The Daily Nebraskan VOL XXI. NO. 122 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, APRIL G, 1922. riJK'K FIVE CENTS -S. D. DEB 17 rmin NEBR. ATE TOM GHT, TEIF TOO 1 IIluO. R UNCOLN FANS GRAB SHOW TICKETS Nine "Peppy" Acts of Drama, Music and Comedy to Feature First Annual Vaudeville. ALL TALENT FROM UNIVERSITY STUDENTS Hints to the Heavy," "Comme ci, Comme-ca," "The Crystal Gazer" Some of High Spots For the first time since the organ ization of the University, Lincoln peo ple will have a chance to see an en tire show put on from talent secured frcfi the ranks of the students when the Variety show is presented at the Orpheum theatre, Friday evening. Starting at S:20, the show will run through nine "peppy" acts of drama, music and comedy. Tickets for the Variety shw have been in big demand by Lincoln fans and university students ever since they went on sale Monday morning and prospects Wednesday evening were that the entire house would be rrabbed before the doors open for :he program at S:20 Friday evening. A one-aight performance seems to be far from being enough to accomoda'e tie ( !J)arid for tickets. L'vfry o:ie of the nine acts making n; tl,e Friday night program is of character rarely seen in amateur pr duttions. Several of the actors hare bad chautauqua experience and the leadinz man in "Hints for the Heavy" is a former performer 1th the Ring lie; Brothers circus. All Feature Acts All of the acts are high class feat tarts of music, comedy, drama or un ssuiil dance numbers. Some of the best talent in the University has been fecured to play in the show and a pro para never excelled in Lincoln 'ma tear theatrical performances is looked for. Leading acts are "Hints to the Heavy," "Comme-ci, Comme-ca," enter-airier.-. "The Crystal Gazer," "The Mystic aza." "The Violin Girls" and special dance and musical number ly two pretty co-eds.' A particular ffcatu:e of the "Comme-ci. Comme-oa" eturtainers is the fact that they wilJ lay emphasis on songs of Wilbur ("L -lioweth, long a favorite among Lin coln fans. "Hints for the Heavy" 5s a scream. Gli-hB Preston, 1521 varsity football qtiinerback and formerly a performer the Ringling Brothers circus, J'lays one of the leading roles and is Wy assisted by Floyd Reed, wrestl ing caoiain. and Frank Adkins, a well known athlete of the university. "The Crystal Gazer and "The Mys :Jc Zoza' are both acts of a rcysteno'i? latere. The unknown man pliyin;; lbi lead with Floyd Johnson in "The Cryttal Gazer" has been the talk of tie Caznuptu since his picture ap pearAij in the Daily Nebraskan before t spring vacation. The other act of mystery is expected to show scenes .cr-.tj n j p 1 i L i xj gr the impossible in pe culiar lines. "The Violin Girls" are well-known fctisicians and have been leading feat ures on the White-Meyers Chautauqua Circuit. The dance numbers to be presented fc the Phyllis Untbank, Mildred John ton. John Costello and "Polly" Butler ratlu up well with any artistic Or tifnm performance. The actors iave j1 become popular with Lincoln the itre roers and will be an Important 'eature of the show. lietldn- these acts tbere are three otU-rs by Zylophone artists, the uni versity band and a quartet of picked fcin from the unirersit FRID A YnTTUTTp' APRIL iiilA-1 ANSEL CLAYBURN WILL HAVE CHARGE OF WORK AT PERU STATE COLLEGE Mr. Ansel Clayburn, a former gradu ate student in Geography, and assist ant in the teachers College, has been elected to take charge of the Geogra phy work and summer session at the Peru State Teachers College. TRACK MEN WORK HARD FOR ALL-COLLEGE MEET Team Captains Lining Men Up For Various Events Meet Comes April 15 The inter-college track meet, which is to be held a week from Saturday, April 15, is arousing an unusual amount of interest and rivalry among the tracksters and all signs point to ward a keenly-contested struggle on the cinder paths on the fifteenth. The captains of the various college teams are busy rounding up their men and the men have begun to report in large numbers. The Bizad team, under the leader ship o" Coats, promises to present a strong lineup. Fifteen pen-pushers have already reported. Peterson, Bi .ad distance runner, is expected to re among the winners in the half mile dash and mile run. The Bizads are somewhate handicapped because of the large amber of their men who are on the varsity team. Riddlesbarger, captain of the Arts and Science squad, declares that th academy cinder path artists will cop the honors. Douglas Meyers, Blood- irnnA fVoMma and a nnmhpr nf r- ., . . . . - - - other stellar athletes are on the Arts team, and are expected to make a good showing. Meyers will run the hurdles and heave the shot. Cre celius will run the higa and low hur- jjts. tfjoodgood win taKe part in ine sprints- WAIL CONFERENCE MEETS AT BOULDER Nebraska to Send Four Dele gates Conference Will Con vene For Two Days The Central Sectional Conference o the Athletic Conference of American College Women to which Nebraska will send four delegates will be held at the University of Colorado ct Boul der April 14th and 15th. The Nebraska delegates will be. Davida Van Gilder, Mannfe Roberts, Ruth Fickes, Lois PederEen, and Miss Clark of the Physical Education de partment. Nebraska will fill the secretaryship, which is one of the most important ol fiees. The program: Friday, April 14 10:00-12:00 Registration, Senate Room, Macky And. 12:30 Luncheon. Women's Build ing. 2:30 Delegates' meeting. 3:30 Open meeting; announce ments; welcome. Dean S. Antoinette Bfgelow; Paper. "Closer National Or ganization," delegate from Indiana; discussion. C:fe0 Fry at Chautauqua. 7:30 Get together. Varsity Hall Saturday April 15 8:30 Delegates' meeting; nnofficii.1 delegates' rcrand-tatle. 10:00 Open meeting. Paper, "Fi nances in W. A- A-." delegate from Ne braska: Paper, "Introduction of Ath letic Associations into High Schools," delegate from Colorado. 11:45 Official delegate picture. 12:00 Lunch-. 1:00 Delegate meeting; unofficial (Continued on page 4.) NINE BIG ACTS ORPHEUM THEATRE Tickets at Student Activities Office and The Orpheum Theater WRESTLING MEET FLAMED All Men Who Have Not Won Letters Eligible to Compete For Honors MEET TO BE HELD WEDNESDAY APRIL 12 Handicap Meet to Follow Which All Wrestlers May Enter in An open wrestling meet, in which any Husker except those who have won leters in wrestling may compete, will be held next Wednesday, April 12, Dr. Clapp announced yesterday. A large number of mat men have sig nified their intention of entering the meet, and a closely-contested meet is expected. Dr. Clapp and coach Tro endley are in charge of the meet. Numeral sweaters will be awarded to the winners in this meet. Following the open meet, a handicap contest will be held in which all wrestders may compete. The handi caps will be determined in such a manner that every mat artist enter ing the meet will have an equal op portunity of winning the honors. These two meets are expected to help keep up the interest in the mat game. The varsity wrestling squad will also work thruout the spring under the disection of Coach Troend ley, and any man who is expecting to go out for the team next year is invited to join the squad and get the benefit of the workouts. Nebraska captured one first place and one third place in the champion ship western inter-collegiate wrest ing meet heln at Wisconsin March 17 and IS. Troutman won first honors in the 175-poundclass, while Thomas copped third honors in the 145-pounl division. The following is the com (Continued On Page Four.) K. U. Says " Valley In bold black type and inserted in a boxed attractive looking lead at the head of a story on the K. C. A. C. indoor track meet, which Kansas University won by a scant five-point margin over Nebraska, the University of Kansas News Letter conies out with the statement "We Own the Valley." tl then lists a group of two cham pionships which the K. U.'s rold at the present time. It fails o mention the fact that Nebraska cleaned up on them in the foo'.ba'l battle last November although it does make note of the schools which Kansas defeated in the 1S21 football season. It also fails to make any mention of cross country' or wrestling championships which Iowa State happens to hold at the present time. In the box under the bold, bad assertion of the K. U. N-ws Letter is listed the following: Track, indoor champions, 1922. Basketball, tied for the title 1922. Football, defeated Missouri, Ames and Aggies, 1921. Baseball, champions 1921. On this record of two championships, a tie for the basketball title and a record no better than Missouri in the football race and considerably poorer than the Cornhusker record for the season, the News Letter asserts that the Universit yof Kansas has it all over ths other schools in the valley. Just why the statement should be made is puzzling. Kansas has a record no better than that of Ames which holds two championships taken more recently than the Kansas ones and which had a football record which compared fayorably with Kansas. Nebraska is right fully recognized as having had one of the finest football teams in the entire country in the 1921 season, one which carried off the Valley honors at 1000 par. Missouri had a basketball team which was nigh unbeatable and which would stand a big show of carrying off the honors were Kansas and Missouri to meet And the new baseball seas on which will in all probability see a new champion school has al ready started. Yet in face of all of these facts, Kansas asserts "We Own the Valley." No lengthy story accompanies the article. The little one column, two inch deep box, with the black head line in quotations, is the only reference made to the assertion. The story following the box tells only of the K. C. A. C. track meet and makes no reference to the as sertion in the box. The University of Kansas does not "Own the Valley" and there are plenty of schools in the Missouri Valley Con ference which stand prepared to give the K. U. athletes a great tumb ling down. VAIREETY GRACE COPPOGK E Every Girl in University Given Opportunity to Support Drive Goal is $1500 LUNCHEONS SERVED TODAY AND TOMORROW FOR FUND Drive Will Close Friday After noon Team Captains to Meet Both Days. The drive which started yesterday for funds for the support cf a Y. W. C. A. Secretary in China is well un derway. The goal is $1,500 and it is to be given to Miss Maude Klatte the secretary who has taken over the work of Miss Grace Coppock. This amount to be raised represents Miss Klatte's salary for the year and it is very necessary that this amount be given. Every girl in the iinlversity will have an opportunity to support this campaign and have a real part in car i;ng on the Y. W. C. A. work in Chi iu. The canvassing will be comple ed Friday afternoon. Luncheons are served Thursday and Friday noon at Ellen Smith Hall to tne captains and team members. Short talks will be given and every canvasser should be present to receive all ine help pos sible in the work of soliciting support from the students. The greatest obstacle to Christian ity in China and progress in educa tional and social lines is the insist ence that duly and obedience to older people is the first and greatest virtue- Many men and women of China who are really Christians at heart are prevented from taking any public stand by the parents or grand par ents who say that the? cannot wor ship at their graves, the greatest ca Iamiiy conceivable to them. The au thority of the old peop!e over all the (Continued on page 4.) We Own The 9 V STARTED PROF. BENGSTON WILIL . SPEAK AT ALPHA ZETA BANQUET THIS EVENING Professor Bengston of the Univers ity will speak at the banquet and open meeting of the Alpha Zeta Agri ture Fraternity at the School of Ag-i-culture Thursday evening. ( His .-ub-ject will be "Agricultural PracMces in Central America." 10 NEW ADDED TO SONG LIST Total of Fourteen Greek Letter Organization Will Have Songs in New Song Book With the addition Wednesday or" songs from the Phi Kappa Psi and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon, a total of fourteen fraternities will be repie sented in the second edition of the Nebraska song book which will be published soon by the Alumni Asso ciation. A list of twelve fraternities winch had submitted songs for pub lication was published in the Wednes day Nebraskan. Each of the two songs which were submitted Wednes day will cover one page in the book. The fourteen fraternity semes to be published in the new book will use up twenty-three page In the new book. With the substitution ot" more Nebraska songs and those from other lrrge universities in place of some songs worthless in a university song book, the second edition of the Ne braska Song Book promises to be excellent The campaign for subscriptions which is to be conducted by girls on the campus wil start Monday and last until Friday evenins. A prize of a $40 seal cowhide traveling bag is to be awarded to the individual girl out side a sorority who turns in the larg est number of subscriptions and the choice of a $o vacuum sweeper or Sheffield Tea Service will go to the scrority turning in the most subscrip tions. The sorority contest is to bc run on a pereentaze basis according to the number of girls they have en rolled in school. BACHELOR DAIS WILL BE FEATURE OF SHOW Musical Revue is Added to Al ready Long List of Attrac tive Numbers. "Bachelor Days," .-. short, snsppy musieal revue directed by Irrna Mo Gowan and Dorothy Sprague has be-n added as an extra feature to the al ready long list of acts to be presented at the University Variety Show IV day evening at the Orpheum Theatre. The act is an exceptionally "peppy" number filled with music and a lot of pretty girls. The cast of ' Bachelor Days" is as follows: Paul, Ward Ray. Jack, A'fred Parks. Garden Girl, Ethel Wild. Athletic Girl, Loi3 Butler. Greenwich Village Girl, Isabel Per- salL Cabaret Girl, Ruth North, Southern Girl, Madge Morrison. Gingham Girl, Marcia Follmer Bride, Dorothy Sprague. Tickets for the Variety Shew are on sale at the Orpheum box office. In the first two days of sale the tickets have been going fast and prospects point to a full house at the Friday evening performance. Yesterday's game between the Huskers and the University of Mis souri a. Columbia was postponed on account of rain. A doubleheader will probably be played this afternoon if the weather permits. HUSKER-COYOTE DEBATE GOMES IHIS EVENING Governor McKelvie to Preside at Inter-Ccllegiate Contest on Subject of Importance CORNHUSKER BAND TO GIVE CONCERT FIRST Open-fcrum Discussion to Follow Formal Debate With Ques tions From Audience Go to the Nebraska-South D; kota debate this evening if you want to hear what intercollegiate debating is like after the picked representa tives have studied a question for weeks intensively, and if you want to get more boiled-down information, within two hours, than you could get through miscellaneous reading in weeks, on a big troublesome interna tional question that a college man or woman ought to be informed on the question of whetehr the United tSates should cancel the 11,000,000,000 which it advanced to the Allies during the World War. Governor McKelvie will preside t this annual inter-state contest in thinking and in platform expression of thinking. An open-forum discussion (which lively innovation last year ran far over an hourj will follow the formal debate rapid-fire questions to team members from the audience. Sinoe Nebraska's affirmative case for can cellation is not the popular side, the Cornhusker representatives are likely to have plenty to do in this give-and-take meeting of emergencies. Tlie Cadet Band will play before the debate, which opens at S o'clock. A dozen or more professors yester day urged their classes to attend. The members of English 10 (Argu mentative Composi-ion) are going to use the debate as a "clinic" in the study of evidence and its presentation and submit criticism of the wohkman- ship. The members of the News Writing class (Engiish S2 are going to at tend and write "stories" of it as if for the State Journal or the Lincoln Daily Star. Nebraska's case will be opened by Wendell Berge of Lincoln president of the Freshmen (lass, the second Freshman in twenty years who ha3 won his way to Nebraska intercol legiate debate team honors. j The middle of Nebraska s case will ibe handled by Harold M. Hinkle, '23, jof Lincoln, and the case will b con Icl'Jdfd ry Welch Pogue, "23, of Grant, jl'jwa. Each of the six speakers will ha allowed ten minutes. Then will coirse the hand-grenade-throwing re bu'tal arguments fcr which four speakers will have five minutes each and the two final speakers seven speakers. Nebraska's negative team that bat tles whh Iowa at Iowa Ciy Fr'day evening will leave today at 1:20 on tae Hook Island, staying at Des Moines tonight. Nebraska's representatives are Ford C. Campbell, Law 23; Bern ard Gradwohl '2.3, Law 22, Lincoln: and Sheldon Tefft. 22, Law '21, Weep ing Water. MARRIAGES Announcement has been made of tie marriage of two University of Ne braska students, Miss Esther McClell and to Ralph. W. Shirey. Mn. Shirty has been a student in the Fine Arts College and Mr. Shirey is a junior in the University Medical College. The couple will make their home in Oma ha. pzzp mi ... TV ' 1