The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 17, 1941, Page 12, Image 12

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    Friday, October 17, 1941
12
DAILY NEBRASKAN
Back in '05 . . .
The Daily Was a One Man
Paper, Edited by John Clark
New liizad Dean
By Art Rivin.
In 1905 there was a Nebraskan,
It was a daily paper, but it was
also strictly a one man affair.
The editor, news editor, and re-
Ag Home Ec
Group to Hold
Annual Affair
Home Economics association,
national professional organization,
will hold its annual Betty Lamp
tea this afternoon, from 3:30 to
5:30 p. m. in the home economics
parlors on ag campus. The pur
pose of this tea is to welcome
all now and prospective members
to the organization.
General chairman of the tea is
Betty Ann Tistthammer. Sub
chairmen are: Leah Jane Howell,
invitation; Norma Jean Campbell,
foods; and Justine Sutton, hos
tess.
Members of the Home Econom
ics council will be in the receiv
ing line. They are: Winifred White,
Mary Elizabeth Gill, Carol Chap
nan, Retha Edeal, Eleanor Craw
ford, Lorene Bennett, Leah Jane
Howell, Betty Ann Tisthammer,
Laura Mae Eule, Marion Hunt,
Louise Frolich, and Marie Ingalls
On Oct. 15, the regular weekly
meeting will begin. These meet
ings are held in the social par
lots of the home economics build
ing at noon every other Tuesday.
All girls desiring to sell candy
at the football games apply at
the WAA office. Besides free
admission to the games sales
girls receive a 10 commission
and a dollar bonus for every $10
sold.
porter was Nebraska's new bizad
dean, John D. Clark.
Those wre the days. It was
that year that the university fi
nally forced private interests out
of control of the Daily and insti
tuted a publication board. And
1905 was the year when the Ne
braskan first came out in blaz
ing red ink. The occasion was the
reporting of a sensational, and
very "hot" news story. As a mat
ter of fact, Dean Clark reports,
the story was so hot that every
copy of the paper was stolen be
fore it could be distributed to the
subscribers.
Class Rivalry.
According to Clark, one of the
greatest differences between
campus activity of today and that
of 36 years ago is the disappear
ance of class organization and
class solidarity. Freshman-sophomore
and junior-senior rivalry was
very keen in 1905; but "an en
livening" affair says Clark.
There were all kinds of class
competition, even interclass foot
ball championships. "We really
used to batter each other" the
dean reports. As a matter of fact
the 1905 editor bears a battle
scar on one of his fingers, per
manent souvenir of the "batter
ing." '
Speaking about the social at
titude of today and yesterday,
Clark pointed out that his day
was the day of frankness. And
the Nebraskan was a frank news
paper. Said Clark, "Those were
the carefree days when social con
sciousness was practically ab
sent, among college students and
the general public also." "There
was none of today's key hole gos
sip," he says.
CAA student pilot registration
at University of Minnesota this
fall is 40, ten more than last
year.
TASTY PASTRY
I
There's a real homecoming
waiting for you here your
favorite foods served in the
familiar collegiate atmos
phere and all your old
friends gathering here after
the game to snack and chat
this is the homecoming
you've been looking for
ward to.
linmwi
Barbs Petition for Change
In Council membership
To alter the constitution of the student council
of the University of Nebraska by amending Arti
cles IV, V, VI and X, striking out Article III, re
numbering Article IX and X and providing a
new Article X, all to read as follows:
Article IV.
Section 1: The Student Council shall be com
posed of twenty members, one-half elected each
semester.
1. The college of agriculture shall be entitled
to four members, two to be chosen at each regu
lar election.
v 2. The colleges on the city campus shall be
entitled to sixteen members, eight to be chosen
at each regular election.
3. If at any time the ratio between the en
rollment of the College of Agriculture and the
City Campus shall exceed 1:4 the student council
shall have power to increase the membership
from the college of agriculture to provide for the
proper proportion.
Section 2: The regular student council elec
tion shall be held on Tuesday of the fifth week
of each semester unless the time is changed by
action of the University Senate.
Section 3: To be eligible for membership in
the student council, each candidate shall be a
bona fide member of the college or group of col
leges that he seeks to represent, and shall have
the qualifications required by the eligibility rules
prescribed by the senate committee. Regular uni
versity rules shall govern in determining a can
didate's college.
Section 4: Nominations for members of the
student council shall be made by the filing of the
name of the candidate not later than 5 p. m. on
the second Friday next prior to the day of elec
tion, at the student activities office. The secre
tary of the student council shall announce in the
Daily Nebraskan at least ten days prior thereto,
the day and hour when filing closes.
Section 5: Election of members to the stu
dent council shall be by the Hare (or single
vote) system of proportional representation with
transfers by what is termed the exact method.
1. The ballots shall list alphabetically the
names of the several candidates for office and, in
case of endorsement, shall designate the party or
group to which he or she belongs.
2. Each qualified student voter shall be en
titled to receive a separate ballot bearing the
names of all the candidates permitted to file.
Each voter shall be privileged to designate his
first and second and third and other choices for
any candidates he is willing to have represent
him.
A Proposal
Section 6: Any advisors appointed by the
university senate shall serve as ex-officlo mem
bers of the council. ,
Article V.
Section 1: The newly elected student council
members shall be installed at a meeting called by
the president of the student council within a
week after election day. At this meeting a presi
dent, vice president, secretary, and treasurer
shall be elected, and the organization of the
council perfected.
Section 2: The council may provide for com
mittees which shall be responsible to it. All com
mittees within the Student Council organization
and all committees or boards appointed by the
Council, which represent the student party ratio
established in the election of members to the
student council.
Article VI.
The terms of members shall be for one year
or until their successors are duly elected. The
complete election count shall be preserved in the
files of the secretary of the student council for
one year. Any vacancy occurring during the col
lege year between elections shall be filled for the
remainder of the term by the candidate next in
order after the last one declared elected.
Article IX (re-numbered Article X.)
Section 1: (Provisions for amendment of the
student council constitution as stated under the
constitution now in effect.)
Section 2: The rules for student elections
may be initiated or repealed by a two-thirds vote
of the student council, or upon the petition of a
majority of the student body regardless of the
council's action but with the approval of the uni
versity senate.
Article X: Schedule.
Section 1: Articles IV, V, VI, VIII and X as
heretofore existing are hereby repealed, and Ar
ticles IX and X shall be re-numbered as VIII and
IX respectively.
Section 2: The amended Articles V and IX
shall take effect immediately upon adoption, but
the amended Articles IV and VI shall not take
effect until the beginning of the second semes
ter of the college year 1941-1942.
Section 3: The student council elected on
April 22, 1941, shall cease to hold office as a
body within one week after the regular election,
held on Tuesday of the fifth week of the second
semester of the school year 1941-42. The ten
members elected at that election shall constitute
the total membership of the student council un
til the regular first semester election of the
school year 1942-43, when ten new members shall
be added.
In accordance with recent legis
lation stating that all issues to be
voted on at a coming election must
be published ten days In advance
of the date of the election, the
Daily here publishes the petition
now being circulated by the barb
organization, which, if it receives
100 signers, will be voted on at the
fall election, October 28.
The petition proposes a change
in the student council constitution
which would involive changing the
membership of the student coun
cil to 20 members, these members
to be elected without regard to
college except for the maintenance
of an ag-city campus ratio. Half
Societies Meet
For Rehearsal
Members of Mortar Board,
Innocents society, Tassels and
Corn Cobs will meet at the
south door of the coliseum Fri
day at 5 p. m. for homecoming
rehearsal. All must be there.
the membership would be elected
each semester by the Hare pro
portional election system. This
system involves voting for all can
didates in order of personal preference.
Chaperones Cluh
Meets Tuesday .?
The Chaperones Club, compdsfd
of housemothers on the campus,
will meet Tuesday, October fl,
at 2:30 p. m. at the Kappa Sigma
chapter house. Invited guests are
Mrs. Verna Boyles, Miss Elsie
Ford Poper and Mrs. Ada Weet
over. Mrs. I. J. Schmillel will be the
hostess assisted by Mrs. Pearl
Fee, Mrs. Gertrude Adams, Mrs.
Myra Cox and Miss MargafK
Smith.
Coliseum
Saturday,
Oct. 18, 1941
9 to 12
P.M.
it ilnfi
. 4 r mm a a M m m.v J jr r t m g mm mem m
Per Couple
80c and 10c Tax 90c
From Any
Corn Cob
or Tassel
$1 and 10c Tax 1.10
at the door
Beat that!
Presentation of 1941 Pep Queen Elected at Door.
Vote for Your Candidate And
Notification of Homecoming Decorations Winners.