THE DAILY NEBRASKA N TEAM LEAVES FOR MISSOURI Coach Kline's Men to Meet Washington and State University Fires. BELIEVE BOTH WILL BE STIFF CONTESTS A light workout in the Armory, with signal practice and basket shoot ing completed Coach Kline's prepar ations yesterday for the game this evening with Washington University at St Louis, and with Missouri Uni versity at Columbia tomorrow. The team left Lincoln yesterday at 4:40 p. m. Coach Kline took with him Cap tain Vols, Tipton, Eckstrom, Black, Andreson, Goodson, Smaha, Beerkle, Usher, and Klepser. Both games will rank easily with some of the previous hard games on the schedule. Washington is only one game behind Nebraska in the Valley race, and will make a special tfnr tn win this evenin in order from the fact that Kansas Advocate, of whjch he served as edi- . .. 3 vi.Jt.nr in 1917. In the University ne "Oz" Black Appears At Mixer On Friday i-L- AUTHORS APPEAR AT MEETINGS OF GUILD (Continued from Page One.) "Oi" Black, ex-'22, cartoonist of the Lincoln Daily Star, and winner recently of first prise in the national "Get-Out-the-Vote" cartoon contest, will give a chalk-talk, "In a Looking Glass," at the School of Journalism reception for the Nebraska Press As sociation and the Nebraska Writers' Guild Friday evening in the Temple. ship exists between them, his success in the sale of greeting cards, and his present sale of syndicate verse deal ing with common-place experience and every-day idealism to more than 500 newspapers. "Editorials Ups and Downs" were discussed with a surprising combina tion of solemn wit ana nonsensical wisdom by Grace Soreson, publisher of Every Child's Magasine, Omaha. "I have very little use for editors, writers, poets and other such contriv ances." announced Miss Sorenson. 1 know too much about them to care for them. "The life of an editor is vagrant, upright, the result of expansive modi fication," was a later comment "I stand aghast before the perpetual din of it It is the old story of doing again for the millionth time what has never been done before." Two forthcoming books were brief ly reviewed by Mrs. Anna Brownell Dunawav. Omaha magasine writer. "Humorous Plays for Children," by Grace Sorenson, is a book of 16 plays Nebraska Student Is Journal Cartoonist air- tuat-k icfcau iiu - m career in grade-school days in Lin- originally written for Every Child s coin. From the age of 12 he Has Magazine, . aei had the cartoon "bug." While a stu- situations in home and school life. i16- . - e tale of experiences in me ouum Mrs. Dunaway read a chapter from university aiicj - , , . to beat the Sooner, last week only contributed art work : to student pub- - ,;t Hn. and that from iicauons. un xue ""j a free throw in the last part oi tne game. Defeat will lower Nebraska to third place, while victory will well nigh cinch second place. Next week will come one of the hardest games on the Nebraska schedule, when the Cornhuskers go to Omaha to play the Creighton BlueJays. Creighton always plays best against Nebraska, and it is one of the big games of the year in Omaha. Last year Nebraska won in one of the most exciting games play ed that year in the metropolis. The year previous, Creighton was victor by a decisive score. Ve served as reporter, news editor and sports editor. For a year he was art editor of The Awgwan. On The Star he was reporter in 1919, and later worked as news edi tor and feature writer before nis I cartoons began to appear. WRESTLING TEAH LEAVES FOR IOWA Highley to Be Matched With Karakovsky, 1924 Olym pic Champion. Highley, Nebraska heavyweight wrestler, will match his skill this eve ning with Karakovsky, Olympic champion wrestler, in the dual meet with Iowa University at Iowa City. Last year the huge heavyweight from Iowa defeated Robertson, Ne braska wrestler, in the dual meet at Lincoln. He was on the American Olympic team last summer. The wrestling team left Lincoln vesterdav for Iowa City at 1 p. ra. Coach E. G. Clapp took with him the men announced yesterday: Blore in the 115-pound class, Hudson in the l?5-nnnnd rlasa. McCoskev in the 135-pound division. Dale Skinner in the 145-tound division, Brannigan in the 158-pound class, Brainerd in the 175-pound class, and Highley in the heavyweight The lineup representing Nebraska this evening is only partially indi cative of Nebraska's wrestling strength. Only three men on the team have had any intercollegiate experi ence before this season. Nebraska veterans and regulars in four classes had to be replaced by second string men on account of injuries and in eligibilities. Iowa University defeated Nebras ka last year in the dual meet, and the indications are that the performance will be repeated. Nebraska thus far has lost every match on the schedule, while the Iowa team is fully as strong as it was la year. Two years ago the Iowans were defeated by Nebraska at Iowa City. BROADCAST EDITORS BANQUET SUtioa WFAV of University Sends Oat Editors Speeches. The Nebraska State Press Asso ciation banquet was broadcast over University Station WFAV yesterday evening. The usual lecture on busi ness English by Professor M. H. Weseen and music by Anne Grogan, pianist and Herman Decker, bari tone, were also broadcast A radio and telephone communica tion laboratory, containing valuable eoui-oment from the Western Elec tric Company, has been installed in the Electrical Engineering building. Station WFAV wishes to announce that its Saturday evening Midnight Follies programs will be open to fra ternities and sororities. Organiza tions wishine to entertain over the the book. She also read a letter from the author to the Guild, dealing in a light satirical fashion with the diffi culties of authorship, the hardships and delays endured in the lapse of years usually taken in the writing, sale and publication of a book. "Why envy the carpenter or the plasterer," wrote Mr. Osborn, "with his dollar and a quarter an hour, when one can turn to the safe, sure ways of art" 'Anv writer who doesn t write to please himself needn't write at alL" was the declaration of Miss Helen Mc Donald, Omaha writer and former reader for McClure's Magazine, after deDlorine the mistaken efforts of young writers to study the apparent 'stvle" of a magazine and to pattern rrnrdinriv. "What a magazine wants today it may not Nebraska's woods and prairies. want tomorrow. Magazines, like per sons, keep on making mistakes. Any how, the best art has the best chance of popularity. "Pprsonallv. I do not believe that untalented persons should be encour aged to learn the mechanics oi writ ing " remarked Miss McDonald. She explained the distinction between the crude photograph of reality and tne artful picture of it which inexperi enced writers sometimes fail to dis cern. An actor is made op, not to look natural to those standing by his side, but those across the foot-lights. I: ft J ' "- D. K. Bryant, '25, Hartington, is cartoonist for The Lincoln State Journal and is a contributor to stu dent publications. the wind; the odors and noises of the prairie night "Good poetry is good for the peo ple. It can give us a new 'Divine Comedv": it can lead us on in the worship of beauty; it can interpret, the growing meaning oi numanuy. n is-not a trifling occupation." Selections from the epic poetry of John Neihardt were read by Dr. Jul--. T. House of Wayne. The extracts j were taken from "The Song of Hugh Glass," expressing the feeling of a great soul alone on the prairie; "The Knnir of the Three Friends," a tale of comradeship on the prairie; and "The Song of the Indian Wars," de scribing the meeting of two great races on the plains. Extracts from "The Last of the Strozzi" were read by the author, Carolyn Renfrew. The story deals with the love-affairs among rival families of Italy. "The Value of a School of Print ing" was explained to the Press As sociation by Ralph M. Coffelt of Kansas State Teachers College, at Pittsburgh. knowledgment of M. A. Brown, dean of Nebraska editors, to the congratu latory applause caused by his cele bration of his seventy-second birth day. J. P. OTurey, Hartington,. urged the Nebraska editors to join the Na tional Editorial Association. Nebras ka is now ninth from the top in the contest for membership. "To protect all that will enrich our Pned from Friday. February 13. SWIMMING MEET CANCELLED Contest With Omaha Athletic Clab Definitely Called Off. The dual swimming meet schedul ed for Friday night February 20, in Omaha, with the Omaha Athletic Club mermen, was called off defi nitely Thursday, according to Frank Hun ton, coach. The meet was post- lives: to know and foster and cele brate the fine traditions of our own home state; may not this be, after all, the real purpose which the Ne braska Writers' Guild should prop erly hope to serve?" was the query of Keene Abbott in his address to the joint meeting of the Nebraska Writers' Guild and the Press Associ ation. A letter written by Willa Cather to the Guild was read by Mr. Abbott "A writer without a feeling for his natural country is a mistake, like a musician without a feeling for sound," wrote Miss Cather in discuss inir Va fowrintive oossibilities of sue The next meet will be held with the Kansas Agricultural College, February 26 at Manhattan. Follow ing that will come the dual meet with Ames at the Omaha Athletic Club natatorium March 6. The Missouri Valley meet will be held at St Louis in the Washington University pool on March 14. Ten men will be taken to each of these meets. radio should communicate with j An artist is the mirror of nature, but Harry Eaton by calling B4334 or by mailing a card to 1810 M. St BOSTON UNIVERSITY Dean E. W. Lord of the College of Business Adminstration says that the average college-bred man earns $72,000 more by the time he has reached the age of sixty than has the man with just a high-school education. TOWNSEND Portraits. "Pre serve the present for the future.' Adv. Interfraternity Relays Will be Run Next Week The interfraternity relay races which were postponed last week will be run off next week, beginning Monday, February 28, acording to an announcement made by Coach '"In dian" Schulte yesterday. The fra ternities not entered yet may do so bv denositmg one dollar at tne atn- letie office and giving the name of the team manager. The time that the team can run must be reported at the same time. he portrays nature as he sees it with his artistic perceptions. At a business meeting I tne Ne braska Press Association in Social Science auditorium at 1:30, Presi dent Marie Weekes appointed a nom inating committee consisting of W. W. Murray, Pender; Miss Eunice Haskins, Stella, and Senator John Kroh, Ogallala. The newly appoint ed nominating committee is J. P O'Furey, Hartington; Jack Walsh, Auburn; Harry Flory, Pawnee City; Emil Von Seggern, West Point and Milton Cox. "HoDe you all keep going and nev er quit until you drop," was the ac- urged the writers to spread propa ganda to prevent the destruction of the state's native trees. In speaking on "Good Poetry? Bnt What's It Good For?" Edwin Ford Piper, Nebraska poet and professor at the University of Iowa, said, in part: 'Life is full of the crude material of poetry. The great poet a for mative personality, draws on this crude material; he cares intensely for his subject The greatness of the personality back of it The good poem is worth reading a second, a third time; it carries vital meaning and is perfected in beauty. 'The supreme poet does not come once in a century. Delects in con temporary poetry arise from a con fusion in the thought of the times .nJ frnm Ipfwtive nprSOMllit V Of contemporary poets. From the ex ploiter, the pedant the poseur we shall get nothing but sham poetry. "Local application: We have to grow our poets. Nebraska cannot be put into poetry worthily except by one who understands sympathetical ly the texture of our life. He must comprehend a whole landscape; the whole old buffalo bones in the grass by the ford; weather-beaten men in OFFER SCIENCE FELLOWSHIP NEW VARSITY RECORDS SET Crites and Locke Make Fast Time in Trial. Held Thurs day Afternoon. WORK OF TRACK MEN BOOSTING PROSPECTS Two new indoor Varsity records were set Thursday afternoon in time trials when Captain Everett Crites won the 440-yard dash, and "Gip" t r.n thn S00-vards in fast time. Finals in the mile and half-mile will be run Saturday afternoon at three o'clock. Ftrorott Crites. barely defeated Frank Dailey in a quarter mile which -f nna nt the new records. Crites Via. covered the distance in 52.1 seconds, while Dailey was only 1-10 of a sec nj hohind him. Locke, running alone finished the 300-yards in 32.8 seconds easily. This is within one second of the Illinois relay record. Coach Schulte expects to win a nlaee in the hurdles, the pole vault, .ml norhans the broad jump. Locke, jf he makes the trip, is almost sure of winning the 300-yard, and i -yard uhM- If the Question of a good miler and half-miler is settled to sat isfy the coach Saturday in time trials, he is expecting to win that event Nebraska won in this event two years ago, with Ed Allen, "Mud Gardner. "Red" Layton, and Ted Smith on the team. WANT LOST Platinum link bracelet set with diamonds and sapphire on city campus between 9 and H Thursday. Liberal reward offered. Finder call B-3580. m Drive It Yourself) u vert You can "get over big" with "her" or the boys. Kent a Saunders Car any time! Drive it your self as long as you like. Costs from to Vi as much as taxi Go anywhere. Coupes, Sedans or Touring Cars. SAUNDERS SYSTEM 239 North lit St. Phaos B-1007 i Mast Apply ior Charles A. Award by April 15. Coffi Applications for the Charles A. Coffin Foundation Fellowships in electricity, physics, and physical chemistry must be filed before April 15, 1925, by seniors and graduates of the universiites. All applications should first be sent to the Dean of the university at which the applicant is, or has been in attendance during the" year. Notification of awards will be made on or about June 1. In 1924 eight fellowships were awarded. The fellowships carry a minimum allow ance of $500, which may be in creased at the discretion of the committee. SoM J Monagraphs . Split Seconds Repeaters Fine Swi New Hats that come to Rudge & Guenzel's from Fashion's bandbox have charm wrapped in their crowns. There's a dent, a ridge, a peak, or just a fold, but there is always exaggerated height and youthfulness provided for the wearer. Some of Budge's smart Hats are trimmed with Straw Novelties some with fringed ribbons some with ribbon bows some with embroidery , others with flowers and some with beads. 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