The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 09, 1940, Page 2, Image 2

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    Wednesday, Ocfcfcer 0, 1930
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dibuaL - - QommsmL - - (Bullsihv
Not only players are Good luck,.
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they, but ambassadors
of good will to boot!
little brother
According to Minnesota football players and Minneapolis sports writers,
Nebraska's gridmen won the hearts of some 48,000 fans who witnessed Sat
urday's game. Iluskcr footballers proved themselves fighting gridmen, good
sports and good losers.
Naturally it's no disgrace to lose any football game. But when opposing
players and out of town sports writers are so lavish in their praise of Ne
braska players' fine spirit, fight, and sportsmanship, we can all be proud.
This university was represented by men who brought honor and glory
back to Lincoln with them . . . honor because they were gentlemen on the
field, glory because they fought hard and clean.
Football players aren't used to having editorial roses tossed at them and
neither are editorialists accustomed or prone to do the tossing. But when
a team turns in the performance that Major Jones' team turned in, they
deserve all the the praise they can be handed.
Authorized by the Publications Board at its meeting Monday afternoon
is a new barb publication, subsidized for $250 by the university public,
tions fund.
The Publications Board recognized what the barbs presented as a
long standing organizational need in acting as it did. The barb bul
letin's successor will be more of a journalistic endeavor than its prede
cessor and should provide an outlet for that journalistic talent now
reposing in the breasts of Barbs who won't, for some reason or other,
work for the DAILY.
Good luck is our only wish to the editors and planners of the barb
paper. The DAILY is still the official newspaper of 7,000 students. In line
with an editorial policy that will adhere to this claim, DAILY editors have
decided to add a barb editor to its editorial staff. Details of this new fea
ture and of the new barb paper are printed on page one of today's paper.
Bulletin
Air schools
Willkie for president club will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p. m. in
room 315 of the Union.
Movies of the Minnesota-Nebraska
game will be shown Wed
nesday at 7:30 p. m. in the Union
ballroom.
Dr. Morris Fishbein will con
duct a forum at 3 p. m.. Oct. 10,
in parlors X and Y of the Union.
w
Cornhuskcr staff will meet in
the Cornhusker office at 4 p. m.
Wednesday. All staff editors
should be present.
Pre-socia! work majors lunch
con will be held in the Union
Thr.rsday. I.Iinscs Rhodes and Mc
Arthur will be the speakers.
Ctuder.ts Architectural Society
will meet at 7:30 p. m. in- the
Temple. Prof. Linu3 Burr Smith
Will be the speaker.
r
A3 college dramatics club will
meet for the first time this year
at 7:30 p. m. today in ag hall.
Young Advocates invite all stu
dents considering: law as a pro
fesslon to an open meeting Thurs
day at 7:30 p. m. in social sciences
200a.
Corn Cobs will medt at 7
p. m. in the Union. All actives and
cledees are requested to dc pres
cnt. Workers are to meet at 4:50
p. m. in the Union ballroom to
U3hcr ut the weekly tea t'ance.
Credit vill be given those pledges
who report for duty.
Student Council meets this af
ternoon r.t 5 in Union 315.
Barbs plan sale
student booster
cards tins year
Student booster cards will be
cold again thia year for the mutual
benefit of students, advertisers and
the barb organizations, the Barb
Council announced at its meeting
last night. A cord will give to
each purchaser a ten percent Ls
count on anything he may buy at
the firms listed and the price of
one card will be 25 cents. Ten
cents of this will go to the sales
mnn and the rest to the barb or
ganizatlon fund. The list of ad
vertiscrs is not yet complete but
bo far it consists of a barber shop
beauty shop, florist, cleaner and
shoe repair shop.
Werner speaks to YRI
Dr. O. II. Werner will speak
before the University YMCA to-
nlerht on the topic. "How to Get
Along in a Group." Dr. Werner
is a professor of Principles of
Education In teacher's college.
th7s"cOUPON & 15c
I Good for One Watch Crystal
t Main Spring or Cleaning $1.50
Radio seminar offers free
course in world's literature
Approximately 110 Americans1
are eligible to take a new seminar
course, given by three of the coun
try's leading men of letters, Allen
Tate, Mark Van Doren, and Hun
tington Cairns given each Sunday
afternoon over radio station KFAB
at 3:30 p. m.
The course cuts through the cus
tomary divisions of college curric
ula to reach many important
"Vorks of the world's literature.
There is neither tuition fee nor
entrance examination for the
course which is open to anyone
having access to a radio. Mail
reaching the Columbia Broadcast
ing System, sponsors of the course
indicates that it should prove par
ticularly interesting to college
students and professors.
Professors.
Allen Tate Princeton profes
sor and former Rhodes scholar,
whose poetry and biographical
works have aided the current
southern literary comeback, is
one of the teachers of the course.
Mark Van Doren is a poet, critic,
and editor of a number of anthologies.
Huntington Cairns is a Balti
more attorney ana bookiover.
Cairns, 36 ,is counsel to the Treas
ury department, and book censor
of the United States. As Treasury
counsel, he passes on the importa
tion of books to which objections
have been raised.
The teachers do not lecture.
They sit around a table at CBS
headquarters in New York, discus
sing each Sunday afternoon one of
their books on their list of the
world's greatest The sessions are
similar to college seminars, ex
cept that listeners cannot ask
their teachers questions. Suniay
they will discuss Michaevelli's,
'The Prince."
The course of discussions, titled
"Invitation to Learning," touches
varied subjects not ordinarily in
eluded in a single course. Ethics,
autobiography, fiction, drama,
criticism, science, and history are
some of the toj ics which will bo
covered. Many of the classics to
be discussed were written origi
nally in Greek, Latin, French, Ital
ian, and German, as well as English.
The broadcasts, in their final
form, result from experimentation
by Columbia to find the men best
suited to form the panel of teach
ers. An experimental scries of
broadcasts was produced this
summer, on which different men
appeared, sometimes more than
three on a broadcast
The men finally chosen to ap
pear on the scries, which will con
tinue through the end of March,
seemed to Columbia's experts to
complement each other's thinking
to make the best discussions.
The experimental broadcasts
also proved that the classics are
interesting to a large section of
the American public. Mail from
people of all types indicated that
America wants to learn and thinks
it can learn best from the greatest
boolcs.
Theater to stage
pre-game pep rally
Friday at 9
The Stuart theater has an
nounced that it will stage a pre-
game, post-rally pep jamboree on
the stage at 9 p. m. Friday night
Regular box office prices will be
in effect
Specialties, yells and songs will
be features of the program. Cheer
leaders ana a novelty baton twiner
will be there to lead the audience
participation. The jamboree fol
lows the 7 p. m. rally, which Is
sponsored by the campus pep or
ganizations. The picture showing will bo,
"Down Argentine Way" with Don
Ameche, Betty Grable, and Car
men Miranda.
"DailyQNebiias
Official Newspaper Of Mott Than 7,000 Studtnit
STOODENTS!
ON OUR STAGE
FRIDAY NIGHT
AT 9:001
N.U. PEP JAMBOREE
and Hot "Congo" Contestl
A Staffe-Full of Pep ... I
A Theater-Full of Checn . . .
... and FUN FOR ALL . . .
Screen " 1 1 1 1
'The Conga Sweeps the
Nation!
'DOWN
ARGENTINE WAY'
SUrrlnf
Don Ameche
B.tty (Whe-.-u) Grab.
Carmen Miranda
.n-
V I
FORTIETH YEAR.
Subscription Rate are $1.00 Pti Semester .r S1..10 for the College Tear. 12.50
Mailed. Single ropy. S Cent. Entered at (frond-class matter at the poslofflee In
Mncoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress, March S, 187'J. and at iperlai rat. of
postage provided for in Section 1103, Act of October S, If 17. Authorised Janoarr
tO, 192.
Office Union Building
Day 2-7181. Nluhl J-719S. Journal 1-S333.
Member Assoelated Collcglat. Pres. 1940-41.
Member Nebraska Pres Association, 1910-4L.
Represented for National Advertising by
NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE. INC.
I.'O Madison Ave., New York. N. Y
Chicago Boston Los Angele San Francke.
Published Daily during the school year except Monday and Saturday, vaca
tions, and examination period by Student of the University of Nebraska under tha
supervision of the Publication Board.
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