he Daily Nebra THE WEATHER Mostly fair, Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska vTxxxiiiimo. ui LINCOLN, NKRRASKA. SUNDAY. MAY 6. Wl PRICK 5 CENTS. T7 GREEK COUNCIL ANNOUNCES NEW RUSHING RULES Abolishment of Preferential System uuisianmng Revision. FEW CHANGES EFFECTED cotornities Receive Cards For Fall Semester Saturday. Rushing rules for social fra ternities, as set forth by the Interfrnternity Council at a re cent meeting, were formally announced Saturday morning bv Prof. E. F. Schramm, faculty advisor to the council. Rush cards were available at 8 . m Saturday for all groups at which time they were permitted to start dating prefects for rush week in September. By Issuing all cards at the same time, it was felt that all fraternities would have an mual chance. "No leniency will be granted fraternities whose members do not observe the new rules," said Prof Schramm. "This set of rules is the result of years of experi ment, and are the best we ever had" He suggested that members of the Interfraternity Council post the rules on their bulletin boards and acquaint their members with those rules. Preferential System Out. One of the major changes from last year's regulations is the aboli tion "of the preferential system of pledging. Last year a man posted his choice of fraternity in the council office before accepting a pin. unaer me new ruieo uc mcicij (Continued on Page 2.) STATE MUSIC CONTEST Contestants From 155 High Schools Compete Here Over Weekend. Three thousand eight hundred participants fro ml55 high schools of the state gathered in Lincoln over the past week end to take part in the eleventh annual state high school music contest. Vari ous divisions of the contest were held at Lincoln high school, Everett junior high, Irving junior high, and Park and Saratoga Khool?. Competition In three classes was conducted among vocal groups, vocal soloists, instrumental groups, and instrumental soloists. Membership in classes A, B, and C is determined according to the ize of the school. Winners in the district contests in these various classes several weeks ago com peted in the finals in Lincoln by rirtue of their sectional victories. Friday events featured small (Continued on Page 3.) Dr. Charles Clvde Telleson died Saturday afternoon. He was fatally injured in an automobile truck collision eight miles north of Lincoln near midnight Friday. His was the ninth Lancaster fa tality resulting from automobile incidents in 1934. He was Injured hen the car In which he was rid was traveling from Wynot to "ncoin ror ine state high school fcusic contest collided with a truck. o inquest into the accident will w held, according to Attorney w Towle. Token payment! to the United State by five debtor nation ha Pced them out of the default ', since a ruling by the attor ney general Saturday cleared at Britain, Italy, Cxechoslo Latvia and Lithuania. The ruling w made on the Johnson recently patted by congre. 'heir payment were eonidered at acknowledgement of their debt to wis country. uEeCause Ron'l Young. 20 year h )Ayne resident, survived when w 19 year old sweetheart died n suicide pact in vhich the two 0. allegedly entered, charges of "ond degree murder have been fori a"w mm. Nancymann Al- : lo , 2? sweetheart. died from ' of blood after her wrists had foun !ilMhi- A coroner's jury; a?h th,stvMl Atfrd came lo )Z Sd'loung0 hanU"' "ded by fcliltPfUl"SJ"thip flht for ifwation in congress during this SrolV,U,d ln 'itrauve: ? conference with ThwrwSn RooMvelt Saturday. th"y mied. Prwl1 WM held on the! v. "v 'hl" he 11 tte tre0-. Wuuam TODAY'S NEWS Briefly Reviewed FERA WORK HM)ER WAY OS AG CAMPUS Reautification of the City Campus Ended for Summer, There will be no more beautifi cation work done on the city cam pus this summer, Mr. L. F. Seaton, operating superintendent of the university, announced Friday. Several FERA projects are un der way on the Ag campus, how ever. They .nclude a new steam tunnel running from the Econom ics building to the Dairy Industry building and cleaning up of the old cottonwood grove along Hol drege and 48th street west for a distance of 80 rods. The cottonwood grove has been a landmark for manv venra and it absence changes the appearance of inai section oi me campus consid erably, according to Mr. Seaton. Work on the erove. which includes the planting of new trees, will be completed in about two weeks. The new steam tunnel will re place the old tunnel that has been in service for the past 20 years. ACTIVITIES OF PAST WEEK CLOSED FRIDAY BY BANQUETS, PICNICS Law, Engineering, Bizad and Geology Students Go on Field Days. Activities of the past week were brought to a close Friday by pic nics and dinners of several col leges. Law, engineering, geology and business administration stu dents went picnicking, baseball playing, fishing, dancing and hunt ing fossils for entertainment. About sixty-five attended the Bizad box lunch picnic at Antelope park. Students beat their profes sors 23 to 22 in a ten inning gamo played after lunch. Prof. Martin was pitcher and Prof. Hicks was catcher for the teachers while Ray Elliott and Ed Gilder filled the posts for the students. Profs. Mar tin and Swayzee were the stars of the game with several home runs to their credit. A larger crowd attended the tea dance at the park pavilion where Wally Morrow's students enter tained. Music was furnished by Leo Beck and his band. The journalism picnic planned for Friday afternoon at Seward was called off because of the in clement weather. - Geology students- - journeyed to Louisville to hunt for fossils in their ; nnual picnic. A fishing con test in which Prof. Schramm took part came out a tie as students cheered the participants on. Sig Gamms won the baseball game they played v ith the foramimifera, the name bestowed on the unaffili ated group. The morning events were held at the state recreation grounds near Louisville. Law college activities began with baseball and pool games in the afternoon. P. A. D.'s won their three games while the non-affiliated won two and lost two. Phi Delta Phi won one and lost two and the Delta Theta Phi lost three The faculty came out victorious in (Continued on Page 3.) TWELVE ERRASKAS GET TEACH ISO POSTS Present, Former Students Receive Positions Reports Shon: Teaching positions to twelve former or present university stu dents were reported during last week to the department of educa tional sen-ice. Harry C. Anderson, now superintendent at Loretto. will go to Beaver Crossing as principal and coach. M. Louise Blomenkamp will teach mathematics and sci ence at Culbertson, having been at Red Willow Consolidated school of McCook. Willard Bronson. Neligh, will coach at Ord. Mary Costelloe, Lincoln, is to instruct in music and English at Alexandria. Defiance, la., high school has elected Howell P. Cnnk of Malvern, la., as su perintendent. Charlotte Crue goes from Oak land to teach mathematics and German at Columbus. M. Ray Da vis, now superintendent at Hick man will hold the same position at Bennet. Evelyn Gritzka, who has been at Scotia, will teach English and dramatics in Ashland the com ing year. Theodore Heskett, grad uate student in the department of history, will be superintendent at Dorchester. Edythe I locking, Den ton, is to teach at Sterling. Erna Motl of Mullen baa been chosen commercial instructor in her home town. Barbara Ullman, Lincoln, will teach in Seneca. CWA Jobs Available to End of Semester To Whom it May Concern: Several students have re signed their Federal Student Employment Relief allotment. The committee in charge of as signing students to these allot ments desires. If possible, to fill the vacancies with students of good scholarship who have time to earn the allotments and who can be shown to be worthy of them. They will be available for the remainder of the semes ter. Interested students may call at the office of the Dean of Stu dent Affairs. T. J. Thompson, Chairman. Committee en the Selection of Students tor Employment Relief. CROWD OF 4000 ViSlIS FARMERS PI SATURDAY Mercedes Augustine Winner Of Annual Intersorority Riding Contest. PRESENT PAGEANT TWICE Band Concert, Livestock Parade, Horse Show Highlights. With the most perfect Farmers' Fair day in several years, stu dents at the Ag college Saturday entertained more than four thou sand Nebraska people. The large attendance and general success of the fair was generally attributed by the board to the excellent weather. Mercedes Augustine, Delta Delta Delta, won the intersorority riding contest, one of the feature events of the fair. Second In the con test went to Helen Luttgen, Alpha Phi and third and fourth places in the contest went to Alice Branson, Phi Mu, and Martha Watson, Delta Gamma. The Faulkner silver trophy goes to the Delta Delta house to be kept there as long as the riders from that house continue to win. J. C. Cutter, member of the Lin coln Bridle and Saddle club, judged the contest and his decisions were very satisfactory to the riders, ac cording to Bill Ralston, contest manager. In the boxing and wrestling meet following the evening pre sentation of the pageant Wesley Dunn Ag college junior, and Claire Dailey, former A. A. U. champion, put on four fast rounds of boxing at the end of which Dailey got the decision. In the second boxing bout John Henschel and Edward Uptegrove fought four rounds for a draw. Barrell Bauder, junior, won a de ( Continued on Page 3.) BARB DEBATE TOURNEY FINALS SET TUESDAY Delian-Union to Meet E. H. Club on Activity Tax Proposition. Finals in the Barb bracket of the intramural debate tournament will be run off Tuesday evening following the postponement from last Thursday, according to the revised schedule arranged by the debaters and Harold Petz, intra mural director. Delian Union and the E. H. club will decide the Barb championship arguing the question, Resolved: that the University of Nebraska Should Adopt a Student Activities Tax. The Barb winners will meet Sigma Alpha Mu, the interfrater nitv champions, in a debate some i time during the week to decide the intramural victors. Winners in the argument Tues day will receive an intramural placque for the achievement. The winners in the intramural finals will be given a similar award. Sigma Alpha Mu was given a year's possession of the silver gavel, presented annually by Delta Sigma Rho. debate honorary. Marjoric Shanafolt Lectures at Aurora Miss Marjorie Shanafelt, curator of visual education at the univer sity museum, spoke to the art de partment of the Aurora Woman's club preceding the spring luncheon Friday afternoon. May 4. Her lec ture was illustrated, and titled. "Romance of the Rose." , I. - ' j New Innocents Tapped Thursday j Here are the new and old members of Innocents, senior men's hon left to right: Owen Johnson. Stromsburg, president; Frank Crablll, R K os man. Omaha, treasurer; Howard White. Tecumseh, sergeant at ar Falls Oty; Frank J. Fischer, Valentine; Vfaynard C Miller, Lincoln Standing at the rear of the chairs Is the retiring society. Fro Omaha; Dick Moran. Omaha; John Gepson. Oman; Wood row Mag Robert Theil. Lincoln; Vernon Filley. Lincoln; Robert PUHnf, Omaha Shram ek, David City. Y.W. Placque to Honor Memory Grace Coppock Twenty-eight years ago, a young girl just out of college a year, or ganized the first Y. W. C. A. work in China, at Shanghai. This morn ing, a plaque commemorating Grace Coppock's service to China and to the world, is being present ed to the university Y. W. C. A. in the pageant which celebrates the Y.W, 's fiftieth anniversary on this campus. The bronze tablet is 17 by Ti inches in size and bears a replica of her head and an English inscrip tion, "Upon such lives, peace may be built." Along each side as a border are Chinese characters of the same words. It has taken sev eral months to have the correct Chinese lettering for the placque worked out so that the meaning of the inscription may be identical in the two languages. Three Copies of Tablet. Three copies have been made one for the University of Ne braska, one which the national (Continued on page 2.) DEAN LYMAN LEAVES FOR PHARMACY MEET Three National Conclaves Hold Attention of Nebraska Man. Z00K SCHEDULED TALK Dr. R. A. Lyman, dean of the college of pharmacy, left Satur day for Washington, D. C, where he will attend three national con ventions of pharmacists and edu cators. During this week the annual meeting of the American Association of Colleges of Phar macy, and the American Phar macy association events will hold his attention. The latter organization will ded icate its new headquarters build ing in Washington. In the same city on May 18 and 19, Dr. Lyman will be a delegate for his sixth year to the American Council on Education, He represents the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy in this body. Dr. Lyman's chief interest will be in the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy meeting. The principal speakers at this convention will be United States Commisssioner of BJducation Zook, C. H. Main, director of the Ameri can Council vmf Education, and Mordccai Johnson, head of How ard university of Washington, D. C, the largest Negro medical school in the country. Johnson will deal with the problem of Ne gro education in pharmacy in the (Continued on Page 3). PLEDGE FEE QUESTION Pep Society to Meet First Time in Permanent Headquarters. Corn Cobs will meet for the first time in their new permanent head quarters in rr om h of University hall Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock when the question of a pledge fee will be discussed. Plans will also be made for initiating those men who were unable to be initiated earlier. Irving Hill, president of the or ganization, said that pcsession of the permanent headquarters will have a steadying effect on the club and is the first step in the reform of Corn Cobs planned for the com ing year. Gramlich Speak. H. J. Gramlich, chairman of the department of animal husbandry at the university, spoke before the Beaver Crossing Community club, Tuesday evening, May 1. o ' .i.i.p.ij y . mm m. . .i i , puw.m;;,!-. y.n, v Yi PAGEANT 10 F 200 Are Invited to Annual Breakfast Preceding Presentation. MISS FONTEIN PRESIDES Mrs. L. C. Brown, University Graduate, in Charge Of Play. In cclcliralion of llic V. V. ('. A.'s fiftieth amiiversiiry on the Nehi'iiskii campus, a page ant depicting the past, present, and future of the Y. V. will he given Sunday morning in Carrie Belle Raymond hall. The pageant is preceded by a May morning breakfast to which about 200 stu dents, mothers, and alumnae have been invited. A reception line, composed of Miss Bernice Miller, secretary of the Y. W., Chancellor and Mrs. E. A. Burnett, the advisory board, and the officers of the Y. W will receive the guests as they come to the breakfast. A grand march into the dining room will be led by the nlumnnc of the ISRO's. Evelyn Diamond, Beth Phillips, and Vir ginia Sweeney are in charge of ar rangements for the reception of guests. All are asked to arrive at 8:30. To Welcome Mothers. Elaine Fontein, president of the Y. W. will serve as the toastmis tress at the breakfast and will also welcome all the mothers and alumnae members. Mrs. C. Petrus Peterson. '08. a mother and an alumna, will give the response. Introduction of staff leaders and their staffs will be made at the breakfast. Y. W. alumnae, start ing with 1884, will be introduced in ten year periods. Old alumnae who are expected to attend ihe anniversary are: Misses Valeria Vonnell, Frances Drake, Margaret. Fedde, Narcissus Snell, and Ade line Reynoldson, and Mesdames Landy Clark. Samuel Avery, E. A. Burnett, Herbert Brownell, Snyder (Continued on Page 4.) OF ORIGINAL Dancing Society Schedules Recital Thursday in Grant Memorial. Orchesis, honorary dancing so ciety, will present its annual dance recital Thursday, May 10, at 8:lf p. m. in Grant Memorial hall. En tirely original, the recital this year is to be divided into two parts, a group of dances and a dance drama. The dance drama, El Lamperero. or the Lamplighter, was written by Virginia Moomaw, Doris Riis ness, and Georgia Kilgore, assisted by Miss Edith VaVil, instructor in physical education. Included in the group of dances is, Spectrum, a study or colors, Traffic, a study of Lincoln rhythms, P. 1 u e, a lyric waltz. L'AUegro Babaro. an invocation, Marche, .Slave, a geometric march, Deep Pviver, a study of Negro workers on a levee, and Felines, a comic dance. Prof. Ycddo Talks al Hfd Cloud ,Wav Prof. Margaret Fedde spoke at Red Cloud, Wednesday, May 2. on the extension achievement day pre gram, with the subject: "The Chil dren of Russia." Professor Fedde is chairman of the department of home economics at the university. Ai 1 SHOW HISTORY 0 NEBRASKA GROUP ORCHESIS GIVES GROUP - Mardon&M photo. - -Court y !!nriit Jnui nal orary organization at the unlvrily Seated on the chairs, are, from ed Cloud, vice president; Gorge Holyoke, Omaha, secretary; Henry ms: Thomas Dsvleij, Utira; Franklin Meier. Lincoln; William Fisher, ; Frederick Nieklas, Syracuse, and Burton Marvin, Lincoln, m left to right, they are: Byron Goulding. Omaha: Frank Mungrave, ee, Lincoln: George Fauer, Lincoln; Lloyd Loom in. Augusta. K : ; Otto Kotouc, Humboldt; Heya Lambertua, Gothenburg, and Joe UH'FMA REJMilTES HARVARD POS Lou Professor Appointed Research Fellow for 19.it -35. Dr. L. Dale Coffman, associate professsor of law at the university, has been appointed a research fel low at Harvard university for next year, it was announced by univer sity officials Saturday. He has been granted a leave of absence from the university for next year. Dr. Lester OrfteHl, associate pro fessor of law, now holding a Bran deis scholarship at Harvard, will resume his instructional work at the university next fall, it was also announced. Dr. Coffman expects to leave Lincoln, with s wife and daugh ter, about August 1, to live in Cambridge for the duration of his Harvard work. He expects to take his law study there under Profes sors Pound, Morgan, and Scott. MUSIC PANHELLENIC FIRST P T Actives, Alumnae of Three Groups to Take Part In Concert. Members of the music panhc-1-lenic council, composed of repre sentatives of the three music so rorities on the campus, Mu Phi Epsilon, Delta Omicron, and Sigma Alpha Iota, will give their first annual concert Tuesday evening. May 8, at 8:15 o'clock at the Tem ple theater. Active and alumnae members of the three sororities will take part. The music panhellenic was or ganized lat November on the uni versity campus for the purpose of regulating rushsing and pledging in musical sororities and promot ing general intetrest in music. The Nebraska music panhellenic is one of many such organizations being set up at universities all over the United States, the one on this campus being modeled after that at Ohio university. The association is composed of nine members, two active mem bers and one alumnae from each of the three sororities. Among the projects the organization plans to sponsor is a tea each fall for all women students of the school of music, and a musicale each year to be given either by members of the three sororities or a guest art ist. Representatives in the council from Mu Phi Epsilon ar, Eliza beth Horrigan, Velma James, and Adeth Pierce; from Sigma Alpha Iota, Kathryn Simpson, Louise Kimball, and Mrs. Ridnour; and from Delta Omicron, Ruth John son, Bernice Rundin, and Mrs. Springer. Ardeth Pierce is in charge of the program to be presented Tuesday (Continued on Page 2.) MARY LOUSE RAKER l RECITAL MOM) A Y Four Music Students Will Assist in Program At Temple. Miss Betty Zabriskie, instructor of violoncello, School of Music. treasurer of the Nebraska league, will present Mary Louise Baker in j Starting as an idea of one ot the a cello recital Monday evening, j officers, the wording is carefully May 7. at the Temple theater at. i evolved so as to avoid manipula 8 o'clock. Miss Baker will be as-I tion bv "term-solitters " aecordin? jn sisie'i ny Maijoric niiin, ursi vio- lin. Neva Webster, second violin. .lane Welch, viola, and Margaret Baker, piano. The program: Bach, Adagio from Toccata, C major. Comma rtini, Sonata in G major, Allegro, Grave, Vivace Saint-Saens, Concerto in A minor. (ilazounow, Interludium in Modo Antico. Schumann, Quintet. Op. 44, Al legro Brillante. Squire, Meditation. Granados, Intermezzo. ' Saint-Saens, Allegro Appassion ato. I ' 1 ire. ALL SEMESTER REGISTRATION IS SET WEEK MAY 1 Students Now in School to See Advisors Before Noon Saturday. MAY GET CREDIT BOOKS Statement of Fees Due to Be Mailed Before August 1 5. Registration nirMer of the year Mill Mart ing, May 7, tlirouch until for the first se l'l.il school Monday lnoni nnd continue noon Saturday, May 12, according to a bulletin is sued from the otlice of the regis trar. Students registered during the second semester may see their advisors between the above dates. Office hours are announced in the schedule now obtainable at the registrar's office. According to Dr. A. R. Congdon, chairman of the assignment com mittee, the policy inaugurated of requiring his signature in order for a student to be excused from aft ernoon classes will be continued. Except with special permission, every fctudent must register for at least two-fifths of his hours in the afternoon. To avoid delay anyone claiming exemption from afternoon classes should see Dr. Congdon this week in room 111, Teachers college. Students may obtain credit books by presenting identification cards at the registrar's office. These credit books should then be taken to the individual's advisor before planning a schedule of classes. An application blank and (Continued on Page 3.) DEBATE LEAGUE PICKS TOPIC FORNEXT YEAR Federal Aid for Education Question to Be Argued Thruout Nation.. Official wording for the debate topic to b used thruout the nation next year in senior high school leag-ue debating has been an nounced by Dr. A. Craig P.aird of the University of Iowa, and was made public Saturday by the Uni versity of Nebraska extension serv ice. H reads: Renolved: That the federal government should adopt the policy of equalizing educational opportunity thruout the nation by means of annual grants to the several states for public elemen tary and secondary education. This question and its wording were arrived at thru the co-operation of the high school debate leagues in the thirty-three states involved, and the National Univer sity Extension association, accord ing to C. K. Moore. se retarv- ; to the secretary Omaha Technical high school de baters, who won this year's tourna ment in Nebraska, will represent, the state 'his week at. Toneka in I the national intcr-s holast ic debate tournament. Rise in Teaching Salaries Pied ic I cd lly Moritz Survey That teaching salaries through out Nebiaska'a public school are due to rise again next year in the conclusion reached in a survey made recently by R. D. Moritz. di rector of the department of edu cational service in the teachers college. Neaily half of the public school teachers In Nebraska will receive more pay during 1934 -193ft, according to the survey, which in cluded 27ft school in the lte. Not only are ?nnn-H being In creased but there is a marked movement to leplace teachers eliminated a year ago, says the re port. Also, schools are replacing rouifri that were eliminated fa a result of the reduction in the teaching staff, while other clauses are being substituted in some rases, continues the summary of Director Moritz's findings. Some 1447 grade teachers and 14"f high school teachers are in cluded in thiH study made of 21 H Nebraska school "This repre-. scnts a cross Keetion of the schools in the Htate and whatever trends may lie In evidence in these schools undoubtedly are reflected In the state hh a. wholn," the dim-tor stales Actual percent apes were figure,! from those si hools reporting as having held elections. For nevl year 4h 6 percent of the giad teachers will receive Increase varying from 45 to 249 more for the at hal term, and 4. percent of the superintendents will be paid higher salaries, varying from $N to $W for the year Shgntlv more than 34 percent of the gra.ta and high . h.ol tea. heis had llieir salaries left un. hanged for the period Salary rte. renees for ths next (Continued on raft 3 ) I