The Daily Nebraskan . Beat Notre Dame! Beat Notre Dame! THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1924 PRICE 5 CENTS VOL. XXIV NO. 38. EXPECT 2000 AT BANQUET Nebraska Men Plan Tradition-r al Affair to Honor Gridsters. COMMITTEE PREPARING ELABORATE PROGRAM Nebraska's annual Cornhusker banquet will be given this year at the Scottish Rite Temple December 12, according to preliminary plnn3 being worked out now. Arrange ments are being made for 2,000 men and according to members of the committee, the program will be the most elaborate ever given at a ban quet Flans for the celebration call for several orchestras and many speak ers. It is the idea this year to pro vide many short speeches instead of only a few long ones. A nationally known man will be secured for toct master, as has been the custom in past years. The banquet is a big feature of the social calendar and is held each year after the close of the football sea son. It's object is to fete the foot ball team and coaches. Last year 1,500 attended and the team, coach es, and fifty prominent business men-1 were guests of honor. John D. Clarke, '05, vice-president of the Standard Oil Company, was the toastmaster. The banquet has become a tradi tion at Nebraska. Last year motion pictures were shown of the Notre Dame game and representatives of the team, faculty, and coaches spoke. The committee for this year's event promise a better program than ever before. Tickets will be put on sale the latter part of this month. OFFER TRAINING TO CLUB LEADERS Y. W. C. A. Will Conduct Course in Girl Reserve Work. A class in training for high school Girl Reserve club work has been or ganized by the Y. W. C. A. under the leadership of Grace Stuff. Thir teen women have already enrolled for the course. There is no limit to the number of women who may join the group. The class will meet for the first time on Wednesday, No vember 2, at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith Hall. This course is quite different from the course conducted earlier by Miss Stuff for teachers in grade schools. This course is suited for high school Girl Reserve club work, and is more advanced and of a different type. There will be but four meetings of the class. The class will meet every Wednesday at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith Hall, beginning on November 12. SCULPTOR TO SPEAK HERE Burt W. Johnson Will AddVeM Special Convocation. Burt W. Johnson of New York and Claremont, California, will speak at a convocation in the Temple theater Thursday morning at 11 o'clock on "Pacific Art and Sculpture." Mr. Johnson studied at the Art Students League of New York City. Among his teachers was Augustus St. Gaudens. Some of his best known works are the Pomona group in Gar field Park, Pomona; the Returned Soldier monument in Woodside, New York City; and the statue of E. N. Dimick, founder of Palm Beach, Florida. Another heroic World War monu ment in New York City and a por trait statue for Tifton, Georgia, re cently won him two preliminary com petitions in the east. Mt Johnson is making his present tour In connec tion with his appointment j a com mittee of well-known sedtotors to lecture at museums, colleges and clubs, throughout the countW. UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA Five members of the f reshmai vigil ance committee were recently dis missed by the class president for loafing on the job. Members o the vigilance committee were put in charge of a tag sale and after the first day's work the members le glected their duties. Will Not Stage November Games The November Games, the events of which were to be run off this week, have been called off, according to an announcement made yesterday by Coach Henry F. Schulte. Mid-semester exam inations which come this week made the games inadvisable. REORGANIZE KEARNEK CLUB EUct Officer For Year at Meet ing In Grand Hotel. Reorganization was the keynote of a meeting of the Kearney Klub at the Grand hotel Saturday evening. Twenty-three members were present and new officers were elected. The club is an organization of Univer sity students who have attended Kearney Teachers College, Kearney high school, or who now live in thu vicinity of Kearney. The new officers elected are as follows: President, Delia Garrett; vice president, Ernest Sjokren; sec retary, Lee Wells; treasurer, Agnes Pierson. i bergeIakes appointments Judd Crocker Will Be Editor ' of Cornhusker Athletic Division. SELECT STAFF FOR SPECIAL SECTIONS Judd Crocker, '27, has been ap pointed editor of the athletic division of the 1925 Cornhusker,. according to announcement made yesterday by Wendell Berge, editor. Crocker will be in charge of the entire athletic di vision and will be directly responsible for the football section. Assistants under him to handle other sports will be appointed later. He is a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. Other appointments to staff posi tions which were made known yes terday include, the editors of sections to be included under the general di vision of "Scarlet and Cream Days." These are: Campus events, activities, publications, fraternities, and clubs and societies. Neva Jones, '25, Neola, Iowa, will be the editor of the section on cam pus events. The post of editor of activities section was assigned to Carl Isaacson, '28, Clyde, Kansas. Ho is a Pi Kappa Alpha. Donald Becker, '27, Pawnee City, a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity, is to be editor of the publications section. Clubs and societies section will.be edited by Mary Walton, '27, York, who is a member of Phi Mu sorority. Work on these sections of the an nual will begin at once, according to Berge. Other Cornhusker work is progressing satisfactorily. PLAN UNIVERSAL DAY OF PRAYER Y. W. C. A. To Ccnduct Serv ice at Presbyterian Church. Observance of the Universal Day of Prayer will be held by the Y. W. C. A. at the United Presbyterian church, at 8 o'clock Sunday morning, November 16. The Universal Day of Prayer for Students is sponsored by the World's Student Christian Fed eration. Each student on entering the church will bow or kneel in Bilent prayer for a moment. The program will be entirely in charge of the Y. W. C. A. and every university stu dent is urged to come. Stage Big Apron And Overall Mixer The Ag College, "apron and over all mixer," held Saturday night at the gymnasium proved a great suc cess. About two hundred and fifty attended and the aprons and overalls were very much in evidence. Bales of hay were provided for seats and a large keg of cider was provided for the urowning of sorrows. The mixer was staged by the Ag Club and the profits will be used to aid in the fi nancing of the organization. Harvard Freshmen , In Favor of Hazing Hazing was approved by an over whelming majority in the Harvarl University freshman discussion group recently. The theory advanced was that sophomore-freshman rivalry tended to unify the entering class and help stamp out indifference which is said to be characteristic of the Harvard undergraduate body. The argument that there is danger of physical injury was hooted down. Grand Chaplain to Lecture on Masonry Dr. Chas. M. Shepherd, Grand iChaplain of the Grand I-odge of Ne- raska, will lecture on the growtn id history of masonry during ooi iial and Revolutionary days, ifter rally Wednesday, m Faculty 1, Temple. Sixty slides will il- luVrate the lecture. Dr. Shepherd en on the chauUuqua platform ft ft ilhaV forVveral years. Thinks R Street Should Be Wider A widening of R Street and the installation of an ornamental lighting system around the cam pus were points urged by Frank D. Eager Monday before the city planning division of the Chamber of Commerce of Lincoln. He said that the state should do this for the campus for purposes of beavr tification and convenience. "R Street between Tenth and Sixteenth Streets is too narrow for traffic when there are two lines of parked cars along it," he stated. SIMPSON PLAYS WESLEYAN TODAY University Students Will Be Admitted On Season Tickets. t Many University students will at tend the Nebraska Wesleyan-Simpson college football game in the Stadium today at 2 o'clock as a part of the Armistice day program. Student tickets will admit the holders to the game and they will sit in their regu lar seats. All regular cadet ushers will be on duty at the game and members of the Women's Athletic Association will have charge of the concessions, as usual. I The game is said to be one of the best on the Wesleyan schedule. Simp son college, at Indianola, Iowa, has not been defeated this season and is one of the'strongest teams in its con ference. Nebraska Wesleyan Uni versity is one of the strongest teams in this state. The advance ticket sale for the game has been good, and a delegation from Simpson has been provided for. A special train will make the trip from Indianola to Lincoln. OPEN GATES FOR FINAL PRACTICE Varsity Will Clash With Fresh men In Practice Game. A practice game between the Var sity and the Freshman gridiron teams will be staged in the Memorial Sta dium at 4:30 Wednesday afternoon, i The gates will be open to the pub lic The Freshmen have been using Irish plays against the first team in the scrimmages this week. The prac tice game is expected to show how ef fective the Varsity defense has be come. This will be the last workout the Varsity will have before entraining for South Bend Thursday. "We want every student to see this game," Coach Dawson declared. "If the students are there and cheering for the team it will do wonders to bring the fighting spirit to its peak." WIN BIBLE CERTIFICATES Sereral Student Complete Course at Y. M. C. A. Several university students com pleted the course in Bible study giv en at the city Y. M. C. A. last winter and were awarded international cer tificates at a banquet given by the board of directors of the Lincoln as sociation last week. The list of men follows: S. T. Anderson, Grant Changstrom, Alan L. Gilmore, David Innis, Herbert L. Koch, Tamejiro Miyake, George C. Pardee, Oscar Yoder. UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA Flo Ziegfield, the renowned connoisseur of feminine beauty, will act as judge for the beauty section of the 1924 25 Seminole, University of Florida yearbook. The Will to Win We have the team. We have the spirit. We have THE WILL TO WIN. Notre Dame has swept the east and the midwest for the third successive year. The chance is ours next Satur day, once more to demonstrate the heights to which Nebras ka football elevens can rise. Last year, on the day we met Notre Dame, our team was invincible unconquerable. Nebraska had made, up to that time, only a mediocre record. But hard training plus grit and determination upset the calculations of those who had pre-reckoned results on the basis of comparative scores. WE WON. Nebraska the team fights hard, because there is an enthusiastic student body with the highest confidence in its team. The energy of the thousands of loyal Cornhuskers is centered on the rally Wednesday evening almost the last chance they will have to carry to the team the spirit that triumphed over the "fighting Irish" last year. Missouri Valley, Cornhusker football will be convinc ingly branded as the best in the nation by a victory at South Bend Saturday. Seven thousand loyal Huskers expect THE WILL TO WIN to conquer the wonder team of Notre Dame. ANNUAL OFFERS SALES AWARDS Cornhusker Will Give Individ ual and Sorority Prizes In Contest. ALL WOMEN ELIGIBLE IN NEW COMPETITION Prizes will be awarded the five highest individuals and the two high est sororities or other organizations competing in the sales campaign for the 1925 Cornhusker to be held from November 17 to 21, according to an announcement made Monday by the business manager, Robert Lang, '26, Wymore. A recent ruling by the Women's Pan-Hellenic Association makes it possible for sororities to enter the contest. This ruling repudiated the previous action of the association discouraging sororities from taking part in sales drives. Dormitories and organized room ing houses may also compete for the prizes. Any woman attending the University of Nebraska may enter the individual competition. The exact nature of the prizes of fered was not announced but it is understood that they will be valu able, useful articles. The price of the Cornhusker will be $4.50, the same that it was last year. The entire amount may be paid at the time of purchase or a first payment of $2.50 may be made and the balance paid when the book is de livered. If 3,500 copies of the annual are sold a refund of fifty cents will be made to all those who paid the full purchase price of $4.50. Each organization competing in the drive will appoint one girl who will take charge of her group. She will be responsible for seeing that the sales books are checked in each night so that the standings in the contest can be announced in The Daily Nebraskan each morning. "The 1925 Cornhusker is to be Ne braska's greatest annual," said Rob ert Lang, business manager, in com menting on the plans for the book. "More money has been spent this year on art work and nearly every section is being made more elaborate and detailed." A large section giving a pictorial story of campus events during the year will be one of the features of the book. AGGIES DEFEAT OMAHA TEAM Defeat American Business College In Saturday Game. The Agricultural College football team defeated the team from the American Business College of Oma ha, Saturday by a score of 20 to 0. Both teams were given a banquet immediately after the game, at the College Cafeteria, by the athletic as sociation of the faculty of the Col lege of Agriculture. Professor C. W. Smith of the College of Agricultural Engineering Department acted as toastmaster and the president of the American Business College respond ed with a short talk. The speakers and their topics were as follows: Dr. L. V. Skidmore "Agressive ness." i Professor C. C. Finteer "Guts." Coach Rufus Dewitz "Goal." D. B. Whelan "Interference." Professor T. H. Gooding "End Runs." R. E. Holland "Success." Pharmacy Graduates Start Drug Stores Five recent graduates of the Col lege of Pharmacy have, within a year, either started drug stores in Lincoln or have purchased estab lished stores. They are Alfred Kol terman, '23, Edith Williams, '22, J. P. Brown, '17, Leonard Hauseman, '24, and Esther Lyman, '23. Issue Call for Olympic Aspirants The first call for Olympic aspir ants in the freshman class was is sued yesterday when Ray Ran dalls, chairman of the Olympics committee, announced that try outs for positions on the boxing team would be held Wednesday evening in the Armory. As many first-year men as possible are urged to get out to the trials in order to assure a victory for the freshman class. The contest will be held November 29, which al lows less than three weeks for practice, he said. JUNIOR PICTURES COMING IN SLOW Hope Many Will Make Ap pointments for Two Re maining Days. Only two more days remain until the last of the junior pictures for the 1925 Cornhusker must be taken. Less than half of the juniors in the Uni versity had had their pictures taken up to last evening. The Cornhusker management hopes that at least 150 more juniors will go to the studios before Thursday and that the total number of junior pictures in the an nual will be about 650. "It is impossible to extend the time limit on these junior pictures because we are under contract to have the panels in the hands of the engravers by December 1," stated Wendell Berge, editor of the Corn husker. Seniors who desire to use thir Cornhusker photographs for Christ mas must have their pictures taken some time this week. Both Town send and Hauck studios have con sented to give the Cornhusker dis count this week only. ASSIGN JUNIORS FOR LAST TIME Students Must Make Appoint ments For Pictures At Once. Last appointments for pictures for the junior section of the Cornhusker are to be made by the following stu dents for Wednesday, the last day for pictures for this section: Townsend's. Weingart, Harry; Weir, Ed; Wells, Ruth; West, George; Whalen, Jack; White, Cleopatra; Wieland, Milton ; Wight, Donald; Wigton, Mary; Wild er, Ruby; Williams, A. D.; Williams, Charles; Wilson, John; Wilson, Don; Wilson, Ivan; Wimble, Jack; Wolf, Albert; Thull, Florence; Tipton, Milo; Tottenhoft, Joser'i; Towle, Priscilla; Treadwell, Paul; Trumbull. Dayton; Trumbull Wm.; Trusty, Et ta; Tuning, Jojeph; Turner, Hobt; Tutty, Rcscce; Uehling, Nova; Ull strom, Jessie. Hcdck'i Studio. Unthank, Vivian; Upp, Harry; Vahl, Slema; Vanderlas, Earl; Van derpool, Leota; Van Landingham, Is able; Van Valdenburgh, Paul; Vas tire, William; Vincent, Dorothy; Waggoner, Frances; Wagner, Lloyd; Walreth, George; Wake, Thomas; Walter, Parry; Warren, Charles; Warren, Velma; Watson, Gregg; Weaver, Farrell; Wong, Benjamin; Wong, Ivan; Woodard, Marion; Woodward, Clinton; Work, George; Wostoupal, Joe; Wright, George; Wright, La Verne; Wroth, Charles; Wurtz, Arthur; Youngblut, Charles; Zelen, Julian; Ziggafoos, Ruth; Zo lat, Davis; Zolat, Ruth. Girl Reserve Sponsors' Classes Started Today Classes for those who would be in terested in sponsoring girl reserve clubs in high schools out in the state, will start today. Classes will be held every Wednesday during the next five weeks from 5 until 6 o'clock at Ellen Smith Hall. The work is for those who will be interested in club work later rather than at the present. Students regis tered in the teachers college will find the work valuable although the class es are open to all women. Entertain Teachers College Instructor Miss Clara Wilson, chairman of the Kindergarten-Primary depart ment of the Teachers College, was honor guest of the primary council at a luncheon at Hotel Fontenelle, Omaha, Friday noon. Miss Wilson was in Omaha as a speaker at the Ne braska State Teachers' Association convention. Dean W. E. Sealock of the Teach ers College gave two addresses at the meeting of the Fifth District of the Nebraska State Teachers Association at McCook Friday. ARTIST TO VISIT LINCOLN Patterson Will Exhibit Paintings Here For Two Weeks. Howard Ashman Patterson of Denver, Colorado, well-known paint er in oils, is coming to Lincoln aljput November 20 to give a twa weeks' ex hibit of his own paintings. According to Professor P. H. Grummann, Mr. Patterson has paint ed with great success in the south west, and is much interested in that semi-arid country. He has also made a study of the ceremonials of the Indians. His work is said to show the broad influence of the Taos school of painting. The date of Mr. Patterson's arrival will be announced later. AG STUDENTS ARRANGE TOUR Will Inspect Becker Farm and Give Demonstration at 7 Denton. ENGINEERING SOCIETY IN CHARGE OF PLANS An inspection and demonstration trip is planned by the Agricultural Engineers, student society of the ag ricultural engineering department, for next Thursday evening, Novem ber 13. Seventy-five men in about fifteen automobiles will leave Agri cultural Hall at 4 o'clock on a tour that will conclude with a series of demonstrations at Denton. They will first visit the farm of Carl Becker, six miles west of Lin coln. Mr. Becker has a very well equipped farm and a splendid herd of dairy cattle. This will give the students an opportunity to observe the improvements that can be made in agricultural conditions. The next stop will be at Denton, where several demonstrations will be made in the Denton Hall. The fol lowing demonstrations will be made: Timing the valves on a stationary engine, trouble shooting on a mag neto, adjusting the knotter on a binder, soldering, saw filing, head light adjusting. About fifty copies of mimeographed directions for each of these demonstrations will be passed out to the farmers in the audi ence. The American Society of Agricul tural Engineers pays all of the ex penses of the trip and puts on the demonstrations. Any student of the Agricultural College or of the Engin eering College who is interested is invited to go and arrangements can be made by calling the agricultural engineering department before 5 o'clock, Wednesday evening. Fifty nine students had signed up to go at noon last Saturday. If the farmers appreciate the efforts of these stu dents, other meetings may be held later in other parts of the country. DAWSON PRAISES NOTRE DAME TEAM Nebraska Coach Says His Team Has Spirit That Is Unbeatable. "The game is never over until th? last whistle blows. We are not con ceding anything, and we have a spirit that is unbeatable." This was the statement of Coach Fred T. Dawson Monday evening. He also commented on the Notre Dame team, which he saw in action Satur day against Wisconsin. "Notre Dame has the finest team I ever saw. It works like clock-work. The men are experienced, fast and well-balanced. The defense is beau tiful. The men are not light, but sturdy. They will outweigh our team, I believe. "In spite of the fact that several regulars are not in good shape, our team will show a great deal of cour age and put up a splendid, manly fight. Never for one minute do we concede that we are beaten." Meals Average Less Than Thirty Cents at University Cafeteria Approximately nine hundred meals are served daily at the Temple cafe teria, at an average og 29.2 cents each according to Mrs. Louise Vin ing, manager. From four to five hundred people are served at lunch eon alone. The cafeteria is owned and . oper ated by the University of Nebraska for the benefit of those connected with the institution. The patronage of outsiders is accepted but not soli cited. The cafeteria operates con tinuously while the university is in session, Sundays included. ' The aim of the Temple cafeteria is to provide a variety of wholesome, well-cooked food at a lower rate than is charged elsewhere. HARTLEY WILL TALK AT RALLY Former Husker Captain to Share Speaking Hon ors With Dawson. FOOTBALL TEAM LEAVES THURSDAY FOR INDIANA , Harold "Chic" Hartley, '23, cap tain of Nebraska's Missouri Valley championship football team which defeated Notre Dame in 1922, will be the principal speaker at the No tre Dame rally in the Armory tomor row evening at 7 o'clock. Hartley, whose team was defeated only once, will share speaking honors with Coach Fred T. "Snap-it-up" Dawson at what is expected to be one of the greatest rallies of the year. Nebraska's "Fighting Cornhusk ers" will be introduced to the stu dents for the first time since the Illinois game and the University band, which will accompany the team to Notre Dame, will be on hand. According to those planning for the rally, a little difficulty, was ex perience in obtaining the rally on a week night. For this reason it is necessary that the program begin promptly at 7 o'clock in order to allow students in fraternity houses and dormitories to return to study table at the required time. Carl C. Engberg, executive dean, granted permission for the rally only on those conditions. The Nebraska squad will entrain Thursday for South Bend, to keep an engagement in that city for the great game of the season. Rallies for the annual Notre Dame game have always been the biggest of each year and it is expected that this one will be no exception. The fact that the team will not be playing on its own field should have a great deal to do with the spirit and demonstra tions at the rally. The only two opportunities stu dents will have to give the team a good send-off will be at the rally and the departure Thursday. The rally is the only means of the year. Mon roe "Duke" Gleason, head cheer leader, is intent on raising the roof off the Armory. "I want every real Cornhusker who wants to see his team win this, perhaps the hardest and most desir able game of the season, to be out there at that rally," said Coach Daw son. "You who can't go along will have to do this to show us that we've got a bunch back here waiting for a victory." PLAN SEND-OFF FOR CORNHDSKERS Students to Give Demonstra tion As Team Leaves for South Bend. Nebraska will send off its foot ball team at 4 o'clock Thursday af ternoon at the Chicago & Northwest ern railway station, Ninth and S streets. The send-off, following the rally Wednesday evening, is e'xpected by many to be the largest demonstra tion of its kind ever staged. The University band and the cheerleaders will lead the crowd in songs and yells. The impression on the team, cheer leaders say, depends solely on the size and spirit of the crowd. They believe that the remembrance of the exceedingly poor showing when the squad left for Oklahoma will serve to make the crowd a large one. Classes will not be excused, but it is thought that there are enough stu dents who do not have classes at that hour to make a good showing. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS No vember 26, the day before Thanks giving, has been authorized as "Ho bo Day." Moth-eaten, worn-out, ragged and torn bits of clothing will be the order of the day. Short classes have been scheduled for that day which will end in a "pep" rally before the game with Missouri. Out of the returns are paid the salaries of the. employed, the ex pense of the raw food, the light, heat and water bills, and the cost of the equipment which is added from time to time. More students are employed by the Temple cafeteria than by any other restaurant or cafeteria in Lin coln. Of the 46 persona on the pay roll, 32 are students. Much labor-saving machinery is in cluded in the equipment. The serv ing counters and steam tables have been rearranged for better service. A duplicate arrangement provides for the accomodation of two lines kS the same time.