The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, June 05, 1924, Image 1

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Daily
RASKAN
Welcome !
Old Grads
Welcome !
Old Grads
Neb
VOL. XXIII NO. 162.
plaPeatures
FOR CUSS DAY
Council Meeting, Two Play,
Luncheon, and Dance on
Alumni Program Today
URGE REGISTRATION AT
TEMPLE HEADQUARTERS
A'i Alumni Council nicotine an in
formal luncheon, two plays presented
by the University Players in the sta
dium, arid an after-theater party, will
be the chief features on the alumni
program today. Alumni arc urged to
resistor at their headquarters in the
Temple building some time during the
day.
The Alumni Council meeting will
be held at the Chamber of Commerce
on Eleventh and P streets. The
uii"lieon is planned for a general
pot-together of all alumni. The Law
barbecue will also be held at noon.
The Automobile club park will be the
scene of these festivities. A parade
down 0 street will precede tne picnic.
All members of the .State Supreme
court and the local Bar Association
have been invited V-o attend the bar
becue. During the afternoon, some special
class meetings, group and college re
unions, will be held. Alumni are
urged to use the afternoon for per
sonal errands as the rest of the
week will be too full of events.
The University Flayers will pre
sent two plays in the stadium in the
evening beginning at 8 o'clock. A
special platform and lighting system
has been placed in the mammoth
structure Vor the event. The first
play to be given will be "Suppresed
Desires," and a three-act play, "A
Doctor in Spite of Himself," by Mo
liere will follow.
The cast for "Suppressed Desides"
includes:
Mabel -."....Myrtle Carpenter
Henrietta . H. Alice Howell
Stephen Neil Brown
The cast for "A Doctor in Spite of
Himself" will be:
Sganarelle Edwprd Taylor
Martini, his wife Fern Hubbard
Val"re Sutton Morris
Lucas Lowell Miller
M. Robert Kenneth Andersen
Jaquelin Ruth Alcorn
Lucind Marguerite Munger
Gerante Foster Matchett
Laronde .-. Jerre Mickel
The plays will be followed by an
open-air dance. The Coliseum floor
has been removed to the space north
west of the Library and a canopy
placed over it. The dance will begin
at 10:30.
KEYSER TO REPLACE
BUCKNER AS ORATOR
Head of Agronomy Depart
ment of Colorado College
Will Give Speech
Emory Buckner, '04, will be unable
to give the alumni oration Friday be
cause he is engaged in the trial of a
case which cannot be postponed. Val
Keyser, '04, head of the Agronomy
department of Colorado State 'Agri
cultural College at For Collins will
give a short address in place of Mr.
Buckner.
Mr. Buckner is a member of Root,
Clark, Buckner & Howland, New
York law firm. He telegraphed E. A.
Bkkford of Lincoln, also of '04, as
fellows:
"Am engaged in trial of case which
cannot be postponed and will rot be
concluded until Friday. Have made
eevry efort to secure compromise or
adjjurnment Physically impossible
for me to go west. Please convey
my great regrets and best wishes to
members of class. Am sending to you
tonight by registered a few remarks
which you may wish t9 have someone
read in place of my speech. Have
looked forward with pleasure to
Roundup and keenly regret unfor
tunate situation.
"Emory R. Buckner."
Mr. Buckner had not been able to
attend any reunions since his gradu
ation, and had been looking forward
wth great pleasure to a renewal of
old acquaintances anong the alumni
on the faculty. He haa visited
kc campns twice during the sum
While in the university.'Mr.
Buckner was a member of Alpha
TheU Chi, Innocents and the English
clu'.-..
UNIVERSITY
f
I
m
m
1 ir-v.srrTTTV t firnt
STUDENT COUNCIL
ELECTSOFF!CERS
Emmett Maun is Chosen Presi
dent; Plans Made for
Coming Year
PICK JOHNSON FOR
NEW VICE-PRESIDENT
Emmett V. Maun, '25, Laurel, was
hosen president of the student coun
cil for the next year by newly elect
ed members at a meeting held to
elect officers and to lay plans for
business next year. Richard John
son was elected vice-president of the
ouncil and Frances McChesney was
chosen secretary.
The University administration has
given an office to the council and
plans for financing the activities of
the organization are being worked
out. Eight drives for funds have
been scheduled with the council for
next year and have been set for dates
planned to work the least hardship
upon students. The Mid-west con
vention gave the Nebraska delegates
information in regard to points that
have been undecided and the new
council will act accordingly at the
first meetings in the fall, Mr. Maun
stated.
"The student council is fighting for
a broader and broader field of act
ivity to work in and as a represent
ative body of students is justifying
its existence as a university organiz
ation. We have plans for next year
that will give students a greater
voice in student affairs and will at the
same time be for the benefit of all
concerned," Mr. Maun added.
The council wDl have the power of
application of a new organization for
either recognizing or rejecting the
recognition in the University. This
power was derived by the authority
of the Committee on Student Organ
izations which felt that the council
would be better able to judge the
necessity for organizations that
might apply for recognition. The
committee, however, will take final
action on the council report.
Lois Thompson Wins
Award of Chi Omega
The local chapter of Chi Omega,
in accordance with the national pol
icy of the sorority, has awarded a
prize of $25 to Lois Thompson as the
winner of the best paper on a socio
logical problem, this year. The sub
ject of the winning paper wis "Med
Social Ferric,"
OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN,
"Welcome tack
mpy .:r
Complete Text of
Ivy Day Address
'Graduates and fellow students:
Once again we are gathered to pay
homage to the ideals and traditions
of our University. For you who
have come back, what golden mem
ories, what reminiscences of delight
ful college days are conjured up by
Ivy Day. Once again you review
those flashes of treasured student ex
perience which were woven in and
out your stay at Nebraska. Time
has not erased them; only softened
them and made them all the more
cherished.
"What a flood of college pranks',
of friendships, of old ambitions come
upon you as you once more stroll
about the campus. A priceless things
those memories. No wealth can buy
them; no misfortune can take them
away. They remain always with you,
suffusing your life with a warm glow
of sentiment. These are gifts, be
stowed upon us by our Alma Matsr
as we leave her, and for which we
are humbly thankful and Teverent.
"And as for us, the undergradu
ates, Ivy day causes us to pause in
our crowded student lifend reflect
just what Nebraska means to us. We
find that we have unconsciously
grown to love her. But it is only at
the thought that we must leave her,
that we appreciate how she has be
come a part of our lives, her sorrows
her successes our successes, and her
ideals our ideals.
"For a moment, we feel as we
would at the loss of an old friend,
that to lose her, is to die a little.
May those with whom she is entrust
ed in the future, be mindful of her
honor, and worthy of her attention.
Citizenship I Theme
"I have chosen as my theme, Uni
versity citizenship. It implies both
ni-ivilptrps and obligations. How croud
1
are we to have the educational ad
vantages offered us by the state!
Throughout attendance at school we
get a quickened sense for the real
values; admiration for what is ad
mirable: esteem for what is trashy ro
impermanent. Our capacity for en
joyment of the cultured and artistic
is increased manifoldly. We may
more closely approach realization of
happiness because we are taught to
recognize the better things in life,
and are in some measure eqquipped
to attain them.
"Through our varied hours of
study, our minds are broadened. We
see how diverse types of excellence
may be: how various the tests; how
flexibl- the adaptation. We learn to
shun narrow-mindedness, to know
a good man when we see him.
Though we may not agree, yet we are
NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1924
Old Grads
0
led to respect the honest opinions of
others. We can enjoy fellowship
with those of other creeds without
letting prejudice poison our temper.
"During our stay at college we are
privilegde to develop friendships
friendships which linger with us all
through the years, based not upon
selfish business opportunities, but up
on mental and moral congeniality
friendships which turn back the years
as you alumni meet again at the foot
ball games or the Homecoming.
Offers All Professions
"Our University offers us the en
tire review of trades, sciences, and
professions and allows us to choose
the one best fitted to our liking.
After our choice we are given the
research, all the experiments, all
the counsel which has been devised
on that study.
"Why are we the receivers of these
bounties? First, because we are citi
zens of the greatest of democracies,
whose principles of equality have de
veloped a scale of education never
before equalled. And second, be
cause we are citizens of the state of
Nebraska, which is investing her re
sources in our characters and intel
lects. "As we have privileges, so too
must we have obligations obliga
tions to the University itself and then
obligations to the state. Our Uni
versity is a community, a peculiar
community, cut off from the outside
world. It prospers or declines ac
cording to the standards of its citi
zens, the student body. As citizens,
what are our duties to our commun
ity? - Should Help Freshmen
"First, that of adjusting the
younger younger classmen to his new
environment. He is here, perhaps
for the first time, on his own respon
sibility. Strange faces, a new sense
of freedom, swift passing of college
events a.l tend to confuse him. He
secretly hopes to be a genuine Ne
braskan, but sometimes his perspect
ive is warped and he adopts certain
beliefs and models which later turn
out to be false.
"It is for the .upperclassmen to
help him, set him aright, and start
him on a desirable 'course. This is
one service that the fraternities may
and should render their school. As
a rule, the conduct of freshmen in a
fraternity is a reflection of the habits
and principles of the seniors or lead
ers in such an organization. To a
certain degree, whether they are con
scious of it or not, they give to the
freshman a conception of what to
look for and get out a University
education. . If a fraternity is fortun
ate in having as its leaders men who
are well grounded in what is right
and what iswrong, then it will have
(Continued -?n Page 3)
A. A. U. W. Will Give
Scholarship Prizes
The American Association of Uni
versity Women is ofcring three gift
scholarships totalling $200 to a senior
and two underclass women. A high
scholastic average, which has always
been above 90 in the past, a degree of
interest in the activity of university
life and partial or entire self-support j
are the main points upon vhich the
winners will be chosen.
A senior will receive one of the
fifty dollar prizes and the other will
go to a sophomore or junior. The
prize will be awarded n sophomore
or junior.
WILL GRADUATE
CLASSJF 790
Seniors Will Receive Degrees
Saturday at 10 o'clock at
St. Paul's Church
TO HOLD REHEARSAL
AT 10 TOMORROW
Approximately 700 seniors and
graduates will receive degrees Satur
urday morning, June 7, at 10 o'clock,
at St. Paul's church. Candidates will
appear in caps and gowns in front
of the Library at 9:30, starting the
parade to the church. Rehearsal will
be held at St. Paul's at 10 o'clock
Friday, "for the purpose of assigning
candidates to their proper sections on
the platform.
Attendance at both rehearsal and
commencement will be checked, and
graduates failing to appear' will be
charged an absentia fee for their
diplomas. Tickets for rehearsal and
commencement will be given out at
the registrar's office today and tomor
row. . A complete list of candidates for
degrees is unobtainable . until this
afternoon since it will take the reg
istrar's office that long to check over
the eligibility of the candidates.
Glenn Frank, editor-in-chief of the
Century magazine, will be speaker
for the commencement program. Mr.
Frank, who is a native of Missouri
and a graduate of Northwestern
University, has edited the Century
for three years and has, at the age
of thirty-seven, won a distinguished
place for himself among American
men of letters. He is the uuthor of
"The Politics of Industry," a co
author of "The Stakes of the Prin
ciple and the Practice," and has writ
ten several studies for the Century.
Mr. Frank was associated with ex
President Taft in the drafting of a
covenant for the League of Nations
which was considered by the Paris
peace conference. For the last de
cade he has been noted in the United
States and in Canada as a lecturer.
Four Cornbusker golf men were
awarded minor sport letters this sea
son. Jack Wrhitten, Carl Hinkle
man, Fred Vette and George Ready
were members of the team which
placed second in the Missouri Val
ley meet.
Program of Roundup Week
JUNE 5
This registration continues all day.
10:30 o'clock Temple building 101
Registration of all alumni, alumni headquarters. Temple building.
Alumni meeting for delegated representatives.
12 o'clock
Informal luncheon at Chamber of Commerce, Eleventh and P St
Law barbecue at Automobile club park.
6 o'clock
Organization banquets.
8 o'clock Stadium
University Players.
10 o'clock City cam p us
After theatre party Dancing outdoors.
JUNE 6
9:30 o'clock
Breakfast for the class of 1904 at the Chamber of Commerce.
9:45 o'clock Ellen Smith hall '
Alumnae meeting.
10:15 o'clock City campus
Class meetings at designated places.
11:15 o'clock City campus
Pageant "The Forest Princess by home economics girls.
V2:30 o'clock City campus
Outdoor picnic luncheon-
Alumni oration by Val Keyser, '04, Colorado College of Agri
culture. 2:15 o'clock City campus '
Genera lalutnni meeting, conducted by Victor Smith of Omaha,
president of the Alumni association. Class stnats.
Alumni medal meet.
6 o'clock
Organisation banquets.
7:45 o'clock City campus.
Dancing outdoors.
Selected nets from "The Wishing Ring. '1924 Kosmet KJub
production.
. JUN 7
Commencement and related activities.
Glenn Frank, editor-in-chief the Century magazine, com
mencement speaker.
PRICE 5 CENTS
TWENTY-SIXTH IVY
DAY ISJBSERVED
Mask Mortar Boards and Tap
Innocents at Annual Festiv
ities Wednesday
JEAN HOLTZ IS
CROWNED QUEEN
Ivy day was observed at Nebraska
for the twenty-sixth time yesterday.
With ideal summer weather the en
tire affair, which was held outdoors,
went off without a hitch. The fea
tures of the day were the crowning of
the Queen of the Ivy in the morn
ing and the interf raternity sing,
masking of new Mortar Boards and
the tapping of the new Innocents in
the afternoon. .
Jean Holtz was crowned Queen
of the Ivy with the customary im
pressive ceremonies. Delta Tau
Delta took the honors in the inter
fraternity sing, followed by Acacia
and Sigma Nu. The Maid of Honor
was Grace Spacht.
The following men received the
highest honor of a school career yes
terday that of being made an
Innocent:
Wendell Berge, president.
David Richardson."
Howard Buffett.
Arthur Whitworth.
Abe Martin.
Harold Edgerton.
Raymond Swallow.
Mathias Volz.
William Usher.
Munroe Gleason.
Emmet Mun.
Everett Crites.
Rufus DeWitz.
Honoraries: Regent H. D. Landis,
Prof. R. D. Scott.
The Mortar Board members for
next year are as follows:
Katheiyn Warner, president.
Frances Weintz.
Frances Mentzer.
Alice Thuman.
Mary Creekpaum.
Mabel Lundy.
Ruth Carpenter.
Barbara WTiggenhorn.
Helen Guthrie.
Arvilla Johnson.
Pauline Gellatly.
Rosalie Platner.
Neva Jones.
The festivities started at 10
o'clock when the University Band
played several pieces. It was a ho
still day the ideal weather for the
affair. Every sound could be heard
in that section of the campus en
closed by bleachers, buildings, and
the platform. The morning crowd
was made up mostly of women, who,
with their bright spring dresses,
added a touch of color to the scene.
Octette Sings.
After a song by the Girls' Octette,
the underclass girls marched in with
a daisy chain, followed by the senior
girls bearing their chain of ivy. The
seniors, all dressed in white, formed
a ring inside that formed by the un
( Continued on Page 2.)