The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 22, 1939, Page THREE, Image 3

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

    WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1939
DAILY NEBHASKAN
THREE
ACS CAMIPIUS
..liPiWM iW&lf'V ;i!!';Sr5'"!i;!i!Mii :----li,!::'i:T!i:.ii:-i,iii- rnrh.;:... iiTi-i.jnTivs:-!. :,;;i..,;-;.:,:itLi... ..;:.::."h;i5i::i -j:!"! ''lu.nWi'.i'Oi'iiiM'
ft
lifer
(hue
'0 (nr n'rTXnarfi ftl
Home Ec
group rraeefs
in Omaha
Miss Grace Morton
to preside at meeting
scheduled March 24, 25
Main subjects for discussion at
the annual meeting: of the Nebras
ka Home Economics association in
Omaha March 24, 25 will concern
the place of home economics In
general education, and sonsumer
problems.
Dr. Clifford Erickson of the
school of education, Northwestern
university, will be a featured
speaker Friday at 10 o'clock. Dr.
Rebekah Gibbons, head of foods
and nutrition of Nebraska agricul
ture college, will preside at this
session.
Miss Mary Barber, Battle Creek,
Mich., will give an address at 1
o'clock Friday afternoon. Dr.
Erickson will talk again at 2
o'clock. At the Friday evening
banquet, he will address the entire
group on the role of home eco
nomics in general education.
Miss Llston to Talk.
Miss Grace Morton, president of
the association and head of cloth
ing and textiles at the ag college,
will preside at a business meeting
at 8:30 Saturday morning. The
morning will be devoted to group
discussions on consumer prob
lems, following a talk on "New
Frontiers for the Consumer" by
Miss Margaret Liston, head of
family economics at the ag col
lege. Mrs. Elizabeth Riner, in
charge of adult education in Oma
ha, will preside at this session.
Mrs. Clara Ruth Neuhaus of the
Omaha publis schools wil deliver
an address at the noon luncheon
Saturday. In the afternoon, a
council meeting of the association
will be held. New officers will be
elected at the meeting.
Nazes
(Continued from Page 1 1
thing. "The organization is too
complete, too efficient to tumble
Ht the loss of one man," he said,
but admitted that the loss of Hit
ler, if it diJ ftiuse the present re
gime to backstop any, might pre
vent the futtlKT territorial de
mands which his father predicted
in an AP story Sunday, for it
takes a man with great daring to
accomplish such great feats as
Germany has.
Assassination Improbable.
"Furthermore," ho thinks, "the
assassination of Hitler can hardiy
be rckoned as n possibility. When
ever he appears in public or on
parade, every office of every build
ing along the route is evacuated,
he is protected by bullet proo
glass, by hundreds of armed
jMi.mls following and precedin;;
him and stationed nmon.T tho
crowd, who are ready to shoot at
a momenta notice. If he I ; f!m;T!
ni'U'd. it will have to be hy po i
or .',(nie suliik' method."
He has n-?n Hitler a g: ;t many
times nod his father interviews
him regulaily "He ia a very f.; i
cinating nvi.ii," wris th r-n'v com
ment he would make, ;nd dojlined
to j;ay whether per s;nn I observa
tion indicated that tl?r fuehrer v;n
mentally unbalanced, b'.it "Ihj
things he f'n.v: certainly make liir.i
appear j.o."
Predicts comeihing elce.
".Mimethin.T else Avill happen to
the dii latorr.hip .U:forQ Iklhr's
deslh," Locimer assorted. b.t he
refused to say just what. In an
:,wt to "What tl: German people
think of their government?" he
thought a while, then said: "There
hi very little openly oxprcssej op
position. Most people, do not nree
with Hitler entirely, but ure proud
of the things he has accomplished.
They believe the statements which
appear in the controlled German
press that 'Germany has again
i-eached a respected and honorable
position among 6ther rations' and
do not have any idea of the Amer
ican and English anti-German
sentiment."
"And they have reuson to "want
Twenty Finish Farm Operators
5
Members of the graduating class
of the farm operators' winter
course at the college of agriculture
are:
Lower row, left to right: Ray
mond Potter, Alma; Melvin Bri
chacek, Schuyler; George Sabata,
Rising City; Supervisor J. V. Srb
Ncbraskans plant
million trees soon
Clorkc-McNory to ship
seedlings last of month
Approximately 1 million Clarke
McNary trees will be planted by
Nebraska farmers during the next
two weeks, it became evident to
day. Clayton W. Watkins, senior ex
tension forester at the agriculture
college, announced broadleaf seed
lings will be shipped from Fre
mont, March 23 thru March 27,
and evergreen stock shipped from
Halsey, March 28 thru March 31.
Shipment is to begin with eastern
counties and end with western
counties.
Orders already received have
virtually exhausted supplies of
certain varieties but orders are
still being accepted for three ever
green and seven broadleaf vari
eties. to believe this too. Few Amer
icans can imagine how the Ger
mans were reduced and humiliated
under the treaty of Versailles.
They are proud of the way Hitler
has built their nation back up, and
are not too eager to reproach him
for his methods."
Real American youth.
Bob Loehner is very much the
kind of youth you would expc :t
to meet on an American campus,
lie is young and athletic wii'.i a
very engaging personality. He was
interviewed on the roof of the Phi
Pst house where he was dressed
only in trunks, playing catch base
hall with a boy stand ng on the
terrace of the Theta hou :e across
the street. He has a profound
know'edge of economics, history,
politic:.! .science ami styles, of vari
ous iuv.;;a;H';s. He M familiar
wKh the s:ct-i:nj of all the pronu
nc.V. Ame; ii an ncwspaiKi- chains
sr.d lo;:'ta forward to bng a
forc"gn ( crit:.poi (l iit in lii.s own
right.
V.'rrner Duch, his, lr:-t fiienl.
was r.-ind ng noulr', and when
Lorliner wr.j n'!:?d what he
tho:!"ht of American girls, he
went into a huddle with liti-h ami
the tv o of thrm starred on the fol
lowing diplomatic utatrment:
"American gills are fashionably
and phy;i-.-ally fiimcrinr, but when
it coitus to char.i'.ter. you will
have to concede the German girls
a point or two. American girls are
too superficial and Insincere."
Lijrory offers student
exams for positions
C'Ulents who wish part time
pcsiti. is in the library may take
the annual competitive examina
tion on April 1. Students are
asked to apply as soon as pos
sible to Mrs. Consuclo S. Gra
ham at her office near the loan
deck on the main floor of the
library. The examination will
he held In the reserve reading
room, library at 9 a. m. on
April 1.
M f '
j
of the college; John Wiechmann,
Cook; Walter Oppliger, Colum
bus; Wayne Warner, Harrisburg.
Second row: Donald Zeilinger,
David City; Ray Lewandowski,
Loup City; Kenneth McRoberts,
Gurley; Theodore Wirth, Nebraska
City; Dean Potter, Wilcox; Wil-
Biclogy department adds
new books to library
New books added to the biology
library in Bessey are:
"Florida Wild Flowers," by
Baker.
"Life's Beginning on Earth," by
Beutner.
"Bulletin of the Vanderbilt Ma
rine Museum," by Lee Boone.
"Introduction to Nematology,"
by Chitwood.
"Protoplasma Monographien,"
by Aschoff, Kuster and Schmidt.
Two ag students
win outstate jobs
Clark, Schudel to work
in Montana, Idaho
Two students from the agricul
tural college have received ap
pointments for positions in other
states according to announcements
made last week by Dr. F. D. Keim,
chairman of the agronomy depart
ment at the agricultural college.
Head of the grass and forage
crops breeding work at the agri
cultural experiment station in
Eozeman, Montana, will be Leland
Oar!:, graeluate student in agron
omy. He received his bachelor's
and master's degrees from the
University of Utah and for the
past three years has studied under
Dr. H. M. Tysdal. who has charge
of forage crop investigations at
the Nebraska agricultural experi
ment station.
Harold Schudel. North Loup
junior in the agricultural college
is to be empisyed this summer at
the experimental station in Aber
deen, Idaho, where he will assist
Dr. H. V. Harlan in breeding ex
periments with barley and oats.
Kehulel's appointment is to fill
the position held for the past two
summers by Ogden Ridd'.e, a grad
uate last spring from ng.
Also announced is the apHint
mcnt of Kenyon T. Fayne as
graduate assistant in agronomy
and will Lcgin work at the ag ex
pel iinental station in June assist
ing Dr. Kail S. Quisenberry in
co-operative small grain impiovc
meiit investigation.
to explain
telephone industry
Commercial engineer
to taik to bizad honorary
M. M. Hale, commercial engi
neer for the Lincoln Telephone and
Telrgraph company, will explain
the business organization of his
company tonight at 8 o'clock when
he speaks before a meeting of
Delta Sigma Fi, Bizad honorary,
at the Union.
Interfraternity council
arranges tutor sessions
Underclass members of frater
nities will get a chunce to review
for eight selected courses in tuto
rial sessions arranged by the In-
Short Course
3V
k T'Sl
1 r -
- ' t. ? ft
Lincoln Journal,
liam Sturtevant, Wauneta; Alvin
Swanson, Bloomfield.
Upper row: Kenneth Bring, Ly
ons; Charles Barrett, Syracuse;
Wayne Cromer, Gering; George
Urban, Claik3on: Edward Pallas,
Wahoo; Leonard Nelson, Genoa,
Clement Pfeifer, Fort Crook.
Dairy products
judges to meet
Contest open to all ag
students tomorrow
The dairy products judginy con
test which is open to all ag stu
dents will be held tomorrow from
5 to 6 o'clock in the dairy audi
torium. Experienced and inexpe
rienced will be placed in different
divisions, thus giving equal chanc
es to all.
The senior division members
have received training in the Var
sity Dairy club's training school,
which met for this purpose. Jun
ior division members have had no
training.
Today's 'grind' to
boss 'smoothies'
Coeds prefer collegian
type lo future 'big shots
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (I. P.)
Women students on any campus
are passing up future "big. thots"
who stay to themselves, in favor
of the smoothies who will be work
ing for the big shots in the next
ten years.
These are the conclusions of Dr.
Robert G. Berniouter, associate
profes.'ior of education aiid psy
chology at Pennsylvania State col
lege. "The girls seem to favor those
who will be working for the
'grinds' in the next decade or so,"
Dr. Bernreuter said.
He pointed out that in all co
educational colleges and universi
ties the problem of developing so
cial case among a group of the
men students is a very real one.
"There boys, many having the
highest intelligence and outstand
ing scholastic records, often go
thru an entire semester without
talking to a girl socially," he said.
"Because of this they are gradu
ated and leave college without any
knowledge of the sort of gi; ' they
prefer."
lerfraternity council and beginning
at 7:1 j p. in. tomorrow night.
Patterned after the tutorial sys
tem successfully used b.' North
western university fraternities, the
review meetings will be couductcd
dv upperclassmen and graduate
students. Since the council will
p.iy all tutor's fees, no charge will
be made. -Daily.
Classified
ADVERTISING
10 ff PER LINE
f
ROOM AND BOARD 3 boys $20
njiioce. 1158 U St. L7u.;.
Goddess of og
presentation
climaxes parfy
Unusual plan promised
to reveal attendants;
spring dance to be open
Climaxine1 ar college's "mnit
elaborate" party of the year, the
iou uouuess of Agriculture and
her six attendants will he re
sented .Saturday night shortly
after 10:30 in the activities build-
nig:.
Open to all students.
Breaking a custom of many
year's standing which closed the
spring formal to all but ag stu
dents, the party will be opened to
all university students, according
to the ag executive board, which
sponsors the affair.
Presentation Chairman Ople
Hedlund promises a scheme for re
vealing the Goddess entirely un
like any used in past years. The
goddess, her identity to be kept se
cret unui Saturday night, was
chosen by the popular vote of all
home economics students All tho
candidates were senior women,
wnose major is home economics
and scholastic average 80 percent.
KFOR to broadcast party.
Carrying the music of Johnny
Cox and his orchestra, KFOR will
broadcast the party beginning at
10:30. Ann Gersib and George
Gooding, the ticket committee,
urge that tickets be purchased at
the advance sale in order to take
advantage advance price of 75
cents per couple.
Transportation
meet held at NU
Truckers, waterway
men convene April 14
Representatives of national
trucking and waterway groups
will attend the transportation con
ference being sponsored by the col
lege of business administration
April 11, according to Chairman
Clifford M. Hicks.
Taxation discussion at the con
ference will feature John V. Law
rence, general manager of the
American Trucking Association,
Inc., Washington, D. C. Lawrence
has accepted an invitation to
speak on "Problems of Motor
Truck Taxation."
Inland Waterways, Washington,
D. C, will be represented at the
one-day conference by F. E.
Schroeder, assistant to the presi
dent of the waterways corporation.
Canon Char'es Earle Raven,
chaplain to King George VI of
England, opened the Merrick lec
ture series at Ohio Wesleyan Uni
versity. 9ik
SADDLES
Brown and white.
Black and white. . . ,
Flue and white.
JIul JjCWWIUu
TWELVE-EIGIITEEN "O" IT.
f