The Daily Nebra kan V0UXXLNO78. H0IEESOF III AHNOUHCED Two From Every Men's Organ ization on Campus Working for Eddy Meetings. TFNTATIVE PROGRAM 1 HAS BEEN ARRANGED Six Central Meetings Are Out lined for February 8, 9 and 10 Program. Two men from every men's organ tation on the campus will meet to day at 7 o'clock at 7 o'clock at El len Smith hall with the co-ed com mittees announced yesterday to hear Ben Chernngton tell of the purposes and pla13 of organization for the three day program of meetings to be given for Nebraska students Febru ,ry 8. 9, and 10 by Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood Eddy. The plans as outlined by the chair man of the central committee caui (or a special convocation on Wednes day, February 8. at 11 o'clock In the Temple for which all classes will be dismissed. Mr. Eddy wil again address the student body on that eve ning on some topic such as, "The challenge of the Present World Sit uation," or "The Challenge of a Ra tional Faith for Modern Man" Mr. Eddy, who for twenty-five years has served without pay as a missionary in the Far Eastern countries and has only recently returned from an extensive survey of religious, social, and industrial investigation of post war Europe is especially fitted to speak to the students on these top ics. He is considered primarily a stu dent leader as all of his work is with the young people in the univer sities of three continents. Thursday and Friday will be given over probably to a convocation each morning at 11 and a larper meeting in the evening. Friday n'ght has been declared closed on account of the Eddy meeting. Sherwood Eddy wjll 'address the morning meeting for the men while Mr. Eddy has a special message ror tne gins. Following are the men who will serve on the large committee of stu dents in co-operation with the ex ecutive committee, the faculty group and some prominent Nebraska alum ni who are interested in the success of the Eddy meetings: Acacia-John Vetter, H. N. Bar nard. Alpha Sigma Phi It. Stephens, Jack Austin. Alpha Tau Omega M. B. Nye, H. F Sandrock. Alpha Theta Chi . F. Uplinger, Roy Gnstafson. Alpha Gamma Rhc O. M. Kruoger, Beta Theta Pi F. W. Winegar, Ward Randol. Bushnell guild H. M. Hinkle, F. S. Oldt. Delta Chi B. O. Dorn, Neil Phil lips. Delta Tau Delta Walter Gass, Glenn Munger. Delta Sigma Delta Hollis Askey, W. A. Weber. Delta Upsilon Hugh Carson, Her bert Brownell, Jr. Farm House K. A. Clark, Arnold Fouts. Kappa Sigma H. McKinley. Lambda Chi. Alpha Hubert Ad kinson, Dale Renner. Onu ga Beta Phi H. S. Tennant, L. F. Xcvak. Phi Alpha Delta E. E. Dornbaugh, Chauncey Woodle. Phi Delta Chi. B. Mikkelson, B Neville. Phi Delta Theta C. K. Seymour, Harold Hartley. Phi Gamma Delta R. A. Ogier, Leo Sherer. Phi Kappa Psi G. H. Sire, D. Noble. Phi Tau Epsilon, A. A. Boettcher; (Continued on page 4.) KIMBALL CAGESTERS TRIM WYOMING UNI Kimball, Neb. Jan. 25 Kimball high school defeated tho University of Wyoming basketbal team at Laramie last night, 30 to 28. Any team desh ,n8 a game should write John Linn, Kimball, Neb. LAST DAY FOR DANCE DRAMA TRYOUT TODAY Today is the last day to try out for eligibility in the W. A. A. dance drama. Twenty-one girls have al ready passed the try-out test. The list of simple techniaue Is nosted on the bulletin board in the gym. Any girl who has Had any instruction in aes thetic dancing can easily make a passing grade in the list. Miss Don na Gustin and Miss Marjorie Barstow will act as Judges this noon. ,The dance drama will be given in the Temple theater in the last spring. Some story will be dramatized thru interpretive dancing. Each girl will be assigned a part which she will work out. Each, girl will also make her own costume. Membership to the Women's Ath letic association, or 100 points will be given to every one who takes part in the dance drama. Girls who do not care for sports can become members of the association in this way. Doro thy Whelplcy is chairman of the com mittee in charge, which is: Marjorie Barstow, irma Johnson, Dorothy Dou- gan, Beulah Grabill. WILL GIVE "ANGEL FACE" AT 0RPHE1 Musical Comedy That Held Long Engagements in East nere Next Week. Under the direction of the Nat Goldstein Producing Co., 'Angel Face' a three act musical comedy will be presented Monday and Tuesday nights and Tuesday matinee at the Orpheum. Victor Herbert is the composer and Harry B. and R. B. Smith are librettists and lyricists of this musi cal which achieved more than average success during its long engagements in New York, Boston, Chicago and Philadelphia. It has youth, beauty, comedy, cleverness and wholesomeness as as sets of the plot and cast. It has the advantage of George W. Lederer's wealth of imagination and skill in such details of producing ensemble drill, novel business and artistic har mony of colors in costuming and set tings. It has vigor and vib in keep ing things always on the move from curtain to curtain. The title character Is the young est of a bevy of daughters of a so ciety woman. Despite her seraphic nickname she is something of an "en fant terrible." She and her sisters are barred from romance and matri mony until the eldest of the family, a blue-stockinged, tortoise-spectacled damsel of uncertain age, is led to the alter. On this plot basis the libret sists rear a story that, complicated by scientist who practices an elixir of youth on a grandmother from Keo kuk, by the search of an amateur de tective for a kidnaped baby, by a sculptor and his pal, who arc the hosts "of musical comedy chorus con tingent, which, however is satisfying- (Continued on page 4.) RAGADORS WILL PLAY AT YELLOWSTONE PARK Orchestra of University Men Books Three Months' Sum mer Engagement. The Louisiana Ragadors, com posed of University of Nebraska stu dents, has added another laurel to its already long list. It has Just booked a three months' engagement at the Yellowstone national park for the coming summer. The Louisana Ragadors have this year won for thenjselves a reputation ail ever the state. They have been p'aying in many towns throughout the state and have everywhere been vat of VAri enthusiastically. For some !lt has been playing at the Lindell Hotel partf house whre t has naa idmlrable success. It has also be come to uucta demand oi -nil unlver- rZw, of a. Kadon, are t-i, AHoma drummer: TuJor Gard Adams. arumm . L'T'Wr old man ,ast week have now MBrHIlll.au " " phones r . ; LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1922. Don't Be Blind To Does Subscribe Once upon a time seven blind men went to "see" an elephant. One of them, bumping into his great side, "here is a creature resembling a wall." Another, feeling the trunk, likened the elephant to a serpent; another, touching a tusk, announced that the animal resembled a spear; and still another, grasping an ear, compared the elephant to a large leaf. The one who got hold of the tail likened it to a r6pe while he who embraced the leg thought of the tree, and he who crawled over the back, declared that the elephant resembled a hill H,rt I n nnriiernnli in which is found the true status of only too large ' a number "t t j btudsnts of the Uni versity of Nebraska; those who are not subscribers to the Daily Nebras kan. If a student is to grasp a true idea of the University of Nebraska, he should not only seek to be proficient in the work of the single department in which he is laboring, but he shou'd attempt as far as possible to enlarge himself and learn of" the other parts of the university. To attempt to race from one building to another in or der to learn of the different activi ties of the school would be folly. How PERSHING RIFLES MITE ELEVEH Honorary Military Organization Will Hold initiation xomgnt for Picked Cadets From the R. O. T. C. The Pershing Rifles, honorary ca det society, will hold its second ini tiation of the school year, Thursday evening, December 26, at 7:30 in room 309, Nebraska hall. The fol lowing are the cadets and cadet of ficers who are to be initiated: Rich ard E. Dearmont, Monroe D. Gleason, Grant E. Lantz, E. A. Mulligan, Wil liam Mapes, Dwight S. McVicker, J. L. Proebsting, Clarence Rogers, Henry A. Sergent, John Westerman, Ernest Zschau. Election is based upon proficiency in drill together with the previous military experience and record of the cadet The Pershing Rifles were organized by General Fershing in 1SC4 under the name - "The Varsity Rifle, ' this name be'r-g changed to the one which now bears -f name. General Persh ing takes a great interest in the Rifles and each year awards a medal to the member having the highest record. Following the initiation there will be an important business meeting and it is urgently requested that all be present. GLADYS MICKIE CHOSEN NEW SILVER SERPENT GClaGdys Mickle has been elected to membership in Silver Serpent, junior girls honorary organization, to take the place of Charlotte Coolidge who did not return to school the sec ond semester. Miss Mkk'e is a member of Alpha Phi and has been active in the Y. W. C. A. and other campus activities. Weather Man Gives Students False Hopes When He Sends Snow Flurries For the third time this winter, Old Man Weather has given false hopes to University of Nebraska students. During the time when Cornhuskers were doing their utmost to prove to the professors that they kaew as much or more than the latter be lieved they knew or should know, Boreus started his snow sifter go ing and sent down a white flurry of flakes which spelled Joy of win ter into the hearts of many of the students. But then, without even bitting an eye, the old man turned on his volume of heat and sent all of the flakes into the discard Plans for sleigh ride parties re- gent down gene off into naught. Little hope What The Uni To The Nebraskan a person can pass up an opportunity presented by the Dally Nebraskan, of getting hold of the main activities and the work of the entire school, condensed and nicely written every morning of the week is more than a person who appreciates the story of the blind men, can tell. Ask yourself the question "Do I keep in touch with everything of in terest in the university so when I go out in the world t will at least know how to keep up with daily events?" And if you answer it cor rectly, you must be a daily reader of the Nebraskan. The Nebraskan is really a depart- mont of Instruction in the University. on the staff are writer who are working members of the student body and all of whom attempt to copy in the best manner possible, the works of the city daily. Information of all kinds is gathered each night. Fine reading material is found on sum maries of lectures, meetings and news of friends on the campus. Students should look up and grasp every conceivable means of enlarging their view point and also of knowing fully what the Nebraska university is doing every day. Don't be a blind man! Subscribe today! E TO CONDUCT LARGE TOUR Students and Business Men Wil Study Commerce and Finance in Europe. An extensive tour of the industrial commercial and financial centers of England, France, Belgium, Holland and Germany and Switzerland, Is be ing organized and directed by the American Express Co. This tour is open to the business man, instructor or student and it will be Tinder the direction of experienced business men and economists. The purpose of the tour is to widen the perspective of the American businoss man, and to establish closer contact with Eu ropean commercial and financial in terests. This tour is being organized under the direction of L. W. De Motte, per sbnal director of . J.bcuAmerican Ex press Co., with the' assistance of Dr. J. Anton de Hass, professor of for eign trade, graduate school of busi ness administration, New York uni versity and Professor Harry R. Tos dal, professor of student research, Harvard university. These men have traveled extensively abroad, and Prof do Hass and Prof. Tosdal, who will accompany the tour as educational leaders, combine experience in prac tical business and government serv ice with experience as lecturers and authors on commercial and economic subjects. The American Express Co., In an nounceing this foreign trade tour, says in Its statement: "The ultimate expansion of Ameri can foreign trade will demand Arnerl cans fitted for the handling of the many phases of International trans nrtlnns Prenarations for foreign trade work is not preparation which may be completed in a short time. (Continued on page 4.) is maintained that ever will Boreus sind down enough of the white flakes to allow bob sleds to glide swiftly snd easily over the country roads. The only pleasure university st uents are finding to have been al lowed tl-em by Old Man Weather is skating. Daily the municipal swim ming pool which has been frozen for coks, is filled with skaters, many cf whom are university men and wo men. Many students have brought their skates with them to school and are making use of them. So it has developed that the st dfnts have sent their sleigh ride hepes Into the discard and are look ing on Old Man Weather as a big fake since he does not hold trutj it all to his established custom. XPRESS COMPANY NEBRASKA PROFESSOR AUTHOR OF ARTICLES Dr. G. E. Howard, of the Univer sity of Nebraska faculty, is tho ou thor of one of tho principal articles in the January , issue of tho "Jour nal of App'lied Sociology." Tho article is on the "New Method of Social Re search." Doctor Howard '.t the early graduates of Peru State Normal and later of the University of Nebraska. He was a professor of history hero for a number of years and later left to become a member of the first fac ulty of Leland Stanford. He returned to Nebraska in 1001 and founded the department of sociology. Doctor Howard's greatest work, which was published a few years ago, "History of Marriage," is of Internationa! repu tation. He has contributed numerous other things to the field of sociology. At present Doctor Howard is on leave of absenco from tho university and is residing in California. fiT T OF University Officials Receive Cer tificate of Student Army Training Corps. University of Nebraska officials have received recognition for the es tablishment of a student army train ing corps at the university during the recen world war, from the secre tary of &r. The Nebraska corps was established in the fall cf 191S and continued until after the signing of the armistice. The certificate of recognition which s signed by the adjutant general anr assistant-secretary of war, shows that Mie University of Nebraska unit of l.o student army training corps was established and operated in a spirit of natriotism and devotion to the United States. Student army training corps wer' ttablished in most colleges and uni versities throughout the country a? ?n incentive to give future soldiers a chance for education during the leriod of training. Many Nebraska S. A. T. C. members wer sent t schools for officers, and a few of them eot over to France. The majority however,' were .kepttufi'.4Ul!xetftiL? 'intil demobilized late in the school vear. A student navy training corps was -Iso maintained at the University of Nebraska. BOY SKATERS TO TOUR. Meets at Montreal,- "Toronto and Boston are planned for the Chicago school boy skating team providing the team retains the national champion ship by defeating New York, Cleve land and Milwaukee in meets at New York. FIVE STUDENTS WIN University Team Under Name of "Lincoln Alleys" Defeat the Bcotery Quintet. University of Nebraska bowlers fowling under the name of "Lincoln Ylleys" performed a monumental feat Tuesday evening when the defeated he Bootery team two out of three rames in the Capital City league. The 3ootcry team Is composed of veteran owlers, and easily captured first ilace in the city league bowling race ast year, and stand a good show of nnexing the honors this season. This 8 the second time tlrat the Bootery earn has been defeated since the eague started in September The Lincoln Alleys won tho odd game, and ilso defeated the veterans in total -ins, scoring 2,679 to 2,653 for the Bootery. Eckeroth and Slama tied for the ilgh score for the series each scor ns 578 pins. F. Spangler of the Bootery was third with 570. RECOGNIZE SOLDIERS WAR ROWLING MATCH PRICE FIVE CENTS PROPOSES 10 GUI Governor Tells Legislatures Half M T . . 1 iviiuion ssnouia De ueauctea From Appropriations. MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM PROBABLY TO SUFFER Proposed New Building for Uni versity May Bear Brunt of Reductions if Made. nciluctions totaling one-half mil lion dollars In the appropriations of tho state legislature for the Univer sity of Nebraska are proposed by Governor Samuel Tt. McKelvie. Tho governor outlined a plan before the opening of tho special session of the legislature, Tuesday, which involved reductions of $2,000,00s in state ex penses. The governor's plan calls for one-fourth of this saving to be made at the expense of the university. Other places where the governor proposes that savings be made are $100,000 at the expense of the state normals, $3S7,S3S8 from the capitol commission, $S0,50O from the state in stitutions under the board cf control, $125,000 from the department of ag riculture, $40,000 from the depart ment of public works, $34,000 from the department of trade and com merce, $19,000 from the vocational educational board, $45,000 from the state superintendent of schools, $1,- 291,870 from road and bridge con struction. Other items of amounts varying from $500 to $15,000 take off . another $105,978. Just how these reductions are to be made are not made clear by Gov ernor McKelvie. But if they are made, the governor declares the gen eral fund levy can be lowered 40 per cent. If the reductions which he proposes are made, the total for the biennium will be lowered from $25,- 672,000 to $23,000,000. Deducting cash funds, etc., and adding special expenditures, only $15,000,000 re mains to be raised for the two years. $9,000,000 of this was raised in 1921, so 19922 must donate less than $6, 000,000. A general fund levy of 1.8 will raise this, the governor declares. Memorial Gym. Would Suffer. The largest part of the $500,000 to be taken from the university is to be at the expense of the proposed memorial gymnasium. $350,000 has already been appropriated for the .-iructure ana there is an outstanding appropHat'ion" which "the governor pro poses to eliminate. Chancellor Avery has submitted; a detailed program whereby $77,000 can be saved by the university next year. The fact that more than ono-fourtb. of all of the proposed reduction in state expenses shall came through, the university, has aroused much in terest among Cornhusker student and alumni. What attitude the students will take in the matter remains to bo seen, but it is believed that the opinion will soon be made There is one thing which might turn university students against tho nropesed reran of the appropriation for the gymnasium. The resignation of director of athletics, Fre 1 W. Lueh ring, is attributed by many to the lack cf athletic equipment and build ings at Nebraska. Compared with th one gymnasium at Nebraska, Minnesota has three, and Cornhusker followers may feel that the gymnas ium should not suffer now. It is likely, however, that they will take the view of the optimist and say that If they relinquish the appropriation now, later on they will be illosed a lareer and more adequate appropria tion. TOM THORP COACH AT NEW YORK UNI New York, Jan. 25 Tom Thorp, -oach, official and sporting author ity, has signed a contract covering period of several yerrs as football -oach at New York university. It was nnounced today. The salary is un lerstood to bo the highest ever paid coach in the metropolitan district Thorp has been assistant coach at Columbia. He succeeds Frank Gar Tan, who has accepted the head coachship at Fordham university. CD TV? Oil! ALLOWANCES iw