d)dw Z 408 Vol. .41, No. 37 TC Homers War eadl M Armistice Ceremoiniie Classes Dismissed At 10 a.m. Altho inclement weather brought cancellation of plans to hold a parade outside today, university Armistice day ceremonies will be carried on in the coliseum where the traditional program will be given. All classes between 10 a. m. and 12 noon have been dismissed so that all students may attend the According to an announce ment from the military depart ment, over 100 uniforms for ROTC junior officers are ex pected to arrive this morning in time to be issued for the armistice day ceremonies. Jun iors who were fitted prior to November 5 may get their uni forms at the department at 9 a. m. ceremonies, scheduled to start promptly at 10:30 a. in. All ROTC cadets are required to be at the coliseum by 10:15 a. m. In uniform. They will gather on the west and east balconies. The public is asked to sit in the north section. Highlighting the program will be the traditional presentation of the university service flag, carried by Tassels, escorted by members of Pershing Rifles. The ROTC band will play a pro gram of patriotic music to begin the day's program. Union Hobby Sbop Starts Next Week "Hobby Shop," a Union spon sored work shop started last year, will be open again one week from Tuesday, Nov. 18. Until Christmas vacation, shop workehs will make cards by the silk screen process. The Union will furnish the materials, paints and instruction free of charge; the student must provide the paper. Under the direction of Irmel Busch, art department instructor, the class will meet once a week on Tuesday between 4 and 6 p. m. Union room 8 will serve as the work shop. For Recreation , . . YW Invites Students to 'Play Night' Held on "Play night," an evening de voted to games, will be sponsored by the YWCA next Saturday night and all university students are invited to attend. From 7:30 to 9 p. m. students may .play table tennis, shuffle board, volleyball, deck tennis and badminton; or they may swim or roller skate. Ballroom and square dancing will be held from 9 to 10:30 p. m. Admission to the pool will be 15 cents; the charge for partici pation in any of the other games is 10 cents. All swimmers will be required to present their swim ming permits. From now on YWCA play nights will be held on the third Satur- Daily ASTebraskan Official Newspaper Of More Than 7,000 Students Lincoln, Nebraska Barbs Meet To Draw Up Constitution General Meeting Tuesday Canceled ; Officers Name Cabinet Members Instead No general group of barbs will meet in the barb office tonight for the weekly meeting. Instead the constitutional committee and a few other barbs will finish draw ing up the document and will name committee heads to complete the cabinet membership. Both the constitution and the appointments are subject to the approval of a general meeting of barbs. This cancels the regular barb meeting. At the meeting at 7:30 p. m. a week from tonight, the general group of barbs will consider the proposed constitution and the ap pointments according to Bill Dafoe, president of the organiza tion. Members of the constitutional committee are Dave Marvin, Doro thy Jean Bryan, Fern Wilterdink, Norma Jean Campbell, George Campen, Lester Wilterdink, Ellis Ruby, Bill Lowery, Norma Wat kins, Bob Dewey and Bill Dafoe. Religion Head Speaks at YW Meeting Today Rev, Allan Hunter, minister ui Mt. Hollywood Congregational church, Los Angeles, will speak on "The Function of Our Student Christian Movement" to new mem bers of the campus YW group, Tuesday at 5 p. m. in Ellen Smith. The meeting, which is -"ins; held to welcome new YW member will include a special candleligat service and a number by the choir. Here on the campus for Religion and Life week. Dr. Hunter served with the Canadian Red Cross in Palestine in World War I and spent two years in China with the cooperative movement. He was also with Kagarva in Japan and with Gaudin in India. Books written by him are "Three Trumpets' sound" and "White Cor puscles in Europe." Francis Keefer, YW president will welcome the nef members at the meeting. Next Saturday . . From 7:30 to 10:30 day of each month. Both men and women may attend. Social, Square Dance ("lasses Change Dates Because the Union ballroom will be used for dinners and other affairs, a change in both square and social dancing class schedules has been made. No square dance classes will meet this week and the session scheduled for Tuesday of next week will meet on Wednesray in stead. The Thursday section of social dancers will meet tomorrow night instead of. Thursday. Tuesday, November 11, 1941 Coop Houses Hear Guild Organizer Carroll Moon, former director of student activities in the Wesley Foundation at Austin, Tex., will speak at the Pioneer Co-op Wed nesday at 7 p. m. and the Corn husker Co-op on Thursday at the Carroll Moon . . . religious leader same time. Moon will be on the campus this week attending Reli gion and Life week. Moon's Campus Guild popular ized co-ops at the University of Texas. The Guild is a cooperative rooming house which was organ ized in February, 1937, by 13 stu dents. Its purpose was to try co (See ORGANIZER, Page 2) Rev Palmer Dav of Reli Climaxing the first day of re ligious, activities, Albert W Palmer, president "of the Chicago theological seminary, told a large crowd that filled the Union Mon day night that religion is concerned primarily with two factors : 1. what people cannot evade in God, and 2. an invitation to those people to come and chose him. Rev. Palmer whose school is connected with the University of Chicago, spoke on "The Inevitable God and the God we choose." His was the second general evening address delivered by the visiting ministers here for the university Religion and Life week. Activities End Thursday. Sponsored by religious organ izations, local leaders and faculty 7:00 a.m. Breakfast for work ers. Union AB. 10:00 a.m. Seminar. Union 315. "Ethics," Father John O'Brien. 12:00 Faculty luncheon. Union XY. Gould Wickey. C. A. Forbes presiding. Seminar. Home Ec building 206. "Religion for These Times," Hilda L. Ives. 12:15-12:50 p.m. Seminar. Ag hall 305. "Ethics," Father John O'Brien. 4:00 p.m. Seminars. Union 313. ' Building an Inter-faith Fellowship," Wil lard Johnson, Julius Gor- f w Fdgh iudentt.ls Goal With Chancellor C. S. Boucher purchasing the first membership, the American Red Cross roll call drive opened on the campus today. Having set the pledging of every student on the campus to mem bership in the organization as a goal, the student council, through a committee headed by Mary Rosborough, is sponsoring the university drive. House-to-house pep talks up and down fraternity and sorority row and in all organized houses initiated the campaign last night. Today is also the opening date for the national ca . ij,n, and, though the campus drive is strictly confined to univers' j, 'tnises, reports to the Lancaster county chairmen will be made daily. Co-chairmen for the Lancaster drive are John Curtiss and Clarence Hinds. Red Cross Services Expanding. Speaking of the drive, Mr. Hinds remarked, "We know that it is necessary to continuously expand the services of the Red Cross in conjunction with the army, navy and civilian defense program. The present Red Cross roll call, therefore, takes on added significance and provides an opportunity for every man and woman in Lincoln to participate in this important work." Each day during the drive, which ends Nov. 21, a Red Cross honor roll of students and faculty members who have become Red Cross members will appear in the Daily. Those workers in charge of various campus divisions must make daily reports at the Red Cross desk in the Daily Nebraskan office by 7:30 p. m. Workers may also pick up additional supplies at the desk each day. BookNookHas Bourke-White Photo Exhibit UN photography bugs are hav ing a field day as the Union Book Nook is displaying this week a series of pictures by Margaret Bourke-White, ranked as one of the best photographers on the Life magazine staff. The display in the Book Nook is sponsored by the national chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi. Miss Bourke-White, an alumna of that organization, arranged for the ex hibit to be shown in every city where there is an AOPi chapter The exhibit illustrates Miss Bourke-White's ability to photo graph detail. University camera experts say that her pictures of birds, plants and human faces re veal every feature, light and shadow of the subject. Character studies of Nicholas Horthy, Hungarian diplomat; Cor dell Hull and Ambassador William C. Bullit are also featured in the exhibit. Miss Bourke-White has re ceived much praise for her picture story on Moscow and USSR Joe Stalin, which was featured in For tune magazine. Speaks to Climax First gion, Life Week Program groups the Religion and Life Week will continue until Thursday even ing. It began with a retreat for workers Saturday night and con tinued Sunday with a talk by Dr. Hilda L. Ives in the morning at the ag campus. Rev. Allen A. Hunter gave the lecture in the coliseum Sunday evening. Tonight Father John O'Brian, professor of philosophy of religion and politics at Notre Dame, will give the general address to close the program for the day. His talk follows a day of lectures, seminars and social gatherings. A complete program for today's activities may be found on this page. Rev. Palmer divided his lecture Into two parts. In the first part Momhrfs Religion, Life Pr don. Faculty lounge "The Chris tian World Mission," Hachiro Yuasa. Z "How Do We Know Right and Wrong?" Albert W. Palmer. XY "Personal Reli g i o n," Allan A. Hunter. 315 "Ethics," Father John O'Brien. 316 "Planning a Student Re ligious Program," Gould Wickey. 5:00 p.m. Seminars. Union 316 "Problems of Or ganized Groups," John Oliver Nelson. Eveiry Adventurer Shows Movie At Convo Explorer of Lost Worlds, City Under the Seas Lectures at Union Nov. 19 Adventure tales the real thing, are in store for UN students when Count Byron de Prorok, noted archeologist, explorer and author, presents his motion picture lec ture, "In Quest of Lost Worlds" at the second convo of the year Nov. 19 at the Union. A real adventurer, Count de Prorok has been active for more than 20 years in his quest for lost worlds ancient civilizations lost to modern knowledge. Having car ried cameras with him on his ex peditions to record his discoveries, he will supplement his speech at UN with pictures. Students will hear how the Count discovered the relics of Hannibal (Carthage), Alexander the Great (Oasis of Jupiter Am- (See ADVENTURER, Page 2.) dealing with the inevitableness nt God he said, "There is an unseen, invisible, reliable force keeping things in the universe moving. The universe does not stop with bi ology. There is humanity. There are human personalities. Man may be the measure of all things but man feels his weakness. There must then be a heart of the uni verse which guarantees processes of economics, chemistry physics." God was defined as a personal God. Human personalities are small imperfect reproductions of the guide of the universe accord ing to the Chicago professor. The laws of the universe are His laws and man can neither break nor evade them. (See PROGRAM, Page 2) ogram X1 "Preparation for Chris tian Marriage and Home life," Sylvanua Duvall. 7:00 p.m. Seminars. Love Memorial Hall "The Christian World Mission," Dewitt C. Baldwin. 303 Ag Hall "Planning a Student Religious Pro gram," Walter Malone. 7:00 p.m. Seminars. Baldwin Hall, 3268 Orchard st. "Student Coopera tives," Carroll Moon. 7:30 p.m. General address, Un ion ballroom. Father John .O'Brien. Richard Vsetecka, presiding.