- J.. -- W J V Fhe Daily Neb r ask an vmTxx. NO. 39. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1920. PRICE FIVE CENTS. eskers tack tate re rem Nebraska May Meet Princeton Team In Debate Fall Bef o nS At .ill BEZDEK HUE VICTORIOUS III 6RIIII6 BATTLE WITH HERS Pen State Take Long End of Score in Saturday Contest RESULT WAS IN DOU8T UNTIL FINAL QUARTER. Marvelous Speed of Eastern Backfield Makes Valiant Fight a Futile One. STATE COLLEGE. Penn., Nov. 6. The Penn State eleven de feated the Cornhusker squad Saturday by the score of 20 to 0. This pame terminated Nebraska's invasion of the east. The Huskers broke even on the trip, defeating the Rutpers crew and losing to the Penn State aggregation. The Penn Staters admitted that the Huskers were the most for midable foe they have met this season. Penn State's wonderful aerial attack combined with an occasional fifty yard jaunt by Way, the stellar Quaker half back, spelled defeat for Ne braska's warriors. The outcome of the game was in doubt until the last quarter when Way, substituting for Lightner, romped around the Huskers ends repeatedly for large gains which resulted in Penn State's last two touch downs. The game opened with Penn State kicknig to Nebraska. An exchange or punts followed and Nebraska had the ball in the middle of the field. Hart ley pot away around the end for forty-two yards bringing the ball to the Quaker eight yard line. The Hufkcrs tried bucking the line for three downs but could not gain. New man executed a pass but the ball went mild and was brought to the Tenn State twenty yard line and put in:o play. Killinger booted the ball into Ne b:a?V:a's territory and Weiler returned The kirk. Welter's punt went out of bounds fifteen yards from the line or scrimmage. A forward pass. Killing r to Haines, brought the ball to Nebraska's twelve ard line. The Quakers took the ball to Nebraska's two yard line on straight football but the Husker line tightened up and held the Pennsyl v&nians for downs. Moore, who was substituted for Hubka. punted from behind the goal line out of danger. The first period ended with Penn State In possession of the ball on Ne braska's twenty-one yard line. Score: Nebraska. 0: Penn State. 0. i Continued on Page FouM Friday Football Colleges. Hastings, 28: Peru, 0. VVesleyan, 41; Corner. 0. York, 28; Central. 0. Doane, 21; Midland. 0. High Schools. Lincoln. 19; Omaha Central. 6. Uni. Place, 42; State Farm Aggies. 0. Havelock. 27; Seward, 0. Orleans. 14; Holdrege, 6. North Platte, 65; Gothenburg. 0. Chester. 16; Washington. Kas., 6. Superior, 56; Fairbury, 0. Burr Oak, Kas.. 6; Superior Re serves. 0. Fairfield. 21; Edgar. 7. Wahoo, 20; Bethany. 0. - Aurora, 13; Nebraska C. A.. 7. Tecumseh. 63; Beatrice Reserves, 0. Bayard. 0: Cambridge, 7. Lincoln Reserves, 7; Omaha Re serves, 0. Rcottsbluff. 86; Morrill. 0. Oxford. 3!; Curtis Argles. 1J. Other Colleges. At Austin. Tex. Texas University, 27; Phillips University. 0. At Birmingham. Ala. Mississippi College. 21 : Howard College. 7. At Des Moines Des Moines Catho lic Academy. 13; Sacred Heart Acad emy of Eagle Grove. 0. At Des Moires Des Moines Col lege, 59: owa Wesleyan. 0. At Indianola Morningslde. 52; Simpson, 0. At Brookings. S. D. Souih Dakota State Collegs. 14; HamlJno I'niwstJy (St Paul), 0. At Valparaiso. Ind Valparaiso. 41: St. Louis University. 0. HOW THEY LINED UP. Nebraska 0. Pos. Penn State 20 Swanson le Brown Pucelik It Beck (C) W. Munn lg Griffiths Day (C) c Bentz M. Munn rg Rausch Weiler rt Baer Scherer re Hufford Newman qh Killinger Hartley lh Haines Wright rh Lightner Hubka fb Snell Substitutions: Nebraska, Moore for Wright; Wright for Hubka; Hubka for Moore; Thompson for Hubka: Howarth for Wright Pern State. Way for Lightner. Touchdowns, Huf ford, Way. Killinger. Goals from touchdowns, Killinger, 3. Score by reriods: Nebraska . -.. 0 0 0 00 Penn State 0 7 0 13 2C Referee Hadden, Michigan Univer sity. Umpire Cosgrove, ' Cornell Uni versity. Head linesman Eberle, Swarthmore College. BIG CELEBRATION OH AUSTICE DAY Every Ex-Service Man Expected to Take Part in the Parade. Census of Victory Medal Holders to Be Taken in All Uni versity Classes. Every ex-service man in the Uni versity is expected to take part in the hi? parade to be held on Thursday afternoon. A holiday has been de clared for the afternoon in order that every student may participate in the festivities. Carl Peterson, commandant of the University Post of the American Legion, has issued the order that all ex-service man report at the Armory at 1:30 p. m. next Thursday after noon, when the University section of ;l.e parade mill form. The University band will lead the I aiade. followed by girls who took part in the war in any way, carrying the service flag of the University. They will be followed by the marines; then the ex-service men according to the organization to which they be longed in the amy. The R. O. T. C. cadets will follow them. Marines in Parade. The marine national headquarters at Kansas City are sending the marine standards and standard bearers, also uniforms for all marines who take r.art in the parade Thursday. This will be a feature of the parade. The LTniversity committee on ar rangements for the parade and cele bration are: Dean Buck. Carl H. (Continued on Page Four) Hard Times Party Staged By W. A. A. The "Hard times" party given by the Women's Athletic Association Salur dry afternoon was attended by a gay crowd of weirdly costumed girls. Most of the afternoon was spent to dancing. In the dining room girls gathered about a huge bowl bobbing for apples, endeavored to eat dough rnts suspended on strings and drank cider. A program was given toward the close of the afternoon. Ruth Ells worth and Dorothy Seacrest danced. Margaret Hager gave a reading. "Hex vonlmous Pop an th Baby." Adelhelt Dettman and Betty Clark appeared in rlever sVH. an Interpretation of Tm Littla Prairie Flower" and T" a Dried Prune." Martha. Krojrman, chairman of the of-trrofitee, snrcd all girls who wnt to become member of W. A. A. to take part in th it fporl on the W. A. A- fU program, hockey. An announcement concerning the game will be mad later. Crowd to Hear Penn State Returns Vies with Election Jam in Size Who said that football is losing Its prestige as the most popular Ameri can college game? Who declared that football is "going out of style," so to speak? If the surging crowds that thronged the streets in front of both city newspaper offices Saturday is any criterion, football as a sport is still in the growing stage, when popu larity is considered. The mass of people students, busi ness men, business women, instruc tors men, women and children of every profession and every walk of life that yelled and cheered and hooted before the scoreboard which echoed the results of far away, vied with the election jam of Tuesday night for enthusiasm. Someone told us that the election crowd was not half so rampant and excited as the mob that awaited results from Penn SCHOOL DEBATE NAmENT Dozen High Schools to Compete Next May in Battle for State Honors. Professor Fogg Re-elected Head of League Which is Largest in County. A debating tournament with ten or a dozen teams in the battle tor state championship honors at the Univer sity of Nebraska next May is the innovation adopted by the Nebraska High School Debating League meeiin? Thursday at Omaha, Every district championship school will send its team for the tournament which will continue through probably three days. Supt. R. D. Kuns, Superior, moved the innovation be made. The innovation is a still farther earning out of the plan in force last May when inter-district championship teams competed, instead of indi vidual representatives of champion ship schools. The competing teams will come prepared to maintain on short notice either side of the League question for the fourteenth annual contests, "Ke solved. That the literacy test restric tion on immigration should be re pealed." Beatrice won the championship in lf'20 in a whirlwind conflict of logic with Lincoln. Fogg is Re-elected. Prof. M. M. Fogg, who organized the League in 1908, was re-elected president. Supt R. B. Carey, Ash land, was re-elected secretary-treasurer. They were empowered to ar range details for the tournament, which will be the largest of its kind (Continued on Page Four) NEWS OF Harding Off on Vacation Trip. ON BOARD PRESIDENT-ELECT HARDING'S SPECIAL TRAIN Start ing yesterday for a month's vacation trip to southern Texas and Panama. President-elect Harding laid aside the last cares of the presidential cam paign for a real rest and vacation be fore taking up the responsibilities of his administration. U. S. Mission in Hands of Reds. LONDON. An American mission in South Russia has fallen into the hands of the soviet forces, according to the Moscow newspaper Pravda. as quoted in a wireless dispatch today from the soviet capital. According to the newspaper the mission was headed by General Morel, who had the task of combating the bandits in the white army. Socialists Permitted to Meet in Switzerland. BERNE, Switzerland. The Swiss gcvM-nTr.ent has decided to grant free entrance In Switzerland to members of the international socialist comrrea meeting Ik Tierne, December 6. T congress will be composed of repre sentatives of the groups that have PLANNED State. Football is just beginning upon a career of undreamed-of popularity. Don't think that because your father was a "star" on the gridiron in the early "eighties" that the sport is nearing or has reached its zenith. Just because a few master motion pictures are produced, we do not say the pinnacle of motion picture pro duction has been reached; these few productions show us that the field is so wide that these super-features are necessary to help in the development of the profession. Football will be just as popular tomorrow as it is today. Our predic tion is that it will be far more popu lar in days to come! Can't we feel just a little pride in the Tact that Nebraska helped to make it so? INTERNATIONAL HELD AT STATE FARM Sixty-four Head of Prize Stock Exhibited By Students cf Agriculture. College to Send Team to Big Show at Chicago to Represent state in Contest. Sixty-four head of horses, cattle, sheep and hogs, that are to represent Nebraska at the International Li-e Stock Exposition at Chicago this winter, were exhibited and judged by students of the College of Agriculture at the "Baby" International held at the State Farm judging pavilion last Friday night This is an annual event and is held to show the public the animals to be sent to the Chicago show and to give students practice and experience in handling and judg ing live stock. The proceeds from the show will go towards defraying expenses of the University stock judging team at Chi cago. The College of Agriculture sends a team each year to compete at the big exposition at Chicago and also at the live stock show at Denver, but they have been compelled to pay their own expenses. The average student can hardly afford this cost and the student body is making an effort to help the team by raising a fund. Campbell Judge of Show. Dr. C. W. Campbell of the Kansas College of Agriculture, who has a national reputation, was judge or the show. He made his awards according to the student's ability to show his animal. Dr. Campbell gave reaons for his placings in each class. An orchestra, a male quartet and (Continued on Page Four) THE DAY refused to accept the twenty-one con ditions for adherence to the third In ternationale at Moscow as laid down by Nikolai Levine, the Russian soviet premier. Germany Considers Closing Big Schools. LONDON. Consideration is being given by the. German government of the advisability of closing the German universities of Halle. Griefswald and Marburg, according to .an Amsterdam dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph company quoting Berlin advices. It is said this step would be taken for reasons of economy, but that it would be possible to support financially the universities of Cologne, Bonn. Heidel berg and Karlsruke. Expelled for Frat Membership. HASTINGS. Neb. The members of the board of education approved the action of Superintendent Staley and Principal Johnsoi for epeItc fonr students from the high school for belnjj ro embers of the Kappa Alpha Phi fraternity. The action was taken nnder the statute forbidding secret societies In high school. NEBRASKA MAY CLASH WITH PRINCETON FORENSIC TEAM Sousa and His Band Here Tuesday Night Sousa and his band, accompanied by Famous soloists, will give a con ceit in the City Auditorium Tuesday night, November 9th. The concert will hold more than usual interest for Lincoln people for Edward Wall's "LhSbib of Mine" will be sun,? a tn encore by Mary Baker, soprano, j nd "Tin American Indian" will be taker, froia themes recorded and suggsj'.ed by Thurlow Lieurence. Both Mr. W:l tnd Lieurance are Lincoln men. The band, in its twenty-nine cars of travel has had unparelleled success, touring Europe five times and taking one trip around the globe. The band, since i:s reorganization after the end of the war, has been drawing im mense croyds. At the completion of the recent two-weeks tour of New England the records of attendance showed that over 60,000 persons, and average of more than 4,000 per day had heard the great bandmaster. GIRL SOCCER TEAMS SELECTED FOR GAMES Classes Will Compete For Honors In Tourney To Be Held This Week. Four Divisions To Meet In Effort To Determine Championship Of University. Class teams which will play in the girl's inter-class soccer tournament were announced Friday afternoon by Ruth Fickes, W. A. A. soccer sports leader. The tournament was eehe duled for Saturday but a muddy field made playing impossible out-of-doors and soccer cannot be played success fully indoors. It is hoped that the tournament can be played off some time this week. The teams are: Seniors: Ruth King, Martha Krog man. Ruth McKenney, Mary Shepard. Ada Stidworthy, Ruth DuBois, Rowena Pollard. Sue Stille and Ruth Carr. Juniors: Katherine Wolfe, Margaret Henderson. Alice Stevens, Mary Hardy, Helen Clark, Eleanor Snell. Mannie Roberts, Betty Ball (tempo ran' captain), Joselyn Stone, Ruth Fickes and Anabel Rorslam. Sophomores: Beatrice Ballard, Ruby Damme. Adelheit Dettman. Bessie Epstein. Margaret Falconer, Beulah Grabill, Lucy Henneman. Helen Kennedy, Katherine Matchett (captain), Dorothy Whelpy and Joyce Rundstrom. Freshmen: Francis Bable, Landa Neulin. Lois Pederson. Josephine Key- man. Marie Snavely, earl Safford (captain). Iois Shephard and Nell Wood. Ag Judging Team Visits Cambridge Preparatory to the selection of the agriculture stock judging team to go to the international live stock exposi tion at Chicago, a squad of ten men was taken to Cambridge to practice on the purbred herds of Mousel Bros., homas Andrews, ind "Mr. Rodweil. The squad was headed by Prof. W. IL Savin of the department of animal husbandry' and consisted of the fol lowing students: C. E. Atkinson. K. A. Clark. A. K. Hepperly, L. W. Ingham, W. V. Lambert, R, L. Schoen, C. 1 CrowelL L. F. Smith. W. S. Rice, and P. F. Toggart. Five men and an alternate will be chosen from this squad to repre sent the state at the big Chicago show. The men will start east about November 1$ and visit herds of stock on tielr way to Chicago. The Neb raska baata was second in the Inter national content UH year, being but 16 points below the winners, i Easterners Query Husker Coach Re garding Possibility of Christmas Clash. SCARLET AND CREAM ANXIOUS FOR CONTEST. Professor Fogg Wires Coast School Willingness to Enter into Agreement Recognition by Princeton Uni versity of Nebraska in the field of inter-eollepiate debate and the possibility of a Nebraska-Princeton debate in Lincoln Christmas vacation is the news that came Friday to Cornhusker students" of argumentation and debate. "Glad to arrange debate. What question?'' was the prompt tele graph reply of Prof. M. M. Forr to the following telegram from Alfred McCormiek, chairman of the Princeton Debate committee : "Princeton debating team mak ing western trip in Christmas vacation. Would you be inter ested in debating with us! Wire reply earliest possible moment." Favorable to such an east-west debate were debaters and profes sors interested in this phase of University intellectual activity at an impromptu conference, on re ceipt of the telejrram. in the Col lege of Law hallway. "Sure!" said Dean Warren A. Seavey. a Harvard man. "Good idea." said Prof. W. G. Hastinsrs. "Let's have it." said Prof. II. II. Foster (Cornell and Harvard). "Cer tainly, we oueht to have it." said Prof. G. X. Foster. Nebraska de bater arainst Illinois in 1910 and Iowa in 1011 and Chicago debater against Northwestern in 1013. -Prospects for Victory. Nebraska's speakers, now in col lege, in the Iowa debates last spring on Article Ten of the League ot Nations are Oscar Drake. Law '22: Louis Finkelstein. Law '22; feci! Strimple. Law '22; and Robert Van Pelt, '20, Law '22. At Princeton, which has met Har vard and Yale annually for nearly thirty years, training in debate has (Continued on Pace Four) Saturday Football At Boston Boston College 34; Bos ton University, 0. At West roint Army, o-; Valley, 0. . At Princeton. . ruuLnu.. Freshmen. 17: Harvard Freshmen. t. At Cambridge Hanaro, i. mm. ton. 14. At Philadelphia Pennsylvania, i. Pittsburgh. 27. ... At New York-Cornell. 3, I 'art- mouth. 14. ,,, At New Haven-Yale. 14: uro-u. . At Syracue Syrarue, 14; Washing ton and Jefferson. 0. At State college -Pennsylvania State, 20; Nebraska. 0. At New York swaniiiu""-. - Columbia. 7. At Chicago-Illinois. 3; Chicago 0. . At Columbus-Michigan. .; Ohio State, 14. . ,. At Minneapolis -Wisconsin. 3. Minnesota, 0. ... T At Indianapolis Centre. ... I Pauw, 0. .. At Detroit-Tufts. 2:,Det1.t-rfik. At Indianapolis-Butler.. 21. Frank lin. 10. .... V,r. At South Bend-ruraue. v. Dame, 28. . Vnr,v At Iowa City-Iowa. 20; North western. 0. ... .. At Denver-Denver Ini., 16. toio- lado Mines, 6. . r , At Boulder I tan -. rado Uni., 0. At Colorado Springs-Wyoming UnL. 17; Colorado College .0 At Norman-Oklahoma, V. . Kansas. 9 At Colurus-yissouri. 10; Kansas KM Omaha-Ames. IT: Cn W At Cedar Rapids-Coe. 14, Gnn BeAt peMte-Sarford. 3: W.shmg-t0AtPortland-Multooniah. 0; Gon- daga University, 7. .,. At Walla Walla-Wbilnian. Montana, 7. ... At R.n tv..iv California. . Washington State. 0.