The Daily Nebraskan Keep Off the Grass. Keep Off the Crass. Stay on the Walks. Stay on the Walks. VOL. XXIII NO. 155 PRESENT MASQUE AT CONVOCATION Vestals of the Lamp Hold Ini tiation at Arts and Sci ence Gathering. CENTURIONS ELECT SEVEN NEW MEMBERS "Academe," a symbolic masque, was presented by the Vestals of the Lamp in the Arts and Science con vocation Thursday morning. Dr. Hartley B. Alexander addressed the meeting: on the meaning of the Arts and Science college. The new mem bers of the Vestals were initiated in the ceremony. Robert F. Craig, president of the Centurions, presided and announced the selection of seven new Centurions, men's society of the Arts and Science college. New members of the Vestals, are: Mary Doremus, Marjorie Stuff, Ruth Ann Codington, Helen Simpson, and Corine Anderson. Honorary Vestals are: Samuel. Avery, Mrs. Can-ie B. Raymond, and Miss Marjorie Shana felt The new Centurions are: Vernon R. Schopp, Audrey Diller, Norman plate, Henry Eller, John Allison, Philip O'Hanlon, and Douglass Orr. Dr. Alexander in speaking of the place of the Arts college in the Uni versity and in the world stated that from this college have come the groups of men and women who have been willing to sacrifice in .order to pass on to posterity the traditions of the college of civilization. The Arts college has always stood for the fun damental elements of our civiliza tion. The ideals of human nature were observed in the clear light of reason by the great minds which have contributed most to this civilization, and the results of their thinking have been incorporated into the subjects of the arts college, Dr. Alexander pointed out. Men and women who enter the College of Arts and Sciences are often charged with having the de sire to become ladies and gentlemen, remarked the speaker. If this is true, it is not to be regretted, but the aim of the college goes far beyond this end. The training of men and women to become interested in the aims and ideals of the best in our civilization and the training of their minds to appreciate the intel ligence of others is a funct'on of the college. But even this, he stated, is not the ultimate end of the teaching of the college of arts and sciences. The great end is the training of educated men and women for serv ice to the stats. Because the great traditions of civilization rest on the ubjects of the arts college, this college is the basis of civilization. It becomes the task of the members of this college to keep these traditions for posterity. History, science, phil osophy, government, mathematics and art these are the foundations of civilization, and, according to the speaker, these subjects form the lasis of the arts college. Dr. Alexander explained the sym bolic importance of the Vestals and the' Centurions. The Vestals typify the Vestals of the Lamp of ancient Home who kept alive the fires in the temple Vesta. The Vestals of today protect and keep alive the fire of the hearth and the flame of culture. The Centurions protect the outer alls and fortifications of 'civilza u'on as in Rome they guarded the ity. The lamp of the torch has lways been the symbol of enlight enment, stated the speaker. It repre ents the ancient torch races which ecalled to the Romans the stealing of the fires from heaven that man ""ght have freedom and knowledge Dr- Alexander in concluding said it jmains for the members of the Col lege of Arts and Sciences to pene trate the unexplored regions of knowledge so that in the end we may nave a democracy of intelligence and rule of reason. The masque "Academe," presented by the Vestals portrayed the trans fer from the old to the new of the ame of learning. The masque was tten by Dr. H. B. Alexander and Presented by a cast of the present "estals. J KANSAS The establishment of a 1 Jondary radical school fen- th J1 "nity of Missouri to be located j kl Kansas City was voted recently i y.tne Missouri State Medical as- ! eiation. UNIVERSITY Compiles Calendar of Next Years Events A calendar of all traditional events such as the Military ball, Engineers week, and University night is being compiled by Dean Amanda Heppner. A copy of the calendar will be sent to each sorority and fraternity house in. order that they may arrange their parties' without conflicts. All or ganizations wishing to schedule events must have their dates filed with Dean Heppner by Saturday. INTERCOMPANY TRACK MEET COMES SATURDAY Twelve Entries in Contest; Winners Will Get Colored Ribbons. The intercompany track meet which was planned for May 7, will be held Saturday morning, May 17, at 9 o'clock. The meet was not held when it was scheduled because of the cold weather. Each one of the twelve companies has entries in every event of the day. All entries are asked to report on the field at 9 o'clock. There can be not less than one and not more than three entered in each event. Colored ribbons are to be awarded to the four high men in each event. The points will count as follows: First place 5, second place 3, third place 2, fourth place 1. All men in the company, officers, non-commis sioned officers, and privates, are eli gible for the meet. The following events are planned: 100-yard dash, 220-yard dash, 440 yard dash, 880-yard run, mile run, javelin throw, shot put, discus throw, 60-yard high hurdles, 110-yard low hurdles, broad jump, high jump, pole vault, and 880-yard free-for-all re lay. The meet is being managed by John Madden, Captain and Morale Officer of the R O.T.C. Coach "In dian" Schulte and varsity track men will take charge on the field. SETS DEADLINE FOR DRIVE APPLICATIONS Student Council Says Organi zations Must File Request by Saturday. Applications for drives for next year will close Saturday at 5 o'clock. according to the statement of Clif ford M. Hxks, president of the stu dent council. Six applications have been received. It is urged that or ganizations desiring to put on drives next year should file their applica tions with the president of the stu dent counc'l at once, indicating first and second choice of days. Both the old and new student councils will meet next Monday. A report of the Midwest Student con ference meeting, held at Knoxville, Tenn , will be given by Mr. Hicks. It is probable that the calendar of drives for next year will be made up at this time for publication in the "N" book. The new council will take over its duties in about a week and officers will be elected for next year at that time. The two senior men ana senior women elected from the old council to hold over as a nucleus of the new are as follows: Emmett V. Maun, Franc's Boucher, Frances Weintz and Neva Jones. Bryan to Review Cadet Regiment Regimental parade and review in honor of Governor C. W. Bryan and his staff will take place at 5 o'clock this afternoon on the drill field. Company C. honor company of the last parade, will be the color jiompany this evening. This will be the last parade of the regiment before competitive drill, May 24, and the winning company will have the honor of escorting the colors on that day. That the cold wave that forced the abandonment of the first musical concert in the stadium does not prove that the idea of using the structure for such festivals will have to be cast as:de, is the opinion of the men who managed the affair in xonnec-t'-on with the officials of the Minne apolis Symphony orchestra. OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, SIGMA PHI EPSILON TO PLAY IN FINALS Defeats Pi Kappa Phi Frater nity by Count of 14 to 10. ' Sigma Phi Epsilon won its way into the finals of the interfratefnity baseball tourney by defeating Pi Kappa Phi, 14 to 10, in a ragged game at Rock Island park yesterday afternoon. Errors were numerous on both sides. The Pi Kap's, who had been playing a consistent brand of ball in previous tourney games, seemed unable to get agoing except at rare . intervals. T. Pickett, on the mound for the Sig Ep's, struck out fourteen' men and allowed six hits while Edwards and Domeir, Pi Kap hurlers, were touched for twelve hits and struck out six. The Sig Ep's took a three-run lead in the first inning but the Pi Kap's came back with a rally in the third that put them in the lead, 4 to 3. In the fifth, Cunningham hit a homer with two on bases and succeeding hits and Pi Kap errors ran the score up to 10 to 4, in favor of the Sig Ep's. The Pi Kap's found themselves in the seventh and produced a rally that nearly brought the game their way.They got five hits in that in ning and the Sig Ep's aided them with a number of pitiful bobbles. Kendall and Maaske brought in two runs each with doubles and Lewis drove in one. The score was 8 to 11 at the end of the inning. The S'g Ep's put the game on ice in the ninth when they ran in three more scores. A last minute Pi Kap rally netted two runs and the game ended, 14 to 10. DISPLAY CORNHUSKER FEATURES IN WINDOW Covers, Sections and Pictures of Representative Men and Women Shown. An attractive display of com pleted portions of the Comhusker and material used inits completion has been arranged by Rudge & Guen- zel in one of the windows on N street The display includes sections from the book, the cover, and pictures of ten men and ten women, representa tive .Nebraska students. The pictures of half of the number will be run in the annual, but their names will not be announced until that time. Printing of the book is now about completed and the work of binding is all that remains to be done. This means that the Cornhusker will be ready for issue within ten days. Ex tra copies have been ordered so that those who failed to make the initial payment may still have an oppor tunity to obtain a book. The original price was $4.50, but a reduction was made to $4. The Comhusker this year will be entered in the Artcraft Guild col lege-annual contest and will compete with Buch books as the Annapolis Luckv Bag. the Wisconsin Badger, Minnesota Gopher, Missouri Savitar, and other college publications. A few organizations have Jailed to pay the bills for their pages and these are being asked to do so at once. REGISTRATION WILL START ON MONDAY Registration for next semester will begin next Monday morning when schedules of classes will be ready for distribution at the office of the Registrar. Every student must be registered before Saturday noon, May 24, or a late registration fee will r charged. Each student must first see his ad visor and after registering must leave his application w'th the dean of the1 college. The student should not fail to place their home or summer ad dress on their applications so that the fees may be collected before Sep; tember 8, wh'ch is the deadline. Every student should register wheth er he expects to return or not. First semester classes bjpgin on September 18 next fall and the open ing address by Chancellor S. Avery will be given September 23.. NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, MAY Strayer Will Lecture at Convocation Today Dr. George D. Strayer, professor of education at Columbia University, will give the adress at a convocation for members of the Teachers college and School of Fine Arts at the Tem ple theater at 11 o'clock this morn ing. All classes will be excused for students in these schools. Dr. Strayer is a past-president of the National Education association and one of the prime movers for a department of education in the United States cabinet. W. A. SELLECK SPEAKS AT BIZAD MEETING Says Business Should Be Aim of Well Spent Life. "Business is the a'm and purposes of a well-spent life," said W. A. Sel leck, director of the Lincoln State National bank, in hi3 address at the special convocation of the Business Administration College yesterday morning at 11 o'clock. Mr. Selleck started his speech by saying that the common acceptation of the word "business" was not the one which he wanted to bring for ward, that he was going to use a broader definition of the term. His subject was "Business Morality." He read several excellent quota tion from a book written on the sub ject of business morality. He said, "There is nothing in the mind of the country today greater than the bur den under which we are laboring be cause of business failures." He then gave the figures on the percent of the American tax dollar that goes for the preparation for war, war itself, or the after effects. He said that this percent is about 75. Dean LeRossignol introduced the speaker briefly. The convocation was opened by several selections by the Candy Kids orchestra. SIGMA TAU ERECTS CONCRETE PYRAMID Puts Up Structure Which Is Symbolic of Principles of Organization. A reinforced concrete pyramid, symbolic of one of the principles on which Sigma Tau, honorary engi neering fraternity, is founded is in process of con-truct'on on the cam pus just south of the Mechanical Engineering build'ng. A committee headed by Frank Ellermeier has con structed the forms and the interior forms are in place. The pyramid will be about eight feet high and eleven feet square at the base. A metal rail section and the letters Sigma and Tau will be imbedded in the walls. The walls themselves will be eight inches th'ck. A seat about two feet high will be poured around the base. The p:ers and footings on which the pyramid is to rest will probably be poured this afternoon . The structure will be complete Saturday. The whole pyramid has been des:gned and the plans made as economical as pos sible. The pyramid is intended pirtlv as a lasting monument to the founding of the national fraternity on the Nebraska campus in 1904. It is the culmination of three or four years of planning. Edgar Bochult, president of the Nebraska chapter, said yester day. MEN SELECTED FOR HUSKER GOLF TEAM Whitten, Henkleman, Vette 4&y teady or Cox j Meet Drake. Jack Whitten, Carl Henkleman, Fred V-tte and either George Ready or Charles Cox will compose 'the golf team that meets Drake university quartet in "a dual match at tbs Coun try club this afternoon. Drake has captured the valley golf chamnfonb'T) for the past two years and the Huskers expect a toup-h f;ght. The meet will be scored on the Nas sau system which provides for indi vidual competition with points being scored at the end of each nine holes. 16, 1924 Weather Forecast Friday and Saturday Fair; con tinued warm. WOMEN SMASH THREERECORDS Make New High Jump, Pole Vault, and Hop-skip-jump Marks. JUNIOR CLASS WINS ANNUAL TRACK MEET Three state records were broken in the womens track meet held in the memorial stadium yesterday after noon. The junior class won honors in the meet with a total of 170 points. Irene Mangold, '25, and Elizabeth Armstrong, '24, tied for first place in individual honors with 60 points each. Florence Steffes, '26, broke the University state record i the hop-step-jump by 4 inches. Lois Putney made a record of 29 feet in last years meet but this record is said to have been shattered by a Kearney high school girl who made 29 feet, 11 inches in a track meet held in Kear ney in April of this year. ' The high jump record was broken when Helen West, '27, made 4 feet 5 3-8 inches; 1 3-8 inches better than the previous record which was made in 1918 by Helen Hewitt. Pearl Safford, '24, went over her own record of last year in pole "vault when she vaulted 6 feet 6 inches Last year she broke the state record with 6 feet 4 1-4 inches. Four girls tied for third place in individual points with 40 each. They are Florence Steffes, Helen West, Ethvlen Gulick. and Margaret Ht- mer. Second place points will be di vided between the two girls who tied for first. The class standings with the num ber of points are junior, first with 170 points; seniors, second with 140 points: freshman, third with 130 points; and sophomore, fourth with 90 points. Summary of Meet. Pole vault First, Pearl Safford; second, Lois Putney; third, Louise Brandstad. Height, 6 feet 6 inches. Hop-step-jump First, Florence Steffes; second, Dorothy Abbott; third, Lois Shepherd Putney. Dis tance. 29 feet 4 inches. Hiirh jump First, Helen West; second, Ruth Wright, Bernice Bal- lance, and Lois Putney. Height, 4 feet 5 3-8 inches. Broad jump First, Margaret Hy mer: second, Vivian Quinn; third, 'Helen West. Distance, 13 feet 9 in Baseball throw First. Elizabeth Armstrong; second, Ruth Wright; th'rd. Vivian Vail'cott. Distance, 156 feeet 8 1-2 inches. Basketball throw First, Anna Hines; second, Thelma Lewis Pettys; third, Kathro Kidwell. Distance, 63 feet 9 1-2 inches. Javelin throw First, Elizabeth Armstrong; second, Ruth Wright; third, Margaret Tool. Distance, 65 feet 8 inches. Shot put First, Elizabeth Arm strong; second, Bernice Ballance; third; Irene Barquist. Distance, 24 feet 10 1-2 inches. BO-yard hurdles Tied for first, Florence Steffes and Margaret Hy mer; third, Irene Roseberry'. Time 10 1-2 seconds. 75-yard dash First, Irene Man gold; second, Ethylwn Gulxk; third, Irene Roseberry. Time 10 1-5 sec onds. 50-yard dash First, Irene Man gold; second, Ethylwn Gulick; th'rd, Helen West. Time. 6 9-10 seconds. 1-4 mile relay First, juniors; sec ond, freshmen; third, sophomores. Time, 61 4-5 seconds. Must Submit Senior Poems by May 25 Dr fiual "5mit for submission of senior class poem manscripts has been extended to May 25, according to Josephine Altman, chairman of the poem committee. Dr. Alexander and Professor Louise Pound have been selected to judge the manucripts. The author of the selected poem, which is to be read as part of the Ivy Day program, will receive a prize, the substance of which is being kept sec ret Length of the productions is not stipulated by the committed. Two cop'es, one siyned. the other vu signed are to be submitted. PRICE 5 CENTS AGGIE TRACKMEN ARRIVEFOR MEET Husker Squad Will Perform for First Time Today in Stadium. STUDENT TICKETS ADMIT T6 STADIUM Kansas Aggies track men arrived in Lincoln last night, fourteen strong, for the dual track and field meet this afternoon on stadium field. The meet starts at 3:00 begining with the 100-yard dash. . Two places in each event will count, five for first and three for second. Student athletic tickets will admit to the meet this afternoon. The dual meet is the first time that the Husk er track squad will perform on its home course this year. Every meet so far has been on foreign tracks. The red cindered circular track be tween the stadium stands will be in first-class shape this afternoon, and will be one of the fastest in the Valley. The stands on either side give a commanding view of the en tire track, and allow each race to be seen from start to finish. Nebraska men who will run in the meet this afternoon were announced yesterday by Coach Schulte. The Husker track men are con ceded to come out first in the dual meet after the crushing defeat ad ministered Kansas last week, and the defeat of the Aggies at the same t me at the hands of Missouri. Ne braska will be especially strong in the middle distances this afternoon and in the hurdles. The short sprints are a toss up. Red Erwin of the Ag gies has beaten Locke twice this year and it will be a merry race between the two this afternoon. Gardner to Ran Mile. Captain Mud Gardner 'will run the mile for the first t.me in a dual meet this year for Nebraska. He will be paired up with Lewis and H.'ggins, the other Nebraska milers. Zimmerman, two miler, beat the field in the tryouts for the meet, and will be the other Nebraska man in this event with Slemmons, medic student from Omaha. Zimmerman made the two miles in 10:16 and was handi capped partly by lack of stiff compe tition that day. He will probably make the two miles in ten minutes or less this afternoon. Husker field men are doped to win most of the events today, with the exception of the javelin in wh'ch Nebraska has not yet found a suc cessor that can match up at all with Hart'ey, who set up a new Valley record last year in this event. The Nebraska lineup that will start the races tomorrow follows: . 100-yard dash Locke, Hein, Bloodgood. 220-yard dash Locke, Hein, Bloodgood. (Continued n Page 4.) TO G0MPLE1E SECOND ROUND OF MEET TODAY Semi-finals and Finals in Wo mens Tennis Tourney to Be Played Soon. The second round of the womens tennis tournament will be completed todav. Semi-finals and finals will be played within the next two weeks. Anna Jensen, runner-up in the tournament lat fall, Kathro Kid well. Dorothy Supnle, who is defend ing the championship title, and Ruth Wrght are probable contestants in semi-finals and are championship candidates. Matches in the second round which have already been played have the following results: 01;ve Huey won from Claire Mil ler. 6-4; 6-0. Esther Robinson won from Doro thy Abbott 6-3; 6-0. Kathro K;dwell won from Anna Hines, 6-3; 6-0. Every match is sponsored by a referee who calls the balls and posts the results. Results of the first round games played Wednesday are as follows: Anna Jensen won from Eula Shive ley, 6-0; 610. Karen Jensen won from Vivian Quinn by default. Dorothy Abbott won from Meda Fisher, 6-1; 6-1. Grace Dobish won from Carolyn Airy, 6-2; 4-6; 6-4.