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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1922)
Fhe Daily Nebraskan Buy Your Dads' Day Luncheon Ticket Buy Your Dads' Day Luncheon Ticket LINCOLN, NKKKASKA. Tlll'KSDAY, NOV KMHKW 1(1, 1!IJ2 VOI DAD'S DAY LUNCHEON TICKETS WI ON S A j. b TODAY COMPLETE PLAN FOR B1ZAD DAY FOOTBALL GAME f rommittee in Charge of Celebra tion of Bizads Expect Five Hundred to Attend , PARADE IN THE MORNING lunch of Barbecued Meats Will be Eaten at the Park Ball . Game and Dance Scheduled The "Ag" college and the "Bizads" ., ,..t mi the football field HI III' v - forfeited tho game to the business students, and the men from the Col lege of Agriculture, who are report ed to have a Rood team, have agreed to substitute. The general chairman. Kenneth Cozier, announces that final arrangements are being completed now. The hard-working ticket sales' committee hopes that 500 ribbons will be sold by tomorrow, when the an nual "lMz.id" Pay will be celebrated. Twelve Lincoln business houses will furnish floats for the parade that rornis outside of Social Science build ing prompt.'y ? o'clock. The column will nroceed to P street from Social Science, up P to Tenth, over to 0 street, ui dbwn O street, throuch the heart of the city. The destination will be Antelope park. nnrhomed meat by "Billie. the Lunch Man" will be included in the lunch at the park. Pean l.cRossignol and other fac ulty men will play a game of base ball with the students of the college after the lunch. Then the crowd will return to the campus to see the foot hall mixup with the "Aggies." The climax of the "Bizad" holiday is the dance in the Armory in the evening. NorthwaTVs artists will play, and the committee expects ex cellent music. Varied entertainments will be interspersed throughout the party. The general chairman wound up with "Let's go, Bizads! Eat, drink, and be merry:" To Have Baseball Contest. A baseball contest between a team made up of the members of the fac ulty and the seniors of the college of business administration is the lat est and most novel addition of the already full program for Bizad Day, Friday. The diamond clash was ar ranged following a conference with Dean Edward IeRosslgnol, who as serted that "We faculty men are baseball players." Captain Dean Le Rossignol immediately signed at fabu lous salaryies Pitcher or Catcher French Kugene Wolfe, any position James Emmett Kirshman. George Darlinrton, Henry Pike, Leon Ayls worth. Theodore, Bullock, Roy Coch ran, Dana Cole, Fred T. Dawson fhe's holding out yet). Earl Full brook. Paul Wesley Ivey, Clarence McNeill. Oscar Martin, Raymond Tool, John Senning, George Virtue, Maurice Weseen, and Robert Wolcott. Expects to Sign More. A few others are expected to sign tb contract papers today. Caplaln LeRossignol says he will have no trouble fn placing a team in the field l)ich can hit, bat, score, run and do a lot of other things, not traditional to baseball. He claims the victory over the seniors is almost already won. The captain says he will use heavy fines as threats against any of his players signing up with other teams and he has appealed to Commissioner Avery, who, it has been found, may 'ake the field himself, to make the rules against barnstorming more strict than they have been before. Indoor Baseball Used. The baseball game as scheduled be of the indoor type. That was found adviseable since the time of the year has found most of the dia mond apparatus packed away in the (Continued on Fafe Four.) Nebraska City High School Contributes The Nebraska City high school subscribed $67.98 to the Str.dium fund November 14. Of this amount 25 was subscribed by the Ne braska City football team. Benson high school also sent in Its sub cription to Marcus Poteet, the ecretary of the Stadium Commit tee. That the high schools should how so much interest In the new Nebraska Stadium is fitting, ac cording to Mr. Poteet, because It ' the high school, students who be using the Stadium In few years. i mil .11 -mini I IIIIIMIl JMH I IHMHIHII IMMIIIH HIT' . -. v., ' U - ' ' v. v Scfwrter ... ,. v-ri Coach Bachman, Captain Halm, and invade Huskerdom Saturday for a invited to attend Nebraska s first an his Kansas Aggie team, undefeated game which will be witnessed by nual Dads' Day. The Aggie team is in the Missouri Valley this season hundreds of fathers who have been considered the "surpr.se ' team of the Nebraska Student From India Speaks at Vespers Monday At Vespers Tuesday evening, Khan to Bala Rai of India was the principal speaker. Mary Ellen Whelpley lead the meeting and special music was furnished by Dorothy Reynolds, who gave a whistling solo. Miss Rai, the speaker, is a student of this University, this being her sec ond year in this institution. She was admitted in the fall of 1921 with ad vanced standing. SIEHGEB ELECTED MANAGER OF SHOW Bahy International Committee for Next Year Selected by Block and Bridle Club Alfred Ptenger was elected man ager of the Baby International Stock Show for next year at a meeting of the P.lock and Rridle club Tuesday evening. Wilbur Shainholtz and "Bus" Daniels together with the new ly elected manager will compose a committee' who will arrange plans for the next year's show. The election was held earlier than usual this year in order to give the newly-elected committee a better chance to form plans for the next show. All of the members of the committee are well qualified for their positions, having had several years of experience In this Ijne of work. The Baby Inter national this year was the bigpest ever and is increasing in size and importance each year. Elton Lux and Arnold Fouts were elected to membership in the club. Another election of members fol lowed by initiaiion will be held early In December. The funniest thing about the comic supplement is dad's pretense that he is merely reading it aloud to please the kids. Spanish Girls Armory Saturday, November 18th Gambling. Kansas A ggie C.tJrini ... Horte WILD WEST WILL PREDOMINATE AT GRANDjGARNIVAL Forty-niners to go Into Action at Eight O'Clock Saturday Night at Armory HILARIOUS TIME FORECAST Last Shot Will be Fired at Eleven-thirty Barmaids to Reign on Dance Floor Ye mortals who would have a good time, appear at the Armory next Sat urday night in any regalia that Buf falo Bill or any other western char acter ever dared to wear into the viin- Tn.' saloon or the Bloody Gulch gambling den. Park your guns outside as knives will be furnished to those who are in a wicked mood. Whisky minus the prohibition kick will be served by home-grown bar maids. At 7:30 the second annual Military Carnival will officially open when the ballyhoo men begin to cry their wares to those who crave action. The doors of the ballroom will swing open at 8 o'clock and Northwali's Keven-pieee jazzland orchestra will blaze forth with the syncopation that will keep many feet on the move until 11:30 when the last shot will have ben fired, the last drink will have gone sluicing down the ragged throats of the evening cutups,( and everyone will bend his weary steps homeward wondering where lie got all that Klondike currency. The Armory will be dressed up in colors that mill make old timers smack their lips and wonder why some congressmen are so cruel as to propose the laws which they af terward pass. The spirit of '49 will be the predominant feature, with the Spanish beauties and the cowgirls fol lowing a close second. One of the (Continued on Page Four). t ? ,-,v ; Y-.viiY' Admission 30 cents includes carnival cap Football Squad Hut ion -kriam iSchoell Speaks at Convocation Today Professor Frank Louis Schoell, vis iting professor in French of the Uni versity of Chicago, will speak at a special convocation which will be held at the Temple theatre, Friday at 11 o'clock on "Applied Art in France." Mr. Schoell is being sent by the French alliance in the United States and Canada. Professor Schoell received his edu cation at the Sorbonne and at Cam bridge, England, and received the title of Agrege at the University of France. ELECT TWELVE MEN OF ALUll TO THE STATEJ-EG I S LATU R E Five Former Nebraska Students go to the State Senate and Seven to the House Among the members elected to the legislature there were several for mer students of the University of Nebraska, five of whom were elected to t.e Senate and fceven to the House. Those elected to the Senate are: George Wilkins, '12. C. B. Chas. Chas. Chas. Anderson, '11. J. Warner, '19. H. Meacham, '06. K. Allan. '08. Newly-elected representatives are: C. L Troy Yocum, '14. L. Davis, '97. H A. J. M. Baldridge, '21. G. Burke, '02. Reid Green, '07. Paul Dennis, 20. Ralph P. Wilson, '11. L. D. Densmore, 20. Colonel Harvey questions woman's possession of a soul. What social element is he currying favor with now? Dancing IS C v.v, f"-A Luis?'' Valley .conference. The Saturday game is the first of the three home games which ends the 1922 season. it Ninety Thousand Dollars Raised Before Wednesday morning Report at Commercial Club MANY FIRMS CONTRIBUTING Donations cf More Than Five Hundred Dollars Published Students Await Result Yesterday's reports on the cam paign in Lincoln for Nebraska's Mem orial Staduim swell the total pledged to J95.20S, with only a portion of the ,iitfri..)u eanvAKKpd The names of all donors will be included in a lir.t to the published at the end of the campaign. Firms or individuals who subscribe f'.OO or more will be given recognition in the city's publications day by day. "The eyes of 7.500 students are on Lincoln, and all the state is watching the capital city." said R. E. Campbell at the Wednesday noon meeting of team captains in the Chamber ol Commerce club rooms. He recalled that the students' quota was $90,001 and they subscribed $110,600. and that the faculty, asked for $21,:.00, gave $25,600. Lincoln's quota of $130, 000 has now been more than half subscribed by $20,000 according to the reports of the team captains. Sixty thousand is assigned to Omaha, bnt no particular report on the pro gress of the drive there has been received at the alumni office, beyond indefinite statements that the cam paign is being received favorably. Nebraska alumni in the state will be asked for the remainder of the $430. 000. Word from Coach Dawson received at the meeting Wednesday noon that next year's football schedule depends (Continued on Page Four). and a good drink. BUSINESS IN SWELLING FUND FOR MEMORIAL NEBRASKA MEN TO FATHER ANDSON DAI SATURDAY Program of the Day Begins With Nccn Luncheon in the Armory Tickets on Sale Only One Day Sale Must Close Thursday GOVERNOR McKELVIE AND CHANCELLOR AVERY TO SPEAK Evening Dinners at the Fraternity Houses Will Conclude Official Celebration, But Many Fraternities Plan Evening Entertainment PROGRAM FOR DADS' DAY Keiristrntii-n of Dads in main entrance of Arm ry. K.vojr nition hadjros distributed. Dads to lie conducted around campus. Noon luncheon in Armory. Sliort Talks: Covernor Samuel R. McKohie ( 'liance-lliir Avery Mayor Frank Zehrunjr Coach Fred Dawson ' Cap-tain Harold llarlley Cltauncey Nelson, president of Innocents Mii I'niversiiy quartette, "serenadors. an I raa- S!C dors. Introduction of Nebraska and Kansas -00 Football trame on Alliletie Field. seated loirellier in student section. .") :i0-7 ;:?() F.ntertainmenls and dinners at fraternity h"Uses with Dads as honor quests. 7:;',0.Militjnv Carnival in Armory. EEC Outstanding Feature is Twenty Six Dolls Dressed in Cos tumes cf Many Countries The history of cotton through thir ty-nine centuries of development is being featured in an exhibit in the Home Economics building on the Agricultural campus. Students may see the display during the afternoons and it will be open to the public from 7 to 9 o'clock Friday and Sat urday evenings. Outstanding in the exhibit is a col lection of thirty-six dolls illustrating the costumes of many countries. The display was originally made to show the possibilities of modern cotton material. The beads, embroidery, tur bans, color combinations, buttons and every detail of the costumes have been worked out minutely. , The growth in the use of cotton is interestingly displayed, including the steps from the ancient Peruvian weaving from which designers secure their patterns today, up through the work with cotton in different coun tries, to the newest frock of today. Besides the Peruvian exhibit, which is fragmentary, there are fabrics from Russia, the Balkans. Hungary, and Egypt, which feature embroidered blouses and runners and some ap plique work; and Japanese prints and batiks. The cotton exhibit belongs to the Brooklyn Museum and the Museum of Natural History in .ew orli City, and was secured from there by M. C. B. Crawford who is devot ing his life to the promotion of cre ative art and designing in America, to show the possibilities of cotton, both artistically and technically. The display has been shown in retail es tablishments for some time, but Ne braska is one of the first Univer sities to exhibit it. Dr. Barker Gives Illustrated Talk On Race Evolution "Evolution, the Hope of the Race," is one of Dr. F. D. Barker's popular lectures. He spoke on that subject last Friday evening in York before the York Business Men's club, and illustrated the lecture. Thursday morning Dr. Barker will deliver that lecture to the members of the Thursday morning lecture cir cle, a study club of Lincoln women. Mir m J U Bar Maids Dancing from 8:00 to 11:30 Good Music. 3 I J, CELEBRATE A'irie teams, l-'atlicrs and s' Tikots for the Pads' Day luncheon must be bought today. Each college has tickets on snle, and fellows whose dads will be here for the celebration Sntuieay are urged to get their tick ets early. Accommodations can be made for a thousand men at the luncheon in the Armory. Preference w.ll be given to dada and their sons. Any tickets left after Thursday evening will b sold to students whose Cads will not be here Saturday. Tickets for the football game for Saturday afternoon can be purchased v.lth the luncheon ticsets cr nt tbs luncheon. The price for Dads tickets to the game will be the same as stu dent tickets. Fathers and their sons will sit together in one section of the grandstand, and the opposite sec tions will be reserved for the girls. The program for Dads' Day opens in the morning when all the Dads are expected to register in the Ar mory, at the main entrance. Rec ognition badges will be given to the visitors there. No definite plans are made for the morning entertainment of the Dads after reeistration, except that they are to be taken around the campus on a tour of inspection. The noon luncheon will be one of the big gatherings of the day. It will be in the Armory, and accord ing to the plans, will be an affair that will get the Dads In touch with the spirit of the University in a differ ent way than in the afternoon. Gov ernor Samuel R. McKelvie. Chancel lor Avery, and Mayor Frank Zchrtmg are among the notables of the city who will speak at the luncheon. Prom inent men in the University who are included on the luncheon program are Coach Fred Dawson, Harold Hartley, captain of the football team, and Chauncey Nelson, presid'-nt of the Innocents. Good rniKoe will also be a feature of the luncheon. The University quartet, the "Serenadors," nrd the "Ragadors" will furnish melody dur ing the meni. Another high light of the luncheon is to be the introduc tion of the Nebraska and Kansas Aggie teams. At 2 o'clock the fathers and sons will adjourn to the football field (Continued to Page Four.) Sunday is Annovnced Universal Prayer Day The universal day of prayer, conducted annually by the World Christian Association, i will be ob served Sunday, November 19. A special service in which the cab inets of the Y. W. C. A. will par ticipate has been arranged, and will be held at 8 o'clock at the Emmanuel Methodist church on Fifteenth and U streets. The vesper choir will flive special music for the service, which will not last more than half an hour. The taf' and freshman organiia tions of both the Y. W. and Y. M. will be present. Other individuals are not barred, but the service Is especially for the benefit cf the group mentioned. The ritual which will be fol lowed ) one which has been pre pared for the use of the western states, and will be observed all over th west.