The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 06, 1918, Image 2

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    The-Daily nebraskan
XVIII. NO. 32
UNIVERSITY OF NEHUASKA, LINCOLN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER G, 1918
VOL
TRICE FIVE CENTS
CLASS PRESIDENTS
NAME COMMITTEES
Bryans and Ellerbrock Appoint
Their Assistants for the
Present Semester
Thirty-seven Seniors and Twenty
six Juniors Receive the
Coveted Honors
The presidents of the two upper
classes of the university today cut
the first political pie of the year when
they announced the chairmana and
associates for various committees who
will hold office for the ensuing semes
ter. The honorable presidents did not
disclose whether they appointed their
assistants because of their good work
in stuffing the ballot box or because
of the faithful, winning, and political
smiles which lured innocent voters to
cast their ballot for "the best man."
A Vsl of lower class appointments
will be published tomorrow.
President Wilson D. Bryans of the
senior class announces the follow
ing senior committees:
Senior Informal
Robt. Wenger, Chairman.
Wm. Holt, M. C.
Helen Doty.
Florence Jenks.
Mildred Bowers."
Leonard . Kline.
Social
Sarah Heiter, Chairman.
Eliza Gamble. .. -Jturh
Welch.
Mildred" Holtz.
Athletics
Wilmar L. Millar, Chairman.
Wm. Maddox.
B. F. Silsbee.
Lyman Meade.
Pin
Katherine Kohl, Chairman.
Leroy Fulk.
Elenor Bennett
Dolly Lutzeharms.
Senior Hop
n. V. Stevens, Chairman.
Ralph Thorpe, M. C.
Walter Blunk.
Charles Killian.
RayWenk.
Louise Jones.
Katharyn Howey.
Helen Dill.
Jeanette Adams.
Dorothy Pettis.
Debate
Merlin Springer, Chairman.
C E. Johnson.
Cap and Gown
Francis Whitmore, Chairman.
Dwight Kirsch.
Katharine Newbranch.
Genevieve Bechter.
Gwendolyn Drayton.
Hanna McCorkindale.
Orville Ellerbrock, president of the
Junior class, announces the following
J'Jnior committees:
Junior Informal
Glenn Hopkins, Chairman.
Charles C. Stretton, Master of C.
Janet Thornton.
Alice Temple.
Tatricia Maloney.
Herman Thomas.
Harold McMahon.
Harold Matthews.
' Alice Sedgwick.
Junior Hop
Gaylord Davis, Chairman.
""old T. Sandusky, Master of C.
Helen Glltner.
nevieve Addleman.
J ebb Richards.
Ed Bush.
Jeorge Farnum.
frothy Wetherald.
Fa Breesre.
Junior Athletic
rschlenberg. Chairman.
Ernest Hubka
7an Adkins.
ArUor Yost
firm. ,.Junior Olympics
"M'Mahon, Chairman.
'""0 Uy.
Harr
er Rice.
Howard
Murfin.
PLANS ATHLETIC
STUNTS FOR SOLDIERS
William Lantx to Succeed Walter
Judd as Leader of Y. M. C.
A. Work
V. M. C. A. work at the University
of Nebraska will In the near future be
taken over by William Lantz because
of the withdrawal from school of
former President Walter II. Judd,
who went to an officers training
school.
Workft-s of the "V" here have a
great time In store for S. A. T. C. men
just as soon as a military schedule
has been completed. They will t!n
consult university and military olTl
cials and ascertain Just what hours
may be given over to sports ord games
of different sorts. It Is the desire o:
"Y" officials to give the maximum
of recreation in the least possible
time. Mr. W .1). Ilealy, who Is wait
ing his call for activo servire. will
act as physical director. Coach "Pap"
Kennedy of Kansas university is to
be director of "Y" athletics for S. A.
T. C. units of fourteen states which
includes Nebraska.
The Y. M. C. A. here have already a
large supply of footballs, baseballs,
lox.'ng gloves .etc., on hand ready to
atart a good time for the men just as
?con as a schedule can be arranged
Rivalry between companies is going
to be encouraged in such things as
boxing bouts, wrestling and football.
TEACHERS WANTED AT
- NEW. MEXICO SCHOOLS
Professor A. .A. Reed received a
call Tuesday for teachers to fill posi
tions in the high school and grade
schools at Raton, New Mexico. Those
wishing to apply for the positions
mentioned in the following letter see
Professor Reed or write direct:
"We are in need of a man to handle
manual training in the high school and
seventh and eighth grades, military
drill, and athletic coach. The position
will pay fifteen hundred to ihe right
man. Board and room here cost
about forty a month. Enrollment 'in
the high school two hundred, popula
tion five thousand, altitude, 6700.
Three hundred days of the the three
hundred sixty-five we have sunshine,
school is closed now because of the
Influenza, but expect it to open with
in three or four weeks.
"L. C. RHOADS,
"Supt. of Srhools."
A huge corn crop, is shortly to be
harvested, making Impossible a short
age of mush.
Are you studying French so as to be
able to talk with the boys "when they
come back?
Cuffed trousers are to bo- abandon
ed by federal orders to save materia:,
says an exchange. Why not make
men wear knickerbockers and save
more material?
Yes, the great American college boy,
like all the other great American boys
from farm and factory, city .town ana
country, is gifing a good account of
himself on the fighting line.
. To achieve victory we must have
two armies: One that fights; one that
saves. Every patriot will be a mem
ber of one of these armies.
STAFF POSITIONS OPEN
Applications will be receiwd
at the student activities' office
for the following positions on
the staff of The Daily Nebras
kan: Business Manager.
Associate Editor.
News Editor.
No applications will be con
sidered later than Friday at 10
o'clock. State qualifications and
experience.
T"
HUSKER LADS PRACTICE
UNTIL FALL OF NIGHT
Lose Three Men in Call for Offi
cers and Coaches Face Job
Before Missouri Game
McMahon Again Dons Moleskins
and Takes His Place in the
Back Field
The Bhadows had begun to fall and
the street lights had begun to glimmer
as the Husker football warriors
tramped homo from their daily prac
tice drill at the M street pary lasi
n'ght. Coaches Kline and Schissler
worked long and hard with their men,
thift'ng players and plugging up the
holes made bythe departure of Bres
tel. Basset and SImpkir.s to the field
artillery officers' training school at
Camp Taylor, Kentucky.
Back Field Reconstructed
The back field underwent almost a
complete reconstruction. Brestel had
been worked at a halfback position for
a couple of weeks and then substituted
for Captain Erney Hubka, who was
switched from fullback to left tackle
in order to strengthen the line. Bres
tel left for the training camp and his
station was left vacant.
Halfback Schellenberg was laid out
with an Injured neck in the Monday
scrimmage and may not get back In
the lineup before the Saturday against
the Tigers. Harold McMahon's return
to the fold after two and a half weeks
on his back with the Influenza, helped
lighten the burden, of rebuilding the
bacK new. Martin and Hartley were
run in and broken in to the new har
ness of the backfield.
The skin a good many young men
love to touch, take it from the old
I scout, is the horsehide pocketbook
father carries.
SOLDIER-SCHOLARS
HAVE FANTASTICAL
STUDYING METHODS
Professors are probably at a loss'to
know by what methods and at what
times their students prepare their les
sons and under what influences the
soldier-scholar is led to make such
unusually perfect recitations. If some
evening the inquiring mind of the
teacher should compel him to turn his
wandering slops barrackswards and
iead him into the solitude of th? stu
dents' quarters, he would find hi3 pu
pils doing unheard of stunts hi their
raarner of study.
In one corner with Ms note
book balanced in the window
sits a lonely private laboriously pen
ning pages of manuscript dealing, pos
sibly, with his i.leas of what should
lie Ihe terms of sn armistice with the
central powers. On the floor sits an
other, his foot ber.eath his bunk usi.it,'
his cot for a desk and leaning agains'.
his suitcase. His troubled brow sym
bolizes Math. And yet another stu
dent sits on his cot holding his
only suitcase across his knees and
writes beneath the glow of the hall
light. Giving life to all this show of
intense concentration is the combined
melody of voice and instrument. Th-i
piano in the hall is receiving a great
deal of attention as is the "uke" or
banjo in the far off nook. Every one
is busy, either studying or recreating,
eating or sleeping.
Under the combined influence of
physical exercise, good and regular
meals, early bed time and early ris'tig,
musical entertainment and strkt dis
cipline the boys are receiving tne
best and most extensive education pos
sible. At present unhandy methods
Lof study must be dealt with, tiresome
means of writing roust be usea an,
other unusual practices taken into
consideration but all tuese and more
the boys do cheerfully, and smiling.
Better facilities for study will be made
soon, both to the benefit and Jny of
the students.
LARGE NUMBER VOTES CAST
BY KHAKI CLAD STUDENTS
S. A. T. C. Men Are Not to Be
Cheated Out of the
Ballot
Nearly six hundred of the khaki
clad S .A. T. C. men at the university
took advantage of the opportunity to
cast the'r vote yesterday, and march
ed In groups cf twenty-five to and
from the polls. Practically every mar.
in Ihe unit of voting age. dropped a:,
vote in the ballot box at some t me
during the day.
The university soldiers were not al
lowed to stop and loiter around the
polling booths, and neither were they
permitted to aid in the distribution of
campaign matter, but were required
to return immediately to the barracks
on the campus. S. A. T. C. mon of the
college section voted between the
hours of ten o'clock and noon, while
those in Section "B" of the detach
ment commenced voting at three
o'clock, and continued until the clos
ing of the polls. But about one hun
dred men of Section "A" were eligible
to the vote because so many or these
men have not yet reached their ma
jority. In Section "B" fully two-
thirds of the men were eligible to
vota.
REFERENCE LIBRARIAN
IN SPECIAL WAR WORK
Miss Josephine Lammers has re
signed her position as reference librar
ian at the-university library, and left
for wnhinB-on, ik Sunday even
ing. She will look up material for a
history of the Marines, as no such pub
lication has ever been made. Miss
Lammers will receive the rank of 'ser
geant in the U. S. Marines. She was
graduated from the University of Ne
braska in 1911.
Whatever else a salient on the west
ern front may be, it Is no place for a
summer vacation.
During the Civil war "conscientious
objectors" got away with it if they
had $300 to pay for a substitute.
The Fourth of July next year will
be almost a world holiday. That is
the way events are trending.
An addition to the list of dead lan
guages would seem to be one of the
possibilities of the near future.
Now and then a true patriot fur
nishes evidence of the fact by refus
ing to try to sing the national air.
Marshal Joffre says that victory is
near. It is not yet near enough, how
ever, to loose our grip on any weapon.
Apiarists report that bees are speed
ing up In their production of honey.
Even the bee wants to beat the Hun.
If we believe the rumors, the for
mer czar dies a couple of deaths a
week in addition to being assassinated
occasionally.
The latest on the list of non-essentials
is a good loafing place.
The best soldier Is the one who has
just received a letter from home.
As for the Yanks, the longer they
are in this scrap the harder they fight.
The man who is looking for work
now .finds "Welcome" on every door
mat. There are worse things than being
caught in a slacker raid, providing you
are not a slacker.
Too many a war garden was raised
to give the bugs a fat fede. Fight
off the Huns, men.
People who begin the use of gas
bombs should know which way the
w'nd blows.
UNIVERSITY OPENS
WAR WORK CAMPAIGN
Monster Mass Meeting to be Held
Friday Morning Rev. Har
mon to Speak
Nebraska to Raise $25,000 of a
Total of 250
Millions
The University of Nebraska has
again been summoned to put forth its
best efforts to swing its part of the
United War Work campaign which
opens November 11. A monster mass
meeting to arouse the enthusiasm of
university students has oeen sched
uled for Friday morning at 10 o'clock
at the city auditorium, and all classes
will be dismissed from 10 to 12. The
entire S. A. T. C. unit will march in
a body to the auditorium.
The university's quota In this nation-wide
campaign to raise 250 mill
ions for the actual promotion ot war
activities is $25,000. This is but
$10,000 more than Nebraska students
contributed in the campaign last year
when their quota was liberally over
subscribed. Since that time the ulti
mate goal of the national campaign
has been Increased fifty per cent, due
to the" fact that we now have over
two million soldiers in France and an
increasingly larger number in training
here.
H armor. to Speak
Rev. II. H. Harmon, prominent Y. M.
C. A. worker who has recently return
ed from the front,.. willJblba, r.ln
speaker'at the Friday morning meet
ing which will serve as the first reg
ular convocation of the ' year. An
other speaker closely connected with
war work has also been promised by
the Omaha headquarters. Patriotic
songs will be a feature of the pro
gram. No subscriptions will be so
licited at this meeting, the purpose
being merely to put forth the aims of
the campaign.
Seven Drives in One
Seven organizations of world-wide
Importance have banded their forces
together to conduct the movement,
and in their joint organization are
authorized by the government for
whom they work exclusively.0" They
are the Y. M. C. A.,' fyjf'W:' OI (A.,
Knights of Columbus.JewIfch. 'Welfare
Board, War Camp Corhmuftity"Ser
vice, Salvation Army, and the Ameri
can Library Association. Each of
these has a special line of worx ans
with their combined efforts form a
powerful organization. The Y..M. C.
A., Knights of Columbus, and the Sal
vat'on Army are noted for their won
derful work at the front. In the bat
tle zones all activities are a part of
free service to H13 government, but
behind the lines each organization
strives to be self mainta'ning, yet
giving the maximum cf free service to
the boys in khaki.
rosters advertising the campaign
have been widely circulated and the
greatest possible publicity is be'ng
given the war work.
DR- J. A. L. WADDELL
COMPOSES WAR BALLAD
'After the War" Song For Sol
diers and Sailors by Noted '
Engineer
Dr. J. A. L. Waddell of Kansas City,
Missouri, has written a new war song
of unusual force and spirit, called
"After the War." The piece is writ
ten to the music of the song by Chas.
K. Harris, "After- the Ball." Dr.
Waddell composed his new war son;:
for the soldiers in the trenches, in the
training camps, and on the high seas,
and no uuubt its popular refrain will
be sung from coast to coast by tbo
boys In khaki.
Dr. Waddell has always been a
(Continued on pa i)
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