The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 21, 1940, Image 1

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    fh Daily ft Nebra
MEN!
Vote now for your choice for
All-American College Queen!
The deadline for voting will be
March 30th. Legibility of the
signautres is essential. Any bal
lot on which the signature Is
illegible will be thrown out.
OH'icial Newspaper Of More Than 7,000 Students
Thursday, March 21, 1940
Vol. 39, No. 112
Lincoln, Nebraska
Library Hours
During vacation the library
will be open from 8 a. m. to 5
p. m. except on Saturday when
the hours will be 8 to 12 a. m.
Duplicate copies of books on re
serve may be checked out for
the vacation after noon today.
SKAN
Students hear
architect
speak today
Noted builder to talk on
'Why Not Beauty' in
Morrill tonight
"Architectural Education" will
be the subject of a talk given by
William Emerson, Boston archi
tect, at a luncheon In the Union
today. He will also speak on "Why
Not Beauty" to Nebraska archi
tects in Morrill hall.
After completing studies of
architecture at Columbia univer
sity, he studied for several years
at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in
Paris. When he returned to New
York he specialized in model tene
ments and bank buildings. Emer
son is a member of the American
Institute of Architects, and has
served as president of the New
York chapter of this organiza
tion. Written two books.
Emerson has written two books
on architecture. "Old Bridges of
France." containing descriptions
and illustrations of French
bridges, and "Use of Brick in
French architecture, in which
photographs of French edifices il
ustrate the extensive use of
bricks in these old French struc
tures.
Recognition of the Importance of
city planning was forseen by Em
erson and he influenced the de
velopment of courses in this field
at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, where for many years
he was dean of the school of archi
tecture. He resigned from his post
and was recently made a life mem
ber of the institution. At present
he is making a lecture tour of this
country.
Professor Smith remarked that
Mr. Emerson is the "first author
ity in the country" in the sphere
of architectural education, and is
an "eloquent and distinguished
speaker.
The weather
Overcoats will be in demand
again for it will be cloudy today
with light rain or snow. The tern
perature is also scheduled to drop
to about 30 degrees.
Humorist Hooton quips
on humans-can imitate ape
Dr. Ernest Albert Hooton, dis- ate classes by a graphic imita-
tinguished anthropologist from tion of the habits of the anthro-
Harvard, who will speak here poid ape.
April 2, is not only one of the most . ..
noted men in his profession in the Dr. Hooton is the son of a Meth-
country, but is also a humorist. minisAer an.a Canadian tai-
In times eone by, Dr. Hooton mined that he should be a genius,
amused his Harvard undergradu- and at 11 he was ready to enter
high school. He says himself that
Lew college
opens contest
New competition plan
will pick best students
Three years of elimination con
tests to reveal the two law stu
dents in the university best able to
present a case in court have been
announced by sponsors, J. A. Doyle
and C. B. Nutting, professors of
the law faculty.
Half this year's freshman class
has thus far entered the voluntary
competition, from whom 14 will be
selected for competition in 1940-41,
four survivors combining as two
teams will meet in 1941-42, from
whom the two winners will be
chosen.
Presentation is basis.
Presentation, rather than merits
of the case, will be the basis of
decisions, according to Professor
Nutting.
"The contests have been ar
ranged principally to provide all
law students with actual expe
rience in legal research and in the
presentation of cases on appeal,"
according to Doyle and Nutting,
Krause, as 'Dame
Fashion' will head
Follies style show
Since new spring styles are ap
pearing daily, Dame Fashion
should be very busy now, but she
is to appear at the Coed Follies
style show nonetheless.
Margaret Krause, as "Dame
Fashion.' will preside over the
style show to be presented March
28 at Temple theater. She will
Introduce the models and point out
the new features of the spring
styles.
Over the country . . .
Majority of students oppose
drastic cut in NYA staff
he was "a horrid little squirt"
Bright boy.
At age 15, Hooton entered Law
rence college at Appleton, Wis.,
and took all the Latin prizes. His
father thought that since the boy
was proving to be so bright, he
might try for a Rhodes scholar
ship. Hooton took the exams but
wasn t chosen, so went to the Uni
versity of Wisconsin for a Ph. D.
in Latin and Greek. While at Wis
consin he taught a class of 40
girls, who conspired to make him
uncomfortable, he says, by star
ing at various parts of his anat
omy.
Then Hooton took the Rhodes
scholarship exams again, and suc
ceeded. When he got to Oxford he
found out he really knew little
about Greek, so one of his profes
(See HOOTON, page 5.)
Kady Faulkner
to give art exhibit
last once oyer
Miss Kady Faulkner, instructor
in the school of fine arts, will dis
cuss the pictures in the Nebraska
Art association exhibit Sunday
afternoon at 3 in Gallery A of
Morrill.
The exhibit, which has been
open for the last four weeks, closes
this week. Over 150 paintings and
statues are in the work of leading
American painters and sculptors
represented.
An admission fee of 25 cents
will be charged to those who are
not members of the art asaocla
tion.
Coed Follies
names 12 ushers
Ushers for the Coed Follies are
to be Freshman AWS members
who were chosen for their interest
in AWS activities. The ushers are
Betty Newman, Maxine Fuller
Janet Shaw. Ann Craft, Alice
Louise Becker, Betty Marie Waite
Shirley Hoffman, Shirley Heldt
Louise Leed, Sarah Behem, Wanda
Krebs, and Pauline John.
Janet Harris is la charge of the
committee.
Klub cast to stage
all-cast rehearsal
Kosmet Klub will stage a com
plete rehearsal in Temple tonight,
at 7, Armand Hunter, director of
the show announced yesterday. No
excuses will be accepted. Due to
the loss in rehearsal time, brought
on by spring vacation, he insists
that all members of the cast be
present.
Tickets for the show are now
on sale thru Klub workers. Reser
vations will be made at the Tem
ple theater the week after vaca
tion.
Contralto,
pianist appear
Duryea, Blackman give
school of music concert
One hundred and fifty persons
hoard Mrs. Don Duryea, contralto,
and Mrs. James Blackman, pian
ist, perform yesterday at the
school of music concert. Marvin
Bostrum was accompanist.
All three are taking advanced
work in the school. Bostrom, who
is supervisor of public school mu
sic at York, and Mrs. BiacKman
are taking advanced work under
Professor Herbert Schmidt. Mrs.
Duryea is studying under Alma
Wagner, instructor in music.
Both Bostrom and Mrs. Black-
man are Nebraska graduates. Mrs.
Blackman holds a degree from the
Eastman School of Music and for
a time taught music at Linden
wood college.
Council seeks
solution for
Prom deficit
' Members want money
to come from operating
budget reserves
Faced with a $64 deficit from
the Junior-Senior Prom, the Stu
dent Council yesterday debated
and argued the question, "Does
the money to pay the Prom debt
come out of individual members'
pockets or out of the Council's op
erating budget.
Nothing definite was decided on
the question for lack of a quorom
after three Council members had
left the meeting, but in a test vote
taken on a motion presented by
Merrill Englund, providing that
the Prom deficit be made out of
the Council budget, the motion
presented was passed with only
four dissenting votes.
Moves fund transfer.
Englund's motion stated, "I
move that the Student Council ac
cept the debt incurred by the Prom
Committee, and that a transfer of
funds In the Student Council budg
et be made so that the amount al
lotted to send delegates to the Stu
dent Council convention last fall
be used to make up the deficit of
the Prom Committee." The con
vention money was not used inas
much as no delegates were sent
from Nebraska this year.
Two points of view were pre
sented before the meeting. Merrill
Englund, Kappa Sigma, argued
that the underwriting of the Prom
(See COUNCIL, page 5.)
Inquiring reporter decides . . .
You can please some-even
daily readers of the Daily
, By Bob Aldrfch.
You can please some of the peo
ple some of the time... and the
rest cancel their subscriptions. It
has long been known by editors
you suggest?
The only result was the dis
covery that readers' tastes are as
different as are tastes In food,
jwii vf cunum .in.vi-p. nnr1 frtnHo Some. want
that readers are fickle in their more det others n0
tastes. What pleases them today co,umn at fa gome wan(. more
ma4u vpfu l"mo7' sports and others more national
and the best the editor can do is ,
lO pui in a Dit oi everyimng in me
hope that everybody will find
something he likes.
However, there is a general
agreement that the paper should
. . .. . . "bear down" on coverage of cam
In quest o samplings of reader -nt
taste, the Inquiring Reporter pua eveniB-
By Joe Beldon, Editor
Ikitnl Qlli HurrcM m
AUSTIN, Tex. March 21. De
bated in congress and in commit
tees was the president's economy
budget American colleges and
universities, often far removed
from the hustle of national life,
have a keen interest in at least
one item; the proposed reduction
oentages. The
tions follow:
national tabula-
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IK A )omt
NYA workers, who perform
posed three questions:
1. Do you read the DAILY
daily?
2. What material do you like
best?
3. What improvements can
or the number of national youtn hundreds of tasks from floor
administration Jobs. sweeping to book writing, earn
. about 115 a month. President
Altho other polls of the student Roosevelt's recommendation calls
opinion surveys of America have tor an appropriation of $85,000,-
shown that collegians favor cuts qqq (miuions) for ths 1940-1941
In governmental expenditures, In tlMCt year to go to the national
mis inniancc an uTtrwnciuunj youth administration. I9.5UU.UUU 10
Joritv is opposed to the recom
mended 32 percent reduction of
NYA positions for college stu
dents. Favor reduction.
What is even more signlflcent
U that at least 12 percent ap
proximately one-eighth of the
students, favor a reduction. Some
of these declared that if the Jobs
were given only to students who
were In absolute need of them, ex
penses could be cut.
As was perhaps to be expected,
students who now hold these Jobs
were emphatically in favor of con
tinuing the program, a good many
telling the surveys interviewers
that the number should even be
Increased. The poll points out,
however, that students who are
not r.TA employes are of the same
opinion by almost identical per-
be spent on college and graduate
aid, the rest on other projects
away from the campus. This would
mean a college employment of
89.000 persons, as compared with
130,000 this year.
Phalanx pledges
seven students
Phalanx, national honorary and
professional military fraternity
pledged seven men at Its weekly
meeting Tuesday wgni.
New pledges are: Gale Carst,
Le Roy Thrle, Walter Cropper,
David Webb, AHyn Green, rersn
ing Nakoda, and Robert Burns.
Plans were formulated at the
meeting for attending the national
convention in Minneapolis in April
Experts to lead conference
'; ' s ft y
LiivU
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r :
' 4
Uneola Journal sad Star.
John V. Lawrence, general
manager of ths American Truck
ers Association Is coming from
Washington to participate In a
round table discussion at the
Transportation conference, an
nouncements of which have been
mailed to 1,000 Interested
groups. The conference Is spon
sored by the collsge of business
administration.
Lincoln Journal ana Star.
Dr. John D. Clark will be
chairman of the afternoon pro
gram of the Transportation
commlttes at ths' conference
April 15. Dr. Clark Is a recog
nized authority in ths business
world, and an eduactor r.s well.
H has been on ths faculty of
vsrlous Institutions and has
served several semesters ss a
guest professor at Nebraska.
V. Kent Vifquain, biz ad freshman.
"Yes, I read the DAILY every
day. I prefer the gossip column to
all the other departments because
it presents news of people I know
in an interesting way. My sugges
tion for improvement would be to
get new material. The paper some
times gets in a rut and prints ths
same sort of news day after day.
There should be emphasis on
things that happen on the campus.
do not care about national and
war news since I can read those in
metropolitan papers.
Norman Hansen, teaonert sopho
more.
Yes, every day. I like the edi
torials and general campus news
best. I like the Ideas in the edi
torials and the "News Roundup"
views on current situations. There
should be more emphasis on cam
pus news that's what the paper
is for. .
Dick Thksen, teachers Junior.
I read it but not daily. I lik
current events, both national and
campus.
Melvin Gottschalg, arts and sci
ences freshman.
Yes. I like campus news, society,
sports, and I like to tell the editor
what I think. I suggest more em
phasis on campus news.
Jim Bordwtll, engineering fresh
man. Yes. I don't think much of ths
editorials. They are not logical
and they go to extremes. I prefer
sports. I cannot suggest any im
provements. Grace Knapp, teachers freshman.
Yes. I think the society columst
(See REPORTER, page 5.)