Me 1 HE Buy a Comhusker Buy a Comhusker Daily BRASKAN VOL. XXIV NO. 41. CAMPAIGN TO BE THISTOK Cornhusker Price Is Same as Last Year Women May Get Book at Office. GOAL OF 3,500 SALES IS SET FOR YEARBOOK The sales campaign for the 1925 u..vr will start Monday of this , ... '; ntil E o'clock , week and will continue untd 5 ocock . ft EAA fv.v.ltiialr an Friday- A saie oi .... - is expected this year. The staff be lieves that this goal will be reached. All University women will be able to get a subscription book in the Comhusker office, University Hall 10 from 7 until 10 o'clock Monday morning and all Monday afternoon. There will be someone in the office after Monday morning all day throughout the week to check out more books and supplies. Many yearbooks can be sold at the Agricultural College, the Dental Col lege, and to faculty members, besides to students on the city campus. Many busniess men will also buy a Com husker. To Check Daily. The women having books checked out should turn them in before 6 o'clock every evening, whether any have been sold or not The books will be checked back to the women just as soon as the slips have been Uken out and the money turned in, to that an accurate check can be made of the standings in the sales contest each day. The organization which sells the most Cornhuskers will receive fifty dollars' worth of furniture from a great variety now on display in Radge & Guensel's show window. The organixation winning second priie will receive a special leather bound Comhusker with its name stenciled in gold on the cover. Each of the six, individuals who sell the most books will receive a Comhusker with his name in gold on the cover. Price la Sane. This year, although the book will have a good many more pages and will cost more -to publish, the price remains the same as last year $4.50 a copy, with a redaction of fifty cents at the end of the year if 3,500 copies are sold. A two-and-a-half-dollar payment will entitle a student to a tag showing that he has sub scribed to the Comhusker. The ad ditional payment need not be made until spring, when the book comes out, or the student may pay for the whole book when he subscribes. The management of the 1925 Comhusker is asking the students to notice that this week is the time for subscriptions to be made. An an nual cannot be successful and com plete without a larger subscription list and it must be known early how many books to plan on to be a suc cess. The Comhusker will be more than an annual, it will be a book of real value and interest, says the editorial staff. Three-color processes and art-work, more pictures and other new features will go to make up the annual. "With the many incentive offered and the superiority of the 1925 Com husker assured, we are sure that the Comhusker sales campaign will be a great success," said Robert Lang, business manager. FIVE COMES ARE SUBUITTED TO KLDB Selection of $100 Prize-winner Will be Announced by Kosmet Soon. Five musical comedy manuscripts were entered in the Kosmet Klub competition which closed yesterday, and selection of the winner, who will be awarded a prize of ?130, will be made soon, according to Arthur Lat- ta, president The elub will hear each author in dividually before the selection is made. He will discuss his comedy with them. The contestants were re quired to turn in the complete play with music attached. ' The show of the winning author - will be presented by the Kosmet Klub at the Orpheum theater April 24 and plans are now virtn-Uy completed for a trip to Omaha. . The comedy will be playel at the Brandeia the ater there, it w as stated. Such a trip was made last year and alumni indi cate that the arrangements for this aason are practically completed. Whitney Reviews Work Of Vienna Professor ProL D. D. Whitney of the depart ment, of zoology reviewed the work of Professor Kamerer. formerly of the University of Vienna, oneinberi- tance of acquired characteristics be fore the zoology seminar, composed cf the members of the department ;anJ advanced and research student. 38 PLEDGE TO KAPPA PHI Methodist ' Women's Organisation Holdi Service. Thirty-eight were pledged to Kappa Phi, Methodist women's organisation, at a pledge service Thursday evening at the home of Dr. Harry F. Hunting ton, student pastor. Those pledged are: Mary Langevin, Ann Gerdes, Mildred Craven, Violet Wachner, Bertha Klein, Helen Nelson, Lois Kunkel, Edna Drummond, Delia Gar rett, Mary Dickerson, Lorine Johan son, Tnei Keller, Constance Stevens, Ione Hasmon, Lucile Bauer, Lillian Lois Carle, Ruth Brainard, Guilia Huckins, Edith Clegg, Belle Alexan der, Mildred Alexander, Una Rich ards, Lillian Danielson, Ruth Woods, Ruth Cooper, Elsie Danskin, Isla Bcdley, Maud Stewart, Delia Strick land, Gladys Hanke, Ruby Ganzel, Bc-rnice Simmons, Marguerite Brid ges, Constance Caraway, and Harriet Schwenker. ALUUNI MAGAZINE DISCUSSES DEEDS Tells of University Finances; 'Chancellor Expains Build ing Program. A detailed discussion of the finan cial need3 of the University, a report of the part taken by alumni in the recent Nebraska Conference of So cial Workers held in Lincoln, an ar ticle on the proposed national educa tion bill, and a summary of the ear lier games of the football season are among the features in the November issue of the Nebraska Alumnus, which was mailed to subscribers yes terday. The necessity of a proper under standing of the building program re cently outlined by the Board of Re gents is stressed by Chancellor S. Avery in his article in "The Chancel lor's Comer." Under the "Among Campus Char acters" head is a story of Henry Witte, who has carried mail on the city campus since 1901. News of the various alumni clubs over the country and of the classes is also included in the Alumnus. I W. ORGANIZES FOLLOW-DP TEAM Eloise McAhan Will Captain Group Which Will Attempt to Raise $300. The follow-up team organized by the Y. W. C. A. under the captaincy of Eloise McAhan, to complete its finance drive, is at work on the cam pus. The members of this team will solicit all women who for any reason were not reached during the regular drive. The follow-up drive will con tinne one week. It is hoped that the sum obtain ea from this drive, together with a few late subscriptions! pot included in the previous total, will reach $300 and complete the budget The bud get is for $1800, of which ii&uw was raised in the dnve a wee ago. EDOCATIOS.STAKDARDS GIYEN Exteuiea New rbisae . Requirements. n,- TTniversitv Extension Division and the State Department of Public Instruction, in response to many re auests for a statement of quantita- - j- various phases secondary education, have formulat ed an oatline, published in the Uni versity Extension News for Novem ber 5, of requisites essential to the recommendation ol scnoow creditment to the colleges of the Uni .tv and. in case of normal w . Virk arhools. lor approval l. Th list is diviaea inw parts: Standards of library and text- DOOK equipuicu", laboratory science; wow" large maps, with suggestea Geography Department Exhibits for Teacner m.- ,inrtmpnt of eeography had on exhibit during the week of the teachers' convention illustrative terial including a display of maps, iw books, industrial sets, cu- , n.mnhlets. supplementary material now available for the teach- ing OI geogryuJ high schools. . v m ih priaes Trt PnWish Thesis on Nebraska Government tu- ttixia written by Prof. J- c.-in f the department of. politi cal science for the degree of doctor of philosophy from the Univers.ty of Illinois will be published next spring. . i m.-nitration in Nebras- THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, Burlington bpecial, To Arrive at Three The Comhusker special train will arrive at 3 o'clock today at the Burlington railway station, Eighth and Q Streets.-carrying the Varsity football squad, the Uni versity band and the students who made the trip to Notre Dame. The special left South Bend, Indiana at 5:45 o'clock yesterday and stopped in Chicago for four hours, leaving there at 11:30 o'clock last night REGISTRATION INCREASES 330 Number of Students Shows In crease of 6 Per Cent Over Mark Last Year. JOURNALISM SCHOOL LEADS IN GROWTH Three hundred and thirty more students an increase of 6 per cent were registered November 1 in the colleges and academic schools of the University of Nebraska than were registered that date in 19235981 against 665 If announces Registrar Florence I. McGahey. The number of men increased 169; women, 161. In the largest college Arts and Sciences which now has 2073 stu dents, there is little change, as in the colleges of Agriculture, Business Administration, Dentistry, Engineer ing, Law, and Medicine. The per centage of increase in the School of Journalism is 62; of pre-legal stu dents, 35; in the Graduate College, 29; College of Pharmacy, 25; Teach ers College, 23; School of Nursing (Omaha) 20; and the School of Fine Arts, 13. A summary of the regis tration follow;: November 1, 1923. Men Wo. Total Agriculture 219 927 32 34 768 81 36 595 110 188 115 302 201 209 428 1048 1975 251 283 Arts 1 Fine Arts . Journalism - 29 77 1 1 74 5 ' 17 15 53 14 786 63 845 82 36 .596 184 193 115 319 216 59 133 850 Bizad Dentistry Pre-Dental Engineering .. Graduate Law Pre-Legal Medicine Pre-Medical Nursing Pharmacy 1 H Teachers 64 Total -3791 Repeated Names 430 2586 6377 296 726 Total (unre- repeated) November 1, 3361 2290 5651 1924. Men Wo. Total Agriculture 202 209 1068 288 33 68 1 1 88 8 3 411 2037 320 96 840 85 30 599 237 192 156 335 226 71 166 1047 6848 867 Arts : 969 Fine Arts Journalism Bizad 63 772 84 30 698 149 184 153 319 209 Dentistry Pre-Dental Engineering Graduate Law Pre-Legal Medicine - 16 17 71 17 932 Pre-Medical Nursing Pharmacy . Teachers - 149 115 Total ..4028 . 498 2820 '369 Repeated Names Total (Unre pealed) .3530 2451 6981 FAMOUS ENGINEER VISITS NEBRASKA Local Sigma Tau Chapter to Give Dinner for Norton Ware, '04. Norton Ware. '04, chief engineer of the Sutter Butte Canal company of Gridley. California, and one of the founder? of Sigma Tau, engineering fraternity, will be in Lincoln Monday nrf Tnesdav and will be entertained by members of the local chapter of Sigma Tau. A dinner in ni nunw will be riven at the Grand Hotel Tuesday at 6:15 followed by a chap ter meeting in Faculty hau at I :ju. According to members of tlie fra ternity, Mr. Ware was "one of the main cogs in the machine when Sig ma Tau was founded." While at Nebraska he was an Innocent and a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. He also belong to the American Society of Civil Engineers. . At the meeting in Faculty hall four new members will be initiated in order to demonstrate the ritual to Mr. Ware. He has expressed his in terest in all matters, pertaining to t. nnrxnization and especially de sired to see he initiation ceremon ies. - TO HOLD BALL " DECEMBER 13 r : Cadets Plan for Annual Mili tary Formal to Open Sea son at Auditorium. 150 TICKETS TO BE HELD FOR STUDENTS The annual military ball, given by the military department and opening the formal season, will be December 13 at the City Auditorium, Four teenth and M Streets, according to announcement recently made. Only 150 tickets will be sold to the general student body, it was said, the same dumber being reserved for cadet officers. The tickets will be put on sale November 24. Plans for the event, as being worked out now, call for rich decora tions and smart favors. A special twelve-piece orchestra organized by the Kandy Kids will provide the mus ic. The cadet colonels of all univer sities in the seventh corps area, in cluding many of the universities in the Missouri Valley conference, will be invited to attend. The ball is always one of the fore most of formal affairs and is the of ficial opennig event of the formal season at the University. The grand march led by cadet Colonel Charles C. Caldwell and Honorary Colonel Dorothy Brown will be one of the features. 'Last year the event was consid ered one of the best of the season. The presentation of the honorary colonel, Miss Rosalie Platner, was done in a novel manner while lights were dimmed and rifle shots fired. Decoration of the auditorium carried out the military idea, with crossed swords and rifles, three pounders, machine guns and flags. Three hun dred couples and sixty-four guests of honor attended last year. ASSIGN-WOHEN TO TABLES FOR SALES Twenty-two Women Expected to Be in Their Places at Hours Turned in. Twenty-two members of the Com husker staff have been assigned to tables in the sales campaign starting this week. The women are expected to be at their stations at the hours they turned in to the office, as the staff wants to make sure there will be someone at each table at all times this week. The following are the members of the Comhusker staff who have been assigned to places: Social Science: Blanche Stevens, Jean Hall, Fayne Smithberger, Flor ence Osthoff, and Caroline Airy. University Hall: Dorothy Zust, Eloise McAhan, Alice Summers, Eve lyn Lindley, Laura Whelpley, and Is abel O'Halloran. Library: Margaret Long, Celeste Leech, Doris Trott, Mary Louise Walsh, Agnes Kelly, and Martha Dudley. Teachers College: Ida May Flader, Beraice M. Robinson, Rachel Elmore, Fern S. Cook, and Sophie Webster. Freshman-Sophomore Olympics This Year Will Furthur Old Tradition When the class of '27 and the class of '28 line up November 29 and view each other with hostile eyes in the annual Olympics contest, they will be furthering an age-old tra dition at Nebraska. For sixteen years the lowly freshman and wordly sophomore have clashed in battle on the field of skill and brawn. It was in 1908 that Dr. G. E. Con- dra, professor of geography conceiv ed the idea of the annual games, and that year saw the first Olympic contest. Previous to that time class fights and kidnaping were prevalent as in other universities and colleges. The Daily Nebraskan of October 15, 1910, says: "It was the annual custom of the sophomore class to attack the first freshman meeting and later kidnap the first-year president The fresh men, resenting such actions, would start something at a time when the sophomores were wearing their best clothes." Whether or not the direct cause for organization of the Olympics was the fact that the sophomores got their best clothes dirtied, is not known. But it was agreed that the organized scrap abolished the old impromptu fist-fights on the campus and the ab duction and subsequent punishment of first year notables. And it is safe to say many sophomore a of 1905 or 1906 will not admit that the fresh men were the only men kidnaped. 1904 marked one of the most tur bulent years in all class annals. How freshmen, sophomores, juniors, and seniors mixed in one great scrap, and SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16. 1924 Association Women Attend Conference The conference and luncheon held at the Lincoln Hotel SatuS day noon by the American Associ ation of University Women in honor of Dr. Aurelia. Reinhardt, president of Mills college, Oak land, Calif, was attended by one hundred and forty-five members. Following the luncheon Dr. Reinhardt spoke on "The National and International Work of the As sociation." Y. II DRIVE $700 SHORT Cleanup Committee Will At tempt to Bring Total up to Goal of $2,000. CLAYTON GOAR WINS TRIP TO MANHATTAN Thirteen hundred dollars was the total amount raised in the Univer sity Y. M. C. A. campaign for funds carried on November 5, 6, and 7. The goal set was $2,000 and the "Y" cab inet will act as a "cleanup commit tee" in an effort to bring the total up to that figure. Clayton Goar, '26, won the prize of a free round-trip ticket to Man hattan for the Kansas Aggie-Nebras ka football game on November 22, which was offered to the individual turning in the largest amount of money. The team of which Goar was cap tain was first in the race among the ten teams which carried on the drive. Giles Henkle's team was second and Monroe Gleason's third. Pledges made last year which were never paid are being checked up and an effort will be made to collect them. Members of the cabinet will inter view all men in the University who did not contribute. , TBETA SIGI1A PHI TAKES IN SEVEN Women's National Profession al Journalistic Society to Initiate Friday. Seven women were pledged to Theta Sigma Phi, national profes sional journalistic society, Friday, November 14, at Ellen Smith Hall. The women pledged are: Carolyn Airy, '25, Watson, Mo.; Irma Ellis, 26, Alliance; Lilliam Ragsdale, '27, Omaha; Ruth Schad, '26, Wymore; Ir-sae Jacobs, '25, Kingfisher, Okla.; Helen Simpson, '27, Casper, Wyo.; Evelyn Linley, '26, Omaha. " Initiation will take place in Ellen Smith Hall, November 21, at 5 o'clock. A dinner at the Woodburn will follow the ceremony. Roland Palmer Gray, formerly in structor in English at the University, now of Elmira College, is author of a recent book, published by the Har vard University Press, on "Songs and Ballads of the Maine Lumberjacks.1 how even the women of every class ioined in the conflict is known to every student of that year. "A spirit of evil and carnage was abroad yesterday morning, says Daily Nebraskan of May 13, 1904. "The meek-eyed freshman who was wont to wander around in humble verdancy, and the model freshman girl who usually trembled at the very sight of an upperclassman, were transformed into friends of the wild est nature. The freshman and soph omore factions were arrayed against each other in a battle to the finish." The freshmen cast the bomb when they declared that they were entitled to wear class caps. At that time every class but the first year, both men and women, wore caps of dis tinctive color with the class numerals. The class of 1908 had won practically every interclass athletic contest and considered themselves worthy of breaking the precedent and donning a distinctive headgear. In spite of warnings from all other classmen the freshmen ordered a sup ply of caps from a clothing concern. The day of their arrival was the one described by The Daily Nebraskan. The first hostilities started when sev eral prominent members of the fresh man class were kidsaped and kept 'in vacant flat all night. Freshmen and' policemen went to the rescue early the next morning. Both men and women joined in spontaneous scraps during the day. The Nebraskan says, "The senior and .(Continued on. Fags Two.),, ROCKNE ATTACK CRUSHES NEBRASKA BY 34-6 SCORE Cornhuskers Get Jump on Notre Dame but Are Unable to Score After First-String Men Are Sent In; Lone Touch down Comes In First Quarter. RHODES AND LOCKE UNABLE TO GET AWAY ON RUNS (Special to The Daily Nebraskan.) UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME, SOUTH BEND, Ind., Nov. 15. The "four horsemen of Notre Dame ran wild on Cartier Field here today and avenged defeats by Nebraska in 1922 and 1923 by crushing the a i i 1 score. The brilliant ana ponsnea msn DacKiieia, me greatest that ever played," smashed the line and circled the ends until the hundreds of Nebraska rooters in the stands groaned in des pair. Layden; Miller, Crowley, Stuhldreher, all were bril liant, while the Husker backs Nebraska scored early against the Irish second team, which started the game, and Knute Rockne may have had momentarv aualms in which he cursed the day he heard of psy chology, or the inferiority complex. But with the regulars on the field the Huskers were helpless; they could not stop the whirling, plunging Irish backs, game. John Rhodes was a marked of the Husker attack." The other Nebraska backs failed on of fence, while Rockne s men slipped through lor runs oi 10 to yards. AG ENGINEERS GIYE EXHIBIT AT DENTON Demonstrate Farm Machinery; Sixty Students Make Trip; parsons Speaks. A group of sixty men, mostly ag ricultural engineers and men inter ested in agricultural engineering, made a trip to Denton, Thursday where several demonstrations were given. The demonstrations ana lec tures were very well received by a crowd of about two hundred people at Denton Hall. More demonstrations of the same variety will probably be given soon at some of the small towns in the vi cinity of Lincoln. Prof. C W. Smith of the Agricul tural Engineering Department, who had charge of the project, considers it to have been very successful. All of the demonstrations, which were with agricultural machinery, were made by the students. A short program was given before the demonstrations started. Richard Parsons, a member of Alpha Zeta honorary agricultural society, gave a speech in which he related the ad vantages of college training. A clown stunt was put on by Prof. F. D. Kiem and Prof. T. H. Goodding, both of the agronomy department. Several musical r umbers were given by a male quartet and an orchestra, which were made up of men from the agri cultural engineering department. Publication Board Makes Appointments Appointive offices on the editorial staff of the University newspaper, The Daily Nebraskan, for the second haif of the semester will be filled this week by the Student Publication Board. Applications will be received until noon Wednesday, November 19, news editors. Applicants are re for the positions of editor, managing editor, news editors, and assistant newa editors. Applicants are re quested by the chairman of the board, Prof. M. M. Fogg, to present evidence as to their qualifications for discharging the duties of the specific positions for which they apply. Prayer Service Is To Be Conducted Today is the universal day of prayer, which is being sponsored by the World's Student Christian Fed eration. A service, conductea Dy Miss Erma Appleby, will be held at the United Presbyterian Church at 8 o'clock for the Y. W. C. A. and the Y. M. C. A. ' On entering each student will bow or kneel in silent prayer for a moment. All students are urged to attend. Nebraska Alumna Holds Fellowship Luella Gettys, '20, A. M., '21, who held the Susan B. Anthony fellow ship at Bryn Mawr in 1922 and the Carnegie fellowship in international law at Illinois in 1923, now holds a fellowship at the University of Ill inois. She is working on her doctor's thesis, which is on "The Status of Peoples in Ceded Territory." "The Miser" to Be Presented Monday "The Miser," one of the best of Moliere's classical . comedies, will be put on Monday night alone at the Temple Theater by the Coffer-Miller Players under the auspices of the University Players,. - PRICE S CENTS Cornhuskers under a 34-to-b W ? 1 1 - 1 . 1 .1 it., It A. J- failed to dazzle. nor break up their passing man, but he carried the brunt Woatoupal Get Fumble. In the first quarter, Bloodgood's punt placed the ball on the Irish 18 yard line and Rockne began subbing out his reserves by sending in Lay den.. On the first play Layden at tempted to punt but fumbled a bad pass from center and Joe Wostoupal scooped it up and ran to the Irish 4-yard line. The entire first team was shot in the breech at this junc ture but it was too late to prevent a touchdown. Rhodes smashed the line for three yards in two plays and Myers leaped over center for the yard that gave the touchdown. Much weight' had been placed by pre-game dopesters in the value of getting the jump. Nebraska got the jump unquestionably but the Husk ers were not able to turn their ad vantage into a victory. The first string Irish team with the "four horsemen" in' the ' backfield worked like well-oiled clockwork. Before the second quarter ended it had piled up two touchdowns and was on the way to the third when the gun sounded to end the half. The Irish had penetrated to the four-yard line when the time-keeper stopped the play. Defeat Is Crushing. The statistics tell the convincing manner in which the Irish evened their defeats of two previous years. Notre Dame left Lincoln last No vember with but one thought and that was what it would do when the Huskers came east in 1924. The Irish are coming west in 1925 and the tables will be reversed. Instead of the green unseasoned material be ing in Nebraska's lineup it will be in Notre Dame's next year and the game will likewise be played on the Cornhuskers home gridiron. That thought of 1925 meeting was all the solace the Cornhuskers had to soothe the crushing defeat. There was one department in which the Cornhuskers had an ad vantage. That was in punting. Bloodgood, as the statistics show, av eraged two yards more on his punts than Elmer Layden, the Notre Dame star. Locke Smothered. Locke tried to sweep the wings but before he could get turned for a straight dash down the field there would be several Irish bearing down on him. The Notre Dame team ripped the line for gains and injected enough passes into the contest to keep the Cornhuskers in a frenzy. It was one of the most polished attacks compe tent critics said they had ever wit nessed. When the line bucks failed as they did so many times, Bloodgood tried the overhead route, but the Huskers completed but one pass, from Locke to Bloodgood. Captain Ed Weir's work was the one bright spot in the Comhusker de fense. The big Superior boy would not quit even in the dying moments when he knew Nebraska was hope lessly beaten. He was tackling as fiercely when the game ended as when it started. BackieM Effective. The Notre Dame backfield was equally effective. Layden would ram center for substantial gains while Crowley and Don Miller rn the ends for spectacular sprints. It ws a disappointed crowd of Cornhuskers who boarded the spe cial train back to Lincoln. But they are concealing the disappointment They too are waiting for Notre Dame to come west in 1925. The Notre Dame victory was far from bcr.i aa upset but the convincing manner in which it was put over Was unexpect ed. It was the largest score the It'' h have ever been able ta run up apiiut the Hutiera in the nine yers in (Continued cn Tae Foir.)