The Daily Nebraskan -- .- V .mm.v nvrmPP O) 1G9K PRICE B CENTS "Tu VXV. NO. 47. . Tili UNIVERSITY Or NEBRASKA, LlNUULiIN. XNl!JUKAStt.A, suiuai, Hutniuum VlJi 1 - i,, - -- I v - I - i. ....... mil-. i i i -i .ill . i IRISH. FRESH FROM VICTORY, DOPED TO WIN Looks Stronger Dame NO"5 . .. f isWtr,. VJi western, 13 to 10 RALLY HERE PLAN BIG Thousand, of Nebr..ka Student., Carrying RJ Tor'ch.s, To Greet Hoosiers Notre Panic, the Irish who meet J , Cornhuskers here Thursday, yes added another victory to ita e cord. The proteges of Rockne won over Northwestern on home sod. 13 t0 Winning" from the Purple, the No tre Dame aggregation comes to Lin coln on Thanksgiving day as a strong favorite to win the annual classic. Nebraska is doped to drop the game, and odds are being offered on Notre Dame, some ranging to fourteen and eighteen points. Preparations are being made for "the biggest rally in ine msiu.y ux Nebraska" when the University stu dents greet Notre Dame squad Wed nesday evening. A huge bonfire will be built on the drill field. From there the students will march to the Lincoln hotel, where the Rockncmen will be quartered during their stay in Lincoln. Students in the parade, which will go through the main streets of Lin coln, will all carry red torches. Only after he had been informed of the big welcome which was planned for his team, did Rockne decide to bring the Notre Dame players to Lincoln Wednesday night. It had previously been planned to have them stay in Omaha that right. nn.m T 1 ' XT-.. O SOUTH t)MU, Indiana, uv. Knute Rockne probably will bring thirty-eight of his gridiron men with him to Lincoln, Neb., when he boards the train which will take him to that city to meet the Nebraska Cornhus kers on Thanksgiving Day. This was indicated as an almost certainty here today. Of these men, fifteen have had varsity experience before this year, gome 0f the windows were also re althoagh none were regulars. Themovs(j from the second and third Uliest man of the lot is John Mc Manmon of Lowell, Mass., who is 6 feet 2 inches in height and weighs 197 pounds, while Joe Boland of Philadelphia, a 6-foot 216 pounder is th heaviest man- on the probable traveling squad. Arthur Parisien of Haverhill, Mass., a 5 foot 8 inch 143 pound quarterback, is the lightest man on the Notre Dame squad. That the two teams will be almost evenly matched as far as weight goes seems very probable, especially if the same lineups are started son Thanksgiving afternoon as the coaches have been started in most of the games to date. What differ ence in weight there will be probably will have no bearing on the result, fur speed and football brains are more apt to decide the winner than braun. And, both teams have a goodly t-harc of each. One of the members of the Notre Dame squad to make the trip prob ably will be a nebraska boy John Doarn of Omaha,. Neb., a graduate of Omaha Central High School. Doarn is a right tackle substitute, who weighs 181 pounds and in 5 feet 11 inches tall. He is playing his first year on the Rockne eleven. Civic Bulletin Lists Information Sources Sources of Information about Ne braska are lifted in a civic bulletin issued this fall by the Legislative Reference Bureau. Edna D. Bull ock, director of the bureau, writes in the introduction: "Intelligent living presupposes knowledge. Since the primitive day when the first Nebraska territorial pioneer built a sod house rd called it home, the machinery of government and community life has been increasing in complexity. Na turally the difficulties of knowing what the machinery is and does, and who is involved in the community life have become greater with the years. Yet the sources of informa tion are many and freely ' available, provided by us for your own use. This leaflet is an effort toward the encouragement of inquisitiveness." Want More Women To Sell Candy Thursday More women are needed to sell candy at the Notre Dame game, Thursday I (t ? nnH on the W. A. A. bulletin board in wes-. Armory. A box of candy will be given to the woman selling the most candy at the game. No one ' to sell while the game is in Progress, go women selling are given opportunity to also see the game. - PARTY IS WELL ATTENDED Over a Thousand Go to All Danea Saturday Evening Uni Over a thousand students attended the All-University party held last night at the Armory. Harriet Cruise entertained the crowd with several popular songs during the intermis sion period. The Aromry was decorated with gold and black streamers leading from the center of the hall. Punch and wafers were served throughout the evening. DEMOLITION WORK GOES ON Debris Scattered by Wind as Wreckers Continue Work On University Hall FOURTH FLOOR CLEARED A blinding driving dust storm blew over the western prairies on Septem ber 23, 1869, when a small group, full of hopes for the future great university, assembled at the corner stone laying exercises of University Hall. Yesterday another wind storm swept over the plains to receive the first dust from the wreckage of Uni versity Hall, now condemned, and soon to disappear from the campus, where the dream of a great university has come true. The brick base of the tower was the first masonry of the old build ing to feel the pikes and irons of the wreckers yesterday as they proceeded downward in their demolition work. The broken bricks and powdery mor tar, as it slid down the wrecking chutes, added to the load of the dust laden winds. Partitions Removed The fourth floor was the scene of the greatest desolation, where the wreckers were tearing off plaster from the walls, and clearing out the wooden partitions Friday and Satur day. All the fourth floor attic win dows were removed Saturday, and the wind made a clean sweep through the barren rooms and hallways. All the doors and woodwork, and floors, leaving only gaunt, desolate walls. Bannisters Preserved The bannisters from the two stairs on which thousands of students have trod and which arc the original ones installed in the building, were taken out Friday afternoon, and are now (Continued on Page Three.) Show Architectual Exhibit in December An architectural exhibit arranged by the American Federation of Arts will be hung in the University gallery for three weeks during December. It will include one hundred exhibits, uniformly mounted, showing excell ent samples of domestic architecture, with pictures of both small and large houses, and city and suburban resi dences. Attends Soil Survey Meeting Dr. G. E. Condra, director of the ii rvpv division, .4..j , meetin of the BllCIIUl-U H ' " American Soil Survey Association in rktx.im Vnvpmbpr 18 and 19. He was accompanied by F. A. Hayes, 27, who has been assisting with the soil survey work in Custer county. " n 1 - - . Large Stoves Heated Classrooms Of University Hall in Early Days There are eight chimneys on the When Prof essor Fossler first be roof of University Hall. They reach , came a student at the University the intn thp rlass rooms, where the holes in the walls have long been cov ered with wall paper or wood, and are only visable reminders of the early days when U Hall class rooms were heated by large hard coal base burn- ers. The principal duties of the janitor in those days were to carry buckets of coal up to the rooms, and carry don the ashes after a day of storking. The coal bin was located in the base ment directly underneath room iv, whic hat that time was the janitor s quarters. Professor Laurence Fossler, who entered the University in 1870 as a student remembers well the old jani tor named George MacClean, who used to carry the coal. He was a man of large build and took several buck Pt of coal up the stairs at one time. There was no running water in the building then. The source of water supply was a well northwest of the building in the court between the nH west wines. The well has lone been covered over, and no mark . remains to indicate its exact location. It was the janitor's other duty to draw the water. HUSKERS PLAGE THIRD IN GROSS COUNTRY MEET Kansas Aggies Win Annual Missouri Valley Run Ames Second RUTHERFORD IS THE STAR Oklahoma Runner Sets New Course Record Ross, Tenth, Is First Nebraskan to Finish LAWRENCE, Kansas, November 21 (Special) Nebraska took third in the annual Missouri Valley cross country run held here this afternoon between halves of the Missouri-Kan sas football game. Seven Valley schools entered the competition which was won by the Kansas Aggies. Iowa State College (Ames) was second. A new record for the Jayhawk course was set by Captain Floyd Rutherford of the Oklahoma Uni-( versity team, who finished first in 26 minutes, 6.9, seconds. It was a case of Rutherford bettering his own mark, for the previous course rec ord was eet by the Oklahmoa star last year. Ross, who took tenth place, was the first Nebraska man to finish. Zim merman was twelfth, Hays, fifteenth, Searle seventeenth, and Lawson was eighteenth. Conger of Ames ran the Oklahoma star a close race, but the Sooner forged into the lead with a great burst of speed in the last fifty yards. He led the Ames man across the tape by five yards. Scores of the teams follow: Kansas Aggies, 50. Iowa State, 81. Nebraska 85. Oklahoma 92. Drake 99. Kansas 100. Missouri 119. Valley schools which did not send teams were Grinnell, Oklahoma A. & M., and Washington. The weather was ideal for the run. FLING TO SPEAK AT WORLD FORUM Professor of History Will Discuss "The Honor System" at Wed nesday Noon Meeting "The Honor System" will be dis cussed by Dr. Fred Morrow Fling at the meeting of the World Forum on Wednesday noon, November 25. Dr. Fling, who has been professor of European history at Nebraska since - 1891, has seen the honor system at tempted and heard it proposed many times, so that it is supposed that he will speaK wiv. OU...C , .11 1- . i i Dean LcRossignal of the College of I " . , . . Y " , , ... .. . .Jl of other prominent members and Lin- Buisness Admisistration has been se- , . T T w ' , .. ... . v 'coin business men. Dean LeRossig- cured by the committee to speak on , , , ., the subject of "How Soon Should " ' who h,a8lJbee.n at iead of the tne suojit., vl Co ege of Business Admisistration' Speoahzed Training Begin? JhM foundation, wiU be toast discussion will come on December z, , followed on the next Wednesday by Miss Julia Deuricott, National Y. W. C. A. secretary for colored women. The addresses by Dr. Fling and Dean LeRossignal will constitute a part of several discussions planned on educational topics. Dean James op ened the World Forum last October with a discussion on the purpose of Arts college and last week J. Stitt Wilson, former mayor of Berkeley, California, discussed educational Ills in general. entire faculty, including the chancel lor, consisted of only eight men. Al len R. Benton was the cnancelrir. IU taught classes in addition to his ad ministrative duties. " The "fiirm boys," as students in .he 'College of Agriculture were then .'ailed, used to walk to classes in the morning from the University farm, which was on the ground where the college is now. They received fif teen cents an hour for woiking in the experimental fields. They had to walk to school on the downtown campus every morning, except on the lucky days when the farm rig happen ed to go to town. There were no classes at the farm then. Room 107 where Englsh faculty of fices were located before the con demnation, was once the seat of the University "Natural Museum" where - - . 11- - exhibits were the skeleton of a cow, and a worm-eaten stuffed rooster. Those memories present quite con trast with the present University, with its numerous buildings heated by a modern steam central plant, and with the new museum and its "Hall of Elpphants." Dean Burnett Elected Head of Association of Land Grant Colleges Dean E. A. Burnett of the College of Agriculture, was elected president of the national association of land grant colleges at the annual meeting which has just been in session at Chi cago. For the past twenty-six years Dean Burnett has been with the college and has been a leader among the ag ricultural colleges. Three years ago he was vice-president of the associ ation. Chancellor Avery is a former president of the association, which is composed of all the colleges and uni versities of the United States who were granted land as subsidy for the establishment of industrial and agri cultural education. This includes many of the large Universities and colleges of the country. SET DATE FOR BIZAD BANQUET Annual College of Business Administration Dinner To Be December 2 TICKETS ON SALE NOW Five hundred tickets for the annual Bizad Banquet will be placed on sale Monday. The banquet, which has grown more important each year in the life of the College of Business Admisistration will be held at the Chamber of Commerce Wednesday, December 2. Tickets sell for seventy-five cents. "Plates must be reserved in ad-! vance," says Roy Pitzer,. '2b, in charge of arrangements, "the ex perience last year when a large num- 1 . i l .u ii . 1 U .. J oer OI siuuunui nuenueu Limn imu , - ucKeis, proved me necesmty 1U. an ; accurate check on the number of the plates reserved." Commercial Club Sponsor The Bizad Banquet and Bizad Day are two of the main college events of the year. They are sponsored an nually by the Men's Commercial Club with the assistance of the Girls' Com mercial Club, Delta Sigma Pi, and Alpha Kappa 1 si. i The jayhTTwkers" had lost all but one Tickets will be in the hands of thegame this geasorii and they stood a following: James S. Bailey, Don Bee- Kood cnance of losing to Missouri, kyr, Victor Brink, George Brink- ' But thev turned the trick. worth, Richard Brown, Judd Crocker, Willard Edberg, Don Frush, August Holmquist, Jacob Imig, Melvin Kern, Harold Laipplcy, Gordon Luikhart, Don Sumuelson, LeRoy Schlcntz, Jac ob Schultz, Monroe Stevens, Wilbur K. Swanson, Marion Woodard, and Charles Uhlig. Members of the Delta Sigma Pi, A1..V- V.nn r.i nnA Vin nirlo Pnm. for sale. Avery To Speak The toast list will include Chancel- , umber Muisc will be furnished by an or chestra. Other entertainments will also be provided. The committee in charge of the banquet is Roy Pitzer, '20, Omaha, chairman; Erwin Domier, '27, Ohiowa; Don Frush, '26, Wahoo; Don Becker, '27, Pawnee City; Richard Brown, '27, Holdredge; and Delbert Forseberg, '27, Minden. TICKETS FOR BALL ON GENERAL SALE All Students May Buy Tickets for Military Ball Monday Morning The general ticket sale for the military ball will start Monday morn- . a r a 1 1 I ing. Since only zou ucnets are ocmg placed on sale and the military ball committee desires to have as repre sentative an attendance as possible, only a limited number of tickets will be sold at each fraternity house. Non-fraternity men may get their tickets from the military office or from Donald Sampson, who is in charge of the ball this year. 'nrsre number of tickets were old liil eek to juniors and seniors in tne military department, when the sale was conducted for them exclus Ively. The military ball is being held on December 4, in the city auditorium, and will open the formal season. The presentation of the honorary colonel, Frances McChecney, and the , .- x. V - 4.V- nn. g.ftim m,.4a . w ..... tures of the evening. The price of the tickets is $3.00. Weather Forecast Fair and colder Sunday. KANSAS WINS, BUT MISSOURI STILL ON TOP Jayhawks Accomplish the Im possible by Defeating Haughty Tigers AMES SPOILS DRAKE HOPE Victory of Iowans Puts Them Right At Missouri's Heels in Dick inson Ratings The Missouri Tigers were knocked from their lofty percentage rating in the Missouri Valley yesterday by an underestimated, fighting Kansas team, losing to the Jayhawkers by a score of 10 t o7, but they were not thrown from the top of conference. For while Kansas was administering a sound drubbing, Ames was whip ping Drake, and thus moving into second place. The Bulldog3 dropped to third. In the Dickinson rating the Valley teams stand as above, with only a few HOW THEY STAND 1. Missouri 833 20 0 2. Ames 750 20.0 3. Drake 714 17.8 4. Nebraska 500 15.0 4. Kansas Aggies 500 15.0 5. Oklahoma 500 16.6 6. Oklahoma Aggies .. .500 15.0 7. Grinnell 333 15.0 8. Kansas 250 13.7 9. Washington 000 11.0 more games to play. Missouri was able to hold first place' because of Amos' (Wpnt. of Drake. Nebraska , Vosaa a;d nro in Hp fnr fourtn- I Oklahoma added another victory to I its record by its defeat of Washing- j oo n ton y esLtri uny, .o-v, anu oiohuo ... , T nHaL., Ad-pips come close behind in sixth place. They are placed above Grinnell (the two teams have the same index) because they have beaten Grinnell. Kansas is eighth and Washington ninth in the standings. Kansas' defeat of the Tigers yes terday was indeed an upset; very few fans thought it could be done. a 1 J !...- u.. mcs '""veu mm 6ei.-u.iu F'" its upset aeieat 01 urane, oy the score 0f 7.6 This week will see the end of 1925 Valley season. In the la-.t games on Thanksgiving day, Oklahoma meets Oklahoma Aggies, Grinnell plays Washington, and Ames battles the Kansas Aggies. Buckner To Be Guest At Lawyer's Banquet Emory Buckner, graduate of the University of Nebraska and now Fed eral District Attorney in New York, at a dinner at 6:30 o'clock, Novem ber 30. Students and faculty mem bers of the University are invited to attend. Tickets, which are $1.50, may be secured in Law 207 any time up to November 27. Mystic Fish Hold Tea for Freshmen Mystic Fish, society of freshman, . . . .. 1 1 a.- which all freshmen women are invited ...nMAan ha 11 Tnp.f M Tl H II M I UH L l on Friday afternoon at Ellen Smith Hall from 4to 6 o'clock. Jessie Mitchell, president of the organiza tion, presided at tne tea taDie ana other members of the organization served. Esther Heyne and Virginia Crooks were joint chairmen in charge of the arrangements and Eleanor Crappe had charge of the music The "Indian Sign Sport writers were unanimous in declaring that the Huskers had the "Indian sign" on Notre Dame when Nebraska defeated Rockne's greatest team for two suc cussive veart. It was also the "Indian sign" that made Red Grange powerless against Nebraska the two big gest years of his phenomenal career. Just what the "Indian sign" was, outsiders were unable to discover. But it soon leaked out and today Nebraska's "Indian sign" is recognized all over the country. The "Indian sign" is Nebraska spirit. Football experts now take Nebraska morale and Ne braska spirit into consideration when they start to figure on the outcome of Cornhusker games. Rocknehad plan ned to have his team ftay in Omaha the night before the Thanksgiving game but after being urged by Ne braska authorities consented to bring his "colts here for the big rally Wednesday. It is rumored that he desired to have his team exposed to the "Indian Sign" as little as possible. Students, you are largely responsible for the "In dian sign." Your unity, your pep, your sportsmanship, nnrl vour sDirit has become part of every game. Get it, build It, Keep it anu wum iu uu nunc uomc. dian sign" Nebraska spirit. BIG SISTERS HOLD VESPERS Board Has Charge of Weekly Serv ices Friendship To Be Theme Friendship is to the be theme at the vesper services, which will be in charge of the Big Sister Board, on Tuesday evening, at Ellen Smith hall. Plans are made to have the big and little sisters come to the services to gether. Dorothy Carr, president of the Big Sister Board, will preside, and introduce the speakers, Laura Whelply and Mary Kinney. The spe cial music will consist of vocal solos by Harriet Cruise. FOSDICK COMING FOR MEETINGS Former Under-Secretary of League of Nations to Speak On World Court COMES ON DECEMBER 2 Rnvmnnd Fnsdick. former under- I secretary to the League of Nations linS evnts. The score stood 25 to 5 and outstanding writer on world in favor of the sophomores when the questions, has been secured for sev- first mss contests began. Only one eral addresses in Lincoln on Decern- ot these' the bul1 Pen- was wo" y the ber 2. Under the auspices of the Y. , sophomores. Freshmen garnered all M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. he is coming. the remaining by force and number, to Kansas, Nebraska and surround- A new wrinkle added to the tug-of-ing states in a campaign to arouse war made that eve"t th most relish interest in the World Court ed victory of the afternoon for the Students of the University, accord- j freshmen. A stream of water was ing to the University Y. M. C. A. of-P,ayed ver the middle of the tug fie, will be permitted to hear Mr.!roPe. and e lsirg side was slowly 'Fosdick in a morning address. At noon he will appear before the busi- I ness and professional men at the I rVinmkni. rxf O.nmtvtM'na rf Tin ivprsit.v Club. Local Committees Cooperate The University World Court Com mittee, including Cyrena Smith, Wen- dell Berge and Douglass Orr, repre- sentyig the cabinets of the "Y" or ganizations, will co-operate with the Lincoln Community Committee 'on the World Court and the local branch of the League of Nations NorvPar- tisan Association in planning the meetings for students and the gen- I eral public. Mr. Fosdick comes as one of the last speakers in the group that has addressed Lincoln audiences this fall. Following Senator Hitchcock and Kirby Page, who spoke under the auspices of the "Y" organizations. Jane Addams addressed a meeting cnnncnrnH hv the Women's oreaniza- - nf the citv. ANNOUNCE PAN-HEL AWARDS THURSDAY Scholarship Pins to Be Presented at Annual Thanksgiving Con vocation The University orchestra, under the direction of William T. Quick, will appear in the Thanksgiving con vocation which is to be held Tuesday, November 24, at 11 o'clock at the Temple theater. The governor's Thanksgiving proclamation will be read, following which the names of the winners of the Pan-Hellenic scholarship pins will be announced. The Pan-Hellenic pins are award ed each year to the woman in the sophomore, junior, and senior class es who in the previous year attained the highest scholarship among the nf Viaf -lnau. It has been the WU1IICII V . . custom to announce the names of the winners of the pins ar tne 1 nan.es- giving convocauon The selections to be played by the University orchestra are: Tanhauser- March Wagner "La Source" Ballet Music Leo Delibes a. Pas de la Guzla. b. March Dansee. Overture Egmont Beethoven ft The "In- FRESHMEN WIN THE RIGHT TO DISCARD CAPS Are Victorious in Olympic Contests With Sopho mores NUMBERS MAIN FACTOR Yearlings Overwhelm Opponents in Mass Events Sophomores Win Early Bouts Overwhelming power of numbers in the deciding events enabled the freshmen to win the sixteenth annual freshman-sophomore Olympics by a score of CO to 40. The victory also won for the freshmen the right to doff their green caps The freshmen girls turned out in greater numbers than sophomores, adding five points to the first year men's total. The sophomores threw a scare into freshmen ranks by winning five of e six preliminary ooxing ana wrest- Pullea wrougn me coia water, Every freshman on entering the gate to the stadium was met by a re- ppnt.inn pftmmittpp nnA rlmilipH wifli iblack paint to distinguish him from the sophomores, who were marked with red paint. The mass rushing events were won by tre freshmen in the characteristic style of previous years. The pole rush, netting twenty points, brought Walter Cronk, president of the sophomores, down into the arms of the awaiting freshmen, who stormed through the cordon of sophomore de fenders. The bull pen was the one mass ev ent the freshmen failed to win. When the whistle blew the sophomores had dragged eighteen unwilling freshmen over the chalk line, whle the fresh men had been able to get but thirteen sophomores over on their side. Some good boxing and wrestling exhibitions were put on in the pre liminary rounds of the afternoon held, in the stadium. The sophomores proved superior in four of these and won another by forfeit. De Ford, sophomore, won the de cision over Carrier, freshman, in the 135 lb. wrestling bouc. Andrews, another sophomore, beat Abbott, in the 145 lb. class. The third bout was won by Tolman, freshman, over Pa tadle, sophomore. A spirited boxing mach occurred in the 158 lb. division where Mc- Intyre won the referee's decision over Weller of the freshman. Died rich was the sophomore to win the 145 lb. match. The sophomores won the 135 lb. boxing match by forfeit when Poppe dislocated his thumb in the haste of getting ready to fill the place of the original freshman who failed to appear in time. Freshmen who ran in the quarter mile relay race were Coffee, Green, Donisthorpe and Easter. The course was two times around the indoor track.. Museum Receives Small Sand Crystals C. O. Sawyer, of iRushville, Nebr. has sent to the museum for display in the University collection some small rand crystals such as are found near the Nebraska-South Dakota line. Mr. Sawyer visited the museum some time ago and noticed tnat aitnougn me University had several large sand crystals they had no small ones. Those which he has sent are excell ent tiny specimens and will greatly improve the the collections. Receive Set of Lantern Slides The department of geology and geography has been given a set of fifty lantern slides from the Jeffrey Manufacturing Company, of Colum bus, Ohio. These slides illustrates all phases of coal mining and mine machinery, and will be used to great advantage in classes studying these subjects. Ushers Receive Final Instructions Monday Every cadet who is to usher in the west stnnd and parcade at the the Notre Dame game is expected to report for final instructions Monaay evening ah u wv. - the lobby of the west stadium. Cadets ushering In the east stand and parcade will report Tuesday evening in the lobby of the east stand.