The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 15, 1932, Image 1

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D
I HE
AILY
E BR ASK AN
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
VOL. XXXI. NO. 107.
LINCOLN. NEBRASKA, TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 1932.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
IN
OF
SISTER BOARD IS
TO BE WEDNESDAY
Selection Made of Sorority
And Non-Sorority
Women.
POLLS OPEN AT 9 AND 10
Voting Takes Place at Ellen
Smith Hall and on
Ag Campus.
University women will go to the
polls tomorrow to select officers
and members of the Big Sister Ad
visory board for next year. They
will choose two sophomore mem
bers from the present freshman
clan, one sorority and one non
sorority woman, four junior mem
bers in the same ratio, and four
senior representatives. Both can
didates for president, Margaret
Upson and Delores Deadman, will
remain senior members of the
board.
According to the constitution,
the junior girl receiving the high
est number of votes is automat
ically elected vice president, and
the sophomore polling the greatest
total takes the office of recretary
treasurer. The polls will be open
in Ellen Smith hall from 9 until 5
o'clock, and in the Home Eco
nomics parlors on the agricultural
campus, from 10 until 12:30.
Identification cards are necessary
for a voter to receive a ballot.
The Big Sister Advisory board,
reorganized under a new constitu
tion last spring, functions chiefly
as an aid to women new to the
school tn the process of orienting
her to her surroundings. In addi
tion to aiding advisers with regis
tration of new students in the fall,
each Board member, who is in
charge of ten big sisters chosen
annually by the Board, is responsi
ble to see that the big sisters un
der her direction arrange inter
views with freshmen woir.cn and
di.-cover their prtb'oms.
The following nominees selected
hy the senior nominating commit
tee will be voted upon tomorrow.
Due to an error, Dorothy Cathers
was announced a candidate for
sophomore non-soror:ty vacancy.
Inasmuch as Miss Cathers' affilia
tion with Delta Zeta was not ap
prehended, she is ineligible for the
vp.cancy, and In the vacancy the
nominating comir tee has placed
the name of Rachel Rodman.
Activities Are Listed.
Delores Deadman, candidate for
president, is a member of Barb
council, has been active in Y. W.
C. A., and for the past year has
served as a member of the Big
Sister board. Miss Upson, affili
a'. :d with Alpha Omicron Pi, is at
present vice president of the board
and a member of the A. W. S.
board.
Of the senior non-sc:ority can
didates, Margaret Chevront is vice
prc"' lent of Tassels; Lois Picking
is a member of Uni -sity Players
and Tassels; Margaret Reedv has
served as a member of the board
( lg the past year, and as a
member of the VV. A. A. Executive
cot. -il. Betsy Benedict, the fourth
no:, inee for a non-sorority place,
hps been active in campus affairs
as -'ell.
Sorority candidates for the two
vacancies are: Elizabeth Barber,
member of Alpha Phi, Student
council. Tassels, and is the new
Pan Hellenic chairman. Harriet
Dunlap Is president of Alpha Chi
Omega and a member of Student
council. Alice Quigle, affiliated
with Phi Mu, is a Tassel, a mem
(Contlnued on Page 3.)
ALUMNUS APPEARS MAR. 15
Crawford Article Featured;
Also Contains Account
of Charter Day.
The March issue of the Ne
braska Alumnus appeared Tues
day, featuring an article on "The
Greatest Need of the University of
Nebraska" by Robert P. Crawford,
17, assistant to the chancellor.
Au account is given of Charter
day celebrations by different
alumni groups, followed by an
article on new alumni. The re
mainder of the magazine is given
over to a list ot addresses of for
mer students In the college of
medicine, news of the classes, and
"The Book Shelf" giving accounts
of happenings of former students.
ELECTION
University Substation at Mitchell
Experimenting With Crop Rotation
The crop rotation experiment
being conducted at the Mitchell,
Neb., substation of the University
of Nebraska is the largest set of
irrigated rotations in the United
States or perhaps in the world, de
clares Supt. James A. Holden. In
this experiment, be explained, there
are 182 quarter acre plots divided
into 47 different cropping systems.
These cropping systems vary in
length from continuous cropping
to a seven year rotation. Thirty
one of these cropping systems were
begun in the spring of' 1912 and
the other sixteen have been added
since.
There is now a marked differ
ence In the yields of the various
crops grown in these various rota
tions. The outstanding difference
is due to the beneficial effect ot
alfalfa, sweet clover and barnyard
manure used in the cropping sys
tem. The yield per acre of such
crops as potatoes, sugar beets, com
and small grain is now 100 percent
higher when grown in rotation
Salary Cuts, Course Eliminations Are
Last 'Resorts' in Economy, Dean Says
v ...
Teachers Executive Points
Out the Need for Right
Kind of Saving.
Reducing public expenditures by
slashing teachers' salaries and by
elimination of subjects from the
curriculum is regarded by Dean F.
E. Henzlik of the teachers college
as being justified only as a last re
sort, believing that such action
should be taken only after careful
consideration of all the factors and
conditions prevailing in the local
community.
"The schools have assumed a
new relationship to community
life," he said. "Teachers are paid
not solely to furnish instruction in
technical subjects, but are con
cerned in shaping and moulding
the lives of future citizens. Any
thing that seriously Impairs the
quality of instruction, therefore,
constitutes a danger to the state
and democracy."
If a question of economy, qual
ity of instruction of instructural
service should not be sacrificed,
the dean said. To take such action
without regard to the facts or the
ultimate results would be "fool
hardy." "There are many districts where
public expenditures must be re
duced in order to balance the bud
get or to live within the income.
Most districts can do this by a
carefully planned program. When
all reasonable economies possible
Eastern College
Has Armed. Arabs
Serve as Guards
(From the Syracuse Dally Orange.)
Those Who passed a certain fra
ternity house on Walnut Avenue
in Syracuse, N. Y., were astonished
to see two swarthy, turbanned
Arabs standing steadfastly on
guard before the classic portals.
Apparently they were armed to
the teeth for weapons shone in
sharp silhouette over their sturdy
shoulders.
A well dressed man emerged
from the door and the easterners
bent in reverential salaams before
him.
Closer investigation revealed the
weapons to be brooms and the tur
hans bath towels that had served
lone and faithfully for the
brothers. Just another phase
of
hell week making its appearance.
HAS LOST ITS SAVOR
Professor Crawford Relates
-
Effect of Depression on
Literature.
"The present period of depres
sion has sounded the death knell of
pessimistic literature in the middle
west," Professor Robert P. Craw
ford of the University of Nebras
ka told members of Psl Chi, psy
chological fraternity at the Uni
versity club, Monday evening.
"It was evident that such litera
ture was on the down grade a few
years ago but the hard times have
completely ruined it," Mr. Craw
ford stated. "The tremendous and
overwhelming success of the Aid
rich novels is an Indication of this
change.
"Just name, if you can, a single
book with the pessimistic slant on
the middle western life that has
had any sale at all the past few
years. Most of them have been
flops. Many book publishers have
not sensed this subtle change, and
that is why so many of them today
are looking the sheriff in the face.
"The book that reflected the de
terioration of human character
was more or less an attempt to
capitalize haphazardly on some of
the popular psychological ideas of
the past few years. Purporting to
be realistic it could not be so con
sidered unless we are to assume
that all people are nit wits, half
wits or just plain Idiots.
"In periods like the present it Is
inevitable that people should turn
to writing that does not picture
them as being in despair. When
vnn are already there, you cer
tainly do. not care to read about it.
The most distressing leaiure or
middle western literature has been
the recent errowth of what Mr.
Crawford termed the 'Speakeasy'
type of magazine. "Once upon a
tima magazines of this character
were hidden in the hayloft of the
barn but in certain ramuies toaay
(Continued on Page 3.)
with alfalfa, sweet clover or barn
yard manure than when grown in
rotation without these legume
crops or manure.
This is but one phase of the
work being carried on at this
branch of the state university In
the Interests of people in this ter
ritory, according to Superintendent
Holden. The work at this sub
station is in cooperation with the
United States office of western Ir
rigation agriculture. Other tests
now under way include fertilizing
tests with sugar beets, cultural
tests with sugar beets, potato and
vegetable work, lamb feeding ex
periments, steer feeding experi
ments, and tests with dairy cattle.
The Mitchell substation farm
consists of 960 acres together with
an additional tract of 400 acres
owned by the United States gov
ernment. Eleven buildings are on
the property, which with other im
provements, has an Inventory val
uation of $57,691, exclusive of the
government owned land.
PESSIMISTIC
WRITING
have been effected and still more
drastic action is necessary, it is
no longer a question of mere econ
omy but a question of curtailment
or retrenchment," Dean Henzlik
contended.
"If elimination of subjects is ne
cessary those fartherest away
from actual classroom Instruction
should suffer. Curtailments should
first affect activities that least
permanently affect the learner.
The need for educational institu
tions to be economical is recog
nized. It behooves administrators
of educational institutions to be as
economical as possible with public
funds. It is their duty and obliga
tion to find, If possible, the ways
and means of securing the same
service for less money, or more
and better service for the same
amount of money.
"Elimination of duplication of
service, increasing of class size In
certain grades, alternating sub
jects in two or more grades in the
smaller schools, establishing mini
mum teaching loads, and taking
advantage of labor saving devices
and procedures are a few of the
many economies possible.
"To meet the present economic
burdens we should first seek out
the major causes or sources of our
trouble. Taxes are not the cause of
hard times. Whatever action taken
should be done so only after care
ful consideration of all factors and
prevailing conditions."
11 FOR KOSMET
"SHOW IS SELECTED
Theme Song for This Year Is
M Have a Dream Dear;'
Sung as Solo.
ORCHESTRA NOT CHOSEN
Music for "Jingle Belles," Kos
met Klub's spring show, has been
selected and arranged, according
to Klub officials. The theme song
of this year's musical comedy is
"I Have a Dream Dear," which is
first introduced in the first act
over the radio and is sung as a
solo in the second act.
Most of the tunes and lyrics are
the result of combined effort on
the part of the music staff for the
shew. Numbers have been con
tributed by Lorraine Lovegren,
Frank Sherman, Jean Pasewalk,
Roger Wilkerson and Leo Skalow-
The choruses appear seven dif
ferent times during the show. The
mniA rhnrns never aDDears with-
ZSSSS&S: SS.
i Kmnn rariaa rain O
Th rhnmsps have been rehearsing
dance steps for the last two weeks
under the direction of Ralph Ire
land. The orchestra for "Jingle Belles
has not been definitely chosen and
the eligibility of some of the pros
pects is being checked. The Kos
mct Klub hopes to have a 10 or 12
piece band to take on the road trip
during spring vacation when the
show will play at a number of the
larger towns in eastern and cen
tral Nebraska.
The first number is the open
ing chorus. The title of the song
is "Let's Get Together." "Corn
Cobs and Tassels" is the number
of the next selection. This is a solo
vocal selection. "Don't Be Blue'
is the next solo. The pajama dance
by the pony chorus is one of the
live numbers of the play. The first
act closes with the serenade num
ber which is sung and danced by
both choruses.
The second and last act opens
with "Snowflakes" and the chorus
dances and sings -and there is a
specialty number. "That's My
Gal" is the pony number. "I
Have a Dream Dear," the theme
song, is a solo number. "Sopho
more Sal" follows. The final num
ber is 'Let's Get Together" and
the whole cast sings in the grand
finale.
BIG SiSTERSJO BE FETED
Dinner to Be Given by Board
For Eighty Girls Serving
This Year,
The Big Sister board will be
hostesses at a 6 o'clock dinner
Thursday, March 17, at Ellen
Smith hall. The guests of the
board will be the eighty girls
who are serving this year in the
capacity of Big Sisters. A St
Patricks motif will be used.
Margaret Upson and Catherine
Warren compose the program com
mittee. Margaret Reedy and
Ruthalee Hollaway are in charge
of arrangements for the dinner.
FOODSTUFFS SHOW
LARGE PRICE DROP
OVER TWO YEARS
Purchases made of foodstuffs
for Nebraska Institutions denote a
remarkable drop in prices.
Five staple articles, of food,
beans, sugar, bacon, beef and ham
were purchased in hundredweight
lots at a combined price of $29.58
per hundred pounds. In 1930 these
same articles cost $46.16. Thus a
riffrence in favor of the state of
$16.60, a saving of nearly 30 per
cent.
Meeting J Called
Of Sigma Delta Chi
Members of Sigma Delta
Chi, professional journalistic
fraternity, will meet Tuesday
afternoon at 4 o'clock In the
Awgwan office, according to
William McGaffin, president.
FRANCIS M. DUNNING DIES
Was Sophomore in Engineer
ing at University.
Frances McCorkle Dunning,
eighteen, known as "Mac," died in
Lincoln Sunday at 4 a. m. follow
ing a serious head operation. A
sophomore in engineering at the
u n I verslty or
Nebr aska, be
was a member
of Kappa Sig
ma, and son of
Mrs. lnice Dun
ning, dean of
women at Peru
state normal.
He was also a
member of the
DeMolay at Au
b u r n. He at
tended Peru for
his fresh man
year of college.
Before com-
-Courteay of Journal, ing to Peru
young Dunning lived at Alliance,
where the body was taken for
burial Sunday evening following
funeral services at Castle, Roper
& Matthew's at 4 o'clock In the
afternoon conducted by Rev. J. W.
Henderson.
BE
Student Council Committee
Convenes Wednesday in
U Hall.
MEET FOR FIRST TIME
Meeting for the first time to
consider the problem of the politi
cal realignment of fraternities on
the campus, the committee ap
pointed by the student council will
convene Wednesday afternoon In
U hall to discuss the question.
Edwin Faulkner, president of
the student council, will act as ex
officio chairman of the group,
which consists of Willard Hedge
and Phil Brownell, members of the
student council; Otis Detrick, Dick
Devereaux, and Delphian Nash,
faction presidents; Art Wolf, Bill
McGaffin, and Richard Bell, mem
bers of the Innocents society, and
Professors E. W. Lantz and E. F.
Schramm, members of the faculty.
Appointment of the committee
was recommended to the Student
Council by the Innocents society,
as a result of the meeting called
several weeks ago to discuss the
problem of the decline of Interest
in student activities. A committee
consisting of Art Wolf, Bill Mc
Gaffin, and Edwin Faulkner, re
ported on the meeting to the stu
dent council, recommending the
appointment of the committee.
The main reason for the lack of
Interest in activities, as brought
out in the meeting, was the unbal
anced political alignment present
among the fraternities on the
campus. Six other causes were dis
cussed, but the problem of the
alignment was considered the most
important.
T
HAS THREEON BOARD
Students Are Members of
Athletic Council; Are
Appointive.
Three students are members of
the Athletic council at Southern
Methodist university, according to
a letter received by Art Wolf,
chairman of the Student council
committee on athletic relations.
The council was organized nine
teen years ago.
The athletic council at that In
stitution is composed of three stu
dents appointed by the Student
council, two alumni, two business
men of the city, one member of
the board of trustees of the uni
versity, the president of the uni
versity, the business manager of
the university, chairman of the
faculty athletic committee, direc
tor of athletics, and a member of
the faculty appointed by the presi
dent. In addition to all of these mem
bers, all of whom have equal vot
ing power, student managers of
athletic teams attend the meetings
of the athletic council, but they
do not hsve the power to vote.
A conference ruling requires
that the faculty of the university
have control of athletics. This is
exercised by the faculty commit
tee of athletics, which Is at all
times open to suggestions and rec
ommendations from the athletic
council.
CAMPUS CALENDAR
Tuesday, March 15.
A. W. S. Freshman activities
meeting, Ellen Smith hall, 4
o'clock.
Sigma Eta Chi, Ellen Smith hall,
7 o'clock.
Wednesday, March 16.
Big Sister board elections, Ellen
Smith ball and Home Economics
parlors, all day. ,
Blzad News second issue ap
pears. Election of Big Sister Board
Ellen Smith hall, 9 to 5.
Lutheran Bible league, Temple
theater, room 205, 7:00.
Freshman commission, Ellen
Smith, 4:00.
Thursday, March 17.
March Awgwan sale opens In
campus buildings.
mi
Organization of Alumni Loyalty Fund
Advocated by Crawford in Alumnus
Wants Small Gifts to Be
Given Each Year as a
Means of Aid.
Organization of an Alumni Loy
alty fund of small gifts each year
is urged by Robert P. Crawford,
'17, In an article on "The Greatest
Need of the University of Ne
braska" appearing in the March
number of the Alumnus, issued
Tuesday.
Citing the needs for student
loan funds, scholarships, and gifts
for distinctive buildings that can
not be considered by the legisla
ture for a period of years, so
pressing are the demands always
for Just the plain unadorned struc
tures that bouse classrooms and
offices, Mr. Crawford shows how
these steps may be made.
"In fact," states Mr. Crawford,
"I am willing to say that almost
anything that the University of
Nebraska has been criticized for
by alumni or friends in the past
ten years is a matter that could
be remedied almost overnight with
gifts of reasonable amounts of
money."
The complete article follows:
On my desk this morning is a
copy of a Nebraska weekly news
paper. One of its important illus
trations depicts a new bell tower,
the $100,000 gift of two North
Carolina families to the University
of North Carolina. Strange per
Tl
Can See No Harm of Student
Representation on
Board.
REGENTS MUST DECIDE
'I cannot see that student rep
resentation on the athletic board
would in any way be harmful, nor
can I see trKt it would be of any
particular benefit, stated Dean
T. J. Thompson when asked his
opinion concerning the move to
place student members on the
board.
'Many schools carry on their
athletic progrjjjri under that plan,
but it is doubtful tnat tneir ma
chinery operates any more smooth
ly than does ours at the present
time."
Dean Thompson commented that
there had always been co-operation
between the board and the
students, that no petition presented
to the board by the students naa
ever been disregarded. "I can see
no objection to the plan," lie
stated, "but 1 also see no oojecuon
to the present system."
The initiative for the change
must come from the board of
regents, not from the athletic
board, for the athletic board it3Clf
was created by the regents. What
ever the board of regents decide
concerning the proposal will de
termine its fate, he said.
"The success of student repre
sentation, I think," the dean stated,
"will depend in a great part on the
method employed in choosing the
representatives. To make a strictly
political "job" of it, would cer
tainly aot contribute to its success.
The plan of choosing one repre
sentative from each of the two
major parties, as advocated by the
council, may in a measure prevent
it from becoming merely a politi
cal position."
The council's proposal provided
for the choosing of two student
representatives to the athletic
board, one junior and one senior
member. The junior member shall
be carried over from one year to
the next as the senior member. A
new junior member shall be chosen
each year, from the opposite po
litical party cf the senior member
by the student council at its last
(Continued on Page 2.)
OMAHA IS SCENE OF DEBATE
Shirley and Seeck Will Meet
North Dakota Tuesday
At Tech High.
The University of Nebraska will
be represented by Don Shirley and
Albert Seeck in a debate with the
University of North Dakota to be
held in Omaha Tuesday, announced
Prof. H. A. White, debate coach.
The subject to be discussed, of
which Nebraska will present the
negative argument is: Congress
should enact legislation providing
for centralized control of industry,
constitutionality granted. The de
bate will take place at the Omaha
Technical high school.
HAMILTON SPEAKS
ON CHEMISTRY AT
SIGMA XI MEETING
Meeting in Morrill hall, the Uni
versity of Nebraska Chapter of
Sigma XI convened Monday,
March 14, at 7:30 o'clock.
Lecturing on "Arsenicals, Old
and New," Cliff Struthers Hamil
ton Ph. D., Professor of Chemis
try, discussed the arongan-arsenic
compounds now in use as thera
peutic, agents. The relation be
tween the chemical structure of
the compounds and their physio
logical action was also presented.
Corn Cobs Will Have
Meeting Wednesday
A meeting of all Corn Cob
member will be held Wednes
day at 5 o'clock In Social Sci
ence auditorium. Both actives
and pledget are asked to be
present to dispense with Impor
tant business.
haps that such an Illustration
should find its way into a news
paper published 2,000 miles away.
Most of us perhaps would not
think of North Carolina as a rich
state. It has had its agricultural
problems quite as much as Ne
braska and it has by no means
been immune irom financial de
pression. But it will rather astound
one to know what the graduates
and friends of that university did
for it in the year 1930. Not only
did the institution receive the gift
of the bell tower but it received
many other things as well. In the
first place, over two thousand
alumni contributed $41,000 in
small unrestricted gifts, each one
giving according to his ability. One
man gave $80,000 to complete the
student union building, and when
I visited North Carolina last
spring the stone masons and car
penters were busy at work. One
friend of the institution had given
it a magnificent pipe organ, but
the institution lacking place to put
it, he gave an additional $88,000
for a small musical auditorium,
just the sort of a building that
would delight the University of
Nebraska. One woman gave
$25,000, the endowment on .which
was to be used for the purchase of
rare southern literary documents.
In fact, in that year one out of
every seven alumni ot the Univer
( Continued on Page 3.)
New South Wales
Experiments With
Super'' Children
Experimental schools have been
started in New South Wales to
discover whether it is really worth
while to spend extra money on the
education of children of excep
tional ability.
After mental tests and a thor
ough medical examination, these
"super" children are given every
opportunity to develop brilliance.
Their achievements later, as
adults, will be carefully noted.
Education Minister Davies, who
is introducing the scheme, says
that while millions of dollars are
spent on subnormal, delinquent
and truant children, the pupils of
outstanding intelligence are
grouped with the rank and file and
their mentality is retarded.
MWllLUPPEnR
Light Is Cast on Stuoent
Life by New Feature
Entitled 'Gore.'
The appearance of the Spring
number of the Awgwaa is sched
uled for Thursday of this week, ac
cording to present plans. This is
sue inclosed within a cover featur
ing a' wood sprite .in. colors on a
black background is to be the most
colorful number published this
year.
"Gore," written by the Snoop
ers, is attracting considerable
comment on the campus at this
time and the release day of this
issue will undoubtedly be an event
ful day for a number of campus
people. This page is probably the
outstanding feature in the March
Awgwan and will present in Win
chellian style the intimate details
and personal affairs of prominent
students.
The Awgwan will include
twenty-eight pages this month, an
increase of four pages over any
previous issue. Three hundred
more copies are being printed this
month in view of the complete
sellout of the February number
the first day of the sales cam
paign. The sales campaign will
be staged over two days this week
and from present indications a
complete sellout will again be reg
istered. Another principal feature is a
burlesque on college life and pic
nics entitled, "Roses Are Red, Vi
olets Are Aw You Know What
They Mean." This exciting story
is the work of J. T. Coffee, a reg
ular contributor to the Awgwan.
Still another distinct and choice
bit of humor is the work of R.
Reeder, who writes, "Mush, a Dog
Who Died for Tale." "A Pen Pro
file," written hy Rosaline Pizer, is
(Continued on Page 3.)
Congress Must Provide Employment
Through Extensive Public Program
"It is up to congress to provide
employment through an extensive
public works program for the mil
lions of jobless in the United
States at this time," Dr. J. E. Le
Rossignol, dean of the University
of Nebraska college of business
administration, declared Monday.
The dean asserted his endorse
ment of the $n,500,000,000 prosper,
lty loan proposal, sponsored oy
Un'"?d States Senator Robert M.
LaFollette of Wisconsin, now being
considered in congressional com-rr-'
e.
"I am not entirely satisfied,
ho .ever," he said, "if the amount
shot-'-' be exactly $5,500,000,000.
Perhaps that is too much. But I
am strongly in favor of public
works In a time like the present as
I believe It la one of the most prac
ticable means of meeting the emerge?--y."
Dr. LeRoasignol was recently
asked for his opinion on the $5,
000,000,000 prosperity loan idea ad
vanced by William Rando'pn
Hearst, regarded aa closely related
to the measure sponsored by Sena
tor LaFollette. The Nebraska dsn
gave his endorsement to M. S.
COMMITTEES FOR
ANNUAL FARMERS
FAIR ANNOUNCED
Every Student in Ag College
Is On at Least One
Committee.
WILL PRESENT PAGEANT
Scott to Direct Production
With a Committee to '
Aid Him.
Individual members of various
committees for the 1932 Farmers
Fair which is to be held on the col
lege of agriculture campus early in
May were announced this morning
by the senior fair board. Every
student in the college is on at least
one committee.
Members of the senior fair
board which is directing the gen
eral policies of the 1932 fair in
clude Fred Meredith, St. Edward;
Delphin Nash, Henry; Gerald
Shick. Curtis; Ruthalee Holloway,
Lincoln; Hazel Benson, Lincoln;
and Eva Buel, Hickman.
The junior board will co-operate
with the senior board in directing
the fair. Those on the junior board
include Ralph Copenhaver, Syra
cuse; Elbert Ebcrs, Seward; Reu
ben Hecht. Curtis; Clarice Hads.
Lincoln; Marion Lynn. Minden;
and Helen Hengstler, Creighton.
As previously announced the
1932 fair will feature the produc
tion of a pageant depicting the",
growth and development of agri
culture in Nebraska. Prof. R. D.
Scott of the English department
in the University of Nebraska is
directing the production. He is
being assisted by a committee
composed of Albert Ebcrs, Rutha
lee Holloway and Clarice Hads. A
n.nr..i, rile, which meets every
week at the college is also assist
ing in the production oi Lne und
ent episodes. .
Tho the fair will feature educa
tional entertainment. Manager
Fred Meredith emphasized the
fact that there will also be conces
sions on the grounds. The snorph
eum under the direction of Jess
Livingston will be one of the fun
features of the fair. He has a
group of men and women working
under him in the production.
Since every student in the col
lege has been selected on one com
mittee or another, the senior fair
board says it is imperative that
everyone work. As in other years
the "horse tank" is expected to
adorn the campus for the benefit
of those students who do not like
to work. In normal years but few
"duckings" have been needed. .
The appointments ioiiow.
FARMKR1 FAIR
BOAKII.
Senior.
Fred Meredith, Mgr.
Gerald Schick
Delphin Nash, Teraa
Haiel Benson. 6ec.
Ruthalee Holloway
Eva Buel.
Junior.
Ralph Copenhaver
Reuben Herht
Albert Ebers
Clarice Hads
Marlon Lynn
Helen HenKstlcr
Frnmntlod ( om.
Eva Buel
Helen HenBStler
Reuben Herht
Pageant Kerutlve.
Ruthalee Holloway
Albert Ebers
Clarice Hads
Episode Director..
Caryl Durfee
Doris Maenuson
Vent Mae Rang
Frances Duhachek
Alyce Zimmerman
Properties.
Emma Keith. Ai chr
.F.leanor Price
Helen Weed
Esther Wenzel
Alma Ferrichs
Evelyn Coe
Elsie Beemer
Alice Reece
C. Elizabeth Borron
Marjorte Brubaker
Harriet Skinner : .
Mora Arnvea
Fred Slefer. Chr.
Howard White
Elmer YounK
Pawson Wischmeier
Paul Swanson
Make Vp.
Margaret Seiver, CH
Helen Porn
Dorothy Brewer
Music
Doris Macnufon Chr.
Beatrice Donldon
Mary K. Smith
raaram pw.(
(Continued on Page 2.)
RAMSAY LEADS, DISCUSSION
Last of Scries of Religious
Meetings to Be Held on
Wednesday.
secretary, will lead the fireside dis
cussion held in the University .
M. C. A. rooms Wednesday eve
ning at i :uu. it. win uc u&oc-j
the last part of the Sermon on the
Mount and will be in the nature of
a discussion of what one should do
with a workable religion when he
has found one.
This will be the last of a series
of discusion covering the general
topic "Finding a Workable Relig
ion" which have been sponsored by
the University Y. M. C. A. It will
be held around the open fireplace
and is open to all university men.
Rurkevser. financial editor of the
Universal Service and Hearst
newspapers.
Hearst Plan Favored.
"I favored the Hearst plan as I
believed some tangible measure
t- -a h nrpspntpd before ine
public pnd before congress for due
consideration,' ne saia. i
f nnnvinrArl thlt CO"rH
should do something to relieve the
unemployment situation ana i re
lieve a wisely planned and eco
not ically adopted public works
program is ine answer.
r . t .Dmiinnl however, rave
several warnings In his reply to
Mr. Kuckeyser, principally
the application of the money after
it is obtained through the bond
issues .
'1 wrote bim that can should
be exercised so that the money
would not be mlvppropriated or
squandered; tliat only needed im
provement will be taken care of.
and that the stock market does
not become saturated with tit
bonds and thus hurt other securi
ties "
The dean said he believed aH
(Continued on Page 8.)