kg ar addresses convo today Noted editor to discuss foreign policy Pulitzer prize winner to appear at Temple this morning, 1 1 o'clock Herbert Agar, recognized as one of America's topmost authorities on the national and international scene and associate editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal, will - h hincoin Juuriuti. HERBERT AGAR. . . . talks at 11 today. address Nebraska students at con vocation this morning at 11 o'clock in the Temple on the sub ject. "Should America Keep Out of Kuropean Affairs?" Agar won the Pulitzer piize in 1034 for his book, "The People's Choice," an account of the United See AGAR page 6. Kiva to show Moliere play 63 minute movie is French stock farce The stock farce of the French theater, Molierc's immortal "Le Midocin Malgre Lui," will be shown Saturday morning at the Kiva theater, sponsored by the French club and the department of romance languages. The "doctor despite himself" is anything but a doctor. He is forced into the role, when his wife, after he beats her, seeks ven geance and gets him engaged to 'cure" a young girl who has lost her voice. The girl, Lucinde, is slated by the father to marry an old fogy, while she is very much in love with one Lcandre. When Lucinde regains her speech long enough to toll her father that she will marry no one but Lcandre, the father is furious, orders the "modocin malgre lui" to make his daughter dumb again. The imM.stor is soon found out, but everyone lives happily ever after. Considered most amusing and vivid of all Molicro's masterpieces by critics, the show is 63 minutes long. Screenings will begin at 8, 9:30 and 11 o'clock. The play is bcint; read m several French classes. Copies of the play may be obtained in the office of the French department for 15 cents. No F.nghsh subtitles accompany the picture, bul a farce is consid ered the easiest to follow of all drama. Tickets may be purchased in U108 or at the box office for 25 cer's. Debaters meet South Dakota Four man squad leaves for seriei at Boulder Two Nebraska debate teams nu t an invading South Dakota squad yesterday in clashes at the Union and at Lincoln high school. Kl wald Warnsholz and Wendell Bmye argued in the Union at 11, ami Paul Bstandig and Otto Wocr ner at Lincoln high at 1 o'clock. The question was "Resolved: that collective action by the democra cies ifl necessary for their sur vival." The four man squad chosen to participate in the tournament at Boulder, Colo., left yesterday aft ernoon. Their debates begin today, and the eerieg will probably bring the season to a close, 65 seniors The Official Newspaper of More Than 6,000 Students VOL. XXXVIII, NO. 121 Kosmei ticket sales boom as show enters last rehearsals Grandma's time comes to ag campus with box lunch social Shades of the good old days when grandpa bought a box lunch and got the gal that went with it! Shadows of the times when the two dudes bribed little brothers to tell which box was made up by the lily white hands of his big sister, and when the biggest box with the brightest ribbon drew the town spinster. Fifty years later, the ag engi neers, willing to take the risk of a riot, are throwing an oldfashion ed box-social Friday night in the Activities building. Auctioning be gins promptly at 8:30, and dancing will last till the scandolous hour of midnight. All the ag Ixdles are urged to Pep groups sponsor party Carl Colby's orchestra to play here tomorrow Advrrsised as "the best informal party of the season" is the Tassel Corn Cob dance being held to morrow evening in the Student Union ballroom. Cochairmen Tassel Virginia Wheeler and Corn Cob Bob Klory reported a brisk pick-up in ticket sales yesterday, indicating one of the best informal party attend ances for many years. The pep clubs have signed Cari Colby and his Minnesota Collegiate band to play. Colby made two ap pearances here last semester and was hailed as an excellent party band. Tickets are being sold by Cobi and Tassels at 60 cents a couple. According to Tassel President Sel ma Hill and Corn Cob president. George Rosen, "the party is bound to be th.? peppiest affair this campus has ever seen. Cobs and Tassels are pep groups and proof of that will be seen Friday night." Doming to lecture to faculty group Final session features synthetic chemistry Dr. H. O. Deming of the depart ment of chemistry of the Univer sity -f Nebraska will discuss "Synthetic Chemistry in the World Economy" tonight at the last of the faculty graduate schol arship lectures this year. The concluding program will be held in the Student Union with a dinner at 0:15. Dr. E. A. Gilniore, jr., of the College of Business Ad ministration, will preside. Mem bers of the committee In charge of tho lectures are Professors L. F. Carey, department of rural eco nomics; C. W. Scott, department of school administration; J. E. Weaver, department of botany; H. A. White, department of English, and Gilmore. Corn Cobs and Tasscli will meet today at 5 o'clock in the Student Union 313 to check ticket tales for their Joint party In the Union FrMay night. Tas sels are required to be In uniform. achieve honors convocations list Z 40S bring lunch boxes incorporating their brightest ideas, for prizes of S5, $2 and H will be given to the best three boxes. Admissions for the ladies is just one box, and for the gents, 10 cents at the door to be refunded on purchase of a box. Free coffee will be served to all comers. Thuis to head R.O.T.C. unit Successor to Oury approved by Regents Col. Charles A. Thuis of the United States infantry, who has been stationed in Chicago, head quarters for the Sixth Corps Area, was approved by the board of re gents Saturday as the new com mandant of the university R. O. T. C, subject to asignment by the war department. He succeeds Col. W. H. Oury, present P. M. S. T., who is slated for retirement June 30. Colonel Thuis, who is married, is 59 years of age. He attended Vincennes university prior to his entry into the service; is a grad uate of the infantry school, the School of the Line, the Command and General Staff school, and the Army War college. He has a gen eral efficiency rating of "excel lent." The board also approved a year's leave of absence for Dr. M. S. Ginsburg of the department of the classics, who was awarded a Gug genheim fellowship to study the policy of the Roman emperors in their efforts to improve the eco nomic status of the lower classes. Dr. Ginsburg will be on leave from September, 1939 to September, 1940. Behind world events 'The Life Line of Empire' Today England is beset with grievous woes. Her appeasement policy abandoned because of the manifest anil insatiable desire for conquest by Hitler and Mussolini, Japan threatening British influ ence and interests in the Orient, Jew-Arab trouble in the Palatinate becoming more serious daily, and domestic unrest and financial strain caused by the present Eu ropean war scare flurry -all these plague the Chamberlain govern ment. Today the English parlia ment meets for a special session, the first since that of last Sep tember over the Czech crisis. British warships are standing off Malta and Corfu, and Italy has been warned that any un toward movement in those direc tions will bo forcibly resisted. Eng lish interests in the Mediterranean, menaced by the fall of Albania, are frightened at the prospect that the lifeline of empire, thru Gibral tar and the Suez canal, may be destroyed If tho power of the Rome-Bcrlin-Tokyo axis continues TIIUKSDAY. AI'KIL 13, 1939 Many good seats left for 'Alias Aladdin;1 chorus works on songs Ticket sales boom as "Alias Aladdin," goes into its final week of rehearsals preparatory to its first night next Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Scats taken on the first dny of reservations at the Temple box office spotted tile lower floor and front balcony seats on all nights, wilh week end performances ap pearing to be favorites. "There are still good tickets available, but they are going fast," Don Moss president and Roy Proffit, ticket chairman, declared. Beck-Jungbluth band plays. With the Beck-Jungbluth orches tra, traditional to Kosmet Klub performances, signed to play in the pit, and the scenery now in Vie painting stage, Joe Iverson direc tor of the play pushes the all male cast thru its final paces. Choral dancers are abandoning dance practices to tune up their voices on the song numbers which Schmoiler and Mueller music men declare are excellent. Heading the cast of the per formance will be Duke Deger, last year's "Satan," changed in name but not in spirit to take the part of the Caliph of Bagdad. J. P. Throckmorton, the American towel tycoon, is portiayed by Louis Wil kins, and his daughter by Jim Sec KOSMET page 5 Chancellor C. S. Boucher to speak in Iowa City Chancellor C. S. Boucher of the University of Nebraska leaves to day for Iowa City where he will attend the 19th annual conference of the Teachers of History and the Social Studies in the schools and colleges of Iowa and neighboring states at the University of Iowa. Chancellor Boucher will appear on the Friday afternoon program speaking on the subject "History and the Social Studies - Whither?" to mount. England's traditional position as "mistress of the seas" is in grave danger. Greece, Turkey and Jugoslavia have become the new centers of interest. England and France wish to bind these nations in non-aggression pacts. Germany and Italy say that these smaller nations will be endangered only if they suc cumb to the wheedling of the democracies. Russia, the most im portant cog in Britain's proposed "iron ring" around the totalitarian states, Is strangely silent and none really knows tho sympathies of the U. S. S. R. Italian troops are rushing toward the complete occupation of Albania altho badly harassed by guerrilla warfare in the mountain ous regions. Holland has mobilized its frontier guards. Switzerland is preparing to defend its terrain. Belgium states that it will fight to the last man if attacked. President Roosevelt has, and some think ill-advbcdly, fanned tho war flamca in this country See EVENTS page 2 O. G. Villard to address uni scholars Program recognizing superior students set for Tuesday at 10 Approximately 65 university seniors will be recognized for su perior scholarship at the 11th an nual honors convocation at 10 o'clock in the coliseum next Tues day morning. Members of this select group, who have been on the honors list four years, or whose averages have placed them in the upper 3 percent of their class, will be seated on the stage, along with the guest speaker, the deans and members of the faculty and the chancellor. These seniors will be presented with leather bound cer tificates citing their scholastic achievements. Oswald Garrison Villard, distin guished author and publisher, will address the convocation on the subject. "The Spiritual Defense of Democracy." Villard was for 21 years managing owner of the New York Evening Post and owned and edited The Nation f roni 191S to 1934. He is a prolific writer, and is the author of "The German Phoenix," "Germany Em battled," "Newspaper and News papermen," etc. Invitations have been sent to parents of students who will hi honored at the convocation, urg See HONORS page 5. N.U. draws foreigners Chinese coed, Czech grod may enroll here Two foreign students may en roll in the university post doctoral studies in psychology, according to letters received by Dr. J. P, Guilford, professor of psychology. A Chinese coed now attending the University of Michigan, where she will receive her Ph. D degree this spring, has written to Dr. Guilford that she intends to be at Nebraska next year. Another let ter was received from a student who received his doctorate at Charles university in Czechoslo vakia and he also intimated that he would enroll here next year. N. U. outstanding. Nebraska has long lecn re garded as an outstanding school in the field of psychology as four of its psychology graduates have been elected to the presidency of the American Psychology asso ciation. Only one other university has fur nished more than this num ber. The psychology laboratories here are also the fifth oldest in the country. Some 400 delegates who will be here to attend the 14th annual meeting of the Mid western Psychological association, May 5 and G, will join with educa tors in celebrating the 15th an niversary of the founding of the laboratories here by Dr. Hanv Kirke Wolfe. Holland services held yesterday Roscntof pays tribute to former extension head Last rites were held for Robert E. Holland, supervisor of program and information of the Ag exten sion bureau, yesterday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the First Presby terian church. Holland, who died Sunday, had been connected with the extension division since 1916. During the. time he held his position he made many contacts throughout the state. Holland was one of the founders of the Farm House fra ternity. Professor E. W. Roscn lof paid tribute to Holland in an address given at the funertl services. T