he Daily Nebraskan All-University Party Saturday Night. Saturday Night. yTxXIII-NO. 116 BIG SISTER BOARD PICKSJH1BERS Wior Advisory Board It Re tired; Will Continue Forme' Work. - CHOOSE MABLE LUNDY FOR NEW PRESIDENT ujith the reorganization of the Ssnior Advisory Board this month, a, Big Sister Board has been cre ated and will continue the work and vities which hare been sponsored w the advisory board. Announce ment is made of the following mem ten of the Big Sister Board for next nior members, Mable Lundy, Sash McReynolds, Marie Went worth, Edith Cook, Freda Barker, jnan, Cross, Mary- Creekpaum, Helen Gntherie; junior members, So4 Virtue, Genevieve Clark, Elsie Gwnlich, Eloise McMonies; sopho more members, Ethel Sarton and ruuise Vaa Sickle. Mable Lundy has teen chosen president of the new Installation of the Big Sister josrd will take place Thursday eve ning at Ellen Smith hall, f oHowing a dinner given by the Senior Advisory Board for the new board. Miss Hepp ner, will be one of the speakers at the installation. Members of the Senior Advisory Board this year were Marian Madi jm, president; Margaret Wattles, vice president; Gertrude Tomson, iecretary; Silence Adamson, Beulah Bnfler, Gladys Rice, Edith Olds, Jan et McLellan, Jean Holtz, Julia Shel don, Edith Gramlich, Ruth Miller, Helen Kummer, Josephine Schramek. The board has given three parties for freshman girls this year, and has provided each new girl in school with a big sister. 1924 CORtiHUSKER IS FEOGRESSIIIG RAPIDLY AS Organizations Should Pay Charges at Cornhuaker Office at Once. Work on the 1924 Cornhusker is progressing and the book is rapidly taking shape. It will be issued about Kay 15, a week or two earlier than usual Xearly all the pictures have been taken and are being mounted. Th pages for organizations will be printed soon. Charges on organiza tion for pages should be taken care t Presidents of the organizations Atrald pay their charges at the Corn hmker office or mail their checks to fl Cornhusker, Station A Copy 31 ont should be turned in imme diately. Advertising for the book is nearly H solicited. 'Merchants supported fl annual and a greater number of l?ei of advertising will be included fta year. L'IRCH NUMBER OF BIZAD IS ISSUED Students Publish Third Edition of Business Administra tion Monthly. The March number of Tbe Bixad, onOJy magazine of the College of Easiness Administration, was issued Jet?rky. This is the third issue of yer. It contains eighteen pages tra era news and articles dealing ith business subjects. Several articles by prominent Lin coln business men are included in 7 ttfgazine. "Good Clothes as a zumeu Asset," is the subject of an Jde written by Ray Farquhr of Farquhar Clothing company. A Dongau of the Lincoln Paint t . ct"pany contributes disens Mm "Salesmanship." -4jtule by two instructor, appear. 5tr Business Utters," by Mau- Weseen of the English de rneTlt nd "Some Geographic Fac r1 the Foreign Trade of Argen Brazil," by Raymond D. a. assistant in the Department "Phy. are tbe subjects. ClulT Dew of tbe Commercial tu, 7 organizations and Administration scholarships. UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1924. Weather Forecast Tuesday Partly cloudy. Wednesday Partly cloudy and slightly warmer. GRACE COPPOCK DRIVE STOPS SHORT OF MARK Team Under Margaret Ander son Wins First Place by Wide Margin. The Grace Coppock drive closed yesterday at 6 o'clock with $1133.86. It is thought that faculty and alumni subscriptions will bring the total up to the goal, $1700. Team number 13, Margaret Anderson, captain, won with a total of $224. Jessie Sutter's team is second with $82. The follow- up team will be organized and started to work today. Members of the winning team are Sarah McReynolds, Alice Sanderson, Ruth Tanner, Dorothy Carr, Mar garet Fahnestock, Jessie Good, Gar trude Mayland, Mildred Upson, Evan geline Fleetwood, Gwendolyn Temp- lin. STUDENTS TO HEAR ADAM M'fMLEN Candidate for Governor Will Talk at Convocation Thursday. Announcement that Adam McMul len, '96, candidate for the republican nomination for governor of Nebraska, had been secured to speak at a spe cial convocation to be held at the Temple theater at 10 o'clock Thurs day morning under the auspices of the Nebraska University Republican club, was made Mondey evening by Frank - M. Johnson, chairman. This is the second of a series of convoca tions sponsored by the Republican club to allow university students to bear the opinions of the leading po litical thinkers of the state-and the nation. At the first convocation at which Hiram Johnson was the speak er the hall was overflowing through out the meeting. " Mr. McMullen was graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1896. Since that time he has beeji active in state governmental activities. While in the University he was a newspaper reporter and took active part in college activities as welL He was a member of tbe debating team and participated in a number of ver bal battles for Nebraska in the early nineties. "Mr. McMullen will be an interest ing speaker for tbe University stu dents to hear Thursday," said Chair man Johnson when he announced that Mr. Mullen had been secured. "As an alumnus of the University and an orator from the time he was a member of the debating team until today, tbe club expects him to at tract a capacity audience at the spe cial convocation." Mr. McMullen will devote most cf his remarks to tbe discussion of the "Value of Good Citizenship." Should Order Capt And Gowns Early Caps and gowns should be ordsred early this week by tbr senior" to eliminate congestion the latter part of the week. Much time will be saved if the length, bust measure ment and size cap desired is known before making tbe order. Members of the faculty who wish to order gowns should do so immediately. The rental fee of $2.50 must be paid when tbe. gown is ordered and s deposit of $10 will be required when the gown is delivered just be fore commencement. The booth will be open every day this week from 1 to 6 o'clock and all day Saturday in the College Book Store. Members of the committee in charge are Harry Fecha, Jannette McClellan, Margaret Hager, Ruth Taft and Lila Wynian. Observatory Open to Public Tuesday The University Observatory will be pep to the public Tuesday from 7 to 10 p. m. for a view of tbs moon It .1. .V: rm .n -1pr. Dr. G. D- IX W1C rJi ' - Swezey will lecture on "Tbe Solar System and tbe Atom." ) -is. If ".All r 1 r .,-v t w fc . t "" H. ,.-. m , ..x Miss Martha Miller, director and co star of the Coffer-Miller Players who are coming to the Temple The ater for five nights next week, in one of her best roles, as Toinette in the "Imaginary Invalid." SALE BEGINS ON PLAYER TICKETS Coffer-Miller Company Will Show Here Fire Nights Next Week. Tickets went on sale yesterday for tbe Coffer-Miller Players who will appear in Lincoln next week. The famous players are ooming under the auspices of tbe University Players and will give five performances from Monday to Friday evenings, inclus ive. Jess Coffer and Miss Martha Mil ler are the owners, directors, and co stars of the company of fifteen. They carry all of their own stage settings. The Coffer-Miller players come through the middlewest playing to high school and university audiences every year. Tickets cost 75 cents and are on sale at Ross P. Curtis company. REPUBLICAN CLUB CALLS FOR L'EMBERS Wants Every C O. P. Univer- siiy Jiuaeni to svjiusi in Organization. The University of Nebraska Re publican club began a campaign for expansion yesterday 'afternoon. It was announced that the names of every man and woman Republican on the campus would -be collected by the executive committee and filed at the committee headquarters. This membership will be the University of Nebraska Republican club and will take active part in receiving and welcoming speakers of the Republi can party to tbe University. Republican clubs have been or ganized in all of the large univer sities and colleges in the United States. A drive for members is instituted in every cnUegc and uni versity to line up tbe men and wo men of tbe Republican party into a compact organization. A Nation al association of collegiate Republi can clubs has been established and correlates the movements of tbe various clubs. A competitive cam paign for members is being waged by the clubs of the eastern and middle-western schools for the larg est enrollment. Every man and woman in the Uni- vtrrity, regardless of age, who de sires to join the Nebraska club will be given an opportunity to do so. A ballot box has been placed in the hall on the fiast floor of the Social Science building and also at tbe State Farm, in which students de firing to join may deposit a slip bearing the name, home address and city address. If more conveni ent the student may hand his or her name to any member of the execu tive committee, -bich is composed of Frank M- Johnson, Mark M. Wer ner, Robert F. Craig, Jack Whitten, Welch Pogue, Sheldon Tefft, Fran cis Weintz and Gertrude Twrcson. Report Indicates Favor of Single Tax Since Definite Plan is Made Camnus opinion concerning the single tax seems to have changed since a definite plan has been an nounced. Of thirty-six students- in terviewed yesterday, ths reporter found thirty-three in favor of the tax. The students who voiced their opinion had changed their minds in most cases, sine the provisional al lotment of the funds raised from the tax was published. A reporter found last week that twenty-four of twenty-seven students interviewed were against the plan. W. A. A. Will Elect Officers Wednesday The W. A A. election of officers for next year and delegates to the national convention at Berkeley, Cal., will be held Wednesday in the west entrance of Memorial halL Only members in good standing will be allowed to vote. Those members who have been absent for three gen eral meetings without sufficient ex cuse or those members who have not paid tbeir dues are not considered in good standing. BAND GIVES SECOND MUSICAL PROGRAM Sunday Afternoon Concert Is Played for Large Audience. Memorial hall was crowded Sun day afternoon for a concert given by the University band under the di rection of William T. Quick, con ductor. The band was assisted by the Uni versity quartet. Several solos were given by band members, accompan ied by the band. Neil McDowell sang a baritone solo and Burford Gage, last year's captain, substituted with a cornet solo for Erwin Weiler who was absent. This was the second concert given by the band this year and they will probably entertain again. The band has forty-seven members. The program was as follows: 1. Overture, "Zampa" F. Herold. 2. Baritone solo "The Old Home Down on the Farm" F. P. Harlowe, Neil McDowelL 3. Caprice, "First Heart Throbs," R. Eilenberg; intermezzo, "Forget Me Not," Allan MacBeth. 4. Cornet solo Burford Gage. 5. Serenade, "Les Milliors d' Ar- leuin," R. Drigo. 6. University quartet. 7. Selection, Scottish Folk Songs and Dances, arranged by J. R. Lampe. 8. The Cornhusker. CHINESE EDUCATOR ' WILL SPEAK HERE Prof. Tsu of Shanghai Will Appear Before Student Groups. Y. Y. Tsn, a professor in St. Johns college of Shanghai, China, will speak at Vespers Tuesday at Ellen Smith halL Mr. Tsu is prominent in edu cational affairs in China. Elizabeth Langworthy wQl lead the meeting. Mr. Tsu is tourning the United States as travelling secretary of the Chinese Christian federation. He will also speak before the Cosmo politan club Tuesday night. He was a speaker at the recent Indianapolis student volunteer convention. "The New Pacific Era" will be his subject Wednesday at tbe World Forum din ner. Tickets for the luncheon may be procured at the Y.M.C.A or at the Y.W.C.A office. Ag Engineers to Convene in Lincoln Lincoln will be the scene of the 1924 convention of the American So ciety of Agricultural Engineers. Be cause the attendance is largely mtde up of college men, it will be held in June, probably 18, 19 and 20. Membership in this society is large in tbe University department of ag ricultural engineering. s. Manufac turers of Lincoln are also represent ed. There will be a student repre sentation at tbe convention. . One objection to the tax system as proposed was that no provision was made for a University Players ticket. A member of the student council ex plained the omission by saying that the University Players was a corpor ation and if it joined in the system it could not present certain royalty plays as it had in the past. It was at the request of the Players that they were left out of the list. Few Would Ht It Compulsory. Two of the students who objected to the plan as it has been proposed gave as their reason 'that it should be compulsory instead of optional. Both were in favor of the plan other wise. The other dissenter thought that the idea was all right in theory but would never work out in prac tice, mainly because their would not be sufficient student support. One student summed up the gen eral opinion of the people interviewed when he said, "The single tax will be much cheaper for the average stu dent and will relieve him from being pestered at every turn with some new drive. Moreover, it will make for better campus spirit as all Uni versity activities will be supported and hacked as they should he." A co-ed brought out the idea that it would save all the students in ac tivities a considerable amount of time that they have heretofore had to spend in campaigning in every drive that comes to the school. "Any student who is in activities knows that he or she is expected to help put every drive over the top and this takes so much time that school work has to suffer many times." A member of the faculty said that he had favored the plan for several years and was glad to see interest taken in it again. "I am heartily in favor of the idea that has worked so well in cities as the Community Chest," he added. JUNIOR-SENIOR PROM WILL BE INFORMAL Plan for Traditional Dance to Take Form of Spring: Party. At a roe ting last night, the Junior Senior Prom committee decided to hold an informal May party instead of the proposed prom. The proba ble date for the party is May 10. The change was made because the only night available for the traditional formal was the night before Easter and tbe committee felt that it was not a desirable time. Since the only open dates other than April 19 are in May, it was de cided that the party could not be a formal. The party as planned will be in tbe nature of a spring party with special decorations and attrac tions. Underclassmen will probably be admitted, the junior and senior classes acting through their commit tee as sponsors of tbe affair. The committee wishes to correct the erroneous statement made by stu dents writing in the Student Opin ion department of tbe Nebraskan that any deficit occurring from the party would have to be met by class assessments. The students in charge of this or similar activities are re quired by a University ruling to per sonally pay any such deficits and tbe classes will not be held responsible for them. Definite plans for the party were ade and preparations will begin imm mediately. The Scottish Rite Tem ple will probably be secured. Will Hold Post Mortem on Debates The annual "post mortem"" on the Iowa-Nebraska, South Dakota-Ne braska debates will be held today from 2 to 3 o'clock in University hall 106. Criticism of the work done by both Nebraska teams will be givn and special attention will be gen to th Iowa-Nebraska debate at Iowa City, a part of which was beard over the radio by Prof. M. M. Fogg axd Nebraska's affirmative team. "FEED" The name "Rag Feed" has been changed to "The' Daily Nebraskan Banquet," Thursday at 6 o'clock. Admission 50 cents. PRICE 5 CENTS HUSKER MAT MAN VANS ONLY FALL Skinner Throws Reed of Indi ana at Western Intercol legiate Meet. KELLOGG WINS FIRST IN 125 POUND CLASS The only fall of the Western In tercollegiate conference individual wrestling meet held at Chicago Sat urday came when Skinner of Ne braska threw Reed of Indiana for first place in the finals of the 145 pound class. Skinner used a body scissors and a half nelson and his time was 6:35. Kellogg won first place in the 125 pound class from Kurtz of Ames. He won on a -time advantage of 2:05. Two first places are credited to Ne braska with but one each to Iowa, Wisconsin, Ames, Indiana, and Ohio. Blore placed third in the 115 pound class, winning a decision advantage of 4:22 from Takaki of Chicago. Sargent won second place in the foils but was enable to place in the swords or sabers. He battled teams composed of several men from Chi cago, Ohio' state and mid-western schools inr seventeen events, a feat which evoked admiration from the astounded onlookers. The schools which sent teams to the conference included Michigan, Minnesota, Chicago, Illinois, North western, Ames, Michigan Aggies, Wisconsin, Purdue, Indiana, and Ne braska. Dr. R. G. Clapp, Nebrasks coach, accompanied the Nebraska team. HUBKA APPOINTED TO PUBLICATION BOARD Is Named by Eastabrooks to Fill Junior Member Vacancy. Laddimir J. Hubka, '25, was ap pointed junior member of the Stu dent Publication Board by Roland Eastabrooks, junior president, yes terday. This appointment was made to fill the vacancy caused by the with drawal from school , of Charles S perry at the end of the first se mester. Bennett S. Martin was ap pointed by Philip Lewis, junior presi dent the first semester, to fill the place until a second semester presi dent was elected. Hubka is a member of the "N" club. Delta Tau Delta, and Phi Delta Phi. He is in his first year in the College of Law. STUDENTS MUST SIGN FOR JUDGING CONTEST Registration for Agricultural Competition Closes Thurs day Afternoon. All students who are going to enter the annual students judging contes which will be beld Saturday, Maicl. 22, at the Judging Pavilion, must regirter with Wilber Shainbolz, presi dent of tbe Block and Bridle club, or at tbe Animal Husbandry office by 5 o'clock Thursday, March 20. The number allowed to judge is limited. All men majoring in animal hus bandry and sophomores taking ani mal husbandry work are eligible. Six freshmen, picked by instructors, w'U be allowed to judge. The contest is sponsored directly by the Block and Bridle club and is designed to give students practical work in judging contests. Ribbons will be awarded to lhe high men of the contest, and to the winners in each class of stock. An entrance f?e of 50 cents will be charged to cover expenses. HARVARD "Jazz good jazz is America's only orignal contri bution to the music of tbe world," Professor W. P. Hill of the music department of Harvard believes. Five hundred deans of women from universities, colleges, and nor mal schools met in Chicago at a con vention. One of tbe deans made tbe statement that there is a new voca tion for college women in the work of state groups.