The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 02, 1924, Image 1

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    y Nebraskan
Have you paid your
Stadium pledge T
Have you paid your
Stadium pledge?
VOL. XXin NO. 145
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1924
PRICE 5 CENTS
The
Da
BASEBALL SQUAD
TO MEET. AGGIES
Team Will Appear in Its First
Home Game of the
Season.
ROCK ISLAND PARK TO
BE SCENE OF FRAY
Nebraskas baseball team .after four
weeks of intensive practice since their
last game, meets the Kansas Aggie
team, in the first home game of the
season, at Rock Island park at 4
o'clock this afternoon. The second
game of the series will be played on
the Agriculture college diamond at
1 o'clock tomorrow as part of the
Farmers fair festivities.
Siir e the trip south during spring
vacation Coach Kline has shifted his
line-up and thinks that he now has
a winning combination. Lewellen will
probably draw the pitching assign
ment in the opening game and Lang
will be on the receiving end for the
Huskers. Janda, who was spiked in
a practice game during the first part
of the week, vAl perhaps be able to
take his place at second. It was fear
ed for a time that the wound had be
come infected and this would have
kept him out of the game for some
time.
Following is the probable Husker
line-up given in the batting order:
Janda 2b, Volti lb, Locke rf, Blood
good cf, Collins If, Gibbs 3b, Bell
ss, Land c, and Lewellen p.
It is possible that Eckstrom, who
has been playing first, may start in
the center garden instead of Locke.
The plan of having a parade from
the campus to Rock Island park has
been given up. Chancellor Avery will
pitch the first ball of the game and
Dean Engberg will attempt to catch
it
The Aggie team, fresh from a vic
tory over K. U., will arrive on the
Union Pacific this morning. Cunning
ham, star hurler for the Manhattan
nine, held the Kansas team to five
hits during the game last week. It
is possible that he may go on the
mound for the Aggies.
The Rock Island diamond will be in
fine shape for a fast game. It has
been filled in and regraded. The ad
mission for the game will be fifty
cents or by student athletic ticket.
COMMANDANTS STATEMENT.
The war department rating
sheet used for inspections to
determine what colleges and
aaivertities should be desig
nated as "Distinguished" allows
20 points for "faculty support,'
v20 points for "student support,
28 points for efficiency in the
oretical instruction and 32 points
for efficiency in practical in
fraction. If, in considering "faculty
sepport" and "student support,"
soaljr spirit, good will, helpful
ness and co-operation were con
sidered, Nebraska woqfd score a
Maximum on these items. In
fact, the faculty and students of
Nebraska hare done all and more
than I could ask to help in build
ag up the military department
it present standard.
Tfce real test of an inspection v
borne by the cadets of the
refimeot and my faith is in the
eorP I know they will do their
t and considering that two
tairds of them will only hare
had about fifty hours practical
instruction on the field their
bowing will reflect credit on
their interest, seal and applica
tion. Whether or not we attain the
coveted goal this year, Nebraska
will
carry on"
' and be back
little harder in
"fating just
1 ..
1924-25.
SIDNEY ERICKSON,
P. M. S. T.
KEW YORK Thirty-seven mem
7" of the Columbia faculty have
nCTed a paper opposing Japanese
delusion.
. We with to extend n cordial
Ration to the faculty and stu-
of all Colleges of the Uni
rtity t0 b. ppMnt at our ixtls
aaual Farmers Fair, Saturday,
3. 1924.
ALLEN COOK
HOWARD TURNER
CLYDE WALKER
CLAUDE WEICERS
JEANETTE GILL
RUTH GROVES
Farmers Fair Board. '
S r
Captain Petersen, who will lead the
Husker, baseball squad against the
strong Kansas Aggie team, today.
"WISHING RING"
CASTJS READY
Curtain Will Rise at 8:15 on
Thirteenth Annual Klub
Production.
DRESS REHEARSAL IS
REPORTED SUCCESSFUL
The curtain rises at 8:15 tonight on
the opening act of "The Wishing
Ring," 1924 Kosmet Klub musical
comedy. No one will be seated while
the curtain is up. A successful dre$s
rehearsal at the Orpheum last even
ing showed everything in readiness
for the thirteenth annual production
ofth Klub.
The program for "The Wishing
Ring" was issued today by the Klub
members. The cover is elaborately
finished in gold and black, represent
ing a stage scene and the Kosmet
Klub pin. The cover design is to be
permanently used for Kosmet Klub
productions.
The program shows a cast and
chorus of over seventy University
men and women. Miss Marguerite
Munger and Mr. Ward Wray take the
leading parts. Special dance and
song numbers are done by Katharine
Saylor, Donna Gustin, Pauline Bar
bi", Neva Jones, Dwight Merriam,
Herbert Yenne, John Dibble, Harriet
Cruise, Dietrick Dierks, the quartet,
Aalph Ireland, Orville Andrews, and
two large choruses.
Leading Roles. ,
Prominent parts are played by L.
C. Hawley, Arnim West, Betty Ray
mond, Phyllis Easterday, Wiliam Nor
ton, William Bradley, Joe Pizer, Har
old Felton, George Turner, Helen
Cowan, Joy Berquist, James Owens,
and William Hastings.
The play is written and directed
by Cyril Coombs, Law '23. He also
wrote the eighteen song numbers of
the show. Four of these songs have
been printed and will be offered for
sale between acts at the Orpheum to
night by members of the Kosmet
Klub.
The entire cast, chorus, and Klub
will leave at 4:40 Saturday for
Omabi to play at the Gaiety thea
ter ander the auspices of the Col
lege Club at their annual "College
Night" performance. The orchestra
under the direction of Prof. William
Quick will also play at the Omaha
show.
(Continued on Page 6)
Schedule for Military Inspection
by Board From War Deparment
FRIDAY.
9:00 Theory section, first year advanced course.
10:00 Theory section, secortd year advanced course.
11:30 Call on Chancellor and Executive Dean.
12:00 Scabbard and Blade luncheon.
1:15 Review and inspection of entire command. Such drills and exer
cises as may be prescribed by board.
SATURDAY.
9:00 Theory section, first year basic course.
10:00 Theory section, second year basic-course.
11:00 Inspect storeroom andclass room facilities.
12:00 Luncheon with Chancellor and Executive Dean. (
1 Joo Conference with Executive Dean. Inspection of schedules and
office records.
2:30 Inspection Agricultural College facilities.
FAIR PARADE TO
HAVE 30 FLOATS
Annual Farmers Carnival Wil
Begin When Procession
. Ends at Ag Campus.
BRONCHO BUSTING TO
COME IN AFTERNOON
All students in the College of
Agriculture are excused from
classes on both the "city and the
Ag campuses today.
DEAN E. A. BURNETT.
A parade 6f thirty educational and
comic floats down O street will start
the sixth annual Farmers fair at
noon tomorrow. The afternoon pro
gram, which includes the Nebraska-
Kansas Aggie baseball game, a
broncho-riding contest, dancing, and
carnival shows on the midway, will
start at the Ag campus as soon as the
parade is finished.
The farmers rube band will lead
the parade and will be followed by a
float of the goddess of Agriculture', a
senior girl whose name will be an
nounced the morning of the parade.
Barney Google, his famous horse
Spark Plug,, McTavish and his Hoot
Mon, several western Madmen, and a
number of clowns are expected to
furnish the comic element in the pa
rade.
The baseball will be the first nun
ber on the afternoon program and
will be followed by the broncho and
steer-riding contests. Carnival shows,
including Jal Olson's Foot and Mouth
Entertainers and the Snorpheum, will
open on the midway when the bron
cho-riding contest has been finished.
When the first performances of the
shows have been given, dancing will
start on the canopy-covered dance
floor and will continue until 6 o'clock
when the afternoon program will end
The dance will start again at 7:30
and continue until 11:30. The mid
way will also be open all evening.
The broncho and steer-riding con
tests are expected to draw a large
crowd in the afternoon. The commit
tee in charge has imported Pancho
and Fire-eater, outlaw horses, and
several "rough, tough Texas steers"
to test the courage and ability of the
student broncho twisters.
Morning.
11:30 Parade down O street.
Afternoon.
1 :00 Baseball game (Nebraska
vs. Kansas Aggies)
1:30 Midway opens.
2:00 Yellow Dog Opens.
2:00 Educational exhibits and
demonstrations.
2:30 Pageant play.
3:00 Dance ball opens.
3:00 Wild West show.
4 :00 Snorpheum opens.
4:00 Minstrels open.
4:30 Purple Goose team room
opens.
Evening.
7:00 Pageant Play.
7:15 Midway lights up.
7:30 On with the dances.
8:00 Snorpheum opens.
8:00 Minstrels open.
8:00 Cornfield Follies open. I
8:30 Free outdoor movies.
11:30 Lights out
Weather Forecast
Friday Fair, continued warm.
KANSAS For the first time in
the history of the University of Kan
sas, a student in the department of
architectural engineering has won a
medal prize from the Beaux Arts
Institute for a Class A project.
FIVE TEAMS OUT
OF FRATTOURNEY
Only One Game Yet to Play in
Second Frame of Inter
frat Contest.
THIRD ROUND PLAY TO
START NEXT SATURDAY
' Winners in the Second Round.
Alpha Tau Omega.
Delta Chi.
Pi Kappa Phi.
Nu Alpha.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Phi Delta Chi.
Phi Kappa Psi.
Five more teams were eliminated
from the interfraternity baseball
tournament in games played yester
day. But one game remains to be
played in the secoud round. Third
round games will probably begin Sat
urday.
The results of yesterdays games: -Alpha
Tau Omega 10, Delta Up-
silon 9.
Pi Kappa Phi 13, Xi Psi Phi 6.
Nu Alpha 11, Alpha Theta Chi 8.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 12, Phi Delta
Chi 8.
Phi Delta Chi 6, Beta Theta Pi 0.
The contest between the A. T. O.'b
and the D. U.'s proved to be the real
thriller of the day. The score was
knotted nine all in the last inning
with the A. T. O.'s at bat. There were
two outs, two men on bases, three
balls and two strikes on the man at
bat, when Smaha, D. U. pitcher, threw
wild ball which let in the winning
run for Alpha Tau Omega. Wirsig
and Brock were the battery for the
winners.
Pi Kaps Win Easily.
Pi Kappa Phi had no trouble in
winning from Xi Psi Phi. Maaske
pitched almost air-tight ball for the
(Continued on Page 6)
COUNCIL DELEGATES
ATTEND CONFERENCE
Represent Mississippi Valley at
Student Government
Discussions.
(Special to the Nebraskan.)
KNOXVILLE, Tenn., May 1 The
midwest student conference conven
ed today at the University of Ten
nessee with fifty-six voting delegates
representing the ' entire Mississippi
valley. Clifford M. Hicks, who re
presents Nebraska frith Harold
Schaaf, was made a member of the
nominating committee.
The morning session was given
over to the welcoming address by
Dr. Morgan, president of the Uni
versity of Tennessee, who stressed
the particular importance of such
student conferences.
Discussion of student publications
took up the afternoon session. All
the methods of control, policy, and
financial matters were taken up in
open forum. Much of the discussion
was directed toward the limitation of
editorial opinion by faculty pressure.
Student government problems will
be discussed in the session tomorrow.
This group of campus problems is to
be given the greatest consideration
in the conference.
1 T)mT-
CHANCELLOR'S STATEMENT.
The federal act establishing
the R. O. T. C. in the universi
ties and colleges of the coun
try wa a great educational
measure. Before its enactment
military training had been more
in accordance with the idea of
conscription prevalent in Eur
opean countries, the training of
young men in the elements of
soldiery.
The work carried on under
the present law makes military
training given, especially in the
senior division, highly education
al. Further, the measure is ad
mirably adapted to give a type
of training that will tend to
preserve the peace of the coun
try. The presence of a large
body of civilian reserve officers
devoted to peace bat able to de
fend our country and our insti
tutions means security without
militarism.
The peace of the world de
pends largely on America's at
titude toward war. The reserve
officer trained in the R. O. T.
C units is willing to make any
sacrifice for defense, but has no
sympathy for imperialistic ad
ventures and no desire for mili
tary glory. An adequate supply
of reserve officers makes the
presence of a large standing
army unnecessary, thus doing
away with suspicion and rivalry,
the fruitful causes of past wars.
S. AVERY.
Cosmopolitan Club to
Hold Annual Election
The Cosmopolitan club will elect
officers for the coming year at its
annual banquet, to be held at the
Elks Club Cafe next Sunday. The
nomination committee composed of
W. P. McCaffree, Miss Laura Rooney
and Kenneth Hattori have submitted
the following nominations:
For president, Fred Goldstein;
vice president, Hippolito Bonzo; sec
retary, Mr. Vero de Sa; treasurer,
Marie Schuebel; corresponding secre
tary, Arvilla Johnson; member of
board of directors, Keith Tyler; his
torian, Juan Udan.
Kansas Protectograph
have been inaugurated by
Foster, registrar.
grades
George
Glade Says Army
R. O. 71 C.
"Veterans of the world war will
soon cease to exist as a military re
serve on which the United States can
call in case of emergency, and the
Reserve Officers Training Corps at
the various universities and colleges
of the country will be, more and
more, the main source from which the
organized reserve officers of the
United States army will be drawn,"
said Colonel Herman Glade, head of
the war department "Blue Star" in
spection board that arrived in Lin
coln last night for the second inspec
tion of the Nebraska unit.
Last year 3,308 commissions in the
reserve were given to R. O. T. C.
graduates, Colonel Glade said, and
in addition about 600 certificates
were issued to students that were
below twenty-one years of age. In
the future the R. O. T. C. will fur-
ni-h between six and wven thousand
reserve officers annually. This is
OFFICERS INSPECT
REGIMENT TODAY
Colonel Glade and Major
Goodwin to Pass on Blue
Star Rating.
ALL CADETS EXCUSED
FOR THIS'AFTERNOOi
All
students taking military sci
ence are excused from classes this
afternoon for the war department
"Blue Star" inspection. First call
for cadets will be sounded at 12:45.
Companies will form at 1 o'clock.
The war department inspection
board, consisting of Colonel Herman
Glade of the general staff, and Major
Walton Goodwin of the cavalry, ac
companied by Major Peyton, R. O.
T. C. officer in the seventh corps,
arrived in Lincoln last night at 8:00
for Nebraska's second "Blue Star"
inspection today and tomorrow.
While in Lincoln the officers will be
guests of Major and Mrs. Sidney
Erickson.
The board -examining the Nebras
ka corps for distinguished rating to
day is one of three that is inspect
ing sixty-one R.O.T.C. units of high
rank in the country. The inspecting
officers come to Nebraska from Man
hattan, Kan., where they have com
pleted a two day inspection of the
Kansas State Agricultural college
unit.
The Nebraska R.O.T.C. unit is the
largest infantry unit of R.O.T.C. that
the inspecting officers have visited
so far this year, Colonel Glade said
last night on his arrival.
Scabbard and Blade Initiates Peyton
The first thine on the insrectine
officers program last evening was
the Scabbard and Blade initiation at
the Agricultural college, when Majxr
Peyton was initiated as an associate
member of the- Nebraska chapter of
the honorary military society. Col
onel Glade and Major Goodwin wit
nessed the initiation. They are mem
bers of the society.
The "Blue Star" inspection will
start this morning at 9 o'clock with
an -examination of the theory section
of the advanced course cadets. In
the later part of the forenoon the
storeroom and class room facilities
of the local corps will be inspected
by the officers. A luncheon will be
held in their honor at noon by the
Scabbard and Blade chapter.
The feature of the program
this afternoon will be the inspection
of the entire regiment on the parade
grounds. There will be a parade and
review in honor of the officers, and
the inspection and examination of
the cadets will follow. Each of the
officers, will inspect one of the bat
talions, and half of the third.
The inspection will consist of a
personal inspection of the cadets in
the ranks, equipment, uniform, and
military knowledge. Companies will
execute such drills and exercises as
the reviewing officers may order.
The three inspection boards will
meet in Washington about May 24
after the completion of their inspec
tions and the findings of the boards
willbe announced some time in the
early part of June, according to Col
onel Glade, head of the board that is
inspecting the Nebraska unit.
OHIO Seniors specializing in fin
ance are receiving practical experi
ence through the cooperation of sev
eral banks. Sixteen students are
working in shifts of four, each day.
Must Depend on
for Reserve Officers
the number thatwill be needed each
year to keep the United States re
serve up to the required mobiliza
tion strength.
The universities and colleges at
which the R.O.T.C. units are estab
lished are supporting the system in
whole-hearted fashion and the co-operation
between the military depart
ments and the university is excellent
everywhere, the colonel said. Many
college presidents have remarked that
the JLO.T.C. helps their institutions
because it teaches discipline. The
military department, they say, gives
them the least trouble of any.
The Nebraska unit is the largest
infantry unit of the R. O. T. C. that'
the board beaded by Colonel Glade
has inspected this year, the colonel
said last night on his arrival. Many
of the other units have a larger num
ber of cadets but they are divided in
to different branches of the service.
V