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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1921)
he VOli. XX. NO. 140. DEBATE HELD Question of Closed Shop Discussed in Masterful Style by School Representatives. NO DECISION RENDERED Nebraska's Negative Team In Iowa City Meeting Iowa's Affirm ative Team. The I- raska-Iowa debate for 1921 on f V stlon, "Resolved that the policy of the closed shop should re ceive the support of public opinion," was held at the'Temple theater before a pood sized crowd of University stu dents and alumni. Under the agree ment entered Into by the two. schools there was no decision, but the audi ence was given an opportunity to ask questions after the close of the re buttals. Dean Warren A. Seavey, who acted as rhairTiian Introducing the speakers, who is in charge of debating work at Nebraska. The Nebraska cadet band gave a short concert In front of the Temple immediately preceding the de bate. The Innocents, with Clarence Haley as chairman, were in charge ot the business arrangements, while members of Green Goblins were in .hat go of the ushering. That the six debaters were well in formed on their subject and that their arguments found favor with the crowd, wa.s ;:iovn by the audience at the close of the debate when a lively open forum nit.cussion followed. The Iowa team received the majority of the queries, which are asked in order that the teams may receive practice in strengthening their rebuttal speeches. Cecil Strimple, as third speaker for Nebraska, and Fred Paulson, who closed the Iowa discussion seemed to make very favorable impressions on (Continued on Page Four) LAST DAY TO ENTER TENNIS TOURNAMENT Close to Forty Men Registered for Singles Competition Thurs day Night. Today is the last day in which stu dents may register for the University cf Nebraska tennis tournamet's which will be held next week. A tourney will be held for both men and womer The singles competition will come first and in all probability be followed by a doubles tourney. Students are regis tering this week for the singles tourna ment. Thirty-five men of the University had signed Friday evening for the singles competition. The purpose of the tournament is not only to deter mine the best tennis sharks of the school but also to create an added interest in the sport. Students are urged to enter the tourney whether they are skilled at he game or not. The courts have been filled the past few days with students preparing for the tourney and indications are that the competition will be keen through out the games. Among the students showing up well on the courts are Conrado Limjocd, Meliton Lejano, Minor Skallberg, Fred McLeod, Gregg McBrlde. John Ray mond and Don Elliott. Limjoco Is a Philipino who went to I the semi-finals In the Lincoln city tournament in which a field of sixty tennis players contested. His game (Continued on Page Three) GREATER NEBRASKA LUNCHEON. ' Mayor Miller will address the' Greater Nebraska luncheon to day on "Gowns and Towns." OH ' 1000 Register Today for Omaha Trip Daily Nebraskan MISS BURGESS TO SPEAK AT VESPERS Miss Burgess, head of the Uni versity Hospital at Omaha, will speak at Vespers next Tuesday evening at Ellen Smith hall. Ther are only two more Vesper services this year and extra good meetings have been planned. The Freshman Commission are working, under the management of Katherine Wills, on the pageant which they will give at the last meeting of the year. 1921 CORNHUSKER NEARS COMPLETION The 1)21 Cornhusker is rapidly ncaring completion. Pictui-ps, write ups, stories, and jokes are rapidly being sorted cut, and only the cream of those submitted are to appear in Nebraska's year book. Students who have not yet pur chnsed a copy o ft he anual may do so until Saturday. The business staff has until Saturday to tell the printers how many copies are to be made and orders will be accepted at t lie Students' Activities office until Sat urday afternoon. SATURDAY LUST DAY TO Students Must Sign Registration Cards by Tomorrow in Order to Make Trip. To insure a holiday Friday, May 6 students intending to take the trip to Omaha must register with the com mlttee by Saturday, April 30. Stu dents planning to take the trip by auto mobile or going with the crowd and "returning late Sunday night should register with the committee, for it will be necessary for them to notify the Omaha Chamber of Commerce how many are coming to Omaha. The Chamber of Commerce must know the exact number who will make the trip, they must know how many automobiles to get to carry the stu dents about Omaha, they must know how many favors to have at the big $700 dance, they must know how many meals to prepare for, and they must know which trips the students are going to take. ' The work necessary to have the stu dents signed up at Lincoln is very great, for checking must be done, firms in Omaha notified, the railroad told how many students will be on the chartered train to Omaha, and how many of these will return late Friday night. To help the committee, and insure a holiday May 6, it will be necessary for the students to show true Nebraska spirit and make the trip a success. STUDENT ADDRESSES MATHEMATICS CLUB Bernardino Guerrero, an engineer ing student, addressed the members of the Mathematics Club at a meeting held Thursday evening in Social Science 113, on "Drawing of Curves by Linkage." Following the talk was a business meeting of the club at which time amendments to the con stitution concerning the election of officers were passed. May 12 was chosen as the date for a wienier roast for the club, at Antelope park. The members of the club will meet at the Temple at 6:00 o'clock. Mr. Guerrero used a number of models whic hhe made himself by which he drew a number of curves, e said that the modern method of drawing straight lines, by means of a system of links, is the only way to draw a perfectly straight line. The J-stralght edge, or common ruier method is very Inaccurate. At the next meeting Dean Engberg will give an explanation on a few of card tripks. A feature of the evening will be a twenty-minute pro gram by a saxophone band from the University Scrool of Music. LINCOLN. XKUKASKA. Fit 1 DAY, APRIL 2!). 1921. - FRIDAY, APRIL 29. '1220 R Dormitory, May party. Foot and Shoe worries, 7:15-8:00 o. m., Nebraska Hall, Room 110. Alpha Kappa Psl business meeting, 7:00 p. m., Social Science hall. Alpha Tau Omega spring party, Lin coin hetel. Sigma Nu house dance. Dellan Literary Society, 8 p. rr., Faculty hall. Palladlan picnic, Crete. Sigma XI lnitlation,..EIIen.. Smith Hall. Delta Chi spring party, Knights of Columbus Hall. PI Beta Phi banquet, Miller and Paine. Alpha XI Delta spring party, An telope Park. Farm.. House spring party, ..Rose wflde. Greater University luncheon, Grand Hotel. Stuc'er.t Council meeting, 5 p. m., Faculty Hall. Commercial Club banquet, 6:30 p. m., Grand Hotel. Union closed meeting for hike, 7:15, Union Hall. SATURDAY, APRIL 30 Kearney Club picnic, Robbers Cave, members meetings 6 p. m., 10th and O streets. Alpha Zeta and Omicron Nu joint party, Farm House. Pi Beta Phi spring party, Lincoln hotel. Freshmen Hop, Lincoln hotel. Kappa Sigma dance, Antelope Park. Alpha Phi Spring Party, Chamber of Commerce. Kappa Kappa Gamma banquet, Ellen Smith Hall. Alpha Gamma Rho house dance. , Bushnell Guild house dance. Sigma Tau banquet, Lincoln Hotel. Komensky Club program and dance. 8-11:30 p. m.f Faculty Hall. Palladlan picnic, Crete. Catholic Students Club banquet, 6 p. m., Lincoln Hotel. Alpha Sigma Phi spring party, Knights of Columbus Hall. SUNDAY, May 1. Pi Kappa Phi mother's day. Alpha Sigma Phi mother's day. Menorah Society 8 p. m., Faculty hall. Sigma Nu mothc' day. W. S. G. A. OFFICERSJOR NEXT YEAR Mass Meeting Resutls In Selection of Candidates to Make Race Election is Monday. At the mass meeting of the W. S G. A. members last evening Man' Browne!!, president of W. S. G. A. pre siding, the following girls were nomi nated: Betty Ball and Isabelle Mc Monies, juniors; Betty Kennedy and Katherine Matchet, sophomores; Inez Pereogy and Margaret Munger, fresh men. The names or tnese gins win be added to those already nominated by the executive committee Of the W. S. G. A. The complete list of nominees from each class are as follows: . Junior Marjorie Barstow, Ruth Fickes, Ruth Lindsay, Nancy Pennoyer, Betty Scribner, Mary Sheldon, Betty Ball and Isabelle McMonies. Sophomore Muriel Allen, Nell Bates, Mary Bost, Florence Price, Mar garet Stidworthy, Betty Kennedy and Katherine Matchet. Freshmen Harriet Boggess, Mar garet Hager, Ruth Miller, Ruth Taylor, Pauline Welwood, Inez Pereogy and Margaret Munger. Election will be held next Monday from eight until six in the entrance of the Library. Varsity Track. All Varsity candidates who wish to try for the Kansas meet must repcrt to Coach Schulte for tryouts Monday afternoon, May 2, 1921. Regular ordei of events and regular schedule wi!i start at 3:30. W. A. A. WILL FEATURE IN SPECIAL EDITION The Womans' Athletic Association will be featured in the Daily ebraskan May 13. Sue Stille and Marjorie Barstow are in charge of the articles to be printed by the paper and will tell of the work, ideals, and results of the W. A. A. Various girls con nected with the association and in charge of the different phases of work will contribute articles for the special issue of the paper. SEXT WEEK-END TO EE LONG REMEMBERED Omaha Day and Farmers' Fair. Day committees are working with each other to make the two days a success. Omaha day, May 6, and Farmers' Fair, May 7. have in the past been celebrated together and this year a close co-operation exists between the two committees. Thursday, May 5, will be a holiday at the Farm campus so that final preparations for Sat urday may be completed. Friday will alsr be a holiday for the entire University provided 1. 000 sign up to take the trip to Omaha. NEBRASKA BALL NINE Husker Diamond Performers Walloo Kansas Farmers to Tune of Five to Two. NEBRASKA WINS AGAIN Manhattan, Kas., April 27. Nebraska defeated the Kansas Aggies this afternoon 6-5 i an warmly contested game on the Aggie diamond. Nebraska won her first Conference game of the season Wednesday by defeating the Kansas Aggies at Man hattan by a 5 to 2 score. Munger on the mound for the Huskers allowed the Aggies four scattered hits. Both teams worked well and the Huskers were able to score in only one inning when all five of the runs were put across. Poole, the Husker right fielder, hit the ball in the nose for a triple after the bases had been filled. McCrory had previously scored Carr with a single and Munger brought Poole in for the final run with a single. The Aggies scoring came in the eighth inning after Munger had walked Guilfoyle and Huston was hit with a pitched ball, Dickerson tripled to left scoring both men but was left on the. third sack. The error column for tha Husker nine showed a goose egg for the total while the Aggies had only one marker against them. The Huskers played the Aggies the second game of the series yesterday and will play at Lawrence today and tomorrow. Schoeppel will probably work against the Aggies today with Carman on the mound against the Jay hawks in the first game at Lawrence and Munger performing in Saturday's contest. Following is the score by innings: R. H. E. Nebraska .0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 05 10 0 Kan. Ags 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 02 4 1 Batteries Munger and Anderson; Otto and Guilfoyle. Umpire Larry Quigley. THETA SIGMA PHI TO PUBLISH ONE ISSUE p Theta Sigma Phi, womans' profes sional Journalistic fraternity, will be in charge of the upblication of the Daily Nebraskan, Sunday, May 1. Each year, since Theta Sigma Phi was installed at Nebraska, it has, been the custom for them to publish the paper one day during the year. The women of the organization are already at work getting "copy" for this issue, which they promise to be an exceptionally good one. VICTORY PRICE FIVK i;KM III 1 ID Colleges Select Members to Make Race for Positions on Organization. ENTIRE LIST IS SELECTED Final Election Will Be Held on May 12 Mass Meetings Held in All Groups. Members of the different colleges of the University held mass meetings yesterday to nominate students for positions on the Student Council. The final' election will be held May 12. The names proposed in the follow ing colleges are: . Business Administration. Jack Austin J. Wilbur Wolf Agriculture. Roscoe Perrin E. C. Brown Helen Hunt Mildred MacNamee Fine Arts. Margaret Lanham Effie Switzer Law. Carl Adams Ed Gardner Dental. William Byers Teachers. Florence Sherman Wilma Foster Arts and Science. Eugene Philbrick Clarence Dunham Flavel Fung Julia Sheldon Ruth Kadel Pharmacy. Harry Brown Clinton Palmer Engineers Piul Kreuch Julian Applegate (Continued on page two.) HIGH SCHOOL LADS COMPETE IN TRACK Nebraska Conducts First Annual Pentathlon Many Schools Have . 1 Entered Competition. Nebraska's first annual high school pentathlon is being staged this week in state high schools. The affair is being conducted by the athletic de partment of the University of Ne braska under the personal supervision of Track Coach Henry F. Schulte. Contestants will participate at their own high schools and records will be kept and sent in to Coach Schulte. A schedule of crediting the athletes with points has been drawn up and awards will be made on the basis of the records sent in. All records must be made between April 23 and May 1, inclusive. After the records have been compared and checked over by the athletic depart ment, announcement of the 8cores will be made on May 7. Medals will be awarded to the ten highest athletes. One thousand points will be awarded to any athlete equalling the state high school record in any event. For bet tering records, points will be added according to a scale. Points will be awarded for marks under the state Tecord, according to a set scale. Con testants must compete in one event in each of the groups Jumps, weights and runs. For the other two events, he may select from' the remaining events. CORN HUSKERS. A few copies of the Cornhusk er are left and may be .sub scribed for at the Student Activ ities office. This week is the latt opportunity to secure the' 1921 annual. IT