The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 26, 1924, Image 1

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    The Daily Nebraskan
Pay Your
Stadium Pledge!
Pay Your
Stadium Pledge!
VOL. XXIV NO. 27.
REGENTS ASK
HIGHER LEVY
Board Wants (Minimum Raised
to One-Fifth of a Mill
for Ten Years.
PUBLISH PAMPHLET TO
DISTRIBUTE IN STATE
If adequate educational facilities
ire to be provided students, the Uni
versity of Nebraska must have, for
the next ten-year period, a minimum
levy of one-fifth of a mill, declares
the board of Regents in a statement
just issued, which will be published
soon in pamphlet form for distribu
tion to alumni, taxpayers, and other
interested persons. In a comprehen
sive survey of the growth from a
small college to a great University,
of its rapid expansion, of the service
it is rendering to the state and to the
taxpayers, the booklet outlines the
needs of the University and suggests
how these may be best taken care of.
In ten years the enrollment of the
University has more than doubled,
while its appropriations have increas
ed only one-third.
"Now and then it is desirable," the
foreward states, "that the Board of
Regents and the officers of the Uni
versity should take stock of their own
instiutions, and its needs. This
holders the people of the state
with the dividends it is paying, the
economy with which it is carrying on
its own affairs compared with other
institutions, and its needs, ffl This
stock-taking has been a revelation to
the Board. It takes a just pride in
passing these facts on to its stock
holders. It believes no other institu
tion has done as much with its money
as has the University of Nebraska."
Practice Strict Economy.
Only by the utmost economy has
the University been able to get along
so far, the report says. Omaha has
expended more money on high school
buildings than the University has
spent for all the buildings of the Uni
versity in fifty years. An eastern
university has erected dormitories far
its freshman class which cost practi
cally as much as our University has
expended for buildings in the last
" fifty1 years." The entire cost of the
College of Medicine buildings at
Omaha is only a little more than Iowa
has appropriated yearly for its medi
cal school buildings the last five
years.
"The University of Nebraska asks
nothing for itself. People sometimes
speak of what the University wants.
The University is an impersonal sort
of thing and wants nothing. It is
what you want. If your children are
to have an education, the University
must have equipment with which to
do the work," declares the Board.
Give Statistic.
The registration of the University
is outlined in ten-year periods: 1871
72, 130; 1881-82, 284; 1891-92, 883;
1901-02, 2,298; 1911-12, 3,b57;
1921-22, 8,196; 1923-24, 10,352. In
1903-05, 4,475 students attended the
University and they were educated at
a cost to the state of $166 per stu
dent; in 1913-15, 8,722 students were
educated at a cost of $280 for each
student; and in 1923-25 the enroll
ment is 21,000 and the actual amount
appropriated by the legislature for
each student is $155.
"It seems almost unbelievable that
with a registration of approximately
two and a half times that of ten
years ago, the appropriations have
increased only a third," the pamphlet
states.
With the average cost of educating
a student in a collegiate course in
twenty-five state educational institu
tions in 1923 was $281.44, Nebraska
accomplished it for $159.32. Among
these twenty-five institutions Ne
braska with one exception educated
its students at the lowest cost per
student Out of twenty-three state
universities, Nebraska had next the
largest number of students per in
structor, the booklet reports.
10,000 Havo Graduated.
The accomplishments of the Uni
versity are also outlined. More than
12,000 degrees have been granted,
representing over 10,000 graduates,
many of them leaders in their com
munities and some of them world
famous men and women. Approxi
mately 15,000 patients, many of
them poor and needy people, have
been cared for at the University hos
pital at the College of Medicine in
Omaha. The dispensary departments
of thn Cnllpm of Medicine Lave 25,
000 visits a year. Experimental and
extension work of the College of
Agriculture have increased the in
come of the farmers of the state
more than $26,000,000 every year, or
six times the total amount spent for
all University buildings in the last
fifty years.
For eve.-y dollar of tax money, ap
proximately only two and one-half
cents now goes to the .University.
The program suggested by the Board
(Continued en Paga Three.)
Cadets Compete at
Bennet Rifle Range
Cadets practiced squad competi
tion on the University rifle range at
Bennet, Saturday. Cadets are shoot
ing on the range several times a week
now, using the regular service rifles.
Squad competitions will be held
every Saturday for the remainder of
the year. One of the military de
partment's trucks takes the men to
the range.
ALPHA KAPPA PSI
CONVENTION ENDS
Delegates from Five Schools
Present During Two
Day Session.
The convention nf t.ho MUanuri
Valley District of Alpha Kappa Psi,
which met at the Lincoln Hotel, ad
journed at noon yesterday after a
two-day conclave. The following
were delegates and visitors to the
convention:
Clair Swonger, Psi Chapter, Lawr
ence, Kansas.
Clyde B. Hood, Upsilon chapter,
Columbia, Missouri.
Ralph Rotnem, Alpha Eta chapter,
Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Harry Hughes, Alpha Lambda
chapter, St. Louis Missouri.
Frank F. Fry, Zeta chapter, Lin
coln, Nebraska.
K. A. Scott, Psi chapter, Lawrence,
Kansas.
C. M. Hegler, Psi chapter, Lawr
ence, Kansas.
Regular sessions of the convention
were held Friday and Saturday
morning. The visitors were escorted
on a tour of Lincoln Friday and were
entertained at a luncheon at the
Chamber of Commerce at noon.
LeRonignol Is Toastmaster.
At the banquet at the Lincoln
Hotel Friday, Dean LeRossignol of
the College of Business Administra
tion was toastmaster. The speakers
were: Everett Lord, dean of the
Boston School of Business, grand
president; W. J. Dowrie, dean of the
Minnesota School of Commerce, dis
trict councillor; Prof. O. R. Martin
of the College of Business Adminis
tration; and Dwight Bedell, national
grand secretary.
Following the banquet the follow
ine nlederes were initiated into the
Nebraska chapter, Zeta, of the fra
ternity: A. F. Jacobson, '27, Oma
ha; Gerald Davis, '26, Norfolk; Karl
H. Nelson. '27, Nebraska City; Em
met Deeter, '25, Kearney; Samuel
Adams, '26, Buffalo, Wyoming; L.
Folda, '25, Howells; A. L. Stanley,
'26, Holdrege; Aldrich Hanicke, 27,
Omaha; Dale Babcock, '26, Omaha;
Duane Andersdn, '25, Omaha; and
Judd Crocker, '27, Omaha.
The next national convention will
probably be held next spring at
Minneapolis, Minnesota, according to
Dean Dowrie of the University of
Minnesota.
NAME SPEAKERS
FOR DAD'S DAY
Coach Dawson, Dean Engberg,
and Ed Weir to Address
Annual Luncheon.
Prominent speakers have been se
cured for the third annual Dad's Day
luncheon which will be sponsored by
the Innocents. Among those on the
program will be Dean Carl C. Eng
berg, Coach Fred T. Dawson, ana ta
Weir. J. E. Miller of Miller and
Paine will be toastmaster.
The committee chairmen are as
follows: General chairman, Ed
Weir; Arrangements, Otto Skold;
Entertainment, Robert Scoaler; Pub
licity, Marion Woodard; Finance,
Ralph Rickly.
Annual Olympics
To Supplant Custom ot "Hazing
The annual Olympics contest be
tween the freshmen and sophomores
will be held the morning of Novem
ber 29, according to plans made by
the Innocents, senior men's society,
Iron Sphinx, sophomore mens so
ciety, and Green GoMIns, freshman
society. The complete program of
events has not been decided upon,
but in general it will consist of track
events, pole rush, and tug-of-war.
ire contest originated
in 1908 following a suggestion by G.
E. Condra, proiessor oi inuuaui
and surveys, as an event to take the
place of the custom of "hazing."
Nebraska was one of tie first univer
thin form of deciding
w -u"r -
supremacy of classes instead of the
old method oi usi ngnw uu
lute warfare.
It was formerly the custom for the
sophomores to attack the first fresh-
man meeting ana anemy w 'u.i
the first year president It was then
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA,
Nebraska Harriers
Defeat Jayhawkers
(Special to The Daily Nebraskan.)
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS,
LAWRENCE, Kas., Oct 25 Ne
braska's team defeated Kansas in
the annual cross-country race, 30
to 25. Lewis of Nebraska finished
first in the fast time of twenty
six minutes. Other entries fin
ished as follows: Pratt, Kansas,
second; Grady, Kansas, third;
Lawson, Nebraska, fourth; Ross,
Nebraska, fifth; Bronson, Kansas,
sixth; nays, Nebraska, seventh;
McCartney, Nebraska, eighth;
Langford, Kansas, ninth, and Er
nest, Kansas, tenth.
Zimmerman of Nebraska fin
ished ahead of Ernest, but did not
count, five of Nebraska's team
having already finished.
Jarboe of Kansas failed to fin
ish. PETROVA TO
SPEAK HERE
Noted Actress and Playwright
Will Address Students
At Convocation.
MEETING TO BE HELD
IN TEMPLE TOMORROW
Olga Petrova, actress and play-
right, will be the speaker at a special
convocation at 11 o'clock tomorrow
in the Temple Theatre. Miss Petrova
is appearing in "Hurricane" at a
local theatre Monday evening and
was secured for the convocation by
the University Players. It is open to
all students.
Miss Petrova is well known
throughout the country. She is a
successful playwright as well as ac-
I
UK
X
OLGA PETROVA.
Famous actor-playwright who is ap
pearing at a local theatre and who
will address a special convocation
today in the Temple theatre.
tress, having written "Hurricane"
and several others in which she has
played. "Hurricane" comes direct
from New York where it finished a
highly successful run in spite of con
trary predictions by critics.
"The White Peacock," written by
Miss Petrova, played in Lincoln last
year starring her. This play and
"Hurricane" are her best known
plays.
"Miss Petrova is an emotional ac
tress of great ability," said A. L.
Erickson, '25, Lincoln, business man
ager of the University Players. "Her
work on the stage has been success
ful and she is known to be one of
America's leading actresses. She has
also done some work in moving pic
tures." UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI
Frank S. Land, founder of the order
of De Molay, is attending the state
conclave at Columbia.
Were Introduced
that the customary fist fight took
place. Many injuries, of course, re
sulted from each class encounter,
and many complaints were received
at Nebraska as well as many other
universities where the custom was
prevalent The Olympics were insti
tuted to replace this and "hazing," a
custom under which at certain times
the sophomores attacked any fresh
men that happened to be near.
Originally the Olympics were
fought for an object exactly opposite
to that of today. It was then the cus
tom for both freshman and sopho
more classes to wear class caps. The
nntrnma of the Olympics decided
which group should discard the head
gear. If the freshmen lost they were
forced to burn their numeral caps,
but if they won, they were allowed
to continue wearing them.
The first year men have won the
contest every year but one, the con
test of 1909-10, when the class of
1913 l"st to the class of 1914.
Y.W.C.A. GOAL
WILL BE $1800
Annual Finance Drive to Begin
November S and Last
for Three Days.
TOTAL BUDGET FOR
YEAR TO 3S00
The annual Y. W. C. A. finance
drive for eighteen hundred
dollars
needed to cover the budget expense
for the year 1924-25, will
begin
Wolnnsrlatr MnvamKai K anI loaf t nm f
three days. The budget for the year
will include the following items:
Secretary's salary, $1900.
Conference fund, $250.
Ofice, publicity and printing, $325.
Social, $300.
Social service, $75.
Furnishings, $50.
Publications, $25.
Contingent fund, $100.
National apportionment, $300.
Vesper choir, $25.
Speakers, $100.
Agricultural campus, $100.
Total, $3560.
The campus quota will be $1800
and it. is necessary that this entire
sum is raised since the Community
Chest committee may not be willing
to give the exact remaining amount
needed to make up the budget sum.
To Report Result Daily.
Each University woman is asked
to give all that she conscientiously
feels she can. The money will be
turned in every day at a noon lunch
eon for the team captains and their
helpers. Reports Till be printed
daily as to how the drive is progress
ing.
Elsie Gramlich. chairman of the
finance committee of the Y. W. C
A., will be in charge of the drive.
Her staff is made up of the follow
in? women: Virginia Taylor, Lin
coln; Elsa Kerkow, West Point; Er
shal Freeman, Lincoln; Kathryn
Krieg, Omaha; Lillian Johnson, Lin
coln, and Lois Jackman. Miss Jack
man is the representative from the
Agricultural campus.
Announce Team Captains.
The following women are team
captains for the drive: Genevieve
Clark, Arline Rosenberry, Sarah Mc-
Reynolds, Ida Flader, Leon McFer
rin, Ruth Ann Coddington, Katherine
McWhinnie, Louise Van Sickle, Cor-
innt Anderson, Eloise MacAhan, Cy
rena Smith, Gertrude Ebers, Freida
Lemke, Elinor Pickard, Wilhemina
Schelleck, Dorothy Almstead, Irma
Guhl. Olive Fletcher and Blanche
Stevens. The names of the two re
maining team captains have not yet
been turned in.
Each captain has ten women under
her and each team will see one hua
dred University women for finance
pledges.
ELECT FERGUSON
AS SOCIETY HEAD
Appoint A. J. Mask To Serve
On Committee at Meeting
at Lawrence.
(Special to The Daily Nebraskan.)
Lawrence, Kansas, October 25.
Dean O. J. Ferguson of the College
of Engineering cf the University of
Nebraska, was elected president of
the Kansas-Nebraska section of the
Society for the Promotion of Engi
neering Education at the close of the
noon session today.
A. J. Mask of the University of
Nebraska was elected chairman of
the program committee. The attend
ance at the meeting included fifteen
from the University of Nebraska and
twenty-five from Kansas State Agri
cultural College. The chief address
of the morning was made by W. E.
Wickendon of New York, chairman
of the national society s committee
on the investigation of methods of
instruction in engineering schools.
LIBRARY HAS SPECIAL EXHIBIT
Facsimiles of Rare Books and Manu
scripts Are on Display.
A collection of facsimile reproduc
tions of old and rare books and
manuscripts is being exhibited in the
main hall of the University Library.
The collection includes facsimiles of
two pre-Columbian Mexican manu
scripts, the Codex Fejerarvy-Mayer
and Codex Borbonicus, and El Lapi
dario del Rei Alfonso X, a Spanish
manuscript of the thirteenth cen
tury.
Another interesting book on ex
hibit is a facsimile of "The Dictes
and Sayings of the Philosophers,"
the first book printed by William
Caxton in England in 1477. At the
time of the Dante sextennial, the
Landiano Manuscripts dated 1336,
the Trevuziano manuscript of 1337.
The Library also has a reproduction
I of the Ellesmere manuscript of
I Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1924
UNIVERSITY BUYS PROPERTY
Four City Blockt Purchased for Use
of Athletic Department.
Four city blocks of property have
been formally deeded to the Univer
sity and will be used as an extension
for athletic activities. The property
was formerly the Reimers Kauffman
stone plant ground and extends from
Eleventh to Fourteenth street direct
ly north of the campus.
Work has already begun on the
orniinH from University Avenue to
Fourteenth Street will be ready for
use soon.
$30,000 wag paid for the
property.
SORORITIES TO
ENTER CONTEST
To Sell Tags During One-Day
Campaign to Send Band
to Notre Dame.
WANT EACH STUDENT
TO GIVE TEN CENTS
A number of sororities have an
nounced their intentions of entering
the contest to collect the greatest
sum of money toward sending the
band to Notre Dame, according to
the chairman of the campaign. The
sorority turning in the greatest sum
of money will be fiven a special con
cert by the band as a reward for
their services to the University.
Sending the band to Notre Dame
will make Nebraska represented by
approximately five hundred students
besides the alumni that will be in
South Bend for the game. Down
town stores will send one hundred
and twenty-five students, the band
will be composed of forty or more
pieces, many students will go by
train, and some are already talking
of driving through according to re
ports. In the one-day campaign, it is
hoped that each person will give ten
cents. It is entirely optional wheth
er anyone contributes to the fund
or not but as plans now stand, the
committee feels that Nebraska spirit
will prompt everyone to' help send
our band to Notre Dame. The an
nual game with the Irish is always
the most important game on the
Husker schedule. By defeating the
Notre Dame team twice in succes
sion, Nebraska established a prece
dent, and now to defeat the South
Benders on their own field would es
tablish the superiority of the Corn
husker team over the Irish.
Will Help Rooters.
The band plus the large number of
students would make a lively rooter
section for the Cornhuskers to fos
ter fighting spirit in South Bend, the
chairman stated.
Students will be given tags
Wednesday to show that they have
contributed toward sending the band
to South Bend. Sorority girls will
solicit for one day only, the results
being announced at noon, at the close
of the day, and in the Daily Ne
braskan the next morning. The win
ning sorority will then be given the
privilege of naming the day and
hour when the band will give the con
cert. William T. Quick, director,
stated that most any time would be
perfectly agreeable to the members
of the band.
RAIN INSURANCE NOT CARRIED
Athletic Department Drops Practice
Used Last Year.
No rain insurance is being carried
by the athletic department on the
football games thi3 fall. This insur-
ce was carried last year, but
proved too expensive, amounting
from ten to twenty per cent of the
gate receipts, depending on the rain
fall that was insured against and the
hours for which it was carried.
Rain last year cut down the re
ceipts from the Nebraska-Missouri
game, but it did not come at the
hours covered by the policy, so noth
ing was recovered.
'
Promise Numerous
For Military Carnival, November 8
Latest reports from Nome and
Monte Carlo indicate that there will
be plenty of faro games and roulette
wheels running November 8, the night
of the military carnival in the Arm
ory. Lieutenant John Kellogg, in
charge of the gambling devices,
nromises that everyone will win and
that every game will cost but a small
sum. "Klondyke" currency will flow
freely for those who have the winning
fever and the Pi Beta Phi bar-maids
will serve the thirsty until the official
decree declares that another Univer
sity party must come to a close.
For those who believe that Captain
Kidd never had a barrel of money,
there will be more than a barrel full
HUSKERS CONQUER KANSAS
IN HARD FOUGHT CONTEST
Robertson and Collins Make Touchdown for Nebraska in
Third Quarter and Starr Counts for Jayhawkers in
Fourth, Making Score 14-7.
500 NEBRASKANS AMONG
(Special to the Daily Nebraskan.)
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. LAWRENCE. Kas., Oct. 25.
Fourteen thousand howling
down to defeat here this afternoon because a young man irom
Nebraska, Rob Roy Robertson, scooped up a Jayhawker fumble
and raced thirty yards to a touchdown. This bit of opportunity
provided Nebraska with seven points which proved to be the
margin needed for a 14 to 7 victory.
Perhaps Nebraska played slightly better football but the
500 Cornhuskers who were present were exceedingly content
with a seven point margin.
It was a determined Jayhawk squad, stung by three con
secutive defeats, that came on the field this afternoon, deter
mined to beat Nebraska or die trying. While matters naraiy
came to this condition, the Kansans gave all they had. Had
they received the breaks instead
might have been different.
KANSAS OBSERVES
HOMECOMING DAY
Fraternities and Sororities
Decorate Their Houses
for Annual Event.
(Special to The Daily Nebraskan.)
University of Kansas, Lawrence,
Kansas, October 25. The University
of Kansas observed its anual Home
coming Day today with fraternity
and sorority houses decorated for the
returnign "grads" and Cornhusker
visitors. The Nebraska-Kansas foot
ball game was the main attraction.
Greek letter organizations were busy
entertaining Kansas alumni and Ne
braska visitors.
At the game five hundred Corn
husker rooters massed on the fifty
yard line rose to their feet with a
yell for the team when it trotted on
the field at 1:53. A few minutes
before the Kansas supporters had
sent crashing across the gridiron the
famous "Rock Chalk,, Jay Hawk, K.
U." chant
Organizations Entertain.
Entertainment between the halve
was provided by the Jay Janes, Kan
sas women's pep organization, Ku
Klux chapter of Pi Epsilon Pi, and
the Nebraska Tassels and Corncobs.
The four organizations marched to
the center of the field and set afloat
scarlet, blue, and cream balloons.
The balloons floated thirty yards
above the field and were held in for
mation by strings running to the four
corners of the stands.
The Corncobs, Nebraska chapter of
Pi Epsilon Pi, marched around the
field chanting, "Rock Chalk, Jay
Hawk, We'll Get You." The ninety
piece Kansas band, half in scarlet
jerseys and half in blue, formed a
semi-circle in front of the Nebraska
section and played Kansas and Ne
braska songs.
Another diversion was provided by
letter men forcing freshmen who had
broken university rules to run a
gauntlet of paddles.
Night Classes Have
Enrollment of 220
Night classes conducted by the Ex
tension Division now have a total en
rollment of 220, not including the
students in the courses in fine arts.
The classes, which range in size from
eight to' sixty-two, are: beginning
French, beginning Spanish, calculus,
mechanical drawing, drawing and
painting, juvenile art, juvenile elocu
tion, investments, life insurance,
modern economic problems, the con
temporary novel, and history of the
foreign relations of the United
States.
UNIVERSITY OF INDIANA
Forty men are required to keep the
campus in shape. It is considered
the second most beautiful one in this
country. y
s V
Gambling Devices
there for them to see, and more than
that, to buy at reduced prices.
Policemen for the occasion asked
that it be announced that guns be
parked outside. Those feeling vic
ious will be furnished knives. The
reason being, according to the chief,
that the discharge of the guns will
disturb the gentle peace of the even
ing.
A special dispensation has been
granted by authorities so that kegs of
quality may be brought on the campus
that night and sold at the bar. Real
Spanish dancing, interpreted by the
Pi Phis, will be a feature of the en
tertainment while the Kandy Kids' or
chestra will offer musical numbers
arranged especially for the carnival.
PRICE 6 CENTS
14,000 FANS AT THE GAME
Jayhawk fans saw their team go
of the Huskers, the Btory
Nebraska Scores.
Early in the second half, after a
half hour's football in which the
teams battled on even terms, Rob
ertson performed his act. The sud
denness of this crushing break in the
game seemed to stunt the Jayhawk
ers. They lined up to kick off to
the Huskers, and before they had re
covered, Rhodes shot a long pass to
Collins, which gained the Huskers
sixty-seven yards and a touchdown
when he ceased traveling. Several
Kansas men tried to stop him, but
'twas too late.
Harold Zuber, 212-pound left half
back who is playing his first year
of varsity football was the Kansas -star.
Zuber tossed passes with dis
concerting frequency and accuracy
and acquitted himself as well as any
other Jayhawk back in carrying the
ball. Zuber should be a Missouri
Valley star before he receives his
diploma.
Roland Locke, the speed king, was
the star of the game in running with
the ball. The work of "Choppy"
Rhodes in plunging through the line
was notable but Locke was the only
gridster who dazzled in the open
field. Locke was sent in for A.
Mandery in the last quarter. During
the time he was in, he carried the
ball on almost every play. Among
his accomplishments was a' 30-yard
run, which came near being a dash
the length of the field for a touch
down. Thrills Numerous.
The game was filled with climax
after climax. Just as the first half
ended, Bloodgood tossed a 27-yard
pass to R. Mandery. The gun end
ing tht half sounded as the pass was
in the air. Mandery caught the pass,
but ran out of bounds on the Kansas
3-yard line. Kansas' touchdown
came as the result of a pass good for
twelve yards from Zuber to Starr,
substitute halfback. The score was
made in the last minute of play and
the pass was completed on the fourth
down.
Numerous fumbles marked the
game. The failure of Quarterback
Hodges to catch Bloodgood's punt
safely accounted for Robertson's
touchdown, and fumbles balked the
drives of both teams.
The Huskers were able to make
more consistent gains on line drives
than the Jayhawkers, altho there was
nothing of the steam roller in the
Nebraskan drives.
Kansas attempted twenty-four for
ward passes and completed half of
them for gains totaling 163 yards.
Nebraska completed three out of
nine attempts for gains of 137 yards,
not far short of their opponents' rec
ord. The first of the first quarter de
veloped into a kicking dual between
Zuber and Bloodgood, with neither
having any great advantage. Zuber
passed to Captain Burt for fourteen
yards but was thrown on the next
play for a ten-yard loss. Zuber tried
to pass, but Molzen broke thru and
tackled him. Runs by Zuber and
Hart and a pass brought the ball to
Nebraska's 25-yard line. On the
fourth down Captain Burt tried a
kick from placement on the 33-yard
line, but the kick went wild.
Half Ends.
More punting followed with neith
er team having any material advan
tage. Later Kansas took the ball on
its 41-yard line and carried it to
Nebraska's 18-yard line, where an
other pass was grounded behind the
goal line for a touchback. The half
ended with Nebraska in possession of
the ball on Kansas' 3-yard line as the
result of a pass to R. Mandery.
Nebraska carried the ball down the
field at the beginning of the second
half until Rhodes fumbled and Mul
lins, Kansas tackle, recovered. More
punting followed, until Hodges,
missed Bloodgood's punt and the ball
went to Robertson. After the lat
ter's touchdown, A. Mandery kicked
goal.
Nebraska took the ball on its 28
yard line on the kickoff and carried
it past the middle of the field and
then received a pei.alty. Rhodes
(Continued on Page Two.)