The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 24, 1939, Image 1

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    Stefansson speaks at 11 in Union ballroom
ffltYBllElBASI
Official Newspaper Of More Than 7,000 Students
Vol. 69, No.
Lincoln, Nebraska
Friday, November 24, 1939
AN
Uuuo mraeon
Final rally
gets under
way at 7
Game captains will
light bonfire on mall
after usual parade
To bring; student enthusiasm to
a fever pitch before the team
meets the Sooners tomorrow. Corn
Cobs and Tassels will stage the
final rally of the year tonight i
around a gigantic bonfire on the j
mall north of social sciences.
The rally will begin at the Union
where students will assemble at
7 p. m. Parading from the Union,
students will follow the victory
bell and the band down R street
to 16th, from 16th and R to 16th
and S, and from 16th and S to the
mall where game captains Sam
Schwartzkopf and Jack Ashburn
will light the bonfire.
Feature of the rally will be
predictions of tomorrow's game
by the two game captains and a
member of the coaching staff. A
public address system will be
' used enabling all rooters to hear
the speakers.
Corn Cobs and Tassels will con
duct a speaking tour during the
dinner hour tonight. The rally
committee has requested that no
cars be used during the rally in
order to minimize the danger of
accidents. The committee has also
asked that all cars be moved from
around the mall during the after
noon. Will frosh
wear red caps
after game?
Will freshmen be able to doff
their red caps after the tug-of-war
Saturday? is the question of
the moment It will be decided in
the annual freshmen-sophomore
tug-of-war immediately before
the kickoff in the Husker-Sooner
game.
If the freshmen win, they are
thru with red caps for the rest
of their collegiate career. If the
sophomores win, the neophytes
'must wear the '43 caps until the
' first snowfall.
The pull will start when an aer
r lal bomb is set off as the players
leave the field following the warm
up. Only freshmen wearing their
caps will be allowed to participate.
The sophomores also will have an
added incentive to tug with all
their might, according to Ralph
Reed, who is in charge.
The tug-of-war, sponsored by
the Innocents society, is an annual
event.
Wolf, Day take
inspection trip
Jean Wolf and Warren Day,
commander and adjutant of Per
shing Rifles national headquarters
here, left last night for Iowa City.
The two officers of the national
honorary basic military fraternity
will Inspect the Pershing Rifles
company and headquarters at
Iowa university this morning,
leaving Iowa City at noon, Day
and Wolf will continue their trek
to Madison, Win., where they will
crutlnize another company of the
aame organization.
Gnave betteo4 empDoyinrQeBiit
200 Dental
college alums
meet today
Dean Hooper leads
organization of new
Nebraska grad group
Today over 200 alumni of the
college of dentistry are expected
to gather on the campus to share
with Dean B. L. Hooper and the
college faculty in organizing the
Nebraska Dental Alumni Associa
tion. Registration will take place this
morning on the third floor of
Andrews to be followed by a noon
LdnoolQ Journal and Star.
DEAN B. L. HOOPER.
...leads dental college alumni.
luncheon in the Union. At 2:15 in
Morrill auditorium Dr. L. T. Aus
tin, chairman of the section of
dental surgery of the Mayo clinic.
will deliver an address.
Anesthesia discussion.
At this meeting will also be a
discussion of intravaneous and in
tratracheal types of anestliesia.
by Dr. Donald Waggener who is a
graduate of Nebraska dental col
lege and who at present has a fel
lowship at the Mayo clinic. The
discussion will be accompanied by
motion pictures showing the effect
of these types of anesthesia.
Chancellor Boucher will term!
nate the day's activities with an
address at the dinner which will
be held at the Union.
Saturday's activities Include
(See DENTISTS on page 5)
5 : -W- .
Mm
Georges Pilerget,
French soldier, expresses
admiration for Roosevelt
in letter to LeRossignol
Pictures of a frightened, terri
fied Europe, with confidence In
rresident Poosevelt, have been
painted by letters from England
and France, received by Dean J. E.
LeRossignol, bizsd, and Prof. L. B.
Smith, chairman of the depart
ment of architecture.
Dean LeRossignol's letter is
from Georges Pilerget, a French
orphan, whom he assisted for sev
eral years after the close of the
last war. The boy writes each
year to the LeRossignols. telling
of his recent experiences. He is
now In the French army.
'You know we are at war with
Germa
v , t y,l JT,f i 7, ,h
m;bcr. I have noU'ct left for the
st. As you know, trance is not
ten
CPS!. M you .uu, r i aiic u "
Invaded as in 1914 and I believe
that it will never be. Our h!gh
command has taken the necessary
7 -i!.-; !F -j v:v. 77, . ... -7 y . , ..
If"
? i . ft
f . - , - - V 7-: ( ? vs.
Center, above. Is Prof. C. O.
employment survey described in
him are graduate students Bev Finkle, right, and Dick White, left,
who assisted Swayzee.
Swayzee's statistics survey
gives figures on job odds
Exam of unemployment covering 10 years shows
graduates have little edge on 1 to 3 year men
By Paul Svoboda.
.. ., . . .
College graduates or those who
have attended higher educational
institutions for one to three years
fare better in employment than
those who have had only a high
school education. This striking
fact was brought out in a recent
survey of unemployment condi
tions in the city of Lincoln cover
ing a period of ten years from
1929-1939. j
The survey is being conducted
by Dr. C. O Swayzee and assisted
by Beverly Finkle, Dick White
and 60 students from Dr. Sway
zee's classes in current labor
problems and government in rela
tion to labor. This, the fourth of a
series of studies by the associate
professor of personnel and labor
relations, emphasizes quality rath
er than quantity of unemployment.
Conclusions on causes of unem
ployment are being made as the
result of these surveys.
Studied in relation to each other
and particularly to unemployment
were the unemployment status at
present; duration of unemploy
ment; causes of unemployment;
education; number of dependents;
areas; industry groups; unemploy
ment since 1929; government relief
work; and industrial shift.
In a comparison of persons hav
ing one to three years of college
measures. Perfect entente exists
with England.
"We French fully approve the
attitude of the United States of
America and also of your dear
President Franklin Roosevelt, who
has done all that was in his power
to avert the war. Last year the
shock did not take place and his
addresses were approved by all
the French. We consider him as
the man able to avert the mas
sacre, and we believe always that
one day his Ideas will be respecteJ
an(j useful to make a durable
peace.
Hitler entirely for the war, and be
h violation of treatie:
. ,,,moran. fnr .mo Mn.ai
j r- 11
,K,K
which caused the war.
(See LETTERS on page 5)
v 1
DAILY pfcota
Swayzee, who directed the un
the DAILY today. Pictured with
education to college graduates it
was proved that graduates do not
. v Mt than ...
a V. ut-ll , u j wi Ma
dents who did not complete their
college . work. The figures . show
that out of 511 unemployed enu
merated, H4 of the persons who
(see SURVEY on page 3)
Men's point
board takes
final action
Two ordered to drop
enough activities to put
them in good standing
Final action to determine the
status of the ten men whose extra-curricular
activities were
brought to the attention of the
Men's Activities Point board two
weeks ago, was taken yesterday
noon when that group met in ex
ecutive session.
Brandon Backlund and Robert
O'Connell were ordered to drop
enough activities to put each of
them back into good standing,
when the board handed down a
decision on the pleas made by the
two at a preliminary hearing,
Monday. The two will be allowed
to choose the activities which they
must drop within the next ten
days.
Of the remaining eight men,
seven have either dropped or sig
nified their intention of dropping
(See POINT BOARD on page 5)
Panhel gives
cups today
High ranking houses
honored ot 3:30 tea
Silver loving cups will be pre
sented this afternoon to the so
rority having the highest scholar
ship for the past year and to the
one showing the greatest Improve
ment In scholarship during the
same period, at Uie Pan-hellenic
Tea to be hHd at G:30 to 5:30 this
afternoon in the Student Union.
The arrangements for the tea are
umkr the direction of Mrs. Wen
dell Groth, president of the city
Panhellenic, which presents the
curs.
cSnaeice
s
Adventurer
will answer
queries at 4
Faculty honors guest
at noon, KFAB airs
interview at 2:35 p. m.
Vilhjalmur Stefansson, world
famous polar adventurer and dis
tinguished author, will speak on
"Abolishing the Arctic" before to
day's convocation, at 11 in the
Union ballroom. The noted ex
plorer, a native of Canada and
graduate of the University of
Iowa, has spent 13 years in Arcuc
regions during which he added
more than 100,000 square miles to
V:
4f-
i
... Lioooln Journal and Star
VILHJALMUR STEFANSSON
. . . speaks at 11 on Arctic
territorial maps of these regions.
This noon the guest speaker will
be honored at a faculty luncheon
in the Union. Arrangements are
in charge of Prof. Nels Bengtson
and the luncheon is open to all
faculty members. At 2:35 this aft
ernoon Stefansson will be inter
viewed over KFAB.
At 4. in the Union, the explorer
will answer questions regarding
his convocation talk. All interested
students are welcome to attend
this informal discussion which will
be held in parlors XYZ.
At the present time the convo
cation speaker, who was 60 the
(See STEFATs'SSON on page 5)
Phantom cokes
disturb guzzling
yearbook staff
Eight cokes were lost somewhere
between the Corncrib and the
Cornhusker office the other day.
The Cornhusker ordered them.
The Corncrib delivered them, but
the Cornhusker staff never re
ceived them.
The inside story:
The yearbookies, who have the
time to guzzle cokes, ordered the
eight missing drinks. The staff
member who ordered them told
the attendant to deliver them to
the DAILY office. When the cokes
did not appear the Cornhusker
man went to the Corncrib to in
quire. After explaining that the
cokes were supposed to have been
delivered to the yearbood office,
he was given tight more.
Members of the DAILY staff
have denied any knowledge of the
affair. Members of the DAILY
staff who usually coke each clay
did not appear in the Corncrib
the day the drinks were fplrtted
away.