The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 18, 1923, Image 1

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    he Daily Nebraskan
129.
PLANS STARTED
FOR BREAKING OF
STADIUM GROUND
Thursday, April 26 Is Date Set
for Formal Exercises
Program Announced
Later.
TO LET CONTRACT SOON
Committee Expects to Make
This Most Impressive Cere
mony of Year Band
Will Play.
The formal exercises for the
Henking of tlie ground for the Ne
braska Stadium, which Is to bo built
(;,s summer and next fall, will take
jlacr Thursday morning, April 26, at
11 o'clock on the present site of the
new structure. Secretary Harold
Holtz of the Alumni Association is
working in connection with a com
mittee from the Innocents Society,
planning a program in keeping with
this event.
The contract for the grading and
building of the Stadium will be let
sometime next week and work win
start immediately following the exer
cises. The committee in charge ex
pect to make this one of the most
Impressive ceremonies, next to the
dedicating ot' the Stadium next fall,
ever held in the history of the Uni
versity. The University "N" Club and the
Women's Athletic Association will
hold an important place on the pro
gram in carrying out the exercises.
Dr. Conilra will take motion pictures
of the ceremonies, which will bo
shown all over the state and in the
high schools in connection with the
"Go to College Week," which is going
to be carried out in the various high
schools over the state this spring.
The University Cadet Band will
furnish music for the occasion ann it
is expected that a large delegation of
Cmaha alumni will be in attendance.
The tentative program has been out
lined and will be announced in a
few days. Plans now call for one ot
two speeches by prominent men of
the state who have, always fostered
a gii'i't interest in the University
and have retained their relations
with the institution in one way or
another since their graduation.
Litters to graduates and the re
gents of the University are being
mailed urging them to attend the ex
i'rei.;. .', and the entire student body
will have a chance to take part wiici.
the "Ccirnhusker" and "Chant" arc
called for. It is expected that Chan
cellor Avery will direct the plow
when the first turning of the ground
will take place. Complete plans lor
the event will be announced in a few
days.
NEBRASKA TENNIS
SQUAD SCHEDULES
TWO DUAL MEETS
The University of Nebraska tennis
team will probably participate in two
dual meets this year in addition to
the annual Missouri Valley tourna
ment Tentative drafts of the Corn
hiisker racquet schedule include
meets with Ames and the Kansas
Aggies.
An inter-college meet will be held
April 23, 21, 25. The inter-class meet
ia hooked for April 30 and May 1.
while the iuter-fraternity tourna
ment will be hold the following week.
The annual university spring tour
nament will be held on the Nebraska
courts the week starting May 14.
OMAHA BOWLERS
HIT FANCY MARK
Thi ii t ,..i,nH rr rutin-
te.t, which won the state bowling
championship at Lincoln last week,
rolled a score of 3,013 in a match
game with the Wolbach Clothiers of
Grand Island on local alleys. The
Cady'B first game totaled 1,091 pins,
'ach man rolling above the 200 mark.
Kennedy was high for the series with
61!. The Wolbachs rolled 2,747.
The Pete Lochs defeated the Grand
Island pin artists, 3,020 to 2,530. Eid
son of the Lochs was high with
658. The Lincoln Star.
Among the notables to attend the
Theta Sigma Phi convention fat Nor
ttan, Oklahoma, are Mary Rouerts
Rinehart, Dorothy Dix, Zoma Gale.
William Allen White, Fannie Hurst.
Dr. Frank Crane, Mary King, and
Mrs. Frederiok Van Renneselaer Dey
of New York.
Lutheran Students
to Hold Rally and
Banquet Saturday
All Lutheran students and friends
at the University are invited to a
rally at the Elks Club next Saturday
evening at 6:15 o'clock. Arthur Lot
and Frederica Lau, who represented
the Nebraska Lutheran Club at the
National Lutheran Student Conven
tion in Rock Island, Illinois last week
will report on that meeting. All the
leading universities and colleges of
our country having Lutheran stu
dents were represented at this con
vention. Professor j. T. Link of Seward, a
graduate student at this University,
will speak on some topic of national
interest. Reservations should be
made early with Frederica Lau,
Hulda Lonnquist, Esther Carlson,
Gunnard Grahn, Fred Wcihmer, and
Arthur Lof, or with any member of
the Lutheran Club which is sponsor
ing the banquet.
SPEAKS JO CHEMISTS
"Fossils in Nebraska" Will Be
Subject for Discussion
Alpha Chi Sigma in
Charge.
"Fossils in Nebraska" by Dr. E. H.
Harbour of the Geology department,
will be the next lecture of the series
on popular chemistry which is being
sponsored by Alpha Chi Sigma. It
will be held in the general lecture
room of the Chemistry building at
5 o'clock on Thursday, April 19. The
lecture is open to the public.
Alpha Chi Sigma has conducted
weekly meetings on this subject dur
ing the year. Dr. Barbour has been
preceded by Dr. G. D. Swezey who
spoke on "Astronomy as Related to
Chemistry" on April 4, and Dr. Ander
son whose subject was "Absorption
Phenomona" on March 20.
'The society has scheduled two
more lectures for this year. Dr. II.
P. Deming will be the next speaker.
He will illustrate his lecture on "The
Structure of th Atom," with moving
picture slides "The i-Ray" will be
discussed by Dr. Marvin, chairman of
the Physics department, at a later
date. His talk is to cover the ap
plications of the Roentgen-rays to
surgery, chemical analysis, and every
day life.
TELEGRAPHIC MEET
BY
Fast Time Made in First An
nual Competition Winners
Go to Kansas Relays
Saturday.
i.. fi, f!,.ut annual tolepranhic Ne-
1 1 1 1. 1 1 lll.11, . - - - ' 1
braska high school relays, which werfe
held last week on the home courses,
the Broken Row team won the free
trip to the Kansas Relays offered by
"Red" Long of the College Book
Store. Their team won first place
in the mile relay, the medley relay,
and second place in the .'half-mile
relay. Minature. a town near Scotts
bluff, copped first honors in the half
mile relay.
In the SSO-yard relay, the Minature
team, coached by J. H. Ray, won first
place in 1:33.1, which is very good
time for high school relay teams.
The team was composed of the fol
lowing men: Greenwood, McDanlels
Burns. Hoick. Hroken Bow was sec
ond Tecumseh third, McCook fourth.
and Gothenburg filth.
The Broken Bow relay team, com
posed of Brown, Beck. Forsythe. and
Ilemman. captured first honors In the
mile relay i nthe fast time of 3:39.2.
The Broken Bow team is coached by
Tom Car. Hastings finished second,
Bloomfield third. McCook fourth, and
Lincoln fifth.
Again in the medley relay the
Broken Bow team took first place,
the Custer County lads covering the
distance in 3:43. The McCook team
was second. Hastings finished th.rd.
and Uloomfield copped fourth place.
Milford was fifth.
While the Broken Bow team is the
only high school to have its expenses
paid to the Kansas Relays, which is
L prize offered by "Red" Long.
Coach Schulte has entered tne fol
lowing other teams in the Kansa
classic because of their fine .hewing.
Hastings. McCook. Tecumseh. and
Minature.
BROKEN
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1923.
OFFICERS ARE
ELECTED FOR
W.S.U. BOARD
Jean Holtz Is New President of
Girls' Organization Mar
garet Hager Is Vice
President.
TAKE OFFICES AT ONCE
Heavy Ballot Cast for All Can
didates from Various Classes
Thirteen Are on
Board.
Officers for the coming year fot
W. S. G. A., elected at the election
held Monday and Tuesday in !the
Library, are as follows:
President.
Jean Holtz.
Vice President.
Margaret Hager.
Secretary.
Barbara Wiggenhorn.
Treasurer.
Helen Tomson.
The voting in the Library resulted
in ,tne heaviest balloting of late
years, according to Florence Price,
who is supervised the booth. The
other members of the Board which
governs the Association will be:
Senior Members.
Ruth Miller.
Josephine Shramek.
Margaret Wattles.
Junior Members.
Ruth Carpenter.
Frances Mentzer.
Rosalie Platner.
Sohpomore Members.
Mariel Flynn.
Ruth Wells.
The Board consists of five mem-
b,ers (frtom jthe wwnior ,lass, fctir
from the junior, and three from the
sophomore. From these twelve mem
bers, the president and the vice pres
ident are chosen from the graduat
ing class, the secretary and treas
urer from the junior and sophomore
classes respectively.
These girls will take office imme
diately, and will continue in their
new work through the remainder of
the school year.
Coach Frank Gets
Fractured Cheek
Bone in Scrimmage
Coach Owen Frank sustained a
fractured cheekbone Monday after
noon when scrimmaging with the
football squad. ' Coach Frank -was
carrying the ball and one of the ends
failed to interpret the signals as they
were called and collided with him.
The fracture occurred below the
right eye. He was taken to the Lin
coln Sanitarium and will not be able
to report for practice for a few. days.
NELIGH DEFEATS
ORCHARD SQUAD
Neligh, Neb In the first high
school baseball game of the season,
Neligh defeated Orchard high by a
5 to 3 margin.
The game was exciting from star,
to finish. In th etenth inning with
two out and a runner on first, Peter
son of the locals hit for a home run.
The Lincoln Star
Olympic Committee Arousing Interest
All Over the World for 1924 Games
The International Olympic Commit
tee's slogan of "All Sports for All" is
taking root in nations throughout the
world as a fundamental principle in
the development of competitive ath
letics, Count Henry de 1'aillet Latour
of Belgium, vice president of the
committee, declared yesterday in a
statement to The Associated Press.
Count Latour is in New York on his
way back to Europe after an eight
months' tour of South and Central
America in the interests, ire said, of
the "Olympic idea" and on an offi
cial mission designed to encourage
athletic development and lift compe
tition to a higher plane of sports
manship in Latin America. By this
method of rousing more widespread
Interest he said, the International
Committee looks forward to the
Paris Olympics in 1924 as the most
successful meet in Its history.
Count Latour spent some time in
Brazil, Argentina, Chile. Paraguay
and Uruguay, besides visiting Mexico
Pharmacy Edition
of Nebraskan Will
Ce Issued Thursday
The Thursday Issue of The Daily
Nebraskan will be tho Pharmacy Edi
tion, and will be given over in large
part to the activities in the College
of Pharmacy, especially during this
week, which is the officially designat
ed Pharmacy Week.
Like all other colleges on the cam
pus, the students in the Pharmacy
College, each year, celebrate for one
week, Pharmacy Night, which this
year falls on Thursday, April 19,
will be an occasion on which the
students, faculty, and people of Lin
coln will be able to see the work
which is carried on by the students
in this particular unit of the Univer
sity.
The week begins Wednesday, April
18, with a Convocation at 11 o'clock,
and continues until Saturday night,
winding up with a banquet for all
students in the College.
SILVER SERPENTS TO
SPOOHIG CIRCUS
Annual Fun-fest Will Be Held
at Armory Saturday After
noon from 2 to 5
O'clock.
Silver Serpent, junior girls' organ
ization, will sponsor' their traditional
Silver Serpent Circus at the Armory,
Saturday, April 21, from 2 to 5. Con
trary to past custom, the circus will
be for all University girls, instead ot
just for the girls of the sophomore
class.
Three rings, a parade, and a row
of side shows, including a bearded
lady and Siamese twins, will be feat
ured. Innumerable clowns and a real
chsriot race will add excitement to
the performance, according to those
in charge. There" will also be pea
nuts, pop, and ice cream cones for
sale. Three skilled clairvoyants will
be there to delve into the dark re
cesses of the past as well as to look
into the dim future. An orchestra
will play for dancing.
A small fee which will admit the
visitors to the main circus will be
charged. The aim, according to one
of the committee, is "to rival the
girls' Cornhusker party in pep and
ingenuity."
O. J. Fee Will Be
First Speaker for
Teachers' Lectures
The first number of the Teachers
College Lecture Course which is to
be given by O. J. Fee wil be held
Wednesday morning in the Temple
Theatre at 10 o'clock instead of or.
Thursday, as previously reported.
The series will be ghen under the
auspices of the College, and Dean W.
E. Sealoek will preside.
Acomas fraternity, local .irgan iza
tion at Lawrence, Kansas, has been
granted a charter of Sigma Phi Ep
silon. The chapter is to be installed
April 27.
Baltimore, Md. Mrs. Mary How
ard Lloyd, granddaughter of Francis
Scott Key, author of "The Stai
Spangled Banner," died here Monday.
aged 92 years.
and Cuba on his way to this country.
He officially represented the Interna
tional Committee at the Latin-American
Olympics, held in Rio de Janeiro
last fall.
Although his visit to the United
States, he said, had no official signif
icance in connection with the Olym
pics, he has consulted with a number
of officials interested in athletics.
"I was impressed as I travel about
the world and as reports also came
to me from Far Eastern countries,"
Count Latour's formal statement said
in part, "by the increasing interest
everywhere on the part of the youth
of the land in physical Recreation
and exercises. I believe thoroughly
in the old Grecian Olympic ideal of
every man physically fit at all times
and am Impressed by the fact that
this ideal now seems to be a possi
bility as simple sports of all kinds
promoted by a variety of organiza
tions seem to be increasingly popular
throughout the world." Associated
Press. ,
RESERVED TICKETS GO ON SALE
MONDAY NOON FOR KOSMET SHOW
Plans Are Well Under Way for Presentation of "The Yellow
Lantern" in Omaha Soon After It Is Put on Here
First Time Show Has Gone Out
side of Lincoln.
MAY 4 IS CLOSED NIGHT
I There Will Be No Advance of
Klub Are Considering Putting on Play for After
noon Performance if Ticket Sale
Will Warrant It.
HIJ KLIIX KLAN SUBJECT
AT VESPERSJTESTERDAY
Reverend Walter Riley Says Or
ganization Is un-Christian
and un-American.
Reverend Walter H. Riley, Congre
gational student pastor, spoke at the
regular Y. W. C. A. Vesper services
yesterday afternoon on the subject
"The Ku KIux Klan is Fundamentally
Unchristian and UnAmerican." The
meeting was led by Gertrude Tom
son and Sylvia Cole gave as a vocal
solo one of Lieurance's compositions.
Pamphlets left by the Ku Klux Klan
were distributed at the beginning ot
the service.
Being himself a southerner, Rev.
Riley was able to explain his point
of view on the Klan very vividly.
"The Ku Klux Klan is concerned with
smashing the negroes, it opposes the
Jews and Catholics. Joking and
laughing over its caprices is th besi
thing. Americans have a tendency
to laugh off difficulties. The Ku
Klux Klan is partly a disease and
partly a symptom of a disease. After
the war ihe Ku Klux Klan changed
its hatred from the Germans to other
lines. It is a symptom of after-war
hysteria. It is organized intolerance.
"The .Ku Klux Klan Is unAmerican
because it works in secret. Amer
icanism is a daylight affair. The
fundamental basis of any democracy
is the civilization brought by that
race which can most advance it. We
violate this democracy when we re
fuse to give the black man a chance.
Everyone is entitled to demand his
chance.
"The Ku Klux Klan is unchristian
because it does not believe in the
doctrine of brotherhood. It is tin
obligation of the Christian American
not to put his foot on the neck of
the other races. The Klan violates
the doctrines and law of God. The
Ku Klux Klan is fundamentally un
American and unchristian."
HUSKERS ARE SECOND
IN VALLEY RATINGS
Baseball Squad Tied with Wash
ington and Ames for
Honors Oklahoma
Stands First.
The second round of the Missouri
Valley baseball contest last week re
sulted in Oklahoma, with six con
secutive victories to its credit con
tinuing to hold first place. By win
ning twice from Missouri, Nebraska
tied for second place with Washing
ton and Ames.
. Games this week Include Nebraska
vs. Washington at St. Louis; Kansas
Aggies vs. Missouri at Columbia, and
Kansas vs. Ames at Ames.
Standings at present are:
Won Lost Pet.
Oklahoma 6 0 1.000
Nebraska 2 2 -
Washington 1 1
Ames 1 1 .-r,M'
Missouri 1 f -"
Kansas Aggies 0 2 .ono
Kansas 0 0(1
Women Secretaries
to Spend Sunday as
Guests of Lincoln
Women secretaries from three
churches will be here over Sunday:
Miss Agnes Hall. Episcopal secre
tary; Miss Margaret Lewis, Presby
terian secretary, and Miss Frances
Greenough, Baptist secretary. Miss
Agnes Hall will speak at the Temple
Sunday afternoon. Miss Greenough
and Miss Hall are former Y. W. C. A.
secretaries.
A new University Library at the
University of Minnesota is to be
ready for interior finishing June 1.
BY ORDER OF COMMITTEE
Tickets to Anyone Members of
Reserved tickets for the Kosmet
Klub play, "The Yellow Lantern" to
be given at the Orpheum Theatre
Friday, May 4, will go on sale at the
Orpheum box office Monday noon at
12 o'clock, April 23. No advance -tickets
will be sold by the members
of the Klub, and absolutely no tickets
will be reserved in advance of the
line according to the play committee.
This means that every ticket for the
show will be in the Orpheum box of
fice at 12 noon Monday and that the
first in line has complete choice of
the house.
The night of the show May 4 has
been Iclosed by the committee on
student organizations for the Kosmet
Klub play.
According to present indications
the May 4 tickets will be gobbled up
in a hurry. Klub members have re
ceived many oral and mail inquiries
as to the date of the ticket sale. Tn
case the first night is sold out the
Klub may consider an afternoon per
formance it was stated by the presi
dent but no arrangements to that ef
fect will be made at persent.
"The Yenow Lantern" is a musical
extravaganza in three acts written,
directed and acted by members of
the Nebraska University student body
with absolutely no outside help. The
script of the play was composed by
Cryil Coombs, Law '23, and every
piece of music in the play is entirely
original and composed by the author.
Twelve years of presentation of the
Kosmet Klub musical productions ,
has made the Klub's work one of the
regular traditions of the campus. The
object of the Klub is to promote in
terest in musical and dramatic or
iginal compositions from the writers
in the student body. Exceptional
talent has been developed in the past
and 'many of the musical numbers
used in the Kosmet Klub plays have
been published.
Investigation was still under way
on the proposed trip by the Klub to
Omaha this year and a tentative date
will be set in the near future. A
special committee on Omaha produc
tion has been appointed and action is
expected by Thursday morning. It
the play goes to Omaha this year it
will be the first time in the history
of the Klub that the production has
been taken out of Lincoln. Such a
step represents a big undertaking
and the complete support of the
Omaha Medical School and the
Omaha alumni must be enlisted to
guarantee the production- financially.
Letters from Omaha people demand
ing a chance to present the s-how in
Omaha have been received by the
Klub for the last month.
MORE THAN MILLION
YOUNG PIGS KILLED
BY COLD WEATHER
Sioux City, la. One and a half
million young pigs were lost by farm
ers oi bnva, Nebraska, South Dakota
and MiinioHota as a result of the cold
weather and bli.zards which pre
, -tiled lliHMiehout the month ot
March, according to figures compiled
by v! J. Kennedy, published here
today.
Mr. Kennedy based his estimate on
figures I m ulshed by the reliable ob
Herveis and reporters in practically
.very hog producing county In the
four states.
Th" greatest loss occurred in
Iowa, where KOO.OOO pigo were lost,
more than the combined losses ot
the other three hog producing states.
Minnesota and South Dakota each
lost 2IO,(H0 of the young porkers.
The Lincoln Star.
SCOTT IN LINEUP
DEFIES BAD ANKLE
New York. That Everett Scott,
holder of baseball's endurance record,
will be able to play today in the
opening game of the American league
season with the Boston Reds was In
dicated today by officials of the New
York Yankees. Scott, who has played
9S6 consecutive games, is determined
to reach the 1,000 game mark, and,
in spite of the injured ankle, plans
to play today.