he Daily Nebraskan U XXV. NO. 76. THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA'TIIURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1926. PRICE 5 CENTS. VERA BARGER TO BE GUEST IN FEBRUARY Month uiLL ADDRESS MEMBERS .cc...or o Cr.c. Coppock Will Tell of Chinese Work yiss Vera Bargc-r, '11, director of thi' Normal Physical Educational Lhool at Shanghai, China, will visit tk. University of Nebraska campus February 14 and 15. She will be a p,est of the University Y. W. C. A. A special vesper service will be kid for Miss Barger after which a dinner will he given. All members of the V. W. C. A., cabinet, staff, tem cartains, and members of the Grace Coppock drive and all other University women who are interested will be invited to attend the dinner. Miss Barger will also apeak to a meeting of the team captains and members. When in school Miss Barger served ts president and vice-president of the University Y. W. C. A. She also acted as an assistant in the physical education department. She Jias spent four years in China and returned on a furlough last April. Miss Barger was the first one to introduce physical education work into the curriculum of a number of Chinese schools. She also established summer camps, somewhat on the order of the v tt". C. A. conferences in the United States, sponsored play grounds and health programs. Miss Barter visited the campus last May when she spoke to the World Forum and told them of her work and the conditions in China. In speaking of her work to the Forum she said: There has been very little done in China for public health. A sign found on the gate of a Chinese park ia Shanghai reads, 'Chinese and Dop Xot Allowed.' The parks and pliyptrands in China are solely for the enjoyment of the foreigners." IHYITE COLLEGES TO ENTER RELAYS tuui Notifies 255 Institutions of Plant for Fnorth Annual Athletic Event LAWRENCE, Kan., Jan. 20. For nal invitation to 255 universities, colleges and military academies, ask fcj them to participate in the fourth annual Kar sas Relays, April 17, have just been mailed by the University of Kansas athletic authorities. The invitations went to some 15 states, and will bring to Lawrence eearly 1000 of the best track athletes of tie country. The day preceding t09 to 1000 high school athletes of Kansas will compete in the twenty second annual Interscholastic track toeet, and the high school relay teams asking sufficiently good time will I asked to enter the Relays the day following. All high school contest ants will remain for the Relays, the rwt i f ;he University. , The Kar,-a Relays come almost at ta opening of the outdoor track sea- preceding the Drake Relays by tek, and in yant past have drawn exceptionally fast teams. Last fear as an unusually favorable to", and no less than four world's ords were broken, together with Poetically all the previous Kansas kyj records. Underneath the two extensions Jt completed on the Kansas Me morial sUdium, locker and dressing Twn facilities are being provided, a all conveniences will be at hand ' tlse veiling teams. THETA SIGMA PHI WILL SPOHSER TEA Meaibc rt of W. omen's Journalistic Or, titration to be Hostesses At Weekly Ewent !eniW of Theta Sigma Phi, hon orary national society for journal tiJ be the hostesses at J weekly tea at Ellea Smith Hall on o'cE."7 afternoon from 4 to 6 4tM" Lawrence will preside i He Irving table during the first and Migg Constance Syford will T , durin cond hour. The committee i charge of the Jtment, i, htcied by Erma El T tie ot"r members of her eere: Elice HoIvUhiner, r ,T U; Nom Carpenter, pro Kuth Moore and Lillian Rags p, U,rrnem,t; and Ruth Schad. WEATHER FORECAST Thursday: Partly cloudy; not much change in temperature. Weather Conditions Colder weather has extended southward over the Missouri val ley and the southern Plains to Oklahoma and northern Texas, and eastward to the upper Mis sissippi valley and the northern Great Lakes. Temperatures are below zero in portions of South Dakota, Minnesota, and most of western Canada. Snow has fallen in the Dakotas and Minnesota, and there are six inches on the ground at St. Paul and Minneapolis this morning. There has also been snow in Colorado, western Kan sas, and sleet in Oklahoma. Fair and warm weather prevails in the eastern half of the country. THOMAS A. BLAIR, Meteorologist. OCCDPATION OF U HALL BEGINS Classes in Journalism and Lan guage Will Be Held in Old Building ROOMS ARE RHPAPERED Occupation of University Hall building, in which classes will be held next semester, begins today. The of fices and classrooms are being put in readiness for classes on February 1. Two new offices have been added to the main floor plan. Prof. M. M. Fogg, director of the School of Jour nalism, will resume his office quar- trs there. A new Journalism read-; ing room has been completed with necessary classrooms. Prof. Clara Conklin, chairman of the Modern Language department, will have one large office with ac commodations for more language in structors. The remaining classrooms will be used for language instruction. The basement plan will be identi cal to that used before the building was condemned and torn down. Both' the Cornhusker and The Daily Ne brasktan will resume their former quarters. All rooms in the new structure have been repaired and repapered, after the confiscation of the two up per stories. The building, first on the enmpus, now presents a different sight from when it had the familiar tower and bell for which it will be remembered. "Wood Preservation" Talk Is Illustrated Members in the class in railroad construction have been making vari ous reports on subjects connected with their work. The latest lecture was one on "Wood Preservation," and was the first to be illustrated with slides, which were obtained from Barrett Company, Chicago. The report was prepared by M. J. Miller, a senior student in engineer ing. It was shown that the use of preservative materials lengthens the life of railroad ties about three times. Engineering Society To Meet The Nebraska Engineering Society will hold a business meeting at 10 o'clock, Friday morning, January 22, in Mechanical Engineering building, room 208. Oklahoma President Gives Criticism of Student Life in State Institutions President Eradford Knapp of Ok lahoma A. and M. College forsees a time when institutions operated on state funds will not have to deal with dullards and students too lazy to make the most cf an education. That is, in effect, what he told Ag gie students in a chapel address on college morals and scholarship, w hich he said was occasioned by the ap proach of mid-year examinations. Student morals, often assailed, r not as bad as one would suppose and students are far from being re sponsible for them as they now ex it, he said- He cited the case in which the student council of Illinois university, before the Illinois-Michigan game last fall issued a manifesto urging that visitors to Champaign and Urbana abstain from drinking because of the reflection their action would cast npon the university and the city in which it is located. "The press is picturing the ex tremes of college students to the public, and persons not connected with colleges and universities are getting the wrong impre. xn, the president proceeded. "I resented a newspaper story recently about Ok lahoma's prize club girl at the In ternational Club congress who was contrasted as wearing a n.gn long-girted dress, while grls of this PLAN TO HOLD ICE CARNIVAL ON WEEK-END Rink Is Open to All University Men and Women for Small Admission Fee TO GIVE SEVERAL PRIZES Those in Charge Hope that All Or ganisation Will Enter Float In Parade The ice carnival sponsored by the W omen's Athletic Association will be held Friday and Saturday, January 22, and 23, if the weather permits.The hours will be from seven to ten-thirty, and Saturday the pro gram will start about 8:15 o'clock, just after the basketball game. The admission fee will be twenty- five cents. The rink was flooded this week, and is ready for use. It is open to all University men and women for skating this afternoon and evening for the admission fee of ten cents. The toboggans are ready for use, and any V. A. A. member may take one out, and all may use them. It is hoped that all fraternities, sororities, and campus oranizations will enter a' float in the ic float pa rade, and a prize will be given to the most beautiful, most ridiculous, and most unique float The rink will be lighted. with bright lir.t', ord there will be special features. WILL BROADCAST MUSICAL PROGRAM Music Instructors Arrange Special Charter Day Radio Concert for February 1 6 An announcement of a special Charter day program was made to day in addition to the program sched uled for February 15. It will be a special musical program to be given Tuesday, February 16, under the di rection of the musical instructors of the University School of Music. This concert will be broadcast from Sta tion KFAB beginning at 8:45 Tues day evening. The Charter day program, sched uled to commemorate the signing of the charter by Governor Butler, founding the University of Nebras ka, will be given Monday. The mu sical will be made into a complete program the following night. The University School of Music faculty taking part in the arrange ment of the program are: Mrs. Will iam Owen Jones, piano; Laura S. Smith, piano; Walter Wheatly, tenor P. Witte, tenor; Howard Kirkpatrick C. Frederick Eteckelberg, violin; August Molzer, violin. These solo musicians will be assisted by the Uni versity string orchestra consisting of Lillian Eiche, August Molzer, Ed ward Walt, and Paul Witte. Soccer Tourney Will Continue Next Week The soccer tournament will be played the remainder cf this week and the first of next week, weather nermittine. All women out for soc cer should watch the W. A. A. bulle tin board for important announce ments, and the line-up for teams chosen. college were garbed in dresses of low necks and short skirts. The "jellybean" and "flapper" are not typical college students, but extremes being pictured to outsiders." Activities Broadening A student who strikes a medium neither a bookworm nor one entire 'y engrossed in college activities :s the one whom the president be-lievc-s will attain greatest success in life, he said, passing on in his dis cu sion, to take up scholarships and activities. Mental laziness is not to be en dured, he said, but "How can stu HnU ntudv?" he asked."When I war ir. college, we had fraternity meet ings only once a month and Saturday ;,rht ma study night. We had dances but once a week. Now there nften two dances a week, and Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights are "open." Enrollment too Small Figures based on the size of the freshman class would indicate that a nH M. should graduate 40 stu dents eat'; year; in reality it gradu ates 250, he said. This condition, however, is but typical of what other institutions are doing. The president has spent much time in the study of the cost of education and government recently, he said. Thermometer Drops to Eight Degrees above Zero Early Wednesday Yesterday was the coldest day of 1926 in Lincoln, according to statis tics given out from the office of Thomas A. Blair, meteorologist at the University of Nebraska. The thermometer reached a point of eight degrees above zero shortly after mid night. The high point for the day was seventeen degrees above zero, record ed at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon, with a half-inch of snow up until that time. A temperature of six degrees be low was recorded December 27 which was the low point this winter and also the lowest recorded in Lincoln during 1925. The drop in temperature during the last two days has again frozen over the skating rink east of Social Science building and yesterday after noon saw a group of skaters on the pond. The rink was frozen over once before this year, but thawed before it could be used. HOSKERS HOLD TRYOUTS TODAY Track and Field Men Will Compete in Second Time Trials This Afternoon FRIDAY RECORDS GOOD Husker track and field men will compete this afternoon in the second time tryouts of the season. Coach Henry F. Schulte will have an oppor tunity to see what improvement has taken place in the array of candid ates since the first trials held last Friday. The first heat will be the 50-yard dash, at 4 o'clock, followed at ten minute intervals by the other events. Freshmen and novices will run in the same heats with the varsity mem bers and candidates. Time made by them will be applied on spring track numeral records. Good records for the first time trials in the season were made last Friday. Consistent early season practice on the part of a great num ber of the varsity candidates and veterans made the advance showing so auspicious. The greatest Husker strength still seems to be in the short dis tances where there is a wealth of ma terial both from the varsity and the freshmen of last year. The middle distances and run3 also have a gal lery of first class aspirants. The indoor track was the scene of the usual mid-week practice runs yesterday and Tuesday. The men worked out to be in condition for the trials, but did not compete in any races, saving their strength for Coach Shulte's stop watch this after noon. Kriemelmeyer was heaving the shot at forty fet and over yester day afternoon, without trying much. Last Friday he put the shot 42 feet and 2 inches. Joe Weir was working out with the shot for a while. A schedule for the events which will be followed in the preliminary varsity and numeral tryouts this spring was posted on the board Fifty yard dash at 4 o'clock; one mile run, 4:10; 50 yard high hurdles 4:20; 440-yard dash, 4:30; two-mile run, 4:40; 50-yard low hurdles, 4:50: half-mile run, 5:00. The shot puf and the broad jump will start at 4:00. Pole vault and high jump at 4:20. JAYHAWKS MEET OKLAHOMA FIYE Kansas Is Victor ia Eleren out of Twelve Basketball Games in Six Years LAWRENCE, Kan., Jan. 20. Twelve times in the last six years the University of Kansas basketball team has met the University of Okla homa, and eleven t'mes K. U. has been victorious. That other game, however, is one long to be remem bered, for it was the only confer ence defeat of the 1924 season, and broke a record of almost two years without a conference defeat for the Jayhawkers. The Oklahoma five comes to K. U. Thursday night for the third game on the K. U. scv..Jule. Previous scores: K. U. Okla. 1920 - 33 28 42 26 1921 33 30 37. 32 1922 41 24 - 42 28 1923 27 21 - 42 18 1924 21 19i 20 26 1925 - 23 20 1 34 20 Total pts - 395 292! Games won 11 1 j DEWING GIVES TALK BEFORE WORLD FORUM Urges Students to Catch the Spirit that Is Molder of World Today SCIENCE AIDS PROGRESS Speaker Says Most Scientific Courses Fail to Show the Proper Sci entific Spirit "Try to catch the scientific snirit" Prof. H. G. Deming unred those in attendance at the World Forum in the Grand Hotel yesterday noon. "I am sorry that most scientific courses fail to ehow the scientific snirit. But try to get it someway, some where. It is the thing that molds the world today." In discussing the subject of "Sci ence and Progress," Professor Dem ing stated that he should divide his subject into three divisions, science, progress and the ways in which sci ence aids progress. "Science," said Professor Deming. "can best be defined by what it is not. Science is not skill. I may be very skillful in driving an automo- j bile. I may be able to shift the (gears without grinding, may be able to handle the car before all the red and green lights. But that is not science. Science is knowledge. But it is a knowledge of a very special kind. "The dictionary says it is 'formu- jlated and systematized knowledge.' It is difficult to disagree with the dictionary but knowledge does not need to be formulated and sysema tized to be science. In fact, system atization is likely to set up artificial barriers where none really exists. For instance, the systematization of knowledge sets up barriers between physics and chemistry when thev are really very closely related and their dividing point hard to determine. "Science is peculiar in three res pects. It attempts to disentangle influences which produce certain phenomena. In its entanglement, it comes in course of time, to certain far reaching principles called scien tific laws. The more important of our scientific laws are universal in their application. The laws of gravi tation, evolution and many others are equally applicable in various ways and all tend for greater reverences as they give a fuller appreciation of the process of Nature. 'In the third place, science is able to make use of its discoveries to ex- end given phenomena to phenomena somewhat related. It furnishes the gift of prophecy for future events. Last week you had progress de fined for j'ou by what it is not. Progress is not change. It is not the accumulation of material resources. It is conscious change toward a defi nite goal. In considering science's contribution to projrress we may say that our changes toward ideals must be in harmony with the law found in science and must be in harmony with the spirit of science. Science is concerned not alone with the materialistic eains but with every phase of human endeavor. Science shows that me may harmon ize our efforts to agree with natura1 lavs. Its contribution is its contri bution to the theory of life. "Science can deliver the world from its old-age ignorance, from its dbgmas and superstitions. Science (Continued to Page 3). Professor of Ethnology Denounces American Collegiate Organization Dr. Charles Mongomery Kennedy, professor of ethnology at Lanefield College, in a recent lecture before an audience of scientific men in New York, Hayed the American colk-g ate organization in the strongest terms, declaring that the educational system in this country is being prostituted to the establishment of a class of cul tured morons. Dr. Kennedy is considered one of the leading ethnologists of the repub lic. He is the author of "Culture the Curse," a study of development; "The History of the Mind," "The Outlines of Ethnology," and seven other books. He holds the degrees of Ph. D.; M. A.; LL.D; Ltt. D., and M. S. Dr. Kennedy charged that the American university is a hot-bed of indolence and superficiality. "The lazy, the trivial, the vicious, and the perverse find in our institutions a paradise where they indulge to the fullest their mania for 'jazz," 'speed,' and so on," declared the doctor. Colleges Country Clubs He continued: "Our typical college is used today as a country club for the idle rich and the rich dumb. It sponsors and urges on every kind of activity except those which it is sup posed to be the home of culture, ac tually its standards are the mone WILL GO TO CALIFORNIA Dean LeRossignol Will Teach in Los Angeles Summer Session J. E. LeRossignol, dean of the Col lege of Business Administration, will tench courses in Principles of Eco nomics and Labor Economics during the summer session of the University of California, Los Angeles, Califor nia, the preliminary announcement of the summer session of that univer sity states. The courses to be taught by Dean LeRossignol begin June 20 and end August 7. PICK TEAM FOR MISSOURI MEET Blore and Buck Win in Wrest ling Finals Held Wednes day Afternoon JANUARY 30 IS DATE SET With completion of the 115 and 125 pound class finals for Nebraska wrestling team Wednesday after noon, the team has been picked that will represent the Huskers in their dual meet with Missouri January 30. Blore, veteran letter man, won the right to represent the Scarlet and Cream in the 115 pound class when he won over Jones with an advan tage in 8 minutes and 10 seconds. Buck won the 125 pound class by throwing Weber with a half nelson and a body lock in 9 minutes and 49 seconds. The matches were held under the national intercollegiate rulings with the wrestlers going ten minutes to decision. The 108 pound class will not be wrestled in the conference this year. The men to represent Nebraska in the first dual meet and the class in which they wrestle are: rsiore r llo Buck ...125 Kellogg 135 Skinner 145 Highley, (C) 155 Branigan 158 Tunning .....Heavyweight WOMEN'S RIFLE MEET WILL START TUESDAY Team That Will Fire Three Matches To Be Chosen From Winners of Tournament The women's rifle tournament be gins Tuesday, January 26, and con tinues throughout the week. The first week in February the team will be chosen which will fire with three Universities, Maine, Hawaii and Ne vada. Any back practices that women may have,' may be made up between the hours nine and five the remain der of this week. All women must turn in three targets each time they shoot. The class averages have changed, and the number of women have de creased in some cases. The fresh men have eighteen out, and an aver age of forty-five. The sophomores have eleven out, with an average of forty-seven. The juniors have eight women out, with the average of for ty-five. The seniors have but two women out, and the average is forty seven. tary standards of the vulgar, the debased and the plebian. 'Education, which in the former time was supposed to raise to its hfgh level the worthy and leave below those who could not make the grade, has become a commodity: it is on sale like any other product of labor, and is available to any ass who has the price to send him through four years of idleness. Faculty Also To Blame The Lanefield College savant blam ed the present condition of the edu cational system equally on faculty and students. "The undergradu ates," said Dr. Kennedy, "were at one time considered the cream of the world. Today the student body of an American college is composed of an aggregation of morons, of idle and unprofitable wastrels which would be unwelcome to any group of thr lowest among the, criminal or degen erate. "The faculties of our colleges are as much to blame as their decadent students. They encourage and urge on their students in their time-wasting occupations when they should be putting forth their utmost to turn this generation from its ways and preserve unspoiled the traditions of (Continued on Page Three.) UNIVERSITY NIGHT TO BE FEBRUARY 27 Date of Annual Event Changed From February 20 by Committee SKITS WILL BE JUDGED Completed Acts May be Presented To Committee at Meeting On January 25 The date for University Night, previously set for February 20, has been changed to February 27, be cause of a conflict with a University Pluyers' production. This will also provide more time to make the nec essary preparations. The deadline for turning in skits, January 31, has not been changed, according to Clay ton E. Goar, chairman of the Uni versity Night committee. Any skits that have been complet ed can be presented at the next meet ing of the University Night Commit tee January 25. All organizations planning on submitting acts are urged to have them ready for presen tation at this next meeting. The acts which appear on the pro gram must appeal to the whole stu dent body rather than one group of; individuals who may write something for their own amusement. All de tails must be included in the skits when presented to the committee for judgment. Plans may be given to the president or any member of the committee. Five acts of twelve minutes each will be-ccepted, and three short cur tain acts. One skit was completed and read at the last meeting of the com mittee, and various organizations are at present working on their offer ings. Profits will be given to the local Y. M. C. A. "The committee reserves the right to make any necessary alterations in the skits and to reject any that in their estimation should not be pre sented," announced Mr. Goar. "It will be glad to answer any inquiries relative to the productions." One performance will be given on University Night this year, at the Orpheum. Last year, two perform ances were held at the Orpheum and the Temple, skits going from one the ater to the other. It is believed that the crowd can be accomodated in' the one building this spring. Students intending to present skits that have not presented them to the committee are requested to get them ready before the last minute. There is always a last minute rush, and af ter the skits are accepted it is nec essary to get them in readiness in a comparatively short time. CHANGE CURRICULA IN MANY COLLEGES Undergraduates of Many Institutions Interested in Innovations in Classroom Work (New Student News Service) Here and there classroom chances are either being made or merely talk ed about in the colleges and universi ties. The following items of in for mation concerning such educational nnovations are broadcast for the benefit of those interested in curri- cular changes. " HARVARD All seniors in college who are in good standing have been granted unlimited cuts by the fac ulty. This regulation, which goes into effect after the mid-year exams. is in accord with Harvard's program of a gradual extension of freedom. Hitherto this privilege has only been accorded a "dean's list" of excep tional students. The Harvard Crimson hones the rule will work successfully enough to warrant its further extension to the junior and sophomore classes, adding that, "it3 application to the freshmen will probably never be either practicable or desirable, as it would add materially to the isr.gers of transition between secondary school and college." BOWDIX An undergraduate committee is cooperating with a fa culty and an alumni committee in examining Bowdin's educational sys tem with view to over-hauling it. Questionnaire have been sent to the, students by this commiuee. UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO The problem of the lecture system and mass education in large classes has been discussed in editorials in the Silver and Gold and in the cor respondence columns of the paper. Ihe undergraduate paper deplore the tendency to ask of the student nothing but a knowledge of facts. It Is quite possible for an instruc tor to inspire his student with his lectures. But too often is he only dealing out information that is mem orized but not understood. Why (Continued on Page Two)