The Daily .Nebraskan VOL. XXIV NO. 131. THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1925. PRICE 5 CENTS SUMMER SCHOOL PLANS ARE MADE Several Profeor from Other Universities Will Be Includ ed on Faculty According to Extension Division. WILL HOLD TWO TERMS First Session Will Be from June 8 to July 15 Second Starts July 16 and Ends August 21. Several professors from other uni versities will be included on the fac ulty of the University for summer school according to an announcement made by the Extension Division. Three hundred fifty-nine courses are being offered during the two sessions. The first term will be from June 8 to July 15; the second from July 16 to August 21. In education Dr. George D. Stray er, professor of education, and Dr. N. L. Englehardt, professor of edu cation, both of Teachers College, Columbia University, will give work in the first summer session. Doctor Englehardt will direct the work of two courses for the first two weeks of the first sum mer session and Doctor Strayer superintendents, principals, teachers in departments of education and others an opportunity to come in contact with two of the foremost leaders in the field of school admin istration. Dr. R. C. McGrane, professor of history, University of Cincinnati, and Dr. W. F. Galpin, professor of his tory, University of Oklahoma, will give courses in the first summer ses sion. In the second summer session Dr. John D. Barnhart, a graduate student in Harvard University, Prof. S. Morley Scott, University of Mich igan, and Prof. W. N. Brigance, professor of history, Wabash Col lege, will be members of the faculty. In many of the departments, the head is teaching the summer session and students will thus have a faculty instructing them which is as good as that wwhich instructs those attending the two winter sessions. In the fi.ut toim, courses under the following sub-heads are being offer ed: educational psychology and measurements, elementary and rural education, special methods, drawing and painting, art history, elocution, j dramatic art, public speaKing, dra matic literature, music, applied mu sic, geology and geography, history, rural economics, ancient languages, botany, chemistry, commercial arts, English, history and principles of ed ucation, kindergarten-primary, school administration and supervision, sec ondary education, special methods high school subjects, vocational edu cation, home economics, kindergarten-primary education, ancient lang uages, economics, practical arts and tcclcgy. In the second term, courses will be offered in the following departments: educational psychology and measure ments, mathematics, home nursing, modern languages, philosophy, rural economics, secondary education, school administration and supervi sion, history and principles of educa tion, special methods high school, library methods, elementary and ru ral education, special methods, phy sical education, athletic coaching, physics, physiology, political science and sociology, history, and zoology. CAPTAIN KGELOW TO INSTRUCT HERE Former Nebraskan Assigned As Professor of Freshmar Military Clashes. Captain Maurice C. Bigelow has been detailed as one of the instruc tors in the military department at the University of Nebraska. The ap pointment will take effect July 1. Captain Bigelow was born in Ne braska and took his A. B. degree st the University of Denver in 1912. The past year he was connected with Iowa Agricultural and Mechanical College as assistant professor of Military Science and Tactics. He will be detailed to the University of Ne braska for three years and assigned ss instructor of freshmen military classes. A fcchool for cheerleaders at the University of Vermont has already enrolled twenty student. KEEP OFF THE GRASS Help make the campus of the University more attractive. Keep n the walks and off the grass wh student should aid the Uni rsity authorities in keeping the cmpu beautiful Nebraska Delegates Return From W. S.-G. A. Convention Ruth Wells, '20, Lake View, la, and Barbara Wiggenhorn, '25, Ash land, returned Sunday from the W. S.-G. A. convention held at the Uni versity of Oregon, Eugene, April 15 to 18. Miss Wiggenhorn is acting president of the local organization and Miss Wells is president-elect for next year. About seventy-five delegates at tended the convention representing all the large colleges and universi ties in the West and mid-West The Eastern colleges were not represent ed because it is felt that their prob lems are different from those of the Western schools and also because of the distance. The Nebraska delegates gained many new ideas for next year's work. They were especially interested in the Illinois point system which is a plan that organizes every independ Miss Harriett Towne To Speak at Vespers Miss Harriett Towne, director of vocational education in the Lin coln city schools, will be the speak er at Vespers this evening in El len Smith Hall. Miss Towne will speak on the general subject of vocations for women. Ruth Car penter will lead the services and Helen Oberlies will play a violin solo. CHOOSE MEMBERS FOR COMMITTEE Charles Warren Selected As Chairman of All-University Party Committee. The All-University Party Commit tee elected new members for the coming year at a meeting held yes terday afternoon. Charles V. War ren, associate editor of ;.ie Cornhusk er and Awgwan, was elected chair man of the committee. Temporary plans for next year's activities were suggested and dis cussed after the election. Student! can be assured of as many parties, and possibly more, as were held dur ing the past year. The following is the new commit tee chosen for next year: Chairman Charles V. Warren. Secretary Eloise Keefer. Decoration Grace Holland, George Johnston. Reception Helen Anderson, Art Beeyer. Entertainment Gregg Vi ntson, Wilhelmina Schellak. Refreshment Robert Hoagland, Dorothy Smith. Checking Willits Negus. Publicity Marion Gardner, Oscar Norlipg. GIYES JUNIOR ORGAN RECITAL Gertrude Barber PUy at School of Maiic Thursday. Gertrude Barber, Fine Arts stu dent, gave her junior organ recital in the University School of Music cor ridors yesterday evening. Miss Bar ber is a student with Edith Koss of the University School of Music. Following was the program: Bach, Prelude and Fugue, E minor; Rogers, Sonata, No. 2, Adagio, lo- ccato. Nevin: Tragedy of a Tin Soldier; The Return from the War; His Jeal ousy; His Farewell Serenade; The Tin Soldier's Funeral March. Jenkins: Dawn; Song of the Volga Boatman, arranged by Eddy; Wol- stenholme; Romanza, Allegretto. t stenholme Romanza, Alegretto. Yon; Hymn of Glory. Schulte to Referee At Track Meet Soon Coach "Indian" Schulte, Nebras ka's head track coach, will be referee at the annual Fillmore county track meet which will be held at Geneva, Nebraska, Wednesday. Ohiowa, Ge neva, Exeter, Fairmont, Milligan, and Shickley, are the towns wnicn will compete for the championships. Schedule Golf Meet With Kansas May 23 1 ' Nebraska has one golf meet ar ranged with the University of Kan Mav 23. at Lincoln. No arrangements have" been made for a tournament to pick the Varsity team but one will be held in the near future. All men that are interested in the sport are urged to try for a ent, or non-sorority girl, into a group in an organized house so that shfl has contact with the University and more social life. Each organized group has representatives on the governing council. Such a plan will be worked out by the Nebraska W. S.-G. A. for next year. Several noted speakers were heard at the convention including Dr. Aur- elia Henry Reinhardt and Dean Kate Jameson of Oregon Agricultural Col lege. ' The problems discussed in cluded: The Place of the W. S.-G A. on the Campus and its Relation to the Faculty; School Activities and the Point System; Vocational Guid ance; and Scholarship Standards. The next national convention will be held at Mie University of Illinois at Urbana in two years, and the district convention next year at the University of Indiana, at Blooming ton. Will Use Stadium For Many Round-up Week Festivities The University of Nebraska Mem orial Stadium will be the scene of most of the events of Alumni Round up Week, May 28-June 1. In it will be held the R. O. T. C. Compet Day, the general alumni luncheon ,at least two baseball games, the Memorial Day services, the tennis tournament, and the Women's Athletic Associa tion dance drama. The stadium will also be headquarters for the general registration and for the class regis tration booths. Round-up Week events will be free to alumni. Tickets are being distrib uted through the mail to active mem bers of the Alumni Association. Y. W. SPONSORS STUDENT TOUR Plan Trip by Twenty Repre sentatives to Study Condi tions in Europe. The National Y. W. C. A. is spon soring a "Pilgrimage of Friendship" trip to Europe, made up of a group of twenty representative university students from .various universities over the United States. The Univer sity ,of Nebraska has been asked to send a representative to this group, which will leave New York City July 1 for an extended trip through Eur ope to last until the twenty-first of August. The main purpose of this Pilgrim age of Friendship trip is to study conditions among the student groups of Europe. The countries which will be visited are England, where the group will attend a student confer ence, a special feature of the trip, the Netherlands, France, Germany, Czecho-Slovakia, and Switzerland. The total cost of the trip will not ex ceed six hundred and fifty dollars. The conductor for the trip will be furnished by the Y. W. C. A. nation al office. Anyone who is interested in taking the trip should see Miss Irma Appleby at once. TO PRESENT PLAY AT FAIR University Players Will Civ "The Devil's Disciple." The University Players will pre sent "The Devil's Disciple" at the Farmers' Fair, Saturday, May 2. This is one of the main attractions at the Fair and will be given in the after noon and evening with no idmission charge for either performance. The play will be given in a large open air amphitheater between the Experi ment Station and the Plant Indus try building. The University Players are one of the new features that have, been add ed to the program for the Fair this year as the management plans to add several attractions to the Fair each year. Expect Dean Engberg To Return Wednesday Dean Carl C. Engberg is expected to return Wednesday morning from Chappell Hill, North Carolina where he is attending a convention of Deans of Men. .A complete course in criminology, consisting of twenty-three different subje-4;, has been prepared for the summer session at the University of California. The course, together with social science and related sub jects, are planned to give both wel fare worker and layman opportuni ties to learn the underlying causes of crime and social degeneracy, iheir remedies. and , BEGIN WORK IN EARNEST College of Engineering Stu dents Making Preparations for Annual Fete Week. MANY NOVEL EXHIBITS PLANNED FOR PUBLIC Advertising for the annual Engi neer's Week, May 4 to 9 was start ed in earnest yesterday. The poster committee, with Carl Mad- , '26, Lincoln, as chairman, has prepared signs which will be placed on all bulletin boards about the cam pus. Stickers announcing the "open house" to be held in all College of Engineering buildings on the city campus were pasted on cars on the campus Monday. The ticket sale for the various events will also be conducted this week at a booth in the Mechanics Arts building, under the direction of W. K. Hackmann, '28, Malvern, la. Tickets for the banquet at the Lincoln hotel Saturday evening will cost $1.25 and tickets for the dance at the Rosewwilde on the same eve ning, $1.00. Tickets for the Field Day exercises Tuesday at Antelope Park cost thirty cents. At a canvass of the freshmen engi neers orientation sections rriday morning, at both city and College of Agriculture campuses, the full sup port of the freshmen was sought Civil Engineer Busy Work has been started by civil engi neering students, chiefly freshmen, under the direction of Douglas Lewis, '26, Bassett, upon a suspension bridge. A bridge of technical inter est is being built, to show the action of the chord members and diagonal members under load. A Pratt or Warren truss bridge of the type used on railroads or highways will also be constructed. A reinforced concrete building and a distributing tower showing the methods of placing concrete in large structures are among the models planned by the civil engineers. The processes by which counter feit coins are made out of an alloy resembling silver will be demonstrat ed by means of a counterfeit ma chine. "Seventy-five cent pieces" will be distributed to visitors. An other spectacle to be offered by the "civils" will be the cutting of con crete blocks with plain, soft wire. Other civil engineering exhibits will be models of concrete retain ing walls, a buttress wall, and the tying of knots in iron bars. A multi ple arch band bridge of concrete will also be displayed. Electrical engineering students are preparing a machine, which, it is asserted, will transfer pictures by wireless. This apparatus will be shown in Mayer Bros, window. The mechanical engineers will open the steam laboratory to public in spection. Flowers and pictures will be frozen in ice by means of a refrig erating apparatus. Experiments with liquid air will display a kettle of liquid air in a cake of ice. A rubber ball, when frozen, will crack like an egg when thrown on the floor. Flowers dipped in liquid air will crumble and dry at once. Carl Gerber, '26, Omaha, is gen eral chairman of the Engineers Week committee. Committee chairmen are: Pep meeting, Walter Lammli, '26, Stan ton. Field Day, Frank Phillips, 26, Chadron. Parade, Arthur Bryant, '26, Elm Creek. Open house, T. F. Armstrong, '26, Omaha. Dance, Ed Wanek, '26, DeWitt Convocation, Glen Sudman, Oshkosh. Banquet, W. H. Hackmann, '26, Malvern, la. Win dow display, Carl Madsen, '26, Lin coln. 1 ublicity, Homer Kinsinger, 26, Milford. Program, Mark Fair, '28, Lincoln. Chemical engineers, Fred Wehmer, '25, sterling. Civil engineers, Carl Dalton, '26, Lincoln. Architectural engineers, L. W. Vas-' tine, '26, Lincoln. Electrical engi neers, Clifford Reese, '26, Carroll. Mechanical engineers, Gorge Work, '26, Litchfield. Agricultu-al engi neers, I. F. Reed, '26, Orchard. Geo logists, Walter C. Schmeeckle, '26, Lincoln. A CAPPELLA CHOIR TO SING Pi Lambda Kappe Sponsors Last Appearance of Season The A Cappella choir, directed by Dean John Rosborough of the Uni versity School of Music, will make its last appearance for the season this evening at the First Baptist Church. The choir will be assisted by Louise ShudJick Zubriskie, Oma ha organist. Pi Kappa Lambda, national hon orary musical fraternity which cor responds to Phi Beta Kappa in the College of Arts and Sciences, is spon soring the concert. . TO HOLD FROLIC WEDNESDAY Students in Psychology 100 Class Plan Festival All former psychology students are urged to attend the second an nual spring frolic given by the psy chology 100 class at Antelope Park, Wednesday at 5 o'clock. Names of those who expect to attend with fifty tents for each person are to be turn ed in to Professor Hyde before 5 o'clock today. An interesting program has' been arranged .which is to include games, mock experiments, and the third edi tion of the Laboratory Moronicle, a humorous publication. Refreshments will also be served. Those who are to participate in the frolic will meet at the south entrance of the Social Science building at 5 o'clock, Wed nesday, or at the band stand at the park. PLAY FIRST OF SECOND ROUND Sigma Alpha Epsilon Defeats Beta Theta Pi 17 to 1 Gars? Yesterday. in REMAINING GAMES TO BE PLAYED THIS WEEK The interfraternity baseball tour nament swung into the second round yesterday when Sigma Alpha Epsi lon defeated Beta Theta Pi. The re maining games will be played dur ing the -week, Saturday being the last day when second round games may be played. Sigma Alpha Epsilon took the ong end of a 17 to 1 score from the Beta's in a loosely-played game. Cone, who pitched for the Beta's, was hit freely, allowing five runs in the second inning and five in the tihrd. Rufe Dewitz slammed out a home run in the second and a two bagger in the fifth. Schram, the Sig Alph pitcher, was in good form and limited the Beta's to six scat tered hits. He had good support so that the Beta's did not threaten until the seventh when they scored their lone tally. Pi Kappa Phi defeated the A. T. O. nine 9 to 4 in a first round game Monday. It was the last first round game played. The contest was e free hitting exhibition, three home runs being chalked up. Newman found Lucke, the Pi Kappa mound man, for a circuit smash in the fifth inning. Adams and Kendall each drave out a home run for the Pi Kaps in the next inning. Adam's smash brought in one man on base. Lee allowed four runs in the sixth which cinched the game for the Pi Kapps. TWENTY-ONE GIVE RECITAL Students Appear at Temple Theater Yesterday Evening. Twenty-one students with Maude Fender Gutzmer of the University School of Music appeared in a pub lic recital in the Temple theater yes terday evening. Participants in Part I of the con cert were Faye Hulbert, Albert Fried li, Maurine Jenkins, Mamie Lebhart, Esther Novotny, Cecil Wagner, Mrs. A. W. Nelson, Frances Mentzer and Jacob Friedli. Those who took part in Part II, which was dramatized, were Ruth Slyer, Alta Story, Ruth Warner, Katherine Costin, Frances Jaques, Sophia Melcher, Ruby Warner, Oline Oleson, Alice Sternberg, and Mabel Zimmerman. Fleda Graham served as accompanist and Louis Babst as flutist. Mounted Quadrille Of Features Mark Hirsig, '26, Cheyenne, Wy oming, is working with one of his rid ing classes on an original mounted quadrille which will be given in con nection with the Wild West show at the seventh annual Farmers' Fair, May 2. The sixteen riders taking part in the quadrille will be dressed uniformly and will ride horses of uni form color. This will be tho first event of this kind that has ever been staged in the vicinity of Lincoln and should prove to be quite a drawing card. A number of Mr. Hirsigs horses will be used in the big Farmers' Fair parade which will ;jass down O street at noon, Saturday. There will be more than thirty raddle-horses and riders in the parjde including several cowboys with high boot and wide brimmed hats, and a number of co eds who are Mr. Hirsig's students. Regimental Parade Held This Evening A regimental parade and review will be held this evening by the University R. O. T. C. on the drill field. Major Erickson, professor of military scienee and tactics and commandant of the unit, will in spect the unit. First call will bo at 4:50 and assembly will be blown at 5 o'clock. CHANGE GAME FOR BIZAD DAY Ags Will Be Opponents in An nual Baseball Contest In stead of Laws. RIBBONS FOR ANNUAL AFFAIR NOW ON SALE The baseball game scheduled for the annual Bizad Day celebration May 1 will be between the Bizads and the Ags instead of the Laws as had been previously planned, it was announced yesterday. Both teams are working out daily and a close game is promised. Lineups of the squads will be published in a few days. Ribbons for the celebration went on sale yesterday and the committee reported that sales were very good. They request that students wear the ribbons all week so that they will not be solicited after they have purchas ed one. The emblems admit the bearer to all festivities including the Bizad spring party . The price is one dollar. A Bizad committee at the Univer sity of Chicago has written those in charge of the event here, asking for information regarding the annual af fair. The College of Commerce at the Illinois school is planning to start a custom much like the one here. Stu dents there have had an annual ball similar to the Bizad spring party but they do not have the rest of the events which take place at Nebraska. The committee in charge of ticket sales for the Day is: Charles Griffith, Jr., chairman, C. O .Davis, Wallis Nelson, Aldrich Hanicke, Harold Zen necher, Doris Loeffel, Hope Hansen, Laverna Currie and Gwendolyn Tem plin. SORENSON WILL SPEAK TO FORUM Prominent Lincoln Attorney to Argue Against Compulsory Military Training. The speaker for the World Forum luncheon Wednesday noon at the Grand Hotel will be C. A. Sorenson, a prominent Lincoln attorney. He will speak against compulsory mili tary training in universities, this be !ng the first of two addresses on the question. Prof. C. J. Frankforter of the University will speak next Wed nesday on the opposite side of the topic. Mr. Sorenson graduated from the University with the class of 1913 Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. offi cials in charge of the luncheon are making preparations for a large at tendance as the two speakers are ex pected to give good addresses on tho subject. Ticket may be obtained at the "Y" office in the Temple or at Ellen Smith Hall. The price is twenty-five cents. Four Texas men are paying part of their school expenses through h hair oil vending machine in the lock er rooms. They advertise their busi ness by posters reading: "Use B oil and get more smiles per gal." Will Be One of Wild West Show The management of the Farmers' Fair has allowed the Wild West com mittee more mcney this year than in previous years and an effort will be made to make this show the best of its kind in eastern Nebraska. The Wild West show will start at 1 o'clock and will be given just north of the horse barn on the Ag cam pus. This is one of the free attrac tions and will be given only once. Several of the business firms of Lincoln have donated prizes which will be given for the various riding and roping contests. Prizes will be awarded for five different contests One of the horses, "High Moon," has the reputation of having never born ridden, although he has been used in quite a number of rodeos and wild west shows. Several high class "buck ing mules" and nearly a dozen wild steers have also been secured for the riding contests. . POLLS OPEN FROM 9 TO 4 Announce That no Campaign ing to Be Allowed at the Polls But Each Candidate May Be Represented. THREE BOARD VACANCIES Expect Large Vote for Mem bers of Student Council and Publication Board for Next Year in Election Today. Polls will be open from 9 to 4 o'clock today in the basement of Ad ministration building and at the of fice of Dean Burnett at the Ag cam pus to allow students to elect mem bers of the Student Council and of the Student Publication Board. It was announced yesterday that there could be no campaigning in the polls themselves but each candidate may either be at the polls or have a repre sentative there. Three vacancies are to Le filled on the Student Publication Board. Glenn H. Curtis, Robert Scoular and David Hume Webster are candidates for senior member. Merrit J. Klep ser, Joe Weir, and John Schroyer and candidates for junior members. Sam St. John is the only candidate for sophomore member. Glenn Curtis is a member of Alpha Tau Omega, Kosmet Klub, Iron Sphinx and Viking. He is circula tion manager of the 1925 Cornhus ker and is president of Pi Epsilon Pi, or Corncobs, as it is better known. David Hume Webster is a member of the Y. M. C. A. cabinet . Robert Scoular is a member of Phi Gamma Delta, Kosmet Klub, Alpha Kappa Psi, Vikings and the University Night committee. Publication Board Filings Joe Weir is a member of the Var sity football and track squads, Ag Club, Green Goblins, "N" Club and Iron Sphinx. John Schroyer is a Sigma Nu, belongs to the Glee Club, Iron Sphinx, Green Goblins and Per shing Rifles. . He was in the Kosmet . Klub play cast and is a sophomore basketball manager. Merritt J. Klep- ;er is a member of Alpha Sigma Phi and Alpha Kappa Psi. He has earned two letters in Varsity basketball. Sam St. John is a member of Iron Sphinx and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Five candidates are filed as jun- iors-at-large for the Student Council. Pauline Barber is a member of Chi Omega, P. E. O. Campus Club, Xi Delta, and University Night commit tee. She has worked on the Daily Nebraskan staff and is secretary of the junior class. Millicent Ginn is a Kappa Alpha Theta and Theta Sigma Phi and is a member of the Daily Nebraskan staff. Theodore Page is a Green Goblin, and was on the Var sity basketball squad. Edward Mor row is a member of Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Delta Chi, is a news edi tor, on The Daily Nebraskan and is in charge of the University News Service. Wilbur K. Swanson is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, was president of the Commercial Club last semester, is vice-president of the junior class and Delta Sigma Pi and is editor of the Bizad section of the Cornhusker. Arts and Science College Helen Simpson, Merle S. Jones and Simpson Morton are filed for Arts and Science College representatives on the Student Council. Helen Simp son is a member of Phi Beta Pi, Mystic Fish, Vestals of the Lamp, Theta Sigma Phi, Chi Delta Phi, the All-University party committee, is sorority editor of the Cornhusker and sponsor of the First Battalion of the R. O. T. C. regiment. Merle Jones is a member of Alpha Tau Omega and of the business staff of the Awgwan. Simpson Morton is a member of Phi Kappa Psi, advertis ing club, and Iron Sphinx. He is treasurer of the sophomore class and is a circulation manager oi xne Daily Nebraskan. Sylvia Lewis is the only candidate from the Teachers College. She is a member of the Freshman Commis sion, Xi Delta and the Y. W. C. A. staff. The College of Agriculture' has four candidates. Mildred Bahrens is a member of the Y. W. C. A. cabi net at the College. Alice Engel is assistant circulation manager of the Cornhusker Countryman. Glen Buck is a member of Alpha Gamma Rho, Nebraskan staff, Iron Sphinx, swim ming team, Pi Epsion Pi, Vikings, and is associate editor of the Corn husker Countryman and is editor o the Ag College section of the Cornhusker. Cecil Molzen r. a member of Kappa Sigma, the "N" club, and the football and wresting squads. Collef of Dentistry The College of Dentistry has three candidates. Arthur Wurta Is momKsr nt Xi Psi Phi and Iron ' Sphinx. Ralph Ireand is a member I (Continued on Paga TbraO place on the team.