The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 07, 1923, Image 1

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    1 . . ... .
Meet the Team at 5:45
The Daily. Nebraskan
Meet The Team Sun
j.v at the Burlington
Meet The Team Sun
day at the Burlington
VOL. XXIH NO. 15
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1923.
PRICE 5 CENTS
Buskers
ELEVEN FILE IN
RACE FOR FOUR
. CLASSOFFICES
Four Seek Presidency in Both
Sophomore ' and Junior
Classes; Onlyi One Nomi
nated to Head Senior Group.
SEVEN CONTEST FOR
PLACES ON COUNCIL
Polls on City Campus to be in
Southwest Corner of Admin
istration Building; Election
Rules to be Enforced.
i
Eleven students were nominated
for the four classes offices, election
for which will be held Tuesday in
the southwest corner of the base
ment of the Administration building.
But one man was nominated for
president of the Senior class, while
four nominees handed in their names
from both the Junior and Sophomore
classes. A man and a woman have
been nominated for the presidency
of the first-year group.
Nominations for Student Council
were held at mass meetings Thurs
day. Two nominees were entered
for each vacancy, with the exception
of the Arts and Science college. One
man nominated to fill the vacancy
there was declared ineligible because
he was unable to meet the scholastic
requirements.
Following is the list of the com
pleted filings for the class presidenc
ies: Senior President
H. Stephen King. .
Junior President
Dorothy M. Brown.
Harold Edgerton. .
John E. Kleven.
Philip M. Lewis.
Sophomore President
Wendell Brown.
Frances McChesney.
Jacob Schultz.
Marion L. Woodard.
Freihman President
Jere Michel.
Mary Walton.
Booths on the city campus will be
erected in the southwest basement
room of the Administration building,
formerly occupied by The Daily Ne
braskan and on the Agricultural col
lege campus in Dean Burnett's office.
The polls will be open from 9:00
o'clock to 4 :00 o'clock. It is expected
large number of vote3 will be cast
thru the noon hour. Students reg
istered in the College of Agriculture
will be allowed to vote only at the
booth on their campus, and those
registered in all other colleges must
vote at il,e booths on the city cam
pus. The entire election is in charge of
the Studt nt Council according to the
council the usual rules against the
Publishing of political rard3 and
against the soliciting of votes on the
campus will be rigorously enforced.
(Continued on Page 4)
Nebraska Alumnus
Selection of Winning Peace Plan
. . i L I.
(UniversitvNews Service
The naming of Dr. Roscoe Pound,
ean of Harvard Law School and dis
tinguished Nebraska aftimnus and
forrierly dean of the College of Law,
8it. on e Jurv ' Beven eminent
Amerjcans who choose the win.
m'ng plan for the $100,000 Bok peace
ard comes as another recognition
i Dr. Pound's achievements. "These
seven have been chosen," the policy
committee who selected the judges
explained, "after weeks of careful
consideration, on the basis of selec
tion which aimed, not to securing a
Jury made up of representatives of
varied groups and sections, but which
aimed instead at getting seven men
and women generally recognized to
ne eminently fitted by experience to
aeal with the exceedingly difficult
and complex subject of our interna
tional relations."
Serving with Dr. Pound are Elihu
Kot, prominent jurist who served
Girls From Estes
Conference Will
Speak at Vespers
Girls who attended the Y. W. C. A.
conference held at Estes park this
summer will speak at Vesper serv
ices Tuesday, October 9, at 5 o'clock.
Lila Wyman, chairman of the confer
ence committee, will lead.
Special music, "I Have Not Seen"
from "The Holy City," sung by Ma
rion Yoder, will be a feature of the
service. The following girls will act
as hostesses: Alice Thuman, Helen
Tomson, Eloise McMonies, and Rosa
lie Platner.
PLAN RALLY FOR
HUSKER TEAM AT
STATIONSUNDAY
Innocents Urge Students to
Gather at Station and Show
Gridmen That the School Is
Loyal to Them.
FOLLOW PLAN STARTED
AFTER SYRACUSE GAME
Dawson's Proteges to Return
From Illinois Contest on Bur
lington at 5:45 O'Clock This
Afternoon.
Every loyal student is urged by
the Innocents to be at the Burling
ton station Sunday afternoon at 5:45
o'clock to give Nebraska's "Fighting
Cornhuskers" a rousing welcome
home. The Innocents intend to no
tify every campus organization of
the rally, so that all students may
have an opportunity to attend.
When the Husker grid warriors
returned from Syracuse last year
after having been defeated by a
small score hundreds of students
gathered at the station to meet them.
Coach Schulte in a speech made last
Thursday when the team left for Ur
bana made it plain that the greet
ing the team got after the Syracuse
game was one of the greatest fac
tors in turning out the team that
eventually beat Notre Dame.
The Innocents feel that it is even
more important to be at the station
to cheer the team when they come
defeated than it is when they have
wbn. The members of the senior
honorary are asking everyone to be
at the station this afternoon and to
show the team that the student body
is still backing it.
While serving on the faculty of
the Puget Sound Marine and Bio
logic laboratories at Friday Harbor,
Washington, last summer, Dr. R. H.
Wolcott, chairman of the department
of zoology, made a collection of the
fauna of the northwestern coast reg
ion which he brought back with him
for class and laboratory work.
to Assist in
in the McKinley and Roosevelt cab
inets and who was the winner of the
Nobel peace prize in 1912; Col. Ed
ward M. House, former confident of
Woodrow Wilson, who served as
special representative of the United
States government at the interallied
conferenceof premiers and foreign
minister held at Paris in November,
1917; Major General James Guthrie
Harbord, president of the Radio Cor
poration of America, who served as
chief of staff of the American Ex
peditionary Force and as chief of the
American military mission to Ar
menia in 1919; President Ellen Fitz
Pendleton, of Wellesley college;
William Allen White of Emporia,
Kansas, editor, novelist and pub
lisher, who was sent to France as an
observer by the American Red Cross
in 1917 and who was a delegate to
the Rusian conference at Prinkipo in
1919; and Brand Whitlock, former
ambassador to Belgium.
COMMITTEES FOR
SALES CAMPAIGN
ARE ANNOUNCED
Different Chairmen and Stu
dent Committees Appointed
in Every College for Each
Day of Ticket Sale.
COZIER IS GENERAL
CHAIRMAN OF DRIVE
Intend to Sell Four Thousand
Pasteboards on First Day;
Executive Committee Ap
pointed for Each College.
For the student athletic ticket
campaign which starts on the cam
pus Wednesday morning, the follow
ing committee chairmen have been
announced:
J. Kenneth Cozier, general chair
man; Herbert Brownell, jr., pub
licity. Executive Committee. .
Ag College, Allen Cook; Arts and
Science College, Howard Buffett,
Barbara Wiggenhorn; College of
Business Administration, Dietrich
Dierks, Josephine Schramek; Engi
neering, Grant Lantz; Law, Oliver
Maxwell; Pharmacy, William Schoo
nemaker; Dental, Byron Arries;
Teachers, Jean Holtz.
College committees for the first
day of the campaign to sell 4,000 stu
dent tickets at $7.50 each follow:
Arts and Science College.
Hugh Cox, chairman, Charles
Adams, Douglas Orr, Crawiord Foll
mer, John Allison, Milo Tipton, Don
ald Reese, Richard Elster, Charles
Warren, William Hiliker, Robert F.
Craig, Ruth Miller, Frances Ment
zer, Dorothy Carr, Carolyn Airy,
Dorothy Brown, Helen Tomson, Elea
nor Picard, Laura Whelpley, Ruth
Carpenter, Frances McChesney.
Teachers College.
Emily Ross, chairman, Hope May-
nard, Robera Spain, Edith Tyler,
Helen Spellman, Ona Everetts, Eve
lyn Daly, Kathryn Johnson, Marcia
Follmer, Julia Sheldon, Lydia How
ard, Bernice Bell, Ruth Towner, Mar
garet Nelson. 4
(Continued on Page 4)
W. S. G. A. ANNOUNCES
RULES FOR CO-EDS
Recommends That Sororities
Set Three Minute Limit on
Telephone Conversations
Rules eoverning University women
were read and adopted at a meeting
of the W. S. G. A. Council held
Thursday evening at Ellen Smith
hall.
The rules adopted are:
1. Every girl shall be in the house
at 10:30 o'clock on mid-week nights,
unless she has received special per
mission to attend a party or a the
atre. Girls shall return to the house
immediately after the close of a
party or theatre. The .door shall be
locked at 10:30 o'clock except Friday
and Saturday evenings, when the
door shall be locked not later than
12:30 o'clock.
2. No girl shall have week-night
engagements after 10:30 o'clock ex
cept by special permission from the
chaDerone in the fraternity house or
dormitory, or the house committee
in the rooming houses.
3. There shall be no eating down
town after 10:30 o'clock on mid
week nights and after 12 o'clock on
social nights.
4. W. S. G. A. recommends that
each sorority house, dormitory, and
rooming house, maintain a three-
minute time limit on telephone caJs.
Members of the Council were
asked to tell freshmen girls about the
convocation Thursday evening at
5:00 o'clock. It was decided to hold
meetings of the Council regularly
every two weeks.
Honorav Initiates
Four Members
at Dinner Friday
The initiation of four new mem
bers of Valkyrie, senior women's
honorary, was held Friday evening
at a banquet in Ellen Smith hall.
The new members will replace wo
men who were elected last spring but
did not return to school. The new
members are: Margaret Wattles,
Helen Spellman, Julia Graves, Isabel
Welch.
CONVOCATION FOR
FRESHMEN WOMEN
COMES THURSDAY
Presidents of W. S. G. A., Y.
M. C. A., W. A. A., Mortar
board, Valkyrie, and Girl's
Commercial Club to Speak.
W. S. G. A. IS IN CHARGE
OF ANNUAL MEETING
All Women's Organiations on
Campus Asked to Come;
University Life to Be Dis
cussed at Gathering.
The annual convocation for all
freshmen women will be held at the
Temple Theater Thursday evening at
5 o'clock. Mortarboard, who for
merly sponsored the annual meeting,
has turned it over to the W. S. G. A.
Presidents of the W. S. G. A., Y.
W. C. A., W. A. A., Mortarboard,
Valkyrie, and the Girls' Commercial
Club will speak. All other women's
organizations on the campus have
been asked to come to the meeting
and sit in a body. Short speeches
will be given for the benefit of
freshmen women. Topics of inter
est about university life will be dis
cussed and advice will be given con
cerning women in school activities.
All freshmen women are expected
to attend this meeting. It will be
the first women's convocation of the
year.
Art Club Elects
Officers and Lays
Plans for Picnic
Officers were elected at the first
meeting of the Art Club of the
School of Fine Arts Thrusday at 6
o'clock in the china studio, Library.
The club is planning a picnic for
October 12 to acquaint the old and
new students of drawing and paint
ing. Officers chosen are as follows:
Eileen Hilliard, president; Lloyd
Tucker, vice president; Karen Jen
sen, secretary-treasurer; Gloyds Lux,
reporter.
During a "Greenich Villige" lunch
eon various topics were discussed by
the twenty-four active and alumni
members present. Further announce
ment of the picnic plans are to be
made later.
Chemical Engineers
Gather at Smoker
Cider was served in conical
flasks with glass rods as straws, and
filter paper napkins at a smoker
for chemical engineers held Friday
evening at the home of Newal Free
man, 1825 A street. The cigaret
stands were made of chemical appa
ratus.
"Hearts," "nose-poker," and smok
ing were the amusements of the gath
ering. A comparatively small num
ber of men are registered as chemi
cal engineers, but most of them were
present, according to members of the
society.
C. W. Kodewald. M. Sc. (Illinois),
has been appointed instructor in the
department of chemistry, and a3 lab
oratory assistant in the general
courses. Mr. Rodewald is complet
ing,1 in conjunction with his other
wori, the thesis for his doctorate
from the University of Illinois.
NEBRASKA BEATEN BY SUPERIOR
GENERALSHIP AND VETERAN LINE
Running and Punting of Lewellen for Nebraska and Spectac
ular Game Played by Grange of Illinois at Halfback
Are Stellar Points of Contest.
CRITICAL FUMBLES CONTRIBUTE TO HUSKER DEFEAT
Versatile Attack of Illini Helps
let and Cream Warriors; Schulte Says Team 50
Per Cent Stronger After Game.
(Special Wire Report by Nebraskan Reporter.)
URBANAJll., Oct. 6. Nebraska lost but went down
firrVifi'no- in tVio initial rnnrest of the season. Superior
4.1 g 11 blliSj
cronovolonin anrl thp vptpran
V v lull V
defeat for the Huskers, who were out-experienced, out-weighed
-. -r-r i 1 i.1
and out-played. 1 he green rrnsKer line was wean aunng me
first half, but came back strong in the second half. Illinois
has a great team.
"Nebraska is a 50 oer cent
game," stated Coach Henry F.
The Nebraska backtield
breaks were against the Cornhuskers. The running and punt
ing of Lewellen was a feature
HUNDREDS SEE
HUSKER DEFEAT
ON GRID-GRAPH
Spectators of Grid-Graph at
Armory See Seventy Yard
Run By Grange Which Was
Never Made.
WILL HAVE GRAPH AT
OTHER FOREIGN GAMES
Reports Received Over West
ern Union Wire in Armory
and Broadcast by University
Radio Station.
The Grid-graph, an innovation at
Nebraska, drew a noisy, enthusiastic
600 students to the Armory Saturday
afternoon to see the play-by-play
flash of the Illinois game. When the
Husker eleven went over the goal
line for six points the watchers in
the Armory nearly went wild.
A seventy yard run by Grange
after he had received a forward pass
startled the crowd during the last
quarter. Onjly those fortunate
enough to attend the Grid-graph ex
hibition ever saw this play the rest
of the world lost out. It all hap
pened when the man who was phon
ing the results to the University ra
dio station became too eager, and
took a telegraph blank he shouldn't
have taken.
Reports were received over a
Western Union wire which came di
rect to the Armory. The telegraph
operator wrote out the dispatches on
a typewriter and handed the filled
in blanks to the operator of the Grid
graph. When he had finished, they
were taken by another man who
phoned them to the University radio
(Continued on Page 4)
EIGHT INITIATED INTO
SOPHOMORE HONORARY
Take tbe Places of Men Who
Did Not Return to School
This Fall.
Eight men were initiated into the
Iron Sphinx, sophomora honorary so-
cietv. to fill vacancies left by mem
bers who failed to return to school
this vear. The initiation was held at
the athletic field north of the high
school Wednesday
The new men who will attend their
first meeting next Tuesday, when
plans for the year will be made, are:
James Wagner, Beta Theta Pi.
Harry Sidles, Delta Tau Delta.
William Hay, Silver Linx.
C. L. Barrett, Delta Chi.
Clayton Snow, Delta Upsilon.
" Wendell Brown, Acacia.
Allen Holmes, Phi Delta Theta.
Ward Lindley, Alpha Tau Omega.
Crumple Up Defense of Scar
4
Tllinnis line paused the 24 to 7
stronger team alter tne Illinois
Schulte.
was weak on aeiense. ine
ot the game. Grange oi Illinois
played a spectacular game at the
halfback position. The versatile at
tack of the Illini was a potent factor
in the defeat of the Huskers.
Two critical fumbles, coupled with
the five green men on the Nebraska
line were responsible for the scores
in the first half
Nebraska scored in the first five
minutes of the second half after
Bassett had recovered a fumble of
Illinois, through a long run by Lew
ellen. An Illinois pass in the second
half was good for twenty yards and
a touchdown. Grange returned a
punt sixty-five yards to a touchdown.
Summary of Firt Quarter.
Britton kicked off sixty yards for
a touchback. Nebraska made a first
down in three tries. After two inef
fective tries by Nebraska, Lewellen
punted, Illinois fumbled and Ne
braska recovered on her own 35 yard
line. Noble and Dewitz made a first
down. Nebraska fumbled and Illi
nois marched to Nebraska's 35 yard
line, trying a place kick which went
wide.
Score, end of first quarter: Ne
braska 0, Illinois 0.
Second Quarter.
Lewellen punted to Illinois' 45
yard line. Britton returned the ball
to Nebraska's 5 yard line. Grange
carried the ball over for the first
touchdown on an end run. Britton
kicked goal.
Score: Illinois 7, Nebraska 0.
Noble kicked off to the Illinois
15 yard line, out of bounds. After
a couple of tries at the line, Britton
punted to H. Dewitz, who ran the
ball back to the Illinois 43 yard line.
Dewitz fumbled, Mcllwain recovered,
(Continued on Page 4)
RECEIVE GORNHUSKER
APPLICATIONS MONDAY
Staff of Eighty-five Will Be
Picked; Work Starts at
Once.
Applications for all staff positions
on the 1924 Cornhusker will be re
ceived Monday at the office in the
northeast basement of University
hall. Positions to be filled are: De
partment editors, assistant editors,
business and circulation aides, typ
ists, copy gatherers, advertisement
saelsmen, and "writeup" men. Blanks
may be secured at the Cornhusker
office.
About eighty-five persons will be
on the staff when it is fully organ
ized. The annual will be larger this
year than ever before, according to
the editor and business manager,
who plan an early stait for that rea
son. Robert Craig, editor, and
David Richardson, business manager,
who were appointed last spring,
made a skeleton outline of the book
during the summer.
Photographs of the "grid-graph,"
of the rally last Thursday, of the
track and baseball teams of last
spring, and of all important events
since the publication of the 1923
Cornhusker have been taken so that
no activity woulfl be missed.