The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, June 23, 1933, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    P
mis - Nvtr$r:r:fc
The Nebraskan
: Is Free
Get Tour Copy from Boko In Social
Heloneoa, Andrew or
Teucbora Vollege.
lie''
I And AnkJr Nohruokuii llTTlce
Official Summer Session Newspaper.
VOLUME IV, NO. 3.
TO PLAY FOR
STUDENT PARTY IN
TONIGHT
Committee Vacancies Filled
And Program Outlined
Thursday Noon.
Dave Hahn's popular twelve
piece orchestra, with Donna Rae
Cooper as entertainer and singer,
will play for the second summer
session party in the coliseum to
night. Admission continues at the
10 cent rate.
Plans for the party were com
pleted including the use of hos
tesses again, at a meeting of the
student executive committee in
Prof. E. W. Lantz' office Thurs
day noon. committee reported
fair success 'of the hostess system
at last week's party and requests
that all girls desiring to aid the
committee by acting as hostesses
at tonight's party leave their
names at Professor Lantz' office.
About 600 people attended last
week's party played by Tommy
Tompkin's band, the committee re
ported. Despite extremely warm
weather, the party was pronounced
a success ns the opening event of
the most extensive summer recre
ation progra ever planned here.
New committee members to re
place those of last year who did
not return to school this year were
announced at Thursday's meeting.
Committee members for this year
are: Vcre Jones, Pheonix, Ariz.;
L. S. Devoe, Plattsmouth; Wendell
S. Dodd, Belgrade; Arthur Jones,
Elm Creek; Helen Faye Huston,
Oscoola; Margaret Frahm, Blue
Hill; Marie Davis, Lincoln; and
Merill H. Zeigler, Lodge Pole. The
last three are new members.
Direction of summer recreation
events have been assigned to the
various committee members as fol
lows: Dodd, entertainment for
parties; Art Jones, music for par
ties; Devoe, golf and horseshoe
tournaments; Miss Huston, wom
en's sports; Miss Fraham, hos
t:sses for parties. Warren Marsh,
Archer, not a member of the com
n. ttce.Ms directing men baseball
organization.
following schedule of parties
a:ij picnics for the summer session
was also announced at the meet
ing: June 23, party in coliseum.
June 30, picnic at Capitol Beach.
July 7, party in coliseum.
July 14, party at Ag college.
July 21, party in coliseum.
July 28, undecided.
j OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Indenpendence DsFy will be ob
served Tuesday, July 4th. There
will be an intermission of sum
mer session work beginning Fri
day, June 30, and ending at 7 a.
m. Wednesday, July 5th. The
regular classes which meet on
Monday, July 3, will be post
poned to meet on Saturday,
July 8.
All summer school students
who traveled to Lincoln by rail
road are asked to turn in their
certificates to Director Moritz'
office, teachers college 305 at
once . The railroads provide for
return fare at the end of the ses
sion for one-third price if 100
students turn in their certifi
cates. LOST A green fountain pen
with black tips between the
home management house and
Social Sciences Thursday morn
ing, June 15, about 8 o'clock.
Finder is requested to turn in
the pen at Director Moritz' of
fice, Teachers college 305.
HAHN
COLISEUM
Reed Lectures Today.
JUNE 23
10 a. m. SSA:
Educa. Psychology 283
Elementary Education 313
Elementary Education 314
Hist, and Principles 31
Hist, and Principles 138
Sch. Administration 151
Sen. Administration 395
Secondary Education 248
11 a. m. SSA:
Economics 204
Economics 291
Political Science 1
Political Science 109
Political Science 276
Sociology 215
History 7
History 202s
History 233s
History 243
All-university convocation.
GYP AGENTS PREYING
Sergeant Regler Issues a
Warning Against Such
Salesmen.
Gyp magazine salesmen, some of
them purporting to be Kansas and
Oklahoma university students
working their way through school,
are preying on gullible Nebraska
summer school students, especially
women, according to Sergeant Reg
ler, university police officer.
Officer Regler has received nu
merous complaints in the last two
weeks concerning the operations
of these salesmen, has ordered
.-.sveral eight in one afternoon
off the campus and succeeded in
frightening one group out of town
by holding them for investigation
in the city jail.
These salesmen, according to
Regler, offer popular magazines to
students for the price of postage
only. Then, when the victim has
signed up, he discovers that post
age will -be five cents a copy and
that $2 of it must be paid in ad
vance. When he protests, the
salesman, who has the buyer's
name on the dotted line, replies
that he is working with authority
from the offices of the dean of
women and dean of student affairs
and that unless the victim pays, he
will be reported to one of those
offices. This is of course his bluff.
Sometimes the victim pays.
Sometimes he (or she) reports to
Officer Regler and the salesman
hurriedly departs.
Since ordering these magazine
salesmen off the campus, Regler
says they have been patrolling the
streets near the campus and meet
ing their prospects there, out of
the jurisdiction of campus police
officers, as they go to and from
school.
Regler asks all students meet
ing these salesmen to report them
to him. He will prosecute for ob
taining money under false pre
tenses if any victim will file a
complaint.
RIake Teaching This
Summer in Wyoming U
Dr. Irving H. Blake, professor of
zoology here, is teaching this sum
mer at the University of Wyoming
mountain summer school camp in
the Medicine Bow national park,
forty miles west of Laramie. Dr.
Blake has done extensive work in
mountain ecology and has pub
lished several papers on the sub
ject. He has worked in the moun
tains af Idaho, Maine, Colorado, in
the Black Hills and in the Big
Horn mountains of Wyoming.
ON SUMMER ST
UDENTS
FRIDAY, JUNE 1933.
E.
T
Democracy Needs Education,
Says Chancellor of
Denver U.
Speaking before summer scho
students in the Temple theater r
a convocation Wednesday moi
Ing, Dr. Frederick M. Hunt
chancellor of Denver universit
defended the public school systc;
against the assult being wage
against it on the score of extrav;
gance and branded crime and w.
as the real extravagances and fo
of democracy in America.
"Sometimes we wonder," sci
Dr. Hunter whose talk Wednesda;
closed three days of lectures on the
campus, as the fir3t special lec
turcr, "whether democracy i..
worth having when we see at
tacks against our social institu
tions, particularly the schools, be
ing led, not by the enlightened
classes who are products of these
institutions, but by those who
serve institutions, but by those
who serve personal and selfish in
terests. "But a comparison of the de
gree of personal liberty the right
of man to think, say and do as he
choses so long as he doesn't injure
his fellow man enjoyed in this
country with the restrictions im
posed in dictator-ruled nations oL
Europe dispells this doubt.
"Our democracy is potent, and
(Continued on Page 2.)
N. Y.lLLEGElAD
COMINGJEXT WEEK
L. R. Gregory Speaks Seven
Times in Three Days
On Campus.
Beginning next Wednesday, June
28, L. R. Gregory, president of
State Teachers college, Fredonia,
N. Y. will conduct a three-day
course in special lectures to speci
fied classes in school administra
tion, elementary education and ed
ucational psychology. He will
speak seven times during his three
days here.
Wednesday at 8 o'clock he will
speak on "The Teacher as a Crea
tor of Good Will and Understand
ing in the Community." At 10
o'clock his subject is "Pitfalls in
the Supervision of the Elementary
School." At 11 o'clock the same
day he will talk on "School Admin
istration as a Challenge to Educa
tional Leadership."
At 9 o'clock on Thursday he will
speak on "Inexpensive but Effec
tive Publicity Devices" and at 11
will continue his talk of that hour
the day before.
His subject for a talk before
classes in educational psychology
at 7 o'clock Friday has not been
announced. At 9 Friday he will
address classes on "Specific Sug
gestions for Individualizing Class
room Procedure.
He will also speak before an eve
ning meeting of Teachers college
men sometime during his stay on
the campus. Places and classes as
signed to his various lectures are
listed elsewhere in today's Ne
braskan. President Gregory is a former
Nebraska public school superinten
dent and later superintendent of
schools at Louisville, Ky., and
Broxville, N. Y.
RIM
WAR
ME
MONEY
AN
SCHOOLS
HUNTER
"jfs-
Lecture. Schedule
For L. R. Gregory
Following are the time,
place and classes assigned to
attend lectures by L. R.
Gretory, president of State
Teachers college, Fredonia,
N. Y., who speaks here next
week:
JUNE 28.
8 a. m. SS107B:
School Administration 151
School Administration 152
10 a. m. And. 128:
Elementary Education 313
Elementary Education 314
11 a. m. TC303:
School Administration 353
JUNE 29.
D a. m. SS101:
School Administration 254
11 a. m. TC303:
School Administration 353
JUNE 33
7 a. m. SS101:
Education. Psychology 63
Education. Psychoioay 263
Education. Psychology 286
Education. Psychology 384
9 a. m. TC320:
School Administration 351
School Administration 354
CLOSES TALKS DAY
Dr. T. H. RfcsOcf Speck
at 10 and 1 y O'clock
This My-rflng.
Two talks this morning by D"r.
Thomas Harrison Reed, nationally
known political scientist, closes a
two-day course of special lectures
here by .the Michigan professor.
Dr. Raodspoke twice Thursday to
audiences packing Social Sciences
auditorium and his talks this
morning arc expected to draw
many students in addition to the
classes assigned to attend the lec
tures. His 10 o'clock lecture will deal
with "Business Methods in State
and Local Government" as related
to the general subject of his talks
here, "Constructive Economy in
(Continued on Pajje 2.)
Museum Given Lobster
By Omaha Hotel Man
The university museum has re
cently received an American lob
ster (Homarus Americanus) from
the Hotel Paxton in Omaha. The
donor is Joseph Huckins III.
According to Dr. E. H. Barbour
this is an exceptionally fine speci
men. It was donated already
mounted and is now on display at
Morrill hall.
Seattle to Lincoln
Record of Girl
Helen Hoag of Seattle, Nebraska
student in 1925-27 and graduate of
the University of Washington
school of journalism, arrived in
Lincoln this week, having hitch
hiked from the coast alone.
"I made the trip in six days,"
says Miss Hoag, "and walked less
than ten miles of the way. I
stayed at hotels and tourist cabins,
for I don't believe in hitch-hiking
without money. - I carried no
weapons and wasn't afraid of any
body."
Like Lindbergh, she says she
succeeded in making the trip be
cause "I knew I could do it and
did."
"1 never asked for a single ride,
Michigan mm?
LINCOLN, NEB.
BOARD OF REGENTS
ECONOMY PROGRAM
New Budget $566,342
Under Present 'Hard
Times' Schedule.
Staff, Salary, Promotion
Cuts Adopted.
Drastic salary cuts, reduction of '
staff, and reorganization of de
partments were found necessary
to balance the budget at the Uni
versity of Nebraska next year.
Detailed information regarding
the budget for the coming year
was announced Saturday by th
board of regents following a meet
ing at which the budget for tha
year July 1, 1933, to June 30, 1934,
was approved.
After analysis of the actual and
estimated income for the next
fiscal year, the regents found it
necessary to reduce the new budget
$663,342.68 below the 1932-1933
budget. A similar or perhaps
even greater saving will have to
be effected for the second year of
the biennium. This reduction is
caused by reduced appropriations
from taxation money, reduction in
federal funds and loss of income
from student feas. The total budget
amounts to $2,642,286.81. not in
cluding the budget for agricultural
extension work, which cannot be
determined at this time because of
uncertainty as to available federal
funds.
Outstanding In Budget.
Outstanding points in this
budget are:
A 22 percent reduction of all
salaries of $1,500 or more as com
pared with the 1931-32 figure and
a reduction of all salaries between
$500 and $1,500 to the cost of fill
ing the positions with new people.
Elimination of the 'school of fine
arts and the consolidation of its
work within the college of arts
and sciences. The school of music
will remain as a separate collegi
ate school.
Elimination in staff of forty-six
major positions and twenty-six
minor positions in addition to not
filling positions left vacant by
deaths.
Elimination of all tuition schol
arships and reduction of graduate
scholarships and assistantships by
about 25 percent.
Curtailment of the work at the
Nebraska school of agriculture at
Curtis by eliminating four teach
ers and abolishing the college pre
paratory course.
A 25 percent reduction in ap
propriations for the ceriaiental
(Continued on Page 4.)
in Six Days Is
Student Hitch-IIiker
but just walked until someone
picked me up. My assistants were
mostly farmer folk or salesmen
many of them college graduates
from Stanford, Idaho, Wisconsin
and other schools."
While here Miss Hoag worked
In the university extension divi
sion. She has just completed a
year of graduate work in sociology
and psychology. At Washington
she was a member of the women's
athletic association, women's "W"
club, and chairman of the Associ
ated Students of the University of
Washington. She was employed
by the Washington news bureau
and has lectured on one of the
largest ehautauqua circuit ia th
country.
OUTLINES
DRASTIC