The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 05, 1926, Image 1

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    The Daily Nebraskan
VOL. XXV. NO. 139.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1926.
PRICE 5 CENTS
ENGINEERS TO
STAGE PARADE
AT NOON TODAY
Seven Floats Will Parade
Down O Street From Ninth
To Eighteenth Street
BAND WILL BE IN LEAD
All Department! Of Engineering Col
lege Will Be Represented by a
Characteristic Display
Seven floats led by the university
band will parade down O street from
ninth to eighteenth at 12 o'clock
noon today. Each department of the
Engineering College, and also the
Geolofry department will be repre
sented with a display characteristic
, of the work done there. Four en
gineering students dressed as clowns
will also be a feature of the parade.
Don Hannon is inr charge. v
The civil engineering float will con
sist of a surveying display. Various
types of instruments and apparatus
used in surveying work will be
mounted in position for taking read
ings. Posters giving descriptions of
the different instruments will be
placed on the side.
For the agricultural engineer's dis
play a machine will be mounted on a
truck into which paper will be fed in
large sheets and out of which corifet
ti will be blown in large clouds onto
the streets.
Will Have Electrical Locomotive
The electrical engineers will be re
presented by a large electric locomo
tive to be built around an automobile
which will provide the motive power,
The locomotive will be of the latest
design and will be true in all out
ward appearances to tne most power
ful in use today.
The float to be shown by the arch
itectural engineers will be a view of
b modern, large city skyline. Models
' i J L!tj: Ml t- -
oi various notea . puiiuings win uc
shown and in the center will be a
model of the large steel framework
necessary for sky scrapers of today.
The Chemical engineers will show
apparatus for a complete coal tar
distillery. The many by-products
and synthetic compounds will all be
shown in the process of preparation.
The apparatus used for making dyes,
artificial silk, fertilizers, explosives,
celluloid, bakelite and other products
will be on exhibit in order that the
manufacture of these things may be
more clearly shown.
Geologist Will Have a Float
The geology float will consist of
signs and pictures giving tumorous
comments on experiences encounter
ed by geologists.
The mechanical engineers will have
a large model of the world mounted
o as to turn around slowly while the
parade is in progress. Apparatus and
igns will be user! to show the many
different parts of the world in which
mechanical engineering plays a ma
jor part
The parade will assemble on tenth
street west of the mechanical engin
eering building at 11:30 today. This
event is given annually in order to
advertise Engineers' Night at which
time all the engineering buildings
will be opened for inspection by the
public. Engineers' Night this year
will be held the evening of Thursday,
May 6. The laboratories will be open
from 7 until 11 o'clock. Over six
thousand people are expected to at
tend the event this year.
CHEMICAL SOCIETY TO MEET
Dr. Parsont Will Speak on "Chem
'try in Bacteriological Science"
The one hundred and twenty-seventh
meeting of the Nebraska Sec
tion of the American Chemical So
ciety will be held Wednesday, May
B. at eight o'clock, in Room 208, in
Chemistry Hall. This is the last
feting of the year.
Dr. L. B. Parsons, In charge of
the Research Laboratory of the Cud
hy Packing Company, Omaha, Nebr.,
will speak on "Chemistry in Bacteri
ological Science."
Dr. Parsons completed his work
for the Doctor's degree at the Uni
versity of Wisconsin. He is st pres
ent the Chairman of the Omaha Sec
tion of the Society. The meeting if
Pei to the public and all those in
terested are cordially invited to at
tend. New Colors To Be
Displayed Friday
The new R. O. T. C colors were
Reived this week and will be dis
ced for the first time at the feder
al inspection Friday. The Gover
jltr'i parade on May 12, which fol
los the War Department inspection,
ai be reviewed by the regimental
'Ponsors. Invitations to the sponsors
mailed yesterday from Colonel
Jeetr, office.
Big Sister Board Will
Initiate Three Hundred
The three-hundred university
"women recently selected by the
Big Sister Board to curry on the
work of the organization for the
coming year will be initiated at
the annual initiation t- be held
at the Agricultural College cam
pus on Thursday at 5 o'clock.
The women who are to be initiated
are asked to meet at Agricultural
Hall.
A picnic supper will be served
by a committee which includes
Wilhclmina Schellak, May Field,
and Florence Brinton, and the
tickets which are 35 cents may
be obtained at Miss Elsie Piper's
desk in the Dean of Women's of
fice. Cars leave Tenth and 0 on
the hour and every fifteen minutes.
OPEN RATES FOR
HIGH STUDENTS
Railroad Rates Reduced Be
cause of High School Con
tests Here This Week
MANY EXPECTED TO COME
Announcement of open railroad
rates of one and one-half fares to
Lincoln for the Interscholastic aca
demic contests, the state debate, and
the annual high school track and
field meet, May 7 and 8, is expected
to bring a large number of high
school students to the city this week
end. Director A. A. Keed of the Ex
tension division which is sponsoring
the interscholastic academic contests,
expects the largest number of aspir
ants in its history. Four hundred en
try blanks have already been receiv
ed, not counting those who will enter
direct from the territory around Lin
coln and Omaha.
The preliminary rounds in the aca
demic contests were held the latter
part of April throughout the state un
der auspices of state colleges. Win
ners will participate in the finals at
Lincoln, May 8.
Start Debates Thursday
The state debate league champion
ship debates will be held beginning
Thursday, with the finals on Satur
day. Thirteen teams are entered, re
presenting the debating districts into
which the state has been divided.
Over five hundred high school ath
letes are entered for the state track
and field meet, which is divided into
three classes according to the size of
the school.
The annual Blue Star inspection of
the R. 0. T. C. unit Friday afternoon
will probably be an additional at
traction for the outstate visitors, who
will be treated to a full regimental
review and parade.
R.O.T.C. OFFICERS ASSIGNBD
Members of Nebraska Staff are Giv-
en Summer Appointments
Assignments of R. O. T. C. officers
to summer camps were received this
week at the Military office.
Captains Morris C. Bigelow and Ira
A. Hunt will be on duty at the Ft.
Snelling R. 0. T. C. camp. Captain
Charles A. Hoss will do double duty,
being assigned to the Ft. Snelling
camp and later to the Citizens' Mili
tary Training Camp at Ft. Des
Moines. Captain Hoss was excused
from duty last year because of ill-
ness. tJaptains aidcit u. rrar,
Floyd C. Harding and Lewis W. Eg
gers will be stationed at the Ft. Des
Mdfhes camp. Colonel Jewett and
Captain Huskea will represent Ne
braska R. 0. T. C. at the Ft. Leav
enworth C. M. T. C.
Bulletin Boards Outside "U" Hall
Were Formerly
Tha 4rnn framework of the two
knllot.in boards which now stand on
either side of the east entrance to
U Hall served from 181 untu iv
as the Eleventh Street entrances to
the University campus.
During the greater part oi wis
period the campus did not extend
east of Twelfth Street and was com
pletely enclosed by a high iron xence,
wii.n t W&me necessary in 1917 to
extend the campus across Twelfth
Street it was seen tnnt it wouia noi
be possible to continue the lence.
The fence Itself was torn down in
1922. The gates, however, were ien
until s year later, when they were
made into the bulletin boards and
placed at the entrance to U Hall.
Although the' fence and gates were
ornamental and added to the goner
al attractiveness of the campus the
real purpose in their erection was
quite different, tne hiu,. -
GREEKS TO HAVE
BANQUET MAY 13
James Davidson Of Omaha Is
Asked To Speak At Inter
Fraternity Affair
WILL AWARD PLAQUES
Mr. James E. Davidson, president
of the Nebraska Power Company, of
Omaha, and former president of the
American Electrical Association, has
been asked to act as the chief speak
er at the annual Interfraternity
banquet to be held Thursday even
ing, May 13, it was announced yes
terday. Wendell E. Berge, chair
man of the speakers' committee for
the coming banquet is experiencing
some difficulty in seeming speakers
for the Inter-Fraternity affair. Mr,
Davidson has not yet accepted the in
vitation to be the chief speaker of
the evening due to a conflict in en
gagements but the committee hopes
to hear from the Omahan within
the next few days.
Tickets for the Inter-Fraternity
banquet will be distributed early
next week and will be sold at one
dollar each. Fraternities are re
quested to close their house tables on
that evening and attend the annual
festivity en masse. Several fra
ternities have already taken action
to close their tables May 13 and it
is expected that the remainder will
follow at the meetings next Mon
day evening.
The program, which includes two
orchestras playing during the serv
ing of the banquet, will be shorter
than in former years according to
William Trumbull, who is in charge
of the banquet. There will probably
be three speakers at the most, on
the toast list. Fraternity scholar
ship plaques will be awarded follow
ing the banquet as in former years.
MAY BREAKFAST
PLANS COMPLETED
Will Start Affair at 8:30 With Pro
gram Later; Judges For Sing
Are Chosen
Plans for the May Morning break
fast to be held on Saturday morn
ing ,May 8, at 8:30, were completed
at the meeting of the Associated
Women's Student Board held Tues
day noon, at Ellen Smith Hall. A
program of dances and music will be
presented at 9:15 and the inter-sorority
sing will begin at 9:45.
The judges for the sing will be
Howard Kirkpatrick, Mrs. Carrie B.
Raymond, and Mrs. Lillian Helms
Polley. The cup given to the soror
ity winning first place, will be the
possession of the sorority for one
year. Phi Mu won the cup last year,
The sing will probably be held on the
Engineer's bridge and the breakfast
wil be served on the campus between
U Hall and the Administration build
ing. The Tassels in Gypsy costumes
will serve the breakfast which the
committee is planning in box form.
The May morning breakfast has been
held twice on the campus of the Uni
versity of Nebraska and corresponds
to the inter-fraternity sing which
takes place later in the year and is
under the auspices of the Kosmet
Klub.
Aikman Sends Forest
Soils to Greenhouse
A shipment of forest soils for the
experimental growth of trees was re
ceived at the greenhouse on the Uni
versity campus recently. Mr. John
Aikman, a graduate student in the
department of Botany, is making an
ecological survey of forests in eastern
Nebraska. He spent several days
last week in the northeastern part of
the state securing these forest soils.
University Gates
hind enclosing the campus was to
keep the public who wished a loaf
ing place and general parking ground
from utilizing the University campus
as such.
The Board of Regents finally de
came convinced that they were not
doing much good by calling the police
every time some one came strolling
in for the evening and it was decid
ed to erect the fence. By doing this
the penalty for breaking into the
University campus was increased
from a small fine at the police station
to a penitentiary offense.
At a certain time every night the
night watchman locked the gates and
no one could get either L. or out of
the campus until . he again appeared
early in the morning with the key.
After the fence was torn down the
gates stood open at their usual places
for one year. They were then re
moved and made into bulletin boards.
NEW OFFICER COMING HERE
Captain Skinner of Fort Benning to
Arrive About June 1
Captain Russel Skinner, who has
been in training at Fort Benning,
has been ordered to Nebraska and
will arrive here about June 1, ac
cording to information received by
Colonel Jewett this week.
Captain Morris H. Forbes, who has
also been stationed at Fort Benning
in the Officers Infantry School, has
been ordered to the Presiiio. Cap
tain Forbes was an instructor in
Military Tactics at Nebraska last
year.
YESPERS HEAR
A MOTHER TALK
Mrs. Roy Green, '15, Speaks At
Weekly Service On The
Viewpoint of a Mother"
MOTHER'S DAY OBSERVED
Vesper services held Tuesday even
ing at Ellen Smith Hall were in ob
servance of Mother's Day. Mrs. Roy
Green, '15, spoke on "The View Point
of the Mother."
"What Motherhood means comes
only from personal experience; one
must grow in tha understanding of
love, learn to know what fear is, and
a thousand other details must be
understood, and only when one is a
Mother is this comprehension possi
ble," Mrs. Green declared.
"Motherhood teaches one a lot,'
she continued, "We find we can get
angry angry at others and angry at
the daughters and sons, yet the great
love is there just the same. Mothers
have a different sense of value than
do those whp are not Mothers. We
find that there is just one American
group in all the world that is our
family. Around this family are
built all the hopes and ambitions of
a life time. Every thought of the
Mother is for this family, she is of
ten apt to forget that there is any
one else, that there is a vast and
thronging world just outside the door
of her home."
"Many mothers lose their person
ality," said Mrs. Green, as she
pointed out that they are but a me
chanical factor in the daily routine of
this life long job of Mothers.
Girls Trained for Careers Today
"Mothers are not trained for Moth
erhood today, but they are being
trained for careers. Many mothers
are continuing their careers and in
some cases the scheme works fine
but there are very few people," Mrs
Green suggested, "who are able to
step into the home and take the place
of Mother.
"The biggest pay for the Mother
is the accomplishment of the desires
she has had for her child. Every
mother in her heart has planned for
her child the sort of character she
wishes him to have. Your Mother
wants you to be the very best kind
of a person and her ambitions are
the very highest, her ideals the no
blest for you. The only way you can
repay your Mother is to look after
your children in a worthwhile man
ner," Mrs. Green concluded.
Grace Modlin lead the ser
vice and the special Mother's Day
music was furnished by Thelma King
and Neva Robbins.
AD CLUB TO HOLD
AH OPEN UEETIHG
Talk on Advertising Will Be Given
By Roy Nordby Thursday
At Grand Hotel
The University Advertising Club
will hold an open meeting Thursday
at 6 o'clock at the Grand Hotel for
all students interested in advertis
ing. Mr. Roy Nordby, advertising man
ager of Rudge & Guenzel, will be the
principal speaker. Marion Woodard,
former president of the Advertising
Club, will also speak. Music will
be an added feature of the program.
Tickets for the meeting and dinner
may be secured from not. i.. r.
Grether or from members of the
Advertising Club.
WEATHER FORECAST
Wednesday: Generally fair.
Weather Conditions
An area of high pressure and
clear cool weather overlies the
eastern half of the country this
morning, following light rain yes
terday in the Atlantic states.
Temperatures have risen from the
Mississippi River to the Rocky
Mountains under the influence of
low pressure over the upper Mis
souri valley and the northern
Rockies but the weather continues
mostly clear. Rain has fallen in
Louisiana, Texas, New Kxico,
Arizona, and the north Pav.ific
states.
THOMAS A. BLAIR,
Meteorologist.
BIZAD COLLEGE
MAKES CHARGES
Divide College Into Depart
ments of Business Organi
zation and Economics
ADD ADVANCED COURSES
Various changes have been made
in the curriculum of the College of
Business Administration for the com
ing year (1926-27.) The most radi
cal change is the division of the col
lege into two departments, the col
lege having formerly only one de
partment. The two departments are
the department of Business Organi
zation and Management with Prof.
Oscar Ross Martin as chairman and
the department of Economics with
Prof. George O. Virtue as chairman.
Among the new courses added in both
these departments are courses in sec-ond-yead
accounting, the course in
the Principles of Accounting serving
as an introduction to this new course ;
courses in Business Statistics, in Busi
ness Finance and in Advanced Money
and Banking have also been added.
A course in Agricultural Credit has
also been listed but will not be offer
ed next year. In the department of
Economics four new courses in grad
uate work will be given.
A slight change in requirements
has also been made. Students hav
ing three years of foreign language
in the high school may take history
or literature instead of a foreign
language. Those students who have
had only two years of foreign lan
guage and that in a single language,
will be required to have either six
hours of the same language of ten
hours of another language. For the
philosophy requirements of six hours,
three of these hours must be in psy
chology.
As regards specialization in this
college, electives are now so arranged
as to supplement the work in which
the student is specializing.
REPEAT STUDENT
WORKER CONTEST
"The Nation" Will Again Hold Con
test for Best Account of Sum
mer's Work as a Laborer
The student Worker Prize Contest
inaugurated last year by "The Na
tion," will be repeated again this
year.
The contest is open to university
and college students who will have
spent the summer of 1926 at work
in some industrial occupation. For
the best account of such an experi
ence and interpretation of the indus
trial situation involved "The Na
tion" will award a prize of one hun
dred dollars and a second prize of
fifty dollars.
The contest is open to graduates
and undergraduate students, men and
women who were enrolled in some
college or university in the spring of
1926, and actually worked as labor
ers for at least two months in the
summer of 1926.
The contestant must give names.
class, and college, names and ad
dresses of employers and dates of
employment; also the name of a
member of the faculty of the con
testant's school who will vouch for
his or her eligibility.
Manuscripts must be typewritten
and not over four thousand words
in length. The winning article will
be published in the "Nation." Other
articles may be accepted for publi
cation.
Winners will be announced and
prizes awarded not later than Janu
ary 1927.
All manuscripts are to be sent to
The Nation," 20 Vesey Street, New
York City, New York, not later than
Novemebr 1, 1926, when the contest
closes. i
Art Expresses Spiritual Unity of
Historical Periods, Says Fling
That the artist expresses the life of
ripriod, that history deals with
pericis of spiritual unity and that art
expresses that spiritual unity, was
emphasized by Prof. F. M. Fling in
an informal lecture in the Art Gallery
Tuesday evening.
Different periods express them
selves in different ways. In Egypt,
expression was gained m architect
ure, in Greecer through statuary pre
eminently, later uowever, p'Sinting
was developed. Today some people
believe that the artist has exhausted
the resources of painting and that
one must go beyond painting to other
forms, such as colored light, for ex
pression.
Art has a definite relation to oth
er forms of culture. The Greek
mathematics was a mathematics of
magnitude, today wo are primarily
interested in the mathematics of
functions and relations. We differ
Collin$, Museum Curator,
Will Be Forum Speaker
Professor F. G. Collins, curator
of the University of Nebraska
museum, will speak at the World
Forum Luncheon at the Grand Ho
tel this noon. His topic will be
"The Place of a Museum in the
University."
Tickets are on sale at the Y.
M. C. A. headquarters in the Tem
ple and the Y. W. C. A. offices in
Ellen Smith Hall.
INSPECTION TO
BE MADE FRIDAY
Student Cadet Officers Will
Be In Charge Of Inspec
tion For Rating
PARADE AT 1 O'CLOCK
Student cadet officers will be prac
tically in charge of the Blue Star
war department inspection program
at the University of Nebraska Fri
day, May 7, when officers from
Washington visit the Nebraska R. O.
T. C. for the annual war department
examination. The instructors will di
rect which phases of the work they
wish to examine, and it will be up to
the cadet captains and majors to
wheel their units for the final show
down. The regular army instructors
will retire to the background that
day while their students display what
they have learned. Colonel Jewett,
commandant of the unit has perfect
ed plans to this effect.
The inspection will start Friday
morning with indoor examination of
theoretical work. Juniors will be
quizzed on machine guns, field forti
fications, military law, and other sub
jects, while the seniors will stand ex
amination on military history, howit
zer weapons, military administration,
etc. Three companies of the bafcic
course, to be designated, will be call
ed on to represent the unit in the
morning examination of basic theor
etical work. )
Examine Unit for Theoretical Work
Time will not permit detailed ex
amination of every class member for
the theoretical work, and of the re
presentative units picked out, the in
specting officers will judge for the
whole regiment.
The regiment will turn out en
masse in the afternoon for a parade,
review, and inspection by the visiting
board. The parade will be scheduled
for 1:00.
Cadets will be excused from all
classes which may conflict with the
inspection. For this one day the mil
tary will reign on the campus.
Colonel Jewett has been inspect
ing the companies at drill periods for
the past three weeks in preparation
for the Blue Star final tests. Minor
points needing correction have been
pretty well taken care of in the course
of these inspections, and the regi
ment is expected to be in top-top
shape.
A luncheon in honor of the visit
ing board will be given Friday noon
at the Hotel Lincoln by Scabbard
and Blade, honorary military society
of the advanced course. Chancellor
Avery, the regents, executive dean
Engberg, and Colonel Dockery of the
seventh corps" area headquarters
have been invited.
Following inspection of the Nebras
ka unit the board will go to Omaha to
inspect the Creighton university unit,
which this year was recommended for
inspection for the first time since the
Creighton corps -was established sev
eral years ago.
from the Greeks as much in mathe
matics as in art, for both are part of
the. same attitude towards reality.
The real resources of art are the
intuitions and feelings of man. An
artist is not a rationalizer. There
has been a recent reaction against
rationalizing on the continent, a
movement which will probably be felt
more in America in the near future.
We have been working on intellect
ual development and neglecting intu
ition, but there is a swinging of the
pendulum in the other direction and
we are beginning to realize that we
cannot solve the problems of life
through intellect alone.
During the recent period of great
interest in natural science, the feel
ing for poetry and art has been lost.
We are now in a transition stage and
cubism represents the last word in
( Continued to Per S).
WINNERS OF
ELECTION ARE
ANNOUNCED
New Publication Board Mem
bers Are Hoagland, Jor
genson and Trout
LARGE VOTE WAS POLLED
Sixteen Members Of Student Coun
cil Are Selected; School of
Journalism Represented
A large vote was polled yesterday
for elections of members of the Pub
lication Board and for the Student
Council, although not quite as large
as last year. This year is the first
time that the School of Journalism
has had representation on the Stu
dent Council. The complete results
are.
Student Publication Board
SENIOR MEMBER
Robert Hoagland 193
Karl Nelson 130
JUNIOR MEMBER
Henry Jorgensen 177
Donald Campbell ( written in) .. 67
Scattered votes 15
SOPHOMORE MEMBER
John Trout 194
Charles Dox 63
Student Council
College of Arts and Sciences
Men
Nieland Van Arsdale .. 147
Ralph Bergsten 144
Women
Ruth Palmer 178
Elice Holovtchiner (written in) 20
Scattered votes 25
College of Agriculture
Men
James Jensen .
69
18
3
Women
Alice Johnson
Scattered votes
J uniors-At-Large
Men
Erwin Domeier 455
Lincoln Frost 268
James Gillilan 255
Women
Evelyn Wilson 130
Elsa Kerkow 47
School of Fine Arts
Ernestine McNeill 34
Alyce Wiess 11
College of Engineering
Harry Cook 56
James Howe 37
Eugene Spellman 10
Scattered votes 25
Teacher's College
Ruth French 75
Scaered votes 18
College of Pharmacy
H-"'o Kuhl 38
Scattered votes 10
College of Law
Stedman French 34
Merritt Benson . 11
College of Dentistry
Byron Wieth 28
John Brauer 12
College of Business Administration
Walter Cronk . 95
Scattered votes 25
School of Journalism
Arthur Sweet 35
Dwight Wallace 13
Robert Hoagland, who was the suc
cessful candidate for senior member
of the Publication Board is a Kos
met Kiub member, a Corn Cob, and
of the Acacia fraternity. He comes
from North Platte. Henry Jorgen
son, the junior member, is a Delta
Upsilon, a Corn Cob, was a Green
Goblin and on the Freshman Coun
cil. John Trout, a Sigma Nu, won
the sophomore position. He is a
member of the Iron Sphinx.
The activities of the newly-elected
Juniors-at-large follow: Erwin Do
meier, a baseball letter man, Delta
Sigma Pi, Corn Cob, "N" club and
Pi Kappa Phi. Lincoln Frost, De
bate team, Y. M. C. A. board, and Pi
Kappa Alpha. Evelyn Wilson, Alpha
Omicron Pi, Teachers College. Elsa
Kerkow, Pi Beta Phi, Arts and Sci
ences College.
James Jensen, the Agriculture Col
lege representative is Associate Edi
tor of the Cornhusker Countryman,
a member of the Corn Cobs, Iron
Sphinx, Vikings, Ag Club. Alice
Johnron was the successful woman
candidate from the Ag College.
Ernestine McNeill will represent
the School of Fine Arts. She is
treasurer of Sigma Lambda, a mem
ber of the Art Club, Alpha Xi Delta,
and a former Mystic Fish.
Stedman French, an Alpha Tau
Omega, Phi Delta Phi, Iron Sphinx,
and a member of the Interfraternity
Council, won the contest for the Law
College. Hugo Kuhl, Kappa Psi, Iron
Sphinx and Pharmaceutical Society
is the new representative for the
Pharmacy College.
Arthur Sweet was elected to fill
the newly created position on the
Council for the School of Journalism.
iHe is News Editor of the Daily Ne
Ibraskan. Secretary of the Sorhomore
class, member of Phi Kappa Psi, Iron
Sphinx, and Pershing Rifles.
Byron Wieth is a XI Ptl Tit and
former Green Goblin. lie will .Vipre
sent the ColZe of Dentistry. V'al-
(Continued To F&.t Thrus)