The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 25, 1941, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
DAILY NEBRASKAN
Sunday, May 25, 1941
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University committee on schol
arships Saturday announced the
winners of four 1911 awards. The
George Barrowman scholarship,
created by Dr. George Barrowman
of Chicago, and awarded to a wor
thy student in either chemistry or
geology, amounting to $60. was
awarded to Roy Chester Feber,
junior engineer.
The Jefferson II. Broady SCO
prize, established by Dr. and Mrs.
John D. Clark, was won by Baird
K. Emmons, arts and sciences sen
ior. Charles D. Lantz, freshman en
gineer, was awarded the Walter J.
Nickel freshman prize, given each
spring to the freshman man or
woman who has overcome the
greatest difficulties in completing
his or her freshman year.
The fourth award announced is
the Edward Lang True Memorial
si holarship of S60. won hy Harold
Fmil Drcycr, Norfolk business ad
ministration junior.
Schmidt conducts limbic
exams in Omaha schools
Prof. Herbert Schmidt of the
school of music faculty spent Fri
day afternoon, May 23, in Omaha
conducting piano examinations for
all Omaha high school students
who are studying piano for ap
plied music credit. Brownell Hall
students were among those in
cluded in the examining.
Reception- fK
(Continued from Page 1.)
, friends and relatives, will have
ther last opportunty to meet Chan
cellor Boucher and other faculty
heads before graduation.
Forming the receiving line will
be Ellsworth DuTeau, director of
alumni activities. Chancellor and
Mrs. Boucher, and all of the mem
bers of the Ijoard of regents who j
are in town at the time. Also at- j
tending will be the deans of all
colleges and divisions, while retir
ing members of Innocents and
Mortar Board societies will act as
ushers.
Henry Mattieson ind his orches
tra will provide the music for the
dance, at which each senior and
his or her friend will be guests of
the Alumni association, which is
t-ponsoring lith th reception and
dance.
Federal Bureau of Reclamation in
January of 1937.
Prof. Arthur Sperry Pearse,
graduate professor at Duke uni
versity in Durham, North Caro
lina, will receive the degree of
doctor of laws. Tease received his
bachelors and masters degrees at
Nebraska, then received his PhD
at Harvard.
A member of Phi Beta Kappa,
Sigma Xi, the British Society of
Experimental Biology, his name
has been starred in American Men
of Science. In 1929 he was a visit-
Alums-
(Continued from Page 1.)
laws degree from Harvard in 1915,
was admitted to the New York bar
in the same year, and is now presi
dent of Eastman Kodak company.
Serving in Trance in the first
World war, he received the dis
tinguished service cross.
John Chatficld Page, commis
sioner of the Bureau of Reclama
tion in western states, will be con
ferred with the degree of doctor
of engineering. After receiving
his Bachelor of Science degree in
civil engineering, he studied at
Cornel! and then entered the gov
ernment reclamation service in
1909. President Roosevelt ap
pointed him Commissioner of the
An eye, on
Girls
Sports
By Susan Shaw.
Tri Delta Jean Hazen and Olive
Rorenson conquered Jerry Grins
pan and Sarah Miller, S. D. T.'s in
the final game of the ping pong
tourney by the margins of 21-13
and 21-11.
Badminton results have been
slow due to two defaults. Mary
Bird and Marcy Bauer, Alpha Phis,
turned in a 35-20 victory over
Frances Bayzann and Frances
Dietze, Independents.
While students relax over a coke.
Instructors Tolman and Thompson
find their spare time taken up with
their special rendition of the
.Skaters Waltz."
With finals starting Tuesday,
my column writing days are over.
Many thanks are due to Ruth Ma
thews and Janet Hemphill for their
help with this column. That's all
.for nvy feutJJippe in hn back .with.
I dirt-; Sport tiUti Jelil Tl II '
ing professor at Keio university in
Tokyo, and in 1930 he went to
Duke.
Inventor from class of '97.
Doctor of engineering, the fifth
honorary degree, will be conferred
upon Karl Chandler Randall, '97,
electrical engineer of Westing
house Electric company. Randall
became an instructor in engineer
ing at UN upon taking his bache
lor's degree. In 1899 he went to
Westinghouse, where he special
ized in transformer engineering
until 1911 when he became head of
the switchboard.
An inventor, designer, and ex
ecutive, Mr. Randall holds several
patents, including the one under
which he developed the present
company form of oil-immersed,
self-cooled transformer tank con
struction. To Mark Morton of Chicago, the
only living son of J. Sterling Mor
ton, founder of Arbor Day and one
time Secretary of Agriculture,
will be granted the degree of doc
tor of agriculture.
Morton, who, with his brothers,
gave Arbor Lodge, the Morton
family estate at Nebraska City,
to the state in 1923 has set up a
Morton fellowship, at present held
by a university history student,
James Olson, one of the DAILY'S
news commentators, and last year
placed on deposit with the univer
sity the complete correspondence
of his father, saved and collected
from his youth and through his
years as a member of Grover
Cleveland's cabinet.
4
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