The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 06, 1924, Image 1

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    he Daily Nebraskan
Reparation
Re titration
January 7 to 12.
January 7 to 12.
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, SUNDAY, JANUARY 6, 1924
PRICE 5 CENTS
TO PUBLISH LIST
Of JUNIORS DAILY
Croup Will Go Each Day to
Have Cornhusker Pic
tures Made.
cniDENTS SHOULD MAKE
DEFINTE APPOINTMENTS
All Juniors should watch the Ne
wskan this week in order to know
When to have their pictures taken
L the 1924 Cornhusker. Every day
.list of the third year students will
vpubished and these students should
Z Hi touch with the Cornhusker of
fice .either by telephone or person.
ally and make a aeiinae appuiiiuncui
to have their picture taken.
tkp Cornhusker staff is asking the
co-operation of all juniors in having
their pictures taken as soon as pos-
jible. In rder t0 nave a rePresen"
othre annual every junior should
liave his picture in the book and if
this is to be done properly the cuts
must be made as soon as possible,
according to Charles Adams, junior
editor, who has charge of the junior
pictures.
Owing to a change in the plans,
organization and group pictures will
V taken on Mondays instead of
Tuesdays, as announced in the Fri
day Nebraskan. Heads of organiza
tions should make their reservations
is soon as possible so that a space
cm be made for them in the an
nual.
At the studio information cards
sill be handed out and juniors should
jot fail to fill them out as directed
for ftey are very important.
Up to date the juniors have re
ported to the studio promptly and
many have already had their pictures
taken. Early indications point to the
fart that with few exceptions every
junior will have his picture in this
year's annual.
To Hive Pictures Taken Tei3ay
The following list of juniors are
to have their pictures taken Tuesday
at Dole's studio, 1225 O srteet. It
is imperative that each person on the
list below call the Cornhusker office
sometime Monday and arrange for a
definite appointment for bis picture.
The list follows:
Leslie Cadwaledar, Carlton Cain,
Charles Caldwell, Ruby Cales, Evelyn
Cameron, Frederic Campbell, Loren
Campbell, Marvel Campbell, Angeline
Carlson, Carl Carlson, Esther Carl
son, John Carlson, Lee Carson, Roy
Carlson, Wilford Carmichael, Gerald
Carpenter, George Carpenter, Ruth
Carpenter, Frances Carrothers, By
ron Carse, Lena Carter, Fred Cas-
ity, Elton Caster. Servillano Castillo,
Rollie Cecil, Rose Cecil, Grant Chang-
rtron, Paul Cheney, Helen Chick, Lu
ciue Chnsman, Helen Christenson,
Eva Church, Bess Olark, Cloyd Clark,
Blanch Clemmons; Ruth Cleveland,
ilorence C'ifton, Ruth Clouse, Rob
rt Coats, John Cochrane, Julius
Cochrane, Harry Cohen, Fyivia Cole,
Walter Collins, Bernice Cook, Charles
Cox, Lewis Cox, Margaret Cox, Bur
ton toy, Edward Craft, Lola Craig,
Kuth Crain, Mary Creekpatmi. Ever
ett Crites, Emma Cross, Joseph Cul-
wtson, Albert Cumpston, Thomas
T" Curran John T. Curran, Lillian
Cnryea, Lealand Cyr, Dwight Dahl
nan, Harold Dally, Evelyn Daly,
Margaret Daly, Howard Dana, Merle
Banielson, Helen Darling, Anna
"ey, Frances Davey, Dorothy
pns, Kussel Davison, Richard Day,
J Dean, Lncile DeCamp, Nellie
Emmett Deeter, Thelma Descb,
Leonard Dewey, Rufus Dewitz, EdiSb.
ntinued to Page 4) '
FUN DEMONSTRATION
OF EXTENSION VOHK
m public demonstration of
jcnltural Extension Woman's
or ever eiven in the 8tee
es is scheduled for Tburs
oramg at the Home Economics
AjbSh eet!ne t Organized
0 A ltnr here - Mrs.
Sou Sf "d. Mre- E' L- "en of
a Sioux City will demonstrate
ha?8e-C"0f the Sick," using
Str,their actions "nd eX"
tue BoT th,ns" the? learned in
then, w Nurs project given
ionsece! Arin,ltTOl,
tie.nl0n1Str,ltion Bno lw;
lo to It !dfrith the Pent in it,!
tteri-v trw to str-
wav vm cioth"r in acom-
Hi? it j
BOGIB'AAN MIL GET YOU
IC VTl A
CADETS WILL SHOOT
IN NATIONAL MATCH
Three Teams Chosen From R.
O. T. C. Will Compete for
Hearst Trophy.
Twenty-one members of the Re
serve Officers Training Corps of
the University will comprise three
rifle teams to compete soon in the
National Rifle Match for the Wil
liam Randolph Hearst trophy. The
competition is open to every college
and "university maintaining a senior
unit of the corps. Applications have
been received at the Chicago head
quarters of the match, from a great
many of the principal American
schools.
The teams will consist of seven
men each. Only the five high scores
of each team wil be counted. Fir
ing will be from four positions
prone, sitting, kneeling, and stand
ing. The rifles used will be of .22
caibre. An officer of the United
States Army or a duly qualified mili
tary instructor will supervise the fir
ing, marking of the targets, correct
ness of the scores, and the rules gov
erning the competition. The com
manding general of the Sixth Corps
Area will designate officers on his
staff to act as judges.
The rules of the contest prescribe
that in case of a tie between two or
more teams, these teams will fire
again under the rnles to be fixed
later. The -cup to be awarded the
winning team wil be a perpetual
trophy, retained by the first institu
tion winning it three times in suces
sion. Individual gold medals for
each member of the winning team
will be offered. The individual hav
ing the highest total score for the
four positions will be awarded the
gold marksmanship medal.
TO GIVE RECITAL OF
"OTHELLO" THURSDAY
H. L. Southwick Presents Pro
gram Under Auspices of
University Players.
Henry Lawrence Southwick, noted
orator and artist, will give an inter
pretative recital of "Othello" at 8
o'clock Thursday evening, January
in t th Tpmnle Theater. The re
cital is under the auspices of the
University Players. Admission will
be 50 cents..
Mr. Southwick is president of the
Emerson College of Oratory at Bos
ton. He is a brilliant orator ana
nitfirm entertainer who has won
much distinction as a reader, especi
ally in the interpretation ol bnaices
Thf New York Times de
scribes his recitals as "a literary
treat," and the Los Angeles Times
says he always gives "a scholarly
production a message to university
men and women of the highest
value."
rmr.kan: Directors of the Rock
efeller foundation appropriated ?2,-
15,000 for the medical scnooia
ifv it Chicaeo. the Uni-
f Tnwa. the University of
Toronto and the University of Al-
rvAM'TT V lATll 1 MIT
UNIVERSITY NIGHT
COMMITTEE TO MEET
Will Plan for Calling in and
Judging Skits at Meet
ing Monday.
There wil be a meeting of the Uni
versity Night committee at 5 o'clock
Monday at Ellen Smith hall, accord
ing to announcement made yesterday
by Fhilip Lewis, secretary of the
committee.
Plans are to be made at the meet
ing for the calling in and judging of
the skits prepared by organizations.
Before Christmas recess organizations
were asked to start work on skits for
the annual stunt night which is to be
held this year in the city auditorium
February 23.
The committee plans to ask for the
skits soon and to submit them to a
committee which will select the best
ones for presentation.
VARIETY SHOW COMES
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
Chorus of University Co-Eds
Featured as Part of "Music
Store Revue."
The third annual DeMolay Variety
Show, given under the auspices of
the Lincoln chapter of the Order of
DeMolay, will be held at the Orpheum
theater Monday and Tuesday eve
nings and eight clever vaudeville acts
have been arranged. The program
for the annual show will be featured
by a headline act the "Music Store
Revue," written and directed by C.
L. Coombs.
Tickets have sold with exceptional
ease this year due to the success of
the Variety show in the past. Tickets
may be obtained from any member
of the local chapter for one dollar
while reservations may be made at
the Orpheum theater box office.
The committee in charge of the
coming event announces that any
single act could be used as a head-
liner with such favorites as the Lou
isiana Ragadors with Miss Harriett
Cruise singing, Orville Andrews black
faced comedian, Chuck Wiles, xylo-
phonist, and O. B. Anderson and his
Y. M. C. A. tumblers on the list. John
D2won with Miss Bradshaw will give
a song and dance sketch while Miss
Donna Gustin has arranged a dance
drama in which eighteen well known
Lincoln girls will take part.
Representatives of
Electric Company to
Interview Engineers
Senior engineers wishingt o learn
of opportunities for entering the
General Electric Company's organi
zation may see M. M. Boring, repre
senting the company of Schenectady,
N. Y., in the Eectrical Engineering
bvn'lding Tuesday. Mr. Boring is
nrimarily interested in interviewing
the electrical and mechanical engi
neers.
W. E. Byerts, representing the
same company, will be glad to talk
with any engineering students at the
Lincoln Hotel ivy time Monday.
REGISTRATION PERIOD
WILL LAST FIVE DAYS
Students Must See Advisers
and Register Before Sat
urday Noon.
Students now in school have from
Monday until Saturday noon, Jan
uary 7 to 12, to see their advisers
and register for the second semester.
Fees for resident students are due
by college dates. Students in the
College of Arts and Sciences '(in
cluding pre-medics, pre-dents, and
pre-laws, the Schoo of Journalism,
the School of Fine Arts) and the
College of Business Administration,
will pay their fees January 21 and
22. Those in the College of Agri
culture, Dentistry, Engineering,
Graduate, Law, Pharmacy and
Teachers will pay their fees January
23 and 24.
A late fee will he charged all stu
dents who do not see their advisers
by January 12, or do not pay their
fees by January 24. New students
will be registered from Friday until
Saturday noon, January 25-26. All
classes will begin Monday, Jan. 28.
Because of conflict with the
program of Organized Agricuture
Week at the Farm Campus, students
of the College of Agriculture saw
their advisers from January 8 to 5.
The second semester will begin Mon
day, January 14, in the Agriculture
College.
Final examinations for the first
semester will begin Monday, Janu
ary 21, and will continue through
Friday, January 25.
PROFESSORS ATTEND
HOLIDAY MEETINGS
Miss Louise Pound Elected
Vice President of Dialect
Society.
Dr. Louise Pound of the English
department was re-elected chairman
of the popular literature section and
vice president of the American Dia
lect Society at the fortieth meeting
of the Modern Language Association
of America at Ann Arbor, Mich., De
cember 27-29. L. C. Wimberly, also
of the English department and Miss
Lillian Fitzpatrick were also in at
tendance at this convention.
Mr. Wimberley represented a sur
vey of "Customs, Beliefs, and Super
stitious in the English and Scottish
Balads" before the comparative liter
ature group which, according to Dr.
Pound, was an excellent piece of
work and well given. An article on
"Nebraska Place-Names" by Miss
Lillian Fitzpatrick was read "by
title" to the association. A paper on
"The Socratic Basis of Byron's
Thought" by Dr. Elizabeth Atkins, a
distinguished alumnua, read before
the English section was declared by
Dr. Pound to have made a fine im
pression, both as to content and de
livery.
At the meeting of the American
Association for Advancement of Sci
ence at Cincinnati, Professor Leva
B. Walker of the botany department
read an article of "Glycogen and
Spore Ejection" before the mycologi
cal section, Prof. J. E. Weaver pre
sented a paper on "Direct Measure
ment of Water Loss Without Dis
turbing the Normal Structure of the
Soil," and Prof. Paul B. Sears took
part in the symposium on the vegeta
tion of Ohio, and read a paper on
"Pollen Degeneration" before the
genetics section.
Prof. Nels A, Bengtson. who is
vice president of the Association of
American Geographers, presided at
the annual meeting of the National
Council of Geography teachers in
Cincinnati during the holidays. Miss
Esther Anderson, also of the depart
ment of geography, attended this
same meeting.
Dr. Louise Pound on her return
from Ann Arbor was the guest, in
Chicago, of Miss Carrie Neely who
was Dr. Pound's tennis partner when
she held the western and central
western title in the woman's doubles.
Professor Waker visited a short time
in Elgin, HL, with Mrs. Margaret
Hannah Atchison fonuerly of the
botanv department here.
ILLINOIS: Students absent from
classes immediately preceding or f ol-
owing vacation are excluded from
the final examination iu the courses
from which they have absented themselves.
W. W A. Plans Tea for
Faculty and Alumnae
At the monthly meeting of the
Women's Athletic Association held
Wednesday the association planned
a tea to be held February 15 in honor
of the faculty, the W. A. A. alumnae,
and the friends of W. A. A.
The following girls have been
chosen as a committee for the tea:
Rosalie Platner, chairman, Eleanor
Flatemersh, Louise Fisher, and Ar
line Rosenberryl
A discussion concerning the send
ing of delegates to the national con
vention of Women's Athletic Asso
ciations at Berkley, Caif., April 9
to 12 was brought up at the meeting.
NEWS LETTER SENT
TO DEBATE ALUMN!
Fourteenth Annual Publication
of "Think Shop" Takes
form of Pamphlet.
Members of the University of Ne
braska's Intercollegiate Debate Sem
inary 1902-1928) there are 154 of
these alumni of the "Think Shop"
"the only class on the campus that
has an alumni association," received
the annual holiday greeting from
Prof. M. M. Fogg, organizer of the
seminary and director of the School
of Journalism the Fourteenth News
Letter. It is a IS, 000-word letter,
prefaced by pictures of "The 192S
Think Shop in Action" U106a) and
of the room where the work of the
seminary was done ?rom 1909-1916
U107).
The News Letter, which has been
mimeographed heretofore, appears
this year in printed form a S 0-page
pamphlet. It is No. 1 in a new se
ries called University of Nebraska
Publications, to be issued through the
University Extension Division.
The 1923 news is set forth in six
divisions: Twenty-second Anniver
sary, Establishment of the Seminary
Reminiscences; News from the
Think Shop and Its Activities; 1923
Debates; Extra-University Argumen
tation and Debate Activities; the
University; and Biographical a
paragraph concerning each of the
154 members.
The high average scholarship of
Nebraska debaters has been hand
somey maintained this year, the let
ter points out. Sheldon Tefft, '22,
Law '24, of Weeping Water, is the
fourth debater to win the Rhodes
Scholarship from Nebraska; twenty
five team members won election to
Phi Beta Kappa; two-thirds of the
debaters were graduated from the
College of Law won membership in
Order of the Coif, which elects the
highest tenth of the graduating class,
and Wendell Berge, '25, of Lincoln,
won the $100 prize awarded by the
Institute of International Education
for an essay on the cancellation of
the 8llied debts.
In fraternity representation on
teams and in the Seminary Alpha
Theta Chi still leads with eighteen.
Delta Upson is second with ten; and
Acacia, Phi Kappa Psi, and Silver
Lynx tie for third at nine. Delta Chi
has eight, Delta Tau Delta six, Bush
nell Guild five. Six other fraterni
ties have less than five.
Nebraska won twenty-one of the
thirty judged debates from 1902 to
1916, securing the favorable devision
of sixty-five of the eighty-eight
judges.
Half of the members have gone
into the law. Twenty-five (includ
ing twelve college professors) are in
educational work.
Nine have won fellowships . and
ten have won scholarships at eastern
universities. One hundred and one
have taken advanced degrees.
Twenty-eight aumni are in Lincoln,
eighteen are in Omaha. The under
graduate members of the seminary
are:
Wendell Berge, '25, Law '27, Lin
coln. Hugh B. Cox, '26, Lincoln.
Devon C. Eyer, Law, '26, Union
City, Ind.
Bernard Gradwohl, '23, Law '24,
Lincoln.
Alexander McKie, '24, Law '26,
Omaha.
Welch Pogue, '24, Law '25, Grant,
Iowa.
Franklin J. Potter, '24. Law '25,
Lincoln.
Sheldon Tefft, '22, Law 'L, Weep
ing Water.
Nebraska Home Economics Asso
ciation will meet January 9-11 with
the Organized Agricuture at the Ag
ricultural College Campus.
IIUSKERS DEFEAT
MISSOURI 24-18
Nebraska Cagemen Outplay
Invaders in Every Branch
of Game.
SPURT IN LAST PERIOD
WINS FOR CORNHUSKERS
Shooting baskets from all angles
of the floor, and completely out
playing the invaders in every branch
of the game the Nebraska basketball
team turned back the Tigers in the
opening game of the season to the
tune of 24 to 18. The game was a
thriller throughout and at no time
did either team have a big enough
load to feel comfortable. A spurt at
the end of the last period put the
game on ice for the Huskers.
Nebraska started the scoring when
Cozier slipped a free throw and the
Tigers came back and Lester made
a follow-in shot count. Goodson, who
Was inserted into the lineup for Ne
braska at the pivot position, shot
three field goals in quick succession
and at the end of the first half Ne
braska was leading by a 12 to 7
score.
At the start of the second frame
the Tigers came back and brought
the score up to 11 before Nebraska
got started, then Black broke loose
and dribbled down the full length
of the floor and dropped in a basket.
Soon after "Satchel" Volz counted
two more baskets on a long shot and
a follow-in.
Missouri depended entirely upon a
short passing game while Nebraska
used a medley of short passes and
dribbling. Few long shots were at
tempted by either team. Each team
missed some easy shots, but taken
as a whole it was one of the best
games that has been played in the
Nebraska circles for some time.
Hays, guard on the Show-Me team
was the stellar floor man for the
visiting side while Lester played a
good offensive game for them and
was high point man, connecting for
three field goals. Volz and Cozier
played a mid-season game at guard
ing, and their floor work brought the
apple down for baskets on many oc
casions. Few shots were allowed the
Missourians within their own zone.
Captain Usher and Black for Ne
braska played consistent passing
game each of them hitting the basket
when a basket counted much. Good
son, who was in the game but ha'f
time, was high point man for the
Husker quintet, with five field goals.
The next home game will be
played in the Armory against the
Oklahoma Sooners Monday night.
Box score of game:
Nebraska fg ft pf pts
Usher, (Capt.) f 10 0 2
Cozier, f 0 S 0 8
Berkle, f 0 0 0 0
Black, f & c 2 0 14
Goodson, c 5 0 4 10
Volz, g 2 0 2 4
Tipton, g 0 12 1
Totals 10 4 9 24
Missouri fg ft pf pts
Wheat, f 2 115
Farrot Capt), f 10 2 2
Lester, c 3 0 S 6
Lewis, c 0 2 0 2
Hays, g 0 2 18
Buchner, g 0 0 2 0
Walsh, g 0 0 0 O
Totals 6 6 9 18
Referee Hargiss, Kansas State
Teachers College.
Timekeeper Johnson.
Scorer Hollingsworth.
Organized Agriculture
to Meet on Ag Campus
Organized Agriculture meetings
will begin Monday, January 7, with
the State Poultry Show at the Au
ditorium. The meetings on the- Ag
Campus will begin Tuesday and will
last till Friday.
Meetings of all the important state
organizations, such as the Home
Economics Association, Farm Bu
reau Federation and Improved Live
stock Breeders will be held. These
meetings will be open to the general
public regard! esa t;f membership in
any association.
A feed will be served on Wednes
day, January t9, in the Agricultural
Engineering Building at 5:80 a,m.
Only a limited number will bf; able
to attend on account of the of
place.
v