The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 08, 1923, Image 1

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Neb
Firs
HE
R AS K AN
TglNO. 143.:
NEBRASKA TO BE
HOST SATURDAY
-
Hieh School Pupils from Over
H the State Will Be Here as
the Guests of the Uni
versitv. T0 BE HIGH SCHOOL DAY
state Debate Tournament, State
Hih School Track Meet
and Editors' Meeting
to Be Here.
('-When the University of Nebraska
1 jj host W the high school pupils
y tho are coming to Lincoln for High
Vfohool Fete Day, Saturday. May 12,
Le proErsm include the twenty
'jl,t annual Nebraska Interscholastic
flick and Field Meel, me Bixieenui
ate debate tournament of the Ne
braska High School Debating iLeagut'
He Convention of Nebraska Hign
srhnol Editors, and the Interscholas-
Mv
tic Academic Contests.
High School Debating League
In the sixteenth ' annual state de
late of the Nebraska High School ucj
bating League (with 90 members) at
the University of Nebraska, May
1H3 will compete for the state cham
pionship picked students of argumen
tation and oral discussion who have
ton the championships of the eleven
districts into which the League is
divided. Through tho tournament of
ten debates beginning with five
Thursday evening and ending with"
the final, state-championship contest
In Memorial Hall Saturday morning,
the contestants will go for the honor
which in 1922 was awarded to North
Platte.
To the tournament the contestants
will come with an all-round knowl
edge of the League questions for
the year, "Resolved, That Nebraska
should adopt the Kansas industrial
court system" prepared! on short no
tice to put up the case for either
tide, as the lot-drawing may assign
the terms.
The purpose of this state-wide or
ganization, organized in 1908 by Prof.
M. M. Fogg with a membership of 30
schools, is to promote straight think
ing and effective oral statements of
ideas in preparation for future vo
cation and for the intelligent dis
charge of the duties of good citizen
ship. High scholarship In general pre
vails among the members of these
eleven delegations. In many cases
these debaters are the best students
in their classes. The llt includes
six valedictorians and three saluta
torlans. Three newcomers at the stale de
bate are included in the list this
year: Brady (Western District 1)
and Perkins County High School,
Grant (Western District II), which
are new members of the League;
and Cattle Creek (North-Central
District).
The Nebraska chapter of Delta
Sigma Rho intercollegiate debaters'
national honorary society will assist
in managing the tournament wel
( Continued on Page Four.)
A Bit of My Romatic Experience
Khanta Bala Rat, of Calcutta, India,
student In the College of Arts and
Sciences at the University of Ne
braska, has writusi the following ar
ticle telling of her trip to this country-
Miss Ral plans to return to
India in the latter part of June.
BY KHANTA BALA RAI
"In the horizon of my childhood
imagination, one of the things (n
which my soul found great delight
as the thought of crossing the
ocean not so much of crossing only,
but being on the middle of the ocean,
bere as far as my eyes reached, I
ould see nothing but waters; and
.to watch the union of the blue sky
above and the blue water below!
Vhat a charming power baa Imagi
nation! What a sothlng quality it
Possesses! Imagination Is like a
golden shadow of reality.
"However, the atar of my fortune
favored me with her blessing and Io
nd behold, my imagination turned
nto actuality! ' Yea, to xny heart's
content I drank In the beauty of the
apfeIouanes of the Ocean. And to
toy great surprise, I found one after
"other, all my ideas and fances
began to turn into actuality.
"But 2 was not going to make my
tale long, it was my romantic ex
perience that I was going to telL
"My experiences are numerous and
kcinating, butt I shall only tell you
toe Important ones. My first aasocia-
I
W. A. A. Girls Active
in All Spring Sports
With the opening of. the baseball
season, the W; A.' A. girla have lim
ited the championship to the fresh
men and Bophomores, who won the
first round of the iriterclass tourna
ment
Sharing interest with the baseball
players are the swimmers who have
scheduled their annual swimming
meet for tonight at 8:45 in the Lin
coln High School pool. This affair
was postponed from last Tuesday on
account of the weather. The judges
at this meet will be Dorothy Teal,
Lois Pederson, and Miss Marian Bald
win.
The annual aiuninl banquet for the
awarding of the "N" sweaters to the
girls who havo won the required
1500 points in athletics, will be held
Friday, June 4. The committee In
charge of the arrangements for the
banquet includes Marie Snavely,
Dorothy Dougan, Rosalie Platner, and
Dorothy Goodale.
LIST OF NEW MEMBERS
Thirteen Girls to Act Next Year
Josephine Shramek Is
President.
The Senior Advisory Board for the
year 1923 was announced by the
present Board this week. The Board
consists of thirteen girls elected from
the senior class at large by the
members of the outgoing Board, and
the president of the W. S. G. A.,
who with the sponsor of the Fresh
man Commission, are automatically
elected members.
The pre'sident and secretary of the
new Board are elected by the old
Board, and are respectively Josephine
Shramek and Marian Madlgan. The
other new members are:
Ruth Miller
Beulah Butler
Edith Olds
..Grace Doblsh - . . -
Helen Eiting
Margaret Wattles
Helen Kummer
Gladys Rice
Julia Sheldon
Silence Adamson
Luncheon to Supplant
Vesper Service Today
The Y. W. C. A. Conference staff
will have charge of the cafeteria
lunch to be served at the hike
which will take the place of the
regular Vesper Services, and which
will be held at Antelope Park today.
The girls will meet at Ave o'clock
at Ellen Smith Hall, to hike to the
Park.
Girls who wish to go on the hike
may do so by signing the list on
the bulletin board In the vestibule
of Ellen Smith Hall, as early In the
day as possible.
tion with America was when I was in
the Drlmary school, reading the story
of George Washington and his cherry
tree little knowing that I should
ever visit his home and see for my
self the very spot. I was quite
thrilled to visit the place ana see
the relics thereof. Then later on,
when I was In high school, studying
world's geography, I learned the
kames of several places by heart:
New York, Boston, Philadelphia and
so on. But the name that fascinated
mp was the Niagara Falls. And when
I actually saw the Falls, I was pell
bnnd I realized that our fanote
contain a different sort of truth than
reality itself. My third and most
thrilling association was wnen j
studied the European history In col
lege in Calcutta and read about the
war of the American Independence.
How well I remember that lecture-
how I stood up for the then American
noonle? admired their brave spirit or
standing up for their own rights at
the Battle of Bunker HOL And when
r 'Blinker Hii' lUelf In Boston,
I could hardly believe myself awake!
Innthor ODDOltunlty WhiCft 1
count most glorious was my visit
with President and Mrs. Haraing i
the WhRe House. I can yet eel
the thrlU that went through me at
the time.
-Ever since I have been in Amer
(Conlinned on Pg Four )
ADVISORY
BOARD
NAMES
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA,
WORK UNDER HAY
FOR NEWSTAB!&
Excavations Being Rapidly item
pie ted Concrete Stands to
Be Poured in Three .
Months. - '
. . 5.;
PLEDGES PAYABLE NOW
Cornerstone Will Be Laid June 1
While Alumni Are At tending
Round-up I
Week. :
With work on the Memorial Stad
ium well under way, with the contract
let, and the assurance made that the
1923 football schedule will be played
in the new athletic field, Stadium sup
porters have let out a sigh of relief.
The anxiety which was felt through
out the campaign for funds has' dis
appeared, and students and alumni
are now watching with interest, the
progress of the actual construction
work on the old Nebraska field. . ;
Excavation for the new stadiutji is
rapidly being completed. Daily, tons
of dirt are hauled away from the old I
field and before long the entire
ground will be dug out, and the con
tractor will start laying the concrete
foundations. Within a short three
months the concrete stands will'; all
be poured and within a month after
that the wooden seats will be in and
the first game will be played.
The contract calls for the comple
tion within 120 days of the west and
eaststands, the combined bleachers
being capable ot seating nearly
40,000 people. Temporarily, the colon
ades on the north and the south
will be left off, but as soon as enough
money is available they will be added.
That may be before the football sea
son starts, and it may not be for
another year.
Money toward the construction of
the stadium has been secured through
bonds, upon which the stadium com
mittee is paying the usual high rate
of interest. Every cent the commit
tee can collect ahead of tinrw5il
mean a saving of that much in money
borrowed and Interest paid.
Payments of the last four install
ments on the stadium pledges are
not due until next fall, but subscrib
ers toward the stadium may pay their
later installments now if they wish.
The payment of the late installments
of the pledges now will save the
committee much expense and will
assure the stadium of more athletic
equipment because of those savings.
Some forty-two hundred student sub
scriptions mean quite a sum, and
every dollar that is collected early
on these subscriptions mean a saving
not only in interest on bonds, but
also a saving in bookkeeping and
collecting expenses. Keeping the
stadium records clear is a huge task,
and students who wish to do bo can
;ielp the stadiun: committee consider
ably by making their advance pay
ments now and thus allowing the
committee to make their payments
at least a closed account. The amount
saved on one pledge is comparatively
slight, but on the more than 4.G00
pledges It Is an enormous sum.
Laying of the cornerstone for the
Memorial Stadium will be a part of
the program for Roundup week this
spring. The stadium ceremonies will
be held on Friday, June 1, the sec
ond day of the Roundup, when nearly
two thousand alumni who return for
the class reunions and celebrations
will be present Students will do well
to plan now to stay over for the
ceremonies on that day.
Dedication of the stadium is to be
a part of the program for football
homecoming day next fall, the day
when Kansas meets Nebraska in the
annual football contest A dedication
ceremony and program will be ar
ranged for that day equal to any
event ever held on the campua. '
The stadium Is progressing rapidly,
ttnd each load of dirt, each mixer of
concrete, that Is poured into the
structure will be watched closely by
Nebraska students, realizing as they
do that each step brings their dream
of a huge Memorial Stadium closer
to actuality than it ever was before.
Otis Skinner Plays
in New Success
TWater-eoers are looking forward
with pleasurable anticipation to the
nnearance of Otis Skinner at the Or
pheum. matinee and night. May 9, in J
i ji:v.,i .ihiuiIt nvmiL "Mister!
Antonio" which waa written especially
for him by Booth Tarkfcgton,.
TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1923.
Dean Buck Delayed
by Ice on Way Home
A telegram received from Dean
Philo M. Buck, who was expected to
arrive from India In April, explains
that he has been delayel by Ice.
Dean Buck expected to arrive in
Montreal on .Monday.
Dean Buck has spent the past year
in India on an exchange professor
ship with Prof. F. S. Joshl, who of
fered six weeks courses here in
February. Dr. Joshi left Nebraska
several weeks ago.
KQBMET KLUB SHOW
STAGED LAST HIGH!
"The Yellow Lantern" Is to Be
Played Tonight in Brandeis
Theater.
Members of the Kosmet Klub ac-co-npanled
the cast of the 1923 pro
duction of that organization when
the, nhow was taken to Omaha to
played last evening at the Brandeis
Theatre. "The Yellow Lantern," the
play for this year, is one with a
Chinese setting, the Bcenes for which
arc laid 'n the Oiicntal country.
The play, which was given in Lin
coin at the Orpheum Theatre Friday
night, was well received and the
members of the Klub were assured
that it would be as popular in Omaha,
rhere tickets in blocks were re
served last week by University ot
Nebraska alumni.
The members of the cast and the
Klub returned to Lincoln after the
production last evening.
THREE MEN INITIATED
fITO DELTA SIGMA RHO
Honorary Society for Intercolle
giate Debaters Elects
New Members.
The University of Nebraska chap-
tor nf Delta Sisma Rho. the na
tional honorary society (with 62 chap-
tors and over 3500 members) tor
intercollegiate debaters, held its initi
ation ceremonies Sunday afternoon at
the home of Prof. M. M. Fogg. The
initiates new members of the teams
this year that debated with Iowa and
South Dakota were Ronald Button,
25, Lincoln; Hugh Cox, 26, Lincoln;
and Alexander McKie, '24, Omaha.
The ceremonies were conducted by
Sheldon Tefft, "2. Law '24, Weeping
Water, president of the chapter; C.
A. Sorensen, '13, Law '16, Lincoln;
Clifford L. Rein, '13, Law '16, Lin
coln; Welch Pogue, '24, Law '25;
Grant, Iowa, secretary-treasurer;
Wendell Berge, '25, Lincoln; and Pro
fessor Fogg.
Mr. Pogue was elected president of
the chapter for next year and Mr.
Berge was elected secretary-treasurer.
SIX TEAMS ELIMINATED
III BASEBALL TOURNEY
First Round Incomplete Rest of
(James Will lie riayea ai
Rock Island Park.
Six fraternity baseball teams were
eliminated from the annual inter-
fraternity baseball tournament in the
opening round of play Monday after
noon.
Results in the games which went
the full seven Innings-were:
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 12; Lambda
Chi Alpha 11.
Farm House 16; Alpha Theta Chi
9.
Delta Tau Delta 13; Sigma Chi 6.
XI PsI Phi 12; Pi Kappa Phi 6.
Delta Upsllon- 9; Alpha Gamma
Rho Z.
Phi Kappa Psl 3; Sigma Phi Ep
silon 5.
Omega Beta Phi 8; Phi Alpha
Delta 9.
Several of the games scheduled
for Monday heXL to be called off
before they could be completed on
account of the darkness. Phi Gamma
Delta had scored 9 runs to 1 count by
Beta Theta Phi la the one Inning
their game was played. In six In
nings Delta Sigma Delta and Kappa
Siema were tied 8 to 8. The Silver
Lynx had scored 5 and Phi Tau Ep
silon 2 In two and a half innings.
The last game will be completed at
Rock Island ball park 'at noon Tues
day.
As soon as the rt round has been
completed the second terles u con
testa will be begun.
NEW MEMBERS OF
ifILL BE ELECTED
List of Candidates and Their Activities in School Announced
Eleven to Be Chosen Irom various uoneges oi we
UniversityJuniors Will Have
Four Members.
POLLS OPEN FROM 10 TO 12
Arts and Science College and
- ... wT
Une Man ana une woman on council rour
Seniors Were Elected by Pres
ent Members.
Elections for ,the 1923-24 Student Council will be held today.
The voting places are the Library Corridor on the City Campus and
the Dean's office on the Ag. Campus. The voting hours will be
from 10 to 12 in the morning and from 2 to 4 in the afternoon.
The Council for next year will be made up of four senior
members elected to hold over from the present Council and eleven
members elected at the end of their sophomore year from the
colleges in which they registered. The nominations were made
at meetings held May 1. The candidates are:
PLAYERS WILL STAGE
0 R 1 G i NALJPhODUCTIDN
"An Adventure for Two" to Be
Presented by University
Players.
'An Adventure for Two," is the
title of the anonymous play to be
given Friday and Saturday, May 11
and 12, by the University Players.
The piece was written by one of the
members of the producing organiza-
tion. The play will be staged at tne
Temple Theatre. Tickets are now
on sale at the Ross P. Curtice Com
pany. A Saturday matinee will be
given for the benefit of University
students.
The leading characters in the play
are taken by Neil isrown ana irma
McUowan. Other parts in the produc
tion are taken by Herbert Yenne,
Marina ( Richardson, Viola Loosbrock,
Harold' Pelton, and Helen Wiggins.
A special set of scenery is being
constructed for the production, and
-I the members of the cast are expend
ing every effort to make this one of
the best productions of the year.
A comedy in three acts, the ma
jority of the characters for which
are seniors and graduates, the pro
duction promises one of the most en
tertaining plays presented this year
by the company, according to tne
management of the University play
ers. Newens Will Speak at
Convocation Thursday
"The Culture Value of an Educa
tion" will be the subject of a lecture
given by Adrian M. Newens, director
of the University School of Music, at
11 o'clock Thursday morning at the
Temple Theatre. Teachers college
classes will be excused during this
hour, and students of other colleges
are invited to come.
This is the fourth' of a series of
lectures given under the auspices of
the Teachers college.
Girls Will Wear Green Badges
Green butons bearing the num
erals of their .class will be worn by
all girls of the freshman class, ac
cording to plans being made by the
members of the fire class honorary
societies for women: Mystic Fish,
XI Delta, Silver Serpent, Mortar
Board, and Valkyrlte.
It has often been mentioned that
the men of the first-year class have
to bear the brunt of the "hazing"
on the campus. The plan of the but
tons for girls Is not so much to let
the girls take their share of the un
pleasantness, as to help the members
of the incoming class to become ac
quainted with one another.
The badges will be green celluloid
disks about one and a half inches
in diameter, with the class figures
in white upon them. This year they
will be furnished by Rudge and Guen-
zel, and, will be distributed the sec
ond weeek of school In tho falL
from a booth in the store of the
donors, which will be In charge of
the girls in the "upper classes. A
record will be kept of the names of
all the freshman girla who secure
their pins, so that lists of freshman
girls may be checked ami all girls
on the campus will he wearing the
pins.
At the beginning of this year, when
plan was first suggested, It - was
thought that scarfs of the Irish hue
would be proper thing for the girls
STUDENT COUNCIL
BY BALLOT TODAY
AND FROM 2 TO 4 O'CLOCK
College of Agriculture to Have
tV !
Juniors
Beatrice Broughton
Robert F. Craig
Carl J. I'ererson
' Josephine Shramek
Ruth Small
Don Reynolds
James Tyson
Lila Wyman
Fine Arts College
Beulah Butler
Gladys Lux
LaVada Zutter
Pharmacy College
Pell Broady
George Carpenter
George Hargreaves
College of Agriculture
Hugh McLaughlin
Raymond Swallow
Frances Weintz
Engineering College
William Bertwell
Frances Boucher
Judson Meir
Law College
Keith Efans
Harold Schaaf
Wallace Walte
College of Business Administration
Victor Anderson
Dave Richardson
Edward Stemans .
College of Arts and Sciences
Qlee Gardner
Neva Jones
Ronald Button
Emmett Maun
Dentistry College
N. F. Johnson
Mack Meradith
Teacher's College
Mary Boyle
Dorothy Hultin
Arvilla Johnson
' -i
Harry R. LaTowsky, a senior in the
Business Administration College, re
turned from Dayton, Ohio, after four
days conference with Mr. Nichols of
the NatldHalCash Register Company.
Mr. LaTowsky expects to leave on
June 25 to take up a position with
the Company In the Merchants Ser
vice Department.
to adopt as their symbols of the
class to which they belonged. But
due to the fact that the vogue for
colored scarfs is rapidly passing,
this spring It was thought advisable
to use buttons of the class color
instead. Accordingly, the promise of
the buttons was secured from Rudge
and Guenzel, and plans are now under
way as to ways and means.
Because of the coarse pins which
are used on the buttons. It was de
cided by the members of the sponsor
ing organizations, that the freshman
co-eds shall be required to wear their
badges at all times except on even
ing dates, when the marks of the
pins might disfigure their dainty
gowns.
On Olympic days. If the men are
allowed to burn their verdant head
gear on the pyre, the girls will add
fuel to the fire in the celluloid pins.
If the sophomores win the annual
contest, however, the girla will not
discard their buttons until the men
are freed from the necessity of wear
ing the emerald caps.
It is hoped by the members of the
class honoraries that the wearing of
the green buttons may become a
established a custom among the girls
as the green caps are among the
men. To this end there will be an
effort to enforce the ruling, y
means of a special committee for the
purpose.
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