Prof of the week TT An.YifirraR 1 " " OM Newspaper 0 More Than 7,000 Students Vol. 39, No. 67 Lincoln, Nebraska Sunday, January 7, 1940 leeinits elect Ttamra ASM ' t J : : iiiiiiiii H 111 SUMMIT I&m ' ill1 1 .SMIlKi J ' ' - v J " C .. "V- 1 1 , . Aestheticist will address convo Jan. 11 Dr. Eames to suggest unification of arts in student's curriculum TTvrv mnn has the right to the beauty, power, truth and health of music, says Dr. Henry Purmort Eames, professor of aesthetics and musical art at senppa cuneBe, 'III by Bob Aldrich. Like a good many other teach ers on the campus, Rudolph Au gust Winnacker, assistant profes sor of European history, proclaims himself loath to submit to repor torial questioning. In fact, when told that he was to be the victim of the journalistic third degree, Prof. Winnacker threw up his hands and addressed heaven with an appeal for mercy. However, his smile belied his words and, finally resigned to it, he good-naturedly overlooked the stupidity of the questions thrown at him and even answered a cou ple of them, though not without expressions of deep pain. He was reminded, he said, of an DAILY itaff photo. He got the "last job of the de pression" at Michigan In 1931. There he weathered the economic slump for five years. Then, in loQft rtoan rtiHffither "made his llUV) .v-m v. big mistake," invited him to come to Nebraska, and has regretted it ever since, Winnacker says. Besides Harvard, he has attend ed school at the Universities of Paris and Munich. He thinks that education is more thoro in Europe, that its great fault is that stu dents are told what to think. "Thv have all the answers. Here, when the student is gradu ated, his mind it open, he will listen But European stu- ;-:f&:- ; 1 i Lincoln Journal awl Star. no HENRY P. EAMES . . everyone has a rlflht to muilc. Claremont, California, who will de liver the convocation address at 11 a. m. Thursday in the Temple. Variety show has film, vaudeville Students will gather in the Union ballroom this afternoon at 4 for the second in the series of Sunday afternoon Variety hours sponsored by the Union. This afternoon's show will fea ture a full length talking motion niotnrA "Kant Meets West." three vaudeville acts, and George Goatas as master of ceremonies. Th film, starring Georee Arliss, is the story of a British-Indian in trigue. Arliss plays the part of the Raja of Kungay wno attempts to block the aims of the British imperialists. Vaudeville acts on this after noon's program include piano num bers by Mary ninzaDetn ouiart, accordian offerings by Eldred Winters, and the tap dancing of Norma Patterson, 14 year old Lincoln dancing star. Admission is free. Grad college reveals 100 awards open Dean announces filings due Mar. 1, most prizes carry fee remission Bengtson heads junior division Board names West Point man president; Devoe is vice-president Mmhfrn of the Board of Re gents at a regular meeting, held here yesterday, elected Charles Y. Thompson, of West Point, presi dent and R. W. Devoe, of Lincoln, marked that the picture of Berlin citizens scurrying madly to shel ter, when there was no war, wa rather funny. "Too cute." knA thri nnnoared in a De- sometimes empty, but at lMt they are open. Not broadening. He has returned to Europe 14 times, thinks that traveling is more narrowing than broadening, i eo And there appeared in a De- tWnk tnat causc you have troit paper a large picture of Hit- veled & litUe you know some- ier Willi I IlC .aViun, wv Bays Michigan professor." So Winnacker looks at reporUra with suspicion. thing. It is not where you nave been but what you are doing that counts." Ynnr first imoresaion of Winnacker is that he is too young tn h ft nrofessor and that you have probably made a mistake and are talking to one of his students. This effect of youthfulness is evi- dent in his speech and manner and has helped to make him pop ular with his classes. He is youthful in his thinking as well as in appearance. His at titude toward his work is that of an inquiring scholar. He looks at a subject from all angles, refusing to accept any definition of con clusion until it is proved. Big and blond. He is a blond Nordic, of heavy build, quite a handsome fellow, with a friendly smile and a man A woman student drops m w Mr. discuss a term paper on Lady Jane Grey. "Have you maae u nice u gory," Winnacker asks, "with the blood all trickling down? Ah, good!" A young man arrives to discuss Phi Beta Kappa. "You're working for it? Ridiculous. You should not work for Thi Beta Kappa it should come to you as an unex pected honor." Foremoot function. He thinks that research is the fnremost function of a university. a miw la lust to train students But a university is founded on th ideal of researcn. a leacner mum do both jobs to be any good." He thinks a teacher does better wnii a iiK-miij v. jje thinks a xeacner uura ltwi ner of looking intently at the peo- k Jf he knows little about the it 'i f Vi ii'Vinm 1ia tnllrn ... . i i .. u annianf pie with whom he talks He says he "hates to buy a suit, smokes Phillip Morris, speaks with a slight German accent, is somewhat egotistic. He started out to be a doctor. . . went to Harvard med school... swears he didn't flunk out, just li illlilftp . j-r v- it' L to discussion. He was reminaea, ne wiu, wi ta everything. VarnM whA WM chaii-man 5S.tSSS- They don't In America, on the of pTano department of the old fnko Ber- -tu. h. UnW.' minds are Lincoln school of music from 1898 iutu. vriicii v... fr' Se E1AMES, page 4 Ag extension workers hear Bunce, Hoor Guest soeakers endorse reciprocal trade policy as help to agriculture - TTninn rJ the democratic and re publican parties on a permanent foreign trade policy was urged and a keen analysis of modern educa tional shortcomings were pre sented Friday to the "school" for agricultural extension workers held this week nere, oy troi. a. . Bunce of Iowa State college and Dean Marten Hoor of Tulane uni versity. Professor Bunce endorsed the nttitude of Col. Frank Knox, who has declared his stand in favor of the reciprocal trade agreements, and cited benefits which have come to the farmer through the trade npTecments. He expressed his be lief that the United States will "go into a tail-spin with a very serious depression if the reciprocal trade program is repealed now, breaking down the start we nave maue toward re-establishing our foreign trade. OW program Id lotto ftrariiiAto soholarshiDfl. fellow ships and assistantships in several departments of the university will be available to approximately 100 graduate students next year, ac cording to an announcement made yesterday by Dr. Harold w. &ione, dean of the graduate college. Ap plication blanks, available now in the graduate oirice, musi w mcu not later than March 1. Most graduate awards carry remission of course fees. TOrht fellowships are provided for advanced chemistry students. As a perpetual memorial 10 me late Chancellor Samuel Avery the board of regents has established two research fellowships valued at $500 each. Six research ienow ships of $500 each have been pro See GRAD SCHOOL, page 4. Cathedral choir opens 20th series The. Lincoln Cathedral choir will open its 20th choral vesper sea son today at 5:30 p. m. in the hnilrnom of Hotel Cornhusker. Warren Jensen, Council Bluffs sophomore, is the speaker of this afternoon's conceit, and Hough ton Furr, Lincoln senior, win oe at the organ. onViWt H nlans to teach ancient history to freshmen next semester, says that the lectures should be interesting because he knows so little ancient history. He is working on a new book, ouhiPft! "Historv and Develop ment of the Third French Repub- decided that being a doctor wasn't h,. spedalty. H has pub worth all the sacrifice. He wanted to do something that would give him some independence, some freedom of thought, the chance to express his own ideas lished a "number of piffling artl cles." "It's part of the racket. You have to ret them published. But you keep them hidden from your Teaching seemed to supply the colleagues." An article of his on ivu rtroirfiu mflA la widelv known. W .VJl V." - ml There Is 'always room for im provement" in the university. "In Europe, they send the young men to the army for a couple of years. We send them to the university. I prefer our way." answer. Before Harvard, he had attended Wisconsin, was graduated in 1928. There he met the late Hartley Burr Alexander, famed Nebraska teacher, and the two went to New Mexico and "dug Indians." In French hUtory. His sense of humor is put to trnnA im! In the classroom. A fav- rr.AA arhnri h entered orite trae in Historv 117: "They but he didn't have enough Elba room so he went back to France." the Harvard exadua school, stud led French history for two years, and obtained his doctor's degree. The Towa economist also as- oprtpri that much of the depression can be traced to me "uiieny iuiouc and insane foreign trade policy fol- fowed by the united states during the post-war period. The modern belief that knowl edce in itself is desirable was described as a tragic mistake by the Tulane philosopher, and he also declared that we must have moral education if science is to help men instead of to be uccd to destroy them." Whether desirable or not, the church is a declining influence in mnral education of children, the Hpnn declared, savintr that he h Heved the family is the only insti tution which can do an adequate job of moral education. The theme which the choir will develop this season is "The Saints of the Tast and the Present." This afternoon's program, the first of a series or eleven, taKes up me definition of a saint. The follow ing vespers in the series will be presented each Sunday aiternoon in the Dauroom at o:ou, mating half an hour. Directed since its beginning by John Rosborough, the choir num bers 65 voices this season. The vespers are open to the public free of charge and students are invited to attend. Dewey to speak here on March 1 Nebraska's republicans will meet at the coliseum on March 1 to hear an address bv Thomas E, Dewey, republican presidential nomination candidate, on tne occasion 01 me annual republican Founder's Day meeting here in Lincoln. Word of the Nebraska speaking engagement was announced Fri day by Lloyd Kain, of Lexington, National Founder's Day president. Dewev's talk will be broadcast on a national hookuo and will follow the state republican central ccm mittee meeting and a banquet that day. Lincola Journal and StM. CHARLES Y. THOMPSON . . . president for a year. vice-president of that body. Thompson is president of the Ne braska Farm Bureau Federation and Devoe is a Lincoln attorney. The men were elected foe on year. First move of the board, taken at yesterday's meeting, was to re duce dormitory rates. New rates, heviminc effective the second semester, lower the cost of livm See REGENTS, page 4. Senior Fair board masks six juniors Over 200 attend annual presentation party, blow whistles, throw confetti More than 200 students watched si mpmhers of the senior Farmers Fair board mask the six ag college juniors, chosen as members or tne junior board, with the traditional Farmers Fair bandannas at the board's annual presentation dance 1n the activities building Friday night. Presented to the ag students at tending the party were Jane Brine gar, Sylvia Zocholl, Betty Jo Smith, Kieth Gilmore, Robert Wheeler, and Ganis Richmond aa Junior Farmers Fair board repre sentatives. Rousek heads seniors. Senior board, elected last spring, Is composed of Edwin Rousek, manager, Will Pitner, Fred Whit ney, Ellen Ann Armstrong, Anna belle Hutcheson. and Peggy Sher- burn. The twelve students in the senior and junior boards are in charge of the Farmers Fair, larg est event of the spring term on the ae- camDus. Th Fair is sched uled for the first weekend in May. Theme of Friday's party was a carnival with confetti, paper streamers, horns, and whistles given as favors. Faculty sponsors of the board are Prof. F. E. Mus sehl and Prof. Ross Miller. The two professors and their wives were chaperons at Friday's party. Music was furnished by Tommy Anderson and his ten Tomcats. The weather Weatherman's prediction r -mains snow for today as well M last night, dospite the warming up in east euid south portions ol the state.