FOUR THE DAILY NEURASKAN TUESDAY. OCTOBER 11. 1;.L'. Lindsey Succeeds Hargiss as Head Grid Mentor at Kansas FORMER SOONER COACH IVES UP IN QUICK CHANGE Started Season as Aide to Hargiss After Five Years at Norman. GETTO RETAINS POSITION Former Pittsburgh Gridster, Now Line Coach, Keeps Job at K. U. PRESIDENT DENOUNCES RULE Missouri Uni Head Says Foreigners' Deportation Short-Sighted. COLUMBIA, Mo. iUP. Or. Walter Williams, president of the University of Mlssoii and formei president of the world press con gress, denounced as "short sighted" the ruling of the secre tary of labor that foreign students attempting to earn expenses in the United States be deported. "The ruling will have regrettable re sults from the standpoint of inter national goodwill," said nr. Wil liams. The financial effect will be insignificant and it will be ac cepted by foreign countries as an other evidence of narrow nationalism." supervision of the. Boy Scouts and Campflre g i r 1 a organizations, therefore, it In not necessary for members to have a chnperone to the games. However,' should an adult desire to accompany the stu dents, they wiU be admitted to the Knothole saction at the general ad mission rate of the game. fcAWRKNCE, Kas.- Coach H. W. Hargiss was deposed Monday as head football coach of the Uni versity of Kansas &nd Adrian Lindsey, his assistant, was moved j tip to fill the position for the rest. of the season. Hargiss, who was recently ap pointed head trark coach follow ing the resignation of Brutus Ham ilton, will retain that post, Dr. Korrest C. Allen, director of ath letics, announced. The change in volves no reduction in salary, Decision to relieve Hargiss as head mentor was made after the .layhawks lost to Oklahoma, 21 to S. Saturday. The athletic board called to a secret meeting by Chancellor E. H. Lindley immedi ately after the game Saturday night, decided to authorize Direc tor Allen to make any changes he desired. . The shakeup does not involve Mike Getto, who will retain his . position as line coach. Lindsey, the new coach, began his first year at Kansas this fall. He had served five years at Okla homa U. as head coach previously, losing out last year in a depart mental shakeup. HUSKERS SEE FILMS OF CYCLONE BATTLE 1 61 Joe AMIIer I NEBRASKA PLAYS MINNESOTA 0 IN FEATURE CLASH Huskcrs Resume Relations With Gophers After 13 Year Laose. Friley, New Head Industrial Sciences, Says Plan Education Diet. Ames, Ta. Students in Ameri can colleges sometimes suffer from "mental indigestion" because they consume too much knowledge or because they are given the wrong variety, Dean Charles E. Friley, assuming his new duties as head of the division of industrial science at Iowa State college, said today. This condition results. Dean Fri- y said, from failure of colleges to plan courses to meet student needs. "Curricula must be ever changing and ever-developing if they are to satisfy the require ments of students in an advancing civilization, ' ne declared. "The proper aim of any educational in stitution is development in its stu dents of well rounded character and ability." One changing condition, he went on, that has affected curricular problems is the huge increase in collegiate attendance in the last thirty years. At the start of the century. Dean Friley said, only one young person in thirty-five was in college;, today one in seven goes to college.- Dean" Friley's objectives for his division inchv-f careful study of teaching methods, a survey of ed ucational activities the division may sponsor and "effecting all economies possible without endan gering the efficiency or develop ment of the work." Dean Friley came to Iowa State from Texas Agricultural and Me chanical college. Bible Follows It With Lonn inf-,h k"1 but thiy ,iu1 1V uiuie runuwa - Willi i-uiiy . eriible rooting themselves in Blackboard Drill on Minnesota Plays. Apathetic cheering from the stu dent section didn t rouse the Husk crs to brilliant heights in the low a st;ite gime Saturday. If the ac called cheering section exhibits an indifferent, don't-give-a-damn spir it, how can they cxp.vt lha tonn i down on the field to play aggress-1 ively ? It's an old, old topic, 1 1 know, but really the cheering wa.i J i-.ii, sis certainly miserable. With so little enthusiasm com-1 ol":;",, ing from the student section the 1 ktintn bui-dcn was placed on William V. "Billy" Quick, and the university band. They were overworked dui- msi'l-; addi-1 tion. Kven the players adir.il that , a fighting spirit from llie stands j inspires them to produce their Ivst : so lot's get worked up a trifle j when the next game conies around. Well, 1 finally got that n' my ' SOONERS LOOK STRONG Oklahoma Beats K. U. 21-6 As Mizzou Gets 65 to 0 Setback by Texas. 1W !MHIP Mlotirl STAMII.VCS I I II I (I A I II I M'I. pi 0PI 1.000 It 1.000 21 .1100 A II .0(10 H Jt 0 Motion pictures of the l.wa State game and a long skull prac tice kept the varsity busy Monday afternoon. Glaring defects in block ing, running interference and the missed assignments gen?rally, came to life in the reels, and then Coach Bible emphasized the error.? still further with a blackboard lec ture. With the Minnesota game at Minneapolis on the boards for Sat urday, the Huskers went through an intensive study session of the Gopher offense and defense as used against Purdue last week. As sistant coach Harold Browne scouted the Minnesota team in the Purdue game and has brought back word that Coach Bernie Bier man has a fast, heavy eleven that gave the Boilermakers a gruelling struggle all the way. Manders Really Good. Jack Manders. the 200 pound all conference fullback is a fast. tough ball carrier, according to Browne, while Francis Lund, soph-1 omore half is the speediest man on j the squad. Minnesota made three definite threats against Purdue but lacked the necessary punch to score. Coach Noble Kizer's outfit winning 7 to 0. The Scarlet players confined their outdoor drill Monday to j working the kinks out of sore mus cles and in running through sev- i era! new plays that have been j saved especially for Minnesota. As I the Huskers will be wearing whit? jerseys in the Minnesota game, they began the week's preparation in that attire Monday. i Steve Hokuf came out of the ' Eight University of Nebraska Iowa State tilt with a sprained an- ; college of agriculture .students are kle, apparently the only injury :n j trying out lor the daily products the Cornhusker camp. Hokuf's an- j judging team which is to compete ekl was stiff and swollen Monday, ; in the national judging contest in .... 0 0 0 .000 (,nnc ThU Wt-rk. Ni'hrnk , Mlnnrviln itl Mlnnrnpnllo. UMnlimnit , 1'r.iH l lull.. MiHMtiin . Kniiona Mule at Munlml- Inn. Kii?im Inwil MnlP at Ami , itrr 1.aI Week. Villi kii I!, Innit Mule , lklnlii,ni-t '.'I. hnnit ti. li'U' . ;.V MKinrl 0. hunonx Mali- Hi, Kniwu lWlr)an . Don Theopilus, 1S5 pound Ames fullback, was one of the chief rea sons why the Nebiaska rucks could not gain consistently in the second half. It was the duty of one of the Husker halfbacks to "oloi-k him in one uf the plays, but Th.' ophilus who was backing up llie line, refused to consider the idea. He made seven straight tackles in one part of the third quarter. Coach Harold Browne, who scouted the Minnesota-PurdiiJ game at Minneapolis Saturday, de clares that Paul Moss, Purdue left end, was the lad who leally won the game for Tin due. Mo; s did most of the punting and much of the passing for his team, and, ac cording to Browne, sei the Minne sota eleven back on their heels persistently with groat kicks and fine passing. MEN TRY FOR PLACES J Nebraska Sends To Dairy Exposition At Detroit. but "Doc" McLean, trainer, de clared that Steve would be ready to go by Wednesday. E Selleck Announces Football Crowd Is Largely High School Students. FREE FACIALS Call MILDRED TEMPER B5241 85241 Reprnentino "NELSOH RAHE" Cosmetic 10c Per Line Mirlmum 2 Lines Karmelkorn FOR GENUINE Karmelkorn, bent but tered popcorn, delirious whipped i ream fudtfe and cameled apples Go to Johnson's. O. Hair Cutting Almost a third of the total at tendance at the Iowa-Nebraska football game Saturday, was made up of members of the "Knothole Club," according to John K. Sel leck, business manager of athlet ics. The ttoal attendance has been approximated to be between nine and ten thousand, and the "Knot holers" made up a large percent of the total. A. new plan for admission was adopted this year which increased the attendance gTeatly. Eligibility ' for membership was advanced to i older students by basing it on ! grades instead of the age of the applicant Any school student from i the 12th grades may become a I member after the proper prelimin i aries. Students wishing to avail themselves of a membership card are required to make application at their school office, where a blank is furnished them to be filled out and countersigned by the principal of the establishment. two groups. The club also is divided into two groups. Senior Knothole and Junior Knothole. Boys and girls in the tenth to twelfth grades belong I to the Senior group, and the j smaller students from the fifth to ninth grcAea are in the Junior di visoin. Senior Knotholers must present twenty-five cents along with their card to be admitted to a game, while Junior members are admitted for ten cents. The Knothole sections are under Detroit next week. Prof. P. A. ! Downs of the daily dcpailment is ' coaching the team. ! Those trying out for the team ; are Marion Mecham. John Rhodes, i P. W. Meredith, Hovce Fisher, Bob j Berger, Bill Ralston. Paul .swan ' son and Harold Besack. Practically all of the men arc dairy renjors in j the college of agriculture. The national contest this year ; will again he held in connection i with the dairy industries exposi tion. Last year the Nebraska team competed in the same contest at Atlantic City. The Dairy and Ice Cream Machinery and Supplies as sociation is offering prizes to the winning teams and individuals at Detroit this year. Included are six scholarships, silver cups for the winning teams and medals to the high individuals in each of the va rious branches of the contest. FARMERS AT CORN TEST Extension Service and Local Crop Bureaus Conduct Experiments. KWuuiing the play of Big Six 1 conference elevens last Saturday was Oklahoma's rather startling 21 to ti victory over the powerful ; Kansas Jayhawkers and Missouri's H.' to 0 drubbing at the hands of Texas IT. Include also Iowa State's fine grid display against Nebraska and you have something of a siza up of Saturday's opening high ! spots. I The Huskers gave a dismal ex hibition in its first game with ! Ames, being barely able to hang up a 12 to 6 yin. Playing sparkling j football the first half, the Corn ! huskers otiense did an about face I in the second to bog down coin j plctely. Alter tallying on a 50 ' yard pass from Schafroth to Imp I son early in the fourth quarter, the Iowa Staters launched a deter-1 mined atlaik which carried the ball once to the Husker 11-yard line, where the Nebraska vlefense stiffened. Bernie Masterson s for tunate recovery of Grefe's fumble in the first of the two Cyclone drives stopped what appeared to be a touchdown march. Dunlap Sooner Star, To Bob Dunlap, flashy Oklahoma quarterback and his halibackj teammate Bill Pansze go the hon ors for the Sooner triumph against r)pUftpr the heavy Kansas team. The con ucidjalta tcs.t wnich waa forecasted as probable tossup resulted in an easy -1 to 6 win for Coach Lewis Hard age's outfit, the light Oklahoma backs simply outspeeding the pon derous K. IT. linesmen. Ralph Graham enjoyed a field day at the expense of Kanf s Wes leyan last Friday night, ihe 190 pound fullback heading an attack that counted eight touchdowns The final score found Kansas g- gies with r2 points and Kansas Wesleyan 6. I Missouri received a 67i to 0 trampling from Texas U. in one of j the worst defeats ever recorded against a Tiger eleven. Oklahoma meets Texas this week, which should give conference followers a good line on the strength of h Sooner cluh. Oklahoma lost 3 to 0 in last year's tilt with the Long horns. Play Gophers. After a thiiteen year laps.-. 1 h Vniversity of Nebraska resumes football relations with th" 1 ni-1 versify of Minnesota Saturday. The last game between the twn teams was played in lf19 at Min neapolis, ending in a 6 to 6 tie. Elmer Sc hellcnburg went over for the Scarlet counter. Previous to this tilt, the Huskers and Gophers had competed in a series of clashes extending over a long periorj of years, with Minnesota's last exhi bition at Lincoln dated 1913. CaptJ Leonard Purdy's team won 6 to oj from the Minneapolis crew that' year. This weeks play again unds only two Big Six games scheduled. Kansas plays Iowa State at Ames in what should be a corking good lilt and Kansas State meets Mis souri at Manhattan. To date. Co ach A. N. "Bo" McMillin s team has displayed tne greatest power fl EH SON Personifies Personal Serv ice. Hair Cutting. 35c. Sr. Pierjon Jr. 1231 N street. Lost and Found FOUND Schaerfer'a Eversharp pencil, black and white. Name of "Leo H. Anderson" on pen. Owner may claini by calling at the Netraakan office a nd paying for this ad. FOUND Pair of white mwh gloves? Call at Nebraakan office. finals cd Several hundred farmers are gathering, this week, to learn more of the corn variety tens, which are being conducted by local farm bureaus and by the extension service of the acriculture collece. Among the things that will be in- j of any of the conference teams and spected and compared, at the : should have little trouble winning meetings, are the probable yield j from Missouri. and strength of stalk of the dif- ; ferent varieties of corn. ? !!.' 1 1 'CTli l it : at ni$cosi u The corn was raised under ordi nary conditions, and did not re ceive any extra attention. 'The seed from which the corn was raised came from a commercial company and is of the variety which is found in Nebraska and Iowa. P. H. Stewart and D. L. Gross, extension agronomists, will assist in conducting the meetings. Money Raised to lie I sed To Train Students in Library Work. GEOGRAPHIC REV I Ell PUBLISHES ARTICLE Professor .els Itengston Composes Summary From Swedish. Board and Room ot vbe ot STTDENTS STRATFORD HOUSE. J500 P t. B-4&S9. Board and mm. Clean rooms and delicloua meais. Kaaie cooking. Depression pi-ices. Yrni -tickets. Discount to groups of eight or more. Garages available. Rooms for Rent V TWO di-sirable sleeping room for hiVf- Extra study room. Very reas os&bls. 1507 L St. B-3083. 121 14th vo"' ...A, t t. Joe Tucker Roy Wytherg 221 No. 14 Professor Nels A. Bengtson of the Geographic department is the author of an article entitled Lop Nor. the Wandering Lake Gobi," which was published in the Geo graphical Record section of the October Geographical Review. The article is a nummary and review of three articles published I recently in Swedish by Sven Hedin j and Nils G. Horner. These articles are based on field work carried I out by the authors in the heart of I the Gobi desert in which they dis- , j covered one of the most remark- ' able changes of drainage that Liu Seventy-five autographed books by some of America's most widely read authors will be auctioned off to the highest Didders at the an nual conference of the Wisconsin Library association, Oct. S to 7. in order to provide funds for those who wish to be trained in library science. The books were collected by the library school at the Uni versity of Wisconsin. The title pages of some of the books have been inscribed with in teresting paragraphs by the au thors. Among the authors who have donated books to the collection are Edna Ferber. Louis Utermeyer, j occurred within historic times. A lake known as Lop Nor to the Chinese was in existence in about I 300 a. d.. since which time it has been non-exisant until in 1926 j when the stream formerly flow- ing into it, again began emptying its waters into the old lake base. . For Your !oon Day Lunch A hot plate lunch B" ith Brterage and liesmert For only Buck's Coffee Shop Facing Campus . Gertrude Atherton, Booth Tarklng ton, Meredith . Nicholson, Julia PeterUln, Hamlin Garland, Carl Sandburg, Margaret Ayer Barnes, George Ade, Robert W. Chambers, Kathleen Norrls, John Ersklne, Joseph Hergeshelmer, John Dos Passos, Carl Van Vechten, Laura Adams Armor, and Charles Rann Kennedy, FRATERNITY TENNIS three matches. Bennett boat Hirst, 7-6, 6-3; Sawyer downed Rasse, 6 1, S-6, and Clark won from Ask wig, S-7. 7-9, 6-0. In the only match thHt has yet been played between Delta Thu Delta and Tau Kappa Kpsilon the team of Tau Delta Delta drubbed Nickel, 6-0, 6-0. McLean Hall suc cumbed to Thl Alpha Delta, Taylor beating Mayborn, fi-0, fl-2, and Reynolds whipping Colo by tlm saino score, First round mulches that havu not been played are the PI Kappa Alpha-Delta Sigma Lain hi hi niatcli and Phi Kappa-Delta Chi mriicn. Fraternities drawlivr byes In tin Initial round Include Alruvi 'fun Omega, Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Knup i Phi, Phi Sigma Kappa, Phi Dell.; Theta, Delta Upsllon and Kappa Slgmn. Sigma Chi Team Impresses With Two Wins; Alpha Thets Triumph. Unexpected strength of Sigma Chi net team and the steady plav of the Alpha Theta Chi players have featured the early rounds of the interfraternity tennis tournev. Sigma Cht with Lester and Me Kerney in the leading roles tinned back both Alpha Gamma Rho and Zcta Beta Tau fraternities In last week's play. Against the A. G. K. team. McKerney was hard Dressed to beat Ralston, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1 whilM Lester had an easier time with Clark, winning 6-1, 6-2. Lester trimmed Levinson of Zeta Beta Tau 6-3, 6-2 in a second round match as McKerney turned back Galitsky by the same score. The championship Alpha Theta Chi outfit took the measure of the strong Sigma Nu team. Miller de feated Frerichs 6-3, 6-4 and Sharer was too brilliant for Johnson, tri umphing by a 6-0, 6-2 count. Sig ma lpha Kpsilon neatly disposed of Sigma Thi Epsilon, winning all " tit a NEBRASKA V3. MINNESOTA MINNEAPOLIS , . . tixrt 1$ JUST ONE I I MWSV ..c?5v Hi LM Saturday lit uire ySSSSJtfper STANCE EVENING r si m THE STUDENTS PREFERRED SHOP MOGUL Barbers ' e T, ELEVEN APIECE DANCE BAND STAGE ML. KADiO ONE DOLLAR Inttodti Supper and Dancinj . . . and Just on: Hold . . . that previdti ,-eal coimopoliUn tmirtncsi with tupcrlaliva comfort and service at pricel in ketpinj with tht times. "Alwiys hetdqutrtm for ih Turn" The CURTIS HOTEL MINNEAPOLIS 3rd to 4th Avt. en 10tH Strctt . . . , - -v.nM.-. ... ...... . SH l nu II Enjoy shopping at Lincoln's Bswy Store Cor. 11th O Sis. S. Xr H. Green Stamps An Added Savior sv - a w r? i I ' A Oil V- - y Jr m W k -y T13 7 yr T-'A 7 If! V II il If If I f. Ill i f : ! it i 1, T II 1 na Q. 4sW7 follow dictates of Edwardian Fashion Trends they're h i h , v i d e and handsome Fluttering . . . youihful . . . definittly an autumn fashion! Broader, smarter, newer! Swaggering in appearance Every detail smartly turned ! Handsome in every 40 5(D C OOLDS Tbirf riser