Fhe Daily Nebraskan Foothall Edition Football Edition LINCOLN. NEBRBASKA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28. 1022 V01 CORWSKERS iSiiTci BANQUET AND GIRLS' PARTY Week From Friday is Day Set for Wial Girl's Comhusker Party in the Armory Uj BE ACLOSED NIGHT will be Scent in Stunts MdProgram With Dancing as Added Attraction Frisking downs, merry milk maids, onsles, and bizzare figures from any land will meet at the Armory, Friday, December 15. at 8 o'clock to participate in the annual girl's Com aker Fi"-- Ten stunts will bo put on by sororities and dormitories, and the rest of the evening will be spent in dancing. The Mortar Boards and Silver Serpents will have concessions to sell food during the evening. This party is P"t on every year by the W. S. C. A. for the purpose of enabling Hie girls of the Univer ,ity to get "t r acquainted, to pro mote better Nebraska spirit among the girls, aii.l of course, the idea of fun is also -an important incentive. Manuscripts for stunts may be handed into a committee of the W. S. G A. at Ellen Smith hall before the end of this week. Only the cleverest stunts will be put on as the time is limited. Complete plans Tor the party witi be announced next week. A larger number of girls than usual are ex pected as the night of the party has been declared closed to other Univer sity events. Football Results To Be Broadcasted The Notre Dame game will be broadcasted from the University radio station in the E. E. building. The game last Saturday with Ames was broadcasted and Ames, received well according to a report from the Iowa college, but the operator said he was sorry to hear the score. Black Masque chapter of Mortar Board, the Senior girls' honorary so ciety, is one of the busiest and most alert ginups of girls on the campus, and its work covers a wide range of activities. Mortar Boards always have charge of the Ivy Day festivities, the election o ftne May Queen and her attendants, and attend to other details of that day. Parties for the girls of the fresh man, sophomore, junior, and senior classes is given every year by Mortar Board. Statistics Given Out On Subscriptions to Comhusker Stadium Tony ,-r cent more men than omr-n subscribed to the stadium fund tiy a rough count of the college rolls of stadium subscriptions. Be tween tli.- 2.203 men and the 1.576 women listed, there Is a difference of f,27. if we take the number of men to he 100 per cent, the women are 71.5 per cent. Again, of the total number subscribing 3,779 the men formed 58.3 per cent and the women 41.7 per cent. Counts of the different colleges give results varying enormously from the avfrngi, because of the varying regis tration. For instance, one women as found in the College of Law list and two In that of the College f Engineering, while the list of the College of Arts and Sciences shows S1 men and 742 women. About eight per cent of the total Mbsrriptlon was mae in two-unit Hocks. Eight-tenths cf one per cent as in one and one-balf-unit blocks; four-tenths of one per cent In four onit blocks, and eight hundredths of one per cent In six-unit blocks. Taking the College of Arts and Sciences to be representative of the 'ze of subscriptions, these figures re borne out. Of the total of L20S, frn ;,nd one-half-unit blocks were listed; ninety-five two-unit blocks; eighteen three-unit blocks; five four "nlt blocks; three five-unit blocks, id one six-unit block. The College of Arts and Sciences, the larges; "ie in the University, has 4 registration cf women close to the 1.000 figure. Although the college aaie the 100 per cent mark, only 2 women are listed at present at tte alumni office. In the Teachers' College, with seventeen men and 468 omen subscribing the quota assigned not reached. ARE DECEMBER IS Annual Comhusker Banquet Will be Held at Scottish Kite Cathedral JOYCE IS TOASTMASTER Vikings, Corncobs, and Iron Sphinx Will Have Charge of Ticket Sale Starting Monday Tickets for the Comhusker Banquet will go on st lo Monday, December 3. Corncobs, V; kings, and Iron Sphinx will have tlvse tickets. The price of the banquet this year is one dollar, which includes, beside the dinner, the other entertainment planned. There will br music and toasts. Robert M. Joyve, an alumnus, will act as toastmastor. All speakers on the program have not yet been decided upon, but it is expected that Captain Hartley, Coach Schulte, and other men who have played their last game for the school will be on the list. Friday, Decem ber 15 has been made a closed night in order that all men . will be free to attend the banquet. The Com husker costume party for Nebraska women has been scheduled for the same night. It is expected that the fraternities will not serve dinner Fri day in order that all members may be present. The Comhusker Banquet, an an nual event, will this year be the cel ebration of the conclusion of a suc cessful football season and of the campaign for a memorial stadium. The men who have fought for the school on the gridiron will be pres ent in a body, and no finer tribute to them could be made. The Scottish Rite Temple will be the scene of the festivities this year, where twelve hundred studnts can be accommodated. An excellent dinner served by the ladies of the Eastenr Star, will be provided. STOCK JUDGING TEAM LEAVESFOR ILLINOIS Nebraska Places Fourth in Amer ican Royal Livestock Show at Kansas City The animal husbandry stock-judging team will spend Thanksgiving at the University of Illinois at Urbana where they will Judge stock in con nection with the International Live stock Exposition. The contest will start December 2. In the contest at the American Royal Livestock Show at Kansas City, November 18, the Nebraska team placed fourth in a field of seven teams. The Individual scores were very close, two of the Nebras ka boys tying for places among the high ten. James Adams tied for fourth place with a score of B4S out of a possible 600. Arnold Fouts tied for tenth place with a score of 543. The scores of the teams follow: Kansas 2,698, Texas 2,631. Iowa 2.613. Nebraska 2,602. Missouri 2.582. Okla homa 2.582, and Arkansas 2,416. The teams remained at the show and practiced until Thursday when they went to Ames, to Judge some of the stock at the Iowa State Col lege. They will return sometime next week. New University Regent Wantsto Do What is Best for Nebraska "l have no hoMtios to ride in my duties as repent. I will pive my best service, and best judgment in business matters, to the University, and its several departments. I appreciate the advantages to our people, and to our system of government, and the far-reaching influence in life, of liberal education. I sincerely believe, if we are to en lure as a nation, we must per sistently and unremittinply afford sufficient educational facil ities to our boys and pirls, and the more that carry their educa tional traininp throuph the hipher institutions, the preater will be the guaranty of safety to our state and nation, and all or Panked society." p WARNER. William P. Warn&r of Dakota City Is the new University regent who will take office January 1- His only daugh ter is a sophomore in the University, and his oldest aon, who was a student In the School of Agriculture when war was declared, entered the Navy in Mar. 1917. EM T Thanksgiving Banquet To Be Held at Grand Tonight for Students For those who have planned no Thanksgiving dinner in the evening, a banquet will be held tonight at the. Grand hotel, Twelfth and Q streets. Under the direction of the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. this dinper is given for students and their friends. It fills a distinct need, for most out-of-town students will not be able to get home, and the Temple cafeteria is to be closed all day. Feeling that most of the students would have plans made for the noon meal, the committee decided to make it an evening affair, and set 6 o'clock as the time. A joint committee from the two Christian Associations has arranged for music; gam.s will oc cupy the rest of the evening. CAPTAIN ELECTED Letter1 Men Entertained by Mem bers of Pathfinders Club at Luncheon Yesterday LOSE ONE BY GRADUATION Captain Bowman Relates Inter esting Incidents of Races on 1922 Calendar INTER-FRATERNITY CROSS COUNTRY. The inter-fraternity cross-country meet will be run Saturday at 1:30. Entries may be made until Friday evening. Fraternities may turn in their lists at the Athletic office. The letter men of the cross-country team elected Leicester Hyde captain of the team for the coming year, after a luncheon given the squad by the Pathfinders Club. Coach McMasters gave a short speech and Introduced the Scarlet and Cream runners to the club. Captain Bowman related a few of the choice happenings of the team and described some of the races in which the Nebraska runners took part. The team has run races in which some member of the squad was injured or physically incapable, but they ran the race and quqit only when the white race and quit only when the white of several of the races that were run under adverse conditions. The captain-elect is a veteran on the Nebraska squad. He has been with the team for two years. He is a member of the Bushnell Guild fra ternity and is a Junior In the College of Engineering. Delian Announces Seventeen Members Delian Literary Society announces Gladys Babcoek. Alice Bennett. Ruth Chappel. Clark Gustin. Verona Hall. George Herzog. Raymond Huffer. Phil Johnson. Alice Leffel. Clair Matheny. Stanley Oliver. Dorothy Overman. LaVada Pickett. Bill Ripley. Elsie Thiol. Maurine Ward. Nevada Wheeler. He was horn on a farm near Fair field, Iowa, and in 1868 came with his parents to Dakota county, Nebras ka, where his home has been since that time. The regent was reared under pio neer circumstances In a family of mod- (Contlnued on Page Eleven). GROSS-GOUNTRY GIVE 111E OF TO PI Greek Letters Adopted by Su preme Governing Council of Achoth Announced Today MANY CHAPTERS AFFECTED Mother Chapter of the Sorority at Nebraska Was Installed Here in March, 1910 Aleph chapter of Achoth sorority announced fhe adoj.ion ;of Greek letters for the sorority Wednesday afternoon, following official notifica tion of the change by the Supremo Governing Council of Achoth. Here after the sorority will be known a3 Thi Omega PI. Twenty-two chapters of Achoth are affected by the adop tion of the Greek letters. The mother chapter is the Nebraska chapter. Phi Omega Pi was installed on the Nebraska campus on March 5, 1910 with fifteen charter members. They were: Alice Humpe, Brittania Daughters, Elsie Mathews, Pattie Metzger, Florence Hill, Etta Yont, Edna Green, Fl.orence Welsh, Loi'. Yont, Clarabelle Green Winifred Ficher, Pearl James, Mabel Long, Hazel Fishwood anil Francis Chatbur. The Nebraska chapter of Phi Omega Pi will be Alpha chapter. Twenty-two chapters are now active on the sorority roll and are installed in most of the leading colleges ot the country. There will be no change in the organization of the soorrity. It will be nationally known as Phi Omega Pi. The Supreme Council of Achoth met in Louisville, Kentucky, October 25 at which time the change of name was authorized. Phi Omega Pi now occupies the house at 1325 R street. COLLEGE TEAMS WILL ROLL BOWLING ITCH Laws and "Bizads" Meet on Lin coln Alleys Wednesday Even ing in Ten Pin Match The second inter-collegiate, bowling match will be rolled between the Law College team and the "Bizads who have organized their team, and have accepted the challenge issued by the Laws some time ago. The "Bizads" are to play the winner of the Law-Dent match, which happened to be the Laws. The match will be rolled on the Lincoln Alleys, 1117 street, next Wednesday evening at 6 p. m. The "Bads" also intend to roll match w ith the Dents as soon as they dispose of their argument with the Laws. A match is also scheduled to be rolhwl between the "Bizads" and (lie Arts and Science College team, as soon as the latter organize. All of the above teams are anxious for matches with the other colleges and will roll series with each other soon. Today two great football teams meet on Nebraska field. Thorough ly coached and ready, the Com husker are waiting for the whistle. Back of the Scarlet and Cream jerseys upon the field will stand a student body united in spirit. It will be a great game and a great day for Nebraska. We must not for a moment allow our part in the game to be any thing but a close observance of our finest tradition. TODAY LET NEBRASKA: 1 Cheer our team every mo ment of the game imbue the men on the field with our faith the faith of Nebrackans. T- Applaud the fine performance of our team and applaud the good plays of our opponents. 3 Not allow even the most sporadis "crabbing" of the men who run the game. The officials are playing a game the game ot running the game. Let them do it. 4 Sing our songs with a roar that will carry with it a glorious victory. 6 Stand to sing the two teams off the field at the end of the game. 6 Beat Notre Dame beat with a fighting spirit and with determ ination to uphold the best Ideals of true aportamanthlp. CHANGE ACHOTH SORORITY OMEGA BAT nn Dean W. Clyde Davis Leaves Soon To Take Up New Work In East . Dean W. Clyde Davis, whose resig nation as head ot the Dental College takes effect December 1, has ex pressed a willingness to return to Ne braska for shprt periods during the coming year to give lectures and meet students. The new position which Mr. Davis is taking in Milford, Dela ware, will not occupy full time so that short visits to this University will be posible. He will aid the acting dean, Dr. Clyde Nelson, and the chan cellor in an advisory capacity until September 1, 1923, without remunera- on. Beginning December 1, Dr. Ralph Sturdevant becomes associate profes sor of operative dentistry. Dr. Arlo M. Dunn and Dr. Arthur H. Schmidt will also carry additional work in the College of Dentistry. E Pan-Hellenic Board Announces Winners in Junior, Sophomore and Freshman Classes HIGH AVERAGES RECORDED Miss Lillian Margolin Wins $50 for Highest Average of all University Women Pan-Hellenic scholarship awards v. ere announced at a special convo cation Tuesday morning by Miss Louise Pound of the Pan-Hellenic Board. Daisy Portenier, Lillian Mar golin and Bernice Halbest received the highest ratings in the junior. rcphomore and freshman classes of last year. The University orchestra gave a musical program of four num bers preceding the announcements. The Pan-Hellenic Board annually presents a pin to the girl making the highest average the preceding year. The pin is a pearl studded flaming torch. Scholarship is the only con sideration in awarding the pins and r.en-sorority girls as well as fraternity girls are eligible. Daisy Portenier of Guide Rock is he senior girl who won the highest average in her junior year. Her rat ing is 96.56 per cent. The highest honors of the sophomore class of last year went to Lillian Margolin who made an average of 96. CI per cent. Miss Margolin was also awarded a $50 scholarship by the American Associa tloa of University Women this year. She is secretarial assistant in the of fice of Prof. M. M. Fogg. Bernice Halbert of Blair won the freshman honors with an average of 95.56 per cent, carrying thirty-six hours. Barbara Martin of Rising City made the higher average of 90.56 per cent, but could not be considered, as she is not in school this year. When she returns, her name will be taken up. lyouise Lineman of Omaha, a graduate of Benson high schooil, re ceived honorable mention in the fresh man class. She carried thirty-four hours alst year, making an average of 95.5 per cent. Lillian Margolin, who made the highest average ranks 2.91 per cent higher than the highest average last year. Her average is 96. CI per cent as compared with 93.7 per cent last year. The University orchestra, which opened the program, played "Men of Sparta," by Zamecnik, "Symphonic Militaire," by Haydn; "Ballet Senti mental," by Zamecnik, and "Zampa Overture," by Herold. CUP AWARDS ID Nebraska Spirit Hits High Mark in Rally Last Night "Corncobs Help Three thousand cheering and how ling students watched by hundreds of townsfolk paraded through the streets to the Lincoln hotel last evening to welcome the "Fightin' Irish" from Notre Dame. The rally which pre ceded the parade and the welcome were the greatest in the history of Nebraska university and came as the culmination of a week of singing and spirit-building such as has never before been seen in the school of the Scarlet and the Cream. Torches and red lights flared for a distance of over a mile as the Com husker boosters showed to the Notre Dame team and hundreds of visitors in the city for the Thanksgiving battle their determination to have re venge for last year's defeat at South Bend. Captain Carberry of Notre Dame NOTE NEBRASKA FIELD WILL BE SCENE OF GREAT GRIDIRON BATTLE TODAY Notre Dame Squad Arrived in Lincoln Yesterday Noon Thirty-five Strong to Face Cornhuskers in Final Battle of 1922 Season for Both Teams TEN MEN PLAY FINAL GAME FOR NEBRASKA TODAY Comparison of Statistics Gives Scarlet and Cream Aggregation Ad vantage in Weight Both in Line and Backfield Rockne Expects to Offset Weight With Clever Plays PROBABLE LINEUPS. Nebraska Notre Dame Scherer R.E. (C) Carberry Weller R.T Oberst Berquist ...... R.G Weibel Peterson C Regan Bassett L.G. Degreo Wenke L.T.... Strange Schoeppel L.E Vergara Russell Q.B Thomas Noble R.B Bergman Lewellen L.B Miller Hartley (C) ...... F.B Livergood Referee Walter Eckersall of Chi cago University. Umpire J. J. Schommer of Chi cago University. Field Judges H. G. Hedges, Dart mouth College. Headlincsman Fred Young, Illi nois Wesleyan. Gates open at 11:30 A. M. Game starts at 2:00 P. M. Two of the greatest football teams in the United tSates, the Fighting Irish of South Bend and the Fight ing Cornhuskers of Nebraska will clash this afternoon in the biggest game that has ever been played on Nebraska Field. The Notre Dame team goes into the annual battle un defeated this season, while Nebraska, champion ot the Valley, will go into the fray with one defeat, the Syra cuse contest, marked up against her 1922 record. The seven conflicts in which these two unmatchable teams have met have resulted in four vie- PROF. DEMING TALKS TOF "Frontiers of Physical Sciences' Is Title of Address Given to Freshmen Lecture "We are not concerned with things physically useful, but we are seeking on the frontiers of the sciences, the truth," declared Prof. H. G. Deming in a lecture on "The Frontiers 6f the Physical Sciences," delivered to the freshmen of the College of Arts and Sciences, Monday evening and Tues day morning. Professor Deming's lec ture dealt with the smallest particles of matter, atoms and electrons. The professor explained that scien tists, through studying radium, had di.ieevered that atoms decompose to form new atoms. Within the last year, according to the professor, it has been found possible to convert tungsten into a different clement, helium, by means of a lightening dis charge. Professor Deming declared that this discovery meant that It night be possible sometime to trans form one element such as lead Into an entirely different clement, such as gold. In such a transformation the energy released would be more valu able than the gold produced. Professor Deming declared that atoms were too small io be seen with the miscroscope and that a molecule or a group of atoms, would have to be magnified a million times to make a Continui-d on Page Two). and the famous Knute Rockne, coach of the Irish, responded to the wel come of the student body and the Notre Dame team members were in troduced one by one as a howl of welcome to each was extended. At the Armory, Nebraska's fighting Comhusker team was introduced and long and rousing cheers were given for the men who play for the last time today on the gridiron. Captain Hartley and Coach Schulte talked, urging the students to fight for the team from whistle to whistle and to uphold the finest traditions of Ne braska sportsmanship. "This is the greatest football rally I have ever seen," said Coach Rockne of Notre Dame In speaking to the thousands who had inarched to the hotel where the visiting team waa (Continued on Page Two). DM tories for Notre Dame, two victories for Nebraska, and one tie contest. The game will be attended by 13,000 persons, the largest crowd that has ever witnessed a football game at Ne braska. Among notables who will at tend the game is Gt nefal John Per shing, who will be escorted across the field before the game begins at 2 o'clock. The University band will play, while the Corncolis will put on a stunt between the halves of the fray. Dope on Game. Acording to the dope that has gone the rounds, Notre Dame is the favor ite by a sixx-to-five odd margin, for a careful analysis of the two elevens shows that if the odds are not even, any advantage that exists is in favor of the Huskers. for in their lineup is contained more football ability and physical power than on any other team in the country. The Catholic team, however, is the best-coached team in the country, and has the rep utation for being the hardest-fighting aggregation ever witnessed on a grid iron. The game will be a contest be tween beef and speed, on one hand, and science and skill on the other. The Nebraska team will outweigh the Irish nineteen pounds to the man, and has a fast, hard-hitting back field. As against these advantages possessed by the Scarlet and Cream machine, Knute Rockne's crew has a wonderful assortment of trick plays and forward passes. The South Bend team is an exponent of clever football, while Nebraska plays almost uninterrupted straight football. If the Nebraska team fights as Notre Dame will fight, the Huskers will win. The Huskc-r team has the line-smashing power to drive to one or more touchdowns, and if they cad smother the attempts of the Irish to work trick passes and passes, the Cornhuskers will win. Regardless of who wins, the game will stand out in the annals of Ne braska grid history, and the thou sands of spectators who will witness this last game played on Nebraska Field, will watch a brand of football unexcelled by the greatest teams in the country. Sine Nebraska griiiron stars will fight for the old Scarlet and Cream for the last time vhen Nebraska meets Notre Dame this afternoon. The men who are i laying for the last time today are Captain "I'Mck Hartley, Adolph Wenke. Raymond Weller. Leo Scherer. Andrew ehoep pel, Bryon Nixon. IVwey Hoy R.bert Russell and Fred Thomsen. Palladian Society Will Hold Annual Dinner Friday Eve The members nf ralladian will hold their traditional Thanksgiving feed Friday evening at 6 o' lock in Palla dian Hall in the Temrl.-. Th boys will furnish a short program, and one member, Lloyd ShiMnetk. will be ini tiated. The meeting will be closed, and a business session will follow the feed and program. Thanksgiving Day of 1922 Will Live for a Long Time In Memories of Huskers What holiday of our whole school year will be quite as thrilling and exciting as Thanksgiving? A whole day of freedom in the middle of the week, with the best game of the sea son, wonderful "eats," old friends and relatives coming from great distances to see us and five open tights right in succession. Really, this seems a phenomenon almost too good to be true, but perhaps dear old Nebraska realizes that her poor over-worked stu dents need one day of play. For months and months we have waited, none too patiently, for this day, and our enthusiasm and "pep" have all been saved for the great occasion. Won't It be just perfect, with the fnAiHinoi (nricT dinner first and Notre1 Dame to bring on the thrills for the rest of the day? "i