The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 20, 1922, Image 1

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    The Daily Nebraskan
VOI;. XXI. NO. 132.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1922.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
1 PLAYERS
CLOSE SEASON
SATURDAY EVE
"Gmniphy" to be Presented at
Temple Theater Tonight Fri
day and Saturday
BEST SEASON FOR
PLAYERS SOON OVER
Excellent Cast Ready to Give
Students Final Performance
' of Year
The University Players will close
their lfl21-l!)22 season of six plays
with a three night presentation of
"Grumpy." "Grumpy"will be produced
at the Temple Theatre Thursday,
Friday and Saturday evenings this
week. The play was chosen because
of it's unusually fine story and splen
did workmanship. It is from the pens
of Horace Hodges and T. Wigney
Tercyval, the two well-known English
dramatics.
This is the celebrated play in which
Cyril Maude originated the part of
an apparently half senile old man
with a crusty exterior, but a wonder
fully kindly nature and the keen wit
and indominable icourage of a Sher
lock Holmes. "Grumpy" is probably
the most expressive name the authors
of this play have chosen for it.
The story deals with the robbery
of a large uncut diamond and the de
tection of the thief through the con
summate shrewdness of the old man.
The robbery takes place in the house
of Mr. Andrew Bullivant, familiarly
called "Grumpy" by his granddaugh
ter, Virginia, and his nephew, Ernest
Heron. The latter is bearing the gem
to his employers in London, and is
about to pass the night in the house
of his uncle. Seated alone In the
siting room after all have retired, he
is mysteriously set upon in the dark
by an unknown assailant, rendered
unconscious and relieved of the valu
able stone. Through a white canielia,
the stem of which has been tied with
a woman's hair, with no other clue
to guide him, the amusing old man,
step by step, traces the perpetrator,
fastens the guilt upon an unsuspected
personage, and in the end makes him
disgorge the gem, and so crowns the
happiness of his nephew and grand
daughter, who love each other.
"Grumpy" is a distinct novelty and
a rare theatrical treat. I tis a sure
cure for the blues generally and for
prumpiness particularly. The New
York Herald said: 'Grumpy' is de
lightful. To see it is to enjoy one of
the best things in the theatre."
The Players are determined to close
their most successful season this year
with a climax of effort. An unusually
strong cast has been selected. The
l"ad"Grumpy" is being handled in
superlative fashion by Mr. Neil Brown
who was so thoroughly enjoyed in
"What Every Woman Knows." The
demands of the part are great, it being
fne of the longest leads in presen'
'lay dninia. Virginia is played by
Lucille Foster who will be remem
bered for her work in "The Tailor
Made Man." Floyd Johnson, the Ma
Rep of "Seven Keys to Baldpate' will
be seen as Jarvis. Hart Jenks, who
has appeared in ma?:y pails since join-
ollently chofen. It consists of Marip
hig of Players will be seen In the role
of Earnest.
The remainder of the cast Is as ex
cellent!) chosen. It consists om Marie
Mills, Viola LoosbrocV, Herbert Yennd,
Bavid Lindstrom, Lloyd Streeter and
John Dawson.
Xow that the Orpheum has closed
Its vaudeville season and there seem3
to be a dirth of road shows. The Play
r'i feel that in producing Mich fine
things as "Grumpy" and the other
Mays which they have given this seas
on they are doing their share of keep
ing the legitimate drama available
for students of the University and the
theatre going public of Lincoln. It
remains to be seen whether or not
moving pictures will eventually be
OQe the only form of theatre enter
tainment left. The Players need your
support to help them carry on their
Purpoge. Besides this, the Players
offer you a thoroughly enjoyable even
ing with "Grumpy". The doors are
Ien at 7:30 and the curtain will rise
Promptly at 8:20. Don't miss this
Plendid play. Tickets may be seemed
t Ross p. Curtice Music Co.
""-if
Courtesy of Lincoln Daily Star.
Dr. Henry F. Cope
Pr. Henry F. Cope, general secre
tary of the religious education asso
ciation of America, who will speak at
convocation next Tuesday morning at
11 o'clock in tho Temple on "The
Challenge of Democracy."
TO SPEAK HEOE
AT
General Secretary of Religious
Education Ass'n to Talk
to Students
SPECIAL CONVOCATION
TO BE HELD AT TEMPLE
Addresses and Receptions Plan
ned For Visitors Next
Week
Dr. Henry F. Cope, General Secre
tary of the Religious Education Asso
caition of America, will give a Uni
versity Convocation address, "The
Challenge of Democracy," in the Tem
ple Auditorium, Tuesday of next week
at 11 a. m. On the same day he will
give an informal address at the noon
luncheon of the Faculty Club, to be
held at the Grand Hotel.
It has been made possible to ar
range to have Dr. Cope give these ad
dresses t the University because he
is coming to Lincoln under the aus
pices of the American Unitarian As
sociation and the Western Unitarian
Com rcnee, to give a series of special
aiidrfss.'s on L.K.ral l.c'vion iu
S(uls' Unitarian ' jr-n, April 23 to
27. His '. uvjfH- E ir -"ii.day wiii De:
Wh.it is K-.ucu tion." iu 1
' Riligion iinl the I'm i. ins of 132 J.
His week night subjects will be: The
Church and the Needs of 1922; The
New Evangel and Evangelism; The
Mind for a New World.
From seven to right o'clock Sunday
i-i cuing in the Unitarian Church Par
krs, theic- v'Jl be held an informa
public recep'ion in Dr. Cope's honor,
All who wo; iii like an opportunity to
nifct him are welcome to attend this
reception.
Dr. Cope was born in England 52
.ears ago and has been for fifteen
years the .secretary of the Religious
Education Association, which includes
in its membership persons from all
churches and lias upon its executive
board some of the leading educators
of the United States and Canada. Dr,
Cope is well known throughout the
country for his work in keeping be
fore the public mind the ideal of ro
1 1 pinna prfneatfon and the sense of
its need and value. He Is in constant
demand by churches of various de
nominations because of his ability as
a popular speaker. His Interpretation
of religion is modern but never of
fensive. He is the editor of the mag
azine, . "Religious Education," and is
the author of several wellknown
books on religious education.
Besides his addresses at the Uni
tarian church and his University en
gagements, Dr. Cope will give en ad
dress, "The Foundations of a City," at
the Monday noon luncheon of the
Chamber of Commerce. On Monday
evening he will give an address at
the opening session of tho six weeks
Training school for vocational school
teachers. This session will be held
immediately after a supper served at
6 p. m. at the Grand Hotel. It is
probable that Dr. Cope will also give
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SPRING FOOTBALL
SQUAD
DWINDLES
10
Captain Hartley Sends Out Call
For More Men For Daily
Grid Practice
COACHES DAY Ah.
YOUNG P Li T WORK
Fundamental of Football Being
Drilled Into Candidates
For 1922 Team
The Cornhusker spring football
squad has been holding strenuous
workouts on the athletic field daily
under the direction of coaches Bill
Day and Farley Young, who are drill
ing the candidates without letup. The
squad has dwindled to a bare eighteen
or twenty men instead of the fifty or
sixty who should be out daily. The
work is being severely hampered by
the large number of varsity gridsters
who are not reporting.
The men who are out for practice
daily include Captain - elect Chick
Hartley, Wenke, Pete Preston, Ber
quist, Sclioeppel, Sherer, Klempke,
Peterson', Henry, Addison, Herb De
wit z, Rufus DeWitz, McAllister, Ror
by, Packer, Phalen, Packer, Halbers
leben, Spies, Ilinnan, Shainholtz and
Cameron.
The coaches are devoting the work
outs to the drilling of the fundamen
tals of the gridiron sport. Tackling
the dummy, charging, backfield step
ping and duckwalking are forming a
part of the workouts. Scrimmaging
has also been a feature of the recent
practices. All the fundamentals are
being stressed now so that they can
be dispensed with in the fall work
outs. The necessity for a strenuous spring
training period at Nebraska is shown
by the fact that at all the colleges a
stiff spring training is being held
At Kansas University, Nebraska's
time-honored foe on the gridiron, hard
practice is being held, which is fea
tured by a scrimmage game every
Saturday. Notre Dame, Turkey Day
adversary next year, has a spring
training squad consisting of a hun
dred enthusiastic grid men.
HUSKER NET TEAM
WINS FIRST MEET
Tennis Team Opens the Season
With Victory Over City
Team Yesterday
The University of Nebraska tenni3
team opened the season yesterday
with a victory over the Lincoln city
te;im in a dual meet. The Huskers
copped three out of the four single
matches and one of the two double
matches. The feature of the meet
was the Russell and Skallherg vs. Ar-
cherd and McProud doubles match
The University Place stars won only
after a hard fight, the score of the
sets being 17-15, 0-6, 6-3.
In the singles, the Husker Philip
pino Btar, Conrado LImjoco, defeated
Don Elliott in straight sets, 6-1, 6-3
Bob Russell of tho Cornhuskers also
won his singles match, defeating Ced
Poiter, 7-5, 6-2. Crawford was victor
ious over Gregg McBride, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4.
Dean McProud was the only city team
man to win in the singles, defeating
Minor Skallberg, 6 4, 6-2.
Limjoco and Crawford, the other
Husker doubles team, copped the
match with Potter and Fullaway after
hard fight. The matches wers
slowed up considerable because the
players have not yet rounded into
mid-season form and because
courts are still somewhot soft.
the
GREEK PHOTOGRAPHS
ARE NOW ON DISPLAY
An exhibition of photographs of
Greece are now on display in the art
gallery. They have been sent out by
the American Federation of Arts at
Washington and will be on display for
one week. These pictures are very
beautiful and interesting I" .at they
show the relationship of landscapes to
Greek architecture.
TWEHTY
Ags Show Lots Of Pep Preparing
For Famous Fair To Come May 6
From the way those two hundred
from the standpoint of the Ags, a bus
ness in separate committee meetings
utter the peppy mass meeting Tues
day night, the Farmers Fair will be
a success. But above all it will be,
from the stanrpoint of the Ags ( a bus
iness proposition managed on a busi
ness like basis. An office will be
opened this week in the Y. M. C. A.
room of Ag Hull for use of the entire
college In making arrangements for
the fair.
The parade, bigger and better than
last year, will pass through O Street
at noon of May 6 as an attraction and
inducement to every onlooker to come
and enjoy the afternoon and evening
on Ag Campus. Plans for tho wildest
kind of a wild west show are very
nearly completed. Plenty of bronks
have been secured. Several steers
are Bpoken for. The one difficulty
confronting the committee is the lack
of two ar three days time to accom
modate the large number of entries.
The Home Economic girls are to
be seen every evening now practic
ing their pageant out of doors and
from all indications gathered through
casual observation the pageant will
be a beautifully staged costume enter
tainment that will even surpass the
envious reputation of these girls as
first-class entertainers.
The Midway carnival shows will in
clude all the novelties and freaks of
the age. The ingenuity and original
ity of the Ags has never before been
tested and taxed to such an extreme
but suffice it to say both faculties are
still intact.
The Snorpheum, that show com
pany that makes its debut May 6, has
already a program of the lightest of
the light fantastic combined with the
seriousness of the snappiest mixed
chorus ever assembled behind one row
of foot lights. The tumblers and the
comedians will contrast with the real
Ag quartette in furnishing the variety
for the show. A minstrel show of
forty five minutes length guarantees
right now a handsome prize to any
man, his wife are child who can stay
the full time without breaking their
shoe strings with laughter.
A great barbeque that will feed the
thousands will be served at the reg
ular dinner hour. The roast will be
prepared by expert chefs and from
the prize steers of the fine herd that
the College maintains.
Dances in the afternoon and even-
ARTS AND SCIENCE
BANQUET
Conflict in Dates Results in the
Change For Big Mystery
Program
Too much competition from other
events already scheduled for the night
of April 27 has resulted in a change
of the most important and most looked
for event to Thursday May 4 when all
of the students of the College of Arts
and Sciences will gather at the Cham
ber of Commerce for a banquet, and
the entertaining program which Is to
remain a mystery until that night
Only a limited number of tickets
will be sold, the Chamber of Commerce
is not large enough to seat and feed
the number of people who will want
tickets to this affair. A number of
students will cover the campus in a
concentrated ticket sale and tickets
for as many students as can be taken
care of will be sold.
Students of the college of Arts and
Sciences iave for Jmany years la
mented the fact that the other and
smaller colleges on the campus have
always had a closer organization
and a better group spirit than the
students of the largest colleges.
Efforts are now being made to re-
ieve this ancient situation by a big
gettogether banquet by which the
students of this college will be able
to meet each other both the men and
the women for the College of Arts,
and Sciences.
Professor C. W. Taylor of the
Teachers College will speak at tho
Superior Commercial Club Fri. noon.
April 21.
Fraternities Attention!
All fraternities wishing to enter
the " inter-fraternity track meet
must turn in their list of entries
to Adolph Wenke by Friday noon.
POSTPONED
ing will entertain you all. The best
orchestras of the country will be se
cured. No stone will be left unturned
to make this feature a high class af
fair. No one need go wandering about
the campus this year without a place
(to go. Guide books are being printed
that will contain anions other things
a map of the campus and the compute
program of the day.
The campus of Agricultural College
in itself is one of the attractivo spot3
of Lincoln. The buildings are filled
with attractive, interesting and in
structive educational exhibits such as
very few institutions possess. Every
building of the campus will he open
that afternoon and evening with stu
dents in the laboratories at their
work demonstrating sonio of the lab
oratory exercises carried on by stu
dents of the college. This is the main
purpose of the fair and special efforts
are being made this year to make this
phase a success.
HUSKER Ml
IN PREPARE
FOR SATURDAY
Athletes Drill Hard For Frater
nity and Varsiiy Meet
This Week
MANY FAST RACES ARE
EXPECTED IN TRYOUTS
Mile Run Will be Feature Quarter-Mile
Dash Will Be
Close Contest
The Husker cinder path artists went
thru another stiff workout last night
in preparation for the interfraternity
and final varsity Drake Relays tryout
Saturday afternoon. The program of
events Saturday is scheduled to be
gin at 3:30, so as not to conflict with
the baseball game, Nebraska vs Wes
leyan, which will be played at 1:30.
Interest in track has increased at
U. of N. since the athletic carnival
last Saturday. The competition for
places on the varsity team lias grown
much keener. The interfraternity
meet Saturday . has already aroused
more rivalry than any previous intra
mural meet.
The latest Intra-mural meet to be
planned is an inter-company R. O. T
C. meet. Co. B, Captained by N'orris
Coats, varsity miler, has taken the
lead in this direction, and is organ
izing a track team. The intercom
pany track meet will be held on May
6, according to Coach Schulte.
Coach Schulte was absent from the
practice yesterday afternoon, having
gone to Columbus to speak to a group
of high school athletes. Coach Schulte
is making a series of such talks in
an effort to interest all hisli school
athletes in coming to Nebraska.
Dixie Smith, the elongated hurdler,
who placed well in the high jump
last Saturday in the Intercollege
meet, has been working in the high
jump this week and with slight
change of form may do some very
good Jumping before the season is
over.
Working with him is another Ag by
the name of Drlshaus, of the sam
height as Smith - is showing greater
possibilities in tho Jump with a slight
improvement in form. Hatch is the
third Ag who with Dixie Smith and
Drishaus tied for second place last
Saturday at- 5 . ft 6 inches and is show
ing some improvement in the event.
has been slow, is coming steadily
Red Layton, whose development
has been slow, is coming steadily
better and should he able to hold his
own with the two Indoor Valley point
winners in the quarter. Ted Smith
and Hawkins. .
Noble and Hatch, two of last year's
freshmen Valley Champions, began
fighting themselves in the discus and
both were doing 112 to 115 feet.
Wenke and Hartley showed some
improvement in the javelin as they
both were getting 153 feet and better.
Allen from the Medical College
writes that he is In good shape and
hopes to make the four mile team In
Saturday tryout in 4:34:4. He is
closely pressed by Coats. Harry
Kretzler, who is supervising the work
at Omaha, is firmly convinced that
(Continued on Page Three)
TICKET SALES
I
A
Organizations Grab Kosmet Klub
Play Pasteboards When
Seat Sale Opens
EARLY RESERVATIONS
FOR EVERY 30 TICKETS
Pasteboards on Sale at Student
Activities Office and
by Members
Tickets for the 11)22 Kosmet Klub,
play, "The Knight of the Nymphs,"
to be given at the Orpheum theater on
May Day, went on sale yesterday after
noon with a rush with prospects of
crowded houses both afternoon and
evening bright.
Announcement was made by the
business manager that every fratern
ity, sorority and other organization
that buys thirty or more tickets be
fore the reserved seats go on sale at
the Orpheum box office next Wednes
day, will have the . privilege of re
serving those tickets before any
others. Part of the tickets may be
secured for the afternoon perform
ance and part for the evening. Two
fraternities purchased over thirty
tickets within fifteen minutes after
the tickets went on sale and secured
the privilege of reserving immediat
ely. Several other organizations
were slated to get their tickets be
fore tomorrow night.
Marvin Myers, business manager
of the play, has his office in the stu
dent activities and all arrangements
regarding seat reservations ahead of
time should be made with him. An
honor roll KJf organizations buying
thirty or more tickets will be pub
lished in the Daily Nebraskan soon.
The jKosmet play Ss regarded! by
many as one of the biggest events
in the calendar of student activities,
and the committee from the club is
making elaborate preparations to en
tertain two packed houses on May
first.
Tickets may be secured at the stu
dent activities office in the south
west corner of the basement of Ad
ministration Hall or at A. Starr
Best's on the south west corner of
12th and R streets. In addition the
following men, constituting the ac
tive chapter of Kosmet Klub, will sell
tickets on the campus.
Harlan Boyer.
Herbert Brownell, Jr. '
Hugh Carson.
Francis Diers.
Eugene Ebersole.
Steven King.
Oliver Maxwell.
Marvin Meyers.
Chauneey Nelson.
Russell Replogle.
Fred Richards.
Rolland Smith.
Ray Stryker.
Arthur Whitworth.
These tickets are exchange tickets
and are felling without war tax.
They are to be exchanged at the Or
pheinii box office as follows:
Rod tickets night $1.50.
Vdlow tickets night $1.00,
Blue tickets matinee $1.00.
White tickets matinee 73c.
Hand bills advertising the Kosmet
play, which were passed out at the
Junior League revue this week at the
Orpheum aroused great enthusiasm.
The manager of the Orpheum has re
ported over three hundred requests
for tickets to "The Knight of tho
Nymphs", to date from people out
side tne school.
Strenuons practices for both tho
chorus and cast of the play was the
order of the evening last night in the
rmory under the direction of J.
Manley Phelps, head otfhe dramatic
Continued on Page Four.)
Senior Caps and Gowns
All seniors are asked to mail the
return card ordering caps and
gowns for commencement to the
Co-op Book Store at once. The
Co-op is the official place selected
by the Senior cap and gown com
mittee to handle all cap and gown
orders. It will not be necessary
to make a payment until the gowna
are received. Any irregularities
will be handled by Margaret Hen
derson or Bob Hardt, members of
the committee. Senior Cap and
Gown Committee.
STAR
m
HEAVY
DEMAND