The Daily' Nebraskan XXV. NO. 100. THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, 'THURSDAY. MARCH 4, 1926. PRICE 6 CENTS. FIRST DAY OF COPPOCK DRIVE OBTAINS-$325 Contest Between Team. Close Winner Given Banquet After Campaign ALL MONEY IN BY FRIDAY Ltt.ch.on. .1 Ellen Smith Hall for Worker. AH We.k, Different Speaker. Dally Three hundred and twenty-five dollars hnd been ralsod by the work rs in the Grace Coppock campaign by noon on Wednesday, which falls ,hort a hundred dollars of the ' .mount raised on the first day of the drive Inst year. The report was made at the luncheon of workers In the drive held on Wednesday at Ellen Smith Hall. Conte.t For Flr.t Placo The team captained by Wilhelmina Schellack heads the list with $45.60 turned in, and Ruth Barker's team a ,econd with a total of $24.60. The Y. W. C. A. cabinet will entertain the winners in the team contest at dinner sometime after the drive, and all the money to count in this con test must be turned in by Friday ev ening at 6 o'clock. Cyrena Smith led the devotlonals at the luncheon on Wednesday noon at Ellen Smith Hall which was at tended by about one hundred and fifty women. Arvilla Johnson, who was chairman of the drive last year was the speaker. STie stressed the importance of approaching: the wo men who are being asked for money in the right way, and she also talked about Miss Vera Barger and Miss Grace Coppoek, their lives and their work. Remembrance, of Grace Coppock The devotionals on Thursday noon will be led by Wilhelmina Schel lack, who will introduce the speaker, Mrs, E. L. Hinman, who will tell something about her remembrances of Miss Coppock on the campus of the University of Nebraska. The speaker at the last luncheon on Friday noon will be Kingsley Chen, a Chinese student. The de votionals will be led by Elsie Gram lich. The luncheons, which are only twenty-five cents ieach, are being served by the social committee of the Y. W. C. A. and are held to keep up the enthusiasm in the drive and also to give the workers an opportunity to check in their mony. This year the Grace Coppock com mittee decided that they should not ask for any certain amount but would leave the question to the ability and interest of the individual. The team workers are trying to arrange for a personal interview, and in this way to explain something about the drive and answer any questions about Vera Barker or Grace Coppock that the person interviewed wishes to ask. Graduate of Nebra.kn Grace Coppock, in whose memory the Grace Coppock Memorial fund was established, was graduated from the Univeraityf Nebraska with the class of 1905, and went to China soon after her graduation where she became national secretary of the Y. W. C. A. in China until after her death in 1921. A clipping in one of the papers at Shanghai, China, the city in which the Y. W. C. A. has its national headquarters, says about Miss Cop pock at the time of her death, "Miss Coppock's death takes from China one of her greatest women leaders. The loss will be felt in every prov ince and section of the country in China." Mis. Barger On Staff Miss Vera Barger, whose work is being supported by the Grace Cop pock fund, was one of the staff work ers in China under Miss Coppock. She is not the successor of Miss Coppock in China but is her success or in the interest of the Nebraska Y. W. C. A. She is the national physi cal education director of the Y. W. C, A., and uses the money sent her by the University of Nebraska Y. W. C. A. to promote physical education Programs all over China Rij :...' j. .. e-.-.--j Iowa University is trying out a SVstem tvTiavotx a efi.onfa ill be graduated in less than four wrcnout carrying extra worK. Special classes are provided for tHnoo n.l. 1 . w0 gnow unusual aDiiiiy. Pipe Organ at Colorado In one of the lament nine ore-ana in the world, erected at the University t Colorado, there are 60 pipes con polled electrically by more than SO, 00 miles of wire. Debater. Widely Challenged Denver tin Jn challenged by 23 different col- leges and universities in 16 states. WEATHER FORECAST Thursday: Cloudy and unset tled. Weather Condition Fair weather prevails through out the country except for light rain in New Mexico and light snow in northern Minnesota and in the lower Lake region and Pennsyl vania. Temperatures are below normal from the Mississippi and lower Missouri valleys eastward to the Atlantic const, and some what above normal in thr western half of the country. The south western storm area is extonding northeastward from New Mexico to the middle Missouri Valley and is expected to cause cluody ar.d unsettled weather In Nebraska to night and Thursday. THOMAS A. BLAIR, ' Meteorologist. CONDRA HEADS NEW COMMITTEE Governor McMulIen Organizes Forestry Division to Make State Beautiful MANY INQUIRIES BY MAIL To' bring together the various for estry activities in the state, Gover nor Adam McMulIen today announc ed the appointment of a state fore station committee, of which Dr. G. E. Condra, director of the conservation and survey division of the Univer sity of Nebraska, is chairman. The governor, is deeply interested in tree planting for wind breaks and for beautifying farms, ranches, and state institutions. He believes the state should have pines and broadleaf tree to be supplied free by the feder al government Plan Sy.tem For Ftre.tation The problem of the committee will be to devise a plan of systematic forestation and to coordinate the present activities. Every day's mail brings a number of inquiries about tree planting. E. A. Nieschnitt, a graduate of a leading European university, who has studied in one of the best forestry schools there, has been engaged as state forester. His office is in the state conservatory and soil division at the University of Nebraska. Encourage Tree Planting The federal government has plant ed to-date over 10,000 acres of seed lings in the sandhills. The nursery at Halsey which was named after Dr. Bessey of the University of Ne braska department of botany, raises millions of seedlings every year for distributun in the sixth congressional district. The state in cooperation, it is contemplated, will produce seed lings for general distribution. This will encourage tree planting, and it is believed will create a larger mar ket for private nurseries. The members of the committee besides the chairman are Director V. H. Brokaw of the Agricultural Col lege extension division; Prof. W. W. Burr, assistant director of the agri cultural extension division; George Marshall of Arlington; Jay Higgins, superintendent of the federal nur sery at Halsey; and state secretary of agriculture McLaughlin. Future Football Player Arrire. A future Comhusker football play er was born to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Swanson. 2936 Sewell Street, on Monday afternoon. Clarence Jr. may not have tried out his magic toe yet, but he is likely to follow in the footsteps of his father, who was the captain of the 1921 Cornhuskers, one of the great grid teams of Nebraska. Never Too Much Education "There is no such thing as too much education," said President Cof- man of the University of Minnesota, at the annual observance of Charter day of that institution. Summer Courses at Her tin jpen jnu for Foreien- ers at the University of Berlin offers to Americans summer school courses the American plan, from July 15 to August 25. These courses include German language uu literature, German political and so cial history, German art, ana ht ization, political economy, and sociol ogy. The courses ere arranged for four classes of students. 1. Undergraduates who are pre paring at college for their B. A. 2. Postgraduates who are work ing for their M. A. or Ph. D. 3. Teachers who desire to con tinue their professional studies. ..... i nnan i.fl 4. Civilians wno merei take cultural courses. Courses will be conducted by uni DDTEAU TELLS OF EVILS OF PRESENT LIFE World Forum Discussion Is of Phases and Faults of Social System NO SOLUTION OFFERED Law College I. Only Campu. Group With Unityi Need Greater Community of Feeling Declaring that the University of Nebraska should remain not only a vital part of our youth but also of our personality, Ellsworth F. Du Teau, junior in the arts and science college, and leader in the movement to overcome the car renting evil, in his address yesterday noon to the World Forum, on the subject, "Some Evils of Present University Llfo," said that to remove present evils, community of interest among the student body must be fostered. Mr. Du Teau stated that he had no tangible solution to offer but he hoped he could point out a few of the things that needed remedying. Quoted Philo.opher The Greek philosophers, Mr. Du Teau pointed out, early formulated the expression "Know thyself." "This is a matter of contact and so cial environment. It is necessary to develop in a suitable social environ ment. Students coming here have two aims, development of the mind and development of the personality. We form our habits before the age of twenty-one. It is desirable to make our habits our friends rather than our enemies. "Superfluous social customs are so interwoven that it takes as great a fight to overcome them as for an individual to overcome his habits." Mr. Du Teau then proceeded to call attention to social defects now existing. He stated that most of his material was taken from questions asked him by students. Old Unity I. Lacking "Where is the old unity that used to characterize the students of the University? One student asked me if congeniality and friendship hadn't become matters of cliques only. This view point may be exaggerated but it indicates the problem.' - "We students in the University lead a two-fold life. The campus is our place of business. There is nothing on the campus to bring the student body together. We have dissociated into small groups. The library is not a place where students can gather socially. It is repressive and of necessity so since its purpose could not be fulfilled otherwise. (Continued To Page Four) ASSOCIATIONS PLAN SECOND JOINT PARTY Univer.ity Y. W. C. A. and Y. M. C. A. Arrange Novel Entertain Ment for ISO Couple. The University Y. W. C. A. and Y. M. C. A. will entertain the students of the University at a joint party to be hed at Ellen Smith Hall this Sat urday evening, March 6th, starting at 8:30 o'clock. This will be the sec ond joint party given by the two as sociations this year, the first being held during the first semester. Plans are being made for one hundred and fifty couples. Elsa Kerkow and Judd Crocker, the "Y" social committee chairmen, are planning a bit of novel entertain ment for the party which includes several musical numbers throughout the evening. Refreshments will be served and numerous games have been arranged for entertainment during the program. " The chaperones include Miss Erma Appleby, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jor genson, and Rev. and Mrs. Dean R. Leland. University of iihcuuumi versity professors, directors, and the teachers in secondary schools. In addition to the regular classes, lect ures, discussions, and obesrvationi, there will be excursions and social gatherings. Saturdays are free for excursions; the language courses will meet daily on the other five days from 10 to 12 a. m.; the other cour ses from 4 to 6 p. m. Requirements of American educ tional institutions are met by these courses. The tuition amounts to about $30, and entitles the applicant to atend sixty hours of language courses and thirty hours from other courses. Other groupings of the courses are possible. Students are entitled to all special activities by the tuition. Engineer's Week Will Be Topic at Meeting The American Society of Civil Engineers will hold a business meeting on Friday at 10:00 o' clock in the Mechanic Arts build ing, room 210. The purpose of the meeting will be to discuss Engineers' Week. Exhibits and how and whore to exhibit them, will bo discussed, as well hs the prizes that are to be given. INDOOR TRACK TRYOUTS TODAY Coach Schulte Undecided How To Enjer Men in Meet Under New Rules FRESHMAN EVENTS FIRST Try-outs for the Missouri Valley indoor meet to be held at Ames on March 12 and 13 wil be run this af ternoon at the Stadium. Coach II. F., Schulte invites all track fans out to witness the events and promises them some real races. They will start promptly at 4 o'clock and will be run off in the usual order. , Coach Schulte is in some perplex ity as to how to enter the men in the indoor meet, for the new rules are that not more than two men may en ter an event. This makes it necessT ary to change the rvn around some what so as to bring out the best pos sible scoring team and still keep the men to their usual events. It is possible that Lewis and Roberts will run in the half mile, while Johnson and Ross will compete in the mile. In the other events the entries are undetermined. Nebra.ka May Be Favorite No outstanding team can yet be picked in the valley but Nebraska is probably the closest to a favorite be cause of her victory last year. The outstanding races of the meet will undoubtedly be in the sprints. Cap tain Locke is the heavy favorite in these, for he has held the title for the last two years. Farley of Missouri, and Wongwai of Kansas are capable of stepping the distance in record time and will press Locke to win. Wyatt should be able to place well to the front if Coach Schulte sees fit to enter him in the sprints, for Far ley was the only Valley man to place ahead of Wyatt at the Illinois relays. Team Re.ted Since Relay The team has been taking it easy since their return from the relays and tonight should find them in fine form to put forth their best effort A freshman numeral meet will be run in connection with the try-outs, but their events will be run off one hour earlier than the same event for the varsity. Coach Schulte is anxious to see every possible candidate for the track team out in suit, for he is bent on winning the indoor title again this year, and wishes more men out com peting in the try-outs. A. 1 S. HOSTESSES AT THURSDAY TEA Motif of "Mad March Hare" Taken From "Alice in Wonderland" Typifie. Sea.on Members of the Associated Wo men's Student board will be the hos tesses at the weekly tea on Thursday from 4 to 6 o'clock in Ellen Smith Hall. The tea, which will typify the season, will have for its motf "The Mad March Hare," adapted from "Alice in Wonderland." The decorations, refreshments and program have been worked out along the motif of the tea. The program is: dance, Jean Tucker; reading from "Alice in Wonderland," Joyce Adair; and music for dancing by Olive Fletcher. FERGUSON RECEIVES BOOKLET Chicago In.titute Pamphlet Describe Salaried Engineering Court An interesting booklet from the Chicago Central Station Institute has been received by Dean Ferguson of the Engineering College. The booklet describes their college gradu ate course to which they admit el ectrical engineering graduates. The course is a combination of experi mental and class-room' work lasting about a year. A salary is paid dur ing the course. The institution is supported by sev eral Public Utility companies in and about Chicago. Nebraska has in former years sent several men in to this course. . Sever al of them are now on the engineer ing staff of th esupporting compan ies. The booklet may be seen at Dean Ferguson s office, Mechanical Arts 204. COACH BEARO STARTS SPRING GRID PRACTICE Candidates Begin Checking Out Lockers and Suits On March Eighth FIFTEENTH IS FIRST DAY Important Thi. Year . i.e Many Game. Schedule ' r I rly Fall Drake I. Fir.t Spring football practice will start on March 15, according to Coach E. E. Bearg. There will be practice at 3:30 every school day including Sat urday. Tho candidates should begin checking out their suits and obtain ing locker March 8. This year spring football will be very important, according to Coach Bearg. Every man who is interested at all in playing football next fall should be out for practice. Owing to the early games that are sched uled for next season, the team will not be able to get much drill before the first eame with Drake. For this reason ii is desired that every candi date participate in spring football in order that the coaches will be able to get an idea of next years' varsity eleven. Coach Bearg issues a call for all varsity men, and freshman players, and any other candidates, whether they have had any experi ence or not. Four Regular. Graduate Four regulars of last years' eleven will graduate, so that positions left vacant by them will have to be filled, and these places will be pretty well decided during spring practice. Another point which adds Import ance to spring football is the ten dency to limit practice time. Steps have already been taken in the Big Ten Conference to lim.t practice to a certain number of hours per day. If such action should be taken by the Missouri Valley authorities, it would place additional premium on spring football. Same Line. a. Fall Practice The spring practice will be con ducted on identical lines of the fall work. All the men will work to gether, as freshmen will be eligible for competition next fall. It is planned to have three or four games, between teams selected, with full time and usual officials. The first game is scheduled for the third week of practice. Everything will be as much like fall practice as possible, and Coach Bearg emphasizes the fact that work this spring will be very important, probably more than ever before. Charles Black, newly appointed basketball coach, will be here to aid in coaching the backfield. Candi dates can check out their suits and get their lockers at the north end of the stadium. ACTS FOR "FOLLIES" MUST BE IN MARCH 8 Entertainment Spon.ored By A. W S. Board Offer. Prize, for Be.t Skit. Submitted All skits which have been pre pared for the Co-Ed Follies, to be given at the Armory the night of March 26, must be handed in to thq A. W. S. office, on the second floor of Ellen Smith Hall, or to some member of the A. W. S. board by March 8. All girls are urged to write a short act of some sort and submit it, for there is no definite sort of entertain ment which is planned.. The prizes of fifteen and ten dollars would be well worth the little effort used in planning the act, not to mention the fun of giving it The Co-Ed Follies are for . girls only, and it is hoped that everyone will co-operate in making this suc cessful. i jtji Colleges Begin Student Projects As Result of Evanston Conference Definite student projects are al ready under way in a good many col leges all across the country as a re sult of the Evanston Interdenomina tional Student Conference which met during the Christmas holidays. Re ports of these projects were brought from every section of the United States to the fir si, meeting of the Continuation Cimmittee which re cently was held in Columbus, Ohio. ' Many of these student-directed un dertakings related very definitely to the demand for church unity which was so persistently expressed at Ev anston. Thus, at Northwestern Uni versity the Young People's Societies in the Evanston churches are moving more closely together in a common j use of the project method. Saturday Is Deadline For All Group Write-ups Write-ups of all groups taking space in the 1026 Cornhuskcr should be in by this Saturday, March 6. The articles can be left with either the editor or managing editor in the Comhusker office in tho basement of University Hall. This ultimatum includes organiza tions having pictures and those with only space. Tho write-ups should be two hundred words in length, contain ing a history of the organization, the purpose and function el the organization, 'and should, stress tho future work and plans. FARMERS' FAIR PLANS STARTED All Committees Begin Work on Event by End of Week; Held May First PAGEANT TO BE FEATURE All the fifty or more Farmers' Fair committees, published in the Daily Nebraskan February 22, will swing into action by the end of the present week to begin preparations for the Fair, which will be held this year on May 1. Ag students who failed to find out upon which com mittee they were placed are urged to attend to the matter at once. The publicity committee met on Wednesday, March 3, and drew up temporary plans for action. There will be a number of new and novel features employed to advertise the fair this year. The committee be lieves that the Farmers' Fair in it self, is well enough known, and that, therefore, publicity that will create a general spirit of "Good Will" is to be stressed. Plan For Pageant Other 'committees have also dis cussed their plans for further pro cedure tentatively. The Pageant Play, whose plans call for the most elaborate and gorgeous production ever attempted in connection with this feature, is already hard at work. Reahersals will be begun within a week, at which time the cast will have been selected. The wild west show committee is beginning to round up the "rough riders" on Ag campus, so as to get them in prime condition by May 1. The show will be run off by a regular event schedule this year, which will do away with the long waits between the various events occsaioned in the past years. Stre. Educational Exhibit. Every educational committee will have met and discussed plans by the end of the coming week. As the 1926 fair board will stress Ag College educational exhibits more than ever before, committee chairmen are al ready busy searching for new and novel ideas to incorporate into their displays. The various entertain ments and amusements together with new ones will also receive attention on a larger and more elaborate scale than ever before. The old saying, "Bigger and better than ever" will accompany the Ag College students in their preparations for the fair. Adopt American Football The University of British Colum bia is considering the possibility of adopting the American style of football in preference to the British style of play. Columbia Student. Radical. Columbia students are the most radical in the United States, accord ing to a Dartmouth professor who made a nation-wide survey of stu dent views. Fraternitie. Di.cu. Violation. Prohibition violation on the Michi gan .campus was discussed at a meet ing recently of the fraternity presi dents. Recently a representative com mittee outlined an experimental program on the creation, "What is your aim in life?" Students from various denominations undertook a wide survey of student and adult leaders, from AI Jolson down the line to discover, if possible, a guide to their own thinking. The sessions at which the answers were discussed were lfVlier and more to the point than any meetings within the memory of -these ch-ch groups. A similar project is under way at the University of Micmgan. A com mittee representative of all Young People's Societies of Ann Arbor has worked out a common program. The (Continued on Page Three.) CANVASS ONE NIGHT FOR "Y" SUBSCRIPTIONS One Hundred and Fifty Men Will Go From House to House Tonight DINNER TO START DRIVE Fir.t Campaign Lat Fall Raited Only One Thouaand Dollar., Half of Needed Amount One hundred and fifty men will tako part this evening In a canvass of fraternity and rooming houses which, it is expected, will bring in at least one thousand dollars for the University Y. M. C. A. enough to enable it to complete its year's work without going into debt. The drive will not be drawn out, but will be completed this evening. All of the workers are asked to report later in the evening on their success. Begin With Dinner The campaign will start off with a dinner for all the workers at the Grand Hotel at 6 o'clock. There will be a few very brief talks, after the dinner. Arthur Jorgcnson. iren- eral secretary of the "Y", and Gerald Davis, finance chairman, will explain the method to be used in carrying out the drive. There will also be short addresses by Prof. O. R. Martin, the chairman of the advisory board, and Ed Weir. This second finance campaign was made necessary by the failure of the regular student drive last fall. The "Y" hoped to raise at least two thousand dollars in that drive, but only about one-half of that amount was obtained. Divide Territory Equally Each of the workers in the drive will be given, after the banquet, a list of men living near him to see. By methodically dividing the terri tory in this manner, it is expected that the entire University community can be thoroughly canvassed in one evening. The drive, on which the success of the "Y's" work for the remainder of the year depends, has been strongly commended by Dean Carl C. Eng berg. GRAPPLERS MEET IOWA STATE TEAM Nebraska Matmen Leave Friday For Ame; May Enter Mid-West A. A. U. March 19, 20 The wrestling meet with the Iowa State College at Ames will probably be the best of the year, Dr. Clapp an nounced Wednesday afternoon. Both Nebraska and Ames havo ' about an equal number of experienced men. Ames made a little better showing against Kansas than Nebraska but Nebraska showed up better than Ames in their meets with Minnesota. It all depends upon how the better men come out, he stated. If they come through with falls Nebraska ought to win. The team will leave Friday after noon at 1:20 on the Burlington for Omaha, and will take the Northwest ern from there, arriving in Ames at 9 o'clock that night. There is a possibility of sending some of the best men to the Mid- West A. A. U. tournament to be held at Iowa City on March 19 and 20. Officers of Chorus Chosen for Semester At the recent meeting of the Chor us, officers were elected to serve for the second semester. They are as follows: Harold Hollingsworth, pres ident; Catherine Dean, vice-presi- d nt; Claude Strickland, treasurer; head librarians, Franklin Durr and Helen Talcott; assistants, Edith Hib bard, Phillip Jorgenson, Theodore Damme, and Stanley Swanson. Bobbed Hair on WaX Barbers in Minneapolis report an increase in hair bobbing among older women and a falling off among the high school and college students. Vote on Military Training A vote on compulsory military training will be taken at the Univer sity of Ohio. Each student will be given an opportunity to tell why it should be retained or abolished. Women Rank Over Men According to figures compiled at Stanford University, women are two and six-tenths brighter than men, and fraternity and sorority members do not rank yery high.