.Y NEBRASKAN I HE Interclass Mat Meet Degins Today. Intercla. Mat Meet Begin Today. " """"""" " " yTxXIlI-NO 113 STAR CAST WILL PRESENTMACBETH Uads Include H. Alice Howell, Hart Jenks, Lindstrom and Yenne. PLAY THREE DAYS IN TEMPLE THEATER A star cast is asaembld by the Uni versity Players for the presentation If Macbeth at the Temple theater Thursday, Friday and Saturday with matinees on Friday and Saturday. Miss H. Alice Howell will play"Lady Macbeth, Hart Jenks will act the part 0 Banquo, Macbeth will be inter preted by David Lindstrom, and Her bert Yenne will take the part of Malcolm. The complete cast is as follows: Duncan, king . of Scotland Neil Brown. Malcolm Herbert Yenne. Donalbain Rose Cecil. Macbeth David lindstrom. I Banquo Hart Jenks. Macduff L. C. Hawley. Lennox Darrel Starnes. Ross D. J. Merriam. AngUS Foster Matchett. Fleance, son of Banqu Mva Jones. Siward Harold Gish. Scyton, an officer attending on Macbeth Orville Andrews. Boy, son to Macduff Pauline Gel latly. A Scotch Doctor Edward Taylor. A sergeant Walter M. Herbert. A porter C. L. Coombs. v An old man O.rville Andrews. A messenger Kenneth Anderson. A lord C. K. Gitting. An attendant C. F. Rogers. Lady Macbeth H. Alice Howell. Lady Macduff Edna Leming. Gentlewoman attending on Lady Macbeth Dolores Bosse. Gentlewoman Marianna Cummings, Marguerite Fisher, Ruth Alcorn. First witch Marguerite Hunger. Second witch Mary Yarbroff. Third witch Dorothy Sprague. First apparition Lucile Brock. Second apparition Rose CeciL Third apparition Marguerite Fisher. First murderer L. Augustus Mil ler. Second murderer D. J. Merriam. Third murderer Frartk Mielenz. Directed by . Holme. Macbeth is one of the season s popular presentations by the Temple Stock Company. The scenery has been specially designed by Mr, Haugseth of the School of Fine Arts. The costumes were designed by stu dents and faculty of the school and made by Theo Lieben and Sons of Omaha. The production is under the direction of Garnet Holme, mana ger of the open-air plays in Cali fornia. Macbeth is now running in New York with the master interpreter Hacket in the stellar role. Ticket sales for the special matinee Friday for high school students have been very large. The late high school classes will be excused. All perform ances are in the Temple theater. Mat inees at 3 ollock and evening pre sentations at 8:15. The price is 50 cents for the matinees and 75 cents for the evenings. MAJOR FORWARD WILL TALK ON GAS INDUSTRY Engineers to Hear Address at College Convocation in So cial Science. Major Alexander Forward will ad dress the Engineerine Colleee con vocation Thursday at 11 o'clock in Social Science auditorium. The sub ject will be the "Gas Industry." which will be illustrated with lantern naes. Major Forward was formerly chair- nan of the Virginia State Railway commission, and at present he is :Je National Executive Secretary of e American On nacnninf;. A .World war veteran, Major For 8 . ia a mn of distinction in the mce of his home state, and prom !, at Present time in a national t0 secure co-operation between '"Si est various gas manufacturing inter- m an attempt to solve their "Problems. eistfrduBeck' '15 consulting geolo- S With offices in H visited . ' 1 iea the campus last week. UNIVERSITY OF Prints Paper to Prove Travelers Should Abandon Yuma Highway Several copies of the "Salome Sun" of Salome, Ariz., "Where she danced," edited by DeForrest W. Hall, ex-98, have been received by Harold Holtz, alumni secretary. The undying purpose of the' " as its publisher announces, is to give the reasons why the Arizona roadway should go through Salome, "Where she danced," wther than through Yuma, as it docs now. The editor, better known as "Dick Wick" Hall, admits that Salome, "Where she danced," is surrounded on all four sides by Arizona, and that it is within 100 miles of Yuma, but aside from that, the town is a perfectly desirable place. The paper is a satirical criticism upon the "Yumaresquo" road, which is supposedly "100 miles out of the way and takes more time, and costs more money" when one 13 traveling from Phoenix to Los Angeles." According to "Dick Wick" Hall, The Sahara desert and hell are shady oasis compared to the glisten ing, glaring, drifting sand dunes on the 'Yumaresque' trail. There is no bottom to the sand; if there is, no auto owner has ever been ahle to find it." "Dick Wick" advocates that you travel on the road that goes by Sa- Radio Party to Hear Nebraska-Iowa Debate Thursday Evening A "radio party" will be held this evening in Electrical Engineering building 104, when members of the affirmative debate team, students in the courses English 9 and 10, Prof M. M. Fogg, director of debating, and others will "listen in" on the Nebraska-Iowa debate, to be held this evening at 7:30 at Iowa City The Nebraska team, composed of Floyd E. Leavitt, Hugh B. Cox and Bernard S. Gradwohl, is taking the negative side of the question on pro hibition of immigration. TANK SQUAD TO MEET KANSAS AGGIES TODAY Swimming Team Leaves This Morning for Manhattan Contest. The Nebraska swimming team leaves this morning at 7 o'clock for Manhattan, Kan., where, they are scheduled to meet the Kansas Aggies in a dual meet tonight. Seven men and the coach, Frank Adkins, are making the trip. The meet is to consist of eight events, including three free style events, one fancy diving, one breast stroke, one plunge for dinnce, and one back stroke. f. The team has only twe veterans with it this-year. Capt. Hunton in the relay and the dashes, and T. J. Reed, entered in the relay and l'tO-yard back stroke. The squad is handi capped by the absence of Jack Hun ton, one of the mainstays of the team, who' is now in the hospital. The following are the entries in the various events: Relay Shildneck, Reed, Kirkbride, F. Hunton. Fancy diving Shildneck, Brain- erd. 40-yard free style F. Hunton, Kirkbride. 200-yard breast Plate. 220-yard free style Kirkbride, Campbell. PUnge for distance Campbell, Plate. 150yard back Reed, Brainerd. 100-yard free style F. Hunton, Kirkbride. The meet is scheduled for 7:30 this evening and the team will re turn to Lincoln tomorrow morning. Scrivener Elected Secretary of Okcia F. J. Scrivener was elected secretary-treasurer of the Okoia club Thursday noon. The club decided, to take a page in the editijp of the Cornhusker Countryman which will be issued the week of the Farmers Fair. A committee was appointed to take cha'-ge of the preparation for an Ag convocation und"r the di rection of the club. NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, lome and Blythe, "About 100 miles the shortest and 100 per cent the best way." He advises traveler to "go by Salome, where she danced, and fill up on laughing gas; play golf on the greasewood golf course, and sleep at the Blue Rock Inn. Mr. Hall describes the Yuma road as picturesque and grotesque; a plasterers dream with plenty of sand and Dante's inferno, up to date. Hall's publication comes in mime ographed form, and has attracted no tice all over the country. Reprints of the "Sun" have appeared in the Saturday Evening Post. ' SOPHOMORE PRESIDENT APPOINTS COMMITTEES Minor Officers to Be Elected at Thursday Meeting in Social Science. Standing committees for the pres ent semester have been appointed by Reginald Everett, president of the sophomore class. Mino rofficers will be elected and class matters discussed at a meeting for all sophomores Thursday morning at 11 o clock in Social Science 101. The committees are: General Richard Rogers, Aair man, Maurine Champe, Robert Pres ton, William Hay. Publicity Robert Lang, chairman Don Reese, Gertrude Barber, Nancy Haggard. Finance Charles Hrdlicka, chair man; Raymond Lewis, Frances Mc- Chesney, John Beeber. Men's athletics Ed Weir, chair man; Robert McKee, Ward Lindley Leo Black, Ernest Raun, Floyd H Bridges. Women's athletics Daisy Rich chahrman; Pauline Tait, Arline Ros enberry. Ruth Wells. Debate Hugh Cox, chairman; El ton Baker, Robert Scoular, Ralph Rickley. Ivy day Harry Burke, chairman, Marion Woodard, Margaret Long, Amelia Dirks. t Alumni week Pauline Barber, chairman; Kenneth L. Neff, John Sheldon. Harry Walter. Social Dorothy Calrr, chairman, Katherine Saylor, Eleanore Picard, Elizabeth Coleman, Blanche Burt, Ar thur Wurtz. Entertainment Florilla Nye, chair man, Martha Fregenbaughm, Arthur Peterson. CALDWELL TO CAPTAIN SCABBARD AND BLADE Fraternity Elects Estabrooks, Marshall and Richardson to Other Offices. Scabbard and Blade, national mili tary fraternity, elected Charles Cald well captain for the next year at a meeting Tuesday. Caldwell is a member of Sigma Chi, Pershing Rlfle3 and is a junior in the University. Roland Estabrooks was elected first lieutenant. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega, is junior class president, and is a member of Per shine Rifles. James Marshall was elected second lieutenant. He is a member of Delta Tau Delta, editor of the Blue Print and a member of Per shing Rifles. David G. Richardson was elected first sergeant. He t.i a member of Kappa Sigma and busi ness mahaeer of the Cornhusker. The annual dinner dance given for members, associate members, and alumni will be held at the University club Friday evening. Plans were. completed for the party, business af fairs of the year were reviewed and work for the remainder of the year was assigned. After the meeting, the newly elected officers invited .he members to the Silver Moon as their guests Newlv elected officers report that the men enjoyed a rather expensive bit of entertainment. Doctor Susanne Ring Parsons, B.Sc. '14, A.M. '15, Ph.D. '17, and Bessie Noyes, A.B. '11, of Baltimore, Md.. were visitors at the alumni oi fice yesterday. They are both in hospital work at Baltimore.' Dr. Homer L, Shartz, Ph.D. '05, is on his second phytogeographic ex ploring trip in tropical Africa. NEBRASKA,THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1924. "St.;.-. it Miss H. Alice Howell, as Joan d' Arc, who will take the role of Lady Mac beth in Macbeth to be presented by "' University Players Thursday, Fri day and Saturday at the Temple theater. HENDERSON SPEAKS AT WORLD FORUM Detroit Bishop Lectures on , Isosceles Christianity at Luncheon. Dr. Theodore S. Henderson, Meth odist bishop of Detroit, Mich., lec tured at the world forum luncheon Wednesday noon at the Grand hotel Bishop Henderson spoke on Isosce les Christianity." He was intro duced by Chancellor S. Avery. Dr. Henderson told about a Cor nell university student who asked the question, "What does it mean to be a Christian?" "To be a Christian," the bishop answered, "is to treat God like a father, to live like the Son of God, and to treat everyone else like a member of the family." "It is impossible to have a brother hood of man without a fatherhood of God," said the bishop. "God, as a Father, has expectations of us, and we have obligations to the Father. If we are going to treat everyone else like a member of the family, there must be no' recognition of caste (financial, intellectual or social), race, creed, color or nation ality." Dr. Y. Y. Tsu, professor of St. John Colleee at Shanghai, will speak at the next world forum luncheon March 19. His subject will be, "China of Today." CABINET MEMBERS TO HAVE TRAINING MEET Seventeen Schools to Send Delegates Here to Y. M. Y. W. Conference. A spring cabinet training confer ence for all cabinet members, includ ing newly-elected members of both Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. will be held here April 11-12-13. Notable speakers from different parts of the United States will be present to' con duct the meetings. Seventeen schools will be represented at this state con ference which will be entertained by the University associations. Raleigh Holmstead of Hastings, Beyrl Snyder and Margaret Bogle of Wesleyan, Alex McKie and Agnes Kessler met with Paul McCaffree and Miss Erma Appleby last Saturday to decide on a tentative program for these meetings and to arrange for the leaders. Ben Cherrington of Denver will be one of the leaders. The subject chosen for the con ference is: "The Re-discovery of the Religion of Jesus and What It In volves for Us." These conferences are held annually but this is the first ti-ne tliat the two associations will hold joint meetings. Weather Forecast Thursday Partly cloudy and slightly warmer." Friday Partly cloudy. CLAPP HEADS NEW MAT ASSOCIATION Organization Formed at Ames to Foster Minor Sports in Middlewest. Dr. R. G. Clapp, coach of the Ne- braske wrestling team, was elected president of the newly founded Mis souri Valley Wrestling association at a meeting of representatives of the various schools represented in the first annual Missouri Valley wrestl ing meet held at Ames last week. This Valley association was formed to foster the mat game and also to increase the interest in minor sports including bo'xing and gymnastics among the middlewestern schools. It will correspond to the Western In tercollegiate conference in the east and will be independent of the Mis souri Valley conference although several Valley conference teams will be members of the association. H. K. Patrick of Kansas university is the secretary-treasurer. The new association includes the membership of seven schools Uni versitv of Nebraska. Iowa State Col lege, Oklahoma A. & M., University of Kansas, University of Missouri Cornell College and Simpson College The committee in charge of the ac tivities of the association has sent invitations to Washington university Texas university, Rolla School of Mines, Kansas Aggies and the Univer sity of Oklahoma. The first meeting of the associa tion will be held at Kansas City next December when the usual Missouri Valley conference meeting will be held. GOPPOCK FUND DRIVE BEGINS WITH A BOOM First Day Receipts Are Large; 1 Committees to Meet at Noon Daily. Two hundred and eighty dollars were raised for the Grace Coppock fund on the first day of the drive At the meeting held Tuesday noon at Ellen Smith hall Mrs. E. L. Hin- man told of Grace Coppock's life and her work in China. Gertrude Tomson, president of Mortar Board spoke on the spirit of the drive and said that she hoped that the Workers would show more enthusiasm in the future. T.he Freshman Commission, under the leadership of Margaret Dunlap leads the list of committees in '.he amount turned in at noon yesterday with $35' to its credit. Meetings will be held every noon at Ellen Smith hall until the drive ends. Luncheon will be served in order not tc incon venience team members. The drive will close Friday night at 6 o'clock INTERCLASS MAT MEET BEGINS TODAY Preliminary Matches Open in Armory at 4 O'Clock This Afternoon. Preliminary matches in the annual inter-class wrestling tournament will be held in the Armory this after noon starting at 4 o'clock, accord ing to Assistant Coach Harry Reed who is in charge of the class compet. Contestants will be required to weigl; in at the Armory between 11 o'clock and 4 at which time the drawings for the first round matches will be made. The entry list in the week end mat classic is expected to be larg er than in any previous class meet heretofore. The class meet will be governed by the Western Intercollegiate wrest ling rules with 10 minute matches in the preliminary matches and 12 min ute periods in the finals with extra 3 minute periods added should neith er wrestler hold a time advantage of more than 1 minute and 30 seconds at the end of the regular period. The class title will be decided by points as a dual meet, 5 points being award (Continued on Pare 4) PRICE 5 CENTS DEBATERS CLASH ON IMMIGRATION Nebraska Defends Prohibitive Proposal Against South Dakota. STAGE HOT CONTEST IN CRr OED ARMORY The immigration problem was turned upside down, dissected, ex amined, and solutions proposed by Nebraska and South Dakota debaters before a crowd that filled nearly every scat in Memorial hall last night. The arguments were broadcast by the University radio station WFAV to a crowd, the size of which will never bo known. Nebraska maintained the affirma tive of the question, "Resolved, That the United States should prohibit immigration for five years." Ne braska's negative team will clash with Iowa at Iowa tonight. Sheldon Tef ft, former debater and winner of the Rhodes scholarship, has been actively in charge of the work in Nebraska s think shop" this year. Professor M. M. Fogg, director of the School of Journalism, who has been in charge of debating at Ne braska for twenty-three years, stated that this was the fortieth debate which has been held on this campus since he came here. The debate was held on the plan adopted in 1920 of having no judges. Justice G. A. Day of the supreme court, who presided as chairman, said after the debate that if he were to be asked to decide it, he would prefer to take the mat ter under advisement. Eyer Opens Dicuion. Devon C. Eyer, Law '26, opened the debate as first speaker for Ne braska. He proved that present im migration as a class is undesirable. The-utheastern Europeans are racially unassimable, their economic standard is exceedingly low and their political training is different. The northwestern Europeans who come here lack permanency and are not adapted to manual labor. These countries try to send us only the undesirable element. North Ameri can immigration is confined to those who come but temporarily to take advantage of economic opportuni ties. Edward L. Peterson, Law '25, was the first speaker for South Dakota and proved that present European conditions are such as to cause a bet ter type of immigrant to come. We are now getting the middle class of Europe which includes scholars, doc tors, poets, artists, musicians and others who will make good Ameri can citizens. He advocated a policy of selection abroad. A system could also be worked out, he said, to send them to the sections of the country in which they are needed and prevent congestion in large cities. Gayle C. Walker, '24, second speaker for Nebraska, argued that prohibition is desirable for our eco nomic welfare. He showed that it will help maintain American stand ards of living, that cheap labor does not prove cheap in the long run, and that present labor conditions do not warrant more immigration. There are twenty-one surplus workers for every hundred jobs, he said. Advocates Selection Abroad. Charles B. Penfold, '25, second South Dakota speaker, maintained that Americanization . and assimila tion can be carried on without pro hibiting immigraton. If immigrants are selected abroad, he said, they will be the type that are easily as similated. The second generation of mmigrants present a serious prob lem because of the unfavorable vironment .in which they have been thrust, but prohibition cannot af fect or alleviate those conditions. That proper Americanization does demand prohibition of immigration, was the contention of Wendell Bre, '25, Nebraska. Only 52.3 per cent of our, population is native white of native parentage. We are behind in our Americanization because foreign ers are not becoming naturalized, many cannot speak English, and few of them know what Americanism means. They are disturbing factors politically and socially. Howard Kramer, '24, concluded the direct argument for South Da kota by showing that to prohibit im migration would retard the growth of American industry because indu." try is dependent on immigrant labor and we now have a labor shortage. The south is in need of immigrants (Continued on Page 3)