The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 13, 1924, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    The Daily Nebraskan
Send OH
The Team!
Send 0
The Team
39.
HOLD RALLY
AT STATION
Cheerleaders and Band Will
Lead Songs and Yells at
3:15 O'clock.
EXPECT 3,000 STUDENTS
TO CHEER CORNHUSKERS
Over 3000 are expected at the fin
al Notre Dame football rally at the
Chicago and Northwestern railway
station, Ninth and S streets, today.
The last demonstration before the
great intersectional game of the sea
son is expected to draw at least that
many, due to the significance of the
game and the fact that this is the
first station rally this year.
"Attendance at last evening's rally
is enough," said cheerleaders. "Every
student who can possibly do it must
be at the station at 3:45 o'clock to
day." Confidence was expressed that
the crowd would number 3000.
The rally wili begin at exactly
3:45 o'clock as the train carrying the
team will leave the station at 4
o'clock. Cheerleaders and the Uni
versity band will lead the rooters in
songs and yells. It is theTelief that
the turnout will be doubly largo on
account of the poor showing made
before the Oklahoma game.
"At the time of the game with the
Pittsburgh Tigers," said a member of
the Innocents, "over 3,000 students
were present to send the team off.
The reason was that they realized
that the game was a big one and that
it would mean much to win it. That
is why we expect at least that num
ber today, as we are sure every one
realizes the importance of this game
with the Catholics."
ASK COMUSKER -STAFF
TO REPORT
Will Hold Organization Meet
ing Prior to Sales
Campaign.
A meeting will be held at 3
o'clock Friday afternoon to organize
the Cornhusker appointees for their
work in the sales campaign. The fol
lowing students are asked to report
at the Cornhusker office Friday:
Dorothy Zust, Richard Elster,
Fayne Smithberger, Elmer Thomas,
Richard Smith, Archibald Eddy, Don
ald Becker, Duane Anderson, Eloise
McAhan, Marta Rankin, Evelyn
Lindly, Norma Carpenter, Pauline
Barber, Alice Summers, Celeste
Leech, Martha Dudley, Sarah Towne,
Jean Hall, Carolyn Buck, Rachel El
more, Fern Staats, Ida Flader, Doris
Trott, Caroline Airy, Laura Whelp
ley, Ellen Gallagher, Lillian Bags
dale, Blanche Stevens, Florence Ost
hoff, Mary Ellen Edgerton, Agnes
Kelly, Emma Westerman, Bernice
Robinson, Elizabeth Webster, Keir
neth Anderson, Philip Smith, Carl
Isaacson, Isabel O'Halloran, Sophia
Webster, Herbert Kelly, lone Gard
ner, Reva Rossiter, Glenn Buck, Gif
ford Bass, John Cameron, Donald
Russell, Roy Jacobsen, Ted Forsythe,
Roland R. Brady, Wendell Ames,
Mary Louise Walsh.
The above constitute only part of
the staff, but they have been desig
nated to do special work next week.
AWARD LETTERS
TO RIFLE MEN
Sophomores, Juniors, and Sen
iors Are Eligible Says
Captain Eggers.
Six letters will be given to mem
bers of this year's rifle team, accord
ing to Captain L. W. Eggers. Cap
tain Eggers has charge of the team
nd he urges all men who have had
any experience with a rifle to try
out. Any sophomore, junior or sen
ior is eligible for the team and there
are several vacancies in last year's
tearr. The requirements for eligibil
ity are the same as those of any oth
er inter-collegiate sport.
The team will be required to par
ticipate in at least twenty matches
before they can be given letters. The
letters will be awarded by the Uni
versity "N" club.
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
Freshmen were substituted for ap
ples in the annual initiation held here
Hallowe'en night Led by the band,
the freshmen were paraded until tie
"Fountain of Knowledge" was ready
and then they went bv threes ang
fours into the water far below. WheA
they crawled out they were received
witn open arms and rolled in the in
. siting mud next to the fountain. One
freshman became stage struck and
took the master of ceremonies with
him as he went down, accompanied
by screams of glee from the feminine
VOL. XXIV NO.
Nebraska Alumni in Schenectady I
Organize with Brookings at Head
Howard E. Brookings, '24, was
elected the first president of the Uni
versity of Nebraska Alumni Club of
Schenectady, New York, at a meet
ing held in that city recently. Mr.
Brookings has been active in organ
izing the club and has actedas chair
man. .
The first meeting took place' at
supper in a restaurant followed by a
three-hour session which was attend
ed by twenty men from the Univer
sity of Nebraska who are now con
nected with the industries of Sche
nectady. Talks were made by W. K.
Fowler, '16, and W. T. Vivian, '10,
outlining the purpose and conception
of this club.
Weaver and Pool to
Go to Science Meet
Dr. J. E. Weaver and Dr. Raymond
Pool will go to Washington, D. C,
during the holidays to attend meet
ings of the American Association for
the Advancement of Sciences, and of
various botanical societies of which
they are members. Dr. Pool has been
nominated for vice-president of the
Botanical Society of America. Elec
tions will be held during the sessions.
Dr. Weaver will present a paper on
the "Invitation Program."
ENGINEERS TO HOLD
CONVOCATION FRIDAY
Fersruson of Kansas U Will
Speak on "The Engineer
and His Job."
"The Engineer and His Job" will
be the subject on which Dean P. F.
Ferguson, College of Engineering,
University of Kansas, will speak, at
the regular Engineering convocation
at 10 o'clock Friday morning in the
Temple Theater. The speaker is a
well known educator with a broad ex
perience in commercial engineering.
Dean Walker will speak Friday
evening at 7 :30 o clock in Mechanical
Engineering 206 before a joint meet
ing of the Nebraska Section of the
A. S. M. E. and the Nebraska Manu
facturers Association on "The New
Era in Industry." Students as well
as the public are invited.
The evening address will be broad
casted by the University Broadcast
ing Station, WFAV.
STAGE OPEN GAME
ON STADIUM FIELD
Mandery and Dailey Score for
Varsity; Mclntyre Makes
Touchdown for Losers.
Members of the Varsity football
squad and the freshman team played
practice game in, the Stadium
Wednesday afternoon before several
thousand spectators. The Varsity
made two touchdowns and the fresh
men one. Regular Varsity men were
not used in the game.
Dailey, playing halfback for the
Varsity, was the star ol the game.
Dailey rounded the freshman ena lor
a 60-yard run but failed to score. A
long pass to Dailey scored one of tne
Varsity touchdowns; R. Mandery
scoring the other counter on a sim
ilar play.
The freshmen executed the Notre
Dame shift with eriougn einciency
to bother the Varsity reserves.
Steady gains were made by the year
lings with this style of play.
The freshmen touchdown came
when Mclntyre, former Lincoln mgn
player, picked up a Varsity fumble
on his own 2-yard line and raced 98
yards to a touchdown. The work of
"Jug" Lrown, former Lincoln high
quarterback, was also outstanding.
The stands were fairly well filled
for the "open house" practice staged
by Coach Dawson before departure
for Notre Dame at South Bend.
ECOLOGY SETTLES DISPUTE
Greely Tells How Oklahoma-1 eas
Border Was Defined.
F. C. Jean of Greely, Colorado,
talked on the settling of the Okla
homa-Texas boundary line disputed
by ecological methods at the Sem
Bot meeting held Wednesday eve
ning . .
The state line was onginauy
marked by the river channel, out
the river changed its course and the
irich oil lands on the boundary were
laimed by both states. f"--'
perts were called in to decide tne
ginal course of the river oy n
ol marks on tne wee -
plVnt life. .The dispute was settled
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA,
Plans were made to hold monthly
meetings and later in the season a
special social evening is planned. It
was brought out that there are in
Schenectady, in the employ of the
General Electric Company, thirty Ne
braska graduates.
Those present at this meeting
were: F. V. Hranac, '24; L. P. Shild
neck, '24; B. C. Trump, '24; R. W.
Maxwell, '24; R. H. Mann, '24; H.
E. Brookings, '24; R. S. Holmes, '23;
S. J. Kester, '23; R. D. Mc Arthur,
'23; G. S. Hyatt, '23; F. H. Doremus,
'22; J. C. Wilbur, '21; E. R. Boruch,
'20; W. K. Fowler, '16; W.. L.
Wright, '16; Klindt Kolls, '13; C. B.
Huston, '10; W. T. Vivian, '10; L. A.
Sheldon, '05; and L. W. Turner, '05.
TO ANNOUNCE
PRIZES SOON
Cornhusker Staff Will Reward
Winners in Sales
Campaign.
CONTEST IS OPEN TO
ANY UNIVERSITY WOMAN
Announcement will be made in a
few days of the awards that have
been selected for the winning organi
zation in the Cornhusker sales cam
paign next week. Business Manager
Lang states that there will be two
elaborate prizes for the winning or
ganizations and six prizes for the
women making the highest individ
ual sales records.
The competition is confined solely
to women. Tables will be set up in
each of the main buildings to serve
as headquarters for all who are tak
ing part in the drive. The contest
is not limited to sororities but is
onen to every girl in school. The
dormitories and literary societies will
take part in the campaign. Any or
ganizations that did not compete last
year but wish to this year, should
see Mr. Lang immediately and make
their entry in the contest.
The price of the Cornhusker will
be $4.50, but -enough books are
sold to warrant a reduction, fifty
cents will be refunded when the
book is delivered. Students may pay
$2.50 next week, and the balance
when they secure the book. The goal
this year is 3,500 Cornhuskers sold
to students.
" 'The Cornhusker of Service' is
trying to fulfill a real need," stated
Business Manager Lang. "We want
to make students and citizens out
side the University realize that the
University of Nebraska is serving the
taxpayers of the state in a vital way.
Every student who has the interest of
the University at heart will realize
the importance of this theme. I hope
the students will respond in the sales
campaign so that the Cornhusker will
be a financial success. If a book is
not a financial success it cannot be
successful in its broader purpose,"
Lang declared.
POSITIONS OPEN
ON NEBRASKAN
Applications for Second Quar
ter Received Until Noon,
November 17.
Applications for staff positions on
The Daily Nebraskan will be re
ceived this week. The positions which
are to be filled for the second half
of the first semester are: editor,
managing editor, news editors, and
assistant news editors. The following
announcement was made yesterday:
Applications for appointment to
the following positions on the Uni
versity's Daily Nebraskan for the
second half 'of the semester will be
received until Monday noon, Novem
ber 17: editor, managing editor,
news editors, assistant news editors.
Application blanks may be got at
the offices of the secretary and the
chairman.
Each applicant is requested to sub
mit evidence as to his qualifications
for the specific position for which he
applies.
M. M. FOGG, Chairman.
Nov. 12, 1924.
History Will Repeat Itself! ! !
Nebraska's loyal sons and daughters today will do their
duty. At least three thousand loyal iiusKers win assemDie ai
the Northwestern station at 3 :45. They will send our fighting
team off with a cheer that will still be echoing when they line
up for the first kick-off Saturday at South Bend.
NF.RRASKA SPIRIT is a Dowerful thing. It wiU sweep
across seven hundred miles of
humanly possible, u win carry
Rockne's proteges are not
Frank Birch, well-known
"NEBRASKA WILL BEAT NOTRE DAME." Why not? We
did it before when the odds were
It can be done it must be
AGAIN. .
NEW MEN TAKEN
INTO SIGMA TAU
Draw Students of Civil, Elec
trical and Mechanical
Engineering.
WILL INITIATE 17 INTO
ENGINEERING HONORARY
One student of architecture, five
of civil engineering, six of electrical
engineering, and five of mechanical
engineering were elected to member
ship in Sigma Tau, honorary engin
eering fraternity, at a meeting .-eld
November 6.
The following are those to be in
itiated:
Burlin D. Basteau, '25, Beatrice.
Arthur C. Bryan, '26, Elm Creek.
Carl B. Gerber, '26, Omaha.
Forest R. Hall, '26, Neligh.
Verde P. Johnston, '25, Shickley.
Homer B. Kinsinger, '26, Milford.
Walter T. Lammli, '26, Stantoifc.
Donald B. Lynch, '25, Lincoln.
Clifford H. Rees, '26, Carroll.
Lyman F. Scheel, '25, Wahoo.
Ellsworth E. Schwalm, '26, Louis
ville. David Skinner, '25, Broken Bow.
Glenn F. Sudman, '26, Oshkosh.
Wm. L. Vastine, '26, Antioch.
Edward Wanek, '26, Dewitt.
George T. Work, '26, Litchfield.
Oscar Yoder, '26, Cheyenne, Wyo.
DISCUSS MARRIAGE
AT VOTERS LEAGUE
Will Discuss Bills to Be Intro
duced at Legislature at
Meetings.
WELFARE BUREAU HEAD
TALKS AT CONVOCATION
The proposed marriage law will be
discussed by Mrs. Clara C. Clayton,
at a meeting of the Junior League of
Women Voters this afternoon in Fac
ulty Hall at 5 o'clock. The speaker
will be allowed about fifteen min
utes, and an open discussion will fol
low.
Mrs. Clayton is head of the Child
Welfare Bureau and is active in W.
C. T. U. work. " She will talk for
the marriage law and there will be a
second speaker on the same subject
at the meeting November 26.
Bills to come before the legislature
will be discussed at the meetings this
year. The program for meetings
(subject to change) is as follows:
Nov. 13 The Marriage Law.
Nov. 26 The Marriage Law.
Dec. 11 The Child Labor Amend
ment.
Jan. 8 Should fraternities and
Sororities be Abolished?
Jan. 22 Should Fraternities and
Sororities be Abolished?
The meeting will close promptly at
5:45.
FRATERNITIES WILL
HOLD TOURNAMENT
Entries Must Be Handed in to
Gish at Athletic Office Be
fore November 29.
The annual inter-fraternity basket
ball tournament will be held this
year before the Christmas holidays.
Entries must be handed in to H. D.
Gish at the athletic office before
Saturday, November 29. The entry
fee will be $1.
The N Club will be in charge of ar
rangements. Officials will be chosen
by the contesting team, a departure
from the method of last year.
The tournament will probably start
the first week in December. Play
will continue for about two weeks.
All fraternities are urged to enter
the tournament, Coach Kline stated.
Delta Upsilon won the tournament
last year. Delta Tau Delta was runner-up.
The purpose of the tournament is
to find Varsity material and that is
the reason that the tourney is being
held before the Christmas holidays.
Coach Kline expects to find a great
denl of desirable material on this
competition.
prairie next Saturday and, if
our team to victory.
supermen.
referee, is credited with saying,
against us.
done IT SHALL BE DONE
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13,
Will Lecture on
Civic Sculpture
"Civic Sculpture" will be the
subject of Burt W. Johnson, fam
ous sculptor of New York and
Claremont, California, at a convo
cation in the Temple this morning
at 11 o'clock.
Mr. Johnson is touring the
country in connection with his ap
pointment by a committee of not
ed sculptors to lecture at various
museums, colleges and clubs.
Specimens of Mr. Johnson's
skill are found in all parts of the
country. He is a former pupil of
Augustus St. Gaudens and has
studied at the Art Students'
League of New York City.
RETURN FROM
BIENNIAL MEET
Twenty-eight Colleges Repre
sented at Convention in
Kentucky.
RE-ELECT UNIVERSITY
ALUMNA TREASURER
Barbara Wiggenhorn, '25, Ash
land, returned Tuesday evening from
Lexington, Ky., where she attended
the fifth biennial convention of Mor
tarboard, national honorary organi
zation for senior women, held No
vember 6 to 8. Katherine Warner,
'25, Dakota City, delegate to the con
vention from the local chapter will
return on the special train from No
tre Dame where she will attend the
game. Mrs. R. N. Westover of Lin
coln also went east for the conven
tion and was re-elected national
treasurer.
Twenty-eight colleges were repre
sented at the convention. Forty-five
members attended. Charters were
granted at the University of Okla
homa at Norman and to the Univer
sity of California at Berkeley.
The convention went on record as
favoring the honor system. Six col
leges reported as having the system
and it was reported to be working
satisfactorily in four of these.
The University of Nebraska was
considered a step in advance of many
of the chapters, according to Miss
Wiggenhorn, because of the way in
which it has worked out the point
system, because it is the only chapter
where an honorary faculty member is
elected and because of its method of
choosing and notifying its members.
At every other college the members
are notified of their election before
it is made public, and at no other col
lege are they elected by a vote of
the senior women.
The program of the convention in
cluded business sessions on each
morning of the three days. Lunch
eons were given for the convention
by the W. S.-G. A. and the Y. W. C.
A., and by the Pan-Hellenic Associa
tion. The president of the Univer
sity of Kentucky entertained the del
egates at a tea at his home. A tea
at the Green Tree tea room, famous
historically, given by the alumnae as
sociation of Mortarboard, and a trip
to Shakertown, the former home of
a famous religious sect, were includ
ed for the entertainment of the
guests.
STOCK JUDGING TEAM
LEAVES FOR CONTEST
Will Represent University of
Nebraska In American
Royal Show.
The senior stock judging team will
leave today for Kansas City, where
they will represent the University of
Nebraska in a judging contest to be
held in connection with the American
Royal Stock Show. Members of he
team are: Nat Tolman, Lincoln;
Honor Oschner, Madison; Jay Hep
perly, Norfolk; Dorsey Barnes, Lo-
retto; Clarence Fortna, Octavia; and
James Barnes, Chicago. Twelve
states were represented by teams in
the contest at Kansas City last year,
and the contest is said to be larger
this year.
The judging team will compete
Saturday and they will visit several
large stock farms in the vicinity of
Kansas City, Friday. After the con
test at Kansas City, the team leaves
for The International Livestock Ex
position at Chicago. They will make
several stops at stock farms on the
way to Chicago and will compete
there in the week from November 29
to December 6.
OHIO STATE Orange, peach,
and raspberry lipstick will soon occu
py important positions on the co-ed's
dressing table. A pharmacy has sent
in an order for these appetising
beauty concoctions, and expects a de
livery daily. ,
1924
HONORARY INITIATES SEYEN
Iota Sigma Pi Chooses Member for
Distinguished Scholarship.
Iota Sigma Pi, honorary chemical
sorority, initiated seven new mem
bers Saturday at 7:30 o'clock in
Chemistry hall. The initiation was
followed by a "chemical dinner."
Viola Jelinek, Mabel Donley, Ruth
Glover, Lillian Brehm, Lucille John,
Gertrude Lynch, Myrtle Hunt, and
Olive Hartley are the initiates.
To be eligible for membership in
the sorority, the student must major
in Chemistry and distinguish herself
in scholarship.
DAY OF PRAYER WILL
BE OBSERVED SUNDAY
Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A.
Will Conduct Service at
Presbyterian Church.
The universal day of prayer will
be observed by University of Nebras
ka students Sunday, November 16 at
8 o'clock according to arrangements
made by the University Y. W. C. A.
and Y. M. C. A.
Miss Erma Appleby, Y. W. C. A
secretary, will lead the service in the
United Presbyterian church, Six
teenth and R streets. The ritual, or
iginated by Miss Appleby, has been
widely adopted for use on this day
Music will be furnished by the Y.
W. C. A. Vesper Choir and a univer
sity male quartet.
The purpose of the service is to
take note of the students' spiritual
needs and to make special interces
sion for needy students abroad.
CLUBWOMEN HOLD MEETING
Faculty Organization Hear Readings
by Mrs. Katherine Harris.
The regular monthly meeting of the
Faculty Womens' club was held Wed
nesday from 3 to 5 o'clock, in Ellen
Smith Hall. About seventy attended.
The hotesses were, Mesdames J. E.
Weaver, C. W. Swift, C. M. Duff,
D. D. Whitney, H. D. Deming. The
program was made up of two read
ings by Mrs. Katherine Harris, en
titled, "The Land of Beginning
Again," and "Encouragement" A
meeting is held the second Wednes
day in every month in Ellen Smith
Hall.
WESLEYAN TEAM DEFEATED
Simpson College Wins From Nebras
ka School by 6-to-0 Score. .
Simpson College of Indianola, la.,
defeated Nebraska Wesleyan 6 to 0
Tuesday afternoon in a game played
in the Nebraska Memorial Stadium.
Alabaster and Wiberg starred in
the Wesleyan backfield, while Mer
cer, fullback, was the big noise for
Simpson. Mercer booted two place
ment kicks from the 20-yard line in
the last quarter, giving his team the
margin needed for victory. Simpson
maintained its record of no defeats
by the win.
Wesleyan went strong in the first
half, but the offense seemed to go to
pieces in the second. In the last
quarter the Simpson backs tore
through the line for good gains and
twice broueht the ball close enough
to the goal posts to allow Mercer to
score from the field.
The eame was ihe Homecoming
game for the University Place school
and many old grads attended.
GEORGIA TECH The senior
jacket, similar to those worn at Eng
lish Universities, has been chosen.
It is a box coat of high grade Eng
lish flannel with the college seal and
class colors on the pocket. The coat
may be worn to informal dances and
yet it is serviceable enough to be
worn on the campus.
East, West, North
Results of Saturday's Big Clash
Few people who have followed
football from year to year will hesi
tate about expressing their opinion
as to just what football contest is
the most important one on this
week's schedule. There can be but
one answer the Nebraska-Notre
Dame game, at South Bend to be
played this Saturday.
Last year when Rockne s eleven
swept through the country defeating
team after team, and scoring touch
down after touchdown, they were
cb -icterized as the "Wonder" team.
Bu tectators who jammed the ori
f inis ' Cornhusker stadium last No
vember saw a more-than-wonder
team defeat the Notre Dame eleven
by a score that left no doubt in the
PRICE 5 CENTS
HOWLING CROWD
CHEERS HDSKERS
"Fightingest Bunch of Corn
huskers Ever Known" Says
Gridster Coach.
DAWSON, HARTLEY AND
BERGE TALK AT ARMORY
"I have no promises of victory.
Must you, Nebraska, have a promise
of victory from me before you will
support your team? I say you do not.
We are going against the greatest
team in America next Saturday with
the bravest, fightingest bunch of
Cornhuskers ever known. You are
sending them there telling them to do
their best and they are going to do
it."
Thus Coach Fred T. Dawson ad
dressed the howling mob of students
which last night filled only three
fourths of the Armory, but respond
ed loud enough and long enough to
make up the difference. The crowd
began to gather before 7 o'clock and
long before the cheerleaders and
teams arrived broke into spontaneous
outbursts of sheer unorganized howl
ing. Wendell Berge, '25, Lincoln, presi
dent of the Innocents, presided and
introduced the speakers. Coach
Dawson was the first to speak. Har
old "Chic" Hartley, captain of the
Varsity football team of 1922, was
the second speaker.
"I know you don't want me to
stand up here and tell yon how badly
we are going to beat Notre Dame,"
he said. "I'm here to tell you some
thing about them. They have won
from Princeton, Army and Georgia
Tech. But that doesn't mean any
thing to Nebraska the conditions
were the same the last two years.
With your spirit and your backing
carrying them across I think there is
no cause for worry."
Hartley was called upon to intro
duce the team, Captain Ed Weir be
ing absent. Following the introduc
tions cheering and singing of "The
Cornhusker" concluded the demon
stration. The rally lasted only thirty-five
minutes, breaking np at 7:35
o'clock.
Mr. Berge reminded the rooters of
the rally at the Chicago and North
western railway station, Ninth and S
Streets, today. He expressed the de
sire that "every man of us and fif
teen hundred more be down there to
see the team off for the greatest in
tersectional contest of the season."
PROOFS MDST BE IN
BY SATURDAY NIGHT
Extend Time Because Many
Were Unable to Make
Appointments.
All proofs for pictures taken for
the 1925 Cornhusker must be re
turned to the studios with the selec
tion marked before Saturday eve
ning, was the statement issued yes
terday by the annual staff. If proofs
are not returned, the Cornhusker will
make the selection of the picture to
be used.
In connection with Cornhusker pic
tures it was announced that sorority
pictures have been extended until
Saturday. Many women were not
able to make appointments before
vesterday. which was previously set
as the final date. Junior pictures,
however, can not be taken unless by
special appointment with the studios.
Just 550 junior pictures had been
taken by yesterday evening. The
studios will not begin on the work of
making up panels until Monday,
which will enable a few who did not
make appointments to do so this
week.
Reeular Cornhusker rates will be
in effect at both Hauck's and Town-
send's studios all this week. Sen
iors who wish to obtain extra prints
for Christmas must make appoint
ments this week in order to secure
the special price.
and South Await
minds of those who saw the game,
as to which team was the better.
This year Rockne's eleven with
perhaps the stiffest football schedule
that any college team has ever had
to face, has again been sweeping
every foe relentlessly before them.
Nebraska, after a rather poor start
has been playing a winning brand of
football. Every football fan In tha
United States looks to Nebraska to
stop Notre Dame.
Win, lose or tie, whatever happens
on - the South Bend gridiron next
Saturday is going to be football his
tory of the very best land. Breaks
may turn the tide of victory one way
or the other, bnt one thing is certain,
(Continued on Pag Four.)
section of the audience.
bytthese means,