The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 15, 1918, Image 1

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    The Daily Nebraskan
VOL XVII, NO. 113.
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA. LINCOLN FRIDAY. MARCH 15. 1918.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
MUST FIT Fill
PHOTOS TODAY
Will Omit All Oornhusker Pic
tures Unsettled For
MANY STILL DELINQUENT
It Alio Lait Day for Getting Sopho
more Pictures .
v Taken
Payments on Cornhusker photos
have been slowly coming in during
the last two days. There yet remains
on the lift of delinquents, two organ!
utlons and 29 students.- These must
be paid today, Friday, or as- stated
before, the yearbook will be published
without the pictures. Business Man
ager H. B. Thompson stated last night
that he wished to make a final appeal
to the students whose names are
printed below, that they take It upon
themselves to settle for their Corn
husker space Immediately, so as not,
to cause any delay in getting out the
book.
The last opportunity for the sopho
mores to have their pictures taken, l
today. The time limit was extended
last week, so as ,to give every sopho
more a chance to have his picture
taken. No more time will be granted
after today. The pictures should be
taken at the Townsend Studio, as ar
rangements have been made by the
Cornhusker management with this
firm, for prompt and satisfactory serv
ice. The names of those students and or
ganizations who have yet to make
their payments follow:
Organizations Not Paid
Pre-Medlcs Dramatic Club
Seniors Not Paid
Helen Stideworthy Elizabeth Crawford
Greta Nunemaker Allen Sutherland
Norman Mussel- Florence Wood
' man Emma Sackett
Bryon Perdue Arden Fisher
Selma Taylor F. H. Miller
Ella Hansen Zelda Sharp
Juniors Not Paid
Mildred Goodwin Helen Whisenand
Jeannette Adams Dorothy D. Davis
George M. Hearn Mildred Bowers
Alta Chrisman Emily Mockett
LeRoy Carson Mildred Morse
Helen Curtice Lillian Arndt
Isabel Derby Mary Husten
Marion Hall Nina Hull
' Military Department Gets
Latest Model Army Rifles
An U. S. army rifle of the latest
model has been received by the mili
tary department. It is intended that
as many cadets as possible become
acquainted with one of the more mod
ern e-unq Thn rifles hplne used now
in drilling are of the 1898 model, and
while it cannot be expected, with such
a demand in the regular army, that
every cadet could be provided with a
later model rifle, there is new oppor
tunity for a large number of men to
acquaint themselves with the new
model. -
OPENS LECTURE COURSE
ON CIVILIAN RELIEF WORK
Dr. Hattie Williams Gives First
of Series of Talks on Red
Cross Work
Dr. Hattie Plum Williams of the
sociology department gave the first of
-a series of lectures on "Civilian Re
lief Work of the Red Cross," before
her sociology class Tuesday after
noon. She spoke of the Red Cross in
general, telling of its re-organization
in 1915 into two distinct branches, the
military relief corps and the civilian
relief corps.' '
The latter takes charge of the re
lief work in case of disaster, lends
aid to the families of men in service,
and takes care of disabled soldiers re
turned from the front. Already there
are eighty-eight wounded soldiers in
New York City and they will be sent
out to their homes as soon as possible.
This will call for experienced civilian
relief secretaries in every community
and citizens should prepare to co-operate
with the relief committee of their
locality.
Next Friday at 3 o'clock Dr. Wil
liams will lecture on the services that
can be rendered by Individual citizens.
These lectures are given especially
for the sociology class, but any stu
dent interested in the Red Cross work
U Invited to attend.
REFERENCE BUREAU TO
MOVE TO STATE HOUSE
Will Assist Special Legislature
" Library Remains
Open
On account of the special session of
the legislature called to make it pos
sible for Nebraska soldiers to vote,
the legislative reference bureau will
move to the state house Monday.
The legislative reference bureau al
ways has its headquarters at the cap
Itol during every regular session of
the legislature, assisting In drafting
bills and legislative research. During
these regular sessions the reference
library in University hall is closed,
but since C. E. Sheldon, director of
the reference bureau, believes the spe
clal session will last only a week, it
has been decided to keep the library
open.
Coyotes and Bulldogs to
Play on Armory Floor
The seemingly. inevitable has at last
tome to pass, and the Wesleyan Coy
otes will meet the Cotner Bulldogs
in two games of basketball on the
Armory floor next Friday and Satur
day. Cotner has tried for some time
to get a match with the Coyotes but
have always been told to go out and
get a reputation or words to that; el
feet. But the Bulldogs were true to
their tenacious reputation and kept at
it until the University Place bunch
finally were forced to yield. From all
the dope that is available the matches
should be exceptionally fast and hard
fought, and it will pay anyone inter
ested in the game to attend. The
Friday game will begin at- 8 o'clock,
while that on Saturday will be staged
in the afternoon, starting at 3:30
o'clock.
Student Officers Study. German
The students of the University of
Colorado believe that the demand for
the United States officers to speak
German will be as great as for them
to speak French, and accordingly
they are studying that language.
GOSPEL TEAM WILL HOLD
EVANGELISTIC MEETINGS
Eight University Men to Have
Charge of Three Services at
Emmanuel Church
Members of the University gospel
team will have charge of a series of
three evaneelistic meetings to be held
at the Emmanuel Methodist church
heeinnine Sunday. March 17. The
men who will take part in these meet
ing are Charles Lively. '17: Walter
Judd, '20; William Urbach. '18. Roger
Jenkins, '18; A. C. Krebs. '18, Law
rence Slater, '21, and Ray Cowen, '19.
Sneclal programs and attractive fea
tures have been planted for this
Easter campaign among wnicn are
solos and quartet music by members
of the team. There will be a special
chorus directed by Prof. O. L Ken
dall. Emmanuel Methodist church is
located at 15th and U streets, close to
the campus and University students
are urged to attend not only the meet
ings in charge of the gospel team but
any of the other meetings which will
be held every evening during the rest
of the month at 7:30 o'clock, except
Saturday.
GIRLS' CLUB PLANS GOOD
TIME FOR CO-ED PARTY
Invite all University Women to
Attend Gathering Satur
day Afternoon
Danplne. a short, novel program
and refreshments are the gist- of the
tmfM-tftlnment that the University
Girls club is planning to give all Uni
versity women Saturday afternoon
from 2:30 to 5 o clock, in Music nan
at the Temple.
Plana for this gathering are in
rharc-P of several special committees
composed of members of the club, and
they are promising a good time for
every girl who comes. Just what will
h done is another matter, and the
committees are not committing them
selves on that subject. However, they
do invite every University woman to
come out tomorrow afternoon, and as
sure them that It will be well worth
their while.
IIEI PATRIOTISM
TO W Hi WAR
Women at Mass Meeting Regi
ster for Red Cross
ERNEST SPIRIT PREVAILS
Can Sign Up for Working Hours
at Library Any Time
Today
Patriotism and enthusiastic loyalty
again exhibited themselves within the
rank and file of Nebraska's student
body, when the co-eds and women of
the faculty assembled yesterday morn
ing In what proved to be one of the
most inspiring Convocations of the
school year. The sincerity with which
the Red Cross work will be carried on
in the future was demonstrated by the
hearty response , given the speakers
and the readiness with which the wom
en registered for definite hours in Red
Cross work.
Edith Yungblut. president of the
Girls' club, acted as chairman of the
meeting. Prof. Sarka Hrbkova, Miss
Kowgill and Mrs. Whitfield were the
principal speakers. "What are We
Going to Do?" was the theme of the
entire program and voluntary induc
tion into the Red Cross service rather
than compulsory enlistment was hailed
by Nebraska's women with true Ne
braska spirit.
Mrs. Whitfield spoke first on the
work to be done in Lincoln. She told
with pride of the splendid work done
in the first drive for surgical dressings
and of the reputation Lincoln has es
tablished for itself because of the
amount accomplished in so short a
time. " 'Make surgical dressings' is
the cry of the hour," she declared,
"and it should inspire us with a sense
of loyalty and a desire for service
first as does the strains of our national
anthem."
Pleads for Nurses
Miss Kowgill's plea for recruits In
the nursing profession stirred every
one with a desire to be of some hlep.
Thirteen thousand nurses are wanted
by the government by the first of next
January and these nurses, taken from
our hospitals, must be supplanted by
young women who are willing to lay
aside their life's plans for the coun
try's cause. "The objection is often
raised that girls entering the profes
sion now will never get into real Red
Cross work," Miss Kowgill said,
"While there is a possibility that they
will not complete their training in
time to join the hospital, unit in
France, they will have rendered just
as great a service to their country
by taking up the work left by those
already trained. A life saved on this
' ide of the water is just as valuable as
one saved on that side, and there is
much to be done in hospitals, in slums,
and every place where health con
servation is the watchword.".
"That the country is at war, has not
seeped through some brains yet'," an
nounced Prof. Sarka Hrbkova with
her characteristic vigor. "We re
sponded to the Red Cross work for a
while and then allowed our impulse
to wear off. When you sign up here
today, for Red Cross work, feel Just
as our boys did when they signed up
in June. Let us make ourselves feel
that we are drafted, that we are bound
by an iroh-clad agreement between
ourselves and our government."
R. E. Gillespie, a former Nebraskan,
who has been stationed at Ft. Riley
in Red Triangle work, .made a few
concluding remarks. He expects to
go to Russia soon to work with the
Salvation army.
May Register Today
All of the girls were asked to sign
up for the hours at which they could
work at the Red Cross rooms. Regi-
qt-sHrin cards vlll be la tko Llbiiij
this morning po that the girls may
register. The rooms are open Tues
day, Thursday and Friday from 1 un
til 6 o'clock.
Ex-Huskers Get Shemmie's .
Band for Military Bali
The Nebraska Officers' club, at
Camp Dodge, Iowa, has completed ar
rangements for a military ball to be
given in the Hotel Chamberlain at
Des Moines, on March 30th. The club
is an organization of former Corn
huskers who are now officers at the
camp and who have banded together
for social reasons. In order to give
the affair a Nebraska atmosphere, the
club has even arranged with Shem
beck for a six-piece Jazz Iband to fur
nish the music for the bell.
ALUMNI DAY WILL
BE HELD ON MAY 25
Executive Committee Completes
Plans for Banquet and
Reunion
The executive committee of the
board of directors of the. alumni as
sociation met at alumni headquarters
Thursday to discuss plans for Alumni
Day, May 25. President Pollard pre
sided, and Samuel Rees, '04, of Omaha,
Director E. P. Brown, '92, and Charles
Roberts, '06, were present.
The alumni banquet and reunion will
be held as usual at the farm campus.
Mr. Roberts was appointed chairman
I of the entertainment committee to
arrange for the automobile tour and
special features of the day.
The committee transacted other of
ficial business. All the members of
the committee with the exception of
the vice president, Mrs. E. M. Sunder
land, of Omaha, were present.
H. B. Wood, '17, writes that he has
school of military aeronautics at Mas
ficers' school, Atlanta, Ga., ,to the
school of military eronautics at Mas
sachusetts institute of technology,
Cambridge, Mass.
This is the same place to which
Prof. E. E. Brackett and Prof. I. D.
Wood went about two weeks ago.
Cadet Wood is studying French and
will also take up aeroplane engineer
ing, the construction of the aeroplane,
motor trucks, etc.
Indiana
At Indiana University it is a cher
ished tradition that the members of
Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journal
istic fraternity, shall set the date
and be the first to wear straw hats
on the campus when the warm days
come.
. Pennsylvania
By the action of the trustees of the
university of Pennsylvania, Kaiser
Wilhelra and Count von Bernstorff
have been removed from the roll of
honor of the university. The em
peror received the degree of L.L. D.
In 1905, and von Bernstorff in 1911.
WHISKBRQOMS WILL -BE
READY TUESDAY
Only Limited Number of Girls'
Magazine to Be
Printed
Only a limited number of Whisk-
brooms have been printed, and there
will be only one edition. Those who
have paid for their subscriptions will
get the book in the Student Activi
ties' Office Tuesday from 9 to 5 o'clock.
Subscriptions are still being taken at
the Students Activities' Office. The
extra copies will be on sale in the
Library Tuesday.
The Whiskbroom is a 54-page maga
zine printed in brown Ink on egg shell
paper, with a broom cover, on which
is a cut in darker brown ink. It
contains prose (bouquets and brick
bats), poetry (wise and otherwise),
free and blank verse; Being local in
character, it is not competing with
Awgwan, and wishes only to show
what University of Nebraska girls
can do in the way of getting out a
representative girls' book.
ENGINEERS TO VIEW
SHOPS AT HAVELOCK
Twenty-Five Students Will Go
on Annual Inspection
Trip
"The Engineers' Annual Inspection
Trip," begins tomorrow afternoon at 1
o'clock, and twenty-five engineers have
signed up for the trip. The afternoon
will be spent in inspecting the con
crete and shop plants at Havelock.
At 8 o'clock Saturday morning, the
engineers .will meet in room 102 M. A.
and the first inspection of the day
will be held at the Lincoln gas plant.
From here, the party will proceed to
the Lincoln hotel, where the electric
elevator system and kitchen appli
ances will be examined. Durin the
afternoon the trip will include in
spections of the Lincoln Traction Co.,
Beatrice Creamery Co., and the city
pumping station.
The trip is held each year under
the auspices cf the engineering faculty
and a written report of the trip is one
of the requirements for graduation in
the engineering college.
SPRING FOOTBALL
TO STARTMDHDAY
Coach Stewart Will Have Sev
eral Assistants
FACES A HARD SEASON
Coaches Want Big Squad of Varsity
Candidates Out for
Spring Practice
Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock the
spring football drive will begin in
earnest. All the necensary parapher
nalia will be issued Saturday from 9
to 12, and it is hoped that there will
be so many candidates out that there
will not be near enough stuff to go
around. Already several of the last
year's squad are working out and with
these and the new material that is
expected, Nebraska fans have every
reason to hope for the best team next
year.
"Ed" Shaw, captain of the 1917
champs will be on hand to assist in
the coaching, as will "Dusty" Rhodes,
the captain-elect for the coming year.
Coach Stewart is making an effort to
enlist the aid of all the old men in the
city, to help in this work. There are a
number of Nebraska's old ex-football
stars who are in business in Lincoln,
and it Is expected that a large propor
tion of them will work with the regu
lar coaching staff.
Stiff Season Ahead '
Nebraska has ahead of her the stiff -est
season that any Missouri Valley
team has ever tackled, and it is only
through the persistent effort on the
part of the men in the University that
we will be able to carry It through to
a successful close. At present there
is only one open date from the first
week in October until the season
closes on Thanksgiving, and the pros
pects are that even this rest day may
be filled up with a game before very
long. But aside from being long the
schedule is not the easiest in the
world. On the list are such teams as
the University of Washington, last
year's Pacific Coast champions and
Denver university, the leaders in the
Rocky Mountain conference, besides
such strong teams as Northwestern,
Notre Dame and Syracuse. Then there
are the usual conference games with
Missouri, Iowa and Kansas which are
always rather tough propositions. Al
together the coming season promises
to be a gruelling grind all the way
through and it is going to take a lot
of hard and steady work on the part of
the .team. Consequently the coaches
are anxious that a large squad of men
report for the spring practice tmd get
things to going as early as possible,
besides giving them a chance to see
about what they will have to depend
on for next year.
CONTINUE CODY
CAMPAIGN TODAY
Results Yesterday Satisfactory
but More Money
Needed
Tagging for the Camp Cody Ball and
Bat fund will continue today until the
necessary funds are secured.
The campaign carried on yesterday
was successful, but it was not exten
sive enough to reach all University
people, and it Is expected that those
who were not reached yesterday will
be approached today. Faculty mem
bers and University employes will re
quire most of the attention of solici
tors today.
The co-eds who were on the Job yes
terday were Nfor the most part en
thusiastic about the response of the
University. Only in a few instances
have solicitors been turned down flat
ly, and in this number were Included
the usual per cent of chronic head
shakers. The canvass, if successful
this morning, - will . show that Ne
braskans do not value a quarter in
their own pocket more than they do
the Pleasure of making it possible for
some Cornhusker in the service to play
at the great out-door game.
Bethany
The Bethany college quintet de
feated Washburn Wednesday night
by a 37-18 score on the LIndsborg
court. It was Bethany's ninth con
ference victory.
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