The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 29, 1939, Page 4, Image 4

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    The DAILY NEHRASKAN
Wednesday, November 23. 1939
SOCIETY
All quiet
on campus
social front
THANKSGIVING
has certainly put a crimp in so
ciety; at least it provides a pood
excuse, all the stooges are plan
ning to come back full of news
with formal season opening, and
no hour dances until spring; and
many new combinations to spy
upon. But today all is nil. Mon
day night provided some excite
ment at the Pi Phi house, how
ever, when Maxine Stalons passed
the candy. She is now wearing the
pin of Don DeLano. The candy
passing: was unusual in the fact
that the box of candy was a bank;
the announcement on a bank
statement which read, "In account
with Maxine Stalong at the De
Lano National Bank One Heart."
ALPHA XI DELT
Pris Compsey is going to Holy
oke, Colo.; and Eleanor Collins,
also Alpha Xi Delta, is celebrating
Thanksgiving twice; last week in
Chicago and this week in her home
town, Stapleton.
LOOKS LIKE
the girls are the goat for the
Mortar Board; while Mortar
Boards weep at the competition
Glen Gray is providing; the girls
call it tough luck to have the ex
penses over their heads for two
bands and with Christmas so I
near!
THE GAMMA PHI
Mother's Club held its meeting
at the chapter house on Tuesday.
Out-of-town guests were Mrs.
Lauvertz of Wahoo; and Mrs. C. S.
Coordes of Omaha.
Pledged by Sigma Kappa is Vir
ginia Kirkbride.
STUDENT UNION
officials played host at a Turkey
dinner to 102 of their employes
yesterday.
Symposium
(Continued from Page 1.)
logical factors producing preju
dice,! think that most creeds and
dogmas are a rationalization of
deeper prejudices. Religion is in
the field of the objectively or
scientifically unprovable of belief,
and everybody else's belief is a
criticism of your own belief.
Bowdern: Now, Mr. Hertzler,
you're giving religion a black eye.
Scientifically objectively what's
that mean. I think we're talking
about the same thing in different
words, but I wish I could get Mr.
Hertzler to use my words.
Fellman: I confess I dont even
understand the question. But since
I m on my feet: 1 was think
ing back to the first instance of
prejudice in my life. The boys on
my street hated the boys on the
other street like thunder. We had
great fights with green apples
over the supremacy of the inter
section dividing the two domains.
This prejudice certainly didn't
have any dogmatic basis. There
are a multiplicity of prejudices
1 IT n rMT-n-r-nw
I Willis, Cole elected
dental alumni officers
Dr. Leroy Willis, '34, and Dr.
W. H. Cole both from Oklahoma
City, Okla., were elected .presi
dent and vice president, respec
tively, of the Nebraska Dental
Alumni at the organization meet
ing Nov. 25.
Dr. A. H. Schmidt of trie dental
college faculty was made secretary.
that don't have anything to do
with religion.
I found that the moral ideals
of all religions are about equally
noble. If all Jews were good Jews
they'd be good people. There is
nothing in the Christian religion
itself that I cannot accept whole
heartedly. There is nothing in
creeds or dogmas themselves to
produce prejudice.
I have a vague hunch tnat
were all rather puny, relatively
uneducated people. We have a feel
ing of insignificance a fear and
uncertainty about the future, and
by hating others we somehow ad
just ourselves. The sources of
prejudice are probably found in
Werkmeisfer article
A forthcoming issue of The
Personalist, publication of the
University of Southern California,
will carry an article on "Unified
Science and Physicalistic Keuuc
tionism" by Dr. W. H. Werk
meister of the department of
philosophy.
fundamental drives of the human
animal. The hope, as I see it, is
in understanding one another, in
seeing how much we have in com
mon and how little we differ,
(Applause.)
Seamans: Certainly the fear ele
ment is strong in anti-Jew or oth
er prejudice. It's the "in group-out
group" situation, the feeling that
each group is trying to dominate
the other. We distrust each other's
motives."
Dean Henzlik of teachers college:
Isn't it a question partly of atti
tude in that we are so busy con
centrating on arguments for "our
side" that we don't listen to all
the evidence which the other side
has to present.?
A student: (the first to talk)
What are you all getting at?
Two ecologists -publish
theses .
Doctorate theses of Nebraska
students appear in the late at is
sues of the two official publica
tions of Ecological Society of
America. Dr. J. H. Robertson, as
sistant instructor in the botany
department, wrote his thesis on "A
Quantitative Study of True Prairie
Vegetation after Three Years of
Extreme Drouth," published in the
October issue of "EcolotH-?l Mon
ographs," which contains longer
articles on ecological studies.
William C. Noll's thesis on "En
vironment and Physiological Ac
tivities of Winter Wheat and
Prairie During Extreme Drought"
waa printed in the October issue
of "Ecology," a quarterly publi
cation. Mr. Noll is professor of bi
ology at York college.
Each of the research projects
represents further investigation in
the field of plant adaptations to
climate under the direction of Dr.
J. E. Weaver, of botany department.
i t
10c Per line
ANNOUNCING the ropnln(t of "HAP'S"
-Glorified Hamburger. Serving food of
the name hlKh quality. We deliver.
320 No. 13.
Serving Studcnt$ for
22 Year,
Dunlcp Optical Co.
120 No. 12th St
SHOE REPAIR
The Beat Leather
The Bert Workmanship
Cleaning and Dyeing
To Satiify
STOEIIRS
1S2J N 8t. 1-7464
That camouflage
in the lounge
it's a mural
That paper going up on the wall
of the Union lounge is not being
put up in an effort to hide the
plaster. It is being put up so that
Elizabeth Calloway and Mildred
Copac, fine arts seniors, can com
plete their senior project
The senior project when fin
ished will be a mural for the north
wall of , the second floor recreation
room depicting all sorts of Union
activity. When finished the mural
will be eight feet high and 27 feet
long. It will be painted on can
vas and will be hung in the recrea
tion room.
The paper pasted te the wall of
the lounge is detail paper onto
which the two seniors will trans
fer enlarged drawings of minia
ture originals which they drew
earlier in the semester. After the
transfer is completed, it will be
traced on the canvas and then
painted. The project will take
the rest of the year to finish.
fa
. ,i..Wff sororities was
Yes.being'-rusnea She
most. ui"""' - , ,
Kha was beautiful. And d
WEYMOUTH JACKSON
. Yes,berog r- - - rience. She
eligiuie. uw "
by rciARGf
. 3 artless? A
abusiness.MgUy '"sented by
polgnut short etory that may o
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T.lusic is a brutal business!" says
pji
LAJ
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Why did Artie Shaw quit last week? "Politics, corruption and
a system of patronage aren't the only things a musician haa
to fight," says the King of the Clarinet. "What's worse are
one-night stands and long, brutal jumps that wreck a man's
health." Here's his fantastic rags-to-riches climb; ..from Hi
cash a year ago to $6,000 an afternoon, and what it did to him!
CAN THEY
D,0
Vby
Why is it that with the least effective antiaircraft
system in the world today we are still immune to
attack? A military expert in the Tost this week
reports on our present air defenses, brings j ju
news of the greatest single military secret in the
world today, which allows U. S. pilots (and them
alone) "to drop a bomb accurately into a pickle
barrel from 18,000 feet up"! An important article,
Fletcher Pratt, in your copy of the Post.
i
AN D ... in the same issue George Halas, coach of the
Chicago Bears, tells you what makes pro football faster
than college football in Hold What Line? ... Booth
Tarkington brings you a hilarious new short story, The
Jabjam Motor Trip . . . Dcmaree Bess shoots a timely
radiogram, Why Ilider Wanted Peace . . . ALSO short
stories, articles, poems, editorials, cartoons all in this
week's issue of The Saturday Evening Tost.
TYPEVniXERS
SALE on RENT
Nebraska Type writer Co.
IN N. Itth St. -SHT
LINCOLN, NEB.
- . - mL