The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 21, 1923, Image 1

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    1 he Daily Nebraskan
VOL. XXII-NO. 96.
TO ELECT MAY
QUEEN FOR IVY
DAY WEDNESDAY
Senior Girls Will Vote for Co-ed
to Fill Honor Position on
Fete Day this
Spring.
CAST VOTES IN LIBRARY
Election Will Be in Charge yf
Mortarboards Kept Secret
Until Crowning
May 1.
The May Queen, to be crowned Ivy
Day, which falls this year onJMay 31.1
will be elected by the girls of the
senior class Wednesday. This elec
tion will be under the auspices of
the members or Mortar Hoard, senior
girls honorary organization and will
be held 1 the Library, from 9 to 6.
All senior girls may vote.
A list of the girls who are eligible
for the honor will be posted in the
Library, and no nominations will he
made in advance. It is a tradition
that there shall be no electioneering.
The May Queen is crowned in an
outdoor theatre which is built in the
quadrangle on the city campus. She
is attended by a maid of honor, the
senior girl who received the next
highest number of votes. The Identity
of both of these girls is kept secret
until the morning of the coronation.
Two maids of honor are chosen
from each of the four classes. These
girls precede the Queen on the way
to the coronation. A pageant is usu
ally staged, and the Ivy Pay ad
dress is delivered before the newly
1 1 owned sovereign.
The Ivy Day orator, elected Tues
day by members of the senior class,
delivers his address after the corona
tion.
The president of the senior class,
escorted by the president of the junior
class, plants the historic ivy at the
side of Administration hall. This is
alo a part of the Ivy Day exercises.
TIME FOB MILITARY
Number of Company Photo
graphs Already Taken
Saturday Is Last
Day.
Thotographs of military organiza
tions will be taken the remainder of
this week. The companies not sched
uled have already been snapped. All
cadet officers are required to appear
for these pictures in full uniform. In
front of Nebraska hall at the time
li.r their groups.
The schedule of photographs for
the remainder of this week follows:
Wednesday, February 21.
Cadet Officers, 3:00.
Pershing Rifles. 3:10.
Staff Picture, 3:20.
Nebraska Rifle Team. 3:30.
Army Non-Comniissioned Officers.
3:40.
Company "F 3:50.
Company "G 4.00.
Thursday, February 22. .
Company "H", 9:50 a. m.
Friday, February 23 -
Company "I". 3:50.
Company "K". 4:00.
Girls Rifle Team, 4:10.
- Saturday. February
Company 'L", 9:50.
Company "M", 10:00.
24.
The Nebraska Museum has just
received from J. L. Walter, U. of X.
'23, a stingaree taught in the Gulf of
Mexico. The 6ting of these fish is
greatly dreaded.
A Lenten Thought
for Every Day
The Day Returns.
The day returns and brings us the
letty round of Irritating concerns
and duties. Help as to play the man!
IMp us to perform them with laugh
ter and kind faces. Let cheerfulness
abound with Industry. Give us to
go blithely on our business all this
day. Bring ns to our resting beds
weary and content, and nndisbonored.
and grant us in the end the gift of
sleep. Amen.
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
Corsages Not to
He Sent for Pan
Hellenic Party
At n meeting of the fraternities
which will be represented nt the Pan
Hellenic formal party at the Auditor
ium next' Friday night, action wan
taken to endorse the movement that
no flowers he Kent to co-eds on the
occasion of this Greek formal. Un
certainty as to this part of the plana
was the reason for the formal an
nouncement. Additional calls for tickets should
he made today to any mem her of
Kosmet Kluh.
EXTENSION OF TIME
University Investigating Com
mittee Will Work Until
March 20 Looking
into Affairs.
The house committee that is in
vestigatlng university affairs report
ed Tuesday morning that another
month is necessary to finish the work
upon which it is engaged, and further
time until March 20 was granted.
The committee says that it is nee
essary to take up one department at
a time, and that each time it gets
some new lead that necessitated in
vestigation elsewhere. The partial re
port made assures the house that the
results so far are of vital importance
both to the uuiversity and the people.
The people set out these facts:
"Your committee has proceeded to
investigate the University of Ne
braska entirely in the spirit of the
resolution adopted by this body.
"You "will readily appreciate tlie
impossibility of your committee inves
tigating" all departments at o:i''e. and
that your committee must proceed In
this investigation by department"
separately.
"On the invitation of the head t i
the department of soil survey and con
servation of resources of the univer
sity, your committee with the assist
ance of an expert accountant pio
ceeded to investigate" this department
in the matter of expenditures. This
i one department maintains seven state
automobiles at the present time. A
-hese expenditures were being in
vestigated suggestions came irom
some unknown source to your com
mittee lhat their investigation he di
rected into the record of the blue sky
department to ascertain the policies
of the department of soil survey and
conservation relative to various com
mercial stock selling activities. Thc
department of soil survey and con
servation appears to be overlook !
by law to the bureau of securities.
Your committee has carried theli
investigation into the bureau of se
curities. The disclosures made in this
direction were from them bcgium::
of such a highly important natur-
that your committee felt impelled to
follow out these developments to
their reasonable and loeical cunclu
sions.
"Limited time has not permittJ
your committee to, in any degree
complete its work.
"Your committee believes it to be.
the spirit and purpose of this investi
gation to look into the financial af
fairs and policies of the university
and not any one department only.
"Your committee has been working
with a determination that their in
vesication shall not be diverted to
any one maj or department, ar i
your committee has reasons to be
lieve that if they are given the op
portunities of longer time to direc'
the course into other departments o.'
the university that many additional
and important facts can be secured
and presented to you for your judg
ment and information.
"Your committee deeply appreciated
the purposes and responsibilities o
this Investigation and assures you
that the results of their efforts and
labors thus far are of vital import
ance both to the university and to
the state of Nebraska.
"Your committee earnestly and re
spectfully petitions you to be privi
leged to lay before this body aeoni
plete report of the findings of a com
plete investigation rather than a par
tial report of any one department
"Your committee desires also to
call the attention of the house to the
fact that sickness of the various
members of your committee has very
seriously interferred with and delayed
this Investigation. On the foregoing
representations and statement of fact,
your committee I'ose respectfully
ask to te continued until March 20."
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1923
DEBATE LEAGUE
ORGANIZED BY
THREE STATES
Nebraska, Iowa and South Da
kota Form Triangular Inter-college
Debating
League.
PROF; FOGG IN CHARGE
'Shall United States Enter
League of Nations" Will
lie Subject for
Discussion.
A Nebinskn-lowa-South Dakota tri
angular debating league has been
formed and contests will be held at
Lincoln, Iowa City, and Vermillion
April 12 or 13, according to anuoune
ment by Prof. M. M. Fogg. Iowa,
which earlier in the year said it
would have to omit its league en
gagement this spring, has recenily
seen its way to keepiug it.
"Shall the United States enter the
League of Nations?" is the question
which a Nebraska negative team will
discuss with Iowa at Lincoln aud an
normative team with South Dakota
M Yermilhcn.
The preliminary debate to select
members of Nebraska Interco'legiaU
teams and seminary members will be
held the first day of next week. Each
candidate is requested to call at Uni
versity hall 112 and fill out the bio
graphical information blank and class
schedule and indicate the side he pre
fers to maintain in the try-out de
bate. This debate is open as usual
to all students in good standing.
Each contestant will probably be
given ten minutes in which to pre
sent to a faculty-alumni committe0
evidence as to his ability in direct ar
gument and in refutation.
Commevcia! Club
Meets Thursday
The University Commercial club
will hold a meeting Thursday, a'. 11
at S. S. 303. Mr. Selleck. president
cf the Lincoln State Bank, will ad
dress the club. Mr. Selleck has re
cently returned from a trip to Europe
and will talk on the reconstruction
of Kurope since the war He has
carefully studied the conditions oi"
Europe and has personally met and
talked with many of the leaders there.
This will be the first of the regular
talks by prominent business men oi
Lincoln and the state which have
been arranged for the second semester.
Activities of Individual Winners
of Cornhasker Contest Announced
Tie activities of the ten girls w.r
ranked highest in the "representative
Nebraskan" conducted by the Corn
husker are listed below in order that
students may know what has qualified
them for the home which they have
won. The highest four of these ten w ill
have their pictures placed in a spe
cial section of the 1923 Cornhusker.
The alphabetical list from which the
Ignored four will be chosen folows:
Adelheit Dettmau.
Belle Farman.
Josephine Gund.
Mildred Hullinger.
Valora Hullinger.
Lucille Johnson.
Hope Ross.
Bern ice Scoville.
Margaret Stidworthy.
Dorothy Williams.
Adelheit Dettman is a student in
the Arts and Science College, and
is a candidate for an A. B. degree
She is majoring in zoology. She has
been a member of soccer, hockey,
baseball, basketball, and track teams,
wai captain of a basketball team in
1920 and has won an "N" sweater
Miss Dettman had served on six school
committees among which are alumnae
week. Sherwood Eddy, and L'niversitj
Night committees. She is a member
of Mortarboa-d, Vestals, T. W. C. A
cabinet, and the Nu-Meds, and the
Industrial Research club. She is a
member of Sigma Kappa.
Belle Farm an is in the Arts and
Science College- and is majoring in
English. She wil receive an A. B.
degree. She has served as reporter,
society editor, associate editor, man
agin editor, and editor of the Daily
Nebraskan. She is a member of Theta
DR. HARRISON
TO SPEAK AT
CONVOCATION
Graduated from Nebraska in
1905. and in Missionary Ser
vice for Fourteen
Years.
TO BE LAST VISIT HERE
Will Address Zoology Seminary
and Pre-Medic Society at
Special Meetings
Today.
s Dr. Paul Harrison, medical mission
ary from Arabia, and graduate of the
University of Nebraska, will speak
on "The Situation in the Near East"
at special convocation this morning
at 11 o'clock in the Temple. Today
is the second and last of his visit to
Lincoln.
Dr. Harrison speaks to the Zoology
Seminar in Bessey hall at 5, and to
pre-medic students at a dinner at the
Grand hotel at 6 o'clock today. He
has been a medical missionary at
Behrein, Arabia, for the past fourteen
years, having been graduated from
the University of Nebraska in 100"
and from Johns Hopkins in 1009. He
will be in this country until the sum
mer of 1924 and he is at present
traveling secretary for the Student
Volunteers.
The conversion of Arabs to Chris'
' tianity is difficult principally because
they are very well satisfied with Mo
hammedanism, Dr. Harrison said U
University student at a luncheon at
the Grand hotel yesterday at nooi
An Arab experiences no spiritual long
ings which cannot be appeased by Mo
hammedanism.
The Arab conception of God is tha:
of an all-powerful ruler who doesu
interest himself with the personal
morality or ethics of his worshippers,
but requires them to acknowledge and
affirm his omnipotence. As long as
an Arab- does this, he is supremely
self-satisfied, and although he may be
in rags and with only a hazy idea as
to where his next meal is coming
from, he regards no one as his sn
perior, said the doctor.
The missionary in Arabia doesn't
try to make Baptists, Presbyterian.-,
or what not of the Bedouins, but en
deavors to teach them the skelets"
teachings of Christ himself, stripped
of unimportant theological baggage
and doctrinal impediments. Dr. Mar
rison explains. The enlightened mis
sionary is content if the Arabs accept
the essential points of the Christia
belief and adapt them to fit the'
individual needs. The result woulr
(Continued on Page Four).
Sisma Phi. honorary journalistic .so
ciety, and Chi Delta Phi, honorar
literary society. She is a member oi
W. A. A., and has served on women's
atletic teams. She has been active
In Y. W. C. A. work and is a mem
ber of the staff. During her senic:
year she was president of Silver Ser
pent. Miss Farman is a Nember o!
Vestals and of Mortarboard. She is
afiliated with Gamma Phi Beta.
.TosepMijo Gund is also a student in
the Arts and Science College and will
receive an A. B. degree. Her major
is French. She has participated in
athletics and is a member of W. A. A.
She has served on 1923 Cornhusker
staff. She is a member of Gamma
Phi Beta.
Mildred Hullinger, in the Teachers'
College, is majoring in kindergarten
primary education. She played on the
freshman soccer team, and last year
was on the vesper staff of the Uni
versity Y. W. C. A. She is a mem
ber of Mortarboard. Alpha Omicron
Pi, the Lyceum Board, and is the pres
ident of the Senior Advisory Board.
She is president of the Kindergarten
club and of Teachers' College honor
society. She was also a member of
Silver Serpent.
Valora Hullinger is in Teachers'
College, with a major in English. She
reported on The Daily Nebraskan
and has worked on the art staffs of
Awgwan and the Cornhusker. She
has been a member of the cabinet
of the Y. W. C. A, for the last two
years. She served on the all-University
party committe in her Junior
year and was point chairman of the
all-University carnival committee this
(Continued on Page Four.)
Silver Serpents
Will Sell Candy
in Social Science
The members of Silver xSerpent,
Junior girl's honorary society, will
hold a candy sale in Social Science
Building, from 9 to 5 o'clock, today.
This sale of homemade candy and
stuffed dates Is held the second
Wednesday of every month In the
same building. The Serpents are us
ing this means of paying off their
pledge to the Memorial Stadium.
DH. HIDE SPEAKS
TO LECTURE GROUP
Science of Psychology Is Ex
plained to Freshmen of
Arts and Science
College.
The science of psychology was ex
Dlained to the freshmen of the Col
lege of Arts and Sciences, Monday
evening and Tuesday morning, by
Dr. Winifred Hyde, professor of psy
chology. The nature of the work in
the study of psychology was explained
and some experiments wcro pel
formed by Dr. Hyde to show the prac
tical application of psychological
principles.
"Psychologists are interested in
human beings. They would like to
find out some of the laws that gov
ern human behaviour," declared Dr.
Hyde. She pointed out that these
laws were discovered by studying the
mechanism through which the consci
ousness works.
Dr. Hyde explained that the first
thing studied in psychology is the
five senses, sound, sight, touch,
smell, and taste. Dr. Hyde then per
formed several experiments to show
some of the laws that govern the ex
ercise of these senses. The human
memory, the power of imagination
and of association are also analyzed
in psychology. Dr. Hyde conducted
some experiments to show how these
mental processes are studied by psy
chologists. CHEMICAL FRATERNiTY
SPONSORING LECTURES
Series of Lectures to Be Given
as Vital Force to Our
Everyday Life.
Alpha Chi Sigma, honorary che:
ical fraternity, is inaugurating a sci
ies of lectures on chemistry as a
vitnl force in our everyday life. The
lectures will take place once every
two weeks and will he given in the
main lecture hall of ihe Chemistry
building. The first one will be given
next Thursday at 5 o'clock by Tr
F. W. Upson, the head of the chem
istry department, on the Field of Or
ganic Chemistry
"The purpose of the lectures is
to show the one who is not a student
of chemistry that it is not merely a
study of test tubes and abstract prin
cipals, but that it is vitally connected
with our commercial and industrial
life," said Lemont Kier, a member of
Alpha Chi Sigma. Various business
and professional men of Lincoln will
tell how chemistry is used in their
lines. Prof. C. J. Frank forter. of the
chemistry department, will also be
one of the speakers.
Officers Elected
for Omaha Club
The second semester election of of
ficers for the Omaha club was held
Thursday evening, February 15 at
the Grand hotel. The officers elect
ed were: Ray FTielps, president; Irma
Wiltse, vice president; Arvilla John
son, secretary; Elmer Gruenig, treas
urer. The new officers will assume
their duties at the next meeting
which will be held March 22. Forty
members were present at the dinner.
Dr. Condra entertained with slides
of the University past and present
Alice Humbert gave a reading from
"Madam Butterfly" and Hart Jenki
sang a number of humorous selec
tions. The club decided to sponsor
a mixer to be held the first week
end after spring vacation. There wil'
be a meeting of the committee In
charge of the party at Social Sci
ence 101 Monday afternoon, Febru
ary 26.
SMALL NUMBER
OF VOTES WERE
CAST YESTERDAY
Students Show Little Interest in
Mid-year Election Con
testants Close in
Race.
STRIMPLE IS ELECTED
Seniors Elect Gairdner, Peterson
Heads Juniors and Forest
Brown Sopho
mores. ELECTION RETURNS
Ivy Day Orator.
Cecil C. Strimple 83
Crvln B. Gaston 73
Ccwey Eurham 26
Senior President.
Tudor Gairdner 125
Guy Hyatt 71
Senior Member Publication Board.
Jack Whitten 143
Norman Cramb 68
Junior President.
Carl J. Peterson 130
Dietrich Dlerks 83
Junior Member Publicaticn Board.
Charles F. Sperry 78
Roland Eastabrooks 65
Sophomore President.
Forest Brown - 98
Sophomore Member Publication
Board.
Leo Black.
Freshman President.
John Welpton.
Class elections for the second se
mester were featured by the absence
of campaigning, and politics, so no
ticeable in former years. The ma
jorities in the main, were large. The
greatest excitement came in the
votes for Ivy Day orator, where the
difference in the votes between the
victor and the runner-up was six
teen. Andy Gump received two
votes for this important office.
Crc 1 C. Strimple. wno won the
position of Ivy Day orator, is a sen
ior in the College of Law. He was
elected by the jpenior ."haws from
six members of their class who filed
for the office. He is a member of
Phi Alpha Delta, and Delta Sigma
Rho. honorary debating fraternity.
He was on the Varsity debating
team in 1920.
Tudor Gairdner. 'president of the
senior class for the second semester
as a result of the elections, is a
member of Sigma Nu.Vikin.cs. Iron
Sphinx, Pershing Rifles, and the I
ten'raternity Council. He was vice
president of the senior class the first
semester.
Jack Whitten. who is the senior
member of the Publication Board for
next year, is a member of Beta
Theta Pi. and Phi Delta Phi.
Carl J. Peterson, who was elected
president of the junior class for the
.-econd semester, is a member of Pi
Ki.ppa Phi. and has played center on
the Varsity football team for the last
two years.
Charles F. Sperry, who won by a
margin of thirteen votes over Roland
Eastabrooks for the position" of jun
ior member of the Publication
Board for next year, Is a member of
Phi Kappa Psi. and has worked on
the staffs of the Daily Nebraskan
and the Awgwan.
In the freshman class there was
only one candidate for each office.
Leo Black will be the sophomore mem
ber of next year's Publication Board
and John Welpton will pilot the fresh
man class through its second semes
ter in the University.
Laws Elect Officers
for Second Semester
Class elections were held in the
law school Tuesday. In the senior
class only one office was filled, Har
old Repiartte being elected president.
Two offices were filled in the Junior
'iass. Verne Lewellen being elected
president, and Felicisisimo Paguio
sergeant-at-anns. , Robert Patterson
was elected president of the fresh
mar class; David Simmons, vice pres
ident; Otto Place, secretary, ard D.
B. Anderson serjeant-at-arms.
The American Council on Educa
tion announces several graduate schol
arships and fellowships in the French
universities of Bordeaux, Lyons,
Straasbourg, and Toulonse. These are
open to both men -and women. In
formation can be obtained from the
Council, 25 Jackson Place, Washing
ton, D. C.