The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 31, 1925, Image 1

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Daily Nebraskan I
THE
Go To Th
Traek Rally
Today.
3
UNIVERSITY OP NEBRASKA, LINCOLN,
NEBRASKA, TUESDAY, MARCH 31, lUap. "I
VOL. XXIV NO. 116.
UURO DE BOSIS
TO SPEAK HERE
Where Dea Faecisirao
Stand?" Will Be
Subject.
IS INSTRUCTOR AT
ROMAN ACADEMY
Dr. Lauro Do Bosis o tho Royal
Academy of Rome will speak at con
vocation Tuesday, March 31 on
"Whcro Docs Fascisimo Stand."
Prof. Boris Morkovln of Prague Uni
versity will lecture April 2, on "Tho
tlfo and Creative Genius of Slavonic
People." Both lectures will bo given
at tho Temple Theater at 11 a. m.
Prof. Morkoviri will speak to all
Fine Arts students Thursday, April
2, at 3 p. m. at the Temple theater.
Fino Arts students will be excused
from classes to attend tho lecture.
Dr. Lauro De Bosis is exchange
professor for Italy this year, lectur
ing under fhfi auspices of the Italy
American Society. He is a Greek
and Latin scholar of tho younger
generation, a lecturer in the Classical
Department of tho University of
Rome and has published a translation
of Ocdiphus Rex. Ho has lecurcd
extensively in England and Italy and
is making engagements at the most
important colleges and universities in
the United States.
Professor Boris V. Morkovin, who
is to lecture Thursday, is on a speak
fr.g tour of the United States which
began at Boston Museum of tine
Arts and will terminate in tho large
universities of the Pacific coast.
WILL INSTALL NEW
Y. W. C. A. OFFICERS
Agnes Kessler, Former Presi
dent, Vill Lead in Con
ducting Ceremonies.
The installation of the Y. W. C. A.
cabinet for 1325-26 wilt be heltrat
Ellen SmhhHall, fypdnesday it 7
o'clock. Agnes Kessler, the retiring
president, will have charge of the
ceremony. The installation will be
in the form of a caftdie.lighting serv
ice and all women in the University
are invited.
The processional will be led by the
Vesper choir singing, "Love Divine,
All Love Excelling." Tlje old cab
inet and the new will follow the ves
per choir. Agnes Kessler the outgo
ing president will read the scripture
and Doris Trott the retiring vice
president will give a prayer. Miss
Irma Appleby, University Y. W. C. A.
secretary will, give a short talk.
The installation and lighting of the
candles will be followed by. a re
sponse from the new president, Elsie
Gramlich. The prayer and benedic
tion will precede the recessional,
"Hymn of The Lights."
DEADLOCKED OH
BUILDING FUND
Legislature In Wrangle Over
University Appro
priation.
The State Legislature is at present
deadlocked on the question of how
much shall be given to the University
and State Normal schools as a build
ing appropriation for the next bien
niura. The conference committees
of the two houses reported yesterday
that they were unable to come to an
agreement The committee from tho
House refused to give up the plan of
win-year levy ana me oensw cum
mittee refused to assent to it
As a result of the deadlock, the
appropriations bill for State expens
1 es is indefinitely tied BP- Mensben:
of the committee from the House de
clared their' intention of seeing that
the levy was passed if "it took until
tho Fourth of. July."
Lieutenant Oliver
To Lwure in June
Lieutenant M. G. Oliver, assistant
professor of Military Science sad
TscUes, has received order from the
War Department to sag from San
ranebco far tlx PUIippir.se dn June
. Liswtsnaat Ottvsr has been con-
4cfe with .the Mftttary Drtnt
awtfor the past fear
Wley Gild WO!
;om
'.'TBS; BOM m sum nnaV
or iUs cmI Tsar
mm.
TWO APPLY FOR COMMISSIONS
Cadet Officers' Application For
Marina Coiamtiilont Accepted
Tho applications for commissions
as second lieutenants in tho Marino
Corps, of Charle3 Caldwell, '25, Lin
coln, and Roland Eastabrooks, '25,
Lincoln, havo been accepted, accord
ing to word received by tho Military
department. Tho appointments are
conditional to graduation and tho
successful passing of a physical ex
amination. Their appointment was
made possible by tho distlnquished
rating which tho Nebraska R. 0. T. C.
unit has. Caldwell is colonel of tho
R. 0..T. C. regiment and Eastabrooks
is major.
The appointment is for two years.
Tho men will leave in Juno for Chi
cago where they will take their phy
sical examinations. They will then
go to the Marino Corps training sta
tion at Quanticlc, Virginia where
they will train for six months after
which they will bo assigned for duty
at a Marine post or on board ship.
BEAM WILL SPEAK
AT WORLD FORUM
"Athletics for .Everyone"
Subject of Lecture
Wednesday.
Is
Coach E. E. Bearg will talk bo
fore the World Forum on "Athletics
for Everyone" at the Grand Hotel
Wednesday noon. This is one of
Coach Bearg's first appearances bo
fore University students, and ar
rangements are being made for a
large Crowd.
Tickets are on sale now at tho Uni
versity Y. M- C. A. and Y. W. C. A.
offices, and are priced at twenty-fivo
cents until Tuesday night, when they
will he raised io thirty-five cents.
The meeting starts at twelve
o'clock, and will be over in time for
students to make one o'clock classes.
After his speech, Coach Bearg will
answer questions in the open forum
discussion. l
Bearg talked last week to' a group
of Nebraska alumni nt Omaha on the
prospects of the 1925 .football team',
anoTto the Chamber ' of Commerce
here on a similar subject
A Japanese student at the Univer
sity of Ohio has just received his B.
S, degree from the College of Agri
culture and is now working for his
master's degree. When he has at
tained this he intends going back to
Japan to go into the ice cream bus
iness. He says there is a great fu
ture for ice creaia in Japan.
Reporter Tells of Experience at
University Broadcasting Station
"W-F-A-V, the University of Ne
braska, at Lincoln. The next num
ber will be "are the words which
operator R. A. Cushman speaks so
distinctly into the microphone in the
blue-curtained room in the Electri
cal Engineering building every
Thursday evening. Out of the room,
its strained silence broken only Dy
the steady, buzzing hum of the
transmitting set, speed, at the rate
or 186,000 miles a second, the
sounds which' are to be heard the
same moment in Alaska, in Hawaii,
in Mexico and In Havana.
Why, with only an unimpressive
microphone visible beforo tnem,
should the performers feel as much
trepidation as if they were facing an
audience In the Metropolitan Opera
TTnnse. Their only hearers are Mr
Cushman and a few electrical engin
eering students, whose interest lies
only in the thing of tubes and wires
and currents behind tne azure iron
lnn!? But many of them seem as ap
prehensive as If expecting a shower
.n vee-eunies irom vuc
VI fcvv w o
w-iriii of the invisible listeners.
"I want to try my piece over urn
you haven't got it turned on, have
vot" whispers a trembling young
pianist, peering suspiciouny .
dark mass behlad the curtain. An
other player palls r dress into
place and smooths her hair as though
about to face the inspection of an
audience of a thousand.
The ipiskir of the evening clears
1.1. Uu-Aafc. rattles Ms papers;
Hies aheat wHh extreme care that
every word jf hta seeee seaii
I . TUHu. TMM.
"We may hm e move tms, ouj
you stay jss mw j , .
the slar ccta'
. . - - am aiA " M.IIU
oa the fleer, oa wMcfc aer
main as if sjasd attl the end of hsr
,
KsswwaBs, MMM iae k,
MlkttooeipBeftts aUsMiSaT s-
Kre,an
a
To Hold Vesper
Passion Service
Vespers services Tuesday eve
ning in Ellen Smith Hall will bo
in tho form of a special Passion
service. Except for prayer and
tho reading of the Passion by
Frances Weintz, tho program will
consist entirely of music. All Uni
versity women are invited to at
tend. PLAN BANQUET
FOR BURNETT
Expect 500 People at Dinner
Chancellor Avery to
Speak.
ARRANGEMENTS BEING
MADE BY ALPHA ZETAS
University students, faculty mem
bers and the public of Lincoln will
give a banquet Thursday evening in
honor of Dean E. A. Burnett of the
Agricultural College, who has served
this University more than twenty
five years.
"' Arrangements for the banquet are
being made by Alpha Zeta, honorary
agricultural fraternity, with other
student and faculty groups. It is ex
pected that five hundred will bo pres
ent at the banquet which is to be
held in the hall of the Engineering
building on the agricultural campus.
Samuel R, McKclvie will be toast
master and speakers will be: Prof.
W. W. Burr, Chancellor Samuel Av
ery, Frank Thompson, E-Regent E.
P. Brown, Richard Parsons, and
Mary Bailey.
Dean Burnett received his first
degree from the Michigan Agricul
tural College, and came to Nebraska
in 1899 as instructor in animal hus
bandry. He was made director of
the Experiment Station in 1903 and
dean of the college in 1909, which
position he has occupied since then.
The banquet this year is taking the
place of the annual spring frolic and
is to get Lincoln people better ac
quainted with Dean Burnett. Tick
ets may bo secured from students Of
the college or from the finance office
on the Ag campus.
A swimming fraternity ,has been
installed at K. S. A. C. Only, .mem
bers of the American Red Cross Life
Saving corps are eligible to join.
Alpha Sigma Chi, as it is named,
aims to give instruction in coaching
and officiating at swimming meets
and to create more interest in college
swimming.
scant half dozen feet away. At the
end of each suite they steal forth
from behind the curtains to pull the
piano a little to the right or to shove
the microphone slightly to the left
"W-F-A-V; W as in Washington,
F as in Florida, A as in Alabama, V
as in Vermont," enunciates Opera
tor Cushman. "The next number will
be ." And the buzzing, and the
silence, and the music go on.
The University broadcasting sta
tion uses a magnetic type of micro
phone, which runs into six stages of
amplification. When the radio tele
phone transmitting set is to be put
into operation, so high is the volt
age of electricity that the button
which releases it is of unusual length
to prevent shock to the operator. The
modulator tube, the out put of the
master oscillator, produces the main
radio waves. Three large, glowing.
red-hot tubes, called power amplifi
ers, amplify the waves produced by
the oscillator. A power of 600
watts is fed to the antennae and the
counterpoise system, which sends
forth the sounds through the air,
with the velocity of light
A number of meters are necessary
for observation to insure the effl
clent action of the transmitter. A
wave meter, set to the WFAV wave
length, prevent the station from
transgressing upon other wave
lengths. A wave meter, set to the
WFAV wave length, prevents the
station; from transgressing upon other
wave lengths.
' Part of the "equipment of the. set,
is kept, for the sake of safety, est
the second ikor of the bmiWiavlri Seow k Deada.
Here a molot geatstr aet eayaBM
cower for ti "three lerg tabes aa4
the twe jisd tabes. FtifeM
composed of sateU eeeeer bars, a$
ford
MceiMry totomieUoa
to ',
can-wit.
Thecatatioa
two lines of re
Oiahds -M
sort i Patrol wkes,
tic Armory,
. ' u'ili:: . t-i . J OA
Urge iectare nxttsu steennca,
?8faaar eetaatorj m
M'ceiapw er eltr ate
Bltt1ea. .aeBt Vr WepheM lata
13
ANNOUNCE NAMES
OF TRACK TEAM
Twenty-two Men Chosen By
Schulte to Go to Stan
ford Meet.
EXPECT WEIR AND LOCKE
TO STAR IN THEIR EVENTS
Twenty-two trackstcrs will entrain
this evening at 6 o'clock over tho
Burlington for , Palo Alto, California,
whero they will meet Lcland Stan
ford, Jr., University in an intersec-
tional track meet next Saturday.
Final selection of the men to makq
the long trip was made late yester
day afternoon, and twenty-two of
Nebraska's best track men were pick
ed to meet Stanford. The Cardinals,
long in training for the contest, aro
preparing for a hard' battle, and rec
ords are expected to drop when tho
Missouri Valley Indoor champions
meet the winntrs over University of
Southern California.
Captain Everett Crites, who was
unable to ran in the Missouri Valley
meet because of a pulled muscle, will
again bo in the lineup and will lead
tho Huskers, running in the 440-yard
dash.
Ed Weir, winner of both hurdle
events at Kansas City a week ago,
will be entered in the high and low
hurdles, and the broad jump. The
football captain is expected to pull
down some good time in his hurdles.
Roland Locke wilt pit his heels
against Stanford in the 100-yard
dash, the 220-yard dash, and the 220
yard hurdler Locke won easily in
the 100-yard dash at 'the Missouri
Valley meet, and finished close be
hind Weir in the low hurdles.
Jimmy Lewis, cross-country captain-elect,
will run in the mile and
half-mile. Lewis is remembered in
Valley circles by his; sensational win
in the half-milo at the indoor meet
Frank Daily will be a running
mato for Locke in the 100-yard dash,
the 220-yard dash, and the 220-yard
low hurdles. Daily was a member of
the Husker relay team which drew
first honors in the Valley meet,,
William Hein wjll onler in the
yard "dash and the 220-yard dash. He
is counted on to furnish good compe
tition for his running mates, Locke
and Daily.
Everett Scherrick is another track-
ster who competed in the Missouri
Valley meet and who will line up "withiart5cle however, will stand upon its
the Stanford men next Saturday,
Ho
runs the 440-yard dash.
In the distances, Coach Henry F.
Schulte has Lewis, Houderscheldt,
Ross, Cohen, Zimmerman, Lawson,
Beckord, and Hays. Houderscheldt,
will enter the half-mile, Ross will run
the mile and two-mile, Cohen the mile
and two-mile, Zimmerman the two
mile, Dawson the two-mile, Beckord
the half-mile, and Hays the mile and
two-mile. Beckord will also run the
Don Reese, hurdler, will compete
in the high and low hurdles, and will fjr th(J ncwspapcrs 0f Lincoln, Oma
run the quarter mile. Reese comes d towM throughout the state
j ,, ." ,' "
show csnecial delight in flashing a
set of shiny spikes to the Stanford
men.
"Choppy" Rhodes, Frank Wirsig,
and "Duke" Gleason will lead Ne
braska's field entries. Rhodes, the
all- around man who finished only
a few points behind the world's cham
pion at the Illinois Relays, will enter
the pole vault and the high and broad
jumps.
Wirsig will be another sky-scraper,
and will do a little broad-jumping jn
addition. Wirsig is the man who as
sured Nebraska of the Missouri Val
ley meet by placing in the polo vault.
(Continued on Page'Four.)
STUDENT TO GIVE RECITAL
Thelraa Sexton Will be Auiited by
Herbert Sckraldt
Thelma Sexton, student pf the
University School of Music, will give
a piano recital at the Temple Thea
ter, Taesday, evening, March 31. She
will be assisted by Herbert Schmidt
The program:
Beethoven Concerto, C minor.
Schumann Dee Abends: Fable.
Cboain Impromptu, F sharp Ma
jor.
L&rt Valse Impromptu.
Debissy Golliwog's Cake Walk;
Scriihine-ltude "in A flat
Careen ter Polonaiee Amerieaae.
First Battalion
i ' To Fark Totey
Tile first BattaHoa of the
O. t . ;C. Tegimwit, eoipesed
of
eeapeaiM A, B, C, mid D,
I 'loek. AM eadeti frMVm
taliea an xeaalrea t be ptxsai
i i
Fossler Speaks on
English Language
Prof. Laurenco Fossler, of the
department of foreign languages,
spoke to the evening section of the
Freshman Lecture class last night
on "Sources of tho English Lang
uage." He will repeat tho address
this morning to tho second section
of tho class.
PLAN ADDITION
TO NEBRASKAN
Literary Section Will Be Issued
Once a Month for Re
mainder of Year.
WANT POEMS, ESSAYS
AND SKETCHES SOON
The first .of three literary supple
ments to The Daily Nebraskan will
be issued about April IB. It is plan
ned to make this section a permanent
institution, and tho editors of the
publication ask for contributions
from students.
The addition is to be a four-page,
magazine-size supplement, and will
be edited by the editor and manag
ing editor of The Nebraskan. Only
three issues will bo published this
year, but it will be published next
year if it proves a success. The other
numbers will come out about May 15
and at Commencement.
This is the first tune that such a
venture has been made by The Ne
braskan. The editors want contribu
tions in the form of essays, poems,
and sketches, turned in at the office
or mailed to reach the editor before
Friday noon, April 10. All mana
scripts must be typewritten, double-
spaced on one side of regular manu
script paper. v
"The supplement will not be a
vaWpIo for the views of any one
group," declares one of the editors.
"Tho object is to make it interesting
to read, and to this end", any point
e inrrr mltAfYio, ninnrtftT nr lin-
10Q-Lrthbd jj be printed if it is well
expressed. There is no limit as to
length, although in view of the lim
ited size of the paper, it is possibly
best to mako essays as concise as
is compatible with necessary develop
ment of the subject matter. Each
merits in comparison with the rest
of the material submitted."
WILL ADVERTISE ROUND-UP
Gertrude Tomton Start Work
Publicity Chairman
As
Gertrude Tomson, '24, took up her
duties yesterday as publicity chair-
nn tViio snrinc'ft nnnuall Alumni
- . SuA write stories
boosting the Round-up,
Miss Tomson is a member of tno
society staff of the Nebraska State
Journal. Before her graduation
from the University of Nebraska she
was president of Black Masque
chapter of Mortarboard and a mem
ber of Phi Omega Pi.
Competitive Drill
To Be Held May 29
The Annual Competitive Drill will
be held May 29. At this "compet"
the best drilled cadet in the unit is
chosen as well as the best drilled
company. The final arrangements
for the drill are being completed
and will be announced by the Mili
tary Department at an early date.
Oklahoma Students Find that Those
Who Live in Cities Get Best Graded
Also Discover that Those Com
ing from Southwest Part of
State Rate Higher.
The best students at Oklahoma A.
St, H. College at Stillwater are those
who live in the southwest part of the
state and live in the towns. This is
taeureaelt of Investigation by three
senior students ia rural sociology,
The student who investigated the
! of staaeataaa, pertaining to
sJm part of the state, they were from
fond that th staeente from the
rtliwt' Wt of the state Made an
vivace wriM U T4.T4 per cent dur-
Ung the rs qaartw; tao from the
oatheMt aeetiea 7,71; students
from the aerthweat asade 7.8B;
Ucheiit grade, trmlmwt 80.M
til sooAwwt part of the state, how-
ever, sheared the Makes pareeatage
U, S. JOBS OPEN FOR AGS
Department of Agriculture As I
Bounces Vacanciet
Nine vacancies in the Department
of Agriculture havo boon announced
by the United States Civil Service
Commission to be open to competi
tive examinations. All applicants
must have been graduated from a
college1 or university of recognized
standing, or bo senior students. Re
ceipt of applications for the positions
will close May 9.
The list of vacancies follow: Jun-
ior Agronomist, Junior Animal Hus
bandman, Junior Botanist Junior
Horticulturist, Junior Ncmatologist,
Junior Pathologist, Junior Physiolo
gist, Junior Pomologist, Junior Poul
try Husbandman.
Competitors will bo rated on prac
tical questions, education, and a the
sis. Full information and application
blanks may be obtained from the
United States Civil Service Commis
sion, Washington, D. C.
WILL ANNOUNCE HEW
P. B. K'S. THURSDAY
Prof. Congdoh Will Name New
Members at University
Convocation.
Students elected to Phi Beta Kap
pa will be announced Thursday,
Apirl 2, at the University convoca
tion at the Temple Theater at 11
o'clock. The convocation speaker
will be Prof. Boris V. Morkovin of
Prague University.
Announcement of tho new mem
bers will be made by Prof. Allan R.
Congdon, professor of Pedagogy of
Mathematics, and secretary of the
Nebraska chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.
Other announcements concerning the
initiation, banquet and ' Phi Beta
Knppa speaker will be made shortly.
NOMINATE OFFICERS
.
FOR "JUNIOR LEAGUE
Election Will Be Held At
O'clock Wednedy
In Temple.
Nominations for the officers of
the Junior League of Women Voters
for the coming year were made Mon
day night There will be an elec
tion of officers at 5 o'clock Wedncs
day, in room 152 of the Temple. All
those who have attended at least one
of the council or general meetings
will have the privilege of voting.
Spring election has been adopted
by the League to enable the new of
ficers to have more time to plan with
the State League, and to work out an
interesting and definite program for
the coming year.
Nominations for officers are as
follows:
President Mabel Utter, '27, Long
Island, Kansas; Evelyn Schellak, '26,
Lincoln.
Vice-president Ida Fiader, '2G,
Lincoln; Grace Evans, '28, Lincoln,
Secretary Mary Louiso Freeman
'28, Lincoln; Ruth Clendenin, '28,
Lincoln.
Treasurer Gwendolyn Templin,
'20, Palmar; Alice Olmstead, '27,
Roca.
Study of animal and vegetable life,
.started in Lake Men Dota twenty
years ago by Dr. E. A. Birge, of the
University of Wisconsin, has since
been extended to 200 Wisconsin
lakes.
Wisconsin high school students last
year wrote about 1,000 essays for the
contest conducted by the American!
Chemical society.
enty, while the northeast sectios
showed the lowest percentage of, stul
dents who made less than seventy.
A second student made the discou
ery that the grades of students wh
came from the farm averaged 73.8
per cent, while the average of thesj
from the towns and cities' was 77.01
A higher percentage of town an)
city men secured honorable dii
charges from the, institution than d:
farm men and women.
The third stvdeat who did inveel
gatioa to find eat facta ahomt ti
relative RMirita, ef cities aad eeaatj
diseovered jthat aly one-haK of t
farm earollsheot were chajeh me
ben. while two-ttfcds ef aft the ei
stndente were memaers .ef i
harea. TIm aw emH ef Mmm ird
the etty wlw UUd;.ehwrTe
ex aay easnar
eeat ef Uw d&f
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