The Daily Nebraskan VOL. XX. NO. 119. LINCOLN. NEBRASKA. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1U21. PRICE FIVE CENTS. IGLSEASON III FULL Sll Nebraska Has One of Largest Squaos in Country Schulte Sets Goal at Four Hundred. HIGH SCHOOL MEET MAY 14 Excellent Schedule Prepared !n eludes Kansas, South Dakota and Haskell Indians. Nebraska will bo represented this spring by not only the largest trark squad in the Missouri Valley, but alsi one of the greatest gathering of track men in the country. Coach Schulte has placed the goal at 400 men and to accomplish this expects every man to bring out at least one other can didate. Spring vacation, which starts nest week, will in no way hamper the work of any of the track men. Coach Schulte expects to remain in Lincoln and take care of all of the HuskM athletes who will work out during the ra.cation period here. All of the racu who are going home for the week have been Instructed to work out at least four times during the vacation period. The annual state high school tr!ck meen will be held in Lincoln on Ma 14 this year . Director Luehring anil Coach Schulte expect to have a larga number of high school cinder path artists here for the annual classic One of the features of the meet wiil be the selective Penthathlon fnr the high school athletes. This Is some thing new for the Nebraska big! school men and Coach Schulte is plannin gon making it an annual event at Nebraska. Coach Schulte has outlined eighl coming events which all gf the meh must be in shape for after they have returned from the vacation. Every man must be in condition for the Varsity or if he is not eligible for the Varsity he must be in shape to win Lis numerals. The first meet oi the year will be the Inter-Fraternity meet on April 9. Coach Schulte ex pects tvi-ry man who Is out for trad now to participate in this meet il br is not eligible for Varsity work. Inter-College Meet Following the Inter-Fraternity meet will be the Inter-college meet on April 16. The men in the novice division will compete against the Freshmen in a meet which .will be staged Apr; 23. The Missouri Valley Conference tryouts for the Freshmen will be heiu on April 30. Nebraska has a greai bunch of yearling performers and should put some real material in the field for this meet. The Missouri VaJ ley Conference Freshmen Telegraphic meet will be held on May 11. A d'ia' practice meet with Wesleyan is scheu ukd for some time this spring. The alumni medal meet will be held ol May 21 thisear. The Varsity men have a strenuous season coming on with three dual meets and four or five other big metis on the calendar. The preliminary fy outs for the Drake relays will be held April 9 with the finals coming or Aprl 16. The Drake relays will be held on April 23, and Coach Schulte expects to enter three relay teams for certain In the big classic. Noth ing definite has been decided regi.r'i tog the Peen games at Philadelphia. Kansas, Haskell Indians and Sou Dakota will follow one another In dual meets with the Huskers. PHI ALPHA DELTA HOLDS BANQUET AT GRAND HOTEL Fhi Alpha Delta, legal fraternity held a banquet at the Grand Hotel Wednesday evening. Cecil Strimplc Mtd as toastmaster and Introduced lle speakers. The main speaker of the evening was Judge James R. Deax o? Ue Nebraska Supreme Court. Judge Dean, who is a member of Alpha Delta, presented to his Carers the fact that satisfaclioi. fomes to the lawyer not so mart the capital be acquires as througt f ierv,oe be renderi to his conmu 7 and ttat. UNIOR HOP FRIDAY NIGHT AT K. C. HALL The Junior Hop will bo held Frlda. evening, March 23, at the Knights oi Columbus Hall. Tickets are now ou sale and may bo purchased from the following members of the Hop com inittee: Andrew SchoeppeL Chal mers Seymour, Katherine Willis, Jes sie Watson, Bryco Crawford, Clarence Ross, Vivian Hanson and Wallaco Herrick. Plans are nearly completed for a successful prom. In other years it has been a tradition to make the an nual Junior dance a formal dinner affair and tickets sold for more than $5.00. This year in keeping with tho Nebraska economy campaign the prom will bo informal and tickets will cost 1.25 including war tax. Parasites Depend On Brains of Others 7o Make Grades In Exams "Nope, can't say as I know a thing about this; I'll have to trust to the girl next to me for my grade." That is the way most of us go to exams and the way wc pass them. Wo depend on tne brains and industry of others; we are that creature known by so ciety as parasite. No one hesitates for a single instant about taking the opportunities to ex change or accept knowledge. It is habitual and customary, it is being done. We cut for all we're worth and never feel any pangs of conscience because of this laxness. If one or two students in a class know lots and are willing to pass it along very few can possibly flunk the exam. Anyone vho is a proficient copier can get by with all but murder. It is perfectly legitimate to "bluff because all you can get out of your own miad is yours, feeblo and un certain as it may be. Cheating is so prevalent that you never wink an eye-lash at it, and quite the contrary with honesty when you find an exceptional honest man in the midst of us hypocrites you gasp and think that he must be the man Diogenes searched for with his lan tern. People evidently had the same trouble in that day that they have now. HUSKER DEBATERS TO FATE IOWA III 10 MATCHES Firs Forensic Contest for Nebraska Will Be With Haweyes. Nebraska's first venture in inter collegiate debating this year wi'l ttke place the last of April or early in May, according to Prof. M. M. Fogg, when the Huskers will enter a for ensic contest with the University of Iowa on the question of the closed ihon. The exact phrasing of the proposition has not been settled. There will be wo debates one at Iowa City and one at Lincoln. The innovation started at the Ne braska-Iowa contests last yea- th pen forum will be continued. After the formal debate persons in the udience will put questions to the members of the teams. This give and take discussion proved highly inter esting last year, running for about an hour at each debate. The omission of special faculty coaching, which Iowa and Nebraska Ir augurated last year and which has ince been adopted by several of the tate universities of the nortVeasf will also be continued. The idea is that Intercollegiate debates shall ap ply what they have already learned in courses in argumentative composition or elsewhere about the science and th e art of debate. Nebraska candidates for the group from which the teams will be selected are requested to leave their names with Professor Fogg before vacation The teams will have to be selected about a week after vacation. Speaking members will have the dditional honor of election to Delta :igma Rbo. the honorary national de- oate fraternity. NOTICE. This Issue of the Daily Ne Hraskan Is withheld from dis tribution until after convocation today In order that this issue may contain the names of those receiving Phi Beta Kappa awards. slmurrcitQ (Calendar THURSDAY, MARCH 24. Ag Club initiation, 7:00 p. m., Judg ing Pavilion, University Farm. Commercial Club, 11 a. m., Social Science Hall. Sphinx, 7:30 p. m., Sigma Nu house Roscoe Pound Club, 7:15 p. m., Lav hall. John Marshall Club, 7:15 p. m., Law II. Pershing Rifles, 7 p. m., Nebraska M II. Student Council, 5 p. m., Faculty Hail. Special convocation, 11 a. m., Temple Theater. Chemistry Club meeting, 5 p. m., Chemistry Hall. Basketball supper, 6 p. m., Ellen Smith Hall. Art Club dinner, 6 p. fn., Art Gallery. Ag Club, meeting, 7 p. m., Stock Judging Pavilion. FRIDAY, MARCH 25. Dellan Society open meeting, 8:00 p. m., Faculty Hall. Closed night. Sigma Nu spring party, Rosewilde Party House. Junior Hop, Knights of Columbus Hall. SATURDAY, MARCH 26. Spring rece-is begins 12 m. Delta Tau Delta dance, Knights ot Columbus Hall. Faculty Club meeting, Ellen Smith Hall. HELFNfBENNEniGIVES SERIES OF LECTURES Director of Women's Vocational Bureau Makes Number of Addresses to University Co-Eds. Miss Helen Bennett, director of the Women's Vocational Bureau at Chicago, gave a series of lectures on women's vocational subjects and held a large number of private conferences with University women while phe was at the University Tuesday and Wed nesday under the auspices of the Women's Self Governing Association She spoke at a W. S. G. A. luncheon Tuesday, at vespers, at a special con vocation for women Wednesday morn ing and a a luncheon of tho Campus Club that noon. A convocation Wednesday morning Miss Bennett spoke about the oppor tunities for women in business. She first gave a brief sketch of labor con ditions today. At present there are about 3.000,000 men and women out of work. Most of these are unskilled workers yet included in this number are many skilled workers who are not now employed. The big need now is for trained salesmen and that (Continued on page four.) GOLFERS ATTENTION. Those wishing to be charter members of the Golf Club must pay 75 cents dues by Friday, March 25, at Director Luehr ing's office. After March 25 an added membership fee will be charged and membership will be by election. FRESHMAN BASEBALL. All freshmen who expect to go out for freshman baseball be at the Armory at 3 o'clock Friday. FIFTY-THREE SENIORS RECIEVE ET TO PHI Membership in Honorary Scholarship of Class of 1921 Helen Highest CONCERT BY UNI ORCHESTRA Twenty Men Included in List Averages Run From 87.53 to 96.06 Mtsa Pound Makes Announcement in Absence of Dr. H. B. Alexander. SENIORS ELECTED 'Atkins, Elizabeth Allen, Esther Beber, Meyer Britton, Lester George Browned, Mary Bigelow Brownell, Sam Carreon, Manuel Darlington, George Mark Detweit'er, Thelma Evangeline DuBois, Ruth Eggenberger, Emma Ellis, Edith May Fowler, Frank Parker Fradenburg, Kendall Mead Gies, Katherine Elizabeth Goodhand, Vera Lucille Harley, James Burks Harris, Harvey Bruce Hartley, Olive Pierce Hayes, Helen Lucille High, Alice Muriel Hinman, Eleanor Hamlin Howe, Thomas Dudley Jensen, Hans Herman Johnson, Harvey Magnus Jones, Josephine Strode Keegan, Milton James Fifty-three members of the class of 1921, twenty of them men, were awarded membership in Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholarship fraternity, at the annual exercises held in Memorial Hall following a concert by the Uni versity Orchestra this morning. This list represents approximately one seventh of the senior class. The highest average this year was attained by Miss Hellen Morriss with the remarkable figure of 96.06. The lowest average was 87.53. The percentage of men elected this year shows an increase of nine over th wards of last year and an increase of 12 in the membership total over last year. The officers of Pha Beta Kappa this year are H. B. Alexander, presi dent; L. C. Wimberly, secretary; and Addie Reynoldson, treasurer. In the absence from the city of Dr. Alexander, the announcement at convication was made by Miss Louise Pound of the English department The graduate students and faculty who are directly connected with the University make up the active chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. Seniors are elected to membership through their scholastic record. Students must have sixty-four hours in the Arts and Science College eligible for grading, and must have completed the required courses in that college. The Nebraska chapter was instituted at the University in 1896. The following program was given by the University Orchestra before the announcements were made: March Cortage Men of Sparta. - First Movement "Militarie Symphonie" J. Haydn. "Reve D'Amour"; "Ballet Sentimental" Zamecnik. Overture "The Merry Wives of Windsor" NicolaL COLLEliE WUMLNS ATHLETIC CONFERENCE AT INCIANA Third Annual Convention is Largest Yet Held Nebraska Represented. The third Athletic Conference of American College Women held at In diana University last week was the largest convention yet held. Over fifty colleges were represented by 156 athletic girls who flocked from all over the country for a two-da7 session. Basketball rules, uniform point sys tem, conference pin and inter tranfer- ence of points were the main topics discussed. A large swimming meet was held between the eastern schools and the western schools, with the east winning by a large margin. The next national conference will be held at the University of Cali fornia in 1924. The next sectional conference of W. A. A. will be held next year at Colorado University, where Nebraska will act as secretary of the meeting. Nebraska W. A. A. delegates re turned to Lincoln Tuesday noon, full of enthusiasm and new Ideas for the association here. KAPPA TODAY Fraternity Awarded to One-Seventh Emma Morrlss Makes Average. PRECEDES ANNOUNCEMENT TO PHI BETA KAPPA. Kelly, Maude Esther Kirk, Mabel Eleanor Lauritson, Agnes Ethel Lund, Frederick Hansen McKee, Blanche Gibons Maitland, Helen Janet Margolin, Morris Mastin, Addie Mathews, Lavern Buckingham Meyer, Clifford C. Michener, Nathan Lindley Miller, Bernice Miller, Jeannette Morris, Helen Emma Mote, Marian Meyers, Grace Petersen, Gladys B. Peterson, Linnea Dorothea Petree, Leo Webb Pettee, Marjorie Belle Pickwell, Gayle Benjamin Polhemus, Carrie Stidworthy, Ada Thompson, Elizabeth Enyeart Wahl, Helen Marie West, Pearl PHILLIPS WILL REPRESENT HUSKERS AT ST. LOUIS Neal Phillips will represent the Unl versity of Nebraska at the intei state public speaking contest to be held on April 8 ,at Columbia University, Rt. Louis, Mo. Phillips was winner among five in a preliminary contest In iQe Temple theater Wednesday morning. The contestants write and plan their own oration. Mr. Phillips speake on governmental aid for disabled bol diers. Other topics chosen ii the contest were: "Cigarets," "LanV "War Indemnities," and "The Purpose of an Education." Dean P. Buck, Dean W. A. Seavey and Carlisle L. Jonee acted as Judges for the reliminaiy contest to select the Nebraska repr sentative. LAST MEETING OF "TRIP AROUND THE WORLD" CLASS The "Tri Around the World" class meets for the last time this evening at 7 o'clock in Social Science 218. Dr. Thomas will give a talk, indicating the various parts of the world Is which Nebraska graduates are doing definite Christian work. Dr. Thoma has been intimately acquainted with at least 50 per cent of these repr sentatives and is in a position tc girn a comprehensive view of the field Into which Nebraska influence kae gone. BETA 4