The Daily Nebraskgiini VOL. XVI. NO. 159. UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1917. PRICE FIVE CENTS FRIDAY ISSUE IS LASTJNEBRASKAN PAPER WILL CLOSE FIRST YEAR AS SIX-COLUMN SHEET (tportorial Work Hat Been Done by Representative Staff Plans for Next Fall With Friday's issue. The Daily Ne nskan will end its sixteenth year. mi its first year as a six-column daily. So ceremony has been arranged for lie official closing of the volume, and w special edition will mark the event, j u planned by the staff to evacuate Tie Nebraskan office soon after the torning post-mortem over the Friday (Jition has been held, and to devote Jie remainder of the week to prepara tion for examination. A History-Making Year Reviewing the season, it may be aid that the present volume of The Sebraskan has had the provilege of chronicling perhaps the greatest single jetr in the history of the University, laternally. it saw the realization of the (ingle tax and the student council, two hndmarks which it appears are destined to make the present college term a memorable one. Other events of Importance have been the installa tion of a new coaching system at Ne kraska; the temporary tumble of Ne- bra ska from her football throne; the I ibolition of the Cornhusker banquet. 1 tad the movement for w ider and more comprehensive training in journalism. But the present term as recorded in 1 i the columns of The Nebraskan Is destined to be remembered as the year wten Nebraska University, as an in tepi part of America, took up the p of battle and entered the fight fr right and democracy. Indistinct rablings of the approach of this psy tiology were also heard in the course ( the year; signs of the awakening of the University to the greater, broad er spirit which is the moving power in the nation today, were seen. Suc cessful campaigns in the University for the prison relief fund and for the French war orphan fund were among these manifestations. The University and War With the entrance of America Into tie world war began epoch-making I'niversity history. The opening event s the immense patriotic parade and demonstration, in which three thou nd students, faculty members, re fat.-, and alumni was roused on that! Numbering spirit was roused on that, iT. and as a result of this expression.) Ttr one thousand students left their ! college work to either permanently or temporarily serve the government. Most of the one thousand who left to!l-ge. who by a special privision. ere given full credit for the semes-! 5r'g work, went to the farms and into! tpfial scientific or industrial lines,! future generations shall remember! j'iat two hundred Nebraska students) t ent Into training for active service; J their country's cause at the reserve! '".i ers' training camp at Fort Snell-1 This is the largest number, u is ; id. to be jsextt from any university fa the division, j Influence on Affairs ; The internal effect of the war upon! 4e University was also as important ! tent of the year. The campaign for; ' Konomy, and for unselfish co-opera- uon. as manifested in the curtailing of social events, the abandonment of oWription dances, the limiting of rority rushing expenses, and liberal nations to the Red Cross fund. Is so a sign of the times. The Reportorial Staff The bulk of the work of writing up the events has fallen upon the tportorial staff under the direction f the news branch of the editorial; raff. special pares and departments have kn under the control of reportorial, M editorial staff members, as fol- Woman's page. Fern Noble.1 Uloriate editor; farm campus page. i Ralph TV. Thorpe and Carl Jones; ty tiety. Katharine Newbranch, and sports. Dwight P. Thomas. Eva Mil ler has been contributing editor. The'reportoria! work for the semes ter has been done by Richard Cook Lenora Noble, Forrest Est is, Carolyn Reed, Roy Bedford. M. J. Keegan, Alan Brundage, H. J. Murfin. Ruth Beecher, Kdness Kimball, John C. Wright, and Ruth Snyder. Richard Cook has been special writer, covering the military depart ment "particularly; I.enora Noble has had the art department, the depart ment of physical education, and the alumni office for her run. Forrest Estis Lhas covered the department of chenv (Continued oa page 2) HOW WILL DRAFT HITATHLETIGS CORNHUSKERS. WONDERING WHAT FALL WILL FIND Not so Many Affected as Generally Thought Move for Compul sory Athletics What state will Nebraska athletics be in when school opens next fall? This is a question that is repeatedly arising among those who are most closely connected with the athletic de partment. No absolute statement can be made as no one can tell what effect the draft will have on Nebraska's athletes. Only two men have so far been surely lost in all the branches of athletics. These are Captain Nelson of the basketball team and Ellsworth Moser, center on the football team. These men have been accepted at Fort Snelling and will in all probability not be free to return to school. No Freshmen Lost Practically all the members of this year's football team will be back that would have been back in normal times. None have been lost from the fresh man squad. Practically all these men have gone to farm 3 out in the state Basketball and track men as a rulejFrir, ..etiine two weeks ago. has been are working on farms or are still In school. The selective conscription will not affect the various teams as much as might be expected. Many of the mem bers of these teams are under the age for registering and so will not be af- fected by the first draft. There will be no thought at Ne - braska of discontinuing any of th sports. Such action would be In direct opposition to te stand taken by the; president on the proposition of college j athletics. The Kansas coach has made the proposition that athletics be made com pulsory. His idea sounds very prac- J tical at this time when reports are . coming from the training camps of the inability of a great many of the men i to stand the rigorous training to which they are being put. Will Lecture at Chicago Prof. F. D. Barker of the departm nn.rmr t n at Kaa 1 n I f rl t " Ori O ! i ,.... - series of lectures on animal parasites i this summer Lofaro iho c-rartnare school of the college of medicine of the Uaiversity of Illinois at Chicago. Wants Assistant The department of zoology has received a call for two assistants in the biological laboratory of the California state board of health located in the department of zoology of the University of California. The incumbent will devote half time to routine and research work for the state board and will have half time free for graduate study. Applicants must have had thoroigh training in zoology and special preparation in protozoology and parasitology. Students who are qualified and interested should consult Prof. F. D. Barker at once. Two hundred and sixty agricultural students of old Penn. have gone "back to the farm" to serve their creor Z f,U ierm work" I - ti in tit ror pu m ' UNIVERSITY PLANS PARTY FOR NEBRASKA P.1EN AT FT, SNELLING Will Give Banquet at Minneapolis Saturday Evening and Send Big Box of Candy to Arrive at Camp Sunday Morning. MONEY TO BE RAISED THURSDAY Nebraska students and alumni at Fort Snelling. some of whom it has been predicted those who remain behind will never see again, are to be remembered by the University before the closing of the term. A farewell banquet is planned for them at the Hotel Radisson. Minneapolis, Saturday evening, and the Girls' club and Y. W. C. A. wili send a big box of candy Friday which will reach the men in camp Sunday morning. The banquet will be given the Corn husker soldiers by the undergraduates of the University, it is planned. Min neapolis alumni will have charge of it at that end. University men are to be sponsors for the banquet, and they will have charge of securing the money. About $300 is needed, which must be raised by Friday noon, so that it may be telegraphed to Min-, neapolis. Tomorrow tables w ill be placed in University hall and in the library for receiving contributions and a list of men to whom money may be given will be published. The men at Fort Snelling will in reality be given a Nebraska party, for on the morning following the banquet in Minneapolis, the big box of candy will arrive in camp. In it will be enough boxes of home-made candy to assure that the two hundred soldiers are all supplied. All student candy- makers are asked to bring a box full of their best to the Y. W. C. A. rooms, Temple. Friday morning, and place it ! REED GOES BACK TO FT. SNELLING Symptoms of Heart Trouble Not Found : xorman B. Curtice, '19, Lincoln, will on Second Examination and He Is leave Sunday for New York city, sail AcceDted as Recruit I ing from there for France to drive an Word has been received that Mer - lri v 14 wh,- returned from j accepted in the officers' reserve train- j ing camp. Reed left a position as an ' as?istant in the botany department of i c0iumbia university to report at the camp and wa3 toid that he had heart troub!e and could not be accepted. H returned to Lincoln and was examined j b. fiv physicians here who could dis- )cover no such svmptoms. so he re-, ',,, .,,; the camp and was V "3 - - pass,j Saturday afternoon, Ref.,i was assign! to Company S. of wbih Verne Austin is a member, Seniors Observe An as strict S'rift t-iannn.". as well secrecy, marked senior sneak day. which, it might b- well to say, as I i , I - . - - One hundred co-ds chose to enjoy Welded that a lne P'cnic. nl ' . . i .a ! r, cntr from an QOZen uieu uun - r- economic point of vie to carry par cels, row boats, ana u- uauim v -ners. The matter of economy of distance was also foueh' won by the con servatives, and the gradua'es sneaked, not to Milford. nor to Crete, but to Capital Beach. " Once on the scene, however, and with the economic picnic all outlined, the one hundred co-eds and fifteen men let Joy be unrestrained. They rode the chute-the-hutes. the frris wheel, and glided in row boats across the waters of the lake. It Is t be pre sumed that the brave fifteen did not take an unimportant part in those pro ceeding; one might conjecture, and with good foundation, that they greased the rollers of the hut?-the-chutes. adJled the capacity-loaded barks gallantly around the expanse rater and accommodated a long u i v line of waiting coeds on the dancing in the big box. It has been suggested that each box be tied with scarlet and cream ribbon and that none of them contains the name of the sender, since it is to be not an individual, but a University gift. In order that there be no confusion, the co-ed and men's organizations in charge have asked that the fact be brought out that the banquet is not ! solely given bythe men, nor the box of candy by the women. They form to gether one big gift from the institu tion and men and women may contrib ute both to the banquet and to the caady box. The plan to give a banquet for Ne braskans is the result of a general feel ing among the students, growing keener as the time came for the scat tering of w hat is left of the University j body for the summer vacation, that J Nebraska should express in some way j her appreciation of her sons who have j given up their college careers for the business of war. CURTICE WILL LEAVE FOR FRANCE SUNDAY I ! ambulance behind the western front. i Curtice returned from Chicago last week, where arrangements were made for him to enter this branch of the service. He will be attached to the foreign legion of the French army. at least until the American expedi- tionary force arrives, In college. Curtice has been active in sophomore class affairs, and was recently elected president of the Kos- met Klub. He is the seventh member of the Klub to enter active service. He had four years of military training here and was major of the second bat-j talion in 1914. Economic Sneak Day floor, each one impatient for her turn. And at lunch-time. Coeds who wt-re there report a perfectly delightful time. "We just separated into groups, you know, and ate box-lunches we brought with us." Would it be illogical to presume that at the center of each of these groups some John Riddell or! Anton Jensen sat, entertiining the charmed cirrle which surrounded him? And after luncheon came a big ball game. It is rumored, although the rumor has not yet gained official flavor, that the fifteen were drafted as um pires, cheer-leaders, and chasers down of wild throws, and that the chief figures in the bleachers were Chan cellor and Mrs. Avery and Dean Gra ham. But the best part about this eco nomic sneak day is yet to be told. When the picnic was planned, mem bers of the class went to Chancellor Avery, who is usually the host at the agair, and told him that, in view of the campaign for economy and the emergencies of the time, the class had decided to pay the expenses of the holi day Itseif. Chancellor Avery accepted the suggestion and he plans to give the mcney to the French war orphan fund instead. LINCOLN HIGH CLASS OF 1913 WILL HOLD REUNION TONIGHT The class of 1913. Lincoln high school, will hold its annual reunion this evening at the home of Anna Luckey, '17, Fortieth and Holdrege streets. The party will also take the form of a farewell reception for Su perintendent F. M. Hunter, '05. Besides short talks by members of the class and Superintendent' Hunter, the fol lowing program has been arranged: Piano solo Leroy Meisinger, 'IT. Aesthetic dances Lillian Wirt. 'IT. Music Harold Morgan, '17. Reading Leila Putney. UNIVERSITY AND ITS PART IN WAR THREE FACULTY MEN OUTLINE ITS RELATION TO INSTITUTION Advocate Completion of College Course, Help in Food Conservation and Technical Training The war and its relation to the Uni versity was discussed by Dean O. V. P. Stout, head of the college of engi neering, Dean E. A. Burnett, of the agricultural college, and Dean Charles Fordyce. head of the teachers' college, at Convocation yesterday morning at 11 o'clock in Memorial hall. Dean Stout pointed out that the de mand for technically trained men has been greatly increased by the war. Military men need engineering train ing, he said. In agriculture, transportation and distribution as well as in military work, this training is of great impor tance. Dean Stout emphasized. The highway campaign begun by the United States government just before war wa3 declared should be carried out, he said. College Training Essential "If our young men leave school be fore they graduate." he concluded, "they go into service with less prepa ration than they need for their work." Students should attend the Univer sity while they have the chance. Dean Burnett urged. "The present war emergency may be long continud. If war is to terminate quickly, the average student can best serve his country by going into the fields of production." This was the reason, he explained, thet the University au thorities have been so willing to ex cuse students to go into this line of work. The work of the college of agricul ture has been greatly increased along supervisory lines especially, by the war. Dean Burnett said. "We have been called upon for laborers, for su pervisors so that the work will be made as economical as possible. Nat urally technically trained men are most efficient, yet one who is just graduating from any profession is not qualified to go out and supervise a large industry." Thinks Food Situation Better A great deal can be done along the line of the conservation of the avail able food supply and the stoppage of waste incident to the ordinarymethod of living, he pointed out. He was con fident that the food situation would improve. The potato, spring wheat and corn acreage is far above normal this year, he said, due to the scarcity of food products and the high prices they command. That the teaching profession was not protected by law as were most vocations was pointed out by Dean Fordyce. "The farms and shops are better fortified than the schools. Men will not be drafted from these, but ;hi strong men of our schools are al! subject to draft. And we dre not neglect our schools. England has made a fatal mistake there." Women Have Men's Work Women will be obliged to take the administrative positions formerly held (Continued oa page 3) DEAN POUND SPEAKER AT COMMENCEMENT DISTINGUISHED ALUMNUS WILL REPLACE GENERAL PERSHING Wires Acceptance to Chancellor Avery Yesterday Is Member of Class of 1888 Dean Roscoe Pound. '8S. head of the Harvard law school, yesterday wired Chancellor Avery that he would ac cept the invitation to deliver the com mencement address to the class of 1917. taking the place of Maj. Gen. John J. Pershing, who is unable, be cause of the exegencies of war. to leave Washington. Wednesday, June 13, is commencement day. Dean Pound, w ho is a brother of Dr. Louise Pound of the department of English literature, is one of Nebraska's most prominent alumni. Graduating in 1888, he has grown to enjoy, since that time, an international reputation in two widely differentiated lines of learning, law and botany. He was associate professor and later dean ot the University college of law, leaving Nebraska in 1907 to become professor of law at Northwestern university. He was head of the University of Chicago law school in 1910; Storey professor of law at Harvard in 1911, and head of the Harvard law school in 1916. He occupies today probably the most in fluential academic position of any stu dent of law in America. A Popular Dean While at Nebraska Dean Pound exerted a germane influence over un dergraduate activities which still is felt, a fact that makes his choice as commencement speaker a happy one. Dean Pound, although almost phenom enal in his own powers, was, even as dean of the law school, a great friend and favorite with underclassmen; he was an interested critic of student pub lications from a student point of view as well as reviewer of the most in tricate system of law. He entered the University of Ne braska at the age of 12. As a college boy he devoted most of his time to rumination among the classics, until he was discovered by the late Dean Bessey, who turned his fertile mind into the field of botany. He received his masters degree in botany in 1SS9. Representing his botanical accomplish ments, "The Phytogeography of Ne braska," published in 1903. written in collaboration with F. E. Clements, '94. is one of Dan Pound's contributions, one which firmly established him both in America and abroad as a scientist. Recognition of his original research was made by Dr. Otto Kuutze, well known German scientist, when he named a lichen he had discovered. Roscopoundia. The a.socie libre de 1'acadeniie Internationale de geogra phic bctanique ulso honored this Ne braskan by membership in its exclu sive circle. Stars Work at Law At nineteen years of ago. Dean Pound turned from the active study of botany to preparation for his life work, the study, practise, and teach ing of law. He spent but one year under academic guidance, however, anl that at the Harvard law school. With this equipment. Pound came back to Lincoln, was examined and ad mitted to the bar, and started the prac tice of law with his father and the study of jurisprudence during his spare time. He became associate professor of law in the University at thirty one, in the year 1&01, the opening of his career as teacher of law, and immedi ately turned his attention to the re organization of the system of teaching law then In vogue at Nebraska. It was through him that the present "case system" of teaching wai intro duced, and the practice courts, which are recognized as one of the most valuable things a senior law gets dur ing his four years, were set up. Two (Continued on page 3) ) i