The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 08, 1919, Image 1

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    V
SKAL-!
UXVL ;N0.56.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1919.
iUESIT GGI!D1L IViLL (!9T
Obtained by Investigation
I Doe Not Warrant Any
I Drastic- Relet
id-week down-town dance are not
a abolished by the Student Conn-
at least until proper facilities are
lded, whereby a greaur majority
jie student body can be accommo-
ed for social gatherings. Tela ma
I of the council comes after several
.ks of Investigations and sounding
of student opinion.
had been alleged both m unlversl
circles and aver the state that toe
heet standard of scholarship at the
verstty was being lowered by the
endance of students at dances In
,11c balls during the middle of the
Bk. To find whether the alleged
.oticea were having any materUl af
t on the scholastic standing of the
Iverslty was the aim of the tnroaU
Uons as carried on by the body rep
touting the studenU. If so. reme-
were suggested such as a ban on
endance at all mid-week parties and
possible substitution of an all-unl-ralty
funtkm in the middle of the
sek. After the' Investigation, the
uncil did sot deem It prudent to
rbtd attendance at the mid-week
'wn town dances or practical to put
o effect a substitution in case the
natl manner, the following tacts:
jt facilities for bringing all students
yether for an all-university was glv-
as the cause for the action taken
fthe council.
Resolutien to Regents
Prom data secured In their Inveatl
itton which Indicated that the Issue
Wld not be properly met, under ex
ting conditions, the following resolu
DR. LATIMER LECTURES
TO NEBRASKA DENTISTS
Dr. Latimer of the department of
dental anatomy has returned recently
from a cooventlon of the dentists of
western Nebraska at Hastings. This
onventlon made a study of the ana
tomy of the head and neck and invited
Dr. Latimer to give several lectures
on the subject.
He spoke at eeveral different see-
slong and also did some demonstration
work. He is much Interested in the
work which the Western Nebraska
Dentists are doing, as they are very
progressive. They have organised
club for the purpose of study on lines
of mutual interest and Intend to meet
several times during the year.
SGPilXE ens
q:i C) CITER-CLASS
ww'CEO TCJ..11!.iiT
on was passed and sent to the unl-
srsity regents
he Board of Regents of the universi
ty of Nebraska.
Gentlemen: The Student Council
I the University of Nebraska, as the
presentatives of the student-body,
jdlres to bring before you in this In
jnnal manner, the following gacts:
! L Due to the fact that it is alleged
Sat the standard of Scholarship of
ie studenU had been lowered be-
kuse of their attendance at the thea
res and public dances in the middle
I the week, the student council has
jade a thorough Investigation of the
Matter.
j 1 The Student Council systeinatl-
ally obtained data on the number ol
tudents attending the theatres ana
'he public dances on the week nights.
fter studying these figures, definite
lans were layed where, by the at
endance of a university student at
'jay public dance on a mid-week night
Vas to be prohibited. However, that
his change m the activities of the
.tndeat body might not be so radlca
bat It would not be permanent, a uni
versity party was planned that would
1 a in the students for an hour and
half on Wednesday night, This par
J was to be as attractive as any pub
ic entertainment but was to aav
be advantage of being a purely unV
ersity party, on the campus, made
9 wholly of a university crowd, aatd
opervteed by the university author!
Ses. The purpose of this party was
ot only to furnish sufficient social
'CtiTtUes for the student body in the
nlddls of the week, under very des
Me conditions but, because It was a
Periodical social affafflr in which the
tudents mingled as an individual arl
a a university function, rather thaa
individual participating to a social
unction of some group," it would tend
0 bring about a truer Nebraska splr-
1 The Student Council finds that
uch a constrictive program can not
adopted until the university author
is provide such building facilities
the entire university public eoula
accommodated In social gatherings.
Therefore, finding that one of the
aportant Issues before the nnivrsit
tjTannot be properly met with eilstnu
acuities, we as the representatives of
e student body, wish to state -that
of the most pressing needs of the
Blrerslty at the present time, Is a
iUerta place that wia aooommo-
the entire university public
Respectfully submitted.
The Student Council.
University of Nebraska.
E'caed Chris. U Chrlatensen.
"'TiOi the passing of this resnratica,
3 tt4ttr which has been d'scr-Mfd
9 nd con by. the -
J to the school y?r. !i r
1 elofed ecu?, j. i -
The sophomore girls soccer team
won the championship by defeating
the freshman team by a score of 1 to
0 in the finals of the interclass tour
nament Scturday afternoon. The one
goal made by the sophomores was .the
result of a free kick directly in front
of the freshman goal. A freshman
player fouled within the goal space
and Martha Krogman. for the sopho
mores, kicked for the goal. This kick
was blocked by the freshman goal
keeper but another foul was made
by a freshman. The second free kick
sent the ball through the goal posts
At the end of the first half tbe score
stood 1 to 0 in favor of the sopho
mores. During the second half the
teams played bard and fast but no
scores were made.
- In the semi-finals the sophomores
defeated the Juniors by a score of 1 to
0. The one goal was made in the sec
ond quarter. In both of Its games the
sophomore team displayed remarkably
good team work. The game between
the seniors and the freshmen resulted
In a score of S to 1 In favor of the
freshmen. The freshmen team stai ted
off with a rush and made a score In
the first few minutes of play. They
managed to keep the ball in senior
territory during moet of the playing.
Of the two games In the semi-finals
the Junior-sophomore game was the
more exciting and harder fought
The losing teams m tne semi-finals,
the senior and Junior teams, met In
the afternoon and played a game sup
posed to determine which team was
the superior. However, there were
no scores made. The freshmen sec
ond team was to have met the winners
of this game but all of the player did
not report Those plsyers who were
not present forfeited the W. A. A.
rolnts they would have received. The
others will receive 25 points.
The officials for. the tournament
were Miss Clark and Miss Davis, ref
erees, and Miss Kohl tune keeper. The
following ladles were patron eases:
Miss Pound, Mrs. Clapp. Miss Hepp
ne.r. Mrs. 8cott Mrs. Schlssler. Mr.
Schulte, Mrs. Springer, and Mrs. Cur
tis. . 4
Teams
Senior Helen Curtis
Irene Springer
Martha Heliner
Ruth Hutton
June Fredericksoa
Msrjorie Haycock . '
Helen Fischer
Sadie Finch
Irene Shuff
Kathleen Hargrove
Edith Tully. sub.
Freshmen Nell Bate
Jeanne Shuster
Cora Miller
Beulah Grab III
Margaret Ulry
Florence Sherman
Rath Kmdlg
Darlda VonOflder
Edna O'Brien
A. Dettman
Melvina Stills
Joyce Rundstrotn
Juniors Sue Etflle
Mary Stephens
Mary Shepherd
Ruty Swesson
IT ! a cark
VOLUNTEERS POSED
FOR 'MOVES"
MAN
The University of Nebraska campus
in the vicinity of the east entrance
of University hall was transformed
Friday morning at 11:23 Into a moving-picture
studio, when a New York
film man took pictures of tnose wno
volunteered to dig coal In the present
emergency.
A "mock" registration was held ana
members of the law college signed
again for use If needed In the coal
mines, but this time it was before
camera which will tell Its story on
many motion picture screen In the
country.
The act of registering the volun
teers was made as life-like as possi
ble. A table, presided over by a man
In uniform, was placed on the side
walk before University Hall. With
banners of "We are alive" the Laws
surrounded the table and signed aaln
the resolution which signified that
they were ready and willing to serve
lit the coalfields, should the governor
deem It necessary to mobilise then.
After the grinding out of many feet
of film deplctlig one of the first stud
ent volunteer movements in the coun
try, which was made as natural as the
real thing" by personal touches, the
camera man announced as sudhenly
as he commenced that the "movie"
was completed.
MISS CHEEK WILL
SPSAK AT VESPERS
Miss Mary Ashby Cheek of the
Woman's Board of Missions of the
Presbyterian Church will apeak at the
Vesper service Tuesday afternoon at
4:80 In Art Hall. ' Miss Cheek Is
member of the Committee on Student
Work of the Prenbyterlan Board and
Is visiting the larger colleges and uni
versities throuout the country in the
Interest of student religious work.
She presents the subject of the
work of both home and foreign mis
sions which is attractive to women
vocational religious work. She Is es
pecially Interested In church secre
tarial work and teaching, both In girls
seminaries and mission schools here
and abroad, but Is also advocating re
ligious openings of all sorts.
Miss Cheek attended the Geneva
Young Womens' Christian Association
Conference last summer and met sev
eral of the Nebraska delegates wno
Bay that she baa a winning personality
and is especially Interesting speaker.
She will be entertained the week oi
her stay at the home of Rev. Dean
R. Leland and will be glad to meet
peinonally any students Interested In
her work. Anyone wishing to' meet
her may do so at Dr. Lelands B2283
or at the First Presbyterian church of
flee, B2137.
-'4
A f
(
ills
HUSXER BASKETBALL COACH
Impressions of a Reporter Writing
A btory on a frozen lypewriter
There are as many kinds of typewrit
ers at the office of the Daily Nebras
kan these days as may be found In
the beat of repair shops.. Of course,
it is admitted that when the thermo
meter is hovering around forty de
grees in the editorial rooms of the
paper, and the working reporters can
easily blow their breath across the
room. It Is difficult to write on a type
writer In good repair, when fingers
are numb and feet are frosen.
But, as it stands, and as conditions
are apt to remain for some time, there
are typewriters of every description
ready to receive the oaths and curses
of the angry manipulators. There Is
the typewriter with the red ribbon,
signifying the most radical Bolshevik
tendencies. Someone forgot In bis
haste, to realize that newspaper copy
mn really be written In black or
blue type', aa romance Is very seldom
tonr.d la the baflUe of a newrpiper
s fa i' r-l f " '
with the best Intentions on the part
of the writer. The carriage sticks.
A reporter has a "scoop" right Iron,
the pbone. He rushes to a waiting
typewriter (they are always waiting,
because no onr has the heart to use
them) and starts that endless flow of
language which will help to fill up the
front page the next morning. In the
midst of a splendid idea the typewri
ter "stlcka." It refuses to move. The
reporter removes the copy from the
machine so rapidly that he tears the
top of the story In three pieces.
A Jar of paste is next visited and
the copy restored to Its before-Uie-ac-cldent
appearance. Another typewriter
Is now tried. Tbe machine selected
this tune Is not only stubborn, but
so doggedly perverse that when a long
line of material has been Quickly writ
ten, the amated writer finds that he
has written every letter of every word
of very sentence in the same spot
An eraser Is borrowed after ten mln-r-!rT!fMi
of to try arocsg the mem-
FIVE CENT8 PER COPY
IIUSSiERS OFFICIALLY OUT OF
SSOUlli VALLEY COiiFERffi
DOROTHY HIPPLE WILL
REPRESENT WORLD
HERALD AT UNI
Dorothy Hippie, 11, of Omaha, has
been appointed staff representative of
the Omaha World Herald at the Uni
versity of Nebraska, according to
word received from Omaha. She will
Assume her new duties today.
During the war, Omaha papers dis
persed with the staff representatives
on the campus. George Grimes,' '18,
was the last representative of the
Herald on the campus before the war.
UNIVERSITY TO
BE KEPT OPEi!
Fuel Committee Roles That Nec
essary Coal Will Be
Supplied
Smell mount of Heat for Class
rooms May Necessitate Stud
ents Wearing Overcoats
in School
The university will remain open ac
cording to the decision made by the
Coal Conservation Committee at a
meeting held . at the Burlington
offices Sunday afternoon. 'The uni
versity will, be furnished with all the
coal needed to run" said Mayor Miller
of the committee Sunday . afternoon,
"and a car will be sent to the State
Farm . Monday." Inquiries made by
the committee developed that other
state universities are remaining open.
Striking mine workers accept the
proposal of President, Wilson to meet
In Joint conference Tuesday to end
the nation-wide strike. With Indica
tions pointing to an early settlement,
the possibility of keeping the univer
sity open until Christmas recess is
rery much Increased. ( Chancellor
AverySaturday- night- said, however,
that If actual suffering existed among
the people, the university would be
closed at once.
The university will practice every
economy possible toward coal conser
vation. Class rooms during the com
ing week will not be heated to the
degree they would If there were plenty
of coal. Keeping fuel consumption to
the minimum this week makes It
necessary for students to wear over
coats In classes. If buildings become
too cold, classes will be dismissed.
Already some of the classes in free
a
hand drawing requiring a certain
amount of warmth, have been sus
pended. Steam has been turned off
at noon In several of the buildings
and faculty members are making
these conditions as little burdensome
M possible to the students. Unto
the situation Is normal again, the
ahortened schedule will be kept in
effect
With one thousand already prepared
to go to the mines, the number of
volunteers are increasing every day.
Dean 8 tout has received replies from
several of his wires which call for
men experienced In certain phases of
mine work. How soon men will leave
la un certain, for present indications
are that an early settlement will nuke
It unnecessary for these men to go to
the mines.
Many Nebraska towns are sending
In frantic pleas for coal, having
waited until their coal supply was en
tirely exhausted before asking assist
ance. Every possible enon is oeing
made to prevent suffering but It will
be some time before there will be re
lief. Seme towns are entirely depend
ent upon wood for heat and commer
cial enterprises are Inactive.
I'm the Guy
I'm the guy who Insists on talking
nonsense and loudly during a claxstea,
music recital.
Those around me shouldn't object
If I wish to talk that's my right
They needn't pay any attention io
me. If they're as Interested to the
program as they profess to be they
won't hear me.
. There's nothing in the rules thai
prohibits me from talking, or from
c 'seussicg something other th&n the
concert Itself.
j, ,. . - p i ret f ' " ' '
Conference Faculty Delegates De
nounce Athletic Relations
With Other Valley Teams
Missouri Valley Officials Frown
tUpon Idea of One Game Each
Year in Omaha .
Nebraska is out of the Missouri Val
ley conference for good. The faculty
delegates of the conference, meeting
at Kansas City Friday and Saturday,
officially denounced all athletic rela
tions between the Cornhuskers and
other Valley Conference teams. Kan
sas is the only Valley member who
will abide by her contract and play
the Huskers next year. Both Ames
and Missouri have announced Ihelr
Intentions to entirely disregard the
agreements between them and Nebras
ka. . Although the conference authori
ties conceded these schools the right
to observe their contracts, both de
creed that their teams would not meet
Nebraska in 1920.
. This action of the conference dele
gates did not come as a surprise to
Nebraska athletic officials, nor is
their any regret in Cornhusker circles
of the withdrawal from the conference
last summer. Nebraskans believe
that the Husker authorities acted en
tirely within their rights when they
asked 'permission to play one game
each year in Omaha, the seat of ttie
University Collego of Medicine.
Sport writers throughout the Val
ley are pointing to the inconsistency
of the conference in refusing to let
the Huskers play a game in Oma
ha and at the same time allowing
Kansas and Missouri to hold their an
nual indoor track meet in Kansait
City. The Des Moines Register
says: "To an outsider it appears In
consistent for the conference to say
that Nebraska cannot play a football
game at Omaha and. then to sanction
the annual indoor meet between Miss
ouri and Kansas universities at Kan
sas City, where It Is. held in Conoen
tion hall " ' .t '."
"If the football game in Omaha Is
undesirable, how about the Missou
i i-Kansas indoor meet in Kansas City?
Where is the dlstlnctionr
Clyde E. McBride, well-known Kan
sas City sport writer and authority,
believes the CornhusWs to be In the
right Commenting on the Conference
scrap, he writes: "There was much
Justice in the request of the Universi
ty of Nebraska to be permitted to play
an annual game in Omaha. The Lin
coln authorities went before the con
ference with sufficient reasons to back
up their request reasons vital to the
University of Nebraska. When per
mission was refused Nebraska with
drew from the conference.
('Nebraska was forced to wlthdiaw.
It would seem that when conditions
arise at any school that are of vital
interest to that school the confei-ence
should recognize the situation and
lend a helping band.
"Nebraska's attitude In the whole
matter has been commendable."
In spite of the sction of the confer
ence members. Nebraska officials are
anticipating ao trouble in arranging a
1J2Q gridiron schedule without the aia
of any Missouri Valley teams. Offers
from the Naval Academy, West Vir
ginia, and Georgetown have already
been received by Nebraska. If any
of these are acepted. the Cornhuskers
will probably clash with the Midship
men at Annapolis. Coach ucnibsier
easily drafted an excellent basketball
schedule, the best Nebraska has ever
had, and not a Valley team is on tne
list Three 1920 footnau pb
now practically assured. They are.
Notre Dame. October 1. K". No
vember 13. and Syracuse on Tuncey
Day. The arrangements with Notre
n.m. pr romoleted Saturday at
Chicago by Provost Lees and Coach
K. K. Rockne, of South Ben "
Catholic school is wefl satisfied witn
hnr ilalon with Nebraska in Um.
past and is anxious to remain on
friendly terms with the husk, in
complete schedule wffl be sjuuxncea
in the near future.
Unsigned Article
., .v- ho wrote the wa
it IUB yvsiw .
skied article on tbe coal situation to
resard to the university mJ wJJ
, ."Mto the Bailor -
win make known his feen--le
wU be publlsted. o
; vnt opinions wUl be pun-
. asking tfce wf"'n
i r-tr.er. T"t it
t that i.-.--: r ! !'j