The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 14, 1920, Image 1

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    The Daily Nebraskam
STUDENTS RUSH
TO GET TICKETS
All Seats for University Night
Sold in Three-Quarters of
an Hour.
NO MYSTERIES DIVULGED
A record was se,t today when all the
tickets for University Night were Hold
three-quarters of an hour after the
sale of them was opened to the stu
dont body. There will be a rehearsal
in the Temple Theatre at seven-thirty
this evening for all who take part
University Night The fun-fest will
open at 8:15 Saturday night, April 17.
The quick sale of tickets is ex
plained by the small number avail
able. Twelve hundred, the number
Hold, la the maximum Heating capacity
of the High School Auditorium where
the skits will be given. Last year
when the City Auditorium was used
.seventeen hundred seats were avail
able, hence there was not such a rush
to get tickets, although all were sold
in a few hours.
Tickets were on sale for the faculty
after eight o'clock Tuesday morning.
At eleven, when tho sale opened to
students, the lower hall of Temple
Building was filled with students wait
ing in line. Some, who rushed over
immediately after a ten o'clock class
in the hope of getting a pick of the
seats, found over a hundred ahead of
them.
Every attempt to get so much as a
shadowy glimpse of the happenings
plotted for Saturday night is futile.
Authorities say that the veil of mys- j
tery surrounding University Night will j
burst at eight-fifteen Saturday night. I
but until then it cannot be penetrated.
UM'ObX, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, APKIL 14, 1920.
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GIRLS BEGIN TRACK PRACTICES
New Agricultural Engineering Building, Farm Campus
Events Include Shot Put, Sprinting,
Hurdling and Javelin Throwing.
Spring practices In track work for
girls has started. A poster is now up
on the W. A. A. bulletin board on
FIVE CENTS PER COPY
TRACK OUTLOOK
NOT PROMISING
which girls should sign up for the . Material Spending More Time
The Agricultural Engineering Build
ing, one of the finest or its kind In
the United States, and one of the
latest additions on the Farm campus,
will be dedicated today. Prof. C. R.
Richards, dean of the College of En
gineering at the University of Illinois
and formerly dean of the Nebraska
College of Engineering, will be the
principal speaker of the afternoon.
Other speakers appearing on the
program will be Prof. J. B. Davidson,
formerly a member of 1 he University
of Nebraska faculty; Trof. I,, w.
Chase, formerly head of the Depart
ment of Agricultural Engineering;
Dean O. V. P. Stout, dean of the Col
lege of Engineering; Dean E. A. Bur
nett, of the College of Agriculture;
j C. E. Chowins, superintendent of
; buildings and grounds of the Unlver-
events they wish to try for. The
!
track meet will be held the first or j
second week of May. Each contest-!
ant should sign up for three events
and the class relay team. j
The events in the meet will include
sprinting, hurdling, basketball and
baseball throw, javelin throw, shot
put, pole vault, the high jump and the
Promenading 0 Street than
on Field.
COACH NEEDS SUPPORT
$240,000. The main part of the build-j broad Jump. There is only a short
Ing has a frontage of 180 feet and is time left for getting into training so
all girls should begin to practice im
mediately. Practices are scheduled
for Friday at nine, Tuesday and
Thursday at nine and two, and Thurs
day at three. More practice hours
will be arranged for and the time
posted on the bulletin board. Mary
Stephens is the W. A. A. track sport
leader.
71! feet deep. It is two stories in
height and has a basement under the
entire front portion. The basement is
devoted to testing laboratories, locker
and toilet rooms and storage. The
rear wing, 84x140 feet, houses the
forge shop, farm motor and automo
bile laboratories, ignition and car
buretor laboratory, farm grain hand
ling laboratory, farm lighting labora
tory, farm hydraulics laboratory, and
a lecture room, all extremely well
lighted. The second floor is. devoted
lo offices, class rooms, agricultural
physics laboratories, a drafting room
and a ladies' rest room.
A Leading University Department
Agricultural Engineering is one of
the leading departments in the Uni-
sity; and J. E. Miller, president of the versity or Nebraska. It promotes di
University Board or Regents. The ! rectly the mechanical and engineering
SEARCfWARRAtWIS OUT
FOR'UGGARD SOCIETIES
Cornhusker Desires Twenty-six
Organizations to Contribute
to Year-Book.
The 1920 Cornhusker staff has had
some difficulty in locating oiilcers of
several student organizations to ob
tain writeups of these organizations
for the year-book. It is desired that
these organizations have writeups and
lists of officers in the book.
It Is necessary that if this is done
some officer or member of the follow
ing organizations should bring lists of
officers to the Cornhusker office, U
206, some time today, Wednesday, be
tween one and five p. m.: ,
Delta Sigma Delta.
Xi Pel Phi.
Alpha Chi Sigma.
Alpha Zeta.
Alpha Kappa Pal.
Phi Delta Kappa.
A. I. E. K.
Freshman Commission.
Ag Club.
Stock Judging Team.
Dairy Judging Team.
Home Economics Society.
Farmers' Fair Board.
El Panol Club.
I'hillplno Club.
Catholic Students' Society.
Seniors Girls' Advisory Board.
Komensky Club.
Dellan Society.
t'nlon Society.
Heaver City Club.
Chadron Club.
Norfolk Club.
Wayne Club.
Twins Club.
Student Council.
program will be held in Room 110,
Agricultural Engineering Building, at
2:30 p. m.
Building Opened to Public
Following the exercises the build
ing will be opened for public inspec
tion. All laboratories will be in oper
ation until 6:00 p. m. In the evening
they will open at 7:00, thus permit
ling those who will be unable to at
tend in the afternoon to see the
classes in operation.
Construction of Agricultural En
gineering nullding was started in 1916
and first occupied for war training
side of agriculture. It deals with the
questions of farm improvements, ma-
FRSIIMEII COACil
PLAN'S BALL GAMES
First-Year Diamond Artists Urged
to Turn Out on Cushman Field
for Daily Practices.
All Freshmen interested in Fresh
man baseball are urged to turn out
on the Cushman Motor Works lot at
chinery, sources of power. Irrigation ; 23rd and Y streets for practice every
and drainage, and ..maintenance of j day from three until five o'clock,
roads. Tractors are tested by the De-1 John Riddell is coach of the Fresh-
partment. as required by the Ne
braska Tractor Law and complete
equipment is provided. The results
obtained have drawn the attention of
other schools and many students are
availing themselves of this opportun- j
man squad and he has planned some
first-rate games with other colleges,
city league teams, and the regular
scrimmage innings with the Univer
sity squad.
"Every Freshman who can handle a
sty of preparing themselves for serv
ice in this particular branch of en
gineering. With the equipment which
the Department now has, it will be
work while still incomplete In 1918. ! able to turn out still more skilled men.
It became available for regular class
work in the spring of M19. This
building with its equipment cost about
About 450 men were registered in
short course work during the year or
1919-1920.
DANCING FEATURES
ANNUAL CONTESTS
BANKER WILL TELL WHY
COLLEGE IS NECESSARY
Marjorie Barstow and Irene
Springer Win Prizes in Girls'
Minor Sports Tuesday.
"College Training Tor a Financier"
will be Mr. C. B. Anderson's topic
(Thursday morning, April 15, when he
will speak to College or Business Ad
ministration students in Room 302 at
eleven o'clock. Mr. Anderson Is vice
president or the First Trust Company
and is very prominent in financial
circles in Lincoln and over the state.
The talk is one or a series given
under the auspices of the University
of Nebraska Commercial Club and
will be rollowed April 22 by an ad
dress by Mr. W. B. Selleck on
"Credit."
i An exhibition or aesthetic dancing
i and Indian club swinging made up a
I beautirul and pleasing program pre
sented before a good-sized audience in
the annual girls' minor sports contest
held at the Temple Theater Tuesday
! afternoon. First place In dancing was
I awarded to Marjorie Barstow and in
1 Indian cluo swinging to Irene springer. I One thousand seven hundred stu
Flavia Waters received second place., iPnt8 from India are studying in Eng
in dancing and Rubv Swenson tlilrd. j land.
Second highest honors in Indian club j
swinging went to Joselyn Stone and
third to Ruth DuBois.
Good Technique Displayed
ball should get out his togs, oil up his
old glove, and jaunt out to the park
to show his goods." says Coach Rid
dell. The Athletic Department will
furnish the bats, gloves and balls for
the first year squad but it cannot at
present furnish suits , for the green
outfit. There are a great number of
first-year ball tossers around the cam
tms and they should be out pelting
the horse hide over the diamond. It
is hoped that baseball will be revived
at Nebraska as it was a few years ago
before the local Western League team
took the center of the local diamond
game. If the game is to be put on a
sound basis in the Husker school the
Freshmen must get out and earn due
distinction to fill the shoes left open
by old Varsity men.
The number of men turning out for
track each day is very discouraging
to a coach of the calibre of Henry F.
Schulte. "All It takes to make n
track man is a sturdy pair or legs, a
willingness to work, and a ralr amount
or brain matter," Coach Schulte has
otten stated, but a great number or
men are loafing about the movies and
promenading O street who have these
c;im;incations and, yet are letting the
golden opportunity or earning an N
slip by.
Coach Schulte has earned a name
for hiiuseir which is known through
out the country ror developing green
men who have never seen a pair of
spiked shoes. The greatest hurdler
who ever leaped over a timber paddle
in America was developed by Schuite
lot Missouri. When Simpson first went
out. he was like all other green men
the-laugh of the trained men and the
i worry of the coach. Coach Schulte
j took him in hand and began to make
'a hurdler out of him. Within three
I years Simpson had broken the world's
; record tor leaping the sticks and now
he is the feature of the sport world
and promises to make a name for him
self as a coach at Missouri.
Simpson went out and made an
effort. How is Schulte to make world
beaters out of green material here
when the men are contented with the
records made in the past and are
merely watching the Varsity men as
they work every day? New material
will have to turn over and show signs
or lire ir Coach Schulte is to be satis
fied and if the Husker standard Is to
be maintained.
CHANCELLOR SPEAKS TO
FRESHMEN ON SCIENCES
AG STUDENTS
There will be a mass meeting
of the students of the Agricul
tural College, Thursday evening,
April 15, at 7:30 p. m. in Social
Science Hall, Room 107. Final
plans will be made for the
Farmers' Fair.
M. M. FOGG TO GIVE THREE
LECTURES AT BROKEN BOW
Prof. M. M. Fogg went to Broken
Bow Tuesday evening to represent the
University at the organization meet
ing or the Custer County Alumni As
sociation and to speak at the Broken
Bow High School this morning on
"Going to College." This evening he
give his Illustrated war lecture
entitled, "Over Nebraskans Battle
Fields in France," which he illustrates
by hair a hundred pictures which he
took on a tour of the battle-front as a
Puest of General Pershing.
The opening number of the program
in which the five dancers appeared
together in technique was very well
done. Marjorie Barstow, winner of
first place last year, again received
highest honors. Dressed in a flame
colored costume with a band of pur
ple around her head, she interpreted
with grace and ease a difficult dance.
Bachanale. Flavia Waters appeared
In a clever dance, Surbana. Dressed
as a little Italian boy she seemed to
Old Tin Cans Prove Interesting
Playthings for Fine Arts Students
Tin cans are proving interesting
playthings for the University girls in
Uhe Fine Arts classes under Assistant
Professor Louise E. Mundy, according
to the wonderrully attractive results
obtained with such common place tre-
quenters or the ash heaps. The popu
lar Bohemian floral designs are sug
gested in the odd flower shapes which
live the part of thq saucy boy while the girls paint on flat pieces of tin
she danced. Ruby Swenson appeared
In a Gypsy dance. She made a lively
figure in a brown and red costume
with a tamborlne In her hand. Joyce
Hartzell danced the first solo dance
on the program, Llebesfrold. It was
a pleasing and artistic dance. Ruth
Snyder, in a sort rainbow colored cos
tume, expressed the spirit or spring as
she interpreted the Spring Dance.
All three contestants in the Indian
club swinging showed the assurance
or long practice. They swung the
(Continued on Page Four)
with a fine brush and plenty of
enamel.
To make the flower stems, narrow
strips of tin are cut out and attached
to the receptacle with a Joint, so that
the "flowei" seems to nod with every
gust of wind. The pickle bottle,
painted with geometrical designs, us
ing the same enamel, makes an ex
cellent vase for the ingenious "co-eds."
Attractive deck pieces of all kinds
are also made from tin cans. When
ornamented with a pretty color deBlgn
in bronze, they are decidedly worth
New Wonders of Modern World
Explained at Lecture
Tuesday.
Chancellor Avery spoke to the
Freshman Assembly Tuesday at eleven
o'clock on Physical Sciences. The
Chancellor centered his speech on
illumination, means of communication,
air service and wireless telegraph and
telephone, the part the scientist has
played in feeding the world, and the
development of pure science. This
proved to be one of the most Interest
ing lectures given since they have
been put in as a course of study.
Prof. Roy Cochran has arranged
some very interesting and instructive
lectures and the Freshmen are for
tunate to hav the opportunity to hear
these lectures. Some of the heads of
departments and some of the pro
fessors have been on the program and
there are some very good lectures In
store for Freshmen for the remainder
of the term.
the time or tedious work it required
to rashlon them. Clay has also been
at the disposal or the artists, and
they have moulded useful articles for j
the study and when shaped and dried
these are likewise painted.
The girls are taught how to make
certain designs and modiry them to
suit the material used, whether it be
metal, wood, or something else. Any
one interested in this novel and very
interesting work, may see the process
and then the finished product, in the
rooms adjoining the Art Gallery, in
the Library Building.
The userul art of designing is also
applied to the making and decorating
of hat boxes. Some richly colored
specimens have been completed and
are now on display. These hat boxes
restore a quaint custom of colonial
days, and becoming a possession of
the modern girL tend to make the
duties of hom-vmak.'ng seem more at
tractive to her.
JUDGE WILSON TALKS TO
CLASS IN JOURNALISM
Hon. H. H. Wilson, of Lincoln, who
was rormerly connected with the Law
College, talked to the students of jour
nalism last evening on "The Iaw of
Libel." In his lecture, he dealt with
the difference and similarity or litel
and slander, the difference lying in
that libel is written and slander is
sroken.
Judge Wilson's lecture was pre
sented In an interesting way, and con
tained examples and illustrations with
which he came in contact during his
experience as a lawyer and judge.
Dean Le Rossignol of the College of
Business Administration has an article
in the last Review on "Three Amer
ican Labor Leaders Gompers, Wil
liam B. Wilson and Eugene V. Debs."