! THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln. Ntbniki OFFICIAL PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Under direction of too Student Publication Board TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR Pabliahad Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday aoralnra durinc the acedemlo year. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4 A. Office Hours Editorial Staff. 8:00 to :00 except Friday and Sunday. Baaineaa Staff i afternoons except Friday and Sunday. Telephone Editorial: B-C891, No. 142; Businnai B-6891. No. 77: Night B-6882. filled with Roundup festivities, and the following week crowded with final examinations, a word as to the ad visability of completing any remaining intra-mural games at once should be sufficient. The Cynic Says: Students have no business kissing and petting, stated a prominent speaker. He's right. It's not their business it's a pleasure. Entered as aecond-claaa matter at the postoffice in Lincoln, Nebraska. nder act of Congress, March 8. 187, and at apecla rate of poetaica provided for in eection hob, act oi ucww 11T. authorized January 10. Ht2. t a year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy i eenta 11.25 a semester Oscar Norllng llunra Keaer Gerald Griffin . Dorothy Nett Bditor-in-Chief Menacing Editor At Managing Editor A.t- Managing Editor NEWS EDITORS Pauline Bllon Dean Hammond Maurice W. Konkel . Paul Nelson W. Joyce Ayrea ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Cliff F. Sandahl Lyman Cass Edward Dickson Kate Goldstein Evert Hunt CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Maurice Konkel Paul Nelson Cliff Sandahl Richard F. Vette Milton MeGrew William H. Kcarna J. Marshall Pitter Business Manager Asst. Business Manager Circulation Manager -...-.Circulation Manager THE GOOD-WILL AMBASSADOR For the purpose of adding to the spirit of friendly competition between the two schools, the Innocents society has planned a trophy in the shape of a law bell to be given to the victor of the next Missouri Nebraska football game. This trophy will then be in the possession of the winner until tne omer gains the right to the bell by securing a victory. The bell was chosen as a trophy because of its suitability for such an occasion. Mounted upon a base, with the letters "M" and "N" upon the sidej, the bell will make an impressive sight. It will undoubtedly be displayed and rung at the rally the night before the annual game and will be brought out on the field be tween the halves of the contest. Missouri was the school chosen to receive the trophy because of the close competition in football between the- two schools in recent years. Although not considered the "big" game, from the football fan's Doint of view, as the intersectional contests, it has been the outstanding game in determining conference hon ors. And the results of past games has excited suffi cient ir.terest to substantiate the opinion that in the future the Missouri game will be one of the most at tractive contests of any season. Such a custom is a welcome addition to our meager list of traditions. For in it will be embodied the spirit of both schools. Besides being the material sign of vic tory, it will act as the "Good-Will Ambassador" a promoter of friendly competition between Missouri and Nebraska. In Other Columns Notices THE SING Fraternity will be pitched against fraternity Thursday morning when the annual Interfraternity Sing will be held. Representative? of the various or ganizations will be present and their musical talents will be judged at that time. The Interfraternity Sing is one of the older tra ditions of the University and every year seems to be increasing in popularity and interest. It is always in cluded as a part of the annual Hound-Up week pro pram. Usually a large number of fraternities enter in this event so that there is always considerable compe tition for honors. As long as the present degree of interest is main tained in this annual affair its future aa one of the Uni versity's traditions is assured. The competition will always be of the sort that will warrant retention. THOSE INTRA-MURAL "LEFT-OVERS" Fraternities are being urged to complete their intra-mural contests at once so that winners of the various sports and of the Jack Best trophy can be determined. A statement from the athletic department indicates that any contests which are late may not count in the final scoring upon which the award of the ath letic trophy is based. With only two more days of school, a week-end AN EDUCATED SURPLUS Colleges annually report enrollments greater than those of previous years. In some cases the proportion of increase is astonishing. One perusal of the statistics sent forth by these secondary institutions is enough to make one wonder what is to become of all the grad uates and undergraduates after the close of their col lege careers. Will they all get jobs? Will they get jobs worth the investment, financial and otherwise, which has been made in obtaining an education for them? Many good citizens are worried about the situa tion to the extent that they believe restrictive measures against such large college enrollments should be passed. Otherwise, they declare, college trained people will be forced to dig ditches and perform other common labor for a livelihood. There will not be. enough office jobs or white collar jobs for college graduates unless the number of graduates is reduced substantially, it is be lieved. The supposition is, of course, that a college graduate must fyave a desk of his own in a business office of some kind in order to be a success, The question now is, "Is it worth while for a young man to spend four years or more acquiring learning if he is destined to spend his yenrs after graduation doing labor of this kind which people scornfully call 'com mon'?" A college graduate may become a filling station operator or a grocery store clerk or a chauffeur, but the chances are that he will have gained something from his college experience which will benefit him in his work to the extent that his investment will not have been wasted. Had entrance to a university been denied to him, he would probably bear a grudge against so ciety for having been denied the opportunity to de velop his earning capacity and would consider himself a failure in life, lacking the key (a college education) with which he could open the , door to the palace of fortune. Finding himself the possessor of opportunities equal to those of his fellows, the college graduate of this type will realize that the question of getting ahead in life rests upon himself and not upon society. The increased enrollment problem should, there fore, not be a cause for concern. The individuals as well as society in general are sure to benefit from the influence of college training to some degree, no matter how slow a graduate may be in applying himself. Much of the crime and class strife which beset communities may be eliminated after all those who prove them selves intelligent enough to go through high school and college get started in life having had the same edu cational opportunities. And in order that as many as possible may have chances to "see the light," perhaps it is not advisable to make graduation requirements stricter than they are at present. If annually increased enrollments in universities mean anything at all, they mean that those who are now-m college must "step lively" in their college work or they will find themselves falterintr in th a Tuesday, May 22 There will be a Tassfl meeting Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock at Kllen Smith nan. Phi T..i Theta Phi Tau Theta will me-et Tuesday May 22 at 7 o'rlnrlc a f thp Wesley foundation parsonaKe. Important. Members requested to be present. r.mlilln Seniors Mr. E. J. Stephens and Mr. H. G. Ryd man of Swift and Company will be here Tuesday, to (ntprvlntv irrsiluatinir seniors, Seniors interested will lind them in Mr. Bullock's office S.S. 806. Wednesday, May 23 Senior Engineers All senior engineers who find it possible to do so are asked to meet with Dean Fcr eiisnn on Wedndny afternoon, Mny 23. at S o'clock, in M.E.20S. Prairie Schooner A final meeting of Sterna Upilon will be held in the office of Prof. L. C. Wimberly, Law building, at 4 o'clock Wednesday af ternoon for election of officers and organi zation for the coming yenr. women. Extracts from the drama were shown last week at the Lincoln theater. The program is divided into three parts, and in the first all the dancers will wear white costumes. This part will include group and solo dances, and will close with a dance called "The Weavers" which represents ii dance form the making of a humr soul. The second part will consist of studies mostly of a humorous nature. The third part will be the dance dra ma proper which is taken from the story of "Sleeping Beauty." Two of the dances will be repeated Thursday morning in the Ivy day exercises. The numbers selected for this are a scarf dance and a character dance. Special lighting effects are being arranged by Bob Reed and work on the theater was begun Monday. In case of rain the production will given in the Armory. King Will Give Round-Up Talk (Continued from Page 1) and tapping of Innocents will be fea tures of the afternoon. Noon Friday is hr occasion for thj age-old Law barbecue. Friday eve ning at tne Loliseum the Kosmet Kn.l. Farewell b;i will attract uf--do'.js, faculty numbers,' and ahran.. Var.ed features of entertainment will be added attractions. Many fratern ities and sororities will entertain the returning alumni at their chapter houses, on Friday or Saturday evenings. Registration headquarters will be maintained at all times during the week at the Alumni office on the first floor of the Temple building, Twelfth and R streets. Letters and reservations for the alumni luncheon may be received at the association office. Advance payment for tirkpts to the alumni luncheon, seventy-five cents each, is desired. street. Letters will be read from members of the class who are unable to return for the breakfast. The eight other classes scheduled for re union this year are all planning breakfasts the same morning. The alumni luncheon for all Corn huskers will follow the "College Cor ral" at the Activities building of the Agricultural campus. W. Ross King. Omaha attorney, will make the alum ni address at the noon assembly. down R street is really a menace. If some of this heavy traffic could be drawn onto some other street, it would undoubltedly be a great boon to the students and faculty of the University." be abundant cnmnptiUnn n-l.;i. ...:n i. . . ' ""-u wm oe onerea Dy younir college graduates of future years. They must not think of considering commencement day as the finale of their years of education, but must keep on staying and de veloping their ability to think. The quitter will lose of course. Butler Collegian. PAY AS YOU ENTER Colleges in which the students will pay the entire cost of their education were advocated by Dr Trevor Arnpff tmcfoa r u- tt - - "V" "'versity 0f Chicago. snealtine- cators meetine ... Kion wmcge, a new institution for wnmn before a o-rnun nf o,i,, . ' R..-:-- "r """-"" .ng in the interest - -wm.iiikluu onege, a new which will be opened next fall Ur. Arnett, who is an authority of educational finance believes that Bennington College may pon ------ - "jvc.ii vi scnoiarships and 1 omuent service. loan funds. New Publications Board Names Kezer Editor (Continued from Page 1) Elliott, '30, Newton Kan.; Gerald Griffin, '29, Greenwood; Paul Nel son, '29, Loup City; Cliff Sandahl, '29, Genoa. No assistant managing editors were appointed. The manag ing editors will serve as editorial writers on their day off from the managing editor's desk. Assistant news editors will be as follows: Vernon Ketring, '29, Den ver, Colo.; Leon Larimer, '30, Lin coln; Mary Thornton, '29, Lincoln. Ketring and Larimer have done re portorial work on The Daily Nebras kan and Miss Thorton has been con nected with The Lincoln Star, as well as The Daily Nebraska. Assistant business managers will J. Marshall Pitzer, '29, Nebraska City; William Keams, '29, Lincoln; Richard Ricketts, '31, Lincoln. Kearns and Pitzer have been circula tion managers this year. Law Barbecue Is To Be Held Friday (Continued from Page 1) the College of Law. Prnr to this '.ime annuo.' picnics, started during Dr. Ror.zio Fonnd's demship here, were held st Capitol Beach. Dr. Tound is the present dean of Harv ard law school, Harvard university, end is an alumnus of this school. Writing his regrets for being un aole to attend the barbecue this rear, Robert R. Hastings, son of the forme, dean of the Nebraska College of Law, who is at present an attorney at Crete, Nebr., adds: "I well remember the first barbe cue tliat was held in the spring of i:li, and all had a wonderful time. V!.'!c the year 1911 a seventeen 7.s ?-'G, I prP3uty.e to the present (tonemvnn eturntM that ITtb of in t-e distrfcl paat reminds them : ....) '.:., t( te crusades'." r rlu.lor.t members of the ' t-i.iiimittea are Wen dell Mumby, Lincoln, and Erwin Jones, Seward, both seniors in the College of Law. Bishop F. B. Fisher Gives Talk on India (Continued from Page 1) led to the adoption of some peculiar customs that they must lay aside if progress is brought about. Amer icans are children of a scientific world, he said, while the Indians have no such aid to help them in their struggle for better things." At the present time, Japan has 74, 000,000 people, and India has 320, 000,000 people. More persons died of starvation in one year in India than the total population of Belgium. One advance made in India has been the steady abolition of polygamy. The three great evils of India at present are polygamy, child-marriage, and purdah. Study English Thirty thousand Indian students are now studying English at Calcut ta university, according to Bishop Fisher. There are now eleven such institutions in India. The standards for a bachelor of arts degree are set at Oxford and Cambridge. Bishop Fisher concluded by say ing: "We should think about what India is becoming, rather than what she was. We cannot blame mreint India for what she has inherited." Arch Is Dusted Off For Use on Ivy Day (Continued from Page 1) the Ivy day arch and throne of forr mer years to decide on a set which could be used from one year to the next without a complete change of architecture. Previously, arches of u-iuwpn, coiiossai columns, trees, branche., and all the scenic effects liUu corsid noasib.iy Je inB1 the part and command the "diirnitv that necessarily goes with the day, were put into use. According to correct authority, this plan of having an arch of a cer --"km 10 uk usea every year was decided on by the stores depart ment, aner enough money had been spent on Ivy day arches to put velvet carpets in U hall. Kirsch la Designer riinlVi Tr: i ... ivirscn, instructor in art, design, and lettering, designed the present arch, in 1925, at the request of the School of Fine Arts. In the olden days, it seems, so many thrones were needed because of the perennial attack on them by hungry moths, enough money was spent to finance a senatorial campaign for the Y. M C cabinet. With the invention, dis covery, or growth of Flit, Kill-the-Bug, and other chasers, moths grew tarce, as scarce as money in a fresh man's pocket. With the fall of the old regime and me discontinuance of the former dynasty, our Roman architecture, throne, loudspeakers, and all, will greet the observer on Ivy day morn. Six men, armed with hammers, uiocks ana tackle, muscle and what not have erected on our campus a representative of old Rome. When "Bud" Hunt emotes, orates, and explains to the waiting (patient) populace from the arch d'triumphe that Nebraska is the school for you, don't let your imaginations make you believe you are in Italy, or the sou thern part of Honduras, it's only a frame up! Turk Is Here to Study Dry-Farming (Continued frorn Page 1) with letters of introduction from the department of agriculture, Washing ton, D. C. He spent most of his two days at the College of Agrilulture. Speaks Good English While the Bey was in Lincoln members of the university Y. M. C. A. entertained him. Although he has spent but five months in this country his English is good. Mr. C. D. Hayes of the "Y" said yesterday, "Ali Nouman surprised me when I first saw him. I went to the station expecting to meet a dark-skinned Turk, but the man I met was as fair skinned as myself. He is of middle age, goodlooking, and very pleasing to talk to." Nouman plans to go on to North Platte to 'the experiment station where extensive research along his line of work has been conducted. The secretary is planning to spend the first semester of next year in study either at the College of Agri culture, here or at the University of Kansas. - ' The Owl Pharmacy IS ALWAYS READY TO FILL THE STUDENTS' NEEDS THE OWL PHAMACY Cor. 14 and P Sta. Dance Drama ' Is to Be Given (Continued from Page 1) for severty-five cents. Orc-nni nons may reserve block: of enf l the bleachers or in the reserved HP 1. uon. NEXT! This is our greeting to you when you walk into the The STURM SHOP Franks & Franks 116 So. 13 Pictures To Be MmAm The Uni-'ersity is havinir movino- n a siia n i a A- ' t - n "w duh; cncLiBjyiwiurea mane nT tha Anfir. conid nomibJr J na. u, look th.ne will be con.l,;,,,,! Atu,L J it. ti , ' ti. fllbUlVB -... iuruajr oi tne track and archery events in a film showing all the activities sponsored by the de partment of physical education for GIFTS FOR THE GRADUATE LEATHER GOODS FOUNTAIN PENS FINE STATIONERY NOVELTIES JEWELERY TDCKER-SHEAH 1123 "O" St LINCOLN. NEBR. 'Corral' Will Be Feature of Round-Up (Continued from Page 1) coterie of instructors at the engin eer's tent, waiting to talk over old times. Arts and Sciences graduates will find their favorite Instructors there, though changed, perhaps, by the course of time. Tenia Will Be at Plaza The tents will be stationed at the Plaza at the entrance of the College of Agriculture campus, and of course will be open to all alumni. "Per haps the largest, number will return to the Arts college canopy," states the last issue of The Nebraska Alum nus, "for the old classes remember no other college in their day." The tent for alumni of this college will probably be the renter of the group. Class breakfasts for returning al umni will be held at various places, with the class of '08, the honor class this year, meeting on the Hazel Hyde Kisselback lawn at '3232 Holdrege Students Continue Parking Discussion (Continued from Page 1) stated that the parallel parking would be all right if the University could furnish space on the campus for students to park their cars. "However," says Triveli, "since this has not been done by the University, I think a return to the old system would be in order." "Blue" Howell, '29, Omaha, 1928 football captain, stated, "the idea is certainly not as good as it might be. This new system of parking takes up too much room. Also many cars are scratched and injured by motorists backing into cramped spaces. The way some of the big trucks whip FOUR GRADUATES VISIT GEOLOGY DEPARTMENT Recent visitors at the department of geology are Claire Matheny, '25, who is with the Sinclair Oil and Gas company, Wichita Falls, Tex.; S. K. Clark, '16, who is with the Marland' Oil company, Ponca City, Okla.; Oliver T. Joy, Caracas, South Amer ica; and Allan Tillotson, '27, em ployed by the Producers and Refiners corporation, en route from Tulsa Okla., to Wyoming. Better get all "slicked up" for this week with a Haircut from The Mogul Barbers 127 No. 12 I1W it vii wheary iiii HypfK Cushioned Top -xZ, Wardrobe Trunks Snappy new models with Patented Features Elgin Hamilton Howard Watches Perfect Timekeepers Easily Repaired A Lifetime of Service American Made We have, the best makes of Swiss watches too. HALLETT'S University Jeweler Estab. 1871 117-119 So. 12 YOU'LL open your eyes when you see our display of "Amer ica's Finest" ward robes. In smart new colors! Trunk shown herehasCushionedTop which keeps hangers from shifting and safe guards garments; re movable shoe box; combination dust cur tain and laundry bag: device to lock all drawers. Specially priced at $33.75 i ; : sAt''ri1i r-' - , I. - aV ' rvit i-s5 Tor tht busintu '4tfffiT ffA X l widib 'atttr$d -s There are doprs to open, still Trade followed Commodore Perry's flag into Japan. Today, as Bell System pioneers develop their service, trade follows the telephone. ; In advancing the art of telephony, there are still plenty of doors to open, plenty of new steps to take. What apparatus will meet some newly-arisen condition in serving the sub scriber? What are the machines and methods to make it ? How can the value of long distance telephony be best presented to in dustry, and the great potentialities of this service developed f These questions and many like them point the way to fields which still leave ample room for the explore.. BELL SYSTEM A nation-wide system of 18,500,000 nter-conneting telefhonet "OUR PIONEERING WORK HAS JUST BEGUN"