he Daily Nebraskan ynrxxjj--NO. 127. HUSKER WARBLERS TO GIVEGONCERT Nebraska dice Club to Give Musical Kntertainment In ' day and Saturday at Temole Theater. BKSKUVATIONS MONDAY Director Witte toeing Solo by Campbell Tipton Tickets " for Sale by Members. Reservations for the University of Nebraska Glee Club home conccr may he made at the Rosa P. Curlxe Music .store beginning Morday norn ing at nine o'clock. The concert will bP given Friday and Saturday, April 20 and 21, at the Temple theatre. The program will consist of group selections, an instrumental solo at the intermission, and a solo, "The Spirit Flower," by Cambell Tipton, sung by Director Parvln C. Witte. Tickets may be secured from any member of the Glee Club, from Tucker and Shean, from the Ross P. Curtice Music Store, or from the Col lege Book Store. The program will be as follows Part 1 1 Bedouin Love Song, Rogers; 2, Plantation Love Song, Deems Taylor; 3, In Vocal Combat, Buck Universitp Gloo Club. Tenor Solo Thor.v, Stephen Adams Francis Diers. 1, On the Sea, Dudley Puck; 2. Medley, Old Fashioned Songs Uni versity Male Quartet. 1, In Dulci Jubilo; 2, Matona, Love ly Maiden, Ancient German Carols University Glee Club. Part 11 Dronthoim (King Olaf's Christmas) Protheroe University Glee Club. Baritone Solo, On the Road to Mandalay, Oley Speaks Archie X. Jones. Scene from Robin Hood, DeKovcn University Glee Club. Solo, The Spirit Flower, Cambell Tipton Parvin C. Witte. 1, Sunset, Van de Water; 2, Bur lesque, Xegro Spirituals University Male Quartet. 1, Open the Gates of the Temple, Mrs. ,los. F. Knapp; 2, My Native Land. Foreythe University Glee Club. IS FROM TIGERS AGAIN Huskers Play Errorless Ball and W alton Missouri in Second Game 10 to 1. Nebraska again defeated Missouri, 10 to 1, in the second game of the two-game series at Columbia. Gibl and Smnlia each hit a home run, wlijle Russell and Lewellen secured a tfue bagger each. The Huskers made 16 hits. The Nebraska diamond artists had no errors chalked up against them, while the Tigers made three er rors. Fickland pitched the entire game for the Tigers. He let Nebraskans hit the hull sixteen times, twice for home runs and three times for extra bases. Peterson pitched for the Huskers dur ing the entire nine frames. He al lowed eight hits during the first five innings and eight in the last four. The box score was: Nebraska ab r h o a e Janda, cf 5 2 12 0 0 Smnha, lb 4 3 3 8 0 0 Collins, f 3 112 0 0 Volz, ss 4 1 3 0 3 0 Lewellen, rf 5 1 2 2 0 0 P"tty, c 5 1 2 7 0 0 Gibbs, 2b 4 1 3 4 3 0 Peterson, p 4 0 10 10 Totals 39 10 16 27 9 0 Missouri r h o a e Roberts, cf 10 12 0 0 Quick, 3b 5 0 1 0 2 0 faurot, 2b 5 0 0 1 0 0 f;mith, c 4 0 0 4 4 0 D-ny, ss .." 4 1 2 5 2 3 Run'icer, rf 4 0 2 2 0 0 VarsaU k, If 1 0 0 0 0 0 Hayes, lb 3 0 0 13 i 0 Piklin, p 2 0 1 0 7 0 xGreatbouse 10 10 0 0 Tcrry, If 2 0-1 0 0 0 Xxr)avis i o o 0 o i. Ttals 33 1 9 27 16 3 batted for Ficklin in the ninth. xxHaUed for Smith in the ninth. innings: Nebraska 6 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 010 Missori 0 000000101 lu w 1 v? n 1?) . 'i-7 v I The University of Nebraska Glee Club, which will gi -e its annual home conceit at the Temple Theater, Fri day and Saturday, April 20 and 21. The Club is under the direction of Parwin C. Witte. ACADEMY OF SCIENCE WILL MEET IN OMAHA Officers for the Ensuing Year Elected Dr. Schulte Is Made President. Omaha will be the place of meeting of the Nebraska Academy of Science in 1924. Officers and members of the board of advistory councillors were elected for 1924 at the noon meeting tn J iy. Fifty-five new members Joined the Academy this year. This figure includes both local and national members. President, Dr. Von W. Schulte Creighton University, Omaha. Vice-president, Trof. Joseph A. Moss Bethany College, Bethany. Secretary, Miss Virginia Zimmer. College of Agriculture, University o! Nebraska. Treasurer, Prof. P. K. Slaymaker. College of Engineering, University of Nebraska. .i ,-'ha, associate professor ot mathematics, University of Nebraska was elected for the three-year term to the advisory councillors. F.Ida Rema Walker, associate professor nt botany, University of Nebraska, was elected to the two-year term. Prof J. C. Jenson of Nebraska Wesleyan University, University Place, was elected for the one-year term. In the fi.iu:e all members of this board will be elected for live years. The n'cretary and treasurer woe re-elected. These officers are to In retained for five years according to i new amendment to the constitution of the Academy. O. F. Smith and L. W. Burma n of the University of Nebraska print shop were elected to two-year member ships in the Academy as an apprecia tion of their -work in printing pamph lets for the Academy in time for th meetings. m be invitation of Creighion University and the Chamber of Com merce of the city of Omaha, the Aca demy decided to hold next year's meeting there. On alternate years the organization meets in Lincoln. The 1924 meeting will be the thirty fourth. Will Hold Academic Contests Among High Schools in Nebraska To conduct int,erscholsic aca demic contests in Nebraska high schools is the purpose of an organ ization formed of a committee con sisting of Prin. H. P. Shepard of Lin coln high school; Prin. J. G. Masters, of Omaha Central high; Supt. H. H. Reimnund, of Tekamah; Supt. A. H. Staley, of Hastings; Supt. J. A. True, of McCook; Supt. W. C. Findley, of Gering, and Chancellor Avery, Dean Sealock and Prof. Reed as represent atives of the University. Ths year contests rponsored by this committee will be held in Eng lish, Composition, Spelling, Algebra, Plane Geometry, American History, and Second, third and fourth year Latin. Elect Officers for Congregational Club The Congregational Students club elected the following officers at a meeting held Tuesday evening at the Grand Hotel: Raymond Eller, presi dent; Keith Tyler, vice-president; iluth Carpenter, secretary, and Mar cia Staton, treasurer. The following chairmen of commit tees were elected: Church Activi ties Helen Tomsen; Bible Study. Philip Robinson; Social Committer. Margaret Anderson; Publicity. Her bert" Brownell, jr. LINCOLN, NEMUASKA, Home Economics Club Raises Stadium Money At the bazaar and food sale given by the members of the Home Eco nomics club, an organization of the women of the Collego of Agriculture, one hundred and nine dollars were cleared. The proceeds are to pay the remainder of the Club's hundred dollar pledge to the Stadium fund. Some of the bazaar articles will be sold on the Ag College campus. At the next meeting of the club, which will be held at seven-thirty in Ellen Smith Hall on May 11, officers for the coming year will be elected. El, AiUfiL COLLEGE WEEK To Start April 23 Ilennir.gton to Speak at Convocation Tuesday Morning. Plans for Engineers' Week, April 2'i to 28, are being rapidly completed. H. H. Henningson, president of the llenningfion Engineering Company of Omaha, will be the speaker at the Convocation Tuesday '.uOrning, Apri 24. Herbert Hoover is the engineer whose picture will be hung in .the "Hall of Fame" in the Mechanical En gineering building following its pre sentation to the college at the convo cation. The College Book Store and the Lawlor Sporting Goods Company arc offering prizes for the winners of cer tain events to take place field day Thursday. All engineers are to be excused from classes that day to play interclass baseball, hold level and slide rule races, track events, boxing matches, tennis and horse-shoe games, somewhere on the campus of the College of Agriculture. . Engineers' badges will be on sale Wednesday, publicity day, and they are to he worn the rest of the week. The speaker at I he "pep" meeting to be held Wednesday at eleven o'clock in the Armory has not yet been announced. A special edition of the Daily Nebraskan will be published on that day in the interests of the engineers. An elaborate scheme of advertisement in the home-town papers all over the state has been de vised. All engineering buildings, the Arm ory, and Chemistry hall, will be open at 7:30 Thursday for the tenth an nual Engineers' Night. All labora tories will be open for inspection and all machinery will be in motion. High spots of the evening are: 8:00 Chemical show, Chemistry hall. 8:30 Metal pouring in foundry, Me chanical Engineering building. 9:00 Radio concert. Armory. 9:00 to 10:00 Moving pictures in Chemistry hall. v 10:15 Chemical show, Chemistry hall. The power plant that supplies bat and power for the city campus is tc be open for inspection the same night. Will Speak on Klan at Vesper Services Dr. Walter H. Riley, Congregational student pastor of the University, will be the speaker at the regular Vesper services of the University Y. W. C. A. Tuesday after. n at five. His subject will be the Ku Klux Klan. The meeting will be led by Ger trude Tomson, and music will be fur nished by the Vesper choir. Sylvia Cole will sing a solo. Did you know that more thaa 500 schools and colleges sent teams to th Fenn Relays last year? SUNDAY, APRIL 15, 1923 IV.S.G.A BOARD WILL Poll ? Will De Open Tuesday and Wednesday List of Girls Announced. All W. S. G. A. members will vote for the members of next years board on Monday and Tuesday of this week. Polls are located in the Li brary, where girls may vote between 9 o'clock and 5 o'clock either day. ll is expected that elections will lx hotly contested. The Board consists o thirteen mem bers chosen by the association at the large: Five from the present ju.vor class, four from the present sopho more class, and four from the pres ent freshman class. It functions a; an executive body for the organiza tion, and requires real leaders. The following girls are up for office: President Jean Holtz. Ruth Milelr. Senior Members Margaret Wattles . Margaret Hager. Helen Ku.nmer. Josephine Shramek. Edith Olds. Esther Swanson. Junior Members Frances Weintz. Besse Wythers. Ruth Towner. Ruth Carpenter. Frances Mentzer. Rosalie Platner. Barbara Wiggenhorn. Sophomore Members Doris Trott. Mariel Flynn. Charlotte Baker. Helen Thomson. Margaret O'Connor. Ruth Wells. Eleanor Flatermersch. SOPHOMORES ARE AH I INTER GLASS TOURNEY Second Year Class Takes Ma jority of Matches in Mav Meet. Sophomores took most of the matches in the interclass wrestling tournament held Friday by winning lour firsts and three seconds. Jun iors won one match and a draw, and piact:l J.ne man recond. Freshmea took one first and two seconds. The seniors obtained a draw. Hendrickson, senior heavy, and Miller, junior, put up the best scrap of the series. The bout went for the full twelve minutes and neither man had a time advantage sufficient to give him the match. The two extra periods prescribed by the rulers were wTestled without either man obtain ing a fall or a time advantage of thirty seconds. The match was de clared a draw. Blore, sophomore 115 pounder, won from Stepp, freshman, by a fall, ir 4:15. Th" 125 pound struggle went to Suiter, sophomore, wi'.n a time ad vantage of 4:30 over Huddleston. sophomore. Whalen, junior lightweight, took fall from Starr, sophomore, in 1:20. The welter clash went to the sopho more grappler, Tracy, who had a three minute time advantage over Mooberry, junior. Skinner, sophomore middleweight erannler. took a match from Hammer. sophomore, with an advantage cf minutes, 55 seconds Lnndy, freshman, had a time ad vantage of 5:37 at the conclusion of his "bout with Porelar, freshman light-heavy. KOSMET KLUB HAS FOR "THE YELLOW List of Thirteen Patronesses Announced Saturday Afternoon by Mens Dramatic Organization for Annual Musical Show Chorus and Lead Parts Hold Daily Practices. CVIUL (OOMHS IS DIUKCTOK OF 192. PRODUCTION More Than Seventy Students Have Parts in Play Iiuilt Around Mystery of Chinese Customs and Traditions May Take Show to Omaha This Year. "The Yellow Lantern" 1923 Kosmet Klub production to 1 Riven at the Orpheum theater May 4, is rapidly being perfected md the acts will Ik? rehearsed in sequence this week, according to nembers of the Klub. More than sixty students, a large number of them co-eds, tire talcing part in the show. Patronesses for the production were announced by the Kosmet Klub Saturday after noon, i hey are: Professors to Hold Debate "Post Mortem" The annual review "post mortem" of the University of Nebraska's in telcollegiate debates-will be held Monday afternoon at 1 o'clock in Uni versity Hall 1045. It is open to the University public. Prof. G. N. Foster of the College of Law; Prof. George O. Virtue, of the Economics depart ment, and Prof. M. M. Fogg and Prof. Orin'Stepanek of the English depart ment will critically review the Nebraska-Iowa debate last Thursday evening, and the members of the team that met South Dakota will report on that contest. AGS PERFECT PLANS E Many Students Attend Mass Meeting Prior to Celebra tion May 5. Two hundred and fifty Agricultural College students attended a mass meeting Thursday evening. April 12, to perfect their plans for the "Big Day," May 5, the date of the 1923 Farmers' Fair. The meeting was called to order by Manager Elton Lux. The cheer lead ers led off with some Ag yells after which business was discussed. Mr. Lux outlined his plans briefly for the benefit of those who had not at tended the previous meetings. In cluded in his talk were his observa tions at the Missouri Farmers' Fair which he attended last week. He then called upon the chairmen of the var ious committees for reports on the progress they were making, or wished to make. After the conclusion of the talks two reels of moving pictures were shown. The first one showed scenes from the round-up ai Chepenne and was full of action. The second reel showed the 1921 Farmers' Fair in ac tion. After the movies the meeting was adjourned and the committees met to talk over some of the plans which they have unde rway. The next mass meeting will be held in Ag Hall at 7:30, April 2G. Movie;-, of the 1922 Fair as well as oth-jr ints-est;r.g pic tures will be shown. The Farmers' Fair will lead off this year, of course, with the traditional parade. The parade will pass through the business section of Lincoln, and all the "best minds" of the Ag Col lege are -t work on the floats which will be displayed. The comic will be interspersed with the serious in the parade. Some of the best and worst methods of Animal Husbandry, Agronomy, and Animal Pathology will be illustrated in the floats. The importance and diversity of ag ricultural education will be shown in the parade. The public is invited to the Ag campus to take part in the day of hilarity which will follow the parade. Y. M. C. A. Employment Bureau Finds Work for University Men Students in need of spring employ ment should file applications with the Y. M. C. A. employment bureau, in the Temple building, of which Wil liam Alstadt is the secretary. 1 takes more time to telephone for men to work than to find the work, Mr Alstadt said yesterday. The bureau is always pleased to be of service te students, he said. COMPLETED PLANS LANTERN" MAY 5 Mrs. Samuel Avery. Mrs. Robert Scott. Mrs. C. C. Engberi'. Miss Amanda Hoppner. Miss Alice Howells. Mrs. Pace Woods. Miss Ruth Fitzgerald. Miss Helen Curtis. Miss Dorothy Raymond. Mrs. Robert Talbot. Mrs. Oiville. Ellerbrock. Mrs. Irving Chapin. Mis. Perry Branch. Practices for the show are being con ducted every evening at the Univer sity Armory. Choruses and leading parts are becoming confident in their parts, according to Klub members. The music and dance steps echo from the Armory from early till late in the evening with Director Cyril Coombs at work all the time with the various groups of actors. Critics who have reviewed the show in the rehearsal say it is by far the best production ever put on by the Kosmet Klub and such a statement is far reaching in view of the splendid successes of the Klub in past years. The musical numbers together with the speaking parts are the work of Coombs, and are conceded to be can didates for popularity with the song hits of the day. Every musical num ber in the show is to be published in sheet form and gathered together in a book of 1923 Kosmet Klub songs which will be available the night of the show. This is the twelfth annual produc tion of the Kosmet Klub which was organized in 1911. Several of the musical numbers from Kosmet Klub shows in the past years have been published and have had their run with the popular music of the day. Every show produced by the Klub has been entirely the work of University students from the writing to the act ing. Professor R. D. Scoit has been an enthusiastic supporter of the work of the Klub in the past, but owing to increased University work be was forced to discontinue his work with the Kosmet shows. The members of the Klub are attempting to keep musi cal and writing talent of the univer sity up to date by offering a prize of one hundred dollars each year to the successful writer of a play which will be produced by the Kosmets. Tickets for the "Yeylow Lantern" will not go on sale until April 23 at the Orpheum. Plans to take the show to Omaha this year soon after the Lincoln show have been considered for some time. Omaha alumni are enthusiastic over the proposal and the action of the Klub is awaiting decision of the Uni versity authorities. If proper financial considerations can be arranged it is understood that the University au thorities look with favor upon the production of the show at the Bran deis in Omaha. An atmosphere of Chinese mystery will prevade in every scene of the three acts althought everything in the show has been modernized and will represent the latest word in modern musical comedies. So varied are the features presented by the "Yellow Lantern" that it should technically classed as a musical extravagance. The day deals with Chinese superst tion woven about the night of Yellow Lanterns, is based upon true incidents As every one knows the Chinese na of Chinese superstition, the belief in their dead relatives and ancestors practically governs even the most minute details of their everyday life. No pains are spared by these superstitious ignorant native Chinese to make their dead comfortable in every conceivable way. They believe that the contentmem and happiness of their dead in their carefully selected resting places is of the greatest im- portance if the living members of he families are to enjoy good health and most of all, prosperity. (Continued on Page Tour).