The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 18, 1941, Image 1

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Official Newspaper Of More Than 7,000 Students
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2408
Vol. 41, No. 42
Lincoln, Nebraska
Tuesday, November 18, 1941
Dead moil do tell talcs. Tn
his motion irliire lecture at
I'niou eonvo at ion Wednesday
at 11 a. in., the noted archae
ologist and explorer Count
Byron de Prorok will disclose some
of the mysteries of lost civiliza
tion. Holder of a number of "con
spicuous firsts" in the field of
archaeological discovery, Porok
has been searching for forgotten
worlds for 20 .years. For his
Ty- a c h ievements
he has been dec
orated by most
of the countries
of Europe.
De Prorok
was the first
man to use
$K
I moving pictures
3 to record arch-
fe. ... , ... X . ,
aelogical data,
r.i oni tha firot t
use the airplane
for exploration.
H e also d i s
covered Tioasa,
an ancient sub-
Uncoin Joui nai merged city
under the Mediterranean. The
relics of Hannibal, Alexander the
Great, Clopatra and King Solo
mon's Mines all were first un
earthed by the Count. He was the
first to establish a scientific link
between the Mayas of Central
America and the ancient Libyans
of the Atlas and Northwest Africa.
From 1936 to 1040, Count de
Prorok was exploring the North
Africans regions where Italy now
bettles Britain. In his pictures he
(See PROROK, page 3 1
Union Shows
rSiesta Film
In Lounge
Student are invited to relax
and be entertained in the Union
lounge between 12:15 and 12:45
p. m. today.
The first in a series of "siesta"
films, a collection of movie shorts,
will be shown. Designed as a
"breather"' between morning and
afternoon classes, the siesta will be
held every other Tuesday.
On the program Tuesday are:
"Close Ups," Trees and Men,"
and "Algonquin Waters."
To)
o)rs
DfKDNUK&ti mfeM DOH HMtDDf)
...Ten Freshmen Win Gold Scholarship Keys
Join the Red Cross
Only four more days remain in which to raise the remaining $56
needed for the campus Red Cross drive to reach its $1,000 goal of
membership contributions received in the current campaign. The
drive, sponsored by the Student Council, v. nd Friday. Add your
name to the roll call today I
A
AGAIN,
HIT IT AGAIN,
HAOEJL
63
BOO.
600
SOO
40O
M
TT7T-
As 300 Walch ...
Alpha Phi Wins WAA Trophy
In Riding Club Show Sunday
. . . Gamma Phi Takes Second
By Pat Chamberlin.
The coveted WAA riding trophy,
the presentation of which climaxed
the horse show held last Sunday
at Shreve's riding school, Pioneer
park, by the University Women's
Riding club, went to Alpha Phi.
Performances were given in sev
eral classes by Alpha Phis Margie
Rivett, Billie Bryan, Peggy Hal
stead, Pat Herminghaus and Joan
Sheldon.
Runner-up for the trophy, which
U a bronze figurine of an Amer
ican saddle horse mounted on an
engraved pedestal, was Gamma
Phi Beta whose points totaled 12
against the 17 of the Alpha Phis.
Kappa Kappa Gamma took third
place with 8 points.
Sunday's ideal horse show
weather drew more than 300 spec
tators to Shreve's riding ring to
watch eight sororities and Carrie
Belle Raymond, represented by
over 20 girls, compete.
Pat Chamberlin, KAT, Marge
Rivett, and Joan Sheldon won the
blues in horsemanship in the ad
vanced, intermediate, and begin
ning classes respectively. Second
In the advanced went to Mary
Beeson, KKG, and third to Marion
Margrave, unaffiliated. Gamma
Phi Janet Gibson and Alpha Chi
Mary Mason placed second and
third in the intermediate, while
second and third in the beginning
class were won by Pat Herming
haus and Peggy HaKstead respec
tively. The stork class had to be eon
(See WAA SHOW, page 2)
Fraternities,
Tassels Join
Red Cross
Delta Upsilon, Zeta Beta Tau,
and Sigma Alpha Mu started off
the fraternity 100 percent list in
the Red Cross drive last night,
when all three fraternities pledged
each of their respective members
to membership in the American
Red Cross. Tassels, women's pep
group, donated $50 to the charity
organization at their meeting yes
terday afternoon.
The five sororities which have
(See RED CROSS, page 1)
Yearbook Staff
To Meet Today
All those on the editorial
staff of the Cornhusker are
asked to attend a meeting to
be held Tuesday in the yearbook
offices at 4:00 p. m.
Barb Group
Delays Meeting
Set for Today
Originally scheduled for tonight
the general barb meeting will be
postponed until after Thanks
giving, Bill Dafoe, president of the
organization announced Monday.
At 4 p. m. next Friday, the
cabinet will meet in room 307 to
consider the new plan for an ag
campus organization and to pass
on the new constitution before it
is submitted to the general meet
ing of the barbs for final con
sideration. Dorothy Jean Bryan
is writing the constitution.
ouduoit Pn
DoDcDiuidles
rainra
hits
Styl,
Highlighting the annual bizad banquet to be held tonight in the
Unoin ballroom at 6 p. m. will be the announcement of scholastic
awards won by bizad students during the past year and the awarding
of gold keys to last year's ten top freshman students in the college.
Freshman students named to receive Gold Keys are: Eugene Allen,
Kenneth Elson, John William
Greene, Jack Knicely, Ralph Ed
ward Larson, Carroll Meyer, Car
lyle Peterson, William Rist, Harry
Schumacher, and John Wolf.
The key awards were initiated
by the late William Gold, a leading
Lincoln merchant, and the practice
is being continued by his son,
Nathan Gold.
Tonight's after-dinner program
will be unique in that brief skits
and music will be featured as com
pared with addresses of past years.
New Fraternity Members.
In addition to the freshman
awards, announcement of members
elected to Beta Gamma Sigma, na
tional honorary bizad fraternity,
will be made. Nine students were
named in last spring's election t
the fraternity, while five have been
chosen this fall.
Included on the list of individual
awards are the winners of the Al
pha Kappa Psi Citizenship Prize,
presented to the senior student
ranking highest in professional
subjects and student activities dur
ing the first seven semesters of
college, and the Phi Chi Theti
Key, awarded to the junior worn
(See BIZAD, page 2)
Coeds Hold
e snow
Tonight at 7
Freshman coeds will participate
in the Charm School style show
to be held at Hovland-Swanson's
department store Tuesday begin
ning at 7 p. m., with all university
women invited to attend. The early
time was set to allow those at
tending to make the 8 p. m. dead
line. Freshman women from all
houses on the campus will model
in the show and a member of the
Hovland-Swanson staff will be on
hand to comment on the styles
which are the latest arrivals at
Hovlands.
Those modeling should be at the
store at 6 p. m. according to an
announcement by Dorothy Wei
rich and Marion Aden who are in
charge of arrangements for the
show.
Students Want Football
National Survey Shows
. . . Despite Chicago U
By Joe Belden, Editor.
(Student 0inba Surveys of America )
Austin, Tex., Nov. 14. Recently
President Robert M. Hutchins of
Chicago U. announced that the
university was getting along quite
well without intercollegiate foot
ball. But the game continues to
thrive in nearly every other uni
versity and most of the smaller
colleges. Furthermore, the sport
as it exists today has the approval
of nearly nine out of every ten col
lege students.
Only five percent of the nation's
collegians would substitute the big
time games with an intramural
program, it is found in a study
conducted by Student Opinion Sur
veys of America, the national
weekly poll of college thought
sponsored by 150 undergraduate
newspapers including the Daily
Nebraskan.
Hundreds of students were in
terviewed everywhere from the
University of Maine to Stanford
in California, with the question,
"Would you rather see football in
(See SURVEY, page 4)
University Receives Carnegie
Art Donation; Home Ec Grant
Announced Monday by Chan
cellor C. S. Boucher were two
recent gifts to the university, one
from the Caaegie corporation of
New York for art exhibits and
the second from the National
Research Council of Washington
to Dr. Ruth M. Leverton of the
home economics departmeint.
The Carnegie corporation ap
proriated $3,000 as a final grant
to the university toward Bupport
of the art exhibition programs of
the extension division, according
to word received from Secretary
Robert M. Lester. M. Lester was
in Lincoln recently to attend the
national conference of the Associ
ation of American Universities.
Benefits Rural Children.
The exibition program operates
to give rural school children an
opportunity to become acquainted
with art as somthing to live with
and enjoy. It now includes 56
rural traveling galleries which
tour 56 Nebraska counties and
spend one week in each rural
school district. Mrs. M. E. Vance
is in charge of the work and
travels about the state to assist
teachers in use of the galleries.
A junior exhibit of prints anl
originals circulates among smaller
towns of the state. All exhibits are
prepared with the aid of the uni
versity art department from whose
coddection originals are loaned.
More than 160,000 persons viewer
the traveling galleries during the
1940.
The second gift, a grant of
$360. was made to enable Mis
Leverton to continue her inveet
igation of "Iron Metabolism in
Human Subjects."