morrill. Harry Tourtelot will lead the group in Spanish songs, and re cordings of Mexican music will be played. Men start into feminine fields Vermont reports males study home ec courses ' BURLINGTON, Vt. (LP.). If women are invading fields tradi tionally considered masculine property, so are men stepping into feminine places. For the first time in its history, the home economics department at the University of Vermont has two men students in its course on the pre-school child. The pre-school child course Is offered to seniors in home eco nomics to teach them how to care Choir in YWCA vesper services at Ellen Smith The weekly meeting of the Y. W. C. A. vespers was held at El- x len Smith hall Tuesday, at 5 o'clock. The program consisted of group singing and responsive readings, In which the Vesper choir participated. for the very young child. In the laboratory class, the students work with young children, observing and learning to teach them. The men report that they en rolled in the course in order to get atcual experience with children and so broaden their scientific and technical knowledge. JmLvwd Handbags by Shurtite : ' l Aft' VV V y fir j l 1 500 Favorite of the Month As feslorrd In Vosne.; Patent or erunhed calf-, j . , . In Mark, Nvy, Ja ponic and Cranberry. Your Bag for March Destined by Khur 'Ite and eselmiv In Lincoln with Go 'US. In shiny black patent erashtl ealf. livlt of the Month, by Sdiaffer (as shown in Vogue) .. .1.50 GOLD'S... Street Floor. Official Newspaper of More Than 6,000 Students THIRTY-EIGHTH YEAR Offices Union Building Day B7181. Night B7193. Journal B3333 Member Associated Collegiate Press, 1933 39 Member Nebraska Press Association. 1938-39 Represtrted for National Advertising bv NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE. INC. 420 Madison Ave. New York, N. Y. Chicago Boston Los Angeles San Francisco Published Daily during the school year except Mon days and Saturdays, vacations, and examination periods by students of the University of Nebraska, under supervision of the Publications Board. Subscription Rates are $1.00 Per Semester or $1.50 for the College Year. $2.50 Mailed Single copy, 5 Cents. Entered as second-class m.-.iter at the postoffice In Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress, March 3, 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for In Section 1103. Act of October 3. 1917. Authorized January 20. 1922. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF HOWARD KAPLAN BUSINESS MANAGER RICHARD M'GINNIS EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Managing Editors ...Merrill Englund, Harold Niemann. News Editors June Bierbower, Richard DeBron, Norman Harris, Ellsworth Steele, Fern Steute vllle, Ed Wittenberg. Society Editor .. .Margaret Krause Reporter Marian Bremen, Stanley Breuer. Jean Carnahan, James Carroll, Janice Feithauser, Pat Greene, Frances Kcefer, Betty Kliiirel, Evelyn I.ravitt, ltollln Llmpreebt Clyde Malts, Donald Moore, Hubert Ordn, ( lark O'llan lon, Chris I'eteisnn, Paul Svoboda, Lucile Thomas, David Thompson, Ava Whaiton. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Assistant Business Managers Arthur Hill, Robert Seidel, Helen Severa. Solicitors. . Roger Anawalt, Ed Calhoun, Ed Segrlst, Ben Novicoff. Burton Thiel. Circulation Manager Stanley Michael ANEW AXIS "An American axis of defense" in the face of European affairs such a thought is not unappealing. Especially is this true when a lit tle reflection reveals how successful the Ger mans and the Italians have found such a move in their eternal game of diplomatic chess. "A bulwark against 112,21 and fascist pene tration of South America" are the plain words used by Brazil's minister in urging America to decrease much of its unemployed by transplanting them on the rich soil of our friendly, southern neighbor. Not often has this "big brother" received such invitations for amity and co-operation. And not likely is it that one can ever be given that will carry such tremendous possibilities for mutual advantages. Mr. Aranha, the Brazilian minister, cer tainly did not exaggerate when he estimated that some 5 million persons will never be ab sorbed by industry with the constant increase of machine industrialization which this coun try has known. Nor has any New Deal meas ure as yet supplied a better occupation for them than to put them to work in huge tracts of valuable land in the "plateau of eternal spring." There the Brazilians have tens of thousands of square miles of fertile farm lands and vast mineral wealth. Despite the differences in temperament and background, the Americans of Brazil and the Americans of the United States seek to pre serve the same high principles. And of greater concern to the youth of our day is the deter mination of both countries that those prin ciples be preserved thru peace. One hundred fifty years ago Benjamin Franklin taught the lesson of power in unity to the jealous members of 13 colonies. Despite the personal aims of Mussolini and Hitler, the Rome-Berlin axis has wielded mighty power. Imagine then the potential forces of a firmly welded American band of unification in jeal ousy does not exist. We have learned full well in the past ten years that relief is no solution for unemploy ment; rather it is an aggravation of it. Hun ger for work as well as for food wrends the souls of the ambitious. On the hungry do the "isms" thrive. Food for the starved, work for the rest less, a united defense against ambitious mur derersthis is what Brazil offers. All thru our history it has been our frontier which opened new resources and new fields, th.1t gave us new light and new hope in times of despair. Now when despair is blackest fpr the greatest number this country has ever known, Brazil opens a new frontier. fro I73 KM rl "father" Mines and his famous N. B. C. 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