The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 08, 1934, Page TWO, Image 2

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    i
TWO.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
TUESDAY. MAY 8, T934.
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln. Nebraska
OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
MEMBERj' 193 4
i
Tn paper It paprestnttd for general
advertising by the
Nebraska Press Assoelatlon
JJUaoriatfd gotlcoiatf frrt
.-ae iajj twgTffg;'iH ia4.a-
Entered a second claee matter at tht P,ho12le87'9n
Lincoln" Nebraeka, undar act of congress, March S.
and at special rata of poetnge provided for In
1103. act of October . 19 1 7. authorized January 80. 1922.
THIRTY.THIRD YEAR
Published Tuesday, n"ay:uf"UFJl!r
Sunday mornings during the academic year.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
1.50 a year S.ng.a Copy 6 cent. rH
"under'SlrI'lon of the Student pMon Board.
Editorial Office University Hall
Te.ephone.i'BNCtri'B.rsis (Journal,
Ask for Nebraskan editor.
EDITORIAL STAFF ,
Editor-in-Chief. Brue. Modi
MarvlB '" Edltor violet Cros.
Burton Marvin
Jack Fisher Fred Nlcklaa
Spots' LS"8tant:::::.".....Jack Grube and Arnold Levin.
Contributing Editors
Maurice Johnson Dick Moran Carlyle Hodgkln
Feature Editors ... . .
Margaret Easterday fc Ru" Matschullat
Loraine Campbell
Woman a Editor Bett' SeM
Assistant Womans Editors. .Hazel Baler, Marylu Petersen
News Reporters
Johnston Snipe Lewis Cass Jack Rasmusson
Allen Gatewood
BUSINESS STAFF
Bernard Jennlngrs Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager
George Holyoke Wilbur Erlckson Dick Schmidt
Advertising Solllctors
Robert Funk Truman Oberndort
Circulation Department ,
Harry West Janet Killian
past work. Othera will tart reviewing for final
exams. Some will do neither.
Curriculum Revision
As a Registration Aid.
"THAT the new higher education must overhaul its
curriculum if it is to keep pace with our present
economic and social order is the substance of a
statement made by Roger Babson recently in an
article titled, "The Waste in Education of Time and
Money."
Careful surveys will be made to weigh and de
termine the relative value of each subject taught in
the university and college. "Unless the boy and
girl is to become a teacher," says Babson, "it is a
waste of their own time and their instructor's time
that they be made to carry the entire curricular pro
gram now required."
What Mr. Babson wants, apparently, is a thoro
weeding out of tha many required courses which
characterize the modern university curriculum. But
Mr. Babson's sentiments have been voiced before.
Recently the University of Wisconsin appointed a
faculty committee to overhaul the curriculum and
eliminate unnecessary courses which appear far too
frequently. Other institutions have similar pro
grams under way. The North Central association's
recent report to rate universities on quality rather
than on quantity, may in a measure, reflect this
tendency.
Apparently Mr. Babson's indictments of univer
sity curriculums, in many Instances, are true. While
the movement is quite obviously in Its infancy it is
cause for some optimism. Universities are at least
attempting to readjust their curriculums to meet
the demands of a new economic and social order.
'J'HIS week Nebraska students will be exposed to
the annual spring registration fiasco. As is cus
tomary, most of the registering will be completed
during the latter part of the week. Students, of
necessity, will register hurriedly. This is unfortu
nate, for correct registration is more of an art than
most students are willing to admit. It does not con
itifit simply In registering for "pipes" or required
courses.
Careful consideration and weighing of all fac
tors Involved should be made before a course is de
cided upon. Students often make the mistake of
registering for a course caring little who teaches It
Rather is the prime consideration whether he can
"get by" with a good grade. It would be to their
advantage to know the professor who offers the
course. In many Instances the entire subject is
built around the man. Students desiring to get by
will find something far more beneficial In expe
riencing the personality and methods of the profes
sor than the subject matter with which the course
deals.
In many instances, however, students will re
gister for courses required by the curriculum which
are unnecessary or of little vaiue to the student's
cultural background. Others will register for
"pipes." Both instances may indicate that the cur
riculum is in need of an overhauling. Both may In
dicate, too, that curriculums originally intended for
another age, are not designed to meet the demands
of a new era.
Doun the
Home Stretch.
CTUDENTS have started down the home stretch
of the present school year. With nothing but
the dull routine of attending classes the next two
weeks to occupy their time, and final examinations
starting May 23, It becomes a stark realization that
the year is about gene. Commencement week will
hold much significance for many seniors. It will
climax four years of university life. For others it
will hold little appeal. They will return to school
next fall.
The suddenes with which the semester draws
to a close leaves many with a feeling of wonder
ment It is a time for stock taking. During the
next few weeks many students will pause momen
tarily to account for the past year.
For some the university may have been a
fruitful one. Scholars were awarded fitting distinc
tion. P. B. K.s and others were the subjects for
many key hangings. Students who entered the uni
versity with the idea that high scholarship was a
great virtue of university life in all events were
rewarded for exrellpnre in scholastic activity.
And at the same time, activity people will pause
to check up on the labors of the past year. Many
students find the same holy cow in this field of
interest that scholars find in scholastic honoraries.
Many of them were awarded distinction for out-
standing work la extra-curricular activities.
But both fields of student Interest have ceased
. activity for tha year. Extra curriculara, for the
moat part, have finished their enterprises for tha
present Student will attend classes. Many will
find the next two weeks a period to catch up on
Another Step to
Oust Politics.
vTTH the announcement Monday by the Inter
. fraternity council of its new method of selecting
officers and rotating the positions between the two
political factions, another step In the Greek govern
ing body's task of removing politics from within
its organization has been completed. This further
move indicates that revisions made last fall were
sincere beyond doubt.
It is unfortunate that such a system of handing
out Greek council offices must be resorted to but
experience proves only too well its necessity. It is
not a far cry to the day when council offices and
ijiterfraternlty ball committee appointments were
political plums of highest order. Innocents were
made overnight by shaking the bountiful Interfra
ternity tree and its fruits came to be prized factional
heritages. The minority party received whatsoever
it did by the will of the majority faction.
Today the Interfraternity council is a vastly
different organization. With its membership limited
to senior men and with all committee work being
done by them, the council is, perhaps, as nearly free
of the influence of political climbers and activity
workers as is possible. A committee on committees,
composed equally of members from the two factions,
handles all committee appointments and removes
these posts from the favors and prejudices of one
officer.
Tonight two council offices will be awarded
each faction. Positions which one party receives
this year will pass to the other faction next year.
The committee on committees will nominate two
men from a faction for each post that faction is to
receive, and the council will choose between the two
nominees.
The committee on committees will be function
ing in one of its most important capacities today In
its selection of nominees. In male circles, the selec
tions will be viewed with much interest and it is
to be hoped that they will conform to the general
spirit of less politics which seems to have marked
the council's actions this year.
Contemporary Comment
Drop Your Chains,
University Women.
The time has com for Northwestern women to
take up cudgels for themselves. For many years
men students have led the fight for modernization
of women's rules, but after all men don't live in
closely supervised houses.
Is the Northwestern woman content to have her
house rules made for her by others ? Is she willing
to be childishly protected from staying out late ? It
would seem that she is. Thus far no amount of male
encouragement, headed by the Daily Northwestern
has sufficed to make women students get together
and decide under what conditions they wish to live.
Men living in dormitories and fraternity houses
make their own house rules. When gradea seem to
require it members are forbidden to leave the house
on certain nights. The men themselves are their
own mentors. Is there any reascn why women are
less capable of taking care of themselves?
The Dally Northwestern believes that each so
rority house and dormitory should have the priv
ilege of making its own house rules and enforcing
them as it sees fit. These rules could be subject
to revision whenever members believe it necessary
They would not be of the unchangeable sort that they
are now. Houses which wish to keep under the
existing order of hours would have perfect freedom
to do so. Houses believing that they could function
as well under a more lenient system could do as they
thought best
Northwestern women are not satisfied with the
rules decreed by the dean's office. Ten out of ten
girls living on campus will say that. Yet they must
realize that it is only by them that rules can be
changed.
Passive submission to whatevpr is pushed upon
them is going to leave them exactly where they
are now. If the college woman believes that she is
capable of governing ber own personal life, she
must insist that the boarding-school rules of today
be changed. When she does this, she will be ready
to govern herself, and she will do so. Daily Northwestern.
For Students
Who Cram.
Only two weeks of classes remain before final
examinations will mark the close of another school
year. Now is the time for students who have been
dilatory in studying to " turn it on." Those who
have studied conscientiously have no need to exert
themselves overmuch in preparation, but a far
larger number will be forced to utilize fully every
spare minute of their time during examination
week.
To those who study little during the semester,
the courses is which they are enrolled are of prac
tically no value. The time spent in school might
have been utilized elsewhere more profitably.
Science has proved that one of the requisites of
lasting knowledge cf a subject Is spaced learning,
and that "cramming" certainly is not conducive to
retention of knowledge.
To some it may be no disgrace to flunk out of
college, but most certainly It is not a credit to any
one. No matter what the purpose of the student in
attending college, he will find much more satisfac
tion in passing his courses creditably than in flound
ering through them.
The unprepared student should take full ad
vantage of all his available time. Now is the time
to begin reviewing for finals. It may be too late
during examination week. Indiana Dally Student
acta of the administration, was that the country
should have a conservative fiscal policy and no in
flationary excesses. He resigned his position last
December.
In his private life Woodin was a man of many
hobbles. His favorite pastime was the composition,
and it is probate that he would have preferred to
devote all of his time to composing music and
playing the guitar, of which he was very fond. That
his music was considered worthy of note Is shown
by the fact that many of his works had received in
ternational recognition, some of his symphonies
having been played by the Philharmonic Orchestra
of Berlin, the Manhattan Symphony Orchestra, and
many others. One of his latest compositions was
the "Franklin Delano Roosevelt March." In addi
tion he was an enthusiastic collector of English
prints, and he haa a fine collection of rare coins,
stamps, and butterflies.
Woodin had been associated with big business
since his birth. His father owned the iron-foundry
industry, and later the company entered other
branches of the iron and steel manufacturing busi
ness. He started to work in his father's plant after
leaving the Columbia University School of Mines.
He finally rose to the position of president of the
firm and then left to Join the American Car and
Foundry Company. When he assumes the position
of secretary of the treasury, he resigned many Im
portant and well-paying positions with numerous
large firms in the Iron and steel industry.
Modern science triumphantly added resuscita
tion to its list of triumphs when a shabby little dog,
dead for eight minutes, was brought back to life by
the use of iijectlons. The experiments were carried
out at the University of California by Dr. Robert E.
Cornish, working on CWA funds. The first dog
used, appropriately named Lazarus II, lived for
eight hours and thirteen minutes, whining, panting
and barking. An injection of glucose solution meant
to speed his recovery caused a blood clot, and the
dog died again. Lazarus III lived only five hours.
Lazarus IV was killed on Friday the thirteenth.
After being dead eight minutes, he was placed to
a teeterboard, and a saline solution saturated with
oxygen, and containing liver extract, adrenalin, and
a blood soup with the coagulating substance re
moved, was forced Into his veins. Soon his heart
began to beat, faintly, then a leg twitched, and
Lazarus IV was alive. The dog has been growing
stronger since, but still crawls around weakly, eat
ing a half-pound of liver, milk, eggs, and oatmeal
daily. It has never recovered its complete mentai
facilities, and recently developed a head cold, which
will probably impair its progress.
Where Dr. Cornish has failed in his few at
tempts to resuscitate human beings, Dr. Albert Hy
man, Harvard medical graduate, has had some suc
cess. Dr. Hyman has regained life for over a hun
dred humans who died from some shock or accident
that did not impair the vital organs, by means of a
five inch gold needle which Is plunged directly Into
the heart, with the current of a tiny electric genera
tor, reproducing the work of the dead heart cells.
Dr. Hyman has noted that the resuscitation must be
made within twelve minutes after the death has
taken place, or brain deterioration would probably
make the revived patient insane. Dr. Hyman has
resuscitated an experimental dog of his own thirteen
times with his gold needle.
all the mothers and alumnae mem
bers. Mrs. C. Petrus Peterson '08
a mother and an alumna, gave the
response.
Introduction of the staff le.rw.
and their staffs was made at the
breakfast, and Y.W. alumnae'
starting with 1884, were Intro!
duced in ten year periods. Alum
nae who attended are aa folln..
xvnsaea vaiena ounncii, Frances
Drake, Margaret Fedde, Narcissus
Snell, and Adeline Reynoldson, ancl
Mesdames Landy Clark, Samuel
Avery, E. A. Burnett, Herharr
Brownell, Snyder Bobby, Merin
Thomas Flee, Anna Treat Beeman
Roy Green, E. L. Hinman Snell'
Charles Fordyce, and Homer Mc
Anaulty.
The pageant, In charge of Mrs
Louis C. Brown, ws given in eight
episodes. The first dealt with the
founding of the Y.W.C.A. in
1884 ; the second described the war
period of 1918, while the third, tha
Estes episode, was a presentation'
of mountain dances and a camp
fire scene. The final scene was a
tableau in whicn the entire cast
took part.
OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
Bukey to Omaha.
F. S. Bukey, assistant professor
in pharmacy at the university, will
speak in Omaha Wednesday, May
9, at the pharmaceutical cnoven
tion. His subject is, "The Cost of
Manufacturing a Cosmetic."
Corn Cobs.
New Corn Cobs will hold their
initial meeting of the year Wednes
day evening, May 9, at 7 o'clock
in room 8 of the University Hall.
All new members are expected to
attend.
Y. W. Cabinet.
Cabinet of the Y. W. C.
meet Wednesday at 7 p.
Ellen Smith hall.
A. will
m. in
Goddess of Agriculture
Lit ? A Q
we
BENEATH TlflE
H3EADLBNES
By DICK MORAN.
Interfraternity Council.
Interfraternity council will meet
Tuesday evening at 7:30 in Morrill
Hall room 9. Election of officers
will be the business of the meet
ing. Stamp Club.
University Stamp club will meet
Thursday, May 10 in room 312 So
cial Science building.
9 NEBRASKA CHEMISTS
TO REGIONAL MEETING
(Continued from Page 1.)
eum chemistry, chemical educa
tion and paint chemistry.
Dr. B. Clifford Hendricks, asso
ciate profesfor of chemistry, pre
sented a paper on the subject,
"Thermochmical Study of Glu
conic Acid and Its Modifications."
Also on Friday morning Dr. H.
Armin Pagel, assistant chemistry
professor, read a paper on "An
Attempt to Prepare Anhydrous
Cobaltus Oxide," which was based
on the experimentations of a grad
uate student.
At the Friday afternoon session,
Dr. M. R. Stevinson and Dr. Cliff
S. Hamilton colloborated in pre
senting a paper on "The Catalytic
Reduction of Organic Arsenicals."
W. E. Craig, a graduate student in
chemistry, with the heip of Dr.
Hamilton, gave the following dis
cussion: "The Reactivity of Nuc
lear Chlorine in Organic Arsenic
als." Walter D. Albert, also a
graduate student, with Dr. Fred
W. Upson, chairman cf the unl
v e r s i t y chemistry department,
spoke on "The Action of Barium
Hydroxide on the Monobastic Su
gar Acids."
At the Friday morning session,
Dr. E. Roger Washburn, assistant
professor of chemistry, and Ben
jamin H. Handorf, a graduate stu
dent, presented a discussion of
"The Measurement of the Rate of
Hydrolysis of Methyl Acetate by
a Study of Surface Tension." Dr.
Hendricks and Ralph W. Tyler pre
sented a discussion at the same
time before the chemical education
division on "Testing for a Mastery
of the Principals of Chemistry."
Those attending the convention
were especially interested in hear
ing Robert A. Millikan, noted
physicist of Pasadena, Calif., who
was one of the outstanding speak
ers. Dr. Millikan, who spoke on
the subject, "Some Recent Ad
vances in Nuclear Physics," re
ceived his A. B. degree at Oberlin
college in 1891, and his A. M. in
1893. He received his Ph. D. from
Columbia university in 1895. He
studied at the Universities of Ber
lin and Goettingen, and was grant
ed his Sc. D. from Oberlin in 1911.
In 1922 he was first exchange pro
feesor to Belgium of the C R, B.
foundation. He was awardpd the
Nobel prize in physics in 1923. He
is also well known as the author
or co-author of over a dozen text
books on physics and general
science, and as a contributor to
technical journals on physics.
Another outstanding speaker on
the program of the meeting was
LeRoy C. Stewart, who wpoke on
"The Commercial Extraction of
Bromine from Sea Water."
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Courtesy Lincoln Journal.
Left to right: Hazel Ingersoll. Raymond: May Stanek, Walt
hill: Mary Frances Kingsley, Lincoln; Lorraine Brake, Lincoln, 1934
goddess of agriculture; Valentine Klotz, Wahoo; Helen Steffens
mcycr, Lincoln; Muriel Moffltt, Lincoln.
Annually at the college of agriculture on the eve of Farmers'
Fair comes the presentation of the goddess of agriculture. To b
their 1934 goddess the students chose Lorraine Brake of Lincoln, a
a senior in home economics.
In a ceremony at the prefair dance Thursday night the goddess
and her six attendants were presented to the students. Ruth Cars
ten of Clatonia, Junior, sang a song she had written for the occasion,
'and the seven honored women appeared on the flower laden plat-
iform, summoned by the sojtgr) -
year; the O. J. Fee Award, award
ed to the engineer who is selected
by his fellow students as the most
outstanding student was given to
Marion Boardman Scott. This
award is a silver shield about nine
inches by twelve inches with the
winner's name engraved upon it, it
is retained by the college. The
W. H. Sawyer Scholarship was
awarded to Edward Dusrhl Beach
ler, Lincoln. The Sigma Tau Schol
arship Award was given to
Charles Henry Nielsen. Askov,
Minn., awarded to the student in
the FYeshman class with the high
est scholastic standing. The Chem
ical Engineering Society Key was
awarded to James Joseph Urban,
Tekamah.
FRATERNITY COUNCIL
PICKS NEW OFFICERS
AT TUESDAY MEETING
(Continued from Page 1.)
ir The committee on committees
for next year will be chosen by
the new president by ana wun me
aavice or me iacuiiy sponsors.
Suoervision of individual fra
ternity budgets by the recently
created alumni boara oi control
will also be discussed at Tuesday's
meeting, Thiel declared.
"Tuesday's meeting will be of
utmost importance to all houses,"
Thiel asserted, "and it is essential
that all fraternities have both
their junior and senior representa
tives present. Junior men must as
sume the work of the council im
mediately and it is Imperative that
they be present to start their du
ties at once.
TRADITIONAL TANKINGS.
CLEANUP PARTY, DIN
NER FOR WORKERS, OFF
ICIALLY ENDS 1934 FAR
MERS FAIR ACTIVITIES
SUNDAY
(Continued from Page L)
came the ice cream. One five gal
lon freezer disappeared, then an
other, then another and then part
of another. No one looked hungry
when the dinner was over. And
nobody felt like work.
Happily, there was little work
left to be done. The coercion com
mittee checked their lists and
found a boy who hadn't worked
enough to suit his committee
chairman. Into the tank he went.
But he was wise and had put on
his bathing suit under his overalls.
Into the tank went another stu
dent. He too had been wise and
wore his bathing suit that morning.
One girl got tossed in not clear
in, just stood up in the water. And
she even got to take off her shoes
and stockinsrs first. Then the
women conspired, picked up a jun
ior fair board member, and threw
him into the tank. A few others
got tossed in. No one was drowned
and by noon Monday no one had
contracted pneumonia.
The coercion committee, Chair
roan Clyde Card said, would com
plete the official tanking of slack
ers after military drill Monday
night. But Manager Peterson said
there would be few to tank. He
said he believed there had been
few fairs when the students rolled
up their sleeves and did the job
better than the ag students did
last Saturday.
CONGRATULATION
LETTERS SENT TO
YW ON BIRTHDAY
(Continued from Page 1.)
visory board, and the officers of
the Y.W. received the guests as
they came to the breakfast. A
grand- march into the dining room
was led by the alumnae of the
1880 s. Evelyn Diamond, Beth
Phillips, and Virginia Sweeney
were in charge of the arrange
ments for the reception of guests
Elaine Fontein, president of the
Y. W., served as the toastmistress
at the breakfast and also welcomed
An outstanding example of tha energy and in
dustry of the new deal, William H. Woodin, former
secretary of the treasury who died last Thursday
night in New York, was nevertheless an opponent
of many of the principles of the present administra
tion. Yet in spite of this disagreement with his
chief and his ill health, the result of an old throat
infection, b continued at his post until the crisis
was passed, and things were running smoothly. He
bad been a personal friend of tha president for
years, and his disagreement over the policies of the
new deal were not enough to causa any serious rift
in the cabinet. His opinion, not carried out in later
MARVIN NUERNBERGER,
AE020E HOSSACK WIN
PUBLICATION AWARDS
(Continued from Page 1.)
were given in the Honors convoca
tion were: the A. 8. C. E. Award,
engineering, given to John Charles
Bishop, Lyons, N. Y which Is
awarded on a basis of competition
of papers presented during the
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WORCESTER IS NAMED
XI
PRESIDENT
Scientific Society Elects
49 New Members at
Session Monday.
A-' a a aw. f
a j4iinaHnnfi 1 Tifrvrhnlirv in th
VI ,V.a I"-' O J
university, was elected president cf
Sigma Al, nunuisij' otiniuut ira
famltv ait a meetinr held in Bes.
sey hall Monday evening. Dr. Wor
cester Kucceeas ur. i. a. iiessei-
bach.
Dr. W. A. Wiliard was named
vice president and Dr. Myron H.
Swenk was chosen councillor. Dr.
Emma N. Anderson, secretary, and
Dr. M. G. Gaba, treasurer, who
were elected for two year terms
n iost hold over. Dr. Willard and
Dr. Worcester were chosen for two
raar trms. while ut. fcwenK was
elected for a five year term.
Forty-nine new mtmocn m me
society were also selected at the
Monday meeting. They are:
Faculty.
Paul Martin Bancroft
I.oul Va11lrw pkidmnra
Harold Evarttt Egrr
Alsnini.
Roy Walttr Dal
Harold KUIcr Schilling
FimnotMim.
Miriam Crowell Banner
Harold H. Blwll
Lillian Mary bannvin
Phyllis JanM Hhodas
Ralph M. WHkine
Charlaa Bltord Bumll
Clarrnw Edward Biwby
Alln I. 01n
Omar E. fiparrv
Oradaatrs.
Gorn W. Harmon
E. Loulf HoffadMi
Rrnrat Alvln O. Nleschmirtt
Fred W. A!rrt!nn
Thoma Frank Barton
David Gordon Brubaker
Evan U Flory
u'.li.p W.nfl
O. David Koch
John r IMr
Loul H. Lukrt
I.lovd C. Mills
Warren W. Ned row
Elva L. Morris
Gilbert 3. SamutHon
Benjamin F. Skllea
Jacob T'rich
Violet Myrtle Wilder
Cvrus E. Ho-kKtra
V'erl C. McKltn
Jerry Ell Upp
William F. V. Baeder
Paul Orrllle Bars
Alvln Friedman
Roy B. Hackman
William R. Johneon
Walter M. Kollmorfen
Marlon Luhman
James W. Marlln
John L. Morrlaon
William C. Noll
Vera Enta Rifdon
George W. Schleeeelman
Laurence A. Stoddart
Anton J. Vemel
ORCHES1S IN OKLAHOMA.
Light modern comedy dances.
. tnirif number4, win
compose the recital to be given By
Orchesis of Oklahoma un iwrsuj
as a part of their annual w -
Day program. The program
sixteen numbers win or f"""
, . ... mamhf-ra Of tnc Or-
ganizatlon. according to an item in
me UKuanoma
VnlvamitV Of
Irvine hmuuito'. -
Southern California's ail-American
grid star, has been rejected for
role in a football picture beetuK
"doesn't look line" a
player.
WHAT EVERY GIRL1
SHOULD KNOW.
I Nia
K -thU-TK-"
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