The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 10, 1920, Image 1

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    he Daily Nebraskan
VOL. XX. NO. 41.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1920.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
GIBAHTIC PARADE
IKE DM
Heroes of Three Wars to Participate
in March Through Main Streets of
City Tomorrow Afternoon.
Co-eds Urged to Join
Wesleyan and Lincoln High School
Organizations to Co-operate In
Celebration of Holiday.
A parade representing heroes of the
World War. Civil War veterans, fight
ers of the Spanish-American War,
and veterans of foreign wars will fea
ture the second anniversary of the
signing of the Armistice tomorrow,
November 11. University classes will
be dismissed for the afternoon.
The line of march, which was
issued Tuesday afternoon by Com
mandant Carl H. Peterson of the Uni
versity Post of the American Legion,
indicates the size of the parade. The
University section will form at
Twelfth and R streets at 1:30 p. m.
U will contain the University band,
the service flag of the University or
Nebraska, ex-marlnes. former mem
bers of the air service, ex-soldiers, ex
sailors and members of the Univer
sity R. O. T. C. cadet corps. These
groups will march In the order they
are listed.
The parade proper will be lead by
;he marshal and his aides followed by
the police. Following these units will
come the high school band, the mem
bers of G. A. R. and auxiliary, the
Spanish-American War veterans, the
ini.t Star Flair, the American Legion
band, those who were wounded In
the World War, the 134th and 355th
Infantry, the memberSjOf the Lincoln
Post of the American Legion, the
Wesleyan band, veterans of foreign
wars, ex-marines, ex-"gobs." the Rain
bow division, the 88th Infantry.
colored troops, the Nebraska State
hand, the medical corps. "the dentists
who served during the war. army
nurses, members of the Red Cross
corps, canteen workers, the American
Lezlon auxiliary, and the Cotner band.
Tl;e University section will make a
'.og extension to the parade.
Msny Service Men to Participate.
Over four hundred ex-service men
n the University alone are ex
uMk-d to take part in the parade.
They will march in civilian clothes.
with no distinction as to rank.
Arrangements have been made for
those men who were Incapacitated in
the war and cannot march in the
parade. Cars will be provided for
them.
All members of the University R. O.
T. C. who were at any time previous
ly connected with any branch of the
United States service, will be excused
from their places in the cadet ranks
and will be allowed to march with
the members of the unit with which
they were formerly affiliated.
"Armistice Day yiis year should be
ebserved more as a memorial 'day."
a!d a committee member yesterday.
"There will be on monster celebra
tions tomorrow as in 1918. but
throughout the country the day will
be quietly observed with parades, ban
quels and memorial services."
(Continued on Page Four J
NOTICE FOR DISABLED
SERVICE MEN IN THE
UNIVERSITY.
All disabled ex-ervice men
who are unable to march in the
parade on Armistice Day, should
telephone at once to Rev.
Copsey, B6469, and care will
be furnished so that they may
ride. The place of assembly
is at the Lincoln V. M. C. A. at
1:30 p. nC tomorrow. If unable
to get to the meeting place, a
car with be sent you.
By C. C. ENGBERGT
Executive Dean.
Faculty and Students:
I wish to endorse most
heartily the request of the local
committee that all University
men, faculty and students, who
have served in the army or
navy or marine corps are urged
to participate in the parade on
Armistice Day at 2 p. m. All
who are entitled to march In
tv procession should e'der
it a privilege and an honor to
do so.
6. AVERY. Chancellor.
WATCH
THIS
SPACE
UNTIL
NOVEMBER
TWELFTH
LAW UPPERCLASSMEN TO
ENTERTAIN FROSH STUDENTS
President Schlabitz, of Junior Class,
Hopes to Make Smoker Annual
Affair in College.
A plan without precedent in the Ne
braska Law College was established
Tuesday morning, November 9, at a
meeting in Law 201. at 11 o'clock.
when the members -of the third-year
class in that college decided to
sponsor a reception and smoker to
be given by the upperclassmen for
the Freshmen Law students sometime
the latter part of November.
President O. F. Schlabitz of the
Junior barristers, In a few words ex
pressed the hope that this would be
come an annual custom of the college.
It is the opinion of some of the Fresh
men that they will return the courtesy
with a smoker for members of the
upperclasses of the Law College in
the spring. The purpose of the first
get-together is to help the first-year
students to form acquaintances amor.!?
he upperclassmen. Regent Judson
will be asked to talk during the
evening.
The smoker and program will be
hld either in the Elks home or the
Lincoln Chamber of Commerce build
ins. The expense of the entertain
ment will be pro-rated among the
ut perclassmen in the College of Law.
CROSS COUNTRY TEAM
ENTERS VALLEY MEET
Tryouts to Be Held this Afternoon
Occurs Next Saturday.
Hvsktr Runners Will Also Participate
in Western Conference Races
November 20..
Cross-country race plana include a
tryout at 4 o'clock thU afternoon for
places on the team to be entered in
the Missouri Valley Conference race
at Des Moines next Saturday. All
who take part m the Wednesday try
out will be eligible to eSter the handi
cap race, which will be held here
Monday. November 15. Ribbons will
be awarded for the first ten places.
Today's tryout U the second of a
heriee. In former years Just one try
out was held to select the members
of the, team. A series was planned
this year so that men who did not
have much practice at the time of the
first tryout would have an opportunity
to get on the team later. The mem
bership of the team may not be the
same all season.
To Enter Big Ten Race.
Besides the race at Des Moines
next Saturday plans have been made
tn enter a team in the Western Inter
collegiate race at the University of
ll'jnois at Champaign, November '20.
in the Y. M. C. A. race to be held
here Thanksgiving day and in the
V. M. C. A race at Omaha on that
ay. Six teams will compete at Des
Moines and forty or fifty men. as
n-'Jviduals and teams, in the T. M.
C. A. race here and at Omaha
Six men will compose each team in
'he Western Inter-Collegiate race, but
orly the records of the tnl five mtn
of each (earn win count In the result.
Thus. If one man Is disabled, bis
record will not affect lie reecrd of
the team.
Sophisticated Upperclassmen
Can Err the Same as Freshmen
Freshmen should really forget their
apologies and ashamed looks as they
murmur that they are only Freshmen,
for some Junior or Senior may be
much more youthful tha nlhey. The
discarded small green caps and the
ever-present blushes of Freshmen are
not the only signs of youth on the
University campus. Although these
other signs of frivolity are perhaps
not as apparent to passersby as are
green caps, often they afford more
merriment.
As the Freshman reaches the digni
fied status of an upperclassman and
learns that there is no fourth floor in
Social Science Hall and does not need
a directory to find his way to the
different sorority houses, his imagina
TO FORM PRESS CLUB
Mass Meeting Tuesday in Law 101 of
All Persons Interested in Any
Form of Newsaper Work.
Organization to Foster Ideals of Pro
fession and Stimulate Interest
in University.
Students of journalism and aspiring
magazine writers of the University
together with all students Interested
in the newspaper game are Invited to
a mass meeting In Law 101 Tuesday
evening for the purpose of organizing
a University Press Club.
The proposed organization is in
tended to stimulate the interest in
Journalism and give every student
with a desire to enter the piofession
a chance to hear prominent Journal
ists and men who know the inside of
the game.'
Membership is to be open to all
students of Journalism, all editors and
reporters on University publications
a well as students who are now
crnnected with the daily papers ot
the city.
Outside speakers of journalistic
prominence will be invited to address
the club and present their views upon
how a student should prepare him
self for the work and what oppor
'vniTies are open to him.
The organization also hopes to ob
tain speakers from among the mem
bers of the Nebraska Press Associa
tion when that group of state editors
gathers in Lincoln during the first of
nest year.
Sigma Delta Chi Behind Movement
Themovement is being fostered by
Delta Chi. national Journalistic
fraternity, and Is the outcome of a
meeting held Sunday afternoon, when
the formation of such a club was sug
gested by Chandler Trimble of the
Department of English, and enthusi
astically endorsed by the members o:
the fraternity.
Theta Sigma Phi. women's national
Journalistic sorority, is expected to
throw Its influence toward making the
Press Club a vital organization in thr
life of the school.
(Continued on Page Four)
NEWS OF
Working on League Plan.
WASHINGTON. Nov. 10 Prelimi
nary work on the plan for an "asso
ciation of nations" promised by
President-elect Harding Is well along,
it was learned here today. Interest
ing facts have already been developed
concerning tbe European attitude
toward an entirely new association.
Harding Enjoys Vacation.
POINT ISABEL. Tex.. Nov. 10
President-elect Warren G. Harding
baa thrown away the restraint of
public life and his chief ambition
has become to land one of the
monster fish. He has donned a soft
shirt and baggy trousers and gone
out into the bay to fish for tarpon.
Labor War Threatens.
CHICAGO, Nov. 10. (United Press)
Rumblings of Impending industrial
rar were beard in Chicago today as
mplcyers and union men prepared
for -. clash over the closed shop
proposition. Employers of niinois
went on record yesterday as favoring
th open shop, which gives non union
men the right to work alongside of
organized labor. The Illinois Manu
facturers' Association also endorsed
the open shop and promised aid to
any of its members who started a
fieht against the closed shop.
Heavy Fighting in Yucatan Province.
MEXICO Crrr. Nov. 19.--One hun
dred fifty-eight lives have been lt
tion couples itself with stories or
Apollo and the heroes of Grimm's
fairy tales, and he becomes aj once
in his own eyes the resulting hero.
When, In upperclassmen garb, he
learnB that he no longer must sub
ordinate himself before his fellow stu
dents, but in turn can show the new
Freshmen how "hopeless" they are,
he takes on an artificial attitude and
his wanderings are far more amusing
than anything ever attempted by a
Freshman. The upperclassman, al
though more sophisticated and college
wordly wise, is not incapable of doing
wrong, and very often appears in a
light that would make the humblest
Freshman stand out like a blaze of
gold on the University horizon.
STUDENTS TO VOTE
ON FEATURE TOWNS
Cornhusker and Dally Nebraskan to
Co-operate in Staging Referendum
Next Tuesday.
Professional Artist Secured for Color
Work in "Nebraska Annual"
Work Progressing.
Nebraska students will have a
chance to vote for their home towns
or whatever other place they want to
back for a place in the 1921 Corn
husker next Tuesday. In accordance
with the plan announced last week,
the Cornhusker management will
stage the referendum with the assist
ance of the Daily Nebraskan.
Coupon ballots will be inserted in
the Daily Nebraskan of November 16
and will be marked and deposited in
a ballot box in Station A. Although
this plan will not permit all students
registered in school an opportunity to
vote, still it will be representative.
The "Nebraska Annual." as the
book has been nick named by the
Cornhusker staff, is to be the biggest
and best annual ever put out at Ne
braska. The feature section is to be
the best that can be obtained and no
expense will be spared to matte it a
truly valuable state section.
Professional Artist Employed.
A professional artist has been em-
nloved to do the color art work. A
considerable amount of this work is
already under way and will be sent to
the engravers soon so as to insure the
best possible art work.
In order to insure absolute fairness
in he selection of towns ot be repre
f:ve towns getting the highest number
cnt d in the Cornhusker. the twenty
rf votes at this time will be voted on
la'er and ten or twelve will be finally
chosen for the Nebraska section.
Hugh Carson, business manager of
the Cornhusker. sent out queries to
business managers of other big uni
ersity annuals to get a comparison
with the Nebraska book. Answers
showed that the Cornhusker could
compare favorably with all of them
:n the" matter of material put into it.
(Continued on Page Tour)
THE DAY
to date in fighting between socialists
and liberals in the state of Yucatan.
The government has rushed six hun
dred rtoops to quell fighting by the
socialists who attacked Meridia. the
raoital. Motul and Tekato. Coin
cidental with the socialist fighting
agitation for a general strike In
Mexico was pressed by communist
societies.
Report of Red Massacre.
PARIS, Nov. 10. An unconfirmed
report of further atrocities by the
Bolshevik! has been brought here by
travelers from Russia.
Italy May Be Rich in Oil.
ROME. Oct 20 (By Mail). Great
interest has been aroused In Industrial
and commercial circles by the an
nouncement that Italy's subsoil, ac
cording to recent experiments, is
extrer-ely rich in mineral oil, which
she v.zb hitherto orced to import
from other countries, chiefly the
United States.
Whiskey Gates May Be Opened.
WASHINGTON. Nov. 10. The
whlpkey flood gates may be opened
by the supreme court decision re
tarding xhiskey held In storage.
Large stocks of the 50.000.000 gal'ons
tf whiskey remaining In bonded ware
houses may be released by this de
cision, it was ststed today. The de
cision may deal a body blow at prohibition.
University Masonic
Club to Be Formed
A meeting of all Master Masons
connected with the University as stu
dents or members -of the faculty, is
called for this evening, at 8 o'clock
In the Temple theater. The purpose
of this meeting Is to form a Univer
sity Masonic Club, membership in
which will be open to any Master
Mason in good standing.
All Masons are asked to attend this
meeting. The pi vlicity committee Is
composed of Prof. S. B. Arenson of
the Chemistry Department, Harry
Reed", '22. and Bert Reed, '21.
North Loup Club is ,
Organized on Campus
Ruth E. Oleson, '22, was elected
president of the newly organized
North Loup Club at a meeting Friday
evening. Gerald Hogan was elected
vice-president; Mary Davis, secretary-
treasurer, and O. T. Babcock, reporter
for the ensuing year.
Following Is the charter member
ship list: Ruth E. Oleson, Gerald
Hogan. Mary Davis, O. T. Babcock.
Ethel Jones, George Hutchlns, Henry
C. Blr.ck, E. J. Babcock. George G.
Gowen, Adelaide Davis, Russell Hill
and G. W. Norrls. There are about
six other students eligible for mem
bership and two faculty members.
Meetings will be held the first and
third Friday evenings of each month.
VARSITY DAIRY CLUB MAKES
PLANS FOR HOLDING SHOW
Big Dairy Exhibition Slated for De-
cember 4 on Farm Campus
Committees Appointed.
At a recent meeting of 'he Varsity
Dairy Club, arrangements were made
to hold a Varsity Dairy Show, Decern
ber 1, at the Dairy building and
judging pavilion, on the University
Farm campus. This will be a three
phase exhibition consisting of a dairy
judging contest, dairy cattle fitting
contest, and dairy manufacturing ex
hibit A continuous moving picture
show will be an mdded attraction.
The purpose of this show is to
f.iouse interest in encouraging ar.d
co-operating with work of all the edu
cational and associative efforts for the
P-'v&ncement of Nebraska's dairy in-
rcFtry. The members of the club
wish to combine the practical phase
of actual work with the scientific in
st ruction of the University in order to
push our college to the front in the
dairy world.
(Continued on Page Four)
W. J. H. F
APPLIES FOR RELEASE
Head of Dairy Deartment Leaves to
Assume Charge of Similar Work
with Capper Farm Press.
Has Been Main Factor in Building Up
Most Modern Dairy Instruction
Plant in Country.
Prof. J. H. Frandsen. head of the
Dairy Department of the College of
Agriculture, has asked the Board of
Regents to releaae bim as aoon as It
is possible to finish all Important
work. Professor Frandsen leaves to
take charge of the dairy department
of the Capper Farm Press as general
dairy' editor and dairy counselor. The
Capper publications have a circulation
of over 1.210,000, principally 'in the
central western states. His salary
will be considerably higher than what
he received fro mthe Universtty.
Proessor Frandsen came to this
department nine years ago when there
were only two Instructors and a very
crowded and poorly equipped dairy
building. He leaves a modern dairy
building and seven instructors.
To Remain in Lincoln.
He will remain in Lincoln for per
haps a year, performing bis duties
here even though the Capper head
quarters are located at Topeka. The
Capper Farm Press has offices in
Omaha. Kansas City, Topeka, St.
Louis. Gridley. Oklahoma City and
Denver.
Professor Frandsen pays tribute to
Dean Burnett and Chancellor Avery
for their splendid co-operation In
building up a dairy department that
has no equal in America and perhaps
the world. Expert hare pronounced
ft i the most modern and best
equipped plant for dairy Instruction
In the United State.
dews
HUSKER PRACTICE
Wintry Breezes Yesterdav Fnw.
Coach Schulte to Resort to Light
Signal Drill Only.
Prepare For Kansas
Freshman Squad Mastering Jayhawk
Formations Gleaned by Scout
Schlssler at Oklahoma.
The Cornhusker football sjuad took
its first workout last night since their
return from the east On account or
the wintry breezes and the muddy
condition of the field Coach Schulte
drilled his men in signal practice only.
With one or two exceptions the squad
reported intact and notwithstanding
the weather conditions showed a great
amount of fight and pep.
The Huskers realize that the Kansas
game will be a hard battle and are
working their hardest to be in the pink
of condition in order to humble the
mighty Jayhawkers before their home
coming crowd next Saturday. More
than any other man on the Husker
squad the Kansas aggregation fears
Hubka. In 1917 and last yer he was
the individual star In the Kansas-
Nebraska games and he alone had the
unch to make the turning scores for
Nebraska. If history repeats itself
in the sport world, Hubka Is due for
a big day next Saturday.
Freshman Learn Kansas Plays.
The Freshman squad devoted the
entire evening to the mastering of the
Jayhawker's plays as learned by
Assistant Coach Schissler who scout
ed the Kansas-Oklahoma game last
Saturday. Although Kansas was de
feated they are said to have a strong
aggregation and promise to give the
Huskers a real battle. The Freshmen,
after a week and a half of rest were
"rarin" to go" last evening and a few
eye-openers are predicted when the
Yearlings spring some of the Jay
hawker's pet plays on the Varsity in
their first scrimmage.
The Huskers will leave Lincoln
Thursday night and will spend th
entire day, Friday, in Kansas City,
where they will take a light workout.
They will leave for Lawrence Satur
day morning. The special train for
students will leave Lincoln Friday
night at 11 o'clock and will returu
Sunday morning at 10 o'clock. Stu
dents who wish to accompany the
team will not have to miss any
classes and it is hoped that a larger
crowd of Husker enthusiasts will be
at the garre at Lawrence next Satur
day than there were Jayhawkers in
Lincoln at the Kansas-Nebraska gatne
next year.
tJnitfrit2 Wnr
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10.
"Ag" Club meeting, 7:30 p. m
Social Science.
Women's Faculty Club meeting, 3-8
p.Vm., Ellen Smith Hall.
Kappa Phi business meeting, eve
ning, Faculty Hall.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11.
Blackstcne Club meeting.
Hastings Club meeting.
Kindergarten Club meeting. 8 p. m.,
Ellen Smith Hall.
Roscoe Pound meeting.
XI Delta meeting. 7 p. m Ellen
Smith Hall.
Green Goblin meeting, 7:15 p. m
Sigma Phi Upsilon house.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12.
Episcopalian Club meeting, 8 p. m ,
2548 Q street
"Ag" Club dance, Lincoln hotel.
University Commercial Club dance,
Commercial Club.
Mystic Fish party, 3-8 P- El,n
Smith Hall.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13.
Wayne Club meeting, 8 P
Faculty Hall.
Delta Tau Delta house dancs.
Bushnell Guild theater parry.
Alpha Sigma Phi house dancs.
Kappa Delta Phi ' I P
Black Masque Freehman party. M
p. m, Eller. Smith Hall.
Pi Phi Chi fall party.