j The Daily "Nebraskan y.W.CA. Election This Week. Y.W.C.A. Elections This Week. vol. xxm NO. 102 GIVE CONCERT IN ARMORYTONIGHT fine Art Student to Hear Varied Instrumental and Vocal Program. UNIVERSITY PLAYERS WILL PRESENT PLAY A concert by Fine Arts students ,t g o'clock this evening in the Ar- pory IS tae program 01 me atis vtek for today. Convocation yester jty morning and a recital by the teachers of the department in the erenicg opened the activities of the The University Players will pre jfut a prize comedy, Ton and I," rtarsiay and Friday. The Fine Arts banquet will be held Friday eve ning and the concluding event of the tmk will be a carnival Saturday eve-isg- PAET L OcleUe Ladies Voices; The Tears st the Spring, Mrs. II. A. Beach; If Jr Song Had Airy Pinions, Hihn; Xtt and Dearest, Caraceiola. So- ranas Marguerite Hunger, Jose-j ifcine AM man, Harriet Cruise, Louise j rets last evening in honor of the lesb, Contraltos Sylvia Cole, Dor- visiting teams who concluded their ty Spmgue, Helen Ehoades, Gladys rk at Nebraska yesterday. The lice. Eo&anna Williams, accom- j teams have been be.e since last Sat fJst. Surday interviewing students and bo'.d- Yiolin Liebesfrend, Krei&ler; On ' ir-S meetings in an effort to enlist llags of Song, Mendelssohn Rob- j church workers for the various de et Er&nsblette; Gladys Tipton, ac-j nom-n'stjons. emjAmst. j Two hundred Method 1ft students Piano Im pTorsisation, MacDow;wre present at the banquet held v,s,,T.a. I.hiH Oltnn I at the Grand hoteL Dr. Evans A Cello Concerto, Golterman; al- Worthly spoke on the "Challenge of offkes of president, vice pres kp moderate Mary Creekpaum; Changing Age. Miss Ella Watson, ideE "Ury, treasurer and under ima Hart, accompanist. J former worker in a girls' school m graduate field representative will be SopraBO-Caro Nome "Bigoktto," India, told of conditions there acd filIed th5js wefck bv vote of Tofi-Qeaa Burke; Fleda Gr- tie ne-d of workers in that part S B,fcmbers- thr cabinet members W acconjpanist. , PAET n. STscpbony, Xo. 1, Op. 21 in C, !ed&vri-u ; Adagio molto. Allegro emi brie; Andantino eantabile con nu; Mecu?tto; Finale The Uni WHaty Orchestra, William T. Quick, irnsctor; Mrs. Carrie B. Biymond, As kiiitorical sketch of the School a Fine Arts by Paul BL Grummann, atAlor of the school, a piano solo by J Ertrt Mac Ahan and a short play-! k by tie University Players eota-j prishl tie program for the couveca-f tim ywlrday mornisg. i Gjtcs Procter Tie Fine Arts school of the Uni fter&ily cf Nebrai&a, so tar as I know, m tii sly school in the country vtwre t&e three allied arts, music, fainting and dramatics, are brought goto titkt-jr proper relation," said Pro fotfhwr GrjiBanaamnL. B tu!.d of the struggle to orgtn tioc Mhool and to gain proper rec CCoiitanoed on Page 4) Student Wai Help Survey Antelope Park r T-rtyHKX fZaiesAs will iake part w DJTf-ijDg and makiflig a topo fstfutaj map of Antelope paric wH f A Street jmeludamg the golf ti&s. ur.der the Jjrectwn s4 soper Ht o, EL Eager and W. Scott f l tvril emgwerwz departaaent. wjjl be sEtarted as soon ax the tvjjvrjrahkal map of the eorth Urt f he fjty caaspus wall be made ett yw tUx the Agrkultaral fctap(ns or tW remainder of AttUsU park w3 be mapped in two Dental Students Hold Animal Banquet Today T f Simdents aioda!liioffl x hi u ansnal tajauet at the 1WW1 WdKdy evenscig Feb ruw7 TSt at (5 o'clock, A lWsit program has t Jftd ffw O evening. Deao C. Zitfjurx wflj deliver the prlaripal J-few. She tAs ma he made y tWs of the faculty feelod- K I. A, DfieaL XtT I. Kim-Am. i&i Daa G. A. Grubb. Hebraslca Rifle Team Will Meet Miwoiirl Wri, trail', rival at the u at Fort Ztut'Sitf, is on f helium by the Ceiled Sules Bareau cage sport. He was also prominent BaW rifle scbed for this of Mines Is wade b7 Profeswor W. I la wrertlicg and trak wark. Before Wii um rjrhzz DeEaufre. etsierisg Univensty he was a star in at rrwljj. Urvaj sd twrn-j A w45Eg 53 be Uli In several UacIa h:h school atiSeti. Hvat; 4 t rry I'jjy C-'s to tfyrrt 4 Vxff of the wt(ii gredass??! Ksn.a lis loa tnit JJ trr, hi tLkry ihe'raige !se for exrt year. The publkativn j irg Isaroracce for Lincoln company. j1 iT v3t jsttk may U made boeOI H I msbr of jgnsa ?o f rater- ti Uuien and rers. Quarterly. r. UNIVERSITY OF Offer Library Edition of Annual This Year ilany fraternities and sororities placed their orders for the gold-letter edition of the 1924 Cornhusker at the office Tuesday. The manage ment arranged for the publication of this volume in order that the or ganizations might use it for their libraries. It has the name of the group stamped in gold on the cover. The Cornhusker office is still tak- Ilne orders for th Annnal hnf tVi A. der placed with the printers within a short time and the actual work of printing sections of the year trill then be started. GIVE BANQUETS TO VISITATION TEAMS Seren Denominations Close Week With Meeting of Student. WORKERS INTERVIEW STUDENTS THIS WEEK Seven denominations held ton JI Use world. Miss Jiuriel lry toid of the work that the Methodist church has done in Mexico. Miss Margaret Lewis, visiting sec retary of the . Presbyterian church. I was principle speaker at the ban jquet in the Temple attended by I eighty students. The Pan-Presbyterian Club, composed of University students, elected the following offi- after the banquet: Presids-nt, John Allison; vke pres- Wert, CS-srice Haggart; secretary- treasurer, Easter Kellogg. Eev. Paul Johnson led the students m Egu2ff Nebraska tovgs. Disciple Club BufwL The Disciples club of the Christian 1 church held their banouet in th their Lanuet north room of the Grand hoteL Sixty students beard the talks by the visit tg secretaries. Miss Lela Taylor told of the opportunities for church work at the present time. Bty Eice told of the conditions in India. Glen (Continued on Page 4) E!iG!HGf,!AGAZ!!iE WILL BE ISSUED TODAY Contain Continuation of Ar. tide on Structural Feat ares of Stadium. The third edition of The Nebras ka Blue Print," xgsaiierly naagaxine of the College of Engjoeering, wi3 be iinued Vixj. It conitaws twenty n pages of ewgineerbig an&de and eom A continuation of a previous wnit img on "irwtJral Featurei on the New fEiadjUMi" by J'.Ls G. K-awn, lf, comwltiig egxeerformerly a facul ty member, gives a complete analyrif of the loadlcg for castuever jIit. ProfT C. A. Sjogren i the author of a comment on The Hcman Mavtbiroe in ItAaxtrjT This artkle treats vhh the general principles usidTlyig the relation of industry to the worker and the value of the faaiKan nuaefcine to the world. Lloyd P. SUdsetk in an article entitled The Hue of a Tboutand Carodle-Power," detrsb the mactir - ery and exjwipwect in the electrical laboratory. A ramnsary of the report of the director of the V. S. Enreau t.f tfj on The Future of Oxrrtn" u also contained m the ed;"Jn. g of the aTlotment of 1 Wit PtWW'T'V , nve-thucand dollars to the depart- meet of mechaJtkal etsglneenKg for .-,.. rrk in the devtlAtwent of ! NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, Bank Books are Left at Studio by Uni Students The old belief that people would "lose their heads if they weren't fas tened on to them is proved true every day. For instance, ten articles pinging from bank-books to a writ ten lesson have been left at Doles studio all ready this year. Of course, it is true that having pictures taken for the University an nual is very upsetting and distracting and this may be taken as an excuse for the absent-mindedness of the students. The lost articles include one white muffler, two pairs of kid gloves, two fountain pens, on writ ten lesson, two dorines, and two bank-books. Owners may rec'7cr their property by calling at the stud i and identifying it. DISTRIBUTE Y.V.G. A, CERTIFICATES TODAY Women Who Signed Member ship Pledge May Get Cer tificates at Polls. Membership certificates will be dis tributed from the polls during the Y.W.C.A. elections today and tomor row in the Library. Any woman who has signed the membership pledge I may secure ber certificates by calling for it at the voting place. " ' Installation will take i place in about six weeks. PLAY SEM1-RUALS ill BASKETBALL TOURNEY Women in Color Tournament Fight Out Championship Today. The semi-finals in the girls bas ketball color tournament will be played this noon. The Dark Blues, usder Esther Robinson, captain, wdjof the College of Arts wd Sciences, play the Purples, Betty Eoberts, cap- J Monday evening and Tuesday mom tain. The game wSl be played in the j ing. The subject of his talk was Armory. The Whites will play the "The Economic Basis of Chiliza Iigbt Greens in the cbipeL Tbejtjon. winners of these two games wtU play "That surplus is dependent cpon in the finals Thursday noon. j economic conditions, be said. Class teams will probably be chosen Therefore civilization and econm tomorrow by S o'clock, and the Crst re closely connected. team tournament will start Stor- Dean LeRossignol traced the bit day momarng at 9 o'clock, A second T l cfriliiation, pointing out snd third team tournament may start tht where tirUlzatiem sprang up, playicg Friday noon, but no definite plans have ben made yet concernir: them. The light Greens with Kalhro K.d- well captain, won 21-14 over the Lav- lender Tuesday noon. Katharine Mc- Donald was captain of the Lavenders. If meyer as captain, won from the Ye!- low team uder Marie Hennamk by a score of 27-1&, Monte Mann, TZ, who has Ked as candidate for tie republka.n nation to the legislature from thirty- fifth drftrkt. - ball d basket ball player while in the Unrrerrity. He played guard on the foothali team and center In the - U ( ' 1. 1 1 NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, DISCOVER WOMAN GYMNASUJT.l THIEF Physical Education Instructor Finds Robber Searching Overcoats. AUTHORITIES DECIDE NOT TO PROSECUTE Continued loss of money, jewelry, and clothes for the past several months in the dressing rooms of the women's gymnasium was explained Monday afternoon when the culprit, a married woman of Lincoln, was discovered by Miss M. D. Clark, gym nasium instructor, in the act of searching through overcoats in the cloakroom. The woman, who' is young and comes from a well-to-do Lincoln family, has been placed on probation, and will not be turned over to' civil authorities, according to Dean C. C. Engberg, who investigated the case. She is not a student in the university. A chance visit to the women's locker rooms wit& student acquaint ances brought to her attention the ease with which things could be stolen in the gymnasium .and tempted her to start on the venture of crime, the woman told authorities. She claims to have taken nothing but money, and says that she got a total of 35. Girls in the gymnasium classes have been losing articles all year, and it is not known to what extent the woman apprehended Mon day is responsible. Dean Engberg, on investigating the matter, decided not to mt the woman prosecuted. He reported the affair to police and asked them to make an investigation of the woman's j character, informing them of his in-1 tention to keep ber name secret. SPEAKS Oil ECONOMIC BSlQ fiP HiVI! ITATlflf J UnWIWLWI Ullli.IL.rt I IWII Dean LeRossiraol Sav Fo- nomics and Civilization Are Connected. "Civilization depends upon leisure t.'nse. To hare time we must have a surplus of the necessities and Inrsiii'.-j of life," Dean J. E. LeRoffi&ignol of the College of Business Administra- J ta'on told freshman lecture students!! g&od economic conditions exi&td. The culture of the Hebrews cen tered in the productive agricultural f gr an t-upra 'i4a" wBzat.on thrived raEe the e; Ath- wu., owe. S m mm M . The slave was the basiis of eivtlt- "t5v j r;xt .f ' , n IEoecSgnol explained. In the days of GGretk culture, rwo-thjrd or three- ourths of the populatson were The rematning portiion b 'A the time to devote to cultural pur suit. Today, machinery is depended upon to provide tense for study. There are four stages Vf civiliza tion which mark the progresdvece of man, declared the speAker. They are the avage, barbarous, semi-eir- ilized, and civiHzed stages. These are elo!y eonnected with the eco nomic stages: Collecting, bunting and fhh'mz, patiyraL Triuiiral, handi craft and commercial and indnittrial Some cay that civilization a mere ly a veneer which covers up the sav age underneath," -id Dean In& svgnoL "Perhaps this is true. Take the fighting instinct. In the savage t prompts him to strike, In civ- ptrrn It results in a struggle. such as with books and laratfi" Dr. Latcmer of the anatomy de partment Is prerarteg three abstract ! for the naut,; meeting of the American Anatomist Asftctation at Buffalo, 2. Y- Apr3 lff-13, er. titled The Growth of the Erasn of the! Chkken," The JlelAtive Proportion s i us oi in rrog, surue, ana DonS" and ntergVobular Spaces of jferrh schools, as few ar able to go the Cat's Teeth." The latter piper to college. Those attending the mid is a jotct report with Mkf Esther Ed- die schools go back to agriculture wards. ' again. FEBRUARY 27, 1924 Weather Forecast Wednesday Probably fair and slightly wanner for Lincoln and vi cinity. MUST HAVE TICKETS FOR FORUM DINNER Student Will Not Be Admitted . Unless They Obtain Tick ets in Advance. Admission to the world forum luncheon this noon will be by tick ets alone, according to Paul Mc Caffree, secretary of the University Y.M.C.A. Judge E. B. Chappell of the Lincoln police court will speak on "Lawbreakers, Who Are They? A few extra plates will be set. and if those who have bought their tick ets already do not fill up the dining room of the Grand hotel, those with out tickets will be admitted. MISS MARKLEY TALKS AT TUESDAY VESPERS "Christian Adventuring" Subject of Address by Secretary. "Christian Adventuring was the subject of an address given by Miss Mary EL Markley of New York City, secrcUrjr board of Education 5 thc Lmted LntfcfTan Chrc,h caper xciuHjajr cnii v w v liwm in 1. 1 en smna oau. jis Esioer Garrett lead the services and the hos tesses were members of the church affiliations staff. Miss Mary Davis played a violin solo. has bee respoiwble for OT ; ,.f r s T.rA to racial problems! world affairs and many other movements of wide inter- est," declared Miss Markley. She ! explained that it was not only in big f problems that something new in the 'way of methods or ideals might be initiated. The circle of activity need j not be so great that it extends to j world affairs, but may deal with a subject that extends through only a small sphere. SECRETARY TELLS OF AGRICULTURE III CHIIiA s:?i f ti c rvi v.f ' MUVKt. BVVOK mjmjm J m M- teen Per Cent of Land Is Developed, Gilbert LovelL church secretary, who has lately returned from China, spoke on "Agriculture Conditions in China." The speaker was introduced by Paul MeCaffree, secretary of the University Y. M. C. A. Mr. LoveH is a member of the church teams visi ting here and has spent fourteen years in educational work in eastern China. He stated that the average Chinese farm contains only six or seven acres and that only fifteen per cent of the land is developed. China is primarily on an agricultural basis, with indus tries jut beginning. In interior China the main resources are coal, tungsten, antimony, acd silver. Eice and the preserved eggs are the chief exports. Mr. Lovetl said that the Chinese farmsr cannot be taught anything! abontthe Intensive system of lVming ftt miwonary aroor.g the Indians, or about crop rotation hut he can be PA to the team cartains of the taught about the seeds he ue andjGr C"M memorial camp&fgn iMat vriti and AmrU'l lw,tft ytr&y after a 12 o'clock lonchon. better type of cotton. One of the sad things about China's agricultural development Mr. Lovel believes is the lack of development In the sHk indus try In whjch Japan s forging ahead because' of modern methods and en couragment of production. Places are open for trainod agri ca!turits in China, bth in universi ties and In high schools, especially ta Interior China for developments along vocational lines. Mr. Lovtll think that the most good cam he m 1st tha middle wmcn correrv4 to our to PRICE 5 CENTS BUSKERS TO PLAY AT Ar.lESTOIJIGIIT Workout in Armory Finishes Preparation for Cage Fray with Iowa. KLINE EXPECTS AMES TO GIVE HARD GAME A workout in the Armory yester day put the finishing touches on the Husker cage machine for the clash this evening with Iowa State at Ames. The squad, numbering eight players, left late last night. Altho a comparison of the past record of the two teams favors Nebraska, Coach Kline is not expecting an easy victory. The Cyclones always put up a stiff fight; Captain Usher, Tipton, Cozier, Goodson, and Volz will be in the Husker lineup against Ames tonight. Black, R. Dewitz and Eckstrom are included in the squad, and will prob ably come in for part of the play. Student Manager Krueger is also going with the team. Ka Defeats CriaaclL In two Valley games played last night, Kansas University defeated Grinnell 39 to 19 at Lawrence, and Missouri lost to Kansas Aggies 23 to 15 at Columbia. The victory of the Aggies over Missouri raises the chances of a Jayhawk victory over Washington at St. Louis this evening. The initvil encounter between these schools last Saturday resulted in a victory for Washington by the close score of 28 to 24. If Kansas de- j feato Pikers tonight, Nebraska will have third place cinched in the I ValleV rice. Nebraska plays two more games after tonight, a return game with Ames at Lincoln next Monday, and a home game with Dmke next Wed nesday. The Drake game will be tournament begins, and several fcun- Ed red hiVh school faiut srPV-t to toke this chance of seeing the lingers in action. High school play rs gueis oi tne L Diversity. SMITH SAlfS WORK IS BASIS OF KNOWLEDGE Professor Addresses Freshman Engineers on Subject of "Work." i i W ork, to frehman engineering Ittudent at orientation Monday at bat!dng. "I learned that labor was the first tep in the road of knowledge. It is the foundation of all knowledge," was quoted by Professor Smt'th from a statement of Secretary of Labor Davis. Prof. Smith described the rtre in business of several men who had learned the valus of work, aiJ the docble value of work And edaca titsn, lie brought out the fact that it is not necessary to go awcy from home to be uccefaL CHINESE MISSIONARY SPEAKS AT LUNCHEON Mrs. Barbour Addresses Team Captain of Grace Cc pock Campaign, Mrs. Margaret Barbour, formerly mmionary to China and at pres- Mrs. Barbour was a personal friend of Grace Coppock nd Vera Barger. "Grace Coppock was considered as one of the peopl way up in thc Y. W. C. A. work, She was what none of us can be, the was a pioneer in the work. Every movement that was adapted to the Chinese Christian work found Its tvrt with Crete Cop r. She efttablobed the physical education schools with whkb Vera Barger, the present tnmionary, is associated." Mrs, Barbour Kau bea ia Crina eiven years. She was connected wth tfce gfrti school of SL Mary in Shanghai. During the last few years she has been doing the follow up work of placing Chinese girl grad uates In denirable positions.