The Daily Nebraskan VOL XXV. NO 69. THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, 'TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1926. PRICE 5 CENTS. HIGH SCHOOLS WILL RETURN T00HE MEET State Basketball Tournament Will be One Central Tour ney at Lincoln r .; REFERENDUM VOTE Members of the Board of Control Are Greatly Pleased Over Re turn to Old Plan Xebrnska high schools will return to a plan of a large central state tournament this year. Last year the plan of holding district tournaments was inaugurated and it met with only mediocre success. In a vote taken last wck of nil tho high schools in the state that participated in the tournaments it was voted more than two to one to return to the old form of tournament. March 4, 5, and 6 are the dates set for the 1926 state tournament and it is expected that all former tourney records will be broken in the number of entrants. Members of Board Pleated Acting Director Gish of the University and members of the board of control were greatly pleased over the results of the refer endum vote which switched the! stauts of the meet from the district' to the old state plan. j "I am pleased to see that the proposition was carried by such a great majority. It was the largest referendum vote ever polled, which indicated that the association mem bers were exceptionally interested ' in the project I believe the Uni versity's proposal to underwrite the railroad fare of the contesting teams turned the tide," Supt W. J. Bra ham of North Platte declared follow- in? the board meeting in Omaha Sat-! nrday. The new University Field House will be capable of taking care of most of the games, This new build-) ins has five regulation courts. I Other courts available if necessary! are those in the Armory, the highj "school, Whittier and the Y. M. C. A. O.'ficials are- desirous ot con fining the meet within as small a radius as possible. We it Opposed Change Although western Nebraska was generally opposed to a change, the eastern and southern sections of the ate were strong for the state plan.! Omaha schools were practically un animous. Last season such strong teams as Omaha Central and South Omaha ! Frem nt, York, Grand Island and University Place were restricted from competing in the tournament because of having been eliminated in the district tournaments. Another feature of this year's tournament is that paid officials may be used in the most important games instead of relying upon University j 01 .Nebraska athletes. No definite action was taken at the Omaha meet ing of the board of control, but in all probability some definite stand will be tr.ken upon the question when the board meets in Lincoln the week procedinir the tournament. MUST TAKE GROUP PICTURES OH TIME Failure To Report Will Delay Work on Cornhusker Says Editor Donald Sampson Two of the three groups which e to have had their pictures ta ken for the Cornhusker at the cam Pi studio Monday noon failed to kP their appointments, the photo grapher reported to Donald Samp an, editor of the Cornhusker. Wrhile jt is entirely possible that the de ky may have been unavoidable. Edi tor Sampson and the photographer ar inclined to believe that laziness and ab-tnt-mindedness are the real reasons for the tradiness. An appointment to some is an agreement, but to others it is merely Tether'," says Sampson. "Failure "how up at the studio for the pic tores not only delays the photo grapher, but also delays work on the mhusker. A fine of one dollar is Placed on the groups which fails to pep their appointments on time. rouPs which cannot keep their ap pointments on time shcild notify f Photographer he has other thWs to do." Appointments for all group pic tures must be made before Satur Tfie four dollar charge is paid " the time the picture is taken. "Disraeli" Successful . "Diseli," presented at the Wash ,ngton State Coll. -ith .,!, Recess that the extension depart- 1 lnat institution sponsored its r.esntatin n Spokane a short time Talk on Conference At Vesper Service Lloyd Marti and Esther White, two of the twenty representatives from the University of Nebraska to attend the Interdenominational Conference at Evanston, Illinois,' during the Christmas holidays, will speak at the Vesper services at 5 o'clock this evening. Mr. Mnrti will discuss "The Church's Tart in the Problems of War, Industry, Race, and Mis sions." Miss White will talk on "The Duty of Youth in Overcom ing Failures of the Church." Esther Garrett will lead the services. Gertrude Mumford will play a violin selection. HERTZLER WILL TALK AT FORUM Professor in Department of So ciology Begins Series of Discussions WILL DISCUSS PROGRESS What is progress? That is a question which men have discussed for ages but one which has never been settled to the satis faction of any very large number of people. Wednesday noon at the regular World Forum .luncheon at the Grand hotel Prof. J. O. Hertzler, of the department of sociology, will discuss his ideas of what real progress is I and what the ideals toward which j society should work are. The discussion Wednesday is to be ( the first of a series on the general) subject of "Progress," which the ; committee in charge of the Forum is planning. Several prominent mem-' bers of the faculty have agreed to, discuss their ideas as to the nature of progress. The subject will be considered from all angles scienti fic, sociological, and philosophical. May Bay Ticket Today Tickets for the luncheon must be bought today. No tickets will be sold after 5 o'clock this evening, i Students who do not have tickets' will not be admitted to the luncheon ; until all those having tickets have been seated and they will be charged thirty-five cents. The price of the tickets is twenty-five cents. They may be purchased at the Y. M. C. A. i office in the Temple or at the Y. W. C. A. office in Ellen Smith Hall. j A lively discussion is expected , after Professor Hertzler has present-1 ed his views. All students who can j possibly do so are urged by the Forum committee to remain after the talk and take part in the open forum. SYMPHONY WILL BE ON AIR University of Kansas Orchestra To Broadcast Over KFKU Several unusual numbers will fea ture the annual midwinter concert given by the University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra on Wednes day, Jan. 13, according to Prof. Karl Kuersteiner, director of the orches tra. The orchestra is composed of fifty pieces. The outstanding number will be Mozart's "Symphony." Another in teresting number fill be "A Lulla by," by Grieg. This song has a num ber of incidental solos for wind in struments. The entire program will be broad cast from Station KFKU, the Uni versity broadcasting station, 275 meter wave length. - . . Field House Will Accommoaate su Social Functions Work on the new Field House be ing erected on the University cam i.. hindered by the unus- yua noa - - ually cold and disagreeable wealn .r nf the last few weeks. Unlesr something unforseen happens, con struction at thorities hope to nave k;Minr enclosed by January 20 after which work on the interior can be hastened. Present plans set the first basket ball game in the new structure for February 6, wh-n Nebraska plays the University of Kansas. If this game is played in the Field House, an open house may be held to intro duce this latest addition to the Uni versity of Nebraska campus. Spe cial exercises may be held and some prominent guests invited, providing that the authorities think the build ing is near enough completed. Last fall it was thought that some social events could be held in the Field House near the end of the ROSCOE POUND WILL ADDRESS STATE SOCIETY Topic of Talk Will be "The Pioneer Spirit and Prob lems of Today" TO DISPLAY COLLECTIONS All Studenti from Gibbon Will be Given Seats at the Dinner By S. C. Bassett Dean Roscoe Pound of Harvard, and a Nebraska alumnus, will speak at the annual dinner of the Nebraska State Historical society and the Na tive Sons and Daughters of Nebraska, which will be held at the Lincoln Hotel this evening at 6:30, as a part of the program for the convention of the Nebraska State Historical so ciety. The topic of his address will be: "The Pioneer Spirit and Problems of Today." Dr. Pound graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1888. The program this morning begin ning at 10:30 in the art gallery of the University Library building, in cludes four addresses each of which is to be accompanied by an exhibi tion of historical material. The Zim-merman-Remsburg collection, which has been purchased just recently, in cludes about 10,000 specimens con nected with the stone age in the state. These relics have been found in southeast Nebraska, chiefly . in Richardson county. Show Williams Collection Dr. Williams collection, one of the best of its kind, shows photegraphs of the steamboats that were in oper ation on the Missouri and Mississippi rivers, when navigation there was more general. The rifle and powder horn of Hen son Wiseman will be shown by Judge F. C. Radke of Tecumseh. Wise man was one of the frontiersmen whose entire family was massacred by the Indians, and he followed the slayers in the spirit of vengeance. The Spanish medieval sword, which was found about forty years ago north of McCook, will be presented by Li.vid F. Abbott of Omaha, to gether with the history of its dis covery. Hon. S. C. Bassett of Gibbon, a member of the Historical society board sent funds Monday to give every student at the University of Nebraska who lives at Gibbon, seats at the dinner tonight. Last year there were eight who received the tickets. A business meeting at which Presi dent William E. Hardy will preside will be held at 9:30 in the art gal lery. A reception and business meeting of the Native Sons and Daughters will be held at the Lincoln hotel at 5 o'clock tonight. No Rides dutside City Women at the University of In diana are forbidden to motor out side the city of Bloomington or to have an automobile except for the two weeks at the beginning and end of the term. Plan Soccer Tourney To Start January 18 The Women's Athletic Associ atie n is planning on starting the soc cer tournament January 18, and ev ery woman who has been out for soccer should make an effort to get her practices in by Saturday, Janu ary 15. The teams will be- chosen from those women having ten com plete try-out practices in by Satur day. There will be twenty-five W A. A. points given to those women who make the complete number of practices, but fail to make the team i . in of the University vcond semester. Owing to the de ay of laying the dancing floor thi; dan had to be disposed of. A con -rete layer has been laid first, ovet( vhich the permanent wood floor if 'o be' built. During the winter months, and especially in the ex treme cold weather, the cement will not dry as well as it will in thr -ummcr. Using such an expensive floor, the University authorities do not want to lay the boards "until the concrete is absolutely dry, because of the chance of warping. This permanent floor will probably not be laid until summer. When completed the dancing tlyoi will measure 120 by 208 feet. Most of the University social functions in the past have been held in the Ar mory which is only sixty-five by ninety feet, or not quite as large as the new stage . will be in the Field House. (Continned on Page Four.) j Dean Roscoe Pound of Harvard Who Will Be Speaker at Dinner Dean Roscoe Pound, A. B. '88, Ph D. '97, LL. D. '13, pf the Harvard law school who will speak at the annual dinner of the Nebraska State His torical society and the Native Sons and Daugh ters at the Lincoln hotel this evening at C:30. Dean Pound is the son of Mrs. S. B. Pound of Lincoln, and a brother of Miss Louise Pound of the English department and of Miss Olivia Pound of the Lincoln High school. He was Dean of the law school at the University of Nebraska from 1903 to 1907; pro fessor of law at North western from 1907 to 1909, and then became a member of the faculty of the University of Chica go. For seventeen years he has been with the Har vard law school. PLAYERS GIVE DEATH PRAIA "Outward Bound Will be Pre sented by the University Players This Week TICKETS NOW ON SALE "The strangest play of the sea son, and by all odds the most ab sorbing," spoke Burns Mantle in the XewYork Daily News of Sutton Vane's three-act drama, "Outward Bound," which will be presented by the University Players this week-end. The play has had successful runs in New York and London. Critics have been most favorable in their reviews of this "bit of invention." "Outward Bound' deals with an unusual theme, "life after death." The characters of the play do not themselves realize their state of be ing until the middle of the play. When the author of the play was asked how he came to write it and what it meant, he replied: Author's Idea of Afterlife "I have put into 'Outward Bound' my ideas of what happens to us- di rectly after we die. Granted that life does not end with this world, I believe that when a person dies, he or she is not at once aware of the fact. "You and I might both be dead at this moment but we may not have had time to discover that we are dead. For stage purposes I have given my characters tobacco, whis key, books and everyday clothes. They had not in the opening act found out that they are dead and they imagine things as they knew them and Were accustomed to them. "Gradually it is impossible to say when, because time, in whatever comes beyond this life is doubtless not what we know as time I think hose who die come to realize that they are dead." Seats for the play may be re served now at the Ross P. Curtice music store. GLEE CLUB WILL MAKE TRIP University of Kansas Organization To Tour Home State The Women's Glee Ciub of the University of Kansas will leave on March 8 on its annual tour of Kan ias towns, according to Agnes Hus band, tSirtcor and Dean of Women. V tentative schedule of towns to be .isited includes Augusta, Wichita, 31 Dorado and Eureka. The program to be given in each :own will include vocal solos, duets, trios, violin selections, readings and longs by the entire club. The K. U. Zee club has a membership of fifty Jive, but only thirty-six women will be taken on the trip. WEATHER FORECAST Tuesday: Fair with rising tem perature. Weather Condition A storm area over the lower Great Lakes caused light snow in Nebraska and western Iowa last night, and snow is still falling in eastern Iowa, Illinois. Wiscon sin, and the Lake region. It is followed by high pressure over the Dakotas, bringing fair and colder weather in the Missouri Valley, and temperatures below zero in northern Minnesota, North Dakota, and Manitoba. Moder ate temperatures and fair weath er prevail in the Rocky Moun tain region and the southwest, ex cept that snow is falling In Wy oming and eastern Colorado. I 1 1 Hop e to oecure runds In Omaha for Building: D. R. Leland, Presbyterian stu dent pastor, is spending the next ten days in Omaha securing addi tional money for the building fund of the Westminister Foundation. DrJ Ralph Owens, representative of the national building association, is with Mr. Leland in this work and it is hoped with the securing of funds from the Omaha churches, that it will be possible to begin the building of the Westminister house in early June, at 335 North Fourteenth street. This house is at present occupied by the department of ancient lan- Iguages. it is the amoition oi tne Westminister congregation to have this building ready for occupancy!'" condition by Wednesday of th'is by the opening of the season. ANNOUNCE 1926 MAT SOHEDULE ' Five Dual Meets and the Mis - souri Valley Meet Com- pose the List CHANGE SEVERAL RULES Five dual meet? and the Missouri : Valley championship meet are eluded in the 1026 wrestling sched-'sity, ule announced Monday afternoon by ( attend and take part in the first Icej i Dr. Clapp. With the organization Carnival held on the Nebraska cam , of a Big Ten wrestling tournament. ! pus. The admission to the Carnival the Western intercollegiate classic j will be twenty-five cents a person was aboli-hed and the Hu-ker mat' The rink will be open from three artists will get their final test at the! to six, and seve-n to ten every day Missouri Valley meet. The first! three meets will be held on the home ; mat while the three last meet ? will be held away from home. National Iiitercollegiate wrestling rules will govern the Valley meets this season making a change in the governing of the matches. j i Missouri will come to Lincoln on ;the evening of January 30 for the first match. On February ', the University of Iowa comes to Lincoln, ; while on February 12 the Kansas ; zine, The Occident. The action i Jjayhawkers will mee-t the Huskers.came as the result of the appi-ar-j (N'ew Student News Service) on the home mat. February 27 the ance of a satiric article on the Na-j MUCn excitement was aroused at I Cornhusker wrc tiers will meet thejtivity in the November issue. ; Columbia University when a group of j University of Minnesota at Minne-1 Suspension of the Occident was 1 students staying at Furnald Hall japolis, and-on March 6 they will 1 ordered, until another editor be were unjustly punished for their dili ' travel to Ames for a meet with iowa ! cured. The new editor will "make I p.Pnce jn pUrsujng studies during the State College. The Missouri Valley! such changes in the editorial staff i holidnys. An apparition appeared in , meet will be held at MUlwater, UKla- ! homa, by the Oklahoma Af g e?, j March 13 and 14, completing the season. Change Ruling System Several important changes will be made in the matches this season (Continued on Page Four.) j Every Automobile at Western School Must Undergo Inspection by Experts Sadness reigns among the owners of the campu3 Fords and other col- . legiate cars at Washington Slate College, Pullman, Washington. Even the cars themselves have an unusu- ally woebegone and forlorn appear ' ance and miss and skid more fre . quently than usual, j In an effort to make the State ! College campus safe for pedestrians and for the women, the administra tion has devised the car-inspection rule. From the miniature special built bug which is smaller than a j Ford coupe, to the largest Marmons , and Pierce Arrows, every vehicle ! which answers to' the name of auto- mobile must be inspected. "We want to have all the cars in such condi tion that if they start out on a trip ! there is at least a fifty-fifty chance j that thty will get back," sail a mem i ber of the traffic squad. "We want I a man to be able to go out in hit car assured that be will be able to ' bring it back without having to carry Students Prefer the Radiators to "Great Open Spaces" Monday A brisk wind drove out of stu dents' minds all thoughts of loiter ing outside at the many favorite meeting places on the campus, Mon day. Students come to eight o'clocks and all other "o'clocks" thoroughly wide-awake. Any spot sheltered from the wind was wel comed compared to the "great open spaces," but the radiators were by fur thn most nref erred. Old Mer cury seemed to be running a race l.:u 1 J ...IK.... r Q 1 ,1 i Willi liuuia, u t i flung xiviui 01 uv- greos Sunday noon to 1 1 degrees yesterday noon. Temperature Monday morning was 7 degrees, and climbed up to fif teen degrees, but fell to nine during the day. Very little snow fell here. The drop was general throughout j the state as was indicated by the re-IN. Seymour, Elgin, who will eontin ports from the weather bureau !ue to be chairman of the campus ' Towns north showed some variation for the colder. The reports showed 6 degrees at Valentine and the same at Sioux City. The thermometer at North Platte registered 18 degrees. At Omaha the mercury tip stood at 16 degrees. Very little snow was reported. About an inch fell at Valentine, ma - king about six hundredths oi an inch of moisture. Only a trace of snow was recorded at Omaha. SKATING RINK OPENS FRIDAY Will be Ready on Wednesday; Have Formal Opening This Week-end WILL HOLD ICE CARNIVAL The skating rink sponsored by the i meeting yesterday concerning Vic Women's Athletic Association will be, tor G. Lyford, who served as a mem- week, and the formal opening will I be Friday and Saturday evenings in jthe form of an all-Unietiity Ice ' Carnival. The rink will open at 7 o'clock ' t - i . i i , :n ; rritiay nigm anu win remain open ntil about 10:30 o'clock. On Saturday the program will start at 18:45, immediately following the j a 'irame ' Kiiid,y and lovable personality based ; Th;re w. bp fanc. gkatinj? con.on a sincere religious background, all ;tepts open to Univer.si",v pPopie, stu-:"f T T. brou,rht h,m recognition 'dents and facultv. Other special h th,e University community, pro- 'features on the program include found rfffa.rd. of colleagues, and I band and radio music. I Tim Vr,nnnV AtMt;e 4 sr.int inn ' extends a cordial invitation to ev- in-jeryone connected with the Univer - both students and faculty, to to all University people and those wishing to use the rink. An admis- sion fee of ten cents will be charged. Editor of California Magazine Suspended j By a committee of his classmates, ' Lewis Russe ll, '2;, was deprived ofj j his position as editor of the Uni-i : versity of California literary maga-, as it deems necessary. i Spauldinc Successful t onito nf hi failurp to win the conf(.rence title. Coach Spaulding of . the Southc.rn Branch was the first j coach to lpad the Grizzlies to three conference victories. it in his pocket. The committee, composed of stu dent automobile experts will look over our gasoline drinking friends from radiator cap to tail light, and all defects will be ruthlessly re vealed. According1 to the rules, all the brakes must be in good shape. Any, driver must be able to stop his wreck within a distance of 500 yards from a speed of fifteen miles an hour. The slogan, "Four wheels and no brakes" will become obsolete in Pullman if all the cars meet the expectations of the traffic cops. "The tires on a car must be in fairly good shape to meet inspection," say the committee. Probably they mean the tires must be round, and not that they should be capable of withstanding the ravages of the highways. Steering whee's must be solid, and without much play in their joints. All Fords must be labeled as i.uch. (Continued on Page Three.) ELECT FRANK TAYLOR HEAD OF REGENTS William P. Warner. Dakota City, Chosen Vice-President of Board SUCCESSOR TO SEYMOUR Former President Will Continue To Be Chairman of Campus Planting Committee Frank J. Taylor, St. Faul, was elected president of the University Board of Regents at a meeting held Monday morning4i the office of the Chancellor. He will succeed Georee planting committee for the beautifi cation and improvement of the cam pus. William P. Warner, Dakota City, will serve as vice-president of the Board. Monday afternoon, Mr. Taylor filed in the Secretary of State's of fice for nomination in the non-poli- jtical primary to succ -d himself for a term of six years, on the Board. He is now serving under appoint ment of ex-Governor Bryan two years ago to fill a vacancy. Mr. Taylor is an attorney at St. Paul and has served in several Demo cratic convention as a delegate from Nebraska. He was a candi date for Congress from the Sixth district some years ago. Regents Approve Plans Plans of a new students' activi ties building on the Agricultural Campus were tentatively approved and bids were called for. The following resolution was pass ed by the Board of Regents at the ber of the Board thirteen yei-s ago: "The University of Nebraska has received outstanding and valuable services from Victor G. Lyford throue-h the two tprme ha corvod oo , rjeent i ( . " V lun!""enVy ,a Droaa- V , . . " -, , ;ar roiai or tne peon.e ot the state. ' "Truly he gave, with calm and iu- Vicious leadership in times of crisis. j crrv,ccs t0 th University which , f ontributed to the upward curve of its history, and exrellent exnression of the educational consciousness of a great state. "Be It Resolved that we express appreciation of the services of Vic tor G. Lyford. sincere regret on his ; passing on and heartfelt sympathy to his family in the loss of husband : r.nd father." i The rest o' th iin routine business. me was spent Students At Columbia Are Haunted by Ghost While Pursuing Studies the- window of the adjoining Jour nalism building. The ghoul-haunted students sent a letter to David M. Updike, acting superintendent of the department of buildings and grounds, saying: "We the undersigned, tenant rooms on the Campus side of the Furnald dormitory. For the past two weeks we have been obliged to behold upon glancing through our windows the morbid spectacle of a human skeleton occupying, it seems, I a special place of honor in one of 'the rooms in the Journalism build ing. This room is on the upper floor and faces the outside of the dormi tory." The letter implored that some ac tion be taken to do away with the grim spectacle. It first appeared as though the guilty party was a skeleton used in the anthropology class of Professor Boar. But the skeleton was found innocent. Then the true offender was discovered on the cornice of the dormitory is a macabre gargogle which throws its reflection on a window of the Journalism building. Basketball Pavilion Site Chosen A site for a new $150,000 basket ball pavilion was chosen last Satur day by the Oregon Agriculture Col lege. Due to the smallness of the present pavilion, not even a'l of the students of the college are able to attend basketball games, go the new project is being made lr.rre enoi.rh to handle over 6C00 pr-( r!i.