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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1940)
! ! A MracanNtta, nsnv MPRRAciiriM Thursday, October 17, 1940 , ; it Sorialhj. By Jo Duree If it wouldn't be counted subver sive activity or anything we might have said a word in passing con cerning all the lads who answered a lot of questions and who may be put on ice for a year... this preparation has the lads signing things . . . On the feminine side one little gal had an idea "Oh, I think we should be saved from Hitler but isn't this conscription going to take a lot of good men out of cir culation. . ." Migratory plans continue to formulate and ChiO Lois Drake, is going with sisters Barbara Lee, Propaganda (Continued from page 1.) all follow the order of the Hitler aA.tart join or O trPTlf V in the trUStinfT. naive manner the low-educated display." While on my post as ex change professor in Germany I met many a people that after hav ing lived for years under the nari still hud not ad lusted them selves to its ways and means of achieving certain aims. Some miss truth. Th maioritv of the people with more than average intelligence know that they never reaiiy gei 10 Irnnw t h truth on conditions in nrmanv nnH the outer world. But they are intelligent enough to know too that expressing uim thought in words wouia eneci ser Professor Werkmeister declared that even these people naa uncon uttaiivlv nhsorbed auite a bit of Hitler's theses. "They could not help but thinking at times in me way that characterizes the na tional socialist. , When asked if German propa ganda would find fertile soil in America the professor answered doubtfully. "Good propaganda, that is propaganda accomplishing its aim, would find open ears in aiiv nlace in the world providing that the conditions were favorable lor that kind of propaganda. Warns America. 'Where there is dissatisfaction there is always willingness among the people to errect some cnange. Wo know bv past experience that the men that menace the world at present have risen thru the will inrneafl to brine about some change in the social and economic order of the people of the nations under their reign." "Yet this is not the only kind nf nroDacanda asrainst which we have to be on guard said Professor Werkmeister. "rropaganaa migm brine us into war if we are not prepared to judge it from the proven truth. Our entrance into the European struggle would be conaidered bv the whole world as a decisive factor in the outcome of that war." Yvonne Costello, and Betty Schmidt... KKG's Barbara Hahn and Ruth Haney, Alpha Phi's Bess Henny, Dorothy Tipton, Mary Bremers...DU's Val Anderson, Dick Splichel, Eda May, and Avery Forke is letting us say he's going to Kansas .... ATO's who will be around in Kansas might be Mike Selzer, Ferd Braum, Bob Jungman... while Virginia Apple, Max Hoff man. Ada Lavendar. Louise Eu- pinger, Jean Saeger. All Gamma Phi's are going to oe among me thousand Nebraskans. . . as will he Delts Dick Galloway. Bob Reees, Arno Bald, and Max Whit- taker. Farmhouse Howard Zorn Is go- ine to desert the Farmers' Formal, which comes up Saturday and head KU way... it bad wnen a coupie of events conflict. . . . The Kapoa Sits are eoine to buffet supper Sunday night and among the mob win oe wayne Mack with Virginia Sturdevant, Tri Delta; Dick Berg with Betty Lou Waechter, DG; Verne ingra- ham with KKG Marge uiarit... We ouestion: Who is this eirl who Tom Grimes had been about with... we wonder on behalf of the Phi Psi's and lust on behalf... Finny Green, Alpha Jiu 01 last Brya (CVinMnnpH from Pace 1.) is Bruce Kieth, also a transfer student from Wesleyan. Kieth was P(iitnr-in-hif of the Weslevan. official Wesleyan publication which last year won the rating as "best college weekly in me u. a. other staff members whose po si Hons have not vet been decided upon are as follows: Elizabeth Clark, Marjorie May, josepnine Chamberlain. Lucille Miller. June Helmstkdter. June Heilman. Bud Walker, Ed Lovich, Ilah-Mae Rengler and Raymond Murray. No name yet. A name for the publication. which was recently approvea oy the board of publications, has not vet been decided uoon. in approv ing a $250 appropriation to cover the cost or puonsning tne Duueun for the first semester, the board stipulated that it could contain no advertising and that distribution of each edition be made free of charge to all unafilliated students on both campuses. The publication, however, wiu carry no general campus news, but news of particular interest to un affiliated students only, that is. news of barb social, intramural, and extra-curricular activities. Blaine Sloan, Barb Union presi dent, has announced that mere are still openings for any barb inter ested in working on the staff of the new publication. year.is wearing Jim Roberts' Slg Nu pin these days again . . . and this time it's a lovely jeweled job... Add social notes: Tnitiated lntelv at Oamma Phi Beta are Janice Marshall, Mary miien Mcwracnen, ana trances Hans... At the DTD chapter house, Delts had a smoker last nieht for all the Lincoln alums. . . Acacia Jerry Mayburn has been seen a lot with Kappa Ruth Fer ris but according to people who should know that score his hie in terest is still Ruth Ferguson . . . What we can casuitv nas nit tne intramurala Frostv Wilson Sie Ep, is in Bryan Memorial hos pital witn a iractured cneek bone, acquired in warm-ups for the I-M scuffle with the Theta XI s.. medicos will operate this a. m... Movie shol stills posted in Temple AU students who participated in the scenes of "Three cneers for Miss Bishoo" which were shot on this campus last week, will rind stui snots posted in me aress-inp- rooms of the Temple theater Those who wish prints should sifrn up on the bulletin board there by o p. m. tomorrow. The nrints will come in small and large sizes at 10 and 25 cents and will be available in the edi torial and publicity department in administration puiiaing i uesaay. Brazilian exchange ... , yT Student, athlete, professor, enrolls here to hnwi degree . . it. is Hiipressea Dy cosi8 By Gene Bradley. Jose Dandido M. Carvalho, new exchange student on the campus, is a Brazilian athlete, traveler, scholar and professor who has been converted into an American Cornhusker for one year so that he may receive his masters de gree in parasitology. Altho he has spoken English only six montns, already he is more intelligible than many native Nebraska students. A blue ribbon athlete, J. D. M. C. was a participant in the 1936 and 1937 Olympics at Paris, fhirH.ninre winner in the 1937 South American meets, and fourth r.io thinner in the Paris Penta gon contest of the same year. His specialty, athletically speaKing, is th Wnthon which includes the following events: 100 meter dash, 400 meter dash, 110 meter high hurdles, 1,500 meter race, the broad jump, the pole vault, the high jump, the javelin toss, the discus, and me snot pui. Assistant Professor. shninatioallv sneaking. Car valho was assistant professor at his Brazilian school: -icoia su perior de Agriculturae Vererinaria de Estado de Minas Gerais Vi Because of his record, he was selected as one of the two trohanm students from his uni versity who should be sent to study in the United states, un uie recommendation of Thpmas B. Snipes a Nebraskan who heads the biology department or mat srhnnl Carvalho chose Nebraska as the school at which he would complete work on his master s de gree. After receiving this degree next June, he plans that he and his wife will return to ijrazu, there to be a professor of zoology. Living costs impress mm. What impressed him most when he first arrived in the United States? "The cars and the high cost of living." Carvaldo replied. He says that automobiles are much more abundant in this coun try than in Brazil. And the Ameri can dollar is approximately twenty times more expensive than the dollar of the Brazilian. In torm nt American money, the en tire cost of one year of schooling in Latin America including room and board totals only $60. And if you are partial to coffee, one United States dollar will buy twenty pounds. Carvalho is favorably impressed by the friendliness and helpfulness of the American people. He had already expected the United States to be a "good country," however, because of the good will attitude between the two nations. "Both the government and people of Brazil were friendly and familiar with this country," he said. In regard to . the Brazilian attitude toward the war, he remarked that both the people and the government are sympathetic to the British cause and opposed to the nazis. IT'S THE SMOKER'S CIGARETTE, because All America has a line on them DEFINITELY Convicts (Continued from page 1.) city jail. Desk Sergeant Kale Car penter started to book the men when a call came in on the switch board. As Carpenter turned to answer the call. Smith fled tru the rear door. He was picked up three hours later in the basement of his apartment house at 1901 L, He did not resist arrest. TURHPIKESFRI.0CT.1B w. B. . rm a.. ' in is CBS. (SS, Aim. fca. T YHUVE HEARO US mm. Sum iim w the mivics, MOW SEE HIM 111 PERSON SAT. 1 EDDY SUN. r ROGERS And Hit Sensational Band direct from tha RAINBOW GRILL atop Radio City, Now York City. 1 i aawm av b vn m. mr mm mm mr m 17 St f A 0HT IAflTI Iff woorm awKii 0 fcmjfi' H 9ovw4 j. 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