The Daily Nebraskan VOIi. XVIII. NO. 107. LINCOLN, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1919. PKICK FIVE CENTS UNIVERSITY WELCOMES BASKETBALL PLAYERS Tournament Visitors Begin Streaming in Today for Open ing of Big Carnival. "N" Club Makes Final Prepara tions for Directing Meet and Planning Entertainment. Tin Lincoln stage Is completely set for (he monster tournament which opens at 8:00 o'clock tomorrow morn ing. The last detail In connection with the management of the huge bas ketball carnival has been carefully worked out and the flood of athletes which will begin to pour from special trains today will meet a hospitable welcome. The University "N" Club met yes terday and gave final instructions to the various committees which will manage the tournament. All trains will be met by some members of the reception committee under the direc tion of Chairman Mackey, who will direct the athletes to their hotels, to the director of the tournament where their credentials will be examined and their tickets issued. The entertain ment committee working in conjunc tion with city Y. M. C. A. and the Commercial Club will stage a free en tertainment for the high school men in the Y. M. C. A. at 8:00 p. m. Wednesday. Season Tickets on Sale Season tickets will be on saleTor two dollars and may be purchased from the ticket seller at any of the games. Twenty-five cents will be the admission charged for the prelimi naries Wednesday and Thursday, and it will require one-half dollar to see the finals or semi-finals. Committees Announced The official list of committees and their duties as given out by the Di rector of the Tournament: Committee of Adjustment: A. R. Congdon, N. H. S. A. A., chairman. This committee has general control of the entire program. Director of Tournament: Dr. E. J. Stewart. Direct control over entire management. Superintendent of Tournament: Paul Dobson, captain-elect of the foot ball team. Direct control over "N" Club committees. Committee on Clerks: Dr. F. Thom as, chairman. L. Shaw, It. Adkins, C. Graff, F. Flood. Absolute charge of floors. Reception Committee: Wm. Mac key, chairman. B. McMahon, Troend ly, E. Lanphere, A. Yort, Gerhart. Meet al ltrains, direct visitors to ho tels, etc. Information: Jackson, captain of varsity basketball team, chairman. Entire varsity squad will act on this committee and will be present at all games. Entertainment: D. V. Stephens, chairman. W. Spear. Scores: W. Rryans, chairman. C. Swanson, R. Lyman, II. Gerhart. II. Troondly.. Referees: Howarth, chairman. Will ee that a referee Is provided for every game and that all contests Mart on time. Timers: E. Schellenberg, chairman. Puchs, Lanphere, Hubka, Iloyt, D. Mc Mahon. Police: W. Munn. chairman. All members of the "N" Club will act on this committee, whose duty will be to keep the crowds back and to maintain order. The big carnival opens tomorrow 'ith the following battles: Class A First match 1:20 p. m., armory. South Omaha vs. Norfolk. 2- Stanton vs. Shelton. 3- Fremont vs. Plattsmouth. Geneva vs. Omaha Central. 5- Lincoln vs. Omaha Commerce. 8. Newman Urove vs. School of Ag riculture. " Schuyler vs. Grand Islaud. 8- Harvard vs. University Place. STATE LEGISLATURE FILMED IN SESSION The first steps toward the filming of the Nebraska State Legislature were taken last Wednesday by the motion picture department of the university, when both houses were photographed in regular session. The various com mitteos of the legislature will proba bly be filmed In the university studio this week. Over two thousand feet of film show ing the various state institutions were shown at the Open Forum meeting which was held at the Orpheum thea Ire Sunday afternoon, March 9th These films nr'e the property of the state, hut are kept on file In the de partment of geography nnd conserva tion at the university. UMI. Y. M. C. A. ELECTION TO BE HELD WEDNESDAY The elecion of a student president and members of the board of direc tors of the University Y. M. C. A. will be held Wednesday, March 12. The candidates filed for president are Lau rence Slater, '21, and C. L. Christen- sen, '20. In past years, the officers of the as soclalion have ben elected by the members of the Y. M. C. A., but this year there are no members who can take the place of those in the past, so it has been decided that all men stu dents on the campus may vote in this election. The elction will be held at the Temple building in the Associa tion rooms. Candidates for the board of direc tors are: Prof. E. B. Hinman, Dean R. A. Lyman, Mr. E. J. Walt, Prof. R. J. Pool, Dean Enberg, Dr. L. B. Paine and Mr. W. E. Gates. Class B First match 8 a. m., armory. 1. Columbus vs. Sutton. 2. Central City vs. Oakdale. 3. Osceola vs. Auburn. 4. Crete vs. Ravenna. 5. Havelock vs. Wjlber. 6. Minden vs. North Bend. 7. Arlington vs. Kearney Military Academy. 8. Beatrice vs. York. Class C First match 8 a. m., auditorium. 1. Exeter vs. Seward. 2. Fullerton vs. Sidney. 3. Syracuse vs. David City. 4. Elgin vs. Tilden. 5. Hardy drew a bye. 6. Nebraska School for Deaf vs, Scribner. 7. Alliance vs. Kimball. 8. Dunbar vs. Stella. Class D First match 12:30 p. m., auditorium. 1. Gresham vs. Upland. 2. Kenesaw vs. Superior. 3. Pierce vs. Chester. 4. Edgar vs. Tobias. 5. Meadow Grove vs. Wahoo. C. Nebraska City vs. Ogalalla. 7. Aurora vs. McCool Junction. 8. Clay Center vs. Waco. Class E First match 12, Y. M. C. A. 1. Fairmont vs. Franklin Academy. 2. Gretna vs. Sterling. 3. Randolph vs. Burwell. 4. Elmwood vs. Wausa. 5. Giltner drew a bye. C. Milford vs. Plainview. 7. Bethany vs. Loup City. 8. Creighton drew a bye. Class F First match 8 a. m., Y. M. C. A. 1. Deshler vs. Shickley. 2. De Witt vs. Verdon. 3. Trumbull vs. Broken Bow. 4. Campbell vs. Wisner. 5. Greenwood drew a bye. 6. Lyons vs. Louisville. 7. Beaver Crossing vs. Holbrook. 8. Bloomfield drew a bye. Class G First match 8 a. m., chapel. 1. Dorchester vs. Waterloo. 2 Hooker County vs. Valparaiso. 3. Talmage vs. Adams. 4! Carroll vs. Wiaverly. (Conttnued on raw TbreO YEAR BOOK CAMPAIGN j PROVES A BIG SUCCESS More Than Fourteen Hundred Volumes Sold on Campus by Co-Eds. Verna Buchta carried off the first prize in the big Cornhusker sales-campaign which closed Frlda evening. Betty RIddell, who ranked second throughout the campaign held her position and Genevieve Addleman, who finished third won the special five-dollar prize by selling the highest number of books on Friday. The campaign was a big success, and more than fourteen hundred and fifty volumes were sold on the campus, which number far exceeds that of former years. A larger num ber than usual of faculty members purchased books this year also, and many orders from alumnae have been received and are still coming In. The thirteen girl3 who will receive Cornhuskers for their work in the sales-campaign are as follows: Genevieve Addleman. Marion Hompes. Louise Enochs. Katheryn Howey. . Marion Yungblut. Dorothy Wolfe. Dorothy Pierce. Doris Hostetter. Florence Chittick. Patricia Maloney. Ruth Snyder. Rhea Nelson. Eva Holloway. Vivian Hanson. What Part Wi7 College Play in After -War Reconstruction? Will the college have a part in solv ing the problems of the new democ racy which is coming to birth at the close of the war, or will it be still fur ther overshadowed, on the one hand, by the newer secondary education, awakened to its social responsibili ties, and on the other hand by the professional schools, always responsi ble to immediate practical needs? This is a big question that Frederick W. Roe, assistant dean of the Uni versity of Wisconsin, discusses in Scrlbners' for February in an article entitled, "The College: Yesterday and Tomorrow." "The graduate and profesional schools," says Mr. Roe, "have reached down and the secondary schools have reached up. until the identity of the college is seriously threatened. Out of the colossal work of reconstruc tion, out of the vast and complex re organization of commerce and indus try, there will arise unprecedented de mands for trained men and women. That industrial and professional edu cation, turning out armies of experts. Is to have a large part in the giant enterprises of the new era we cannot doubt." Colleges Must Re-State Purpose Mr. Roe believes that those who look for unity In our social life and freedom for self-government in our in dividual ideals, has a part to play not less important than the part to be played by any other organization in the educations! scheme. "But" h says, "that part ought to be re-stated by the colleges or tomorrow so mat the significance of the education they offer Bhall be as clear and definite as the aims of the technical schools." Mr. Roe defines the field of the col lege: "The college is a place for the culti vation of humanistic interest and standards. It has no higher function than to impress upon every youth who enters its hospitable doors that he is a social belns. and that he may not live to himself, whether in aris tocratic or Intellectual isolation. The student must learn somehlng of what mankind has achieved in science and philosophy, and something of the standards in morals and art that man kind has established through cen turies of striving. In other words, his emotions must bo touched to finer Is sues. SUMMER TERM OFFERS PRACTICAL COURSES The February Issue of the University Journal explains courses offered at Bummer school. The summer term be gins June 2, and ends July 25. The second summer session will end Au gust 22. The summer school offers ex ceptional advantages to teachers, graduates of normal schools, high school graduates,' adult specials, nnd graduate students. 'Courses are offered for teachers who wish to improve their ability ta teach manual training, French, Spanish, mathematics and American history. Besides these, the usual summer school subjects will be offered. NEBRASKA UNI STUDENT WITH ARMY IN GERMANY Letters received from Captain Earl M. Cllne, who has been overseas since last summer, indicate that he is still in Germany, with but few prospects of getting "over here" in the near fu ture. Captain Cllne 13 in command of a machine gun company which has been a part of the army of occupa tion. He was at one time a law stu dent at the university and later su perintendent of schools at Nebraska City, Nebraska. Before his Induction into the army, Captain Cline resigned his educational position and became a member of a prominent law firm in Nebraska City, of which Colonel Wil liam Hayward was at one time a mem fContlnuod on l'nge Three) Where Narrowness Dies The college is also a place for the development of personal Ideals and love of knowledge for its own sake. Here under the guidance of real lead ers, narrowness is to be put off and breadth is to be put on. "Finally, the college is a place place where young people who have not yet made the discovery may find their aptitudes." Mr. Roe believs that thousands of students who have reached the age of 20 years have not yet found their aptitudes, and that there should be this period of experimentation which n college eduactlon affords. Four Classes of Study As a curriculum by which those rums may be realized, Mr. Roe sug gests four fields which Include the fundamentals of a colleg education: science, Including matematics; his tory, including economics and govern ment; literature, including language; philosophy. He advises the study of Latin. "No other one language satis fies so many purposes aa Latin, and Ms restoration Is imperative if college training Is to regain its old-time vigor." The study of these four fields in a secondary school should form a foundation for college training, Mr. Roe says. "When the curricular or ganization of secondary schools and colelges becomes fairly continuous and articulate, prospective college ihnte will be regularly innmcted to the place and purpose of college education while they are yst In high school. "But a college course, even the most caiefully constructed will not work automatically. To be successful ac cording to the standards of a new day, It must be sustained by an organized a:id co-ordained life on the past of students and faculty, comparable after its kind to that of the best In dustrial and comrnticial concerns of which we know.' Muddling with Athletics Quulhig from Mr. Slossou'a bonk, "Great American Universities," he says: "The roost vulnerable point in our colleglato system is the diversion of the interest of the student body from the (reu aims of the college. Social life, athletics, dissipation, and the multitude of other student activities have cut down t othe minlmuia the at fContlnwwl on V'gf- Thre) LARGE ATTENDANCE' AT ROAD INSTITUTE Credentials Given by Visitors and Programs Distributed at Opening Session. Engineers Attend State Legisla ture and Hear Discussion of Road Bills. The first sessions of the Nebraska Road Institute opened Monday morn ing with a large attendance of state engineers, road men and surveyors. The meetings of the conference are held in room 206 of the mechanical en gineering building. The morning of the first day was largely devoted to the registration of visitors, credentials, and the distribu tion of programs. Many additional guests were registered during the aft ernoon and State Surveyor Robert Harvey's paper was postponed until later in the week, when it will be read in full. The members of the Institute attended the sesions of the Nebraska State Legislature in a body later In the afternoon. The road bills, in which the engineers are manifesting vital in terest, are up for discussion at this time. In the evening Paul E. Brown, a Gordon, Nebraska, surveyor and engi neer, gave an excellent illustrated lec ture on "Sandhill Roads," which was greatly appreciated by the road men of the state. The open discussion led by Professor G. R. Chatburn of the uni versity followed this lecture, and proved to be a period of great enlight enment and interst. Program for Today Today's program begins at nine o'clock promptly. Mr. Clarence A. Davis, attorney general for Nebraska, will open the confernce with a paper on "Nebraska's County Road Laws." A talk on "Nebraska's State Highway System" will follow, given by Mr. George E. Johnson, state engineer. Next a discussion led by Mr. B. A. George of the legislative committee, Nebraska Good Roads Association, will be held. The morning session will close with a paper on "Prelimmaiy Surveys for Permanent Roads" by Mr. R. O. Green, civil engineer of Culbert son, Nebraska. This afternoon the meelngs will be conducted at the Agricultural Engi neering building on the state farm campus. The first thing on the pro gram will be a paper on "Plans and Methods for Supervision of the Con struction of State Highways," by Mr. A. S. Mirick, chief road engineer. "The Use of Tractors and Trucks for High way Construction and Maintenance" will then be discussed by Profesor L. W. Chase of the university faculty. Supper will be served in the home economics building at the state farm. Improved Roads to Be Discussed Promptly at seven-thirty o'clock this evening Mr. A. H. Edgren, Lancaster county engineer, will read a paper on "Lancaster County Improved Roads for 1918" and the program for the day will close with a discussion of "Lan caster County Highway Bridges for 1918," by Mr. D. W. Erickson, deputy Lancaster County engineer. The committee In charge of the road Institute, which has worked extremely hard the past few weeks to secure the excellent talent they are able to pre sent, Is composed of the following members of the university faculty: Professor Clark E. Mickey, chairman; Professor George R. Chatburn, Profes sor J. N. Brldgman, and Professor L. W. Chase. CONVOCATION Charles Pergler, representative of the new Czecho-Slav state, will give a talk in Memorial Hall this morning at eleven o'clock. Ills subject 3 one of vital importance and universal discus sion, and the convocation will be most unusual and interesting.