The Nebraskan pAY YOUR PAY YOUR STADIUM PLEDGE. STADIUM PLEDGE. Daily vSjgnir-NQ. so DEFINITE PLANS NOW COMPLETE FOR DAD'S DAY November 10 Is Date of Annual Event; Lunch and Football Came on Program. rvorrr 1.800 FATHERS TO VISIT UNIVERSITY With definite plans completed for Dad's Dav the day of the Notre Dame football game, November 10 members of the commuiee m viiuiBe at least 1,800 fathers who ,,ve sons ct Nebraska will gather on the University campus iu aiieuu h. noonday banquet and the football Mme in the afternoon with their boys. In this issue of the Nebraskan is . letter addressed to "Dad." Free envelopes and copies of the paper will be supplied all men irom Dooms on the campus Monday, and all that is to be done is to address the letter and put a stamp on it. Fathers, when accompanied by their sons, may secure tickets in ad vance for the afternoon game from the student activities office. Banquet at 11:30. The banquet is to be held Saturday at 11:30 in the Armory, and as serv ing is to start promptly all are re quested to meet at the building at 11 o'clock. Immediately following the lunch eon the entire body will go to the new stadium where a special section has been reserved for Nebraska dads and sons. Interesting Speakers. Dr. George P. Shidler of York, an alumnus of the University, and a popular boys' worker and writer, has been secured to make the principal address at the banquet. Dr. Shidler is known to many Nebraska students, as well as to their fathers, having made the alumni address at alumni week last year. He is the author of "Tips from Dad" which appear in many Nebraska newspapers. Arrangements have been made for the varsity quartets, and an orches tra to entertain the visiting dads at the Armory. Besides Dr. Shidler, Captain Vern Lewellen, members of the faculty, and possibly prominent alumni will also be on the list for short talks. Co-eds Urged to Write. Nearly every fraternity on the campus is planning to entertain fathers visiting their members in the evening, and special events are being prepared for them. It has been suggested by members of the committee that co-eds should also write their dads inviting them down for the day. While the ban quet at noon is to be strictly a men's affair, it is possible for the fathers of the girls to buy their football tick ets in advance and attend the gp.me with their daughters. "And it's perfectly all right if 'mother conies, too," committee members said. Pay Your Pledge Today! Author W. Sampson, a former stu dent of the University, is the author a book entitled, "Range and Pas ture Management." Mr. Sampson re ceived his A. B. here in 1909, and later his M. A. in botany. He was formerly a plant ecologist in the U. S. service, and is now assistant pro fessor of range management in forest "o'ogy at the University of Cali fornia. Fogg Speaks on News Writing to Women's Clubs of Nebraska Prof. M. M. Fogg, director of the school of Journalism, addressed the convention of the Nebraska federa on of women's clubs at Beatrice Jnday on "News Writing." Prof. Margaret Fedde and Miss Mary Ellen rown of the home economics de partment, spoke on "Co-operation with University Extension." A range of topics from specialized oiscussion to lectures of general cul Jw value is offered by faculty members of the University under the am - f the Un'versity extension vision. Prominent men in practic- every field of University instruc menuFe available for lecture engage- UNIVERSITY OF Mis&ouri Harriers Whitewash Huskers COLUMBIA, Mo., Oct. 27. (Spe cial to the Nebraska.) The Mis souri cross-country team over whelmed the Scarlet and Cream dis tance runners by a score of l.to 30, the team with the lower score win ning. The Tigers placed the first five men. As in the Kansas run, Zimmerman was the first Husker to finish. The runners finished in the fol lowing order: First, Lamar, Missouri, 26 minutes, 50.4 seconds. Second, Pittinger, Missouri. . Third, Poag, Missouri. Fourth, Vallet, Missouri. Fifth, Eddie, Missouri. Sixth, Zimmerman, Nebraska. Seventh, Lewis, Nebraska. r Eighth, Dickson, Nebraska. Ninth, Ross, Nebraska. Tenth, Schultz, Nebraska. The Tiger cross-country team looks like certain Missouri Valley cham pions. They are coached by Bob Simpson, former world's champion hurdler. Pay Your Pledge Today! Y, W. G. A. BUDGET FOR 1923-24 IS $1700 Finance Staff, Under Frances Mentzer, Estimates Total Expenses at $3,300. The Y. W. C. A. budget for the year 1923-24 has been made by the finance staff under the direction of Frances Mentzer, finance chair man. The total to be raised on the campus from members of the organ ization is $1,700. The social service staff under Mar garet Hager needs for its American ization, girl reserve, and other work outside of its self-supporting activi ties, $100. This department in con nection with the city Y. W., C. A. is carrying out one of the most ex tensive programs of its kind in the United States. The secretary's sal ary is $1,800 and the conference fund for sending three official delegates to the annual conference calls for $250. The conference staff under Lila Wy- man supplements this amount with money made at special sales. Expenses of the office under Helen Kummer, publicity under Julia Shel don, and printing are estimated at $300. Parties and teas for all University women cost the social committee $250. Fifty dollars are allowed for furnishings which include song books, book cases, and files. ','The Woman's Press" and other printed material for the reading room cost $25 for the year. A con tingent fund of $100 is allowed for unclassified expenses. Every local organization helps sup port national headquarters. The University organization's allotment for this year is $300. Twenty-five dollars have been assigned Vesper choir for music. Out of town speakers will be a necessary item this year because most local men and women have spoken. One hundred dollars are set aside for their expenses. Totalling the above gives $3,300, but the community chest is giving $1,600 to the support of the Univer sity organization so that the amount to be raited is $1,700. Pay Your Pledge Today! 704 calls for teachers in Wisconsin schools were handled by the nlacement committee of tne uni versity of Wisconsin last year. Will Issue Free Nebraskans Today Free copies of the Nebraskan and envelopes will be given to every student from booths on the campus Monday. All that is re quired is that the address to "Dad" be written on the envelope and a stamp affixed. It's an easy thing to do, members of the com mittee feel, and may make "Dad" feel "pretty good." "But do more than that after mailing the 'rag write a personal letter of your own. Better do that now, Sunday afternoon, before you forget it," committee mem bers urge. NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, Son John Invites His Father to Come Down for Dad's Day Lincoln, October 28. Dear Dad: f Just a few lines to let you know that you are invited to be here for Dad's Day and the Notre Dame football game. They're both a week from Saturday, November 10. The fathers are to be guests of the students and if you can arrange things so as to be here you'll honor a proud son. A big luncheon in tho Armory will keep us busy around noon, and among t1 ; oeakers will be Dr. George P. Shidler of York, a grer . u ig men's enthusiast, Cap tain Lewellen of the football team, and other in teresting men. This is not the first time the old "U of N" has hon ored the men's fathers. Dad's Day is an annual event. Right after the luncheon we're all going to the foot ball field to see Ihe 1923 Cornhuskers in action. This game will be good from the start and the athletic depart ment has reserved a section in our new stadium just for the fellows and their dads. Think this over, dad, and if there is a possible chance of your coming down, try to be here. Let me hear from you soon and come down to see me the tenth. Your son, JOHN. Girls Urged to Invite Fathers to Dad's Day It has been suggested that Uni versity girls may just as well write their fathers and invite them down for "Dad's'Day," November 10. While the banquet in the Armory at noon is for men only, the girls' fathers can enjoy the game with their daughters, as they may buy their t'ck ets in advance and sit with the girls at the game. BEGIN PREPARATIONS FOR SWIMMING TEAM Coach Plans to Call Meeting of All Men Interested in Tank Sport Swimming Coach Frank Adkins plans to call a meeting of all men interested in the varsity swimming team soon. Several Missouri Valley conference schools will be on the schedule when it is completed. Among them will probably be the Kansas Aggies, Iowa State, and also the Omaha Athletic Club, all of whom Nebraska has met in the last three years. Three leter men from last year will try for positions on the team this year. They are: Jack Graebing, who was captain last year; Frank Hunton, captain elect for this year; and Dan Reed. The squad lost two men by graduation, Neal Philips and George Lindley. The loss of Philips will be felt keenly as he was the fancy diver of the team, and won every diving contest in the three years he was out. However, there is a lot of promising material for this year's team, among them being Jack Hunton who won the third Western A. A. U. meet last spring at Omaha. Hunton was in eligible for the team last year be cause he was only a freshman. Swimming as a sport at Nebraska is handicapped greatly by the lack of a swimming pool. At present the teams hold practices at the Y. M. C. A. downtown, where the swimming classes are held also. The sport has been increasing in popularity each year, since it was first organized three years ago. This fall there arc fifty-six students registered in two University swimming classes which meet at the Y. M. C. A. Frank Hunton, captain elect of the swim ming team, is instructor of one of the classes, and Jack Hunton has the other. Pay Your Pledge Today! Four All-University Convocations Planned A Droeram of four all-University convocations and a number of musi cal convocations will be begun this vear bv the University committee on convocation services. Plans for these events are beine worked out in con junction with the Student Council and dates nd speakers will be an nounced soon. . Members of the standing convo cation committee are: Chairman, Prof. Paul H. Grummann, director of the School of Fine Arts; Mrs. Carrie R. Ravmond. director of music; and Miss Florence I. McGahey, registrar. NEBRASKA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1923. STUDENTS FAIL TO PAY NOTES NOWOVER-DUE Officials Say Stadium Is Mort gaged; Will Be Lost if Pay ments Are Not Met. ONLY 400 OF 4,500 WHO PLEDGED KEEP PROMISE Students are not paying their sta dium pledges nearly as fast as they should, according to the Nebraska Memorial Association, which is now conducting a campaign for the pay ment of the second installments of the pledges. The campaign for stadium pledges which started last Monday has moved only 400 of the 4,500 students who owe the memorial association money to make good their promises of a year ago. "Results of the campaign for sta dium payments are far from satis factory," memorial association offi cials frankly confessed Saturday af ternoon. "We had expected that virtually all of the second payments on student pledges would be cleared up during the week but at the rate students are responding to our call it looks as though they are going to have to be urged in a much more forceful manner than that of the voluntary campaign plan which we are attempting. Reiponded in Campaign. "During the campaign for funds a year ago, students were moved by the 'smoke of battle,' and responded in a most splendid manner. Under the heat of the campaign, all students were willing to sacrifice in order that Nebraska might have her stadium; all were stirred with a feeling of patriotism that was indeed fine. "Now, when the payment of those pledges is being called for, students do not seem so patriotic. They seem to think that they can pay when they feel like it. That is not the case. The payments on the pledges, which are in truth promissory notes and collectable under the law, must be paid when due. The second install ment is due now and it must be paid. Stadium Unpaid For. "The stadium is a mortgaged piece of property. It stands on ground belonging to the University, and the memorial association must meet every cent of its obligation if the stadium is ever to become a real part of the University equipment. Shouid the payments fail to be met, the stadium and .all of the ground on whxh it stands would have to be sacrificed. (Continued on Page 4) How About the Stadium? WHAT Pay Your Pledge. WHEN Now. WHERE Stadium Booth at Twelfth and R WHY Keep Your Promise. Reduce Your Debt. Save for the Stadium. Over Three Hundred See Husker-Missouri Fight on Grid-graph Three hundred and twenty-five Nebraska followers saw a reproduc tion of the Husker-Tiger scramble at the showing of the grid-graph in the Armory yesterday afternoon. Cap tain Lewellen's seventy-yard run was the feature of the 7-7 game. ' A Western Union wire ran direct to the Armory, and the wire reports were broadcast over WFAV, Univer sity radio station, after they had been flashed on the illuminated front of the grid-graph. The spectators were given checks at the end of the half and the hall was emptied during the mid-period. Pay Your Pledge Today! DIRECTORY SALES REACH HIGH MARK Supply of 2,300 Taken by 3 O'clock Friday; Total of ' 2,700 Sold. Twenty-seven hundred Student Di rectories, more than ever before, were sold this year. By 3 o'clock Friday afternoon the whole supply of 2,300 was gone, 200 additional were printed, and 200 were sent to the College of Medicine at Omaha. The committee headed by Ruth Wells made the most sales, reaching a total of 475. "Great credit for the large salesJ is due to the splendid work of the committee of Y. W. C. A. girls of which Julia Sheldon was general chairman," Frank Fry, business man ager, stated Saturday. There were seven teams of forty girls selling on both the downtown and Agricultural College campuses. Two hundred were sold on the Ag campus. According to the staff the book was received more favorably than was expected and the new feat ures seemed to be very popular with the students. The members of the winning sales committee were: Mary Wigton, Ma riel Flynn, Anne Gerdes, Ruth Ring land, Rossanna Milenz, Joyce Adair, Eloise McMonies, Harriet Palmer, Isa belle Quinn, Mildred Schwab, Rachael Styles, and Norma Heine. FRESHMAN ENGINEERS ORIENT THEMSELVES Dean Ferguson Announces List of Speakers for First Semester. To help freshmen in the College of Engineering to broaden their con tacts and to orient themselves in their work is the purpose of the reg lar freshman convocations held every Monday at 5 o'clock in Mechanical Engineering 206 under the direction of Dean O. J. Ferguson. The pur gram for the semester includes lec tures by Prof. F. W. Upson, chairman of the department of chemisiifc; Prnf fiporirp R. Chatburn. chairman of the department of applied ' nfc-J chanics; Prof. Laurence Fossler of modern languages; Prof. Goodwijf D. Swezey, chairman of the departflTent of astronomy; Prof. O. W. Sjogren, chairman of the department of agri cultural engineering; Prof. J. W. Haney, mechanical engineering; Prof. Morris I. Evinger, civil engineering; and speakers not yet selected for two dates. The introductory work of the first two meetings of this series was handled by Dean Ferguson. Prof. Clark E. Mickey, chairman of the de partment of civil engineering, took up some of the problems of his spe cial field last Monday. Professor Upson will discuss tomorrow some of the chemical problems which arise in engineering. PRICE 5 CENTS TIGERS HOLD HUSKERS TO 7 TQ 7 TIE Missouri Scores First; Lewel len's Seventy-yard Run Nets Scarlet Only Score. MUD HANDICAPS FAST NEBRASKA BACKFIELD By John Hollingsworth. COLUMBIA, Mo., Oct. 27. (Spe cial to the Nebraskan). The Uni versity of Missouri football team wrote its name in blazing letters in the hall of football fame here this afternoon when it held the invad ing Cornhusker machine to a 7 to 7 tie. The muddy field handicapped the fast Cornhusker backs, who had to be content with short gains thru the line. Big Dave Noble, who crashed through the Tiger line for gain after gain, besides making a spectacular forty-three yard run, shared honors for the Husker team with Captain Lewellen, who intercepted a Tiger pass and ran seventy yards for the only Nebraska score. The playing of Bond and Moulder in the Tiger backfield was the sensation of the game. Missouri Score. Missouri kicked off to Nebraska who was forced to punt. The punt by Wier was blocked, and it was Missouri's ball on Nebraska's 26 yard line. A clever pass from Moul der to Hennessey put the ball on Husker 6 yard line, and Bond car ried it over on the first play, fol lowed by a successful goal kick, mak ing the score Missouri 7, Nebraska 0, before the game was five minutes old. Missouri again kicked off to Ne braska, Hartman returning the kick off twenty-seven yards. Here Cap tain Lewellen, who had been ordered to stay out of the game because of injuries, replaced Hartman in the Nebraska lineup. Lewellen punted far down the field. Missouri took the ball and tried a forward pass on the first play. Lewellen Scores for Nebraska. Captain Lewellen of Nebraska took the ball almost from the hands of the waiting Tiger and by a bril liant seventy yard run, in which he dodged two tacklers, planted the oval behind the Missouri goal posts for the only Scarlet and Cream tally of the game. Dewitz kicked goal and the score was tied, 7 to 7. Big Dave Noble ushered in the sec ond period of the contest with a brilliant end run which netted the Huskers forty-three yards and put the pigskin on the Tiger 6 yard yine, but the Huskers could not shove the ball over the final chalk mark. Dur ing the remainder of the second pe riod, Nebraska outplayed trie Tigers consistently, but lost their punch whenever they got within the Tiger 20 yard line. Another feature of (Continued on Page 4) To Present Plans for Y. W. C. A. Drive Plans for the Y. W. C. A. finance campaign will be presented at the weekly Vesper service by Frances Mentzer, chairman of finance. Dr. Johnson will talk on "The Value of Bible Study" as an introduction to the Bible study course that will be offered within a short time. Alice Beavers, who is in charge of this course, will announce the classes. A vocal solo will be given by Blanche Martz. Hostesses for the meeting are Ju lia Sheldon, Dolores Bosse, Carolyn Airy, and Beatrice Broughton. Second Generation Students Wanted on Annual Staff Everyone whose father or mother went to Nebraska is wanted to work on the Cornhusker historical section according to Robert F. Craig, editor- t in-chief. These people will collect material concerning the University as it used to be. The historical section is to bo one of the features of the book and sec ond generation people should be able to get first-hand information from their parents which will make this section one of the most interests g. Students who can qualify should turn their names in to the Cornhusk er office in the basement of Univer- sity hall as soon as possible.