The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 05, 1923, Image 1

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    he Daily Nebraskan
Buy Your
Buy Your
Cornhusker.
Cornhutker.
XXIII--NO. 55
RIFLE TEAM HAS
HEAVY SCHEDULE
Forty.five Colleges and Univer
sities Accept Nebraska's
Challenge.
rmiNGS TO BE MADE
EARLY IN NEW YEAR
Forty-five colleges and universities
have accepted Meuraska's challenge
for nlie maicnes 10 De nem us win
ter. 'le scnools are scattered Irom
the Atlantic coast to the Pacitic, and
be met in telegraphic meets by
Whraska during a period of nine
,eeK3 extenoing from January li!
t hiarch 15.
1'he first group of colleges in the
TeeK enamg January 12 will include
easiern scnools in the New fcngiana
tutes. tach week the schools met
yui be farmer west, enamg up on
Harcn lo with a match against eight
Kuversmes on the i'acinc coast.
The ail-university rifle team sepre
senung NeDrasKa will consist of tu
teen men, tne ten hignest scores
counung in tne mrtches. l'he scores
guae Dy eDraska in each week's
shooune win count against all the
scnoois met that week.
"llie shooting at each school will be
eerunett to Dy regular army ollicers
detailed to tne university K. O. T. C.
Tbe rifles used will be standard
United biates army Z2 caliDre gal
lery rifles, single shot. The range
tiU be toe standard indoor range ox
0 feet.
Hukea Is Coach.
Captain Huskea, director of
martemanhip in the university K.
0. 1. C, is coach of the nlie team
ud has arranged the schedule,
high men in the all-university team
vui represent Nebraska in the
Kventn corps area matches to be
bid later in the year, and the high
ma in the area will proDably be en
tered in the national rifle meet held
in summer.
Inter-Company Matches.
Inter-company matches are being
thot off next week. Most of the
teams have already been chosen and
tbe fellows are practicing in the gal
kry now. Seven men compose the
company team. The five highest
stores will be counted.
After the inter-company meets are
over Captain Huskea plans to have
an inter-fraternity tournament Last
year such a tournament was held and
i skin awarded to the winner. A sim
ilar prize will be given this year to
tie fraternity with the highest score.
core.
- 1 1 1 ft VI LUC 11 IK 11 III lUC III-
ter-company and inter-fraternity
sects together with their practice
jlwoting on the gallery will determine
i" the next month or so those who
ifl make up the all-university rifle
warn.
The schools that accepted Nebras-
challenge and the week in which
y shoot with Nebraska are listed
Wow
Jaaaary 12.
Xew Hampshire College of A.
(Continued on Page 4)
&
K3 CORSAGES IS RULE
FOR MILITARY BALL
Ure Amount of Decorations
-
. I Being Used to Bedeck
the HalL
Xo corsages at the Militarv Bull i
"ling of the Cadet Officers' Asso-
raon. This applies to students as
s officers and anyone bringing
ges will be asked to leave them
the door.
ST i0T the baI1 are in aU ne
tie decorations are fast nearing
Pletion. There will be 10,000 feet
35repertre,"ner" Bsed at the b11'
2fK 1,00 roIls wrpentine,
m n v ns nd four Punds UcVs
au be nsed in the novel scneme
Jrn the haU. Around the
eh; " a raotley "ray of ma
ead 'f' croMd sabers and rifles,
S erest in the baU8t-
fe pti,, A the
rant lurf IV-
r9 vm. Mic evening.
announcer! she
v. innrcn in coapany
tet coloneL
1 r
UNIVERSITY OF
Ag Y. W. C. A. Elects
Officers Tuesday
Election of officers for the agri
cultural coHege Y.W.C.A. was held
Tuesday. Grace Spacht, president of
i WT w a
tne university i.vv.u.A. spoke on
the "Spirit of Friendliness."
The officers are: Chairman, Lois
Jackman; publicity, Lillian Curyear;
speaker, Gladys Trullinger; music
Ann Krula; hospitality, Emma Prince
pianist, Winifred Grunkenmeyer;
postors, Ruby Simpson ; personal work
Grace Henderson; vesper choir,
Frances Weintz.
On the city campus Miss Ella Wat
son, former missionary in India,
talked on her recent trip around the
world. Gertrude Eberspracher led
the meeting and Harriet Cruse sang.
Hostesses were Josephine Bishop,
Irma Guhl and Margaret Wattles.
UNIVERSITY PLAYERS
PRESENT 'MADAME X
Miss Alice Howell Plays Title
Role in Melodrama at
Temple.
"Madame X," a brilliant melo
drama, will be presented by the Uni
versity Players Thursday, Friday and
Saturday of this week. Miss Alice
Howell is to play the title role in the
drama.
Miss Howell is one of the pioneers
in dramatic work at JNebraska. A
graduate of the Emerson School of
Expression, she came to Nebraska to
take charge of dramatic instruction
in the School of Fine Arts.
During the World War, Miss How-
Miss H. Alice Howell, who will play
the leading role in "Madame X.,!
ell was engaged in Red Cross work in
the battlefields of France and played
in several plays for the soldiers as
well as several presentations given
in various cities of France. After
the armistice Miss Howell returned
to Nebraska and again took up her
work in dramatic instruction. Again
last summer she returned to "Europe
to study. She visited the theaters in
England and on the continent, spend
ing several weeks o fintensive study,
both in England and in France.
The cast of supporting players in
eludes Herbert Yenne, Cyril Coombs,
Neil Brown, Harte Jenks, and
number of other well known players
Doctors Are Speakers
at Banquet of Numeds
Dr. Harold E. Eggers, member of
the faculty of the Medical College
at Omaha, and Dr. L. J. Owen of Lin
coin will be the principal speakers at
the monthly banquet of the Numeds,
Wednesday night at the Grand hotel
Dr. Owen will talk on cancer and
radium and Dr. Eggers on the appli
cation of medicine.
Arrangements have been made for
more than 100 Numeds at the pro
gram. Dinner starts at 6 p. m.
Selleck Will Address
Girls' Commercial Club
W. A. Selleek, president of the
Lincoln State National bank, will ad
dress the Girls' Commercial Club at
tt rHmlT meeting tonieht at 5
o'clock in Social Science 107. Mr.
Selleck is the first downtown speaker
tn address the club this year. De
tails of the "rummage sale will be
presented and other important, plans
will be discussed following Mr. Sel
Ieck's address.
County Attorney C. A. MatzeA will
talk on "Crimes and Criminals" tt
the World Forum luncheon Wednes
day noon at the Grand hotel. Tickets
may be secured at the Y.M.C.A. and
Y.W.C.A. offices. .
-' :
"""
-
i
NEBRASKA, LINCOLN,
It's Your Turn
GLASS DEBATE
TRY-OUTS ARE TODAY
"Should Nebraska Adopt the
Unicameral Legislature"
Is Question.
The try-outs for inter-class debat
ing teams will be held this afternoon
at 3 o clock. The question for de
bate is: "Should Nebraska adopt the
Unicameral . Legislature?" The
speeches will be five minutes in
length, a part of which will be de
voted to refutation.
Three men and an alternate will
be selected to represent each class.
Freshman try-outs will be held in
University Hall 106, sophomore in
Law 101, junior in Law 201, and
senior in S. S. 107. The try-outs will
be held under the direction of the
class debate committees and Delta
Sigma Rho, national honorary socie
ty for inter-collegiate debaters. A
definite date for the class debates
will be announced a day or two after
the try-outs.
The names of those who will try-
out this afternoon follow: seniors,
Clinton G. Richards, George B. Gross
Hugo F. Srb; Juniors, Frank Scriven,
Dudley R, Furse, Devon D. Eyer,
John A. Otley, Bennett S. Martin,
Carter R. Battershell and Bill Norton
Sophomores: Raymond P. Eyer, Will
Gros, Cullen M. Palmer, Edw. Ashe;
Freshmen, C. F. .Wright, A. J. Wea
ver, Philip Nemir, Volta Torrey,
Paul Kamm, Donald Becker, Robert
V. Hoagland and Maurice Hevelone.
INDIANA James H. Elliott, soph
omore, and chief copy editor of the
Indiana Daily Student, was awarded
the International Reporters Prize for
his publicity work.
Your Days
School had just closed. She walked
to the station with him and both felt
that those wonderful college days
were soon to be but memories idle
thouehts punctuated by recollections
that threaten to follow the course of
time and disappear. What could stop
fleeting moments?
Nothing interferes with the prog
ress of time, bat time must leave a
record. It was a consolation for tiotn
of them. There was a record a
complete record that would bring
back every individual happening,
every interesting event, and every
memory of the days that were ending.
He was leaving for the east to take
if k
NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY,
CORNHUSKER BANQUET
TOASTMASTER CHOSEN
Annual Football Dinner Will
Be Held at Scottish Rite
, Temple Tickets $1
John D. Clark, '05, vice president
of the Standard Oil company of Indi
ana, is to be the toastmaster at the
annual Cornhusker banquet, which
will be held Friday evening, Decem
ber 14 at the Scottish Rite Temple.
This banquet, which has become a tra
dition at the University, is given in
honor and appreciation of the foot
ball team and the work it has done
for the school.
The Innocents are in charge of the
dinner and they say that as the Tem
ple has been enlarged since last year,
about 1500 men can be accommo
dated. They have been at work for
some time and according to Ken
neth Cozier, general chairman, the
banquet is to "be bigger and better
than ever before." There will be
two orchestras playing during the ;
meal, the Kandy Kids and the Seren-
aders. !
All the speakers have not yet been
decided upon, but it is assured that
Captain Lewellen and Coach Schulte
will be on the list and if Coach Daw
son returns, he will also talk. In the
past all fraternities have closed their
tables that night so that their mem
bers can attend, and the same will be
done this year.
The tickets will go on sale next
week, each fraternity being alloted
thirty-five of the pasteboards, while
the Iron Sphinx and the Vikings will
have charge of the sale on the cam
pus. The price will be one dollar.
of Romance
a position. She was remaining at
Nebraska to be graduated. Thous
ands of miles would separate them
for many months. Letters were prom
ised, photographs had long since
been exchanged but among strang
ers, he needed more than that he
needed a Cornhusker and he had it.
H wa? .aking a friend with him, a
fhnd tha! would tell hirn of his last
year at Nebraska. It was bis 1924
Cornhusker.
You, freshman, sophomore, junior,
or senior, will some day be leaving
the old Cornhusker schoop to enter
your work. Do you want to forget
your college career or do you want
to have it recorded for you.
DECEMBER 5, 1923.
Cornhusker, Office
Staff Is Appointed
Ruth Small, office manager of the
1924 Cornhusker, announced the
members of her staf as listed below.
Work will begin immediately. Miss
Small will be in the Cornhusker of
fice from 4 to 5 o'clock every day ex
cept Tuesday.
Members of the office staff are:
Rachael Burkey, Mildred Armstrong,
Polly Barker, Peggy Cox, Helen Pal
mer, Verona Hall, Leah Potter, Na
omi Gaddis, Janice Shrimpton, Neva
Uehling, Fern Jenkins, Anne Gerdes,
Hazel Hagerman, lone Hughes, Mar
guerite Tamisea, Winifred Drach,
Emma Beck, Alpha Parham, Joyce
Schuyler, Margaret Brown, Edna
Kent, Eleanore Kealing, Mary Brown,
Gladys Siekkatter, Lois Richardson,
Bee Broughton, Mayme Pecha, Eloise
McMonies, and Ruth Coddington.
BUYERS MAY RECEIVE
REBATE ON ANNUALS
Business Manager Announces
That Success of Campaign
May Warrant Refund.
The price of the "Cornhusker of
Progress," the 1924 yearbook of the
University, originally set at $4.50,
may be reduced fifty cents or more,
in the form of a rebate when the
book is issued, dependent upon
the number of copies ordered in
the sales campaign which began
Monday and will continue until
Friday, announces David G. Richard
son, '25, Omaha, business manager.
To secure student publications to
students "as nearly as possible at
A Thought for You.
31,000 Russian students have
only one meal a day.
50 to 90 per cent of the students
of central and eastern Europe are
actually below physical efficiency
level.
14,000 refugee students have no
homes and no funds.
Professors' salaries are so small
that they live below the poverty
line.
Shattered currencies make sav
ings worthless and day-to-day pro
vision for expenses necessary.
cost" is the instruction of the Board
of Regents under which the Student
Publication Board operates. Limita
tion of salaries (in line with the prac
tice at other middlewestern universi
ties) and close supervision of the
management of all student publica
tions were adopted by the board last
winter.
This limitation in the amount of
money staff members may make out
of their positions makes It possible
this year for the first time for the
board to consider a possible rebate to
buyers of the "Cornhusker," after
the costs of the enlarged book are
met and the limited salaries of staff
members are paid.
"Old Crads" Remembered.
Of interest, not only to present
Etudents but to students of former
years, the yearbook will carry a motif
of history dedicated to "Old Grads,"
says Robert F. Craig, editor-in-chief.
Never before at the University, and
perhaps never before in American
colleges, has the place of the alumni
occupied such a prominent position
in the plans of an annual. Fifty-four
years of activity at the University
with the record of every organization
will give the book a wide interest to
graduates.
This added interest will not be
gained at the expense of usual sec
tions; for plans for the 1924 annual
include an enlargement of the size
of the book both in page-size and
number of pages. Most of the art
worK will be done by campus artists
and the printing of the volume has
been awarded to a Lincoln firm.
KORNHUSKER KADET
TO BE ISSUED SOON
The '-"Holiday Number" of the
Kornhusker Kadet will make its ap
pearance in" another week. Accord
ing to Charles Sperry, editor, this
Ktlifcbf-I FTCfAlsvS i6 ke the Lest of
those published thus far.
The staff of the Kornhusker Kadet
is now completely organized.
5 CENTS
VOTE IS CLOSE
rOR HONOR LIST
Seniors Are Nominated for
"Representative Nebras
kan" Section.
ALPHA PHI LEADS OTHER
SORORITIES IN SALES
Voting for the ten seniors for the
"Representative Nebraskan" . section
of the 1924 Cornhusker aroused
great interest as shown by the close
count at the end of the second day
of the subscription campaign.
The following twenty men and wo
men were the ones receiving the
greatest number of votes:
Ruth Small
Josephine Schramek
Helen Kummer.
Amy Martin.
Gertrude Tomson.
Emily Ross
Edith Olds.
Jean Holtz
Zella Gilmore.
Verne Lewellen.
Kenneth Cozier.
Grant Lantz.
Addison Suton.
Oliver Dirks.
Stephen King.
Howard Turner.
David Noble.
James Tyson.
Alpha Phi Lead
Alpha Phi was leading Alpha The-
ta by a slight majority in the sub
scription campaign, as shown by the
results checked up last night. Fol
lowing close behind them are the
Kappas, who won last year, with Del
ta Delta Delta and Kappa Delta next.
The contest this year is closer than
ever before and the winner cannot be
assured until Friday non when the
campaign ends.
Winners of first and second places
in the contest will he presented with
la trophy book containging a gold
I leaf telling how they won the book,
i This book takes the place of skins or
cups usually given as rewards in such
contests.
The business staff urged all stu
dents to order their Corhuskers this
jweek so that the proper number of
: books may be ordered from the prin
ters. Only a few extra copies will be
; on sale next spring and in order to
insure getting a copy, subscriptions
should not be put off.
Making Fine Progress
"The salesmen are making fine
progress and are to be complimented
on their work." stated David Rich
ardson, business manager of the an
nual, last night. There are 250 stu
dents on the campus taking orderd
and the goal they have set for them
selves is 3500 copies by Friday noon.
"Students must remember in vot
ing for the representative seniors to
fill in all ten lines if they wish their
vote counted." he added. This ruling
is made in order to prevent ' cam
paigning for individual students.
Ballot boxes have been placed in the
College Book Store, University Hall,
Social Science Building, and in the
Agricultural college cafeteria.
The business manager wishes to
meet all the college chairmen in the
Cornhusker office at 2:30 this after
noon to talk over the sales campaign.
All books should be checked in before
five o'clock at the office in the base
ment of the University Hall.
FORr.i STUDENT LEAGUE
OF WOMEN VOTERS HERE
Officers Are Elected at Convo
cation Held in Temple
Tuesday.
Definite plans for the organization
of a student league of women voters
were perfected at the convocation for
university women held Tuesday at 11
o'clock in the Temple theater. The
purpose of this league, which is simi
lar to those of other universities of
the middlewest, is to teach women the
responsibilities of the franchise.
The following officers of the pro
posed league were elected: President,
Ruth Miller; vice president, Julia
Sheldon; secretary, Lorn a Plimpton;
treasurer, Agnes Kessler; correspond
ing secretary, Dorothy Brown.
A tentative constitution was pre
sented by Miss Julia Sheldon, chair
man of the constitution committee.
Further action in the formation of
the organization w.l be Ukcn ac'jte
meeting tonight in St Paul church,
when Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt will
install the chapter.
PRICE
4