I Do x PRICE FIVE CENTS VOL. XVI. NO. 157. UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, MONDAY, MAY 28. 1917. Neb grain NEBRASKA TAKES SECOND AT AMES MISSOURI WINS BY 23 POINTS AMES IS THIRD Only One-Half Point Separates Nebraska and Ames Cold Hurts Huskers CONFERENCE MEET RESULTS Missouri 57. Nebraska 34'2. Ames 34. Grinnell 18. Kansas 12'2. Drake 6. Simpson 1. Ames, la., May 26 Nebraska Uni versity took second place In the Mis souri valley conference track meet, which the University of Missouri won with a total of 57 points. Nebraska's lead over Ames was but one-half of a point. The cold, damp weather and slow track are conceded to have hurt Ne braska's chances. Reese in the ehot put and Graff in the two mile were the only Nebraska men to take firsts. Reese put the shot 29 feet, i inches. Graff's race in the mile was one of the features of the meet. The little Husker runner kept a shoulder ahead of Husted, Ames, for the last quarter of a mile and spurted to the tape with a narrow lead. Daft, of Simpson, winner of the race la3t year, fell exhausted at the end of the second lap. Simpson's Last Appearance Robert Simpson, of Missouri, in his last Missouri valley meet, was the individual star of the day, with 194 points. Hoyt, of Grinnell, was second. Simpson put up a wonderful exhibition, with first in the two hurdles, first In the broad jump, second in the hundred. (Continued Jff page 2) COLLEGIANS FIRST AMERICAN FIGHTERS FORM INITIAL DETACHMENT TO CARRY FLAG IN FRANCE Eastern Undergraduates Forsake Am bulance Corps for Active Duty at the Front American college men were the first to tarry the American flag to the bat tle front In France. They were form erly In the ambulance corp, but since 'be outbreak of war between the United States and Germany, have been drilling In preparation for active fight ing. The first American combatant corps 8tarted to the front May 24, according to a newspaper dispatch from French headquarters, under the leadership of Captain E. I. Tinkham and Lieuten ant Scully of Princeton University. Cornell undergraduates chiefly made up the first detachment for field serv ice which left the headquarters for the Aisne battlefield. The stars and tripeg were raised when the detach ment started its march to the front. The fmn were armed with carbines and drove American five-ton motor cars. Other Sections Drilling There are other sections of Amer ican college men drilling, for active service, having forsaken and ambu lance corps. Andover, Dartmouth, Harvard, John Hopkins, Yale, Chicago, nd Williams, all have undergraduates in France who will be among the first to battle for the nation as distinct American organizations. Lieutenant raly. captain of the 1910 Yale football team was among those who were drill ing companies of college men, with bom we Interspersed other Amer icans who were previously engaged In mbulance work. EVELYN CALDWELL IS ELECTED PRESIDENT OF PALLADIAN SOCIETY Evelyn Caldwell, '18, of Lincoln was elected president of Palladian literary society for the first term of the com ing year at the last regular meeting of the society Friday evening. Paul Connor, '18, was chosen vice-president; Jay Buchta, '18, treasurer; Rachel Sutherland, '18, secretary; Verna Buchta. '20, corresponding sec retary; Theda Waterman, '20. program stftretary, and Charles Longhorn, '20, historian. The annual senior program was given at this meeting. The society will Tiold a picnic at Epworth park next Friday evening. A F HAL MESSAGE TO STUDENTS ON WAR ITS RELATION TO UNIVERSITY SUBJECT AT CONVOCATION Four Faculty Men Will Tell Students What Is Expcted of Nebraska At the last Tuesday Convocation of the year, in Memorial hall at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning, three faculty men will speak on the war and its relation to the University. The three speeches will form a parting message to under graduates before they leave for home. Dean O. V. P. Stout of the, college of engineering, Dean Charles Fordyce of the teachers college. Dean E. A. Burnett of the college of agriculture, are the three who will speak to the students. They will summarize the relation of the University the war both as it affects their special lines of work and as it 'affects the instution as a whole. This will be the last gathering of the students at Convocation, w ith the exception of the musical program Thursday morning, for the present semester. The Convocation committee has arranged the four speeches to present in an authoritative manner the problem which has become the most vital of students' interests. It is ex pected that no one who can will miss the Convocation. Yale Students to Erie The Aerial Coast Patrol No. 2, com posed of Yale students, has been or dered by the government to do duty on Lake Erie. The men will be en rolled as individuals, and not as a unit of the naval station. Ex. MEN TAKE TURNS AT PLAYING OFFICER FT. SNELLING PLANS MARCH IN DECORATION DAY PARADE Fort Snelling, Minn., May 24. It u nlanned to give every man in the training camp at Fort Snelling prac- tiP In acting: as captain, lieutenant. sergeant and corporal on various days during his three months in military ex perience at the Minnesota post. The men become non-commlssionea aua commissioned officers in their com pany in alphabetical order, for in stance, the men having "A" names are captains first, then returning to the ranks while others come up. Later they will be corporals, sergeants, lieu tenants. The men in camp will be given In struction in swimming if they desire it. Swimming places abound near the post and water recreation promises to be a big thing as soon as warmer weathf arrives. Recitations are still maintained and the evening study periods are found very convenient. The men may march in the Decora tion Day parade In St. Paul. All are drilling with rifles, bayonets and car tridge belts now. Great stress is laid on aiming and firing instruction. Seven Points On Draft Registration 1. There is only one day for registration, June 5, 1917. 2. Every male resident of the United States who has reached his 21st and has not reached his. 31st birthday must register on the day set, June 5, 1917. The only exceptions are officers and enlisted men of the regular army, the navy, the marine corps, and the national guard and naval militia while in the service of the United States, antf officers in the officers' reserve corps and enlisted men in the enlisted reserve corps while in active service. 3. Rgistration is distinct from Draft. No matter what just claim you have for exemption, you must register. 4. Registration is a public duty. For those not responsive to the sense of this duty, the penalty of imprisonment, not fine, is provided in the Draft Act. 5. Those who through sickness shall be unable to register should cause a representative to apply to the county or city clerk for a copy of the registration card. The clerk will give instructions as to how this card should he filled out. The card should then be mailed by the sick person, or delivered by his agent, to the registrar of his voting precinct. The sick person will enclose a self addressed stamped envelope for the return to him of his registra tion certificate. 6. Any person who expects to be absent from his voting pre cinct on Registration Day should apply as' soon as practicable for a registration card to the county clerk of the county where he may be stopping, or if he is in a city of over 30,000, to the city clerk. The clerk will record the answers on the card and turn it over to the absentee. The absentee should mail this card to the registrar of his home voting precinct so that it will reach that official by Registration Day. A self-addressed stamped envelope should be enclosed with the card to insure the return to the absentee of a registration certificate. 7. Registration booths will be open from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. on Registration Day, June 5, 1917. $500 ANONYMOUS .GIFT TO FUND FRENCH WAR NOW ORPHAN $7,164 TOTAL Nebraska City Sends $500 Sororities Boost Campaign -Reach Public Schools An anonymous donation of $500 to the French orphan fund, received by Max Westerman. treasurer. Thursday, increased the total amount donated to May 24 to $7.1ti4.L'5. The anonymous money was sent to Mr. Westerman through the wife of a professor. This $500 w ith $11 additional will keep seven children for a period of two years. Five hundred eleven dollars was re ceived Saturday from Nebraska City, where Prof. F. M. Fling of the depart ment of European history spoke for the orphan fund May 11. Two of the urinnHnna frnm there were for two years and five of them were for one (Continued on page 3) Editorials For Editor's Note Tke following is the first of a series of editorials by emi nent citizens to be furnished through a committee appointed by the national conference of college newspapers. The editorials will appear simultaneously in all college newspapers in the coun try. By Alexander Meikeljohn, President of Amherst College The members of this college know how I have hated the threat of the coming of this war, , how 1 have shunned every act. every word, which would seem to invite it. But it is here. Those whom we have chosen to make decision for us on such issues have declared that for the sake of our com mon principle and our common life we must fight. What is to be our answer? For you and for me the question is very simple. I am ready to go wher ever I am called. Aud if I am not di rected what to do, I shall look about to eee what I can do. and will try to do it, whatever the cost And I know that every one of you will do the same. I ' trust that no man in this college will rush heedlessly into a place which LIST OF THINGS NEEDED IN WAR INTERCOLLEGIATE INTELLIGENCE BUREAU CLASSIFIES POSITIONS Aviators Badly Needed, Despite Re- port That This Branch of Service Is Filled Prof. C. J. Frankforter of the chem istry department, adjutant for the in tercollegiate intelligence bureau at Ne braska University, received a commu nication from the headquarters at Washington Friday giving a list of urgent government needs at the pres ent time. They include: Mechanicians, qualified as instru ment makers by four years' apprentice ship and two years' experience, wanted in the bureau of standards at salary of $1,000 to $1,400 a year. Five textile experts for service at Pacific coast stations. Qualifications: (a) Two years training in a textile school, or (b) three years' experience (Continued on page 3) College Students another man can fill betted than he. But I am sure that no one among you will cringe or shrink in the face of the duty he sees before him. I advise you that you find, each one of you. something to do something worth doing and that you do it. As students we have two loyalties, the ab stract loyalty to principles to truth, goodness, freedom, beauty, youth, gladness and also the- concrete loy alties to the institutions of which we are members to the family, the church, the school, the state, the hum ankind. And as students we hold our selves forever free to criticise and to understand the Institutions In terms of the principles. That right we will never relinquish. But this does not mean that we have lost our loyalty to the institution. It means that we are trying to serve It by making it Intelli gent. Every man among us loves his nome, bis school, his fellowmen. And when the crisis comes, he will fight for them if need be, fight not with blind fury and passion, not with hatred and bitterness, but as one who Is driven to the last desperate way of trying to do the human worli that must be done. GENEVIEVE LOWREY WILL GO TO CHINA AS Y. W. C. A'. WORKER Genevieve Lowrey, '15, Is one of the 36 secretaries secured by Grace Cop- pock, '05, to help in the Y. V. C. A. work in China, and will go to the Orient next November, it was an nounced Saturday. Miss Lowrey was very active in the University, especial ly in Girls' club work. She was a member of Black Masque. SWEATERS CAUSE SENIORS TROUBLE MAY NOT GET DIPLOMAS IF $100 GOES UNPAID Is Claimed Sweaters Were Voted Foot ball Champions at an Unau thorized Meeting The senior class, with its funds now barely out of the hole, faces a deficit if it must pay for the sweaters of the members of the class football team. A class meeting w ill probably be called during the coming week to act upon the emergency. Girl members of the class, who paid for their own costumes in the Ivy Day festivties, now face the possibility of having to contribute to an assessment to pay for the sweaters of the menj who represented the class in football. The sweaters have been delivered and are be,ing worn by the members of the eleven. May Not Get Diplomas The possibility that members of the class will not be given their diplomas until the bill, amounting to more than a hundred dollars, is paid, is another interesting angle to the muddled sit uation. The trouble came about because the sweaters were voted to the members of the team at a meeting that was not called by the class presMent, and that was mainly attended by the football men. Publicity in The Daily Ne braskan was given the first meeting called for the purpose of discussing the matter of awarding the sweaters. but that meeting was adjourned, by the few students present, to the fol lowing day, when the sweaters were awarded without many of the mem bers of the class knowing about the matter. The senior team won the football championship of the University. The sweaters that were bought by the ath- (Continued nage 4) 2 SPECIAL COURSES IN SUMMER SESSION I ASSOCIATION FOR CONCILIATION OFFERS STUDIES The American association for inter national conciliation, one of the sub divisions of the Carnegie Peace founda tion, has renewed its arrangement of last year, and two special courses have been added to the summer session, South American affairs by Prof C. E. Persinger of the department of Ameri can history and a study of internation al relations by John P. Senning, also of the American history department. In Mr. Senning's course will be in cluded a review of nineteenth centruy diplomacy, with reference to the origin of the present war. Five reci tations a week will be required with fifteen hours of preparation. Three hours' credit is given. Recitation is at 8:30 daily. In his course on South American affairs, Professor Persinger will give a brief study of its history, the relation of Its republics with one another and with the outside world, and a more detailed study of present day South American Institutions. Fif teen hours preparation will be required for the five recitations a week. Three hours credits is given. STUDENT COUNCIL PLAN ADOPTED LIGHT VOTE CAST, ALMOST UNAN IMOUS FOR CONSTITUTION Faculty Senate Ratifies Plan Saturday Morning Election of Members Early in Fall ' By a student vote of 216 to 17 Fri day, and approval of the University senate Saturday morning, the student council became the approved form of government for student life at Ne braska University. The election of tho first student council will be held dur ing the first three weeks of the first semester next fall. The vote on the constitution sub mitted by the charter commission was very light, totalling but 262. Two bal lots were invalidated. The vote was practically unanimous, however, and only twenty-nine of those voting scratched their ticket to vote on the articles of the constitution, submitted separately. Even among those who scratched the ballot, every article carried except the third, providing for a junior and senior membership, 18 voting against this to 6 for it. Because of the 216 votes in favor of the plan as a whole, however, the student council will take form un der the exact provisions submitted to the student body by the commission. The votes that were split were as follows: The Split Votes Article 1. The name, Student Coun cil of the University of Nebraska. For, 25; against, 0. Article 11. Giving the student coun cil control over extra-curricular activi ties. For, 18; against, 6. Article 111. Providing for a council of six junior men, four junior women, one graduate student, four senior men, four senior women, and two non-voting sophomores. For, 8; against, 18. (Continued to Page Four) CO-EDS WHO CAN'T DO FARMING, KNIT UNIVERSITY WOMEN DETER MINED TO HELP Farmers' Wives Don't Want Them Bandage-Making Also to Keep Co-Eds Busy Finding that Nebraska farmers' wives do not want them to help on the farm. University co-eds have made up their minds to knit instead. Those who have not learned this accomplish ment, and who do not expect to right now, will turn their attention to some other form of service. They are all determined, however, to help in seme manner this summer. The department of home economics has reported that those who volun teered to work on the farms without pay have turned their energies to knitting. Recently the department sent up "housewives," consisting of needle and thread, and other necessary articles, to the Nebraska men at Fort Snelling. These and others will devote the rest of their spare time until the term is out and through the summer to knHtlng mufflers and "bracelets" for soldiers. Make Bandages Too The making of bandages is also ex pected to be the summer's work of many co-eds, who have learned from the Red Cross campaign of the "ban dage famine" on the western war front. The stories reaching America that sol diers in the first line trenches were using newspapers, at the risk of blood poisoning, to stop wounds whica If allowed to flow would be fatal, because bandages could not be supplied, are said to be responsible for the bandage campaign.