The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 31, 1940, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE DAILY NEBRASJCAN
Sunday, March 31, 1940
i Daily1Vedmsean
Olfkial Nspap Of Mvt Than 7.000 Sludmfc
THIRTY-NINTH YEAR
Offices ..Union Building
Day 2-7181. Night 2-7193. Journal 2-3333
Member Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40
Membsr Nebraska Press Association, 1939-40
Represented for National Advert'tlng by
NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVi'E, INC.
420 Madison Ave., New York, fs. Y.
Chicago Boston Los Angeles San Francisco
Published Daily during the school year except Mondays
and Saturdays, vacations, and examination periods by stu
dents of the University of Nebraska, under supervision of
the Publications Board.
Subscription Rates are tL.OO Per Semester or S1.50 for
the College Year. $2.50 Mailed. Single copy, 6 Cents. En
tered as second-class matter at the postoffice In Lincoln,
Nebraska, under Act of Congress. March 3, 1879. and at
special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103, Act
of October 3. 1917. Authorized January 20, 1922.
Editor-in-Chief . .
Business Manager..
..Richard deBrown
Arthur Hill
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Managing Editors Clyde Martz. Norman H-rrl
News Editors Chris Petersen, Luc"e Thomas, Paul
Svoboda, Mary Kerrigan, Mortjn Margolin
Sports Editor June Blerbower
Ag Editor leo Cocksley
Star Reporters This Month Bob Aldrlch, Hubert
Ogden, Elizabeth Clark, Marjorle Bruning
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Assistant Bi-ainess Managers. .. .Burton Thiel, Ed Segrlst
Circulation Manager Lowell Michael
ALL DAILY anslmed editorials are the opinion of the
editor. Their views or opinions In no way reflect the atti
tude of the administration ef the university.
Candid Clippings
Morton Margolin
. It takes $163.18 to go to all the dances given
during the academic year at Pittsburg according to
a survey made recently by the "Pitt News." The
figure includes the cost of going to 31 dances plus
the cost of food and corsages for the most important
affairs. Let it never be said that it doesn't cost
money to be a college man.
This one was picked up from the "Ward-Bel
mont Hyphen.
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA OFFICIAL BULLETIN
This bulletin l for the use of eamp ooflantoaetone, student ad fa.
uHy members. Announcements of meermgs cr other notices tor the InNteftn
may t- submitted at the NEBRASKAN office by 6 p. m. the day before swfc.
licatlon or at the registrar's office by 4 p. m. on week-days and 11 a. m.
on Saturday. Notices must be typed or legibly written and signed by some
one with the authority to have the notice published. The bullethi i will aj.
pear daily, except Monday and Saturday, on page two of the NEBRAiKAN.
TODAY
LIBRARY JOBS.
Students who wish port time positions
la the library may take the annual com
petitive examination on Hatiirdn?, April 6.
Students are asked to apply as soon as
nA..ihi. a Mlau HiiHmIita lit her nfflne near
We paSS it on and dedicate it to the the loan desk on the main floor of the
. T I I .. I .11! k. RUi In
This business of thinking up jokes
Gets one a little bit daunted;
DEAR EDITOR:
Restrict dances
to students
Dear Editor:
It is with much interest that I write this letter
an interest which should be that of the entire
student body. It is concerning the dances in the
Student Union.
As I have been observing from time to time
throughout the year, students must present iden
tification cards to attend dances in the Student
Union. This has not been carried out and due to
this fact the ballroom has become a rendezvous
for the persons who frequent the dance halls not
patronized by students of the university. This
creates an antagonistic attitude toward the Stu
dent Union, not only from the studonts but from
alumni of the university whose cooperation we de
sire in order to boost our institution.
It has been remarked by several students that
they would not take a date to the Student Union
dances and it is a justified statement. We pay our
Student Union fee of $3.00 each semester to pro
vide entertainment supposedly for ourselves, how
ever, the present status renders this entertainment
very unattractive to the students. Many student!
will not even go in the Union because of the manner
in which it is operated.
If these dances are to be attended by the stu
dent body as a whole and not fifty percent stu
dents and fifty percent outsiders, there should be
a change in the policy of operating the dances. Fifty
percent is & very liberal estimate of students
attending these functions. A good many students
cannot afford other recreations, but do not care to
take advantage of what they are compelled to pay
for, because of the calibre of the majority of the
crowd.
The board which has the power to regulate
these activities should make an endeavor to curb
the present situation, thus making our Student
Union Ballroom a recreation center for students
ratner than a cheap dance hall for outsiders.
Respectfully,
Clint Jurgensen.
$
Dr. Popenoe was here to tell students how to
know it's love we are wondering, just wondering.
When you wonder, you klnda think over a lot of an
gles to a thing. When angles are thought over, you
are bound to get a few points.
We have suggested a few of these things before
but they fit the situation at the present
Love can best be defined as a gross exaggera
tion of the difference between one person and ev
erybody else.
How can you recognize love ? You know you
have it when you have a feeling that you feel that
you are going to have a feeling that you have never
felt before.
Some people say that love is blind but it seems
that there are plenty of people who are willing to
make spectacles of themselves for It
If it is blind, maybe It is so in order to give the
homely folks a chance.
Of course, Popcnoc has bis Ideas, too.
a. m.
the reserve read inn room at 9
INTEBKRAT QUIZ.
Final round of the Interfraternity Quls
will be held In the Union bnllrnnm at 4
p. m. Cnntestiints are Kappa Alpha Thets,
Sigma Alpha Mu, Form House, and Alpha
XI Delta.
RF.I.IdlOl S WKI.FARK COUNCIL.
Members of llie Relink Welfare Coun
eH will meet In parlor X of the Union
at 4 p. ni.
MONDAY
TOWNE ci.ru.
Members of Towne Club will meet
parlor A of the Union at p. m.
FACULTT MEN'S CLUB.
The Faculty Men's Clnb will meet
parlor C of the Union at 6:15 p. ni.
PHI ALPHA DELTA.
Phi Alpha Delta will meet In parlor X
of the Union at 6:30 p. m.
la
Reporter
they said.
The ones you want we can't print
And the ones we print aren't wanted.
"The Creightonian," official paper of our neigh
boring university in Omaha, last week, carried a
plea in behalf of the women student that they be
given a voice in student affairs. It seems that at
Creighton the women don't get a chance to vote
not even on leap year.
Citation for the latest bit of campus service
should go to the "Daily Iowan" which recently fin
ished a crusade to clean up several old campus fire
traps. Only a one-day crusade was necessary before
university authorities put sprinklers in the buildings
in question.
Another housing controversy is going full speed
at Kansas aiaie wnere irate rooming nouse owners, (Continued from Page 1.)
last week declared that they would not obey the K,B educationalf the questions
university's new single bed regulation. "The stu- asked are on various subjects and
dents have to live somewhere, and if none of us test the knowledge of the con
comply with the ruling what can the college do?" testants. I haven't seen many of
me questions, uui, juugiug uum
the ones I have seen, they're not
too stiff for the average college
student."
Hortense Casady, arts and science
Junior and member of the Kappa
Alpha Theta team.
"The quiz is an . entertaining
competition drawing fraternities
and sororities together, but other
wise not especially beneficial. It
is amusing to both participants
and spectators, and is certainly in
keeping with the fad that is
sweeping the country."
MY DAY A LA CONGRESS. Clintnn Wilkinson, arts and sci-
While affairs in the world at large have been ences freshman
shifting with amazing rapidity, the doings of Con- t really don't know enough
gress have followed a singularly unexciting pro- about the quiz to express an opin-
gram. The regularity with which the national legis- ion, but I suppose it is a good
7 t JJiJJ4.i.t a:ia thing. The questions seem to be
lature has proceeded to do just what was predicted wenB8electednd those on campU3
has given renewed courage to many of our political mformation should help students
prognosticated. to learn more about the univer-
A nearly everyone had believed would be the sity."
caw, Congress has found its proposed cutting of Montee Baker, ag college senior
expenditures a difficult task. Within the past week "I enjoy the quiz, but I believe
annrnnriation. for th er.e and the NY A have been is entirely a matter of chance
. . . . . ... as to who wins, as the questions
MORTAK BOARD.
Members of Mortar Board wH mm ka
the Union at 4 p. m.
BEQUEST PROtiBAM.
A program of request miasle KM ha
played on the Carnegie Music set In the
faculty lounge of the Union at 4 p. m.
TASSELS.
Members of Tassels will meet ka
SIS of toe Union at I p. m.
SIGMA ALPHA IOTA.
Hlgma Alpha Iota pledge will
room SIA of the Union at 4 p. sa
TUESDAY
PHALANX.
Phalanx will meet hi room II W Mae
Union at S p. m.
SIGMA ETA CHI.
Sigma Eta Chi pledge will meet hi
room SOS of the Union at 7 p. m. Active
will meet at the same time la room SIS.
HARMONY HOUR.
Weekly Kinfimln Harmony Hoar will bo
held In the faculty lounge ef the Union
at 4 P. m.
DELTA SIGMA PI.
Members of Delta Sigma PI wilt
m parlor X of the Union at 1 p. m.
1 ijjjp floundupL
I C vSS Dav's' Loos, Mohnkenjl
Hooron
are extremely variable in their
difficulty. I believe the questions
should be more standardized. The
premium and the quiz itself stimu
late mental activity."
Everett Egan, arts and sciences
freshman
"I haven't paid a great deal of
attention, but I think the quiz is
they could do the same on the
campus."
Annette Bierbaum, arts and sci
ences junior, member of the Alpha
Xi Delta team
"The quiz is all right, and the
increased over the figures proposed in the original
budget Economy has once again proven to be a
noble ideal, but the compelling facts of an election
year make congressmen more than willing to be
liberal with government funds.
Predictions as to the fate of the reciprocal
trade agreements have thus far proven true. Hav
ing safely passed through the house of represent
atives, the trade agreements program found senate a grand idea. More quizzes of this
opposition more determined. Friday's vote on the sort should be conducted. We can
Pittman amendment which would have required ee what a hit they made in radio.
senate ratification of any agreements negotiated
by the president, indicates that the Hull program
will in all probability pass the senate by a very
narrow margin.
Even the Dies committee has followed an un
usually uninspired course. Nothing more spectacular questions should help one to gain
than the fact that Snow White and Pinnochlo both f information Judging from
, A, L, . , the attendance at the prellmina-
evidenced communistic sympathies has come out of r, stU(jcnta aren't interested in
the current investigationwhich, It must be added the quiz. This, I believe, Is be
out of justice to the Texan, are Just beginning. Yet cause they don't know about the
it must trouble the oubliclty-consclou. Dies that his "ore publicity is neeciea.
revelations thus far have produced nothing more
than ill-concealed yawns.
Senator Norris has been, strikingly consistent,
if only in his unpredictability. Nebraska's senior
senator has managed to maintain the position of
prestige which he has gained dining the past, even
though the field of activity is necessarily limited
by the very inactivity of Congress. Yet Norris has
been one of the senators most consistently opposing
the dropping of the Hull program, and tho resultant
connequences which would "put Congress back in
tlft? business of tariff logrolling."
Within the last few days Norris has placed his
stamp of approval on at least one candidate in the Masons hear Rosenlof
current primary race, former governor Arthur J.
Weaver, republican aspirant for the Unite? States'
senatorshlp. Avoiding the heated contest for the
democratic nomination for the same position, Nor
ris announced that hs considered Weaver the best
qualified candidate In the field. It Is not surprising
that such a "boost" should come from the senator,
for the careers of the two men concerned are par
allel In that both have approached public problems
from a point of view based not solely on partisan
politics. :
Weaver has let it be known that he considers
some few features of the New Deal to be of per
manent worth, and that a simple campaign of vili
fication is hardly an ample cause for seeking office.
Support of a progressive-minded and independent
candidate thus comes from an office-holder of the
same make-up.
tarry Nelson, arts and sciences
freshman
"It sounds like a good deal. It
should inspire some real thinking
among students."
George Cunningham, arts and scl
ences freshman
"The quiz creates a better at
mosphere for scholastic work. It's
a disturbance, but for the good."
Jack Hacker, engineering sopho
more
"Good idea. Interesting and edu
cational."
Dr. G. W. Rosenlof of the de
partment of secondary education
will speak tonight before Masonic
lodge No. 54 on "Safeguards to
Democracy."
Fraternity house presidents at
Oregon State College recently
voted overwhelmingly to continue
the current ban on corsages at
their formal dances.
(Continued from Page 1.)
at 11 a. m. in the Union ballroom.
Professor Karl Arndt, convocation
chairman, will preside. Prof.
Hertzler also talks at a forum
at 3 p. m.
Would perfect man.
Hooton, who, according to Life
magazine, is "one of the most
gifted, versatile and articulate
men in the history of science,"
says in his book that "we must
improve man before we can per
fect his institutions and make him
behave.
"If the generations to come can
be emancipated from the worth
less members of the human race,
it will be a comparatively simple
matter to perfect social and polit
ical institutions.
"We know far less today about
making men than making auto
mobiles, and we act far more in
telligently in raising crops than in
raising children," continues Hoo
ton. "As a matter of fact a good
deal more of human thought and
effort has gone into devising and
perfecting motor engines than hu
man engines. We are really more
interested in the quality of our au
tomobiles than in that of our
progeny."
Queen
(Continued from Page 1.)
who will attend the premier of
"Those Were the Days," at Gales
burg, 111. The picture is based on
the "Old Slwash" stories written
about Knox college at the turn of
the century.
Hosts and hostesses at the pre
miere wil be students at Knox and
stars of the picture, including Bo
nita Granville and William Holden.
While at Knox, one of the 12
"American beauties" will be
picked by a committee of judges
as the most typical American col
lege girl and crowned AU-Amer-ican
College Queen. The AU-Amer-lcan
College Queen will receive
a free trip to Hollywood where
she will be entertained by the
stars, and will be screen-tested by
Phth mount studios.
McNeill, Steele attend
consumer conference
Dr. C. E. McNeill of the depart
ment of economics, and Ellsworth
Steele of Lincoln, senior in the
college of arts and sciences, will
participate in round tabic discus
sions on the program of the sec
ond national conference on con
sumer education at Stephens col
lege, Columbia, Mo., Tuesday. Dr.
McNeill will discuss "What and
How to Teach College Students in
General," and Steele will partici
pate in a discussion of "Consumer
Education for College Students."
, Serving Students for
22 Yean
Dunlap Optical Co.
120 No. 12th St
LINCOLN
SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Final Concert of Season
Monday Eve., S P. M. April 1
St. Paul's Church'
DON LENTZ
flutist flueil soloist
Single Admission 41. W
Oa Bale at Door.