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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 17, 1931)
TUESDAY. 1 KHKIIAKY 17. VM. " s 5 V. : E R T E R Li CI N 7 C i i X v Ii; 1 ,- HI II W I' il ;.! ? 1 S i tit; nt 1 j i a a . s ! , : j c ; I : t : t .c c . i-l ; it? ..; ii. ,t w i c( is i' i IK .' w H til f.l 1'0 III III I ; ; :i i i ir i.i x iii y in vt lu CI 111 vi ti c( in IK 111 If l' It u 111 t a i 4 KANSAS VICTORY SATURDAY TIES UP BIG SIX A E bring the two trailing fsnib together. Outside of the Sooners u Vm' t of Kansas, the Oklahoma team has tli'V"ved lit - this sea son and Iowa State must te -lyi the edge. Kansas ArrIos an 1 Oklahorta will go outside tho conference for games this week, the Sooners meeting O" ' "f A. and M. at Stillwater Tuesday, and Kanp"j Ajrp-ips entertaining St. Louis Thursday. Beth Huskers and Jayhawksj Have Three Games I Left to Play. BISHOP LEADS SCORIMG Dopesters Slow to Select Winner; Kansas to Meet K-Aggies. K:iunft Nibrn.lrt . . . Vlniuiiii . Wuinum AkkIfi IllMU SIhIf. . . OkliihmiiH BKi Sl M'AMUMiS. n w I pii ; n : .14 ; a .-! K .1 1 4 7 I II kiiii 4-MI 111 IK 240 .'; i mi ii.t I M I Art llll H4 Stl iU! I H.l I tlh IlKM I.TS I.AfcT w K ii M.ii. S4, Ni'lirii.ka '!!'. Nrliru.ltH .1", hililH Atll' SI. MLtmirl 2. Okliilmiim U. Kiin.n. Ac(ir 3d, lonn Mali1 21. Ml-.mirl n. ri'lihtiin III. (.AMI S THIS K.K. TiiciImv: hilllMi Al!Kli R:mli l.tiuritirr; MKwmrl Mmlilinlmi I . nl idlinihlH irvllllillliini : IIMiilmnm . (Ikln h.niKi Aiiili' ill Millwnlcr (cn hthll Ion. t I hiir.ilii : Kmi-.ii. Aiuif v. SI. Iul I . Hi MmihnttHii ii-olillnlloii . vitiinlio : Iowh Slulr . llUhiliumn nl s.inimii; Mhwiurl . Knn.al AKlr l Muntiitttiui. Tin Hliili Srnrrj-w. k rn i III. hup. K:in.u N.1 B I i.Iht. Ni'lira.kn hi i: l(n:ifr:l. lonn Stule ary. hunvis .... tfuhii Mi..iiuri rtrrk.' Okhiluimn . . . MuHny. Ni.hr:i.k . Il:iti. N-'bl.i.ka . . M. .ItihiiMon. Kannaii 4 r.inkllr, KiiKKii-4 XI 2 4 !i II t in 18 BY MURLIN SPENCER. The victory of Kansas over the first place Cornhuskers Saturday night again threw the Big Six race into a muddle previous to the Iowa State game last night. Both teams are now tied for first place with each team having three games left to play. Possibilities of the Cornhuskers winning the conference alone this vcar look slim at the pr 3ent time. The only possibility left is for some tcr.m to pull the unexpected and defeat the Javhawkers. Nebraska must also win all of her remaining games. Season of Upsets. ThL'i season has been one of up-sM- however, and it is not only possible but probable that some ie"- will do the unexpected. Mis souri, in fifth place at the time, up set the Cornhuskers while on the same night the last place Okla homa five beat Kansas. Missouri is coming- forward Strang and will be out to avenge the 31-13 licking they tonk at the hands of the Kansas Jayhawkers. This is one possibility for a Kansas upset. No predictions can be made truthfully, however, for if the dope turns out in the futui-4 as it has in tho past, the Big Six race will not be decided until after the last game. . Kansas plays Kansas Aggies at Lawrence tonight and should win easily. The Kaelos have not met un with advance n-"dictions thij var and have displayed nothing startling. Other conference con tests slated furnish little of inter- and bnn together low-rank teams in games that will have p or no bearing on me unai outcome of the race. Sooners Meet Cyclones. Iowa State will meet Oki'-homa at Norman Saturday while Mis souri plays Kansas Aggies at Man hattan on the same night. The Timers are n' third place with the Aggies. A win for Mis souri would probably decide the third place position in the Tiger's fnvor. The Iowa Stale-Oklahoma game est ir.r. Classified Want Ads Only 10 Cents a Line (Minimum of 2 Lines) PHOTOGRAPHS THK HAITI? STUDIO, 121H O itl'Mt. H2VU1. Distinctive !hu!nuaph. AI'TKK Al,lt a 'ion:nil pliutugrapn Dial S'uu want. WAMED WANTED y.vrsnn t' tnnc artlripn whuii he li"-n f"'""l to tlm Dally Ni-hral.an ulllti-. ftt-uaiil. POSITIONS TKACIIINCJ 1"h "1HV h ""-ii r-rt Ihrnuch Th Davn Bchuul Sfrvaf, 6.i.'j-6 Btuart Hull. LOST AND FOUND I A I!' IK HllM'l.Y t fllnvin y unclaimed ' In Imiiv Nitirankan otllic. Claim tiii-m Inilnedlaloly. l.(ihTilf.HKim il KiTi'n "ilmihlt i-iinii-l wllh wiiudi'n hand IF. Lfhvf at Imlly Ni biBKiian orritF. i I I 1 1 ISI.KM CAJ-'K. HIS " Alwaya home like lilacF. Quallt: 1'iort ou.y. MKET MK at KliFrhurne n Inn. Ill Niirth Fourteenth. l'ood prci.urrd by txperl Fnce4 women. CAMPfS CAFE. M2 N.irth Iftin H'.iVF lookinc anil pantrlea at .il hour. COM-ITGIAN CAFE-'j liloi'k aninh nf campun on 1.1th. It 'n a good place to eat. Mewl .IV and up. TYPING TYPINO- Maniim-rlpla tl.l. Will call tor mi delivei. Call 1.47(17. CUT SPRING SPORTS Move Comes in Line With New Budget Slash by Legislature. NORMAN, Old. I Special i Re duction of the Sooner physical ed ucation staff and curtailment of all spring sports, in perfect har mony with the $9,200 sla.sh made Tuesday in the university physical education budget, was announced today by Ben G. Owen, director of athletics. "If the governor fe.ls that way I about it, we'll click with him and I with President Bizzell and go ahead and meet the conditions of the Sf.200 reduction." Mr. Owen I declared. "Our physical education staff will remain intact until July 1, when it will be reduced. Cur- i tailment of spring sports will start j at once.". i Asked what members of the Sooner physical education staff would go, the Sooner athletic chief replied, "That's to be worked out later." Mr. Owen then outlined specific ally, how the various spring sports now in vogue at the University of Oklahoma would be curtailed. "We would abandon baseball were it not for games we have al ready contracted with the five other 'Big Six' schools," he as serted. "As our revised schedule now stands our baseball team will make but one road trip the coming season, that from May 8 to May 12. It will meet no non-conference foes. "Track and field will be affect ed in that whenever possible, trips will be made in automobiles, the smaller squads will be taken, and in the future there'll be fewer in door and outdoor meets. "The only tennis matches we will play are those already con tracted for. Hereafter we'll play no fall matches whatever and en gage no non-conference foes. "Basketball and wrestling have already been curtailed, the teams traveling in automobiles whenever feasible, and smaller squads being transported. "Football squads taken on trips next fall will be cut to the bone, fewer players being carried on the road trips than were even carried this past season, ' he concluded. ENGINEER'S ROUNDUP TO BE HELD FEB. 25 i Continued from Page l.i braska" A. W. Andrews, office engineer, engineering department, lines west, C. B. & Q., Lincoln. "Pioneer Highways and City Pavements" Guy P. Dorsey, deputy county engineer, Douglas county. Omaha. "Pioneer Railroad Construction in Nebraska" F. T. Darrow, chief engineer, engineering department, lines west, C. B. & Q.. Lincoln. "Outline History of Irrigation in Nebraska" K. H. Willis, chief of bureau of irrigation, department of public works, Biidgeport. "Street Railway Systems of Ne braska" K. R. Heiny, vice presi dent and general manager, Lin coln Traction company, Lincoln. Afternoon Session, 2 p. m. "Engineering on the Farm and in the Rural Communit:. of Nebraska"- I. D. Wood, state exten sion engineer .department of ag ricultural engineering. University of Nebraska. "The Evolution of the Brick, Tile, and Pottery Industries in Nebraska" -Robert L. Ferguson, president of Yankee Hill Brick company, Lincoln. "The Mechanics of the Meat Packing Industry in Nebraska"- T. J. Byrnes, plant engineer, Cudahy Packing company, Omaha. "Cement Plants and the Pro duction of oPrtland Cement in Nebraska" Donald D. Price, dis trict engineer, Portland Cement association, Lincoln. "The Beet Sugar Industry in Nebraska;' A. J. Dcnman, man ager, American Bept Sugar com pany, Grand Island. "Meeting Nebraska's Bridge Problems," Jack Singleton, district engineer, American Institute of Steel Construction, Topcka, Kas. "The Canned Food Industry in Nebraska," Morton Steinhart, vice president and manager, Otoe Food Products company. Nebraska City. "The Milling Industry In Ne timuUn 11 C. c. Ferciison. superin tendent i f Gooch Milling and Ele vator company, Lincoln. "The Unique Production of Na tive Aggregates in Nebraska," Roy M. Green, manager, Western Lab oratories, Lincoln. Committee reports, Banquet, 6:30 P. M. "The Engineer's Responsibility to Society," Prof. J. B. Davidson, Iowa State college. STUDENTS WILL GO POLLS TODAY TO VOTE i Continued from Page 1.1 the Y. W. C. A. cabinet, president of Omicron Nu. belongs to the Home Economic club, and belongs to Phi Upsilon Omicron Hociety. Alice Cnnnell, Fit 'bury, is on the Dally Nebraskan and Awgwan staffs. She is affiliated with Gamma Phi Beta. Minnie Nemecheek, Humboldt, is a member of Mortar Board, se nior women's honorary. She has nerved for two years on the stu dent council, is on the Y. W. C. A. cabinet and belongs to several extra-curricular organizations. She belongs to Phi Mu sorority. Margaret McKay. Des Moines. Ia., Is on the Cornhusker staff and belongs to the Pan-Hellenic asso ciation. She la a member of Ksp pa Kappa Gamma pororlty. Mildred cnianDell. Omaha. is presented n a candidate by Alpha Phi soroiity. She Is n member of1 the Pan-Hellenic and A. W. S. as sociations. Only two men hae filed for each of tho class presidencies, the Barbs, as stated before, being dor mant. In the case of Ivy Day ora tor, however, there are three con testants, an Independent being filed along: with the Blue Shirt and Yellow Jacket candidates. Alan G. Williams. Lincoln, !s the Independent Ivy Day orator aspir ant. He is a member of Innocents society, is chairman of the Barb council, ia a scnioi man at ltugc representative on the Student council, and belongs to Sigma Up silon, Delta Sigma Rho, and Pi Ep silon PI. in addition to serving on the university debate team. John P. McKnight, filed by the Yellow Jacket faction group, Is a senior law aspirant for the ora tory position. He comes from Aub urn, is affiliated with Sigma Nu fraternity and belongs to Delta Sigma Rho fraternity. He was for merly a member of the Student council and the varsity debate squ;;d. Rtlph Slocum, Lincoln, is the Blue Shirt hone for orator. Be- P Intramural Sport To Individual Enrollment. Limited Gym Dailv Nebraska Ranks High Among University Publications According To Epsilog, Publishers Magazine FIFTY ENTREES SIGN UP Women's intramural ping pong elimination tournament will com mence Wednesday when the girls who are registered for individual gym will have a chpnee to com pete in intramural sports since the tourney is limited to the girls of their number. About fifty girls have already sifjned up for the tournament with about fifty more expected to enter. A list is posted in the individual longing to Delta Theta Phi social 53 m room where entrees may fraternity, he is also freshman law I si!n. The Intramural representa advisor, was chairman of the an- lives of each group should hand In nual law smoker, and ia on tho i nnir.os of competitors before Tues- stal'f of the Nebraska Law "Bull Grau and Dave" Opponents. The two men entered in the sen ior presidency race are I-Vcd Grau. Bennington, and Ssldon Davey. Lincoln. GraM is vice president of the Innocents society, formerly served as Intertrateinity council president, has served tor two years on the Student council and is on the Ag Executive board. He is affiliated with Delta Phi Gamma fraternity. Davey, s member of the "N" club, forward on the var sity basketball team, and member of Corn Cobs, is a member ol Kappa Phi. social fraternity. dav noon. All girls who are not icgistered for individual gym now, but have taken it any time before arc eligible to enter the ping pong totiriiii ment. The tournament will be held In the individual gym room every day at 1 and r o'clock. Four tables will be used each hour enab ling eiyh! git's to piny. Ping Pong is played like tennis :n a table with paddles and a cel luloid tail. Any ping pong rules may he used, though tennis rules nre adviwd by Estle Anderson, the l'i Iv.-ad of pins pong. Contestants are ! expected to furnish their own um- T.n othir.t..a am nittpd as rivals i uire. The cirls who wins two out in he contest for junior president, of three games is declared the George Koster. Lincoln, is the Yel- winner of the match. lowjacUet ofi'ei ing. He has been I The number of intramural points a varsitv fjotball guard for two! to be awarded will be announced seasons, ' belongs to the "N" club, Inter. and is now playing his second sea son as guard on NcorasKa s oas kctball five. His fraternity is S.g ma Alpha Fpsilon. Hugh Rhea, Arlington, Blue Shirt candidate, affiliated with Alpha Sigma Phi, was Grantland Rice's choice for All-America football honors, is on the track team and served on the publication board during his soph omore year. Two Lincoln boys are contest ants for the sophomore presidency. Linnus Carroll, Phi Kappa, was placed on the ballot by the Blue Shirt faction. He is a Corn Cob, is on the track squad, c id plays in the R. O. T. C. band. Don Easter day, who flies Yellow-jacket colors, is a member of Phi Ga ;a Delta social fraternity. He is sopho more representative on the Publi cation board, belongs to Corn Cobs pep society, and is Interfrateinity council representative. Freshmen Rivals from Omaha. The rivals for the office of fresh man class president both hail from Omaha. Richard Moran, affiliated with Alpha Theta Chi. is the Yel lowjacket choice. He is a mem ber of Pershing Rifles, is on the military department's crack drill squad, and is on the Daily Ne braskan and A -gwan assista.it staffs. Lyman Johnson, Delta Tuu Delta, is the Blue Shirt aspirant. He is leader of one of the down town orchestras. And so the stage is set for the curtain to swing open at 9 o'clock this morning in the Temple lobby, i Balloting will continue throughout j the day until five o'clock when election activities will end and i votes will be counted by Student ! council members in the presence of faction and faculty representatives, i No electioneering will be permitted I within fifty foot of the polls, ac cording to a late Student eo;;:icil : dispatch. j Rhea Wins Shot Put. Relay Captures Mile Event in Kansas Meet. Weakened by the absence of Willis Lamson, veteran timber topper, Smutny, sprint man, and Dean, pole vaulter, the University of Nebraska track team scored two firsts and one second in the K. C. A. C. track meet at Kansas City last Saturday night. Anothei Nebraska entrant, Frank Lydic of the Nebraska State Teachers col lege at Kearney, took first in the special half mile race. Hugh Rhea contributed one of the firsts, taking the shot put with a heave of 48 feet 9 inches. Bausch, entered under the col ors of the Kansas City Athletic club, placed second. The mile re lay team turned in a time of 3:34 to take first in the mile event. Ostergaard lost his supremacy in the Shannon Douglas special 000 yard race when he was forced to take second, bowing to the Oklahoma entrant. Orli.ld Will Discus .Model (IrimiiKil Code WRESTLING The model code of criminal pro cedure, prepared by the American Law Institute, was discussed by Prof. Lester B. Orfield of the col lege of 'aw at a meeting of Phi Delta Phi, honorary legal fratern ity, Thursday evening. The state senate judiciary committee is con sidering a number of reforms in criminal procedure suggested in the code. Thirieen bills have been introduced in l he legislature cm- jdying provisions of the model code. Out of more than sixty colleges j In the United States which publish j htudent libvtaoutivin, Ulil ly-eiglll leading Institutions issue regular daily publications, and among these the University of Nebraska is rated well up the list. This fact was made known in an article en titled "Hals Off to College Dailies," In the January Issue of Tho Epsilog, national college pub lisher's magazine The Daily Nebraskan, the ar ticle stated, is listed as one of the outstanding college dailies In the middlewest. While the Daily Nebraskan is not provided with wire service as are a few or me larger student dailies in the eastern universities, it is provided with all other facil ities that are included in the equip ment of other college dailies in the United States. The article in the Epsilog brought, out the fact that the Nebraska publication is con trolled by a board of publicaitons composed of faculty members and students, as in several of the lareer universities of the country. Circulation Is 182,417. The thirty-eight college railies j claim a total circulation of 182. 417 or aD average of 4.800 copies each, but of these, two have circu- ; lalions of less than a thousand, i while on'j distributes as many as i 15.000. The distribution of ihe college dailies throught out the country, a map accompanying the article showed, presents three distinct di visions. There are twelve along the Ailantic coast, nineteen in the cen tral portion of the country includ ing the states in the neighborhood of the Mississippi, of which Ne braska is one, and seven along the Pacific coast. In the states bordering Nebras ka on the west there are no uni versity railies published, I he offi cial publications there being is sued either weekly or semi-weekly. There arc no college daily papers published at all. in fact, in the ter ritory west of Nebraska, except in California, Washington and Ore gon. Kansas, on the south, Iowa on the east, and Missouri, each have large well equipped univer siiy dailies. Those at the University of Iowa and the University of Missouri are particularly outstand ing inasmuch as they are published in cities where there are no other newspaper plants. Average Size Is Cited. The average sixe of student pub liations is from four to eight puges, while in many of the larger uni versities the number of pages is much greater. The size of the pub lication at Nebraska averages about four pages for each issue. One of the finest college dailies in the country is the Ulini, which is published at Champaig-n-Urbana, 111. Issues of that paper number as high as forty-eight eight-column pages, made-up and printed as well as most metropolitan dail ies and superior to many. It car ries the full Associated Press ser vice and is the only morning news paper in a community of more than 40,000 persons. The bulk of its news stories on the front page are college items, but the import ant national events are given good position. All Do Good Work. Every one of ihe thirty-eight college dailies, whether they use wire service or limit their cover age to the individual campus, are doing excellent work, according to the article in the Epsilog. Prac tically every daily affords some financial compensation to one or more members of Its staff. This j compensation takes the form of ; salaries varying froui $200 to i $2,000 a year, and averages be tween $.V)0 and $600. Various method:: of ni.i.iBc nunt have been put into practice in the different college publica tions tliruout the country In the larger share of the institutions the papers are under the supervi sion of the administration and tacully members, along- with stu dent representatives. Most of the schools use their newspaper offi ces as laboratories for wtudents in journalism. At Nebraska, Michigan, New York university, North Carolina, North Dakota, and the Univeisity of Texas, the board of control of publications is composed of fac ulty members and students. GETS MARINE GIFT Veritable Thousands of Fish. Including Whale, Are ! Given School. SYRACUSE. N. Y. Veritably i thousands of deep sea fish, which have been viewed by spectators from all parts of the United States will be given to the Syracuse uni versity museum of natural science, an announcement released yester day revealed. The collection was trapped In the nets of Capt. Lin G. Greene. Captain Greene, who offered the collection to Dr. Parke H. Struth ers, the director of the museum, received a message yesterday from the Syracuse university zo ologist accepting the gift. The cablegram was sent from the base camp at Merida, Venezuela, where the Andean expedition is stationed. Includes Large Whale. A 40-foot whale, several devil fish, sword fish, sharks and other deep sea monsters are included in the collection. In addition to the fish there is a long list of antiques, ranging from the plumed hats, cutlasses, cannons, pistols and other relics of the days when pi rates rode the seven seas, to the old compasses and more staid in struments of ancient ocean navi gators. Captain Greene, who is now at Norfolk, Va., notified Mrs. Struth ers, the wife of the director, that beoause of ill health he was about' to retire from his showboat ac tivities. When the ship had been stationed at the canal terminal, Dr. Struthers had shown great in terest in the collection and because of this interest shown in the "pi rate ship," Captain Greene an nounced that he would make the university a gift of the exhibit. Ship in Toledo. The collection, which is housed in the Captain Greene's "l reasure" ship now in dry dock at Toledo, O., will go to the university museum as soon as Dr. Strulbers and the members of his expedition return from their explorations in the An des mountains. In his lettei' to Mrs. Struthers. Captain Greene explained that his collection was not a scientific one, hut a collection that had been DthniAH in nlease the puoljc. "It Is nevertheless a valuable one." ho wrote, "but 1 must retire from the) business because of ill health.' Explorers Divide Forces. ; ! In the message to the Hill in which Dr. Struthers wired his ac ceptance of the gift, he also re vealed that tho South American ! explorers were dividing their forf. es. wniie tne majority i iv !'": will continue in their studies of tho Andean wilderness iu the moun tains which loom behind their bao camp at Merida. three members of the unit will go to the lowlands in the vicinity ot sn urisiouai io makc a stuuy of the territory there. In this stood will he Prof. Earl Apfcl, Prof. Ernest Reed, and John Erflejian, Syracuse Boy Scout and student at Central high school. The section of the lowlands they will explore is known In that region as the "llano." clinic" sdentTo" speak Measuring the Baby's Mind" will be the subject of Dr. Zora Schaupp's talk before an open meeting' of Phi Beta Kappa at the University club Tuesday evnning af 6 o'clock. ' Dr. Schaupp spent last year in clinical studies of babies in some of the most famous European hospitals. Phi Beta Kap pa will hold a joint meeting with i Sigma Xi March 26. The scholastic society's initiation has been set for May i Reeular spring football practice at the University of Kansas is scheduled to start either the mid dle of February or the first of March according to Coach Bill Hargiss. The exact nature of tht preliminary gridiron tactics has not been determined at this time. ''The Student's Store'" RECTOR'S 13 A P C. E. Buchholz, Mnr, Our Store is Your Store Today Is the Last Day Free Copies " of the Nebraskan at the Book Stoves Sulwrihe Today for ihe ros-t of the year. i Eighth Annual High School; Bout Will Be Held March 6, 7. NORMAN, Okl. Growing from , a small unimportant meet to the ; second largest high school wrest- j ling tournament in the United States last yeai, being surpassed only by the tournament at Iowa State college, the eighth annual University of Oklahoma high , school wrestling tournament will be held in the Field house here March 6 and 7. "I expect nt least twenty-five teams and from 150 to 200 men : to compete this yar." says Paul , V. Keen, the Sooner coach and di- , rector of the tournament. Last ; year nineteen high schools and 107 . men participated, Cashing winning , the meet with twenty-eight points, with Stillwater second with twen- , ty-four and Elk City and Geary tied for third with twelve each. "We hope each school entering will bring a full team this year," Coach Keen SHid, "However if a coach doesn't have a man for each weight, that shouldn't keep his team away. He should send as many men as p tlble. Even if he has hut one nian and that mini wlshe.i to wrestle, he should send him on. It may mean a grent dal to that man." The national collegiate rules with high school modifications will be used at the Sooner tournament. Weighing In will begin at H a. m. both days and actual wrestling will star not earlier than 12:30 p. m. No overweight shall be al lowed the first day and but one pound will be permitted the second. Hick Plan Attend Ileltron Inauguration Deun John Hicks plans to at tend the inauguration of Walter H. Hellman as president of He bron college and academy at He bron, Neb., Feb. 20. Professor Hellman was the first student on the campus at Hebron when the college was established in 1911. 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