The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 17, 1939, Page EIGHT, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    EIGHT
DAILY NEBIUSKAN
FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1939
J
Tnhiqliiuj. ivitfv WlcVfy j
Well, well, well... the kiddies
will pull surprises every now and
then . . . and the biggest surprise
of the day is the news of Jim
Armstrong's Beta pin on Alpha
Chi Eunice Halm. . .which prob
ably puts the bee on the story
concerning her which was in Wed
nesday's paper... and also in the
Alpha Chi house, and also a Beta
pin, for Betty Ellen Kuhns is
wearing Lew Nordgren's diamond
and shield . . . Congrats to all of
you... three big parties come off
this week end, the Alpha Sig, the
Sig Alph, and the Sigma Delta
Tau formal... all Saturday night
...the Alpha Sig carries out the
Hawaiian theme, and you'll see
Don Gonzel with Mary Tolhurst;
Jack Jackson and Lila Hillman,
Chi Omega; Harriet Bowman, Al
pha Phi, and Dick Simonson; Al
bert Phelps and Jane Bracket;
Walter Dunn and Lola Arterburn;
Walter Cropper and Betty Meyer,
Kappa; and Guy Holland with
Jayne Young ... a t the Sig Alph
Bowery party (closed) will be
Alpha Xi Deit Den Alice Day and
Don Selby; Chi O Hope Drum
mond and John Keating; Bob Mar
tin and Pi Phi Jeanne Fetter;
Theta Jessica Mutz and John Up
son; Delta Gamma Helen Burn
ham and Bob Burruss; Kappa
Marj Runyan and Grant Benson;
and Chi O Barbara Dale and John
Hinrich. . .and at the Sigma Delta
$ and his band play
every night from
6 to 9
FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY
from 9 to 12 at the
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
P
II
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Contract rrni-irnl for
6 !( more'
JIM SLMONiK
now playing the piano with
the band, coming from
Franklin Vincent's band at a
the "Chez Paree" in Omah.i.
Come iloirn find hear
Jim really "ticLle
the irorieiV
o
o
o
o
3fie
JHOTEL
JJoits Dkii Week lo
EfPM t
IHELSON!
o
DTE
CAPITAL
Tau formal Saturday night, Selma
Hill and Bob Cohen, Zeta Beta
Tau; Sarah Smeerin and Jerry
Milder, ZBT; Mary Arbitman and
Leo Turkel, Sigma Alpha Mu,will
be among those present. . .Satur
day night at the Turnpike you'll
see Morris Jenkins of the Com
manders, who is so thataway
about a home town gal that he's
importing her from Humboldt
Harriet Slagle's the name .... and
Jim Tillma, also Commander, will
again be biding his week end time
at Raymond hall... at Joy Night
of Lincoln High this week, such
university students as Allen Men-
etee, and Dorothy Faulkner, Towne
club, and Commander Elbert Rich
ardson will be among those pres
ent. . .Thursday's lunch at sorority
houses were brightened by the
presence of Kappa Sig pledges
in tux ...
Gamma Phi's announce Eleanor
Hyde as a new pledge.
Texas students
live on $16 month
320 bendFiTb Unis
co-operative housing
AUSTIN, Tex. (I.P.). At the
University of Texas, 320 students
are getting: an education and liv
ing comfortably for the price of
three packages of cigarettes daily.
The 320 students are residents
of the university's fifteen co-oper
ative houses, established on the
campus since 1936. In cold figures
they are actually paying board
and room expenses with 50 cents
a day, figures released here show.
Save $40,000 a Year.
University officials estimate
that the whole group saves $40,
000 a year, and declares that if
co-operative housing could be pro
vided for the entire campus
enough money would be saved an
nually to retire the state deficit in
ten years.
While the average student
spends $30 and the dormitory resi
dent, $45 to $55 a month, the
"co-oporativc houser" spends an
average of $15.90 for room and
board.
"Co-operative housing will revo
lutionize America's system of liv
ing," one administrator predicted
after checking comparative living
costs. "If we turn out two nun
dred students a year who know
they can live comfortably on that
little money, think of what may
happen ten years from now when
the movement has spread back
home.
Kentucky faculty
may be insured
Uni senate considers
hospitalization plan
LEXINGTON, Ky. (IP.). Hos
pitiiliZHtfrm insurance may become
available for all memlicrs of the
University of Kentucky faculty
if plans now under consideration
by a special committee are ap
proved by the university senate.
At ihe regular meeting of the
body approximately 50 percent of
those present voiced their willing
ness to adopt such a plan, which
would include attendance by the
physician of one's choice, provided
he has the association a approval.
Lutheran Bible class
meets this afternoon
Gamma Delta Bible class, Lu
theran ntudent group, will meet
at 5 o'clock in room 203 of the
Temple. Discussion dealing with
the questionnaii e started at the
last meeting will be led by Rev. H.
Erck.
LINCOLN
Sunday
PHI DELTA PI
DINNER
NU adds 44
new courses
Regents' change goes
into effect fall term
Forty-four new courses, about
half of them in the Graduate col
lege, will be added to the univer-
ity curriculum effective Septem
ber 1, it was announced yesterday
by the board "of regents. . The
courses are the result of over a
year's study by a special faculty
committee on curriculum.
A special committee, composed
of members of the law faculty,
recommended to the regents that
a revision of instructional work in
the law college should be made.
Additions to the present law
courses will include taxation, gov
ernment regulation of business and
labor, administrative law, crim
inal procedure, and insurance.
The subject of partnership will
be included in an expanded course
on business organizations. The
courses in procedure will be re
vised to provide a more efficient
instruction in modern procedural
problems, both federal and state.
Constitutional law will be a re
quired course hereafter for second
year law students. The additional
courses, according to the commit
tee, will be offered without any
new expense to the university.
Add courses for graduates.
New courses approved for the
graduate college will include:
Seminar in architecture, graduate
research in architecture, advanced
plant physiology, water purifica
tion and sewage treatment, super
vised correspondence study and
literature for the high school age.
Also thermionic-tube circuits
and antennas, the Near East from
330 to 1204 A. D., the Near East
from 1204 to 1699 A. D., internal
combusion engine laboratory, lab
oratory investigation, introduction
to theoretical physics, classical
theoretical physics, quantum me
chanics, research in physics, ad
ministrative law, principles of
public management, land utiliza
tion, introduction to literary trans
lation, and 16th century French.
Other new courses approved by
the committee include: Fungi, ag
ricultural machinery, chemical en
gineering laboratory, photography,
spherical trigonometry, physical
education courses for women,
sight reading, oral laboratories in
French and Spanish, agronomic
practice under irrigation, biometry,
methods of plant breeding, recent
British thought, and animal com
munities. Harvard attempts
new teaching plan
Uses 'undergraduate
faculties' successfully
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (ACP)
Pointing the way to what miy be
come a new system of U. S. edu
cation. Harvard university au
thorities have declared successful
the experimental plan of training
high school graduates by "under
graduate faculties."
Designed to aid high school
graduates who cannot attend col
lege, the nation's oldest university
has created classes that are taught
by students. Under the new sys
tem, 50 Boston h'gh school alumni
have followed college courses un
der the volunteer tutelage of 100
Harvard undergraduates, most of
them honor men.
Classes in the unique course
meet at night in the dormitory of
"faculty members." There they
have relayed on to them the ma
terial that the "teachers" have
learned in their college courses.
The "pickapack scholar" plan is
being continued this semester, and
has interested National Youtn Ad
ministration officials, who are con
sidering offering this work to col
lege students who now receive
government aid.
Besides learning In evening
classes, the "pickapack scholars"
watch experiments in the univer
sity's laboratories and have full
use of the university's libraries.
dUIN. and His
THE BAND WITII A MILLION FRIENDS
Direct from the. Club Victor- Seattle.
Mirveloaa Masie at a Popular r-iiee
Why
tO Mln. Boa
Kosmet show
song writers
meet Sunday
Rest of pony chorus
to be selected Tuesday
night at tryouts
All persons who have submitted
songs, and others interested in
writing songs for the Kosmet Klub
show "Alias Aladdin" are request
ed to attend Sunday afternoon at
2:30 in room 308 of the Union.
According to Don Moss, Klub
president, part of the pony chorus
and harem to be used in the show
was selected at tryouts held Wed
nesday. All who tried out then and
other students who wish to try for
the remaining places are to meet
in Teachers college basement next
Tuesday evening at 7:30.
Deger plays lead.
Except for the chorus-harem,
the show cast has been chosen,
with Everett "Duke" Deger slated
to play the lead in the production,
written by Innocents Ed Steeves
and Bruce Carnpbell.
The show will be directed this
year by Joe D. Iverson who has di
rected the last six Kosmet produc
tions. Kosmet Klub workers and Ma
gee's will handle the ticket sales
which begins next week. Tickets
will sell at 50 cents each.
Forecast best show ever.
Kosmet officers forecast the
best show ever produced and have
taken more pains in selection of
cast and pony chorus than in the
years before.
"Alias Aladdin" will be shown in
the Temple theater the week of
April 17 thru 22.
Tennessee aids
'flunked out' frosh
Claim one quarter not
enough for adjustment
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (IP.) The
bewildered" college freshman ia
being given a helping hand at the
University of Tennessee this year,
with the university's new guidance
program in effect.
Instead of following the age
old regulation of suspending all
who "flunked out" during the fall
quarter, university officials have
allowed many of the first year stu
dents to re-enroll this quarter, as
signing them to special faculty ad
visers who will aid in solving their
difficulties.
"The university feels that some
freshmen should have more than
one quarter to adjust themselves
to the college program," explained
Dr. R. F. Thomason, registrar.
"After they overcome the bewild
erment of a new environment, we
can tell whether they are capable
of doing college work. Meantime,
we should offer them all the guid
ance possible."
UNOEft 5CHn.mf: DIRECTION
is proud lo
he the host to
Friday
KAPPA
KAPPA
GAMMA
BANQUET
Saturday
DELTA
GAMMA
BANQUET
Knrt
SIGMA
DELTA TAU
SPRING
PARTY
HOME OF- THE
Trsty Pastry Shop
i n 1 1 1
NBC-CBS ORCHESTRA
Tar More?
Service from 10th O .
hotel
lomhusker
Professors meet
in Baton Rouge
Three NU men attend
mammalogist conclave
Three persons from the univer
sity plan to attend the annual
meeting of the American Society
of Mammalogists, April 3 to 7 at
Louisiana State university near
Baton Rogue, La. They are Dr.
Otis Wade, pre-med advisor, Edson
Fichter, and Rufus Lyman, jr.
Each man will present a paper at
the meeting.
Dr. Wade's topic is "The Time
of Emergence of Ground Squirrels
from Hibernation in Relation to
Soil Temperature and Weather
Conditions." Mr. Fichter's paper
is on "The Third Record of the
Dusky Pocket Mouse from Iowa."
Mr. Lyman's subject is "The Blood
Sugar Concentration in Active and
Hibernating Ground Squirrels."
Chancellor to address
Docne college faculty
Chancellor C. S. Boucher of the
University of Nebraska will be
guest of the Doane college faculty
Thursday evening. He will talk to
the group on college problems in
general and will participate in a
seminar to be held following the
program. .
JUL
STUART
Hurry! . . . haul Day!
"Huckleberry Finn"
"Slart)i Tomorrow!
Fields, Bergen, McCarthy
"You Can't Cheat
an Honest Man"
11
LINCOLN
Voir Sliouinf!
'ST. LOUIS BLUES'
with
Dorothy Lamour
Lloyd Nolan
- Maxine Sullivan
f TURNPIKE
Presents In Person
f FRIDAYS
iMARCH 17S
!UERBIE!
v . v
'V
v
-I-
r.
"i Young Marttro fromQ
Q fi Mutiuippi )" .
, Direct from the . '
Edgcwatcr
O Beach Hotel
Chicago
O
Fealurlnr IS pceple Inclodinr;
Nancy Hainan iene Babbitt
Three Rhythm Bebrta
Four Levee Lonnfcra
GLEE CLVB
O
O
o
o
o
o
I F,. I WILBUR, Manager
Aim. for thl (treat Orchestra
Only &5c Vtt Fereoa
m tm) ill