Friday, May 2, 1941 DAILY NEBRASKAN fcdiiohiaL QommsmL Ivy Day Oration BY EUGtNE CURTISS ladies and gentlemen, fellow students: We are indeed fortunate to be eble to take this occasion to celebrate a day of sentimental memories here at the university I believe today has been traditional almost since the opening of this j-xhool, and let us hope that in the future it shall remain so. It has been the policy of my predecessors at this time to dwell mainly upon the faults or upon the pood points of the university, and oecause this Is a university function, quite naturally some phase of the school should be discussed. However, it seem.' to me that there is a situation at the present tim. that pertains to the students of the university rather than the university itself, which should be discussed. Iet us look first to the present international situation. We find that a!l of the major powers of Kurope today are engaged in a chaotic conflict. The winner of that conflict cannot- be determined at this time, but we all krow that the interests of the United States are vitally in accord with those of the allies, as a result, and since the plight of the allies seems very serious, it is possible, and' even probable, that the United States will enter this con flict. Our entrance into this war will require the United States to draw into her armed forces prob ably every able-bodied man between the ages of 18 and 40, and into this category we will find included practically all college men. Therefore, we find many students concluding now that their college careers will be cut short and that since they may not be able to finish now. they probably never will finish, and there has developed a feeling of futility as far as their academic pur suits are concerned. We need look back only three years to see that then the average college student vu preparing for his or her career, that the time he was spending here at the university, he spent in preparing for a lifetime job. and that since his entire future wa probably based upon his accom plishments in that field, he quite naturally desired to attain the highest levels he possibly could. A result, the college student of that day diligently applied himself to his work. Today, however, rather than contemplating pursuing the line of activity, which he has chosen, the average college student has nothing to contemplate in the next few years but joining the armed forces of the United States, either as a draftee or a soldier. The fortunate ones will go in as officers, the leSk, fortunate as privates. It seems quite obvious that "th-average education obtained at the univer sity, with the exception perhaps of the required ROTC course, would not benefit one in such a post to the slightest degree. Hence, there has grown up a pessimistic attitude toward school today, a feel ing of futility and of hopeless endeavor. From this, deplorable as the fact may seem, the standard of our university has fallen very greatly me past two years. But let us examine this viewpoint to see if the defeatist attitude taken by is substantially correct. We need to look only to htitory to see that wars do not last forever. The lAigest we un be- tiv th rvistinsr war will las? ia two or three more years, and the taking out of two or three years from the lifetime of the average 18 or 19 year old student will still leave him a life ex pectancy of 40 years. We must remember that we will have ourselves and our familiea and our chil dren to support during that time, and the best the only way to secure assurance that they will be prexys provided for is by gaining a proper education for planted liv da ourselves, as we can while we can. . p Some students, who do not like to exert the J V fCSlSHS SClt lO itS TdtC effoit necessary to study intelligently, sooin tneir consciences with the aigument that States is involved in a war. they w return anyway. However, again looking to tne nasi. Donald E. Bower. ceremony? I. a young and tender we find that even in the bloodiest of wars, the snrie of Ivy who was Iv'y sPriP. carried away from my fatalities have never been more than 10 per cent "eXrdav nd am dead unlive abode and made to suffer of those engaged in the conflicts, and. therefore. tPoda By wav oy haunting those " the hot May shou'd assuming the United States doe, get into the war who looked at me and applauded dTgotThe irn munifrns whip uui i mc -. if .. tly. sooth their . CJ Zl" hy dying at foot of oak tree and assuming you win nave io go, r inu.-i. member that the chances are nine to one you will return, and we must also lemember that the period for your returning will be very soon, comparatively. And once again if we look toward history, we will further find that at the end of every major conflict, there has almost always been a rather serious depression. How better, in the absence of lich relatives, could you provide to withstand a depression, than by a good education? a moment let us take the very d i a c k - am going to tell you my expe rience on Ivy Day - from the Ivy"s point of view. 1 was growing peacefully the day before yesterday, enjoying the place of my birth. I was very young and tender and hadn't felt anv of the hardships prevailing in the world. That was the day be fore yesterday. Suddenly, my habitat so peace ful was cone from me as the earth around my roots Then for t of nil assumptions. For the purpose of argument roots they were) disappeared, and . . . , . ,,,t.j 5itr enters this there I stood, in my roots now let us assume that the United Sle""te ... nude. A spade had loosed the war and mat we, me - --- were to happen, then the only thing, the single solitary thing we would have to depend upon for in a new oraer earth, and a human hand grasped me. sprig of a plant that I was Kept on ice. I was carried away by this hand and kept in a refrigerator until yesterday. When they fi nally took me from the cold I was stiff and frozen prelude to death for thev were enjoying it .an Kverything was Ivy but really only I was Ivy. Ivy Day, Ivy Day poet, Ivy Day orator, Ivy Day sing now all that's gone, and I a m too. Resigned to fate. Resigned to my fate, I neverthe less was shocked when a hand 50 times the size of my stem clenched me and carried me to the side of a tree. Looking down I saw the (slender corpse of another Ivy plant and I knew what my fate would be. Two men now knelt over me, and dug my grave with a little marie And while thev planted me in a little hole, flash bulbs hurt my v? program tender chlorophyll, and people em barrassed me, for I was unclothed, having no soil over my nude roots. Then the deed was done. The crime committed. I was buried and the two brawny. Inhumane men arose and left me. men l was -""S - Behind r'. IIXQLj News Q2sZJ Olson H The next time I saw light I was in alone. It grew dark. In that flash VV tor over 7.000 planes now on . ,'f . - rv the midst of hundreds of neoole. of memorv that comes to one iust order. Hit ll III lIHtllall Y our survival for making our way would be our education. So let us remember to get everything we can out of school while we can still go to school, be if we et in the war. the war will not last it-. K hArk Striving tO make th mii-lot rf himriroHa rf nnnlp rxf momrrr that rnmpq trt ftnp iust Order. . ij m KAnoiiP KAinfr nncriarl T bnnur rrt a'hprp T HofM-o rfAath T rPVlAWAfi TTIV fihnrt Contract authority u..;n utthtn anon wnuu i wm-, x...- .... ..,..v " - 4 w v v" " - - - family and relati non us in the future, educe tion- what we have in our minds -is the sole and only asset which we can still depend upon having after this crisis is over. h Ordal . , ,1 r;wv over Ne Italians at Matapan. The Ships J or the U3.y English had an aircraft carrier Kunds to speed construction of with their fleet: the Italians had ... . r, vcere none. The extent of the British the new two-ocean navy were attributed by voted yesterday by the senate, and many observers to the services of the bill was sent to the president the royal navy's planes, for his signature. At present the United States The bill appropriates three HI- "JjTlK lion, 500 million dollars for the cjfjf, fleet and one wjth tne At Of this amount, a jantic fleet. Since the creation of hillion and a half are to speed tne tnf Asiatic fleet their exact tus- construction of the 729 vessels in position is in doubt, the present fleet building pro gram. Slightly under half a billion has been allotted for naval aviation. This includes funds with which to Records slioiv women veolacinv' to the ., wiIi probably be dependent vv the queen crowned, and fi ves will prooaoiy u h my jUon x djd not enJoy u uture. and. finally, because our 8n o and from existence, and was glad that next amount of 150 million and cash in the year I shall be a corpse no ivy Day for me. the amount of 142 million was pro vided for repairs and alterations rf fitrhtine- shins. The precise na- Chicago. 111. fACP). Place ment records of the University of Chicago are beginning to reflect iCommentorials from our readers i Stutlent criticise Ellsicorth Steele, Dear Editor: it n e v i I r ' ture of these repairs is not speci- xMe trend toward replacing men JCoUflpJUA. with Mary Adelaide Hansen S U tu fied. The navy, however, has been equipping all its ships with the famous English De Gaussing anti magnetic mine device; and last year congress voted 300.000.000 dollars for deck armour plate snd anti-aircraft guns in the current modernization program. Presum ably more work of this type will be done. Because of the expanding na- And ire of the air arm of the navy Jl there is some possibility that a - . 17 1 . . ...Ill n frr til pari oi uic niuinrj' w iw vj. Ned Bell. Pooky Peters, Lowe Fol- transformation of certain ships in- with women in industry, reports Doris B. Larsh. placement coun selor of the university's board of vocational guidance and place ment. She added, however, that "the salaries tend to be lower for women than for men who have held these same positions. For in stance, one company which offers a starting salary of $125 a month to men is offering $90 to women in the same capacity. "There undoubtedly will be a fluctuation upward, as the avail- som, and Paul Dinnis "snuk" into to aircraft carriers. able good candidates are none too Kllsworth Steele, the self appointed champion on,.c again they have planted the ,he 'coiiseum Wednesday nizht and A possibility along this line plentiful now and certainly can- of the c.moui have nots. speaks out in true Goeb- Ivy. Someone must have been do- nad a at time wolfing an the would be the battleship Wyoming, not last much longer it employ or tne campua " f ...,,, v, insr a lot of praving. because the , Q, : ro,a the oldest battleship in the navv men continues to increase. , . w . . m i m nnnnrpn nvnirv ui viii-n . . wecto, v. , . . . , wv. - - . neis oiyic - - pn shone, lots of people were nH T-,, Rrihnff innv the hi and one which was almost was not a part. - made happy, and Ivy Day was trip to Omaha, the Ice Follies, scrapped at the 1930 London na- Two hundred of the 670 students Like an ardent reformer. Mr. Steele speaks generally conceded to be one of and tuff in general. And what's val disarmament conference. Its at Norwich university are fresh- onlv of results without even mere mention of causes the most successful in history, this about John Weingarten get- status at that time was reduced men. There will he only 52 gradu- ...fno While he heartily condemned and And ye Societe Columne now rates tj gt , jn the mud? to a training ship, and its big guns ating cadets in June, or circumstances, wnue ne ne hi. jr the distinction of having a Mortar ... wcre removed. Nevertheless. ;t criticized the juvenile actions oi wir ...6 Board for one of ita editors that vuwi ruw fngn can serve 8g an effPCtjve airplane students he saw no wrong in the destructive action Black Masqoe enabling Mimi to do is the Sig Alph formal, and some- carrier, especially in the North of covering aji expensive exhibit with manure and more secret snooping, no doubt. thing elegant in the way of favors Atlantic in certain waters. Ivy eve. re college student whitewash. It is noteworthy that in his attempt to improve campus relations, he apparently disregards the fact that the heads of the two student bodies concerned saw fit to take no penalizing action upon the par ticipants. It is tragic that Mr. Steele had to witness a brutal scene In which brute force andVtwords tin which he is so adept) was the persuadirV mo tive. It is mutually believed that the lawand engi- neering students can conduct their own actiUtles J esJ.orting the latter gal without the aid of tne former Carrie uun lnend. Student Council. We hope that he may find a more Out Woody Herman way. Alpha fertile field for his efforts in the future. Sincerely yours, Robert W. Nourse David A. Roach The value of aircraft carriers to rumor. Alex Mills will take was conclusively demonstrated in saw the battle of the bands, and Becky Wait, and DG Dotty Thomas the recent British naval victory everyone had a wonderful time no will do her waltzing with Louis matter which place they went. You n- v f.01- First chapter of a national fra- might have seen Beta Piker Davis UiU V011 Know ternity ever established in the and Kappa Helen Cather dancing Seybolt. south was a "temple" of the My- to Ray Noiie. or Nate Kolman, that those smooth attendants' stioal Seven organized at Emory ocrri n,ZTti Sio-ma Nu's. who gowns yesterday were designed uni frersity about 1840. took ttfo girls home from the and made by Dorothy Bumstead, tes college is offering short- coliseur of Petty'; tally. Nate pai The Daily Nebraska!! tCo girls home from the and made by uorotny tsumsteaa, ues conege is onermg .win- jyn- eunTVPi Phi Lou Ide and one former Kappa here at UN? She's hard and typing courses, without cm. etty'siscious gals. Inciden- responsible for all 11 of them, not acTdemic credit, to help students Nate paid $7.50 for the priv- some swanky New York modiste, gevs jobs after graduation. itmhr FOKT1ETH rEAK HnbMrfptloo Katm mre SI. 00 Per seme trt or Sl.M lor lh College 2- Mallrd HlnKlr opj. .enu Hai"" (erand-lmu mattrr at tlw postTWcr in l.lnroln. Nrbraaka. indn Ael of on- Mareb . 1873. and at p-irj' rale IMMtacr provlrtf d for in Hrrtxor 1 1 o. of Ortobrr 3. 1817. Atnn-itra lemher 30. 1932. Engineers- (Continued from Page 1.) a color organ display giving col ored visual pictures of music as It is played. Visitors also saw an electric anake and a voice controlled train. May Queen- Continued from Page 1) flounced with fine Notting- fullv ham lace. The classic shirred 1938, when they won second place bodice of net was joined to the honors, while tne ineias piHceu shoulder yoke with self-ruffle, first three times in succession, forming a heart neckline. The '38. '39. and '40. verv full-flared double net smri juuges iw me iuuiri Ivy Sing- (Continued from Page 1.) the annual sine in they went steady, was that of Phi Delt Cliff Meier ana ivappa iviouy Woodward. Phi Dorothv Tipton came home w ith something extra, too. It's the Sig Alpha pin of Dick Spelts, who forsook the usual moonlight and roses for such an occasion and passed her the bit of jewelry right at the table among all the coke bottles and brothers. An unusual combination, or rather, one which used to be usual last year when winners in with double rows of me lace at or execuem iiiui. ..u hemline. Sleeves were slimly difficult contest to judge. ' Judg- tapered to the wrists below shoul- ing was baaed on general excel- der fullness. The traditional tulle lence of efforts of competing veil fell from her shoulders to groups, technical perfection, which train-leneth. and she wore while memoes tone juiuy j.u c. satin sandals and a necklace of and the appearance of the group. while hamburgers were fried in a extended into a long train, flounced that this year's contest was one hot skillet over a coia stove. Frank Slaymaker had charge of electrical engineering exhibits. Two sound films on housing and manufacture of steel were shown by architecture students, and stu dent drawings and models were displayed. Chairman of this was David Wink. Roacb in charge. David Roach had charge of the engineering mechanics students' exhibit which featured testing demonstrations of cement, con crete cylinders and building and highway materials. Drawings and models of various projects, includ ing drawings made by students In t'ol among tliose present enjoying this long week-end of pomp and picnics will be Theta Hap Mcintosh. She's in the hos pital with a touch of bronchial pneumonia. The Betas seem to have been playing lately. of Concordia in Seward were form organization i a 1 t . - -m pearls. Her flowers were gar- Mr., riorence fl3on .nu nrmj CoeflS at UuCrllll Li.. ..ni.ri with delphinium Anderson of Omaha and Prof. s ' 101 ' ir. . minified lei Theodore Stelzer Miu Shaw', ewn was of silk teachers college jersey in a regal coral shade, and the judges. she wore a matching turban. Her Contestants flowers were varying shades of Other women's groups entered blue delphinium with white stalks in tne contest. in addition to the in a modified lei. first, second, and third place win- Atttndant gowns. ners. were as follows: Kappa mited. to help soldiers Oberlin. Ohio. (ACPI. Oberlin college coeds have formed an or ganization to provide entertain- Tbe ten attendants of the queen Kappa Gamma. Gamma Phi Beta, ment for men in military service in of of rational defense training course wore gowns styled the same as Delta Delta. Co-op houses were shown lr,e maia or nonor oui vrcic Exhibits pertaining to highways increasingly deeper shades j v. . hiirhii.hi f blue. Their flowers were leis the civil engineering open house, salmon pink gladiolaa. A working model of an arch First to appear in the Queens bridge showing its actual behavior train were the two freshmen at- under different Joading conditions tendants. Jean Cowden and Lois w.n a. a model of Panama Jeannette Christie. Sophomore at- Canal lock gates in operation were tendants were Ann Craft and Janet charge of Janet Curley this year. on.trotH Kvral model Louise Curley. Junior attendants were teny u ansa, jean uimwiii t-roressor lxuis t.. rsucnmian i Camahan and Marv Elizabeth Ros- the department of Enelish at for women. Chi Omega. Alpha Xi Delta, Towne Club, Alpha Omi cron Pi, and Alpha Phi. This year's contest represented the first time that the number of con testants has been limited. Sponsored by the AWS Stu dents' Board, the sing was in planes were also shown. In charge of these exhibits wss Martin Siem- The organization is called the committee for intercollegiate aid to American soldiers and sailors. Its purpose is to collect playing cards and games for young men undergoing military training. Stu dents in other colleges have been asked to form similar committees and to send in reports to the Ober lin group, which will act as a clearing house for information. Harvard university SPECTATOR me The classic spec tator with closed toe and hUh heel ....$6.95 Smartly styled of snow white doeskin with tan, blue or black calf. Two heniitiful Mlci in PARADISE SHOES Lel'x nit lt or Spectator Beautiful, perfo rated style . . . with medium heel ...S6.03 Sound movie shown. A sound movie in color was ahown on plastic materials and there waa additional demonstra tions of polarized light and weld ing when all laboratories of the mechanical engineering building were open. To acquaint spectators with their duties and equipment, mili tary engineers showed model field fortifications and camouflage ef fects. Harry Seagren was chair man. Engineers from ag showed their new draw-bar instrument car used for tractor testing. It is the only test car of its kind In the world and ag college has the only offi cial tractor testing station in the world. Don Kruse, chairman, also had charge of an irrigation exhib it, farm motors exhibit, and rural electrification display. Helen Elizabeth Claybaugh ana Mary Kerrigan. Pages who heralded the ap proach of the May Queen and her party weie freshmen Dorothy Owen Thomas and Betty Ann Bonebright. Junior women who led the daisy chain were Louise A. K. Frolich. Ellen Wllkens, Maryellen Robiaon. Betty Jean Spaulding and Ruth Louise Gros- i venor. Senior women who led the ivy chain were Lucille Eilen Thomas, Esther Marie Connett, Dee Mag dalene Schill and Patricia Mc- I Mahon. Flower girls in the procession were Paula Broady. daughter of Prof, and Mrs. Knute Broady, Phyllis Gish. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Gish. and Teresa Stepanek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orin Stepanek. all of Lincoln. Pablo Saenz, son of Prof, and Mrs. Hilano Saenz, was crown bearer. is raising "war libra- 1 first editions of the late 18th and ries" to be distributed arouna tne 19th centuries. university. borough. Senior attendants were Washington State is collecting rare $2,000 for 12 special Nebraska's Fashion Center A student loan fund at Iowa State has accumulated almost en- and Richard Lee Walton, son of tirelv from sale of Veishea cherry Prof, and Mrs. W. H. Walton, was pies. train bearer. Your Drug Store Stop in for that coke. You'll like the atmos phere. OWL PHARMACY 14 No. 14th ft P Phone 2-l6 ALL MAKES OF TYPEWRITERS FOR SALE OR RENT NEBR.' TYPEWRITER CO. HATS $1195 lflovfil companions for your cnsiial ensembles iiecjiuse t li e i r neut nil shades blend so beauti fully. Choose n print or a plain band fashioned flatter smart Nebraska coe'ds. 1 TV 4nd prettier Ok icm, f1 I Perry Brown "Washable Qunior 3rocks A. A jaunty sport dress of washable CYSEE. Its wrinkle resistance makes it Ideal for school or vacation wear. $16.95 B. Go South American with Perry Brown. Col orful CYSEE. . .washes and irons like magic. $16.95 Remember marvelous hist year Kvervone CVSEE! . . . that fabric introduced by Terry Brown, was thrilled with the wrinkle resistant, qualities of this exclusive cloth. It washed so easily, without in juring the colors a bit. And best of all. CVSKH is fresh looking and very cool to wear. Won't you stop in tomorrow to see them? ! ?1 HOVLAND-SWANSON 130 Na. 12th t-M57