The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 18, 1937, The Ag Campus Edition, Image 1

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    Tin Ag Cmmmpuiis DMMim
he Daily
EBRA
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
.SKAN
IIMW'i; T Cl'V'l i
' VOLTXXX VI INOTl 27. L1N(X)I.N, NEHIiASKA, SUINDAY, AI'HII. IK, IVJ ..J.,.. 1Z..1- :
inNntfuniRUK W . tfJkJLL-.. I JUDGING MEET GO
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TUESDAY EVENING AS Ljr & ML J
Agronomy Society Elects
Students at Meeting
Saturday.
Newly elected members of the
Tii-K club, agronomy honorary,
nnnounccd Saturday, they are
Kllngman, Myron Kcim, Lewis
Camp, Rodney Bertramson, Harold
Benn, Harry Bell, Mclvin Beer
mann, Robert Daniel, Neil Dawes,
Arnold Peterson, Earl Heady, Clif
ford Heyne, Richard Jackson. Or
vin Meierhavey. Lester Sherfey,
Weston Whitwer. Rundall Peter
son, Howard Weibcl, Arnold Carl
son, and Claude King.
Initiation will be held Tuesday
evening, April 20. at five o'clock
in the crops laboratory.
Sponsors Crop Judging.
Kach year tho Tri-K group spon
sors student crops judging contest
for all students interested in
ngronomy. As an aid in keeping
closer contact between the fac
ulty and students in the depart
ment, the club holds several din
ners during the year with promi
nent agriculturists as speakers.
Tho Tri-K group is also sponsor
of tho crops judging team which
competes at the American Royal
Livestock show at Kansas City and
tho International Livestock show
in Chicago annually. The team this
vear -Dalo Smith, Ward Hender
son, Ralph Brose, and Frank Svo
boda was second at Kansas City
and first at Chicago. Smith was
the second individual winner in
each contest.
Frolik Coaches Team.
Dr. A. L. Frolik. coach of the
team, has has had two first place
teams, three second and one fourth
place at Kansas City, two firsts,
one second, two thirds and one
fourth place teams at Chicago, in
the six years he has had charge
of the Nebraska team. In 1933
the Husker team was first at both
Kansas City and Chicago.
Darrell Bauder is president of
Tri-K: Ogden Riddle, vice presi
dent: Maurice Peterson, secretary;
and Wayne Domingo, treasurer.
CLOSES FRIDAY WITH
SILVERANNIVERSARY
Professor Gramlich Flays
Sit-Downers; Rusk,
Harper Talk.
Tn attendance of more than 2,000
persons, Nebraska's silver anniver
sary Feederr.' session at tho ag
college closed Friday. The student
activities building on tho Holdrege
street campus was filled to ca
pacity by visitors viewing the ex
hibitions. rrnf I inward .T. Gramlich. one
of the chief speakers at tho sec- j
xion, accentuated the fact that sit-.
down strikes have been playing
havoc with the livestock Industry.
"While industrial conditions of the j
country seem definitely on the ,
mend, erratic demands for food
resulting from numerous sit-down i
strikes without question are pre- j
venting the pork market from ad
vancing," Professor Gramlich as
serted. I
Jesse Harper, ex-Notre Dame
football coach, wa.i introduced to
tho assemblage by Coach Biff
Jones. In the role of a seer, he
predicted a good feeder market
for next fall and urged agricul
tural rchonls to undertake studies
showing the cost of producing
calves.
Prof. H. P. Rusk, of the Univer
sity of Illinois, compared livestock
conditions of Illinois to those of
Nebraska. Ho told his audience
that Illinois farmers are deeply In
terested in improving their pas
ture lands.
The program:
Mnrnlnx lin: "Sprint ljinib." M. .
Alexander: "lHvf rlflratliin WKhln r
l.lvntork KlelrtV Vt'allT Tolmani "Hon.
k Nrbnioks Nrrnnity," William J. IxwMelj
"Thr Inlerrl of irner nll l-eeder
Ohonld Re Mntiml." W. W. DerrleU:
rn In the HhII.hi fur Flnl-ihlnc Cat
lie." M. I.. BaUT, North Piatt.
Ohervntlnii and Kxnerlence," rtelmar
AnderMin. Ixlmton; "tan MitlaMM Oil
1he W R. R. Thalman; lnpeetlon of
eipetlnienlal llventdek ealtlr barn: ront
beef and all tin- trimming aervrd by
Hloek and Bridle eluh.
Afternoon aelon: Word of 'welcome. DT
Penn W. V. Burr; "Bnlne Method In
attle Fedlnr." Byron lemoret. manac
Ini edMor of Omaha Dally 4onmal-Moek-man:
"The t attle Bnalnna KulU -Me Bet
ter Than Football." Jem Harper.
"Illlnnla Beef Making I'rartlrea of In
teret to Nehraka t'attlenicn," . H.. V.
Rtlftk; "Some Ievelopment. Within, the
l-aat Vear." R. R. Thabnan: "What'a
ronnd the Cortielj." II. 4. tiramllch; the
auettlnn box.
commeniusjlanTpicnic
Slate Czech Club Party
Date for May 2.
Comenius club members have
set May 2 as the tentative date
for their joint picnic with the
Creighton Czech club. All mem
bers should plan to attend the
next meeting, April 30, when final
arrangements wil lbe made.
After the short business meet
ing, Johnson Beam, accompanied
by Mrs. Besm, played two violin
selections. Dr. Miles J. Breuer
then gave an illustrated lecture on
-.vnr experiences wnue con
r,ected with the medical corps in
rrrnrnn
GATHERING
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!
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VW-?
DEAN W. W. BURR.
. . . who heads the school of ag
riculture. r'rom the Lincoln Journal.
PROF. H. J. GRAM LICH.
the popular ag campus
professor, the champion horse
harnesser.
Kruni Hie Lincoln Journal.
PROF. W. J. LOEFFEL.
whose meat judging teams
are national champions.
- From tlie Lincoln Journal.
PROF. H. P. DAVIS.
who helps direct Farmers'
Fair activities.
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A Poet a La Schnozz Tours
Ag Campus for Soul's Sake
Barns, Silo, Corrals, Milk
House, Fresh Earth
All Smell Sweet.
Nostalgia of the olfactory an
acute case of it that was all sweet
ness and melancholy and deep
pangs of longing was what a
ramble around the smelliest haunts
of the ag campus gave me on a
sunny Saturday afternoon. Smells
in the barns, smells in the empty
silo, smells in the corrals, smells in
the milk house, smells in the fresh
ly turned earth, smells of life re
newed in growing things, smells
everywhere, smells that men have
always smelled. smells worth more
than a thousand pages of outside
reading, smells that said, 'you've
spent a lot of springs perusing the
printed pa?e .
j Folks, my real roots take their
.1
A cross section of the agricul
tural college as viewed thru the
lens of the candid camera, when
the Nebraskan staff visited the
Holdrege street campus yesterday.
Our crack columnist Sarah Louise
Meyer is somewhat unsuccess
ful in getting around and about
as she meets up with a black
Angus calf with a bit of a "tem
perament." MINNESOTA WINS
.1937 ILL MEET
Vikings Take Third Victory;
Huskers Get First in
Sophomore Group.
For the third consecutive year,
Minnesota university's Pershing
Rifle company won the platoon
award at the annual drill meet of
second regiment men held Satur
day on the university campus. The
Minnesota group scored 95 percent
to defeat Iowa university with 86
percent and Nebraska university
with 85 percent. The other school
in the meet, Wisconsin, entered
only a rifle team.
In the individual competition
Harry A. Epperson and Joseph G.
Stephens placed first and second
for Nebraska in the sophomore
group and Benjamin Johnson of
Minnesota was third. John C. Cat
lin of Iowa was first in the fresh
man division, with Richard S. Hos
man of Iowa second, and William
Wood of Minnesota third.
The crack squad competition
held at the Lincoln hotel during
Intermission of the dance was an
other of the honors won by Min
nesota. Awards were presented im
mediately following the squad
drills, climaxing a day of activity
which began with the rifle match
in the morning and included, be
sides the drill meet, a parade thru
downtown Lincoln and an exhibi
tion by the Nebraska band on the
university mall. Also during the
(Continued on Page 2.1
SIGMA TAU'S ELECT TEN
Engineers to Hold Initiation
Banquet April 29.
Ten engineering students have
been elected into the Alpha chap
ter of Sigma Tau, honorary en
gineering fraternity of the univer
sity. The initiation banquet will
be held on Thursday, April 29.
New members will be: K. R.
Bailey, Will W. Rudy, George C.
Mallon, Earl W. Ostcndorf, W. T.
Stolle, G. R. Kerlin, R. J. Rose,
A. L. Chase, James H. Riisness,
and E. S. Dahl.
ences and the mellowed humanities
of libraries and universities, but
from the loam, the manure, and
the atmosphere of a well-stocked,
honest-to-ged farm. Can t you un
derstand, I was born there. I played
hide-and-3eek in barns, haymows,
and hay stacks not under a street
light and in among houses, coal
sheds and city shrubbery and pick
et fences.
The Height Milking a Cow.
The smells of the too modernized
barns out at ag carressed my sense
of smell and told me I'd been miss
ing something. There's poetry in
the pungent smell of manure, in
the dry bailed hay. in the barn.
And after nestling up to the cham
pion cow, serenely and dignifiedly
chewing her cud a hundred rods or
so off Holdrege street. I decided
that there's no experience on God's
rn-pen earth ouite comparable to
PERSHING RIFLES
milking a cow. 1
Think of pressing your forehead
.(Continued on age 4.1
fT3
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ft
The junior livestock judging
team proudly displays the cup,
awarded them in a recent contest.
The cameraman views the campus
from Holdrege street with the ag
engineering building in the back
ground. Dean Burr sits in office
from which he directs the activi
tes of the college. The cannonade
is provided by R. O. T. C. mem
bers of the new artillery corps.
IJ
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Ag Board Reports Progress
On Plans for Farmers Fair
Advisory Council
nff pro ,
UIIVlO
Aiding Suggestions
At Luncheon.
As members of the Farmers
Fair Board reported to the advis
ory council, and heard bits of criti
cism and suggestions at an in
formal luncheon yesterday noon, it
marked a definite step in the prep
aration for what committee mem
bers promise to be the largest
Farmers Fair in history. The fair,
an annual event on the ag college
campus, is scheduled for May 7-8.
Clyde White, manager of the
1937 Fair Board, presided over
the meeting and called for re
ports from the several chairmen.
DELEGATES FROM 15
HIGH SCHOOLS VISIT
AG CAMPUS APRIL 1 7
Home Economics Society
Entertains 100 on
Hospitality Day.
Nearly 100 home economics stu
dents from fifteen different high
schools attended the High School
Hospitality Day sponsored yester
day on the ag campus by the
Home Economics association. Be
ginning at 9 o'clock, the program
included talks by association mem
bers and instructors, a luncheon
at noon, exhibits, demonstrations,
a fashion show, and tour of the
campus.
Presiding over the morning's ac
tivities was Agnes Novacek, presi
dent of the university Home Eco
nomics association. Following the
address of welcome, Miss Margaret
Fedde, chairman of the depart
ment, gave a short talk to the
high school students who might
be enrolled in her department next
year.
The greater part of the morning
hour.! was taken up by a panel
discussion led by Agnes Novacek
on the topic "Opportunities in
Home Economics." Various girls
(Continued on Page 2.)
Kitlwrll Will Kenn
Quartermasler! l'ot
- From Ttir Unroln Journal
COL. F. A. KIOWELL.
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Nebraska Photoa by Allen jsmpes
with the newest university build
ing in the background. The silver
dome, is the new observatory,
which houses Professor Rust's
valuable telescope.
At the bottom we view a few
of the prided specimens of do
mestic animals raised and tended
on the ag campus, with the famous
La Vertex Quantity of U Neb at
the extreme left.
Earl Hedlund manager of the
xr cu, ronnrtorl that pntrieS
-VlC J . . w II , . i. j . . i - -
are being accepted for the contest,
and from early registrations, he
could predict a large representa
tion. The contest will be held in
the State Fair Grounds Coliseum,
the evening of May 7.
Whole State Represented.
Among the horses competing in
the show, which is always the
main feature of the Farmer's Fair,
will be representatives from Om
aha, Lincoln, Fremont, Grand Is
land, Beatrice, and from all over
eastern Nebraska. Trophies and
ribbons will be awarded to. the
winners in the various classes of
competition. E. A. Trowbridge, of
the University of Missouri, will
serve as judge.
Featuring the largest spring
horse show in the middle west, will
be the annual inter-sorority riding
contest. Entries for the event
should be made to Carl Swanson,
or June Sanders, who are direct
ing the sorority ride. A one dollar
entrance fee is being charged.
Board Members Report.
Other members of the board
who are planning the 1937 show
include, Marjorie Francis, Elinor
McFadden, and Frank Svoboda,
exhibits; Elsie Buxman and Dar
rell Bauder, publicity; Raymora
Hilton, concessions; Earl Heady,
dance; Elsie Buxman, Donna
Hiatt and Pauline Walters, who
are in charge of the Cotton Pick
ers Review, a minstrel show and
new feature of the Farmers Fair.
Clyde White, manager, expressed
confidence in the annual ag fes
tival, and declared that "from the
opening event in the Friday eve
ning horse show to the final swing
of the dance that will conclude
Saturday's festivities, it will be
the most successful fair in history.
We are working out in the state
and hope to entertain more pat
rons han in any other year since
Its origin."
OMAHA DKNSON HIGH
WINS DEBATE CKOWN
Omaha Benson high for the sec
ond straight year won the state
class A debating championship
Saturday by defeating the Kimball
team. Benson did not lose a de
bate during the entire tournament.
Winner of the class B champion
ship was Elm Creek high school
by downing the DeWitt team, de
fending champions, and Wayne
prep, runnerup.
World's Best Cow Demands
'Honor Where Honor Is Due'
la VertPV Mn 1 Producer:
La veriex imo. i nuuuwi,
Milk, ZZ.,JZ rounds;
Butter Fat, 8,455.
Hi, old girl, how the hell are yu"
on this fine spring day?" asked
the cocksure visitor from the city
campus.
A slow, sophisticated, and slight
movement of the well shaped head
was the only answer to this in
formal query tendered by Her
Royal Highness "La Vertex Quan
tity of U Neb."
Disdain spurring the male homo
on as no other affront can. the
cockey one tried egain, "Well,
Boss. I just wanted to make
friends."
Retains Dignity Deluxe.
The prize specimen of female
bovines on tne agricunurai cam
pus budged not a jot from her re-
I trenched position of dignity de -
'luxe. Little did the interviewine
By MARY FISLAR.
Never thought I'd be a Holly
wood correbpondent, but there's so
much to tell about the trip, I'd
probably have written to the
student pulse or something with
out the Nebiaskan's invitation to
help meet its deadlines.
The best feature of the trip out
to Hollywood was not the Grand
Canyon gorgeous when you fly
over it, or the breath-taking
Boulder dam, or the ocean, or even
the thrill of crossing half a conti
nent by air. It was the three girls
pwith "whom I made the trip, rep
resentatives of Kansas V, Okla
homa, and Kansas State.
Only one incident has arisen to
mar our friendship. The plane,
was smooth in appearance, but oh,
the bumps. Two of the girls be
came actively ill, while the other
girl and I just gritted our teeth
and longed for a car and a smooth
highway. The rub came, when, in
our comparative discomfort, we
would glance across the aisle at
the other two and begin to laugh.
That's plenty hard on friendship.
i ne Kins say lhul
made a fuss over them and treated
1
The girls say mat ineir lw..-
(Continued on Page 2.)
PROF. REINMUTH
RE
SIGNS TO TAKE
OKLAHOMA POP
Well-Known Author Accepts
Language Department
Chairmanship.
! rr r W. Reinmuth. who has
been a member of the classics de
partment faculty at the University
of Nebraska since 1928, announced
his resignation Saturday to accept
a position as a.
chairman of a
new depart
ment of classi
cal 1 a nguages
with rank of
professor at the
U n i versity of
Oklahoma. The
board of re
gents accepted j
the resignation !
at their meet-1
ing Saturday.
Since coming
to Neb raska,
rr R p inmuth
From Lincoln Journal.. fmlnd time
ltr. O. W. Krlninulh. "as iounu uiue
to make a name for himself in
the field of scholarly research. He
recently completed a book en
titled "The Prefect of Egypt From
Augustus to Diocletian." which
was published at Leipzig, Ger
many. He has also conducted ex
tensive research in the field of
Roman history and papyrology be
sides having written articles re
vealing the results of these
studies.
Among his more popular articles
(Continued on Page 4.)
NEW ANNUAL TO FEATURE
ENTIRE STUDENT ROSTER
Advertising and Circulation
Hit New Peak as Book
Nears Completion.
New feature of the 1937 Corn
husker will be a section devoted
to the roster of all students who
i : v.n ri.ai'cit V dlir-
ine- the current school year. This
first time that the i-n H
has carried a classified l.si of
the student body.
According to Sid liukii. Icisi-
ness manager of the book, ndver-
tV, nnmial IP trl
lisinx wyy ... -
largest the Cornhuskcr has ever
had. Circulation this year has
again reached the peak to whicn
it climbed in 1929.
Although the date for distribu
tion of the book has not yet been
UOn OI in, uuuiv Itaa nui
..:..! , i r - ,-.. nrt mn(pt
for sale. Whether any books win
h available to nersons who have
not yet purcnaaeu inem in iwi
be certain until after publication.
i journalist fr2in ,he .rJl (a',lipS!
k that sne .as tne most fa-
innim row on the campus.. Anu
I fame does that to celebrities.
i Again the press prober tried to
pierce the pale of portliness. Ma
dame, you seem to be enjoying
a quiet hour following your mid
day repast."
Eyes of a Goddess.
And he was rewarded by a grace
ful, condescending movement of
the whole body, as of a queen to a
3 Ul a Ull-CIl
i-.-
jr
favored couiti-
llie. grrai B.i.r,r. . fe -
tecipient for one brief moment
with soul thrilling ecstacy.
As the now awed intruder into
the afternoon reverie of La Vertex
On.intitv nf tT Neb. worshiped at
the true altar of buter fat and
principal source of lactic fluid.
j " " . '
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t -Continued on Page 4.)
ravoreu couni.r, aiiu pia-c., "r-- - i".i, -..
of the glances that make history i of fice of campus police in the real
the eves of a goddess in love with of Social Science annex.
... - . i. .,..!;.,. ih. This rpmifKt has been made nec-
JUDGING IE! GO
10 OAVIO M' GILL
Freshman Wins Coveted
Griswolcl Trophy in .
Contest April 17.
David McGill. frcshmnn ng sLii
,lont from VYaverlv. won the cov
eted Griswold trophy for the best
all around performance in the
Tri-K club's annual judging con
test held Saturday morning in the
crops laboratory. A record num
ber of Bo entrants including jun
iors and seniors as well as first
year students participated.
According to officers of Tri-K
club, honorary agronomy society,
this is the first time in the eight
years of contests that a frcshmnn
has been victorious. In the judg-inp-
of the entrants. McGill's re-
suits were
necessanly comparer
with thn.jp nf unnrrclassmcn wlio
w.w. - r ,
have had specialized training m
ii-lnln thai frochniatl
Mini iinie-intr while the freshman
has had no university instructions
in that field.
Ten Ranking Contestants.
Others of the ten high tanking
competitors in order of their place
ment are Rundall Peterson, sec
ond; Clifford Heyne, third: Al
Moseman. fourth: Ogden Riddle,
fifth: Weston Whitwer. sixth:
Louis Camp, seventh: Denver
av eighth: Will Pctner, ninth,
nd Mvron Keim, tenth.
Participants in the contest are
divided into tnree sections: r re Mi
man, for students who have taken
one course in agronomy; junior,
for students who have had average
instruction in crop judging: and
senior, for students who have re
ceived two semesters of special
training.
Eight Classes.
Contestants are graded sep
arately for their showing in judg
ing eight classes of crops, and
for identifying 40 specimens of
(Continued on Page 4.)
W.A.A. TO ANNOUNCE
AT
Installation to Feature
Program for Spring
Mass Assembly.
New members of the council of
W. A. A. and the sport members
for the coming year will be an
nounced Thursday evening. April
22 at the spring mass meeting for
wome nat which time officers of
the association will be installed,
according to Jeanne Palmer, re
tiring president of the association.
Active officers to be installed
are: Marie Katouc. president;
Ruth Fulton, vire president: Paul
ine Bowen, secretary; Patricia
Lahr, treasurer; and Harriet Jack
son, concessions manager. Retir
ing officers are: Jeanne Palmer,
president, Marv Yoder. vice presi
dent; Mary Elizabeth Dirkey. sec
retarv: Marie Katour, treasurer;
and Ruth Fulton, concession., man
ager. Introduce Council Members.
Members of the retiring council
on.i th nfwlv. fleeted council will
be introduced as well as the old
I and new members of the
sport
board. Miss Matilda Mienn. lac-
ultv sponsor of the organization
swill be presented at this time
Vera Wckesser. retiring points
; chairman, will explain the points
tvotom ullil h IS Used bV W. A. A..
, - ., .. . ...
after which the winners of the
sports which have been run off
this year will be announced. As
a ne wfeature of the points sys
tem an award will be made at this
tune to the individual who has
,i,.
i .arTir-.' thp mnsi noints for par-
ticipatirn in the sports wrlch Have
; been n il off this year.
To Describe Cabin.
Idella Iverson. cabin chairman
for the coming year will tell the
group about the W. A. A. cabin
explaining its used mid the rules
for such.
Climaxing the evenings pro
gram will be the awarding of
three scholarships of twenty-five
dollars each which were given to
the e-irls on the basis of need.
participation and average
Tn h , nr;m. .
Tn ho ht-lH in Ornnt Memorial
the meeting will begin at 7 o'clock.
POLICE REQUEST
STUDENT KEPOKTS
ON BOOK THEFTS
Police officers have issued a re
quest that any student having
hnnks nr other articles stolen re-
a. - .... . , ,
n.lnnrr th loss immediately to the
, - -- - . ,. ... t
essury ucca-uac i
within the past week a large num
ber of books has been taken from
the ag college campus and, due to
the failure of students to report
the theft, have been sold to local
bookstores and since resold.
In sueli cases recovery of the
lli9ro,.PI V nf the thief Is
i mH almost imwMble.
made almost tmpo.
OFFICIALS
THURSDAY
France. strength,
not from the meaty sci