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

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    The Daily Nebraskan
Co To
Tk FootWl Rally
Tonight
Go To
The Football Rally
Tonight
PLAN HOHSTER
STUDENT RALLY
Captain Weir Will Introduce
the Members of the 1924
Football Team.
PEP MEETING TO BE
HELD FRIDAY NIGHT
Nebraska's "Fighting' Cornhusk
ara," who will line up against Illinoii
Saturday afternoon in the opening
nmm of the 1924 season, will be in
troduced to the Cornhusker student
body at the monster rally scheduled
for Friday night at 7 o'clock at the
Armory. CapUin Ed Weir, star
tackle of the 1923 team, will intro
duce each member of the squad.
The Innocents committee in
charge of rallies has completed the
program for the Friday night pep
meeting, at which the student body
will practice Nebraska songs and
yells, and demonstrate to the Husker
gridiron warriors that , Nebraska is
behind the team.
Wendell Berge, president of the
Innocents, will preside at the meet
ing, and introduce the speakers. The
University band will play Cornhusk-
er songs. Duke Gleason and a corps
of Varsity cheer leaders will be on
hand to lead the yells.
The great Illinois yell:
"Os-kee-wow-wow !"
Skin-nee-wow-wow!
Illinois, Illinois,
Y-e-a!
-nil ha mraetleed at the meeting. It
is planned to give this yell as the III
tnni, tan comes on the field, in
furtherance of the spirit of "Wel
come Illinois." The University band
i. lmins- the Illinois "Blue and
Cold" field song, which will be prac
ticed at the rally Friday night, and
on tip far the Cornhusker student
body at the game on Saturday.
Coach Dawsoa to Speak.
Coach Fred T. DawBon, pilot of
fta r.nrnriniiker eleven, will five a
neo talk emphasizing the need of a
fighting student body behind the Ne
braska team Saturday when it faces
Illinois, a team super-charged with
such stars as Captain Rohesek, "Bed"
Grange, and Britton and coached by
the peerless Zuppke, who will be in
vited to give a short talk at tne raiiy
Friday night.
The Innocents are urging every
student to attend the rally Friday
nicrrit. Thev say that the Husker
coaches and players are expecting
great send-off for the 1924 season at
the rally.
ELECTION FILINGS
CLOSE MORROW
Six Candidates Are Filed for
Honorary Colonel and Four
for Class Presidents.
Six candidates for the position of
honorary colonel and four for the
various class presidencies had filed
their names with John K. Selleca,
manager of student activities, up to
last cizht. Filings will close at
o'clock Friday and the election will
be held Tuesday, October 7.
The names are sealed in the pres
ence of the candidate and they will
not be opened until Sunday when
they will appear in The Daily Ne
braskan. This is done to prevent the
formation of any political slate.
On election day the polls in the
Student Council office in the base
ment of the Administration building
will be open from 8 to 5 o'clock.
Tassels' Constitution
Is Passed by Counci
The Tassel constitution was psssed
by the Student Council Monday af
ternoon. The organization will now
take up its activities.
The all-woman convocation exer
cises, to be held Wednesday at
o'clock at the Temple, will open with
a skit by the Tassels.
A program for the winter has been
planned to include a tea for all iresn
man and sophomore women, October
10, at Ellen Smith Ball.
English Professor
To Lecture Friday
Dr. E. C Baley of Liverpool Uni
v entity, Liverpool. England, will
speak on "The Photosynthesis of
Naturally Occurring Compounds" at
an open meeting of the Nebraska sec
tion uf the American Chemical Soci
ety in the Chemistry building at 7:46
Friday evening.
Dr. Baley is touring the United
States speaking at the large univer
sities. Edward E. Carr, '17, of North
Platte, visited the alumni office last
week, He was-in Lincoln attending a
meeting of the state finance commit
tee of the Methodist Episcopal
church. He is a member of the law
firm of Hoagland and Carr. He was
a Varsity debater two years.
W.A.A. 10 HAVE CONCESSION
Caady, Apples, aad Poaaots to Bo
Sold at Uliaoii Football Game.
Concessions at the Illinois-Nebraska
football game Saturday, October
4, are under the management of the
Women's Athletic Association. Be
sides selling the regular line of re
freshments such as candy, apples,
and peanuts, the organization is con
sidering handling pop.
One-half of the profits of the sale
will be given to the Memorial Asso
ciation for the Stadium fund. Per
sons who buy from the women who
sell at the games are indirctly help
ing toward the completion of the
Stadium.
Anyone who will sell at the games
should notify one of the members of
the W. A. A. board before Thursday
evening. More girls are needed to
selL
KOSHET KLUB
OFFERS PRIZE
Organization Will Produce
Best Original Play
Submitted.
WILL AWARD $100 TO
SUCCESSFUL STUDENT
Competition for a prize of $100 of
fered last spring by the Kosmet Klub
to the person connected with the Uni
versity who writes and submits the
best original play to be produced by
the Klub, is now open, according to
announcement by the organization.
AH manuscripts must be present
ed to the Klub for consideration by
November 15. Several persons are
now working on plays. Any manus
cript handed in by the final date will
be considered and judged on its ori-
einality, cleverness and adaptability.
The play must be one similar to
previous productions. It must con
tain musical numbers which include
choruses. Information on the plays
mav be obtained from the president,
Arthur Latta, or any other member
of the Klub. i
The contest has in the past met
with a good response from students.
A large number of manuscripts nave
been submitted each year.. The prize
lart year was awarded to Cyril
Coombs for his play, "The Wishing
Ring." Mr. Coombs also wrote the
1923 comedy, '"The Yellow Lantern,"
Chinese production. Both plays
were presented at the Orpheum in
Lincoln and at the Brandeis and Gay
ety respectively in Omaha.
Plam Year's Activities.
At the first meeting of the Klub
this week, plans were made not only
to start work on the annual produc
tion, but to sponsor the annual Pan
Hellenic formal party and the inter
fraternity sings. The Kosmet Klub
presents each year a silver loving
cup to the fraternity winning we
song-f est The Klub also has under
consideration now a play which will
be produced early in December by
an entire male cast. No definite ar
rangements have been made as yet.
The regular spring show, however,
will be the big Klub event of the year.
The Kosmet Klub is an organiza
tion of fifteen upperclassmen produc
ing annually a musical play written
by a Nebraska student and sponsor
ing other activities in the pettermeni
and growth of the University. The
members of the Klub this year arc:
Arthur Latta, Dietrich Dierks, Ar
thur Whitworth, Ralph Ireland, Rob
ert F. Craig, William Bradley, Mar
ion Woodard, Clayton Goar, Donald
Reese. Orville Andrews, James Ow
ens, Robert Scoular, James Marshall,
Glenn Curtis and Ward wray.
tmhmnements in Daily Nebraskan
...r. ------
Office Capped by Amvai or iai
The Daily Nebraskan has an of
fice catl Many notable improvements
have been made at this newspaper
office during the summer, but what
more praise-worthy change could pos
sibly have taken place than the ac
quisition of a cat?
For years, this publication has
been deprived of the services of such
a friendly animaL . But shortly after
midnight last Thursday, when
the
news editor was covering up
the
I typewriters and preparing to leave
down the steps came ine cat
He is a thin, grsy creature that
still has the look of a lost kitten
but he has a home now. He came an
and rubbed up against the editor's leg
and purred affectionately. Then, he
spotted the copy table.
Now the copy table is obviously the
proper resting place for the cat in a
well-regulated newspaper office. So
this volunteer worker epraug lightly
to it and took his place in the center
of a pile of exchanges. The night
man switched out the lights, but si
he gropd for the door, two friendly
eyes bermed out at him.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA.
Professor Jenhs is
Visitor in Lincoln
Professor Jeremiah Jenks, who
delivered the Commencement ad
dress to, the graduating class f
1910 of this University, spoke
Wednesdsy noon to the Linco.n
Chamber of Commerce.
Professor Jenks lecture dealt
with the economic and political
conditions in Europe before the
Dawes plan went into effect, and
die improvements it has brought
about. He advocated that the
American business men and cap
italists invest money ia Europe
and especially iu Germany.
Professor Jenks served as an
Industrial commission on invesfti
expert agent of the United States
gations of trusts and industrial
combinations in this country and
Europe in 1899-1901, he served on
the United States Immigration
Commission, 1907-1910; and act
ed as a member of advisory com
mittee of the Council for National
Defense at Wshington in 1917. He
has written more than fifty books
of finance, politics and trusts.
IIYSTIC FISH WILL
INITIATE SATURDAY
Pledges Must Be Dressed In
White and Wear Arm Bands
for the Ceremony.
Initiation for the new Mystic Fish
the freshman honorary society, will
take place Saturday, October 4, at
the Lincoln Hotel after the Illinois
Nebraska game. The girls to be ini
tiated must be dressed in white and
wear the green arm bands which may
be obtained at Ellen Smith Hall Sat
urday morning.
The old Mystic Fish will meet the
new members in front of the Social
Science Building imediately after the
game on Saturday, and take them to
the Lincoln Hotel where the initia
tion ceremonies will take place. A
dinner will be served in the Chinese
room immediately following the ini
tiation. The following girls have been elec
ted to the freshman honorary society:
Alpha Chi Omega Ruby Wood
side, Sheridan, Wyoming.
Alpha Delta Pi Dorothy Gass, Co
lumbus. Alpha Delta Theta Lillian Pipal
Omaha.
Alpha O micron Pi Margaret
Moore, Tecumseh.
Alpha Phi Ruth Carlyle, Hold
rege. Alpha Xi Delta Ernestine McNeil,
Lincoln.
Chi Omen Francis Valder, Te-
kamah.
Delta Delta Delta Ruth Kimberly,
Omaha.
Delta Gamma Caroline Connor,
Grand Island.
Delta Zeta Barbara Norns, Mc-
Cool Junction.
Gamma Phi Beta Helen Van Gild
er. Hastings.
KjiDna Alpha Theta Jessie Sea-
crest, Lincoln.)
Kappa Delta Alice Leslie, Omaha.
Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alice Con-
nett. Cheyenne, Wyoming.
Pi Beta Phi Catherine McCowan,
Omaha.
Phi Mu Grace Modlin, Ulysses.
Phi Omega Pi Maurine Jenkins,
Lincoln.
Non-sorority women: Velna Mc
Guire. Tekamah; Maxine Zeimer,
Lincoln; Gladys Downey, Lincoln;
Ames Hentzen, Seward; Dorothy
Howard, Lincoln; De Ette Smith, Lin
coln.
The old Mystic Fish who wish to
attend the banquet are requested to
call Viola Forsell at the Chi Omega
house before Saturday.
, . . r r .
He is a rather timid animal and is
not seen -very often during the busy
hours of the day. But, anyhow, his
work can best be done in the dark.
The tradition of a newspaper of
fice cat is older than a good many
newspapers. It originated when
Charles A. Dana was editor of the
old New York Sun often called the
newspaper man's newspaper ana
was the invention of Judge Willard
Bartlett.
One warm night in the eighties,
the flimsy telegraph copy of a presi
dential message fluttered out ol ui
window and was lost in Nassau
Street The Sun had nothing about
it the next morning, and in the after
noon when Judge Bartlett called on
Mr. Dana, the matter of the lost re -age
was under discussion. The edi
tor remarked that it was difficult to
explain to the readers. "Oh, say that
the office cat ate it," suggested
Bartlett. A paragraph appealed the
next day, creating the cat, and the
animal immediately became popular
as a polyphage in thousands of news
paper of f iees.
Hut we don't think that cur's is
that kind of a cat
HOLD W.S.G.A.
CONVOCATION
Dean Heppner Is Principal
Speaker at Meeting of
Freshman Women.
ORGANIZATION HEADS
ALSO MAKE SPEECHES
"Your University work is your vo
cation. Your activities, school and
social are your avocations. Cultivate
the ino-a-curricular life. Grades are
the yardstick by which you can meas
ure your work," aaid Miss Amanda
Heppner, dean of women, to the
freshmen, in welcoming them at tha
convocation held at 5 o'clock yester
day at the Temple theater by the
Women Self-Government Associa
tion. Besides Miss Heppner, the
preidents of various women's organ
izations on the campus spoke.
The W. S.-G. A. orchestra fur
nished the music before the opening
of the meeting. At exactly five,
twenty girls, dressed in red sweaters
and white skirts, put on a stunt, in
troducing the Tassels, an organiza
tion of Sophomore women, which was
followed by the giving of a few Ne
braskan yells.
Barbara Wiggenhorn, Ashland,
president ef the Women's Self-Government
Association, introduced the
board members and gave the girls
a short talk on University life, in
cluding the traditions and women's
organizations on this campus. She
read "A Nebraska Girl's Creed" and
"An lf for a Nebraska Girl," copies
of which were handed each girl as
she entered the Temple theater.
Ruth Carpenter, Lincoln, chairman
of the Cornhusker luncheon, ex
plained this tradition to the new
eirla. and informed them that it
was to take place, October 18.
Eleanor Flatemersch, Milford, was
the third speaker. She described the
point system and the various sports
of th Women's Athletic Association.
Agnes Kessler, Beatrice, spoke on the
Y. W. C. A. and its objectives for the
coming year.
Mable Lundy, Bethany, told the
girls about the Big Sister movement.
Mary Towle, Lincoln, talked on Val
kyrie, and Kathryn Warner, Dakota
City, gave the history of the Black
MaBque chapter of Mortar Board,
and gave mention to other women's
organizations, such as Theta Sigma
Phi, Kindergarten club. Pi Lambda
Theta, Omicron Nu, Girls' Commer
cial Club, and the class honorary so
cieties.
Dean Heppner was the last speak'
er on the program. She welcomed
the freshmen to the University, and
told them of numerous ways to get
acquainted and make friends on the
campus. She then told the new girls
what the University expected of
them, closing her talk with the ad
vice that each girl develop mentally.
morally, physically and spiritually,
thus getting the most benefit from
the four years of college life.
LIMIT TIME FOR APPLICATIONS
Will
Bafia to Soloct Corahs
Staff Aftar October 3.
iker
AH applications for positions on
the 1925 Cornhusker should be in the
hands of the editor by Fridsy night,
October 8. Applications will be ac
cepted after this date, but those ap
plying will be at a disadvantage be
cause some of the appointments will
already have been made. Applica
tion!" mode before Friday will have
uk iwd hance as any. since none
f th m tve been conidercd ns jot
Announce Official
Results of Tourney
Omaha Central with 22 points in
Group 8, Gothenburg with 89 points
in Group 2. and Crllaway with 27
points in Group L were declared win
ners of the 1924 track and field
championships held in the Stadium
last spring, according to the official
summary issued by the athletic office,
published in the University Extension
News. The announcement also con
tains a list of the gold-medal-event
champions an the point scores of the
different groups..
Dean Sealock Back
From Speaking Trip
Dean W. E. Sealock of the Teach
ers College returned Wednesday
from a week-end trip in Iowa where
he was the principal speaker at sev
eral institutes. His return was de
layed by the fact that he encountered
poor train service.
Dean Sealock spoke at Osceola on
Thursday and Friday, at Waverly t
Monday, and at Allison on Tuesday.
One hundred and fifty large pic
tures of Ed Weir, retain of the 1924
football team have been sent to pro
minent alumni in 1E0 towsr of the
state. They will be displayed with
with a football schedule printee beneath.
THURSDAY. OCTOBER 2, 1924
Girl Reserve Training
Course to be Offered
The girl reserve training course
for University women interested
in taking charge of Junior "Y. W.
C. A. work in grade schools, will
begin Wednesday evening, Octo
ber 15 at the city T.W.C.A.
This course, which under Miss
Grace Stuff, will List four weeks,
with meetings once a week. The
Y. W. C A. desires t have twelve
girls enter, for they have twelve
grade school clubs in the Lincoln
schools. Freshmen who have not
had teaching experience are inel
igible. Beginning the first week of No
vember, Miss Stuff will give a
course for upperclassmen in train
ing girls to take charge of the girl
reserve work in high schools.
There has been great demand of
late for teachers in high schools
to have had preparation in this
line of work, and this class is be
ing organized to meet it.
START SIGMA
TAO CONCLAVE
Delegates and Officers of En
gineer's Fraternity Ar
rive for Erent.
WILL HOLD OPENING
SESSION IN TEMPLE
The first of the delegates to the
Sigma Tan fifth biennial conclave
arrived in Lincoln Wednesday noon
for the three-day session Thursday,
Friday and Saturday. By 10 o'clock
Thursday all delegates and national
officers of the engineer's fraternity
will have arrived and the first ses
sion will open in Faculty Hail in the
Temple at Twelfth and R Streets.
Alpha chapter. University of Ne
braska, is in charge of the enter-
tainment and arrangements.
.
the registration and opening business
session a uurouojr uui mug uc ,vm-
mittees of the national organisation
will meet in the afternoon to outline
the work of the three days. j
Plaa Smoker. I
A smoker is planned for Thursday!
evening. A candidate x aopea eaap-;
ter will be initiated at that time by
the Nebraska undergraduate mem
bers. A business meeting will open the
day Friday. In the afternoon, Don
Young, a Nebraska alumnus, will con
duct an inspection to points of en
gineering interest in Lincoln and
nearby territory. A business meet
ing will be held Friday evening.
Will Attend Came.
The Illinois-Nebraska football
game is the big card for Saturday.
The delegates will attend in a body.
A meeting in the morning will finish
the business of the convention, and
the banquet will be held in the even
ing. This year is the twentieth anniver
sary of the founding of the frater
nity at the University of Nebraska
in February, 1904. jOn this account,
special significance is attached to the
meeting by all the chapters and a
check up of growth and future poli
cies will be made. Chapters are now
scattered from Oregon to Florida.
Membership of the organization is
among the upperclassmen in the col
leges of engineering. Elections are
made upon a basis of practicability,
sociability and scholarship.
SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY The
freshmen defeated the sophomores in
the annual rush by a large margin.
The great numbers of the class of
'28 made it impossible for the second
year men to make a showing.
Successors of Luis,
Hero-worshipers of the campus will
welcome the arrival of Rattle and
Battl, recently of Wyoming, who
are here to take the place of the
much-mourned Luis. The two new
comers so far have exhibited only
two good sonorous ru
marked boredom si wra1
has about five Wyoming Burners to
his credit, but Rattle is just launch
ing on his first year.
Cmtrary to general opinion, a
rattler's age cannot be told by count
ing the rattles on his teJL Some rat-
tiers shed their skin and rattles twice
s year, outers only once, aepenamg
on the climatic conditions. Certain
it is that Rattle can compete with
the old-times when it comes to dis
playing his temper and he resembles
a cross between a pre-war Ford and
a barnyard gasoline engine.
While Rattle is the official spokes
man for the pair. Battle carries off
the pugilistic honors. Visitors in the
laboratory are greeted with a scath
ing torrent of staccato charges, and
a lisrntning inrun oi uavue s tang
wiiich. fortunately, cannot get be-
yond the wire of the cage. However,
RECEIYE FORTY APPLICATIONS
Maj Still Apply for
Positioas
CoraLaaker B
Staff.
Forty applications have been
turned in to Robert Lang, business
manager of the 1925 Cornhusker, for
positions on the business staff. The
positions to be filled are: circulation
manager and assistant, foreign ad
vertising manager and assistant, typ
ists and advertising salesmen.
There are also an abundance of
other positions to be filled as there
is more work than ever before. The
staff will be picked within a few
weeks and work will begin as sooa
thereafter as possible. Application
for these positions may be made be
fore Monday noon at the office of
the Cornhusker in the basement of
University Hall.
SALE OF STUDENT
TICKETS DWINDLES
Booth Will Be Closed Today
and.Sales Committees
Are Cancelled.
Student ticket sales have dropped
off considerably and as practically
the whole section, with the exception
of about 800 tickets, has been sold, it
will not be necessary to keep open
the booth previously used. The booth
will be closed at noon today. All
committees for the rest of the week
have also been cancelled.
Any student wishing to get a stu
dent ticket after Thursday noon may
buy it at the student activities of
fice. Plenty of good seats are left for
the Illinois game. The student tick
ets left are as a rule better seats
than those remaining for the general
public, for the student section is lo
cated in the best part of the Stadium.
Reservations are coming in from
high schools over the state at the rate
3 of five or six a day. The high school
certification as
to their standing, are being admitted
jtes.
Other sales are becoming more
brisk. Sales in the general sections
of the Stadium have been good. How
ever, there will be plenty of seats
lft for sale on the day of the game,
according to John K. Selleck, bus-
iooss stgsnt tar athletics.
ELECT PAH-HEL
BOARD IIEMBERS
Four Students Chosen to Fill
Vacancies and Two Are
Elected Officers.
New student members of the Pan-
Hellenic Board, to take the place of
those who did not return to school
this fall, were elected at a meeting
of the board held yesterday after
noon. Several recommendations re
garding changes in rushing method
were also offered but no action was
taken.
The new members of the Board
are: Pauline Gellately, '26, Indian
apolis, Indiana; Mildred WDkensen,
'26, Lincoln; Helen Tomson, 27, Lin
coln, student chairman, and Eleanor
Pickard, '27, Omaha, student secre
tary and treasurer.
A report on the methods used by
sororities in rushing was made oy
Helen Tomsen, chairman of a com
mittee of investigation. The matter
of standards and ideals was also dis
cussed.
The faculty members of the Board
are: Amanda Heppner, Florence
McGahey, Louise Pound, Marguerite
McPhee, Madeline Girard, and Lulu
Runge.
Famous
Boa Constrictor, Make Debut
members of the department invite
visitors to the laboratory and guaran
tee a rattling good time.
According to instructors In the
department, rattle snakes are born
alive, and develop a rattle in their
first year. The fangs are in the up
per jaw and resemble canine teeth
in location. When the mouth is clos
ed they lay against the upper jaw.
When the rattier strikes, the mouth is
opened wide and the fangs spring out
to inject their poison.
Rattle and Battle have been on a
diet of mice and seem to be progress
ing well oa that, although Rattle has
not been caught partaking yet. The
department fears that he has bees
told of Luis hunger strike and Is
setting out to beat his record. Fra
ternity houses may be solicited te
save all their mice for this charitable
purpose. Any students baring dona
tions will be warmly welcomed by the
department. In the meantime, if yos
have any spare minutes, drop is and
say s cheery word te the Westerners
for the first few weeks away from
jhome are Lktdy te be eKU-wne!
soma
PRICE 5 CENTS
BARBECUE IS
BIG SUCCESS
Wendell Berge and Coach Day
Give Pointers to Freshmen
at Annual Event.
AFFAIR IS SPONSORED
BY THE IRON SPHINX
Sandwiches, coffee, cheers, music.
and peppy speeches combined to
make the Freshman barbecue held on
the drill field last night one of the
most successful since the tradition
was started some years ago by the
Iron Sphinx, sophomore men's soci
ety.
Wendell Berge. 25, president of
the Innocents, senior honorary soci
ety, and "Bill" 'Day, former captain
and center on the Nebraska football
team and a member of the coaching
staff here, addressed the frshmen to
organise and gave them pointers on
school life.
Ia introducing the speakers, Fran
cis Jones, '27, president of the Iron
Sphinx, admonished the freshmen
that they would have to fight hard
this year because the sophomores
were out to win.
Berge, however, encouraged the
freshmen, stating that they could al
ways win if they organized properly.
He explained that it was not easy t
develop good spirit when so many
men from all parts of the state were
brought together suddenly.
"It is just such things as this bar
becue, the Olympics, and the wearing
of green caps that organize your
class," he declared.
Berge also urged the freshmen to
back the football team. "Nebraska
never concedes a game until the
game is over," he said. He also em
phasized the matter of treating the
Illinois team with the utmost of
courtesy.
"We're going to treat Illinois nice,
but we're going to treat them rough
and its going to be the same with
the sophomores in the Olympics,
shouted "Bill Day in opening bis
talk to the first year men.
The famous Nebraska center urged
the freshmen to wear their green
caps, declaring that it was one of
the best ways to get scquanited with
the other men in he clans. "And the
man who gets out and gets to know
his fellow men is the one who suc
ceeds," he said.
Day also gave the yearlings a little
advice about studying. He told them
to remember that they were here pri
marily to study and that as long as
they gave their classes the attention
they should have there would be no
trouble.
"When the time for the Olympics
comes, play hard and play clean,"
Day advised. "The harder you fight
a man tne oener ne xu.es you.
never played against an opponent
that I was not glad to meet and glad
to play against"
Over three hundred freshmen were
on hand when the f unfest began.
They were served with hot sandwich
es, apples, doughnuts, and coffee.
All fraternities had closed their tab
les to freshmen.
Donald Woerner, newly appointed
freshman cheerleader led the cheer
ing. An orchestra afforded enter
tainment during the tneaL
MORE GREEK CAPS
PLACED OH SALE
Freshman Cap Rule Will Be
Rigidly Enforced After
October 6.
F-arquhar's will have another sup
ply of green caps in today, and all
Freshmen who have not acquired
them already will be expected to get
them immediately. The dead line
has been set at October , and after
that the cap rule will be enforced
rigidly.
Seven hundred and twenty caps
have been sold already, and a ship
ment of one gross will be received to
day. More will be received each day,
until the demand is supplied. Every
dsy since the first order ran out,
nearly one hundred Freshmen have
been in the store inquiring as to when
the new order would be received. The
Bale this year has been heavy, and
will probably surpass other years.
The Iron Sphinx, Sophomore men's
organization, is in charge of the sale,
and will also enforce the rule very
strictly. Members of the organisa
tion are selling tickets which enthAe
the bearer te a cap, bat they may
also be purchased directly from Far
quhara. Fresh&ea chcnld remember thel
the caps are not worn as hrzing. but
te promote class spirit, and so mem
bers of the class may identify them
eelves. Dean Wniiam ( Sealotk of Teach
ers CoHrre was principal srVer t
teachers UwUlotes in sever! Iowa
W'sre b iart t'L Bf rrort i- 'r
erly, Oftv. esd Al'iaon.