The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 07, 1925, Page 4, Image 4

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    i
i t
HIGH .
STAGE SET FOR
HIGH SCHOOLS
Attendance and Performance
Records May Fall at Twen
ty-third Annual Track and
Field Meet.
STADIUM OVAL IS READY
Entry List Reaches Seventy-
three When Randolph High
School Enters With Ten-Man
Team.
Seventy-three high school track
teams, bringing more than seven hun
dred and fifty future Cornhuskers,
will pour into Lincoln Thursday and
Friday for the greatest of all Nebras
ka state track meets to be held in
Memorial Stadium Saturday morning
and afetrnoon.
The twenty-third annual track fest
may see records for attendance
and performance surpassed. With
a fair track, records are expect
ed to fall in both track and field
events before the onslaught of the
numbers of ambitious high school
tracks,ters.
The entry list reached seventy
three teams Wednesday when Ran
dolph high school made the latest en
trv. with a team of ten men. The
Randolph school, which won the
Hartington invitational meet, will
compete in group I.
Forecasts of showers for Thurs
day and Friday may dampen the ar
dor of high school athletes and slow
down the track, but unless it rains
Friday night and Saturday the Stadi
um track should be in good condition
A bunch of sprinters and distance
men who have made creditable per
formances in sectional and dual
meets will be on the track Saturday
afternoon to lower the state marks.
In the sprints at least six men look to
be likely contenders, and the coveted
ten-second-flat mark may be clicked
off on the timers' watches in the 100
yard dash. The present record is 10.2
seconds, held jointly by five track
men of former years.
The record of 22.4 seconds for the
220-yard dash has already been bet
tered in outside meets by four men,
among these being Uahn of Grand
Island, who won the pentathlon, with
a time of 21.8 seconds.
Another mark which has been bet
tered consistently this season is the
high hurdle record of 16.2 seconds,
held by Ed Weir.
A special event of the afternoon's
track work will be a tetrathlon be
tween Bill VanCleve of Tekamah and
Rex Watkins of Hastings, both of
whom are ineligible for competition
in the meet The pair have finished
high school athletics but are still tak
ing their courses in prep school.
VanCleve and Watkins will com
pete in the high hurdles, broad jump,
and high jump for a special award.
The large entry list makes it nec
essary for the preliminaries to be
held at 10 o'clock in the morning,
while the finals will be run off be
ginning at 2 o'clock.
ADVERTISING CLDB
IS RECOGNIZED
University Authorities Ap
prove New Organization of
Bizad Students.
The Advertising Club of the Uni
versity of Nebraska which was re
cently organized by a group of stu
dents interested in advertising has
been officially recognized by the
Committee on Student Organizations.
The main purpose of the organi
zation is the study of advertising and
selling problems and the dissemina
tion of information favorable to the
University. Members of the Club
feel that there is a great field for
favorably presenting the University
to the public and for counteracting
lad impressions often thoughtlessly
given.
The Club meets twice month, one
meeting being devoted to Club busi
ness and the other to the discussion
of questions pertaining to advertis
ing and selling. Prominent authori
ties on these subjects speak before
the club at least once a month.
Under the guidance of Prof. A.
G. Hinman, instructor in advertising,
salesmanship, marketing and real
estate, the Ad Club was organized
by Wilbur Swanson, Otto Skold,
Simpson Morton, Tom Varney, and
Marion Woodard. These charter
members met several times and after
electing members perfected the pres
ent organization which is a depart
mental club of the College of Busi
ness Administration.
Membership of the Advertising
Club includes:
President, Msrion Woodard ;
vice president, Otto Skold; secre
tary, Gertrude Barber; treasurer,
EU Goldstein; Irvin Jetter, Tom
Varney, Clarence Eickhoff, Robert
Eiinpson Morton, Clayton
.'' , !..fhan!fcl Foote, Wilbur Ross,
' . .ti Coar, i:,ro!d Cish, Psul
SCHOOL ATHLETES
Continue Work in
Spring Basketball
Continued instruction in passing
the sphere was the feature of last
night's workout in Coach E. E.
Bears' spring basketball practice.
Twenty men reported.
Owen Frank, assistant football and
baseball coach, was on hand helping
Coach Bearg with his mob of basket
eers. The candidates are mostly
freshmen and new men, and Coach
Rearg is giving them intense drill in
the fundamentals of the game.
OKLAHOMA COMES
HERE NEXT WEEK
Husker Baseball Team Takes
Things Easy After Series
With Ames Aggies.
The Husker baseball squad did not
practice yesterday afternoon, taking
advantage of a short rest after the
close struggle with Ames the first
part of the week. They will con
tinue practice this afternoon.
The squad will rest over the week
end will not get into action again
until May 15th and 16th, when Okla
homa will journey to Lincoln.
The Huskers emerged from the
fray with Ames with a valley stand
ing of .625, having won five out of
eight games. They have evoked the
count with Missouri, Washington,
and Ames, winning and losing one
game to each; and taking both games
against the Kansas Aggies.
B. Lang won his eighth straight
win in Missouri Valley conference
games when he won from Ames in
Tuesday's game, having won five
last year and three this season.
TELEGRAPHIC MEET
NEXT ON PROGRAM
Annual Freshman Competition
Among Valley Schools Is
Next Wednesday.
t
The fifth annaul Missouri Valley
Freshman telegraphic meet will be
held at the various Valley institu
tions next Wednesday May 13.
The Husker freshmen enter the
meet as strong contenders for the
cup which will be awarded to the
winners. Similar to the codition of
the Varsity squad, they are strong
in track and rather weak in the
field events. The results in today's
telegraphic dual meet with Drake
will give a good indication of Ne
braska's chance in the meet next
week. The meet today will also de
termine the men who will take part
in the Valley meet
Nebraska won the opening meet in
'21 and in '23; while Kansas won
in '22 and Grinnell in '4.
Offer Prize for
Original Songs
At Breakfast
The singing of original Nebraska
songs will be one of the features of
the May morning breakfast which
will be held May 9. The W. S.-G. A.
board is offering a prize for the best
original University song which is
submitted. The board wants more
songs to be entered for the occasion.
They may be composed by any group
or individual.
There will be four tables and food
enough for one thousand students.
Xi Delta, Silver Serpent, and Tassels
will serve and act as hostesses. An
excellent menu has been planned.
Entertainment has been planned for
every minute and Harriet Cruise and
Ruth Haberly will sing several num
bers. Frances McChesney is gener
al chairman of the breakfast commit
tees. Mothers of University students are
invited and will be guests of the W.
S. G. A. A special invitation ha
been extended to all men to attend".
Fraternities, sororities, and dormi
tories have been asked to close their
tables and many have already signi
fied their intention of doing so.
The intersorority sing will be an
other attraction of the breakfast.
A silver loving cup, which is offered
as a trophy, will remain in the per
manent possession of the sorority
which wins it three times in succes
sion. Gamma Phi Beta won the cup
last year. ,
Equipment has arrived at the Uni
versity of Oregon, for the women's
fencing classes. Classes began last
Monday after a delay of about three
months, during which time the order
was sent to France to be filled.
Have you sent your Mother those
flowers for Mothers' Day? You
should order them from Chapin Bros.
Florist today. Adv.
Wollvine, Ira Brinkeroff, Allen Stan
ley, Oscar Keehn, Kenneth Anderson,
Herluf Christensen, Wilbur Swan-son.
SIG ALPHS IN
SEMI-FINALS
S. A. E. Wins Third Round
Game in Baseball Tourna-
ment Over Delta Sigs.
SIG EPS TAKE MEASURE
OF KAPPA SIGS, 17-5
How the Tournament Stands in
the Third Round:
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 8 Delta
Sigma, Delta, 1.
Pi Kappa Alpha vi. Pi Kappa
Phi.
Sigma Nu vi. Phi Delta Theta.
Alpha Theta Chi vt. Sigma Phi
Eptilon.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon is the first
team to enter the semi-finals of the
annual interfraternity baseball tour
nament, after a victory yesterday
over Delta Sigma Delta, 8 to 1.
The Sig Alphs won their way to
the semi-finals bracket by outclass'
ing their opponents in every depart
ment of the diamond sport. Schram
pitched an almost air-tight game for
the winners, letting thorn down with
a single run,- scored in the second
inning, while his mates were piling
up a total of eight tallies.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon led all the
way, jumping into the lead in the
first inning with a brace of count
ers. One more came in the third inn
ing and three in the fourth to com
plete the scoring for the game. Brau
er started on the mound for Delta
Sigma Delta and was replaced by
Beckman.
The second round of the tourney
was closed yesterday with the playing
of the Kappa Sig-Sig Ep game. Last
year's winners, Sigma Phi Epsilon,
trampled on the Kappa Sigma team
and beat out a victory to the tune
of 17 to 5.
Stribling was hit hard by the win
ning team, being nicked for eleven
runs in the third inning, while Hoff
man and E. Raun for the Sig Eps
held the Kappa Sig tallies down to
five. The Kappa Sigs counted in the
fourth and fifth innings only.
Three games are left in the third
round. Pi Kappa Alpha meets Pi
Kappa Phi Monday afternoon at the
State Hospital grounds, according to
the schedule, and Sigma Nu and Phi
Delta Theta mix today. The Alpha
Theta Chi-Sigma Phi Epsilon contest
will probably not be played until
next week, in order to give the Sig
Eps a rest.
The last contest in the third brack
et should be a thriller. Kerr has
been attracting attention among the
Greeks by his pitching. He shut out
his opponents in the first and in the
second round, fanning twelve men on
each occasion. The Sig Eps are rat
ed high due to their victory over the
Kap))a Sigs.
The scores of yesterday's games:
S. A. E 212 300 08
Delta Sign Delta .... 010 000 01
Batteries Sigma Alpha Epsilon:
Schram and Gray. Delta Sigma Del
ta: Brauer, Beckman, and Baker.
Sigma Phi Epsilon 2111 010 217
Kappa Sigma 00 0 230 0 5
Batteries Sigma Phi Epsilon:
Hoffman, E. Raun, and A. Raun.
Kappa Sigma: Stribling and Hughes,
STUDENT COUNCIL
ELECTS OFFICERS
Leo Black to Be President; Re
tiring President Addresses
New Members.
Leo Black, '26, Grand Island, was
elected president of the new Student
Council at a meeting held yesterday.
He was one of the four members
elected to be carried through from
the last year's council. He i.s a mem
ber of Kappa Sigma and played on
the Varsity basket-ball team this
year.
The other members who were elect
ed to office were: Millicent Ginn,
'26, Nebraska City, vice-president;
Helen Simpson, '27, Casper, Wyo.,
secretary.
The meeting was called to order by
the retiring president, Emmet V.
Maun, who told the members of the
council their duties as representa
tives of the student body. He said
that the purpose of the organization
was to relate all activities outside of
the curricula to one another, and to
the University as a whole; to act as
a court of investigation and make
recommendations in such cases of
minor discipline as might be referred
to it by the executive dean and the
dean of women. The council is also
in charge of all class elections.
The retiring president of the coun
cil especially stressed the work that
the new council might do on the single-tax
plan, whereby University stu
dents would no longer be bothered by
divers solicitors. The question of
student honoraries was also suggest-'
ed ss a possible subject for next
year's work.
TOWNSEND Portraits. "Prs-
servs the present for the future."
Adv.
iptrn nATT.V NE11R AflKAN
a - i i 11 "-rrm
TENNIS TOURNEY
PLANNED BY AGS
Thirty Students and Twenty
four Faculty Members Sign
Up for Net Tournament.
More than thirty students and
twenty-four members of the faculty
at the College of Agriculture have
entered a tennis tournament which
will begin today. The first round
games will all be held this week and
the second round will be played off
during the first part of next week.
The tournament is sponsored by the
Ag College faculty athletic associa
tion and is he second torunament
of this kind that has been held this
year.
The championship of each class
will be played off first and tho win
ners of the classes will play for the
championship. The games in the
doubles tournament will probably
begin next week. Much more inter
est is being shownin this tourna
ment than in one which was held last
fall, according to D. B. Whelan, who
has charge of the tournament.
The faculty athletic association
plans to have a more extended ath
letic program for students in the Col
lege of Agriculture next year. Sev
eral physical education courses will
probably be offered and the college
will have football, basketball, base
ball, and track teams under the su
pervision of competent coaches. Be
cause of the distance between the Ag
campus and the city campus, it is
almost impossible for the freshmen
and the sophomores in the college
to go out for athletic teams at the
city campus. The athletic program,
as planned, will enable Ag students
to participate in athletics and to get
credit for their physical education
work.
Announce New
Schedule For
Examinations
A complete schedule of University
events for 'he end of this semester
was issued yesterday by Florence I.
McGahey, registrar.
The last classes will meet on Wed
nesday, May 27. Nebraska's annual
"Roundup Week" will "be the next
three days, May 28, 29, and 30. This
includes the Ivy Day program on
Thursday the 28, the annual military
'compet" on the 29, and the special
Alumni Day on May 30. All three
days of "Roundup" week have been
set aside for the returning Nebraska
alumni. Sunday, May 31, has been
designated as Baccalaureate Day.
Final examinations for the second
semester will be from June 1 to 5.
The examination schedule, which
has been changed considerably, sets
the examinations for 1 1 and 1 o'clock
classes for Monday, June 1. 10
and 2 o'clock classes will meet on
Tuesday, 9 and 3 o'clock classes on,
Wednesday, 8 and 4 o'clock classes
an Thursday, and 5 and 7 o'clock
classes on Friday, June 5. Examina
tion schedules will be ready for dis
tribution by May 25. There has been
some misunderstanding about the
dates set for the annual events at
the close of the 1925 spring session
so a complete list will be published
in a short time.
WANT ADS
LOST Handbag at the Farmers'
Fair. Finder please call L-4220.
LOST Small black fountain pen be
tween Ellen Smith Hall and Sigma
Kappa house. Finder call B-0413.
MEN' end WOMEN distribution relig
ious and educ ation il publications.
Guarantee Salary. L-8605.
LOST Large 'nannish ring, blue
flat stone in fancy gold mounting,
valued as an heirloom. Reward.
Call Jo Ann Westgate. F-8118.
EM PLOYM ENT Largestorganiza
tion of its kind will have openings,
in several states, for college men.
L-E004, Tuesday.
TEACHERS wanted for all lines of
teaching work. The Stewart School
Service, 138 No. 12 street. Room
383, Peterson block.
FOR RENT Chi Omega house, 202
So. 27th St. Phone B-3C04.
When Vacation
Starts
What Then?
WE ALL KNOW THAT
TO SUCCEED ONE MUST
TRY HARD.
If you have ability and plen
ty of pep and really want to
make a good summer's earnings
see G. L. Kidd, 442 National
Bank of Commerce Bldf., Lin
coln, Nebr. Adv.
. READY FOR
RUSSIAN TALKS TO
HISTORY CLASSES
"The Russian Revolution and
Soviet Russia" Discussed
by Anatole Mozer.
Anatole Abraham Mozer, a grad
uate of a Russian "gymnasium" and
at present a student at the Universi
ty gave lectures yesterday before Dr.
Laura B. Pfeiffer's European his
tory classes on "The Russian Revo
lution and Soviet Russia." Mr. Mo
zer spoke from first hand informa
ZZ . im iimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiimi
n
It's More Convenient II
1 1 TenPayPlan
Of selling Society Brand, Style Plus or Schloss Bros.
: Clothes is a service originated by this store for the
: convenience of these men.
FETTER CLOTHES
: Can be worn by many because of this modern idea. jj
: By men who might not be in the financial position
j to pay $25 to $65 at one time.
&atw ti Urattft (tfliija 1 1
And all other fine clothes are sold by us on the Ten-
Pay-Plan, at our regular cash prices. The new fab-
rics and models, for Men and Young Men. I
Here's How It Figures: j
j I $25.00 suits I 1
You pay $5.00 when purchased and $2.00 weekly. I
j I $30.00 SUITS - I
You pay $6.00 when purchased and $2.50 weekly.
j I $35.00 SUITS J
You pay $7.00 when purchased and $2.75 weekly.
I $40.00 SUITS I H
: You pay $10.00 when purchased and $3.00 weekly. I
j I . $45.00 SUITS I g
You pay $10.00 when purchased and $3.50 weekly. I
I I $50.00 SUITS j J
You pay $10.00 when purchased and $4.00 weekly.
j $55.00 SUITS ' H
You pay $15.00 when purchased and $4.00 weekly. 1 EJ
I 1 $60.00 SUITS j SS
You pay $15.00 when purchased and $4.50 weekly.
No Red Tape Just Plain Business f
Featured in the Big May Drive J 1
For 6546 More Sales j f
Men's and Young Men's 2
Sizes to Fit
Men of All
Proportions
1
- i
i
f
1 I
2 i
Mayer Bros, Co,
ELI SHIRE, PRES.
Where Society Brand Clothes are sold
riiMimnmi:MiMtMimmii
tion about the revolution for he
spent three years in the service of
the "Red" army and lived in Russia
until two years ago, when he made
his escape to Italy on a League of
Nation's ship.
The Russian revolution, according
to Mr. Mozer, was a deep reforma
tion of economic and political condi
tions and while it was against the
old Russian government it was also
a protest against world crime. Rus
sia had been exploited by Europe
for many centuries but the World
War gave tha revolution an oppor
tunity to develop and as a result,
Mr. Mozer predicted, the old govern
ment would never return.
nun
luiiimiiii mum Him iiiiiiiiiniiiiimii iiiiiiiimimiimim mum
For many responsible men
to purchase and pay as their
incomes permit. Our new
SUI
MEN'S 3-PIECE WOOL SUITS
FOR YEAR ROUND WEAR
Cooirricht,
MlHllBIUllHllalllulllnlmllllUulllwmlllMlllllHllBmlml!lnMMllmlHllllllnMllMl''"w'"''l,l"
MEET
The speaker pointed out that Rus
sia It in reality an Oriental country
and so the people have dlffrent stan
dards than the peoples of the west
em world have. He drew a dollar
sign on the board and said that to
him it represented the American
people Russia, he declared, is n
intellectual nation and at present
there is a movement in that country
to get away from the materialism of
the West and adopt the attitude of
the Orient
Mail tKfjse flowers today or tomor
row sure if you want your Mother to
have them from Chapin Bros. Flor
ists for Mothers' Day. Adv.
is
iimiiiinmii i t mm nil I'niintt ,.- :
Cheviots
Cassimers
Worsteds
IMS, Alfred Decker A Coha
I.