-,-.-n.l.n ' 3AILY- NE Football Edition Football Edition vOLrXXVII. NO. 57. THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1927. PRICE 6 CENTS BRASKAN GRID CAMPAIGN RANKS HIGH IN HUSKER ANNALS Pat Season Considered One Of MOt jucceuiui tii Nebraska History ONLY TWO GAMES LOST Pittsburg and Missouri Able To Win; leam uea vauey In Points Scored By Jack Elliott The scarlet-clad Cornhusker foot ball team just closed one of the most successful seasons on the grid iron in many years. The Nebraska eleven piled op more points during the season than any other Missouri VaRey team and held their oppon ents to the lowest score among the conference elevens. Although the Huskers finished in second place in the Valley they were rated by critics all over the country to be the strongest eleven in the Valley conference and Middle West. It was Nebraska's last year in the Valley for next year will find the Huskers playing in the newly formed Big Six conference. Iowa Drop Opener The season started with a win when the Iowa State Cyclones treked down to the Husker stronghold to open the season. The Nebraska eleven was doped to beat the Iowans badly but the Workman crew from Ames threw a big surprise and held tho Xebraskans to but six points. In this rpening g?se the Beargmen could r.r.t get started in the old Hus ker stylo and the playing was loose and ratfgcJ. Next week-end found Nebraska invading the lair of the Missouri Tiger. The Tiger eleven had beaten Nebraska for two years and the Scarlet-clad eleven was out for re venge. It was Missouri's Home coming battle and the Tiger eleven fought until the last inch of ground had been gained and the referee's whistle closed the game with Mizzou leading by one point. Crinnell Stingingly Defeated Still stinging with the bitter de feat at the hands of Gwinn Henry's crew, the Huskers pulled together for the third Valley game of the season, GrinnelL The Pioneers proved to be easy pickings for the Beargmen and a 58 to 0 score was piled up before the referee ended th massacre. This was the largest football score in the conference all teason. Glenn Presnell crossed the Pioneer goal line four times during 333 North 14 street, from 5 to 6 the contest and took the lead among o'clock. the Valley scorers which he held Among his selections are throughout the entire season. poems from William Blake, the The next game on the Nebraska eighteenth century author and en schedule was the inter-sectional graver, who "touched the sky with clash with the Syracuse Orange elev- his finger," and from Francis from New York. The Orange Thompson, a Lancashire mystic, who came to Nebraska touted as one of j was, at various time, clerk in a boot the most powerful in the east. . shop, assistant to a bookseller, med Hiulers Trample Syracuse 'ical student, homeless vagabond, and Out on Memorial Stadium sod that even match-vender on the streets of Saturday afternoon, Nebraska, rep- j London. His "Hound of Heaven," resenting the west in collegiate foot-1 which Mr. Good will read, is con ku completely trampled the Orange sidered one of the new great odes ana won the East-West conflict, 21! w o. Baysinger, Syracuse quarter- (Continued on Page 11.) Fourteen Huskers Donned Scarlet For Last Time By Jack Elliott whon Nebraska closed the 19271 lootball season on Thanksgiving Day "7 Deating Kew York, fourteen Cornhusker football men played their last game of college football, onrteen men who hnd f ouht on Piron for Nebraska for three Tears donned the Scarlet for the! time I In the training room under the ' -ium before the big East-West Coach Ernest E. Bearg talked , u luggers for the last time. The started but in the Kansas Aggie floor opened and led by Captain! game the Husker captain found his Brown, the scarlet clad war-'stride and ripped through the Pur Tm dotted out on the field to do ! Die line for large gains. Two touch- i.f.i. . , . attle ap-ainof . kA i a i . coached eleven from the Atlantic aboard. The Thanksgiving Day battle was ted aflair for these Cornhuskers ho were fighting for Nebraska no wore. It wa, the fareweU day to eDraslca and Husker footbalL It back, was the outstanding player in ? ' farewell to the men they had the Missouri Valley and one of the Wyed beside for four years. The greatest backs in the country. Pres ent that dared for them during nell's last year on the gridiron wear . mr tr,ree years of httl and vie- in the scarlet colors was a most tor. v, " ' ux - -ea and went out. N. Will Be Ramemb-rad hew loyal sons of Nebraska have their exit, but their names lU be rempmV.o-J v. xt- ! "U conM - JD- Brown, Presnell, Oehlrich and Rice and Walter Eckersall as an All- luncheon. Mary Louise Freeman, others? They upheld the American halfback. Presnell gained president , of the organization pre d traditions of the Corn- more ground during his last year for sided and introduced the speaker, gfhool and lept the name of Nebraska than the renowned R- The luncheon was followed by an foremost In coUegialei (Continued on Page 12.) (Continued on Pp.ge 2) Cunningham 1$ Phased With Polo Tournament "I certainly wish to express my appreciation for the fine way the recent water polo tournament was conducted," stated Cliff Cunning ham, assistant physical director of the Y. M. C. A., in speaking of the recent inter-fraternity polo joust. "The fellows were all fine in the manner in which they re sponded and the affair went off in fine shape." GIRLS FROLIC AT COSTUME PARTY IN OLD ARMORY Annual Co-Ed Festival Will Be Held in Armory Under A. W. S. Board DANCING BEGINS AT SEVEN Class Societies Will Present Skits; Award Prizes for Best Make-Up Tonight in the old Armory, is the Girls' Cornhusker Costume party, the annual frolic for all University women, given under the auspices of the Associated Women's Student Board. The party begins promptly at 7 o'clock, when dancing will start, to the music of the Merrymakers, an orchestra composed entirely of girls. The grand march during which the costumes will be judged, will begin at 7:45 o'clock, and Miss Mable Lee, Miss Clara Wilson, and Miss Marg aret McPhee will then award the prizes. There are three prizes, given on the basis of the cleverest, the fun-nii-rt and the prettiest co:un-es. - he .-kits then follow, and aUr this, the rest of the evening wi'.l b." gin otr tn anrcing. Mystic Fish Present Slat Mystic Fish will present a skit called "The Merry Mixup." Ruth Diamond is the negro mammy, There will be a clever chorus, and (Continued on Page 2) Paul F. Good, Former Rhodes Scholar Will Read Verse Sunday Mr. Paul F. Good, Lincoln attor- ney and Rhodes scholar, will read to university women from the Oxford Anthology of Mystic Verse Sunday afternoon at Westminster House. in the English language, and is in its pompous music, comparable to a Bach chorale. Thanksgiving Day football circles, Captain John "Jug" Brown was at the helm of the Husker eleven dur- ing the 1927 season and played the position of quarterback. "Jug" came to Nebraska from Lincoln high where ha starred on the ;li school gridiron for his four years of high school. Under the tutelage of Coach Bearg, "Jug" developed into one of the shiftiest quarterbacks in the Valley conference. During his senior year he was late getting downs were marked up for him and he showed the Homecoming crowd that packed the Aggie stadium what he could do in the football world. Presnell Wu Outstanding Glenn Presnell, thundering Corn hunker halfback and All-American glorious year. He smashed, arove, plunged and fought his way to the pinnacle of the football world. He was selected captain oi me mi it: i Vollni fpnm and WSS v- .-!, a Grantland Husker if Y r . 1 To Coach Ernest E. Bearg, Corn husker football mentor whose dreams of victorious Nebraska foot ball teams have inspired into his men the highest degree of clean sportsmanship, hard nlavimr and Cornhusker fight. And to the Corn- husker football squad of 1928 which has just closed a sucessful season, we dedicate this special football edition. HUSKERS HAVE FINE MATERIAL Prospects for 1928 Season Look Bright Despite Fourteen Grads TEAM LOSES FAST ENDS Nebraska loses fourteen gridiron warriors by graduation this year but with the men returning to school next fall and the coming sophomores from "Choppy" Rhodes' freshmen team this year, Coach Bearg will have a host of good material from which to build his 1928 Cornhusker gridiron eleven. Some of the best men ever turned out at the Husker school leave the fold this year. Such men as Glenn Presnell, Oehlrich, Captain "Jug" Brown, Randefs and many 'others graduate in the spring, after their three years on the Scarlet eleven. But with such ball luggers as Clair Sloan, "Bud" McBride, Farley, and Witte to take the places of these graduating veterans, the Nebraska coaching staff will attempt to put a winning team on the field for the initial season in the Big Six. Scherer Had Good Ends In the line the Cornhusker foot ball mentor will have Cliff Ashburn, Lewandowski and Still from this year's squad and a host of promising freshmen for the wing positions. The graduation of Lee, Lawson, Sprague, Shaner and L'ndell hits the Husker camp the hardest in the line. This season Coach Leo Scherer had a fine array of wing-men and from the outlook of things the scarlet clad (Continued on Page 2) LIRS. ALDRIGH GIYFS BINTS AT LUNCHEON Nebraska Author Tells Cirla Write About Thing's They Know Familiarly "Write about what you know," advised Bess Streeter Aldrich, Ne- braska writer, who spok') informally to a group of sixty-five university .vomen at luncheon Thursday on writing as a profession. She illustrated her point with one of her own first stories which dealt with a millionaire's wife in the hills of Vermont. She had never been to Vermont and knew little of the problems of a millionaire's wife. The story travelled a long time before it found a market. "But,' said Mrs. Aldrich, "as soon as I began writing about ordinary families with ordin ary incomes and noisy children I found an eager market" Theta Sigma Phi Sponsor Lambda chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary and professional Journalistic sorority sponsored the Mentor Coach Bearg came to Nebraska from Illinois where he had estab lished his name as one of the Big Ten's greatest backfield coach, tu- toring "Red" Grange during his vears' on the Illini eleven. Bearer has been at Nebraska three years and during that time his ideals and character have stamped him in the . minds of Nebraska students as a I gentleman of the highest calibre. Athletic Board Has Developed Sports Program The athletic board of control at the University of Nebraska serves as a supervising body for all the matters that are concerned with "Ne braska athletics. Under its super vision comes all competition with othPr institutions in the Missouri Valley or outside the conference. A complete system of intra-mural sports has been instituted at Ne braska that rivals those of some of the best colleges or universities of the country. By this program of intra-mural sports, men at the Univer sity that are not Varsity material can participate in all sports. Last year one of the most success ful intra-mural basketball tourna ments was held on the floor of the Coliseum and again this year an other cage tournament is being held. Last year's tournament among the Greeks was the most successful bas ketball meet ever held at the Hus ker school. Eight Make Up Board The hoard is mflde up of eight members. John K. Selleck is sec retary and treasurer and also busi ness manager of Nebraska athletics. He has complete financial control of all athletic divisions. Other mem bers of the board of control are; Professor R. D. Scott, Herbert D. G'sh, L. F. Seaton, John Gunderson, Max Towle, T. J. Thompson and one Nebraska alumnus. Two impressive monuments stand on the Nebraska campus, that have (Continued on Page 2) LITERARY CLUB GIYES PLA. Palladian Society Presents Program la Temple Tonight The Palladian Literary society will present the play, "Thursday Night," to 1 at a public meeting to be held to I night at 8:30 o'clock in the Palladian rooms on the third floor of the Tem ple. The program will also include musical numbers. Members of the society who are in the Coleges of Agriculture and Engineering will be in charge of the P'OTram, with Richard Reed as chairman. Next 'Varsity Drag Will Be December 16 "Varsity Drag," last varsity party to be given before the Christmas holidays, will be held Friday, December 16, in the Col iseum. New features will be in augurated at this rarty according to plans set forth at a meetin- of ti Varsity Party committee held yesterday. The College Club orchestra of Omaha has been secured to furn ish the music. This orchestra con sists of nine pieces. A pony chorus will furnish entertainment during the intermisfiion. Nebraska Schedules Eight Games m 1928 Oct. Oct. coin. Oct. Oct. Nov. Nov. man. Nov. coin. Nov. coin. 6 Iowa State at Ames. 13 Montana State at Lin- 20 Syracuse at Syracuse. 27 Missouri at Lincoln. 3 Kansas at Lawrence. 10 Oklahoma at Nor- 17 Pittsburgh at Lin- 29 Kansas State at Lin- GREEK COUNCIL APPROVES PLAN OF CAR CONTROL Inter-fraternity Body Will Present Proposals to Board of Regents PARENTS MUST CONSENT Registration of Cars Would Be Required; Would Limit Parking Nebraska's Inter-fraternity Coun cil Thursday evening approved the report of its committee on restric tion of student automobiles which provided for: (1) Registration of all student cars, (2) Written permission of parents for student cars, (3) Re striction of use of cars to sopho- mores and above in school in good ; standing and (4) Prohibition of parking within campus area, The plan as submitted to the council will be suggested to the Board of Regents as a remedy to the present situation. Copies of the report will be submitted to each fraternity for approval or disap proval. With definite announcement from the university officials that regula tion will be started at the beginning of the second semester, it is hoped by the council that student action will be accepted by them. Regulations Approved The regulations as submitted to the council at their meeting were: 1. Registration of all student cars, including those owned or op erated by Lincoln students, in the office of the officer charged with the enforcement of these rules. It is also suggested that the registra Continued on Page 11.) INTER-RACIAL TEA SERVED THURSDAY Party Sponsored by Study Group Is Given to Promote Harmony Between Races Two hundred and fifty university women were served at the inter-1 racial tea given from 5 to 6 o'clock Thursday in Ellen Smith Hall. The tea was sponsored by the inter-racial study group, of which Dorothy Nott is the chairman, to promote better understanding between the different races on the campus. Negro spirituals by a double quar tette, Cleopatra Ross, Zanzey Hill, Dorothy Dixon, Joy Conrad, Alberta Martin, Katherine Thompson, Flor ence Reed, and Thelma Hammond, featured the program. Readings by Mauiine Drayton and Joy Conrad. violin solos by Alberta Martin and Evelyn Battles, and a vocal solo by Cleopatra Ross carried out the spirit of negro art. Books on inter-racial ou"stions were on 'display during the .hour. Miss Erma Appleby presided at the tea table. Maurine Drayton, anzey Hill, Mary Kinney, Dorulhy Nott and Thelma Hammond were in the receiving line. PHI CHI THETA INITIATES Professional Sorority Makes Miss Heppner Honorary Member First initiation services of Rho chapter of Phi Chi Theta, profes sional business administration soror ity, were held Wednesday evening at the University Club. Dean Amanda Heppner was made an honorary member and seven women were in itiated. Plans are now under way to estab lish a national employment service which will not only benefit members, but which will add to the research work of the National Professional Panhellen c association. Branch 'agencies nil be established in va rious cit.f V' where commercial posi tions are plentiful. I Girls initiated were: Hilma Ander son, 'St. Paul; Mary Elizabeth Ball, Long Pine; Catherine Brown, Dead wood, S. D.; Janet McLcllan, Lin coln; Helen Ninger, Lincoln; Elea nor Paul, Lincoln; Emma Grace I b'Connor, Elsie. NEBRASKANS RALLY TODAY FOR CORNHUSKER BANQUET Annual Dinner Winds Up 1927 Gridiron Season; Brown Will Present Football to Captain-Elect at Close of Program Honoring Scarlet and Cream CHANCELLOR AND GOVERNOR TO ADDRESS STUDENTS John Curtis Will Be Toastmaster Again; Bobby Joyce, Coach Bearg, Rhodes, and Schulte Will Speak; Houses Close fables for Get-Together Nebraska's annual Cornhusker banquet, honoring the football team, will start at 5:45 o'clock this afternoon in the Coliseum. Nebraska's 1928 captain will be announced at the banquet. Acting Chancellor Burnett and Governor Adam McMullen will speak at the banquet, while John Curtis will act as toast master. Mr. Curtis is connected with the State Railway com mission, and was toastmaster at the Cornhusker banquet last year. John Brown, this year's football captain, will present the captain-elect with a football, which will serve as an announce ment of the 1928 captain. Head Coach Ernest Bearg will intro duce all of the members of the team, and the men who have played their last game for the University of Nebraska will be called upon to deliver short talks. GANDIDA SCORES THURSDAY NIGHT Miss H. Alice Howell Makes Convincing Portrayal in Title Role PROLOGUE IS IMPRESSIVE "Candida," George Bernard Shaw's great play, was skillfully interpreted by the University Players in its first performance last evening in the Temple Theater. Miss H. Alice Howell made a convincing and dig nified Candida, and was splendidly supported by the rest of the cast. Theodore Diers, as the Rev. James Morell, her husband, was exception ally strong in his role. The prologue, a short Christmas play, "Why the Chimes Rang," by Elizabeth Apthorp McPadden, was an impressive and beautiful per- (Continued on Page 2) Intra-School Sports Show Development Aside from putting Nebraska on the map as one of the greatest ath letic producing institutions in the country, Cornhusker football has made possible a large inter-fraternity program, which has been con tinually growing for the past few years, giving an increasing number of students a chance to participate in athletics. In addition to fraternity athletics, a large non-fraternity program has been planned, and several leagues have been established. A system of requiring that each military science student answer questions re lative to previous athletic experience has worked very successsfully in in teresting a large number in sports. Aside from $10.00 entrance fees for each fraternity that enters intra (Continued on Page 2) W.A.A. Does Two to Five Thousand Dollar Business on Candy at Games By Lucille Bauer The Women's Athletic Association through its division of Stadium con cessions does from two to five thou sand dollars worth of business an- nually. Consider that in terms of )et". Board with whom the concetu five anl ten cent sales and you have sion contract is signed. The rule, the magnitude of the concession however, does not prohibit their sale manager's responsibility. Appointed i at the tables in the hallway and dur bv the president of the Association ( ing the first ten minutes of inter- she holds her place on the W. A. A executive board during the whole year. The duties of the concession man ager call for an unusual combination of talent, for she must often be car penter, sales manager, janitor, buyer and executive during the course of the day. During the week before a home a m i 1 game a sans lorce must e organ ized The most satisfactory method of recruiting sales women has been to offer free admission and a candy treat to all participating. A mini mum of fifty women has been found necessary for an adeau&te sales pro gram. The names of the girls sell ing filed at the Student Activities office where a copy is made for the gate man at the stadium to whom they report. Manager Places Order Sometime previras to Saturday morning the manager has met tht salesmen of the various candy whole- salcrs and placed her order. In buy - ing, tne weainer icwcwt, aiia ine size of the crowd is taken into con sideration. A supply of nickel bars Other addresses will be given by Henry F. Schulte, head track coach, and Freshman Coach "Choppy" Rhodes, who will forecast the 1928 season for freshman football. Bob by Joyce, toastmaster of a Cornhus ker banquet three years ago, will give the team his greetings. Entertainment, in addition to talks, will consist of music from the U of N Collegians, and Beck's or chestra. Harriet Cruise Kemmer will also sing a few numbers. The team, coaches, and speakers will be seated on the stage, and loudspeak ers will be used to amplify the voice of the speakers. This is the first year that the Cornhusker banquet has been held in the Coliseum, but it is considered a better place, as it will accommodate more people. Cooperation of fraternities has been given to the banquet, and all fraternity houses will have closed tables this evening so that their men may attend the affair. Many fra ternities are refunding fifty cents to men attending the banquet. The tickets sell for one dollar, and a limited number is still available at Long's College Book store, C. D. Hsyee' .ffice in tho Temple, or at fraternity houses. Nebraska coaches here for the convention which starts Friday, De cember 9, will attend the Cornhus ker banquet. FOSTER DISCUSSES JESDS AND PRAYER Student Mind Is Ready for Incarna tion, Secretary Tells Forum "The student mind is now ready for the turning back to the life of Jesus and Incarnation," declared Dr. Allyn K. Foster, secretary of the board of education of the Baptist church, at the World Forum lunch eon, Wednesday noon. "In connec tion with the life of Jesus, comes the thought of prayer. Prayer is the outreach of the whole being for new levels of power." The subject of the address by Doc (Continued on Page 2) is always laid by to tempt the small but ready change of the Knothole club. The sale of apples in the stands was recently ruled out by the Ath- mission at the Thanksgiving game over 1600 apples were sold in the west stadium alone. Sales Checked Carefully After the game, by a specially de vised system of auditing, each sales girl's account is checked and bal-t anced. Few serious discrepancies occur in spite of the rush and hurry which of necessity marks most of the sales. The tables in the hallway are in charge of members of the W. A. A. executive board. Unsold candy is stored in the sta dium until the next game or brought to the W. A. A. store in the Armory. Uno.tened boxes of apples are usual ly returned to the firm for credit while the Joose apples find ready) sale in the W. A. A. store. , The end of the football season does not end the manager's worries. Her ingenuity is demanded to keep the W. A. A. store functioning with the greatest possible efficiency on volunteer labor. After the close of the basketball season, uutrkd by me o cnuoi iohiwitivi - e- gins to see the end of the major pnrt of the work.