The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 20, 1924, Image 1

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    he Daily
Ne
Examinations
BRASKAN
Examinations
January 21-26
January 21-26
vnrT; XXIII-NO. 79
START WORK ON
SENIOBPICTURES
Staff of Annual Asks Students
to Make Appointments
in Office.
JUNIORS MUST HAND IN
PROOFS BY TOMORROW
Work on the senior pictures for
the Cornhusker will begin Monday
gnd will continue for. two weeks. Ap
pointments can be made at the Corn
husker office at any time. Seniors
arc urged by the staff to make their
appointments at once, if possible, and
have their pictures taken during ex
amination week. By getting- their
sittings this week, they will avoid
the usual rush at the studio. No lists
be published during this week,
so that there will be plenty of time
for appointments. Over 100 pictures
were taken before the holidays and
the staff expects to get every senior
within the next two weeks.
Photograph No More J union.
All junior pictures that will be in
the book have been taken and no.
more appointments can be made by
juniors. Work on the mounting for
cuts will begin Tuesday. Over 500
jumors will appear in the Cornhusk
er. This is a great increase over the
number in former years, there being
only 410 in the section last year.
This year's class responded very well
to the plan of making appointments
nd the staff is pleased with the re
sults. All juniors who still have proofs
out must return them to Dole's stu
dio before Monday evening if they
wish to make their own choice of
the picture which is to, go in the
book. If the proofs are not returned
the staff will be forced to make the
selection.
All Cornhusker pictures are to be
token by February 2, according to
the staff. This includes all depart
ments of the book. Any organiza
tions that have not made appoint
ments for pictures must do so soon,
by calling the Cornhusker office.
The pictures are to be taken at the
eampus studio.
All sorority pictures should be
token by the middle of this week. Ap
pointments for these pictures can be'
made at either the Cornhusker of
fice or Dole's. Fraternity pictures
were finished last week, and are be
iug mounted. With the completion
of the senior section, most of the
pictures will have been taken.
TRACK TEAM STARTS
TRAINING THIS WEEK
Nebraska Has Enough Coaches
and Equipment for Five
Hundred Men.
Everything is set for a successful
year, according to Head Coach
Schulte. Intensive training, prepar
atory to tryouts for the Kansas City
indoor nuet, will start this week and
ery man who expects to report for
tte squad should see Coach Schulte,
the athletic offices, as soon as it
convenient.
There is a great chance for track
en to make the team this year and
e coaching staff and equipment are
efficient to take care of from four
five hundred candidates. Under
Schulte's system of coaching it is pos
"!e for men with very little appar
ent ability to deveop into track men
nd lett-r men.
HARVARD The first of a series
college votes on prohibition laws
"ought in the results of a 2 to 1 vote
Pinst prohibition.
Fees .
The student fees for the second semester registration are to be
P'd in the Armory, as follows:
January 21-22 (Open from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m-)
College of Arts and Sciences.
Pre-Medics, Pre-Dents, Pre-Laws. .
School of Journalism.
School of Fhie Arts. '
College of Business Administration.
January 23-24 (Opeu from 9 m. to 5 p. m.)
College of Agriculture.
College of Dentistry.
College of Engineering.
Graduate College.
College of Law.
College of Pharmacy,
Teachers College. .
UNIVERSITY OF
Vesper Choir to Give
Concerts for Mission
A program of philanthropic worK
was decided upon at the monthly din
ner of the Vesper choir held at Ellen
Smith hall Tuesday night. The busi
ness meeting following the dinner
was presided over by the president,
Josephine Bishop. Norma Carpen
ter was elected social service chair
man. The social service pans for the yjar
include a program at the Orthopedic
hospital, and the continuance of last
year's program of singing at the City
Mission once a month. The choir
will also have a trained quartet that
will be available for University af
fairs. Lola Craig was elected social
chairman to have charge of the din
ners and parties.
PHI DELTA CHI WINS
ANNUAL RIFLE SHOOT
Phi Gamma Delta Lags Fifteen
Points; Kappa Psi Takes
Third Place.
The Phi Delta Chi rifle team with
a total score of 806 won first place
in the third annual inter-fraternity
rifle tournament held by the military
department, which closed Saturday
morning. Second place was won by
the Phi Gamma Delta team with a
score of 791, and third by Kappa Psi
which also scored 791, but made a
lower standing position record. The
two fraternities were tied for sec
ond place on the basis of total scores,
and the standing position scores de
cided the winner according to stand
ard army regulations covering rifle
matches. The Phi Gam team made
172 in the standing position, and
the Kappa Psi made 171.
Other high sc ' es in the match
were made by Alpha Sigma Phi 778,
and Delta Chi 767. Phi Tau Epsilon
was fifth with a score of 730.
Major Sidney Ericksen will give
n skin to the winners of first and sec
ond place.
Nineteen fraternities were entered
in the tourney, of which fourteen
completed all firing, and five were
incomplete. Last year there were
twelve in the meet.
Francis Millson of the Sigma Chi
team was high man in the shoot. He
made 187 out of a possible 200. Fred
Kamm of Alpha Sigma Phi was sec
ond high individual man with a score
of 179. Williard Dover, Alpha Sigma
Phi, W. F. Mast, Kappa Psi, R,
Young, Phi Gamma Delta, Raymond
Currier, Phi Delta Chi, were tied for
third high individual honors, each of
them making 174.
The fraternity scores are listed be
low: Phi Delta Chi 806
Phi Gamma Delta 791
Kappa Psi 791
Alpha Sigma Phi 778
Delta Chi 767
Phi Tau Epsilon 730
Sigma Chi 716
Bushnell Guild 712
Alpha Theta Chi 695
Lambda Chi Alpha 661
Delta Upsilon '....656.
Kappa Sigma - 632
Delta Tau Delta .....614
Nu Alpha 579
DARTMOUTH: The annual Dart
mouthOuting Club winter ascent of
Mt. Washington will Btart February
23. This date was chosen in order
tn insure fast Bnow on the 21,000 ft
ski course. Although perfectly safe
for even a novice on sfcis a speea oi
40 miles an hour is often reached on
this slide. Snowshoes and ice
pm. will be used by the students
in order to visit all places of interest.
NEBRASKA, LINCOLN,
Ag Engineers Choose
Leaders for Semester
The American Society of Agricul
tural Engineers elected officers Fri
day. L. G. Samsel was elected presi
dent, Thomas Koontz, vice president,
and Claude Wieger, secretary-treasurer,
for the coming year. Narotney
was chosen to represent the society in
the Engineering college.
The society outlined the program
for the ensuing semester. A series
of talks will be conducted by the
members on engineering topics at the
regular meetings. An entertainment
is being planned to raise funds to
send a representative to the national
convention in the near future.
SELECT COMMITTEES
FOR BIZAD BANQUET
Chairmen Say Both Men and
Women Invited to Ban
quet February 8.
Bizads will gather February 8 for
their annual banquet at the Cham
ber of Commerce. This banquet will
be open to all men and women in the
College of Business Administration.
Merle Loder, president of the men's
club and Josephine Schramek, presi
dent of the women's club, are joint
chairmen.
. They have announced the follow
ing committees:
Banquet: Bennet S. Martin and
Marie Van Es, joint chairmen; Art
Latta, John Hollingsworth, Florence
Hosing, Meta Wunder.
Ticket sales: Philip Lewis and Rhea
Freidell, chairmen; Clayton Gore,
Agnes Anderson, Mildred Armstrong,
Fred Kraemer.
Publicity: Frank Fry and Minnie
Schlicting, chairmen; Wilber Swan
son, Mildred Jensen, Doris Loefell,
Williard Penry.
Entertainment: Deitrich Dierks
and Alice Kauffman, joint chairmen,
Oscar Ooterlund, Paul Cheney, Earl
yne Harriot, Ella Hardin.
Omaha Beats Fremont
by Two-point Margin
Earlv week earnes in high school
circles showed about the same brand
of basketball that marked last week's
contests. The Fremont-Omaha Cen
tral battle headed the list of pre
week eames. Central taking the long
end of a 24 to 22 score after a hard
fought game.
Score of week day games were:
McCook 23, Indianola 22.
Nebraska City 32, Peru 3.
Aggie H. S. 11, University Place 8.
Chadron 19, Alliance 14.
Valentine 32, Alliance 12.
Grand Island 44, North Platte 10.
Omaha Central 24, Fremont 22.
Winnebago 28, Craig 26.
Tilden 38, Meadow Grove 8.
Fairmont 19. Geneva 6.
In addition to these games, girls'
teams in many schools have been
playing regularly. Some fine teams
are being produced.
TVnTAMA Tho fnnthall SQUad
Alllinma
biave organized a Sloovering Club.
The purposo oi the ciur w to Keep me
football spirit among the members so
that spring practices will start with
out a hitch.
Tkia will b tho latt of the
Daily Nebrakan wntil h ecoB!
matter boffins. A bow taff, -lecUd
by tho Publication Board,
will odit it for tho aext quarter.
NEBRASKA, SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 1924
ADKINS SELECTS MEN
FOR SWIMMING TEAM
Chooses Tentative Line-up for
Omaha Meet at Joint
Workout.
Following a joint workout yester
day with the Lincoln high school
swimmers at the high school pool,
Coach Frank Adkins picked a tenta
tive lineup for the team that will rep
resent Nebraska in the dual meet
with the Omaha Athletic Club next
Friday night at Omaha. The selec
tions are 'tentative and additions to
the ones 'announced yesterday may
be made uring the week. There are
seven men on the team and two more
may be added.
The divers will leave in the morn
ing in oriier to have a workout in
the pool, 'and get accustomed to the
different diving board. The sprint
ers and relay men will go down in
the afternoon. A. A. U. rules will
govern in the meet.
Need Fat Man.
A fat man for plunging regard
less of swimming ability is still the
need of the Husker swimming men
tor. This is the one event in which
Nebraska is weak.
Nebraska will be represented in
the relays by Jack and Capt. F. Hun
ton, Shildneck and vReed.
F. and Jack Hunton will swim in
the 50 yard sprints.
Shildneck and Brainard will do
the fancy diving.
The entry for the 100 yard breast
stroke swim is Plate.
Campbell will do the 220 yard
crawl. Plate and Campbell are slated
for the plunging event. Reed and
Brainard will swim the 150 yard
backstroke swim. The free stroke
100 yard swim will find Jack Hunton
and Campbell at the starter's line.
Offer Ag Students
Basketball Course
The Agricultural College is offer
ing a course in basketball for stu
dents registered in physical educa
tion who are not able to work out on
the Armory floor with convenience.
Many students have availed them
selves of this opportunity and arc
working out daily under Bob Rus
sell who is coaching the team.
The team played its first game Fri
day night against the Havelock town
quintet and lost by a score of 15
to 13.
Mats have been secured and stu
dents may register for wrestling on
the Agricultrual College campus. Dr.
Clapp will supervise the work, and
part of the time the men will have
to work out at the Armory.
Lccke Called Home
by Death of Father
Because of the death of his father
Roland "Gipp" Locke was called
home to North Platte Thursday. The
fact that his mother is left alone
makes the possibility of his return
to school doubtful.
The Husker track squad will be
without a sprinter, if he does not re
turn, ts Noble graduates at the mid
year, and Keith Lloyd, who was the
co-star of Noble in the sprints last
year, is now attending school at the
University of Southern California.
Locke made a name for himself in
the football reason by his plunging
and fast work in broken field.
Postpone Rifle Match
Booked for This Week
No intercollegiate rifle matches
are scheduled for this week on ac
count of examinations. The match
with Cornell University that was
scheduled for this week has been
postponed.
The gallery is reserved this week
for straggling freshmen who have net
yet completed the required rifle
shooting in the freshman military
science course. This is the last
chance for delinquent freshmen to
clean the slate. The gallery is open
every day from 9 until 12 o'coek and
from 1 until 4. Failure to do the
required gallery shooting makes an
incomplete in the course.
START PLANNING FOR
JUNIOR-SENIOR PROM
Assess Students to Pay Class
bebt and Allow Holding
of Formal.
The recent ruling that juniors and
seniors are to Dav their class dues in
the registration line has allowed com
mittees to start plans for the annual
junior-senior prom. A rule made by
the committee on student organiza
tions that no organization having a
deficit in its treasury cte hold a so
cial function would have oarred the
junior-senior prom-had it not been
that the respective debts w'. in this
way be erased.
Among the three big University
functions, the junior-senior prom has
always been the one to put a climax
to the formal season. But few for
ma parties are held after this event.
The field for the upper class p-.rty
is now clear and committees from
both classes are making their pans.
FARES REDUCED FOR
HIGH SCHOOL TEAMS
Cut Is Made in Railway Rates
for Teams Coming to
Basket Tourney.
High school basketball teams com
ing to the state tournament set for
March 6, 7 and 8 have been granted
a special rate of fare-and-half, ac
cording to a notice received from the
Chamber of Commerce.
The annual basketball tournament
has become one of the largest in the
world and attracts hundreds of
teams every year. All of the plans
for the tourney are in charge of the
"N" club. Active work on the as
signment of the various team has al
ready started but will not be finished
until later scores show tho rating of
the interscholastic squads.
Two Alumni to Speak
to Chemical Society
Two prominent alumni who hold
state positions R. G. Batty, Ph. C.
'15, B. Sc. Ph. '16, state chemist, and
L. C. Vose, B. Sc. Ag. '17, M. A. '18,
state bacteriologist will speak on
"Applications of Chemistry and Bac
teriology in the Enforcement of Food
and Drug Legislation" at the 113th
meeting of the Nebraska section of
the American Chemical Society, in
Chemistry hall 208, January 17 at
8 p. m.
Use of Oxygen in Smelting Results
In Cheaper Metals, Says Committee
(University NJews Service)
Radical changes in the methods of
metal manufacture resulting m
cheaper metals,' in conservation of
the metal wealth of the country by
the utilization of lower grade ores
for smelting, and in production of
cheaper artificial gas by the introduc
tion of oxygen in place of atmospher
ic air these; are some of the results
of investigation carried on by a spe
cial advisory committee of the United
States bureau of mines.
Prof. William L. DeBaufre, chair
man of the department of mechani
cal engineering at the University of
Nebraska, is a member of this com
mittee, which was charged with the
duty of eliminating waste and in
creasing efficiency in the utilization
of minerals by the use of oxygen in
metallurgical processes. This com
mittee completed the thirteenth an
nual report of. the bureau recently,
having given special att ition to pos
PRICE 5 CENTS
HUSKERS LOSE TO
OKLAHOMA 32-20
With Nebraska Trailing . One
Point at Half, Sooner De
fense Tightens.
IS THIRD CONSECUTIVE
VALLEY BASKET DEFEAT
(Special to the Nebraskan.)
NORMAN, Okla., Jan. 19. Trail
ing by one point at the half, the
Cornhuskers failed to weather a ter
rific Sooner onsaught in the second
half, and went down to defeat, 32-20
here tonight. Coupled with the de
feat at the hands of Kansas 19-18
Friday evening, this makes the third
consecutive Missouri Valley basket
ball defeat for the Husker squad.
The game was bitterly fought with
neither side possessing the advantage
in the first half. Oklahoma tightened
up on the defensive in the final pe
riod and found the Husker basket for
17 points, holding Nebraska to 6
points.
Wallace, Sooner guard, was the in
dividual star of the game. His brilli
ant floor work and basket shooting
netted Oklahoma five field goals and
a free throw.
Wheeler, lanky center of the Okla
homa five, nearly equaled the mark
of Wallace when he tossed in four
fied goals and two free throws for a
total of 10 points. Wheeler was one
of the fastest men on the floor.
Captain Usher was the main stay
of the visitors. Time and again he
broke ujl threatening Oklahoma of
fensive moves by sheer speed. Per
sonal fouls were plentiful, Oklahoma
drawing 12 and Nebraska 6.
Cozier ran up 6 points for the
Huskers. Beerkle and Black each had
a try at the foward position, Beerkle
getting a basket, and Black making
a free throw.
The close defensive work of the
Oklahoma squad, coupled with the.
failure of the Nebraska men to con
nect well with the hoop in the last
half, was responsible for the defeat
of the Huskers. The Sooners rolled
up 17 points in the final frame; the
Scarlet and Cream five getting 6.
Nebraska fg ft f pts,
Usher (C), rf 3 0 16
Cozier, If 2 2 0 6
Beerkle, If 10 0 2
Black, If 0 10 1
Goodson, c 0 10 1
Volz, rg 0 0 4 0
Dewitz, Ig 0 2 12
Tipton, lg 10 0 2
Totals 7 6 6 20
Oklahoma fg ft f pts
McBride, rf 3 0 2 6
Goodwin, rf 10 0 2
Ruppert (C), If 113 3
Wheeler, c 4 2 1 10
Wallace, rg 5 1 3 11
Dunlay, lg .. 0 0 0 0
Morse, lg 0 0 3 0
Totals 14 4 12 32
Hargiss, Kansas State Teachers
Colic', referee.
Kama Defeat Nebraska.
Thirty seconds before the whistle,
Ackerman tossed the basket that de
feated the Huskers in the Kansas-Nebraska
game at Lawrence Friday
night. The final score was 19 to 18.
The Huskers led the count 11-5
at the half, but a Kansas rally tied
the score ir-11. The score see
sawed till it was again tied at 17,
when Volz realized one point on a
(Continued on Page 4)
sible developments in the smelting of
pig iron, the Bessemer and open
hearth process for the manufacture
of steel, the manufacture of artifi
cial gas, and the blast furnace smelt
ing of ferromanganese. Oxygen,
popular chiefly for breathing, may
bring a revolution in metal processes,
this report shows.
Decrease Coslf Increaie Output.
As an example of the savings made
possible by the research of the com
mittee, Professor DeBaufre points
out it will be practicable to increase
the oxygen of the blast 21 per cent
to 31 per cent, and that this en
riched blast, when fed to furnaces
cold, will increase the production of
the furnaces by 18 per cent and de
crease costs by 6.7 per cent, Not
only will cost be decreased but the
output per furnace will also be in
creased, trouble in the smelting can
be more readily located and remedied
(Continued on Page 4)