"HE Nebraskan xoh. xxi. NO. 9. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1921. PR ICE FIVE CENTS Daily HUSKERS TAKE ON COYOTES SATURDAY Nebraska-Wesle'ynn Grid Battle First on Program of Scarlet and Cream. HARD SCHEDULE AHEAD Traditional Jayhawk Battle Made Home-Comlng Day For Old Grads. The curtain will be lifted on the IflL'l University of Nebraska football schedule Saturday afternoon when the Huskers trot out on the field to meet t'.io Nebraska Wesleyan Coyotes in the fi.-st game of the season. The Huskers this year are facing a grid program that promises to put (Much Dawson's warriors to a gruel ling test. In the Methodists, Nebraska will bo meeting one of the leading teams in the Nebraska state confer ence. The Methodists have a husky bunch of veterans with a heavy line and a fast backfield. After two weeks of practice and rounding the team into condition, the Haskell Indians will arrive on the tiene. The Redskins have always pre sented a strong team in the field aud this year will prove no exception. Has 1:11 rates as one of the strongest In dian schools in the United States. beginning October 22, the Scarlet and Cream must face three of the great teams in American football Notre Dame, University of Oklahoma and Pitt. Two of these contests will be played on foreign fields. The Irish will be met at South Bend. Pitt U. will be an opponent on an eastern trip. The Sooners will make their ap pearance on Nebraska field. Benny Owen's Oklahoma team grabbed off first honors in the Missouri' Valley circles last fall and are planning to duplicate the stunt this season. After the Pitt contests the Jayhawk ers will pack up their duds and pay the Huskers a visit. Last year the two teams battled to a tie. The Nebraska Kansas game is one of the traditional ( lassies and should t)e a hummer from whistle to whistle. The last Junket away from home will be with Iowa State at Ames. The Iowa State aggregation is not to be over looked. Two years ago the Iowa lads Mine to Lincoln and defeated the Hus kers, 3 to 0. Last year the Ames crew gave Iowa U. a good scrap. The final game of the season will be an interesting battle. The Colo rado Aggies, who last year held Ne braska, 7 to 0, will come to Lincoln for another encounter. The Mountain Far mers are the pick of the Mountain grid circles and will give Nebraska a warm scrap. DEAN SEAVY GIVES FROSH LAWS ADVICE Emphasize Importance of First Start Urge Students to Support all Activities Dean Seavey's address of welcome and advice to the freshm hi lasvs oc cupied the first general lectur: perlou 1 f the prestnt school year l.i i.ie Co! 1' tre of Law, His worc'p were cno: en ih ;he Idea of impressing upuu stu vond aBBBBB dent the importance of systematic and diligent study. Before proceeding be yond a brief introduction, the De.n announced his theme, and excuse-! :ny Fecond or third year man who de sired ot leave; this suggestiem was met with a unanimous immobility on 'he part of the btudents who ha I be fore, had the plcasuro of listening to him. The law college described was as dif ferent from general academic schools because no one was required to study b w and only do so, becau.e ol an interest In that particular field; also because, while studying law, ti t; stu dent is dealing with fates, rule, and reasons for rules that will be funda mental, and of the utmost import ance to him in after life, hathe r than landing merely to his cultu.al pol ish. Dean Scavey, "The purpose of the law college is to mako real lawyers. (Continued on Page Six.) Buh P. A. TO HOLD OPEN MEETING MONDAY On Monday, October 3rd, ll.o Nebr aska branch of the American Ihufm r,l leu! Association will hoid Us monthly meeting in the library of the college of pharmacy at 8:00 p. m. Dr. Schneider ot the college of pharmacy Is secretary and Mr. A. B. Pease ot Falrbury is president of the ....ebraska chapter. Dean Lyman will make a re port of the meetings of the American Association and the American Confer ence of Pharmaceutic Faculties which he attended recently Nat ew Orleans. The entire evening's program will be announced later. Every one i s invited. MANAGING EDITOR Excessive Work Causes Gregg Mc Bride to Ask Release From Daily Nebraskan. Gregg McBride, '23, has resigned his position as managing editor of the Daily Nebraskan. His resignation was formally filed with the Student publi cations board Friday afternoon and will take effect at once. McBride is employed on the Lincoln Daily Star and is also Lincoln correspondent for the Omaha World-Herald and sev eral Des Moines and Chicago papers. It was because of this excessive work that he was forced to resign. McBride is a junior in the College of Law. He graduated from Wesleyan in 1919 and since entering Nebraska has been prominent in student activi ties. He is connected with the Awg wan and Cornhusker staffs and is do ing publicity work for the athletic de partment. He is a member of Silver Lynx. Sigma Delta Chi and Phi Delta Phi fraternities. Orvin B. Caston, '23, news editor, will act as managing editor until the Publications board chooses a success or to McBride. Gaston is editor of the 1921 "N" book and student directory and has ben on the Nebraskan staff for the past two years. REGISTRAR RELEASES ENROLLMENT TOTALS Figures Given Out Show Ttotal Of 3,925 Students Signed Up By Friday Night. A total of 3,674 students had enroll ed in the University up to Friday night, according to figures given out by the Registrar yesterday. With 251 addi tional at the College of Med'cine in Omaha, the grand total is boosted to 3,925. The checking up of the lists !n the Registrar's office was completed Fri day afternoon and a list made of the number of freshmen and upper class men by colleges. A total of 1,445 freshmen enrolled of which number 807 are men and 558 women. Upper classmen enrolling total 2,058. Of these 1,168 are women and S90 men. In. the College of Medicine 96 fresh men registered and 155 upper class men, making a total of 251. AND TO THINK THAT H'S TRUE OF Some years ago a male student braved the storm and wore a wrist watch. He got away with that. Next, a year or two ago, a man appeared on the campus wearing ear-rings. He was hardly classes as eliminate on that account. But listen Yesterday a fastidiously dressed male came jauntily down the steps of U hall, and sauntered over to one of the benches near. He seated himself, gently crossed his knees, and pulled up his trousers leg just a trifle. That was the start of the show. The riscerning ones noticed that he had on a apir of extra long hose, and tiFten. they were rolled down to four inches below the knees, with a pretty blue garter. Dope out the rest yourself. POSITION crib fi TO ARRIVE First Issue of Nebraska's Funny Mag azine Will Be Dedicated To The Freshman. CAMPAIGN STARTS TUESDAY Prizes Will Be Awarded To High Re cord Holders On Each Doy Of Campaign. The freshman number of Awgwan will appear Monday October 3 on the campus of the University filled with brief bits of wit and humor contribut ed by members of the student body. The great feature of the 1921-22 vol ume is the slash in the price of the nibllcatioit. Awgwan, rating with the Harvard Lampoon, Yale Hecord, Grin nell Malteaser, Bowdoln Bear Skin, and a host of other publications which sell at $.00 or more per year, has taken the initiative in helping stu dents to cut down college expenses. Kvery student should take the college -jomic. To show that the publication has a standing far beyond the campus of the University example after example might be cited. However, during the past week the editor has received a letter from each coast to say nothing of the many other letters from over the entire country, askine for Awgwan. A letter from Los Angeles says "Hur ry up with Awgwan, I want it and want it bad." Another from New York says "fiave seen one issue of last year's publication. Put me down for a year's subscription." Letters from over the entire coun try follow the same trend, all bubbling with enthusiasm for Awgwan. The na tional standing of the publication should rate a splendid circulation on the campus where it was born and reared. Awgwan has always had a splendid circulation in the city and this year at the cut price it should double its popularity with the stud ent body, especially the freshman for whom this opening issue is primarily intended. Subscribe This Week. A subscription campaign will be pushed this week just in advance of Old Man Awgwan's initial appearance. Sub-debs and co-eds will rush the cam paign which opens Tuesday at S a. m. and closes at 5 p. m. Friday. Each day will receive the prize for that day Four splendid "N" blankets, you've seen them, those beautiful red blank (Continued on Page Six.) BASKET SCHEDULE fi Valley Conference Athletic Directors Meet Monday to Lix Dates For Games. Athletic directors representing the nine universities and colleges holding membership in the Missouri Valley conference will assemble Monday morning, Sept. 2G. at the Baltimore hotel, Kansas City, to draft confer ence basketball schedules for the com- iik season in the indoor winter sport. The call for the meeting was issued to day by Pe'e Welch of Drake un veralty Pes Moines, and Fred W. Lueftrmg, thletil director at Nebraska, president and secretary, respectively of the di re tors' association. Missouri aVlley basketball schedules in the past years have always been drafted in haphazard fashion a sys tem which often failed to provide for games between the leading teams in the Valley circle. Missouri and Ne braska, for instance, did not compete n basketball last winter because of the inability of the basket coaches to cot together on satisfactory dates. The situation was discussed last online at the annual conference meet ing and the directors of athletics de cided to inaugurate a new deal in schedule making, calling a special meeting this fall for that purpose. The Monday session in Kansas City, it is resumed, will take steps to enforce an even exchange of games by all con ference schools. Under the proposed plan, it is probable that Nebraska w 1! compete with practically every other conference school. WW 0NC1ICILITE DRAFTED 10 DAY ARE GIVEN E Coach Switches Men About Giving Every Candidate an Even Chanci, To ShowWhat He Can Do. PUCELlK DONS MOLESKIN Dawson's Clan To Have an Iron Line To Halt Methodist Onslaught Saturday. A stiff scrimmage practice Friday afternoon and a light workout yester- iay morning brought the week's work to a close for Coach Dawson's foot ball warriors. Three complete teams went through a grind Friday that gave every man a chance to demonstrate Tils ability at handling the pigskin. Coach Dawson mixed up the line-ups somewhat giving each eleven an equal chance. Preston, Noble, DeWitz, and Hartman on one eleven showed up well and should be valuable Varsity material. Hartman was the outstand ing figure by his line-up plunging and general work in the bacgfield. Hart man is a former Lincoln high school man. Coach Dawson seemer very much pleased by his performance. Most of the scrimmage was devoted to line-plunging with an occasional forward pass. Coach Dawson plans to have the Huskers perfect an aggres sive machine of the line plunging type before giving the men many new for mations. The Husker mentor expects to use very few trick plays and open work against the Nebraska Wesleyan aggregation next Saturday when the opening curtain will be raised on the 1921 football season. Saturday's workout was devoted to scrimmage, which lasted for an hour. The entire squad worked at one time or another during the morning. Nixon, who was a member of the 1919 fresh men eleven and last year's Varsity siuad showed a great deal of class in his work at tackle. Nixon was in jured last year early in the season and was not out during the greater part of the year. New Men in Linfeup. The Xebraska-Wesleyan contest will see a number of new faces in the Husker line-up. Pucelik, who held down the guard and tackle positions on the left side of the line for the last two years, reported for work Fri day afternoon and was a welcome ad dition to the Husker squad. Coach Dawson is not using any of the squad ias a regular Varsity eleven yet but is giving all of the men a chance to demonstrate what they can do. Cap ta n Swanson will probably be at his I'd position on the left wing with Scherer working at right end. The ma terial out for the tackle, guard and center positions is of excellent calibre and Coach Dawson will have some trouble in picking first string men. L BE FOUND FOB ALL Uni Secretary Advises That Em ployment Situation is Improving. "I want every man who wants work and has not y t found some thing to register with me in the next few days," said Sv.-cri.tary of Em ployment Eugene Ebers,;Ie y.-;ton!;.y. This includes all men who have al ready register d as several titans-, s hi'.vu been mad-: in the department and the employment service is now under the direction of the U. o. Ex tension Service. All of the cards and data formerly held by the Lions Club have be en tinned over to Mr. Ebe-r.soh; and he i:s ery anxious to get a line on all men who a,e desirous cf securing verk. He also wants a copy of each man's class schedule. There wil no doubt be plenty of work for all men in the near future, according to Mr. Ebersole. He says that no one should leave school now because of lack of work as the em ployment situation will undoubtedly be relieved soon. The office of the secretary r.f the Employment in located on the fii.-'t floor of the Temple building and Mr. j Ebeisole can be found there .it all times. S 1 W Awg ANNOUNCEMENT OF STAFF APPOINTMENTS D8LAYED Owing to the resignation of dregs McBride, managing editor of the Daily Nebraskan, the anuomcemcut of the eportorial staff of this publication ior 'his semester will he withheld al the present time. i CHANCELLOR ISSUES T Student Council to Supervise Fall Elec tion Battle Faculty Committee Appointed. The coining class elections, slated .'cr Tuesday, October 4, will be under he control and supervision of the Stu lent Council. A faculty committee :onsit'ting of ProUssor 11. K. Cochran, Mi.-.s Florence McC!.:hey, Dean Eng er. Profess ir E. W. I.an'z and Pro "es;or It. D. Scott has b:'on appointed by Chancellor Avery to co-operate .vith the council in holding the elec tion. Ths following statement has been ssucd by the chancellor: Election Notice. To all students of the University of Nebraska : Inasmuch as by vote of the students the Student Council has been author ized to take charge of student elec tions, I hereby name the following faculty committee to co-operate with the Student Council in putting this action into effect: Professor Roy E Cochran, chairman; the Registrar, Executive Dean, Professors E. W. Lantz, and R. D. Scott. The expense :t the election has already been cared or by the incidental fee that the stu Icnts paid on registration. The committee is directed to make this a 3 nearly as possible, typical of a legal public election with the usual safeguards for eligibility of voters, ac curate counting, etc. as are provided "or state and local elections. It is ;lesired to make this election a pre liminary exercise in good citizenship. The faculty committee will exercise no control over the election other than to assist the Council in procuring ade quate facilities, accurately check in? he expenses and guaranteeing to the indents. University officials and Re ?pnts that fair play has prevailed in 11 particulars. This election is now nit into the hands of the students in he hope that they will take pride in inducting a model election and utter ly banish all thoughts of using un scrupulous methods to elect their fav orite candidates. S. AVERY, Chancellor. UNIVERSITY CADET BAND HOLDS FIRST REHEARSAL Many Old Members Reported Again "This Year Tryouts Discover Good Material. The University Cadet band met Thursday evening in the armory for the first rehearsal ot the year. Many of the older members, together with an unusually large number of fresh- nun, attended. The band, this year, which numbers close to 85, is much larger than the bands of previous years. It is hoped that this year"s group of musicians will surpass in quality as well as In quantity those of other years. Mr. Mathews, the drum master, stated that the music sounded better to him than that of some of the other bands after several rehears als. Mr. Mathews gave a short talk on how tiie band came to be what it is today and the duties ot the freshmen members. The older members or upper T-issinen have first choice of chairs and the freshmen take what Is left. The chairs are to be arranged in place by the freshmen at every rehearsal. The band today, which occupies the place it does in our college life, has grown from something very small. In conformity with the custom of prev ious years, it will be called upon at various times to assist at rallys. basket-ball and foot-ball games, and oth er school activities. w ELECTION TUNING UPFOR RAGE Presidents or the Four Classes to be Selected by Student Ballot Tuesday, cf Next Week EXPECT KEUN RIVALRY Ml Filings Mutt be Mads c Student Activities Office by F.Uy Aiiiiouneein-m. el. si e e tions have already appeared in the U.iily N bi ;.sl-an ami till' . c-.t in tiie poli tical situation is ntpi-ily ri. i;r en t:.o campus. RuiihiN (f Viir.ai.i- slates and combinations are now afloat and -.n liv,.!.'y i antic ip.ite '. 1' ;' ail ot the ollices. The only o!li. e i , l,e lill ! .:. lie ei mi:ig eveeth it a e the p.i.-ld m-ies of the four cl.is.-es Whir: n : t.nnli .1 ,tes have l.ee.i definii:'.c"y an nounci d a; y t. s- vera! 1; i: "- a;e .etching prominent mention among Lhe political elit and it is expected that iiutn r. us li; ts will be l-'-ss ,1 in.o tid ing early thi.i week. The announcement', i. se. d by the it. gh-trar s t I'onii that all liliiiRS for el.ss pi e: id. ntial el ct: .ns must be made a.' tie- Stti.teiu Activities office in the basement of A '.mini tra tion Hall by 3 p. m. Friday, Septem ber 30. The election wil b held the following Tur.,.ii-y. October A. Students a., awaiting whit i:u rest any political e'eve lopun nt . in the Fieshman class. It is understood i)iat (-iversil candidate fv-r iead'or of the first-class group an; now in the process of grooming and will s-.. n be announced. The Daily Nebrisk;::i wi'l ke- e its readers in close touch with ; 11 p rases cf the situation. ALUMNI ELECT Acs:ciation Officers Select Omaha Man fo.- Pc.ition a: Friday Meeting Haiohl S. Hoitz, '17, c f Omiiini, was e' ete.l smci tary of the Univeisity of Xrbii.. ka i.lumni associati .n at a meeting of the alumni officers Frl ay ;.t'i i noon. This position was fo. m .ly held by Mrs. Annis Chaiken ooif nson, who resigned during the .vutumer. The following t.flicer weie pr- sent at th-- meeting: President Robert G. Simmons, cf SeoUsoIuff; Mr. Iliigc-r, of Omaha .u;d M.;-. H. R. Ank ny, of Linhetn. Chancel!.;; Avery wa.i also pr tent. Mr. Hultz will be in Linreln to morrow to assume his m w duties. An office for the alumni association is maintained in the basement of the Ad ministration building. Itside keep ing the records of .i rlumijl, the secretary d ' t s tie Alumni J urnal, a quarterly m. p izine v-hieh h, sent t N. braska liiadnates all ov-1 the w rl ' Graduate; cf 1917 Mr. Holtz .; a 1017 gra luite of the college cf npinrcring with the dejr.ie of Bachelor of Sehnce ir. me chanical t ngiii' enng. He is recorded as a member ot' Acacia, Sigma Tau (h;-nor..ry n;nin e.ing f.at.r.ity). Innocents, A. A. M. E. Engineering Society, P.r.-hing Ri.Tes, Cadet Offl c ts association, Y. M. C A. cabinet, captiiin Company (', blue print stafl, junior class president, Math, club, tu all of which h was active. Upon graduation he was given the Pershing ineda'. Hv; went to tii firsr officers' train ing camp taFort Snelling from which lie was ti ansi'erred to aviation. He was among the first men to be sent overseas and was stationed on the Kalian front where he was in prtive service in the First combat division Day and nicht air raids wore made .'gain:;;, the All. trian front and upon the naval base cf Pola. He received (Continued on Page Six.) Applications for Managing Editor of the Daily Nebraskan will be accepted at the Student Activities Offic e up until 5 p. m. Monday. a eh