The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 11, 1928, Image 1

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    1
our nufctuM v(n ee
COnPttTt VJHtN AN
Ot.0 fASHIONEO SfANKIWj
WEATHER
For Lincoln and vicinity: Fair
Wednesday; moderate tempera
ture. 16 pRI&lftVIO THIK.6
VQiTxXVH, NO. 69.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1928.
PRICE 5 CENTS
T017
Daily
Nebraskan
I SIGS AND
SIG ALPHS WIN
IN TITLE RACE
Sig Eps Lose 21 to 18; Delta
Tau Delta la Defeated
22 to 19
FAST PLAY IS FEATURE
Norling, Margaret, and Mor
rison Do Outstanding Work
For Victors
Marked by fast, rough playing in
both games, Alpha Sigma Phi won
from Sigma Phi Epsilon, 21 to 18,
and Sigma Alpha Epsilon won from
Delta Tau Delta, 22 to 19, in the
first two games of the championship
race for the title in inter-fraternity
basketball. Both games were exciting
and neither of the teams was sure
of victory until the final whistle was
blown.
In the' first game, the1 Alpha Sigs
started out with a rush, using fast
breaking plays to score. The Sig Eps,
however, soon recuperated to launch
their attack. After a series of rough,
fast plays the quarter ended 9 to 2
in favor of the Alpha Sigs. Sigma
phi Epsilon outshone their oppon
ents in the second quarter, scoring
6 points to 2 points for Alpha Sigma
Phi, although the half ended 11 to 8
in their opponents' favor. The third
and fourth quarters were packed with
thrills, the third quarter ending 16
to lt, and the game ended with the
Alpha Sigs on the long end of a 21
to 18 score.
Oehlrich led the Sigma Phi Ep
silon team with 8 points. His good
basket shooting aided by Krause's
accurate floor work enabled their
team to score the majority of points.
Norling of Alpha Sigma Phi scor
( Continued on Page 3)
SiLE OF TICKETS
FOR FROLIC OPENS
Results of Classroom Canvass Are
Very Successful) Interesting
Program Planned
Ticket sales for the Bizad Frolic,
to be held January 13 at the Lin
coln Chamber of Commerce, began
Tuesday morning and were very suc
cessful, according to Wilbur Mead,
chairman of the Frolic committee.
All classrooms in the College of Bus
iness Administration were canvassed
yesterday by a group of five cap
tains and their assistants.
This year's Frolic promises to sur
pass any of its predecessors. Mayor
Verne Hedge is scheduled to give an
address at the banquet which begins
at 6:30 o'clock in the Commerce din
ing room. Dean J. E. LeRossignol
and a few other members of the Col
lege faculty are also on the speaking
list and plan to give short addresses,
"Red" Krause to Play.
Immediately following the ban
quet, "Red" Krause with his accor
dion and orchestra will provide mu
sic for the dance. Students who de
sire to attend only the dance or only
the banquet can buy separate tickets.
Banquet tickets sell for one dollar'
while the dance tickets are seventy
five cents.
Classes will be visited aeain today
to give students, who were unable to
bay tickets yesterday, another
chance. Plans for interviewing stU'
dents individually have been made
provided the classroom campaign
fails to succeed.
Interesting lighting effects have
been planned according to the com-
miwce in charge. Vari-colored bulbs,
fashing off and on, will be provided
to lend an air of "frolic" to the oc
casion. ' Come and hrinc, ttii. Aala " ia
the
. b v., aw
earnest plea of the committee
cnairman, Wilbuf Mead. A large per
centage of Bizad students is needed
V insure the success of the Frolic,
-fording to him.
Ml BANQUET IS TONIGHT
pen Council and Lincoln Hieh
J5fhool Hi-Y Meet Jointly
Tile Freshmen fliMiTifi'l nrTiinli nini.
"f1?. .meets on Wednesday evenings
at 7 o'clock will meet with the Lin
! foln high school Hi-Y tonight at a
ALPHA
M .banquet ?t 6 o'clock In the Hi-Y
M ouudinc n... u x x m.
"Jen school This banquet is. being
!ven for the Lincoln high school
MuMi.? tieJIi-Y club.
A he feature the banquet will be
presses by two delegates to the
invention of the Student Volun-
in Detroit recently. Perry
ftemb
e" of the Lincoln Hi-Y club
t me Danquet.
Be Freshman Council
4L . i
group
on s rW1wJy t 930 o'clock
aunday mornings will hold their
men"ig ur.J;9? ;r4L
MASONIC CLUB WILL MEET
C. P. Peterson Will Deliver Address
To Square and Compass
The Square and Compass club, art
organization of the University of Ne
braska faculty and student Masons,
will hold its regular monthly meet
ing this evening at 7 o'clock in Fa
culty Room 202, Temple building.
The Honorable C. Petrus Peterson
will be the main speaker of the eve
ning. His topic will be the "Spirit
of Adventure," the oration he gave
before the Grand Lodge last June.
Masons of any rank are invited to
attend.
PLAYERS WILL
GIVE NEW PLAY
"The Black Flamingo", Jan
ney's Last Play Not Yet Pre
sented on Broadway
OPENS IN LONDON SOON
"The Black Flamingo," next of
fering of the University Players to
be presented Thursday, Friday and
Saturday of this week, in the Temple
Theatre, will give patrons the rare
opportunity of enjoying a play which
has not yet been presented on Broad
way. Sam Janney, the author, wrote
the drama for Guy Bates Post, who
plans to take it to London before
opening the production in the east.
Janney's play is a mystery drama
of the French Revolution, and was
secured for the use of the Players
after a long correspondence with the
author, .who finally gave his permis
sion for a special showing. The un
usual achievement of producing an
acknowledged success before its east
ern presentation will add much to
the attraction of the offering.
Cast of Twenty
Twenty players will take part in
"The Black Flamingo." The play will
be beautifully costumed, in keeping
with the period in wheih the action
takes place. The scene of the action,
the Black Flamingo Inn, an old stone
building, will be realistically presen
ted by use of novel settings and ef
fects. In keeping with the thrilling
and mysterious atmosphere of the
play, weird and striking effects are
being used to obtain the most color
ful effect.
Plot and action center about the
theft of a diamond 'necklace which
belongs to Queen Marie Antoinette.
The action takes place July 15, 1789,
the day after the capturing of the
Bastille. The aristocrats are fleeing
for their lives. The necklace, together
with a young man, has disappeared,
which initiates the plot that quickly
becomes complicated with mystery
and unusual happenings.
(Continued on Page 2)
BIZAD NEWS FOR
JANUARY ISSUED
Publicity for Bizad Frolis, News and
Features Form Content of
First 1928 Number.
January's number of the Bizad
News will be issued this morning
from stands at the north and south
ends of the third floor, Social
Sciences building. This issue is de
voted to publicity for the Bizad
Frolic to be held Friday evening.
In addition to Frolic news, the
January issue contains a clever poem
concerning "Ye Frolic" and a spe
cial article on "College Women in
Business."
Bob Trullinger furnishes a take
off on "Captain John Smith and Po
cahontas," and Sense-O-Grams writ
ten by Emerson Smith furnish a col
umn of clever sayings. "If You Be
lieve It, It's So" constitutes another
feature of the January News.
Humor Used.
Organization writeups, personals,
and humorous events transpiring in
the College of Business Administra
tion are also included in the paper.
An article concerning the recent visit
of Doctor Heilman, dean of North
western University's Commerce
School, completes the contest of the
January issue. '
The staff of the News includes
Douglas Timmerman, editor; Flor
ence Benson, associate editor, and
Paul Marti, news editor. A. Ralph
Fell, business manager; Wilbur Mead,
assistant business manager; Enos
Heller, advertising manager; and
Marvin Grim, circulation manager
ompleU the business staff ol tne
January number.
Dr. A, W. Adson Visits
Zoology Department
Dr. Alfred W. Adson, a graduate
of ther university, was a visitor at
the department of zoology Wednes
day. Dr. Adson is now on the staff
of thr male, clinic at Rochester, N.
Y.
University Students Study Culvert
And Bridge Materials for Highways
The curses or the blessings that
Mr. Motorist bestows upon the high
way beneath the balloon tires of his
automobile (or Ford) might well be
referred back to a little group of
men, many of them University of
Nebraska students, working in a
dusty laboratory on the University
campu3.
For these men, who paused, per
haps, in their study of Plato and
Aristotle to don overalls in the lab
oratory, are the official testers of
the highway, culvert, bridge, . and
guard-rail material that goes into
the roads of Nebraska. It is for
them to decide, with the aid of the
most modern machines, whether a
certain mixture of concrete shall be
acceptable for a stretch of prairie
highway or for one of the streets in
a thriving Nebraska town. It is for
them to determine if a certain cul
vert will withstand the shocks of
speeding automobiles passing over.
In explaining the work of the test
ing laboratory today C. M. Duff, as
sociate professor of applied mechan
ics in the University said: "By an
arrangement between the University
and the state department of public
Nebraskan and Awgwan
Applications Due Friday
Applications for appointments
to the following positions will be
received by the Student Publica
tion Board until Friday noon,
January 13:
The Daily Nebraskan: Editorial
editor in chief, contributing
editors, managing editor, assist
tant managing editors, news ed
itors, assistant news editors.
Business business manager, as
sistant business jnanager, circula
tion managers.
Awgwan: editor, associate edi
tor, business manager.
Application blanks may be got
at the office of the secretary
(student activities office, Colise
um) and at the office of the
School of Journalism (U104). Ap
plicants are expected to submit
evidence as to their qualifications
for filling the positions for which
they apply. (Material already on
file need not be duplicated.)
J. K. Selleck, Secretary
Student Publication Board.
Ice Brought
Copper Lump
To Dakotans
Vermillion, S. D., Jan. 10. About
fifteen years ago a piece of pure
native copper was ploughed up by
Andrew Helseth on his farm on
Brule creek in Union county, thir
teen miles northeast of Vermillion.
The piece of copper which is oblong
and flat, weighs almost nineteen
pounds. It is now in the museum
of the University of South Dakota.
The lump of copper, Prof. W. H.
Over, curator of the museum, said
was evidently picked up and carried
down from the Lake Superior copper
region thirty of forty thousands
years ago by the Wisconsin ice sheet,
the last of the glaciers that passed
over this country.
"Suggestion has been made sev
eral times," Mr. Over said, "that the
ore may have been carried to this
locality by the Indians. But there
is no archaeological evidence that
this is the case. And too, there is
no logical reason why an Indian
would carry so heavy a piece of
copper to this locality in primitive
times."
Mr. Over also pointed out a nwn-1
ber of other indications that the ice
was the agent that carried the ore;
the rounded shape of its edges, for
. i
instance, from rubbing against rocks.
PROFESSOR MICKEY
WILL GIVE ADDRESS
"Conservation of Water Resources
and Mississippi River Flood
Control" Is Subject.
A lecture entitled "Conservation
of Water Resources and Mississippi
River Flood Control" will be given
by Professor C. E. Mickey at the
meeting of the student branch of the
American Society of Civil Engineers,
Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in
Mechanical Arts, 100.
Flood control is one of the print
cipal questions before the present
Congress. Professor Mickey has just
recently returned from Washington
where he served as technical advisor
for the House committee on . flood
control. He also worked on a com
mittee made up of the leading civil
engineering instructors of the coun
try which has also been called be
fore the House committee on flood
controL This group advocates the
utilization of flood water for aid of
agriculture and for use In the water
ways of the country.
works, the department of applied
mechanics does the testing of all the
materials used in the building of
state roads and other state struc
tures. This work has grown until it
require- pracuca ny tne equivalent
of three men on full pay. It offers
excellent opportunity, however, for
students to make part of their ex
penses, at the same time gaining val
uable experience.
One of the important phases of
the laboratory's work is testing con
crete. "Probably no rond material
is subjected to more variables in its
construction than concrete," said
Mr. Duff. "As in baking a cake,
the fact that all ingredients used are
first-class and satisfactory does not Conch Charley Black's basketeers set
insure a satisfactory or first class re- tied down to a real practice grind
suit. In concrete work, the quantity by staging a lengthy contest with
of cement and water used, amount Bunny Oakes' yearlings. Tom Elliott,
of mixing, and the quality of curing, Dutch Witte, Jug Brown, Elmer
all effect the quality of the con-! Holm, and Bob Krall started the
crete." tussle with the freshmen and Glen
In addition to testing the stone, Munn, Harvey Grace, Kenny Othmer,
gravel, sand and cement, the con-jAdolph Lewandowski, and "Army"
crete made from these ingredients is Armstrong finished the game. Scoring
molded into cylinders twelve inches honors were fairlv even for awhile
long and six inches in diameter. Af
(Continued on Page 2)
AWGWAN TO BE
ISSUED FRIDAY
"Leap Year" Number Features
Local Comment on Sororities
And Campus Events
ART WORK OUTSTANDING
Leap Year number of the Awgwan
will be released Friday unless fur
ther trouble is encountered in drying
the cover colors, it was announced
yesterday from the Awgwan office.
The January issue will feature lo
cal comment on sororities and cam
pus situations, revolving particularly
around Leap Year possibilities.
Ethelyn Ayres, whose parodies
were features of the first two num
bers of the Awgwan this year, re
turns as a contributor in the Jan
uary issue as a versifier. In conjunc
tion with Mary Alice Race, she pre
sents a half page of "Very Light
Verse", a collection of five short
verses with a humorous twist in each.
Number of Contributors
Short sketches from the type
writer of Alan C. Mcintosh, associate
editor, Kenneth Anderson, Frederick
Daly, Elice Holovtchiner, Joyce
Continued on Page 3)
PLANS FINISHED FOR
GRACE COPPOCK TEA
Tea is Given in Honor of Work Done
In China by Grace Coppock
and Vera Barger
An elaborate poster display will
feature the Grace Coppock Tea to
be held at Ellen bmith Hall on
Thursday from 4 to 5:30 o'clock.
The history of Y. W. C. A. work in
China will be portrayed by the pos
ters and offers a real educational op
portunity for all university women.
The tea will carry out the Chinese
atmosphere. Entertainment will
consist of musical numbers and a
talk by Chen-Shih Yuan, , a student
from Honan, China, Chinese art
work and costumes will be loaned by
Miss Williams of the City Y. W. C.
A. Waitresses will be dressed in
Chinese costumes.
Miss Erma Appleby will preside at
the tea table during the first hour
and Miss Williams during the sec
ond hour.
The purpose of the tea is to ac
quaint the students with the work
done in China by Mist Grace Cop
pock, Nebraska's first woman mis
sionary, and Miss Vera Barger, her
successor.
Grace Coppock was graduated by
Nebraska in 1905, and went te China
soon after her graduation. Sho be
came nationrl secretary of the Y.
W. C. A. in China and died there in
1921. The memorial fund which the
women of Nebraska send each year
to China goes to a work in which
Miss Coppock was vitally interested,
the physical education of Chinese
women. Miss Vera Barger uses the
money sent here by the University
of Nebraska to promote physical ed
ucation programs all over China.
South Dakota Paper Is
Awarded First Prize
Vermillion, S. D., Jan 10 First
place among student publications
competing in the North Central press
association was awarded to the
'Volante' Student publication at the
University of South Dakota by Har
per Leech, well known Chicago news
paperman, author and critic now of
the Medill school of journalism, at
the annual cnventic7 held at. Creigh
ton university January 6 and 7.
BLACK DRILLS
BASKET SQUAD
ON OFFENSIVE
Game whh Drake Bulldogs Is
Scheduled for Saturday
Night at Des Moines
MEN IN FINE CONDITION
Drake and Nebraska Each
Have Single Game in
Victory Column
After placing Monday's game with
Washington in the wrong column,
but the Varsity was well ahead when
Black called the halt.
Offensive drill is to receive the
most attention during the coming
week, according to Coach Black. The
Husker defense was functioning
smoothly Monday night against the
Bears and will be spared drilling un
til just before the game wtih Drake
at Des Moines Saturday night.
Two Schools on Par
Drake has won a single game so
far this season and ranks with the
nusKers as iar as winning is con
cerned. .The Bulldog quintet seems
to play about the same brand of
basketball as the Scarlet and Cream
hoopsters, being especially good at
basket tossing one night and especi
ally poor the next. No prediction can
be made on the outcome now or just
before the contest.
Varsity athletes weathered their
(Continued on Page 2)
Mercury Rise
Sets Record
For January
Yesterday was the hottest day in
January ever recorded by the gov
ernmental records of the weather de
partment. The mercury took an
abrupt rise like gilt-edge bonds on
Wall Street. At 2 o'clock yesterday
afternoon it had climbed to the un
heard of heights of 67 degrees which
is rather warm for January weather.
The only instances on' record of
weather reports nearly equalling this
were when the mercury showed 66
degrees Fahrenheit, on January 16,
1892 and January 29, 1919.
This cannot be explained unless
the mercury is rising because of the
fact that students have been forced
indoors to cope with coming exami
nations. ,
FOUR DAYS REMAIN
FOR REGISTRATION
Students Display UnusUal Prompt
ness in Filling Second
Semester Schedules.
With the deadline of noon, Janu
ary 14, still four days off, registra
tion of resident students for the sec
ond semester is progressing rapidly.
One hundred and thirty-seven stu
dents had registered in the College
of Arts and Science, Monday, ac
cording to a report from Dean
Candy's office. This is the largest
number of students to register in
that college on the first day of reg
istration within the last five years.
Up to noon Tuesday, one hundred
and twelve more students had turned
in their schedules to Dean Candy.
From the College of Business Ad
ministration no actual number of
registered students has been re
ported. Miss Klotter, of the office
staff of Dean LeRossignol, intimated
that the number of students regis
tered in this college the first two
days of this registration week was
larger than the number registered at
this time last year.
Students Serve At
Ag College Banquet
Students in the College of Agri
culture cooperated in serving the an
nual Farmers' Family Fun Feed
which was served to 800 Nebraska
people in the students' activities
building on Wednesday, January 4.
The banquet was sponsored by those
in charge ol Organized Agriculture
meetings which were held on the
Agriculture College carrnus the past
week.
Under the faculty supervision,
forty boys and sixty girls who vol
unteered through the Ag Club and
the Home- Economics Club, worked
with girls majoring in institution
management in the serving.
New Course Is Added
To Advanced Zoology
A new course in advanced zoology
is being offered by Professor Blake
next semester, Embryology 113. A
large amount of equipment has been
added for this course, among which
is over $200 worth of slides.
SLAVIC RELIGION
IS VESPER TOPIC
Professor Orin Stepanek Dis
cusses Reputed Irreligion
Of Czecho-SIovakians
PERSECUTION TO BLAME
"Why the Slav has the Reputation
for Irreligion in the Un.ited States"
was the subject upon which Pro
fessor Orin Stepanek talked at the
weekly Vespers meeting held last
night in Ellen Smith Hall, and led
by Elizabeth PeteTson.
The n: iapprehension in regard to
the Slavs and the reputation which
they have acquired of being atheists
comes from the fact that very few
Slavic immigrants in this country go
to church.
"In Czecho-Slovakia religion and
Catholicism are the same thing. You
are either a Roman Catholic or you
are a pagan, atheist, heathen or any
one of like terms used synonomously
and carelessly," Professor Stepanek
declared.
Church Ali-Powerful
Through centuries of persecutions
the Czechs never forgot the inius
tices forced upon them by the gov
ernment which was at the same time
the church. A Czech could not be
legitimately born, married or buried,
unless the government sanctioned the
act, until 1918 at the close of the
World War when the Catholic church
ceased to control the government.'
Professor Stepanek here paused to
remark that he did not mean to up
hold Catholicism one way or another,
but merely to explain the situation
among the Slav3. "That great empire
of Great Britain tried for nine hun
dred years to force the Irish to ac
cept Protestantism in much the same
manner that Catholicism was forced
upon the Slavs, and with just as little
real success," he stated. "It all goes
to show that you cannot force a re
ligion upon anyone who does not
wish to be so forced."
Slav Immigrants Misinformed.
Slavic immigrants to this country
have carried the notion that Chris
tianity and Catholicism are one, and
since even as late as 1918 they were
persecuted for refusing to obey or
comply with Catholic conventions in
Slavic countries, they have refused
to have anything to do with the
(Continued on Page 2)
ANATOLE MOZER IS
LUNCHEON SPEAKER
Native Russian, Delegate to Recent
Detroit Convention Will
Address World Forum
Anatole Mozer, junior in the Col
lege of Arts and Sciences, and dele
gate to the recent international con
vention of the Student Volunteers in
Detroit, will address the World
Forum meeting this noon.
"Echoes from Detroit" will be the
topic of the talk to be given by Mr.
Mozer this noon. He will tell of the
impressions he received during the
meeting in Detroit, nd review the
work of the convention. Mr. Mozer
was on of the twenty-three dele
gates to represent the University at
the Student Volunteer Convention in
Detroit from December 28 to Janu
ary 1.
"He has been asked to speak to
the students of the World Forum by
the committee, not just because he
was a delegate but because he has
experienced a different kind of a life
than the average Nebraska student
and has a great deal of interest in
his subject," stated Mr. C. D. Hayes,
secretary of the University Y. M.
C. A.
Born in Russia. !
He was born in Russia, the son of
land-owning parents of the old re
gime, and was educated in good
schools. At the time of the revolu
tion, his parents lost their land hold
ings and he made his wry out of Rus
sia, spent a summer in Europe, and i
sailed for America. He is specializ
ing in Political Science in conjunc
tion with the study of international
relationships.
The delegates who returned from
the convention expressed their views
in regard to the convention as very
favorable. The 4000 delegates from
all parts of the world were brought
together in a deep relationship and
the delegates maintain that th;y re
ceived a great deal of good.
The luncheon today will be held at
12 o'clock t the Crsad Hotel,
Tickets may be procured for twenty-
five cents.
REGENTS VOTE
TO RAISE FEES
FOR NEXT YEAR
University Governing Board
Takes Action in Regard to
Raising Student Fees
BOARD ELECTS OFFICERS
Increase in University Expen
ses Is Reason Given (or
Step
A new schedule of student fees
was passed by the Regents at their
meeting today. The order becomes
effective with the summer session
opening in June and with the college
year beginning 'in September, 1928.
The increase in fees generally will
run from only 10 to 30 per cent and
will amount to only a comparatively
few dollars per student.
Other important business of the
meeting was the election of officers.
Mr. H. D. Landis of Seward was elec
ted president of the Board of Re
gents and Mr. John R. Webster of
Omaha, vice-president. Professor
Guernsey Jones was made Emeritus
Professor of English History and
Editor of University Studies. The
step in regard to student fees
has been taken only after a com
parison of fees with those of similar
institutions dn adjoining states and
after careful consideration of the
University's financial needs. Main
tenance costs of the University have
increased faster than legislative sup
port. Growth in registration, regard
less of stationary appropriations for
maintenance, has been a contribut
ing cause. Overhead charges of all
sorts, such as repairs and upkeep,
heat, light, etc., have increased with
the rise of general commodity prices.
The addition of several new build
ings to the plant is also a contribut
ing factor.
Action Has Been Pending
At the present time the student
fees pay only about ten per cent
of the cost of instruction. Many uni
versities have increased their fees
from time to time, but Nebraska has
postponed such revision, hoping that
legislative appropriations would take
care of increasing costs.
Although the increase in fees runs
from only 10 to 30 per cent for the
most part and the fees themselves
represent only a negligible part of
the cost of an education, a special
committee will be appointed to look
after the interests of needy students
who may need some special assistance
in the shape of remitted or reduced
fees.
Expansion of Budget
When the budget for the current
year was made, it was found that
all increases in salary and mainten
ance costs must be taken from the
ISffervp fund held for emergency pur,
poses. This current budget tan be
maintained for the next year without
creating a deficit in University fin
(Continued on Page 2)
PI K.A, PHI PSI AND
PHI SIG WIN GAMES
Xi Psi Phi, Sigma Nu and Delta Tan
Delta Are Eliminated
In Class B
Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi Kappa Psi
and Phi Sigma Kappa were shoved
up another notch in Class B as the
result of the first post-vacation games
in the inter-fraternity tournament,
held Tuesday evening. Xi Psi Phi,
Sigma Nu and Delta Tau Delta were
the teams defeated.
The Pi K. A.'s were rather easy
victors over Xi Psi Phi, the final
count being 24-12. Mitchell and Sny
der for the winning quintet were the
largest factors in the long count,
scoring eight points ecah. These two
smashed through the Zip defense
again and again with disastrous ef
fect on their opponents.
Stephens topped the list for points
in the 14-8 Phi Psi win over Sigma
Nu. Both teams shot often and wild
ly, but the Sigma Nu defense was
penetrated more often tan that of
(Continued on Page 3.)
SCHUETT WRITES BOOXEP
Zoology Instructor and Chicago Man
Publish Joint Work
J. F. Schuett, an Instructor in the
Department of zoology at Nebraska,
has written and published, with the
assistance of W. C. Allee of the Uni
versity of Chicago, a booklet entitled
"Studies in Animal Aggregation:
The Relation between mass of ani
mals and resistance to colloidal sil
ver." Schuett was a former studnt of
Alisd wfcila jtiu.ding Chicago "G'nl
versity and it was then tr.ut the",t
joint publication was staritl.