The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 02, 1934, Image 1

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    FIT
Daily
Neb
IASKA
THE WEATHER
Partly Cloudy
and Colder
Official Student Newspaper of the University " of Nebraska
W1 M
VOL. XXXIII NO. 101.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1931
PRICE 5 CENTS.
HE
N
UNIOR AK SHOW
T
I
ATI
Annual Showmanship Contest
To Be Feature of Ag
College Event.
BILL WALDO IS MANAGER
Exhibition Will Be Followed
By Dance in Activities
Building.
An alarm dock will Hug Sat
urday night at 7:00 o clock
sharp, the formally attired
trumpeter will herald in a class
of show horses, Judge W. W.
Derrick will start work, and
the 1934 Junior Ak-Sar-Ben will be
in progress. Manager W illard
Waldo announced Thursday that
the Ag livestock show is all set to
go, and it will introduce more new
and interesting features than any
previous Junior Ak-Sar-Ben.
The livestock auditorium has
been gaily decdrated for the oc
casion, the manager said Thurs
day. A huge red "N" will adorn
the center of the arena. Howard
White, ag junior, has organized
a pet and hobby show which will
be added to the six classes of live
stock exhibited. A radio system
has been installed over which
Master of Ceremonies Charles
Rochford will announce for the
guests the showmanship winners
of the evening. Mrs. (joairey tseut'
ler. Lincoln will demonstrate the
use of a sixteenth century spin
ning wheel, using ag college wool.
Promptly after the six-class
livestock exhibition, the junior Ak-Sar-Ben
ball opens at the activity
building. Tlie animal husbandry
faculty members, Waldo announced
Thursday, will sponsor the dance.
Formal invitations have been sent
to Chancellor and Mrs. Burnett
and Dean and Mrs.. Burr to attend
the livestock show Saturday night.
The show Saturday night has
been announced in every school in
Lincoln, Waldo said Thursday, and
the number of inquiries received
indicates that a large number of
Lincoln school children will see the
livestock exhibit
The junior Ak-Sar-Ben, Waldo
and Rochford explained Thursday,
is a showmanship contest for stu
dents. W. W. Derrick, former in
structor in the animal husbandry
department, will judge all classes.
The students fit and exhibit their
animals exactly as they would at
a state fair or other exposition.
But the judge selects, not the best
animal, but the animal that has
been fitted and shown the best.
Hence the student's showmanship
ability rather than the animal is
the thing the judge considers.
Prizes are awarded the winners
of each class. The show opens with
the class of horses, and are fol
lowed by beef cattle, dairy cattle,
hogs and sheep. A championship
class in which the best showman
Is selected from the winners of
each of the different classes com
pletes the show. A cane will be
awarded to each class winner, a
cup to the cnampion. ieiKues
will be awarded by the Mid-West
Wool Marketing association to
winners in some classes. Ribbons
will be awarded by the Block and
Bridle club, sponsors of the show.
TODAY'S NEWS
Briefly Reviewed
Thirty hours of labor a week is
the maximum recommended at the
IS'RA protest meeting now going
on in Washington. This measure
was recommended as the best to
Increase employment. It is under
stood that a ten percent reduction
in hours and a ten percent increase
In hourly wages is General John
son's plan. This would provide for
a thirty-six hour week.
Request for continuation of the
administration's present monetary
policy at least for the remainder
of the fiscal year was voiced In a
message to congress yesterday by
Secretary of the Treasury Morgen
thau. He admitted that the present
policy was an experiment and
would not forecast the future of
the monetary system or policies.
Granting dictatorial powers to
Premier Doumergue, the French
parliament yesterday passed a
finance measure which balanced its
budget for 1934 and provided -Jt
surplus of nine million francs over
estimated expenses. The parlia
ment gave Doumergue the powers
of a dictator in effecting govern
mental economies and in manipu
lating tariffs to negotiate trade
treaties.
Bank deposits in Lincoln have
Increased about sixty-five percent
In the last year, according to fig
ures announced yesterday. Bank
ers attribute most of the increase
(Continued on Page 3.)
Men's Commercial Club
Plans Luncheon Tuesday
Members of the University Men's
Commercial club will attend a
luncheon at the junior chamber of
commerce Tuesday noon, March 6.
Bizad students wishing to attend
are asked to se Harold Barnes.
crtary; or Max Ninlwum. presi
dent, in the club room in Social
Science hall
0 OPEN TONIGH
PROMPRY
Tremendously Important That All
Students Should Become Familiar
With World, States Y. W. Official
"It is tremen Jously important
for students to become more fa
miliar with the world in which
they live," emphatically declared
Miss Stella Scurlock, National Stu
dent Secretary of the Y. W, C. A.,
who is visiting the university Y.
W., Thursday afternoon, "in order
to be better citizens and to learn
how to take more responsibility."
"Students usually live a shelter
ed life," she continued, "with no
outside contacts with business or
economic life to speak of, and we
want them to have a chance to
make these contacts and ,to form
some theory or idea of life as it
really is."
It is on this basis or considera
tion, according to Miss Scurlock,
that a plan is being formulated by
the Kansas City Y. W. and Y. M.
C. A. to allow students to make
contact with various areas of the
social world in order to understand
Chemistry Students
Discover Hydrogen's
Just a Bit Explosive
A light, some air, and some hy
drogen and bang!! That's all that's
necessary to send a test tube or
flask merrily on its way, as Glenn
Jameson and Marie Pakes found
out in their Chemistry 1 last Tues
day. Glass hit the ceiling and some
went over to a distant wall.
Before trying to light a test
tube of hydrogen, all the air must
be gotten rid of first, and some
times when the combination of air
and hydrogen is ignited, it is one
of the best explosives obtainable.
"The next time we light a test
tube of hydrogen," laughingly de
clared Marie, "it will be just hy
drogen." QUILL CLUB 10 OFFER
Manuscripts Must Be in the
Hands of Judges by
31st of March.
American College ' Quill' club
again is , offering the Ted Olson
Quill prize of $50 to be awarded
for the best original poem or
group of poems submitted by an
undergraduate in any American
college or university. The contest
will lust until midnight, March 31,
1934.
The Ted Olson Quill prize for
poetry is offered every two years,
alternating with the Edwin M.
Hopkins prize for the short story.
which was awarded, for 1932-33 to
Mr. John Gilchrest, of the Uni
versity of Kansas, for his story,
"The Circus." The judges were
Dorothy Canfield Fisher, John T.
Frederick, and Lowry C. Wim
berly, professor of Eng'lish at the
university.
The manuscripts will be judged
by poets of national repute or by
well-known critics of poetry. The
poems to be considered must in
elude at least eight lines, but must
possess some organic unity. The
prize-winning poem or groups of
poems will be published in The
Parchment, the Quill magazine.
Announcement of the award will
be made as soon after May 1
possible.
All manuscripts are to be sent
to the high chronicler of the Quill,
Mrs. Ethelyn M. Hartwich, 511
Broadway, Tacoma, Wash.
TO
Open Meeting Will -Be Held
Friday Night in
Temple.
Palladian Literary society will
be entertained at an open meeting
Friday evening at the Temple
building by the senior members of
the society.
A pantomime on "The Shooting
of Dan McGrew," a burlesque,
"Grind Hotel," and a one-act com
edy, "Dear Old Aunt Harriett," are
to be presented as units of a gen
eral theme woven about the search
for characters by the proprietor of
a dramatic studio.
Those taking part are: Henry
Baur, Anne Bohlen, Elwood W.
Camp, chairman; Vernon Filley,
Max Halderson, Evelyn Hallstrom,
Wilbur Hansen, Stanley Jameson,
Helen Still. John Stover, Edward
Suchy, Lois Turner and :larry
West.
GRADUATE 0PENS STORE
Leon Frankel Starts Men's
Haberdashery at
1107 0 St.
Leon Frankel. graduate of the
university in 1930. has opened a
men's haberdashery recently at
1107 O st. Frankel, who has Just
returned from the east, will pre
sent a line of latest college clothes.
W hile he was in school Frankel
was a member of Zeta Beta Tan
fraternity and the Men's Commer
cial club
it better. Under the sponsorship of
Kansas university professors, Y. M.
and Y. W. leaders, and nationally
known men, a group will study for
ten days or more the social and ec
onomic aspects of our present day
life.
"There will be the requirements
necessary to join this group," ex
plained Miss Scurlock, "one will be
a required reading list so that
everyone might be well Informed
on sociological subjects and have
the same common background, and
the other that the students agree
to enter into the experiment fully,
even to restricting themselves in
the amount of money to be spent
to $5 for the ten days. This will, of
course," she further continued,
smilingly, "necessitate that the
boys eat in flophouses and the girls
in helping hand hotels."
The first three days are to be
(Continued on Page 4.)
PROM COMMITTEE IS
AT IRK FINISHING
DETAILS OF PARTY
Andy Kirk Signed to Play
For Season's Last
Formal Event.
With the orchestra which id to
play for the Junior-Senior prom on
Friday, March 9, in the coliseum
finally selected, the Junior-Senior
prom committee will set to work
Friday afternoon in completing ar
rangements lor the party. Previous
to the naming of a band for the af
fair the committee was marking
time, since few arrangements
could be made until the orchestra
was obtained.
The orch.-stra which will play
for the prom is Andy Kirk and his
Twelve Clouds of Joy. This is a
colored band which has played at
various places thruout the country
during the past few years, notably
at the Rose'and ballroom in New
York city along with Glen Gray's
Casa Loma orchestra for three
months. While playing the en
gagement at the Roseland the Kirk
orchestra broadcast over a nation
al radio hookup, and made many
recordings.
At El Torreon.
Recently the twelve piece band
closed a four months engagement
at the El Torreon ballroom in Kan
sas City. It has been featured over
both the CBS and NBC radio
chains during the past year.
Tickets for the prom next Fri
day were placed on sale a week
(Continued on Page 4.)
DEBATERS LEAVE FOR
101 CITY THURSDAY
Delta Sigma Rho Sponsors
Tourney at Hawkeye
. School.
Prof. H. A. White, coach, ac
companied four members of the
debate squad when they left on a
trip Thursday morning to Iowa
City to compete in a tournament
on March 2 and 3. The affirmative
team will also meet Iowa univer
sity in an argument which will be
broadcast over station KSUI at 3
o'clck on Friday afternoon Mar. 2.
The teams with Professor White
are an affirmative group of Dwight
Perkins and Eugene Pester and a
negative lineup with Jack Pace
and Charles Steadman speaking.
Discussion during the contest will
be on the topic Resolved: That the
United States government should
substantially increase the powers
of the president as a settled pol
icy. The schools likely to send teams
are the University of Iowa, Iowa
State college, Iowa State Teachers
college, the University of Wyom
ing, Washington University of St
Louis, South Dakota University,
the University of Notre Dame,
Denver University and the Univer
sity of Nebraska.
Delta Sigma Rho, honorary for
ensic fraternity, sponsors the
tournament for the second time
this year among the colleges and
universities of this district There
is no prize awarded the winner.
MEN'S CLUB PLEDGES FIVE
Commercial Society Has
Meeting Wednesday
Evening.
The rushees of the Men's Com
mercial club were introduced to
the members when the club met
Wednesday evening in the club
room. Max Nusbaum, president of
the club, presided at the meeting,
and Ralph Nollkaraper, Gerald
Spurlock, Edward Severy, and Ray
Brady served on the committee
planning the affair.
Edward tiiidner spoke Dneny to
the members and welcomed the
pledges into the organization. Aft
er the meeting refreshments were
served consisting of sandwiches,
punch and pie. Following the
meeting the pledges were guests
of the members at a theater.
The following Bizad students
were oledred: Harold Alber, Clar
ence Banghart, Frederick Hawks-
worth, Harry Heller and Everett
Kilzer.
L
Tl
Governing Body Recognizes
AWS and Ag Executive
Boards Officially.
RECEIVE CONSTITUTIONS
Jennings Brands as Farce
Action in Suspending
Organizations.
The A. W. S. board and Ag.
executive board, two of the
eight organizations that were
suspended by decree of the Stu
dent Council for failure to sub
mit their constitutions for in
vestigation, were reinstated by the
council Thursday afternoon. The
constitutions of the two groups
were received Thursday. Presi
dents of the other groups gave va
ried reasons for not complying
with the request of the council.
The majority intend to submit
their constitutions and be rein
stated before the week is over.
Charles Hulac, president of the
university Y. M. C. A. stated that
the matter was merely neglected
and the importance of it not real
ized. C. D. Hayes, general secre
tary, said that he did not believe
that suspension had been threat
ened in the letter ordering the in
vestigation, and thus no special at
tempt was made to get it in on
time. Hayes had no fear of the con
stitution passing the perusal of the
council. "The same constitution
had functioned successfully many
years before the Student Council
was organized. However, we have
no idea of bucking the council," he
said. Their bylaws will be given to
the council soon.
Siy is Farce.
Bernard Jennings, president of
Gamma Lambda, expressed indif
ference to the procedure of the
council. "I think the investigation
of the smaller organizations is a
farce, and the council's time could
be spent to a better advantage,"
Jennings said. "Whether our con
stitution is abolished or not, we
will still continue tmr organiza
tion." A meeting was t be held, on
Thursday night to decide whether
or not the constitution should be
submitted.
Fred Nicklas, president of the
Dramatic club, felt sure of the re
instatement of the club In a short
time. Their constitution will e
given to the council this week.
Nicklas believed that the club will
pass the Investigation with but a
few minor changes.
President Mary Louise Clark of
the Girl's Commercial' Club stated,
"a recent election of officers has
been held and there was no record
of a letter being received from the
council." This constitution was
sent to the council immediately.
Coeds Wonder About
A. ITS. Rules After
Council Suspension
A dillar a dollar
The 12:30 scholar
Why are you late tonight ?
"The A. W. S. is no more
And so it's my right!"
This rhyme is dedicated to the
girls of the school who were won
dering if they were "living by
rules."
The Associated Women's Stu
dent board as temporarily non
existent since the Student Council
suspended eight campus organiza
tions Wednesday for failing to file
their constitutions. -
The A. W. S. makes the rules
and punishes the offenders, the
board was officially non-exiat
ent therefore the rules of the sus
pended group must be suspended
too. This was the optimistic view
that coeds were venturing to take
since the announcement was made
yesterday.
No one knows who started the
idea, but it spread over the
campus. Members of the A. W. S
board, when interviewed on the
matter, merely smile. They won't
express their opinion, but weir al
titude seems to say, "It's a good
theory but just try to do it!" Miss
Ada Westuver. assistant to Dean
Heppner, when asked what she
thought of the feeling brewing on
the campus, very wisely remained
silent She did admit that it was a
"humorous situation" and that "no
board no rules" idea was an angle
to the question that she had not
thought of. (It's the coed who has
to be in at 12:30 who thinks of
those things.) Miss Westover fears
that when the idea has spread,
she'll be beseeched with 'phone
calls 3,800 of 'em In fact for
there are 3,800 students in the uni
versity. Main Street Given
!'eic Definition by
Dean Roscoe Pound
According to an Associated press
dispatch. Dean Roscoe Pound, for
mer dean of the university law
college, now affiliated with the
Harvard law college, has a new
definition for Main Street "Main
Street is nothing more than a dis
inclination to cooperate," he told a
Western Reserve university mass
meeting Wednesday night The
statement came as part of a speech
on current legal trends.
STUDENT O r!
REINSTATES TWO
GROUPS
BAY
Pioneers Who Made First Grants
To University Little Dreamed of
Great Change to Come in Future
The pioneers who made the first grants of money and land
to found the university little dreamed that the single building
which housed all of the students, teachers, and all the other
deparments necessary in a university would grow to an insti
tution valued at $12,000,000 giving instruction to 5,0!)0 collcgi-
ates in by major buildings or w-o-
struction and using 32 other build
lngs for activities and purposes
other than for class instruction as
the Library and the Administra
tion building.
In the first year that the univer
sity opened In University hall there
were but 10 students that could be
strictly callea collegiate. There
were 120 going to the Latin school
and for this reason the first class
is spoken of as a class of 130 stu
dents. The original campus was a
plot of 11.9 acres of ground which
lay between the 10th and 12th and
between R street and T street.
Now the city campus alone covers
a plot of ground 55 acres in extent.
MUSGRAVE SELECTS
FOR ANNUAL SHOW,
Cast Members to Be Named
Soon by Director
Yenne. .
Frank Musgrave, president of
Kosmet Klub, Thursday announced
committees in charge of the Klub's
annual spring production. Workers
on these committees will be an
nounced as soon as the eligibility
of the men can be checked, it was
further announced.
Frank Musgrave, chairman, and
Byron Goulding will be in charge
of general plans for production.
Business will be handled by John
Gespson, chairman; Henry Kos-
man, and Art Bailey, woodrow
Magee will handle commercial af
fairs for the show. Tom Davies
and Charles Flansburg have
been named co-chairmen in charge
of scenery.
Arrangements for costumes
and make-up will be made by
Owen Johnson and Frank Crabill
who are acting as co-chairmen.
Neil McFarland will have charge
of properties and Dale Taylor will
arrange for music. Dick Moran
has been named publicity chairman
and George Jlolyoke will, have
charge of directing the chorus.
"The campus cop,' oy wern
Yenne was chosen for this year's
show and is being directed by its
author. Tryouts are under way
now and members of the Klub
plan to announce those having
parts in the cast as soon as selec
tion is made.
INTO CLUB COURTS
Outstanding Group Will Be
Decided Near End of
Semester.
Members of the freshman law
class have been placed into four
groups, known ks club courts, for
the purpose of debating law cases.
Monday the first of the series will
begin with i tort case. Each of the
four clubs nas a senior law student
sponsor, who with justices appoint- j
ed to hear the pleadings will hand '
down the decisions.
Judicial decisions will be Judged
on a basis of law involved in the
cases and the manner of presenta
tion. Lawyer will not be permit
ted to use evidence.
Officers and names of the clubs
are: Cardoza club. Jack Minor,
Chief Justice; John Landis, clerk;
Otto Kotouc, bailiff: Herbert Ron
in, Sponsor: Webster Club, Justin
Wolf, Chief Justice; Claude Cum
mings, clerk; Lawrence Ely, Bail
iff; J. Ernest Deming, Sponsor:
Jeffreys Club, Meredith K. Nelson,
Chief Justice; Harry L. West,
Clerk; Dan Easterday, bailiff;
Merlyn Modig, sponsor; Blackstone
Club, Elwood Thompson, Chief
Justice; Harry Foster, clerk; Mary
Quigley, bailiff; John Sullivan,
sponsor.
The outstanding group of the
four will be decided near the end
of the semester by an interclub
contest. It was learned that simi
lar courts are held in Harvard, Ok
lahoma university and in several
other law colleges throughout the
country. Th'S is the first time such
a court has been established at
Nebraska.
IOWA GRADUATES PLACED
Division of Agriculture
at
Ames Finds Positions
For Fifty-Eight.
AMES, la. Fifty-eight gradu
ates of the division of agriculture
at Iowa State college in the last
three months have obtained posi
tions, according to R. M. Vifquain.
personnel director. The number
includes a few alumni who have
changed positions.
Departmental placements are:
Agricultural economics 4. animal
husbandry 23, farm crops and soils
4, forestry 1. horticulture 3. land
scape architecture 3. technical
journalism 5, and vocational edu
cation 15.
The university has expanded to
include 10 separate units located
all over the state. The center of
this group and oy far the largest
is the city campus; the college of
agriculture and the university
farm, which was formerly called
the model farm; the Agronomy
farm whicn is located near Have
lock; the experimental fruit farm
near Union; the College of Medi
cine, in Omaha; the school of agri
culture at Curtis; and three sub
stations located in the central and
western part of the state, one near
North Platte, one at Scottsbluff,
and the other near Valentine. The
(Continued on Page 4.)
Ginger, CWA Worher,
Dies While Working
On Campus Thursday
Perhaps they should have hitched
old Dobbin to a sled instead of a
wagon because it would have
made the pulling easier, but it is
too late now as Dobbin is no more
uoDDin, or Ginger as he is
known to his owner, R. W. Crumb,
a worker on the university
grounds, was a familiar sight on
me campus lor about three years.
Ginger was engaged in CWA work
inursaay anernoon pulling a
heavy load when, tiring of the
work, he lay down and died. Old
Ginger had previously slipped on
the sidewalk.
Interment will be in the happy
nunung ground lor horses.
TICKETS FOR SHAWN
ON SALE MARCH 16
Chairman Names Committees
To Make Arrangements
For Affair.
Committees to arrange for pub
licity arid "tickets for the perform
ance of the Ted Shawn dancers to
be given March 28 were appointed
at the regular meeting of W. A. A.
Thursday noon at Grant Memorial
hall.
Alice Geddes. general chairman
for the affair, announced that
tickets would go on sale March 16.
Evelyn Diamond will have
charge of publicity for the event.
Serving unaer her on sub-committees
will be Alice Beekman and
Halleene Haxthausen, newspapers;
Caroline Van Anda, placards, and
Christobel Weaver, miscellaneous.
Jean Alden is chairman of the
ticket committee. Jean Brownlee
and Christobel Weaver will have
charge of distribution to salesmen
and Elaine Fontein will arrange
for ticket distribution to stores
and offices.
IS
Former Physics Assistant
Here Receives New
Appointment.
Henry Mergenau. former assist
ant in the physics department, was
recently made co-editor of a new
publication called The Philosophy
of Science.
The magazine, which is a quar
terly, was first published in Janu
ary. It is connected with Johns
Hopkins university and is publish
ed in Boston.
Mr. Mergenau came to the uni
versity in 1924 and left in 1927 to
attend Yale where he received his
doctor's degree and was awarded
a scholarship in Germany.
Process of Finding
Out Grades Ordeal
To Greek Freshmen
Slowly, with fluttering heart and
faltering step a nervous looking in
dividual walks up to a window
marked "A-K." He fumbles lor
something in his pocket and fi
nally extracts a small card and
presents it to the lady at the win
dow. She glances at it unconcern
edly, then makes a hasty search
of the rows of envelopes in front
of her and after what seems to him
an age. she hands him one of the
little mani la-colored envelopes.
He opens it quickly and glances
at the little white cards within.
His brow clouds and clears suc
cessively as he takes in the mes
sage contained in those various
cards. Then, dubiously he reaches
tot a pencil pnd begins to scribble
industriously. Deep furrows appear
in his forehead as he multiplies
and adds rows upon rows of fig
ures. At long last he makes a di
vision. His face suddenly lights up
and with a broad grin he shouts.
"I made it:"
Yes. you've guessed it Just a
little freshman who has succeeded
in making his 72 average and now
he ran be initialed with the res,
of the pleUge
IU STARS
AS HUSKER C P
LAST CAGE GAME
Sophomore Guard Sinks Six
Goals as Ncbraskans
Win 29-25.
PARSONS OPENS SCORING
Mason and Lunney Compete
In Last Tilt for
Scarlet.
Stepping out to n 4 to 0 lend
in the first minute of phiy,
Coach Browne's llu.sker capers
played through to a 20 to 2
victory over St. Louis univc.
sity Thursday evening in the roli
seum. Henry Whitaker played sen
sational heads-up ball to ioad the
Scarlet live to a win in its final
game of the season, the diminutive
St. Joseph, Mo., guard sinking six
field goals to lead the scorers for
the evening. The count at the half
was 20 to 14 Nebraska.
Immediately after the first tip
off Bud Parsons sunk a shot from
back of the foul circle to start tha
tilt off with a bang. After a short
passing exchange following the
next toss-up Ken Lunney tallied
from close in. Both of those scores
came within the first minute.
Huskers Lead 12 to 4.
At the end of ten minutes of
play the Huskers led by a 12 to 4
score. Parsons having swished an
other long shot. Whitaker having
sunk a pair of goals, and Sorenson
with a brace of free shots to his
credit. Fash. Billiken pivot man
had sunk two gift efforts, and
Cochran had counted an underbas
ket flip.
After the Huskers held the eight
point advantage, the visitors start
ed a rush of scoring coming up to
within two points of Nebraska,
with a 13 to 11 count, within three
minutes. With one minute left to
play in the first half Nebraska
was in the lead by a 16 to 14 count.
Whitaker came thru with a long
shot, and just as the gun cracked
(Continued on Page 3.)
FI
Impromptu Program Is Given
By Students and
Faculty.
Forty-six students and faculty
members attended a meeting spon
sored by the Pharmaceutical club
in Pharmacy hall Wednesday eve
ning. The program of the evening
was impromptu, presented by the
faculty and students of the club.
In a "powder paper filling con
test George Hauschild. represent
ing the junior class, won from the
senior conlestint, Charles Mc-
Cracken, with a margin of seven
seconds. In the capsule filling
contest which followed Hauschild
also won, filling 54 capsules in 5
minutes, exceeding McCracken by
eleven. He was awarded the jun
ior championship in this division
by his class but McCracken was
made a champion by the seniors
in the "Art of Compounding."
In tne student division of the
speed race in compounding an
emulsion Vean Cowell placed first
with a time of 3 minutes and 45
seconds. The facultv contest was
taken by Prof. Joseph Burt with a
time of 1 minute.
Gevald Keim, a freshman, took
the prize of the capsule swallow
ing contest, gulping down five
capsules in 2 1-2 seconds. George
Bauer, a senior, officiated at the
meet as master of ceremonies.
TO INSTALL YM OFFICERS
Informal Discussion Will
Be Held Following
Ceremonies.
The new officers and cabinet of
the university Y. M. will be in
stalled following a supper at the
Hi-Y building at 6 o'clock this eve
ning. An informal discussion will be
held to consider various phases of
the Y. M. C. A. work. Reservations
can be made at the campus office
of the Y in the Temple building.
All university students are invited
to attend and members especially
are requested to be present.
School of Music to Play
Inventions of Student
Miss Elizabeth Titrney of the
schiHil of music announce that
some of the inventions which have
been written in the counterpoint
classes will be played for the first
time next week. They are to be
played in Morrill hall 217 on Tues
day, March 6, at 4 p. m. Students
and instructor are welcome.
A.W.S. and Ag Boards
Submit Constitutions
The A. W. S. board and the
Ag. Executive board have sub
mitted their constitutions to
the student council according
to an announceemnt made
Thursday afternoon.
r