; 'I 5i I Nebrask HPn ifie Dai v Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska T INCOTN. NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1932. PRICE 5 CENTS. VOL. XXXI I NO. 42. t 77T 77 7T1 TTh rt rt 71 7V UU fl I)tvt IN Til lTV0 H ChTY IrTt IflfO Ifh 71 17 If OP i, ' M CAMPUS KEYED UP FOR EASTERNERS SCHOOL OBSERVE 10 ARMISTICE SIGNING WITH PARADE TODAY ; 1 Classes Dismissed at Noon ; For R. ,0. T. C. Ceremony i Through Town. ' , Co-operating with city officials and numerous civic organizations in the observance of the fourteenth anniversary of the signing of the Armistice,, the university will take part in the afternoon ceremonies, Chancellor IE. A. Burnett has an nounced Classes will be dismissed at The R. r T. C. unit will take , part in the parade through the downtown streets starting about 1-30. The 1 R. O. T. C. band, divided into four units, will also paruci no f in th nrncession. an,- untf ;7iii assemble on the campus atjl:20 and join the other units of the; parade at 15th and N streets. Tne paraae win uivu from 15th west on O to 9th, north of h tn t past on P to 14th. At that point the university unit will leave tne paraae o umau .u iVtA ofarlium A football rally and review will be held on the football field after rho, nnrarte. The DrOETam Will COn- sist of cheering led by varsity cheer leaders, and a review Honor ing the coaches and footoau squau LAWRENCE MAY CARRY VOTE Editor of Star Considered Probable Member of College. James E. Lawrence, associate professor of journalism, and edi nf th Lincoln Star is the most likely member of the Nebraska electoral college, to transport the seven electoral votes to Washing ' ton, according to an Omaha press HianAtfh. s Th seven electoral members for Nebraska include: Harvey Newbranch, Omaha; J. E. Law rence, Lincoln; Mrs. Effie M. By r ers, Hastings; James Quigley, Val William P. Cowan. Stan . ton- Frank M. Calfer. McCook: and Frank F. Farell, Colfax ' -county. iThese electors will meet 1 next month to choose one mem- her messenger to carry Nebraska : votes to Washington. Nebraskans did not Vote for either Kooseveit or Hoover but for the seven mem bers of the electoral college. For Peace The year of the War and the years since the War are prob ably as eventful as any you will ever see. In your student life times you have been witnesses of a world struggle unequaled in purpose or intensity. You have seen the Armistice, you have lived through a panic, you have witnessed the unexam pled rise of a great prosperity, and then another depression. Many nations have fallen and risen again. You have been living in times that will be his tory indeed. The older among you will re member vividly those closing days of the war, those hours of earnest scanning of the news papers, the anxiety, the rumors, and finally the Armistice and victory, with its bonfires, its whistles, and the relief In every heart. To many of you the years of the war are remembered as only a misty haze. But those with a little more of life's experience recall that they were years of idealism of purpose and willing ness of purpose and willingness to sacrifice in order that justice might encompass the earth. On this Armistice Day, fourteen years after the close of the war, let us dedicate ourselves to the same ideal. Chancellor E. A. Burnett. YEARBOOK CAMPAIGN CLOSES TODAY AT 5 Discontinue Special Rates After Friday Says Manager Skade. Emphasizing that with the close of the sale, books will no longer be obtainable at the special cam paign price, Charles Skade, busi ness manager of the Cornhusker, vAsferrfav ure-ed all students who have not yet purchased an annual to take advantage 01 tne oner. The sale will close today at 5 n'rlock. accordins to Skade. After that time the sale prices will be discontinued, and the profit-sharing plan, in the event that one thnLand conies are sold, will be put into application, the business manager stated. Members of the business and ed itorial staffs of the publication, in addition to members of other cam pus organizations, are handling A nrize of twenty-five dollars worth of merchandise will be awarded by Magee's to the stu dent selling the greatest number of books. Sosh " Rally Ground Today, Once Quartered 800 Troops in Training How many of the collegians who rally in front of "Sosh" today know that the building before which they're standing once fur nished barracks for some of the 1,500 students who in the war days of 1918 were members of the S.A.T.C. (Student Army Train ing Corps) and as such were pre paring for active service overseas? .Yet Social Sciences halL just erected and still with the scaffold ing about It, served that very pur pose. Students will rally in the building today, but the number, is negligible when compared with those who slept there in the fall of 1918, for there were over 800 quar tered there. Sleeping in Sosh or In the Arm ory, which was also transformed Into barracks, eating in a mess hall in the Temple, and drilling on the old athletic field, now the site of the stadium) was the order of the day for these student-soldiers. Theoretically their time was to be evenly divided between "education si" and "military;' work. War aims and tactics were allotted twenty four hours each week, and an equal number of hours were to be spent on those academic, subjects which the student elected from the list designated as being specially nertinent to wartimes. At the entrance of the United States into the war there was a demand for college men for off! rem a demand so ereat that it appeared that colleges would soon be depleted or men. war oniciais and educators convening together organized the S.A.T.C, advocat ing the enlistment of the college man and detailing him back to college for training. George R. Chatburn. professor of applied me chanics, was Nebraska's represen tative at tnis conierence, ana 10 him goes the credit for securing and directing a unit of S.A.T.C. at Nebraska. When they came to school in the fall of 1918, those students who were eighteen years of aee or over and who were physically fit for military service were auowea to enlist in S. AT. C. and thus be bona fide soldiers. The 1,500 who volunteered were organized into seven companies under tapu E. J. Mclvor, commandant, Includ ing a navy detachment known as S. N.T.C. About 500 were quar tered on the Ag college campus In temporary wooden barracks, while the rest were housed on the city campus. NNOCENTS EXPECT LARGE ATTENDANCE AT DADS DAY FETE Varied Program Is Planned i For Annual Luncneon Saturday Noon. with n unusually laree number of dads expected in Lincoln Satur day for tne nusDurgn gic, Innocents society is preparing for one of the largest Dads Day lunch- enns Saturdav noon at me cuam- Kor nf commerce that has ever been held, the committee in charge j announced Friday. The completed program, in cludes several short introductory talks by Chancellor E. A. Burnett, and several members of the board of regents, a speech by W. C. Kun din of Wahoo, entertainment by Joyce Ayres and his eleven piece orchestra, an initiation ceremony for dads into Delta Aipna ueita, and a pre-game rally led by Jack Minor, cheerleader. The luncheon and program are timed to let out shortly after 1 o'clock, the committee announced, so that all who attend will have time to get to the stadium before the kickoff at 2 p. m. Dads and sons :ind daughters can sit to gether in the stadium in a special section reserved for them, accord ing to John K. Selleck, students beine' permitted to trade in their own tickets for seats in this sec tion. Tickets are on sale by members of Panhellenic, Interfraternity, and Barb councils and at The Daily Nebraskan office. A limited num ber will be on sale at the cham ber of commerce Saturday. croups to honor service flag at SALUTE SATURDAY Parade Will Form on Field For Ceremony Before Start of Came. Pershing Rifles, Ta3sel3, the R. O. T. C. band and the cadet col onel and his staff will participate in the annual salute to the Ne braska Service flag which will be held in front of the stadium im mediately before the beerinnine of the Nebraska-Pittsburgh game Saturday. The Kines win lire a volley of three rounds in honor of the flap- following which taps will be played by the buglers, of the band. A narade led bv the band will march from the south end of the field to the north end where the salute will be made. The Pershing Rifles and the Tassels carrying the flag will follow the band. "While taps is being played, the students should take off their hats and hold them over their left breast as a courtesy," stated Cap tain Scott of the military depart ment. AG TEAMS ENTRAIN FRIDAY Judging Squads Compete at Kansas City Saturday In Exposition. The senior livestock judging team and the meats judging team will leave Friday to participate in the American Royal Livestock show being held Saturday at Kan sas City. Prof. M. A Alexander, coach of the senior livestock team will take with him Vernon Miller, Farm House; John Martin, Alpha Gamma Rho; Wayne Bishop; Reu ben Hecht, Alpha Gamma Rho; Floyd Hedlund, Farm House; La Verne Sengrid, Farm House; and George Harrison. Six will compete. The meat judging team, under the direction of Prof. W. J. Loeffel, is composed of Hedlund, Bishop, and Miller. The crops judging team, coached by Prof. A. Frolik, has already left for the exposition and includes Murray Brawner, Elver Hodges, Roy Blazer, and Gerald Mott, alternate. Rallies Thruout Day Come To Climax at Coliseum Eve Pep Fest. Hanging from a gallows beam in front of Social Science hall, the body of the Pitt Panther swayed Thursday awaiting the application of the torch Friday morning at 11 o'clock when students will gather to watch flames consume the ef figy. Climaxing a week of rally spirit in preparation for the game with Pitt, who intncted tne worst ae feat on the Cornhuskers last, year in the historv of Nebraska foot ball, the largest all-student rally of the year will te conducted in tne coliseum at 7:30 Friday evening. Coaches Bible and Schulte, and Dr. G. E. Condra are the scheduled speakers, and the entire football team will be present. At 6:50 a parade, forming in front of the Temple, will march be hind the band and tne massea pep organizations to the Coliseum by way of R street to fraternity-sorority row, thence to Vine and to the field house. Immediatelv following: the Arm istice Day parade early Friday aft ernoon, for whicn classes win De dismissed, the R. O. T. C. regiment and band will march to the sta dium where a uniform military rally will be conducted. Coach Bible indicated Thursday that the team appreciated the large amount of student enthusi asm displayed thruout the week. "Such encouragement," he said, "adds a large measure of resolu tion to the team members, but it is far more effective in attaining its end if this spirit is confined to or ganized displays such as are planned for Friday afternoon and evening." AXLING SPEAKS TONIGHT Noted Graduate Will Address Friendship Banquet at Christian Church. In honor of all foreign students on the campus, the fifth annual in ternational friendship banquet will be held Friday night at the First Christian church. Dr. Axhng, a graduate of the University of Nebraska will speak on the topic, "An East less and West less World." Dr. Axline; has spent the past thirty years in Japan as a mis sionary and is well acquainted with the Orient. Dr. Pool of the Dr. Wm. Ailing. Dotany uepan- Courtey, Journal. ment will be toastmaster at the banquet. Need More Girls to Sell for Pitt Came More girls are needed to sell concessions at the games, accord ing to Jean Alden, in charge of sales. Girls interested may still sign up on the list in the Armory All present salesmen are requested to report promptly at 1:30 Satur day. Hot dogs will be sold at the game as well as candy, apples and hot popcorn. Omaha Band, Rooters Coming for Pitt Game Accompanied "by a thirty-two piece band, 200 members of the South Omaha Livestock Com mission will renew their annual pilgrimage to a Cornhusker foot ball game Saturday, coming here In a body to witness the Pitts burgh game. The tradition was inaugurated In 1906 and for twenty-six years the visitors have watched the Scarlet emerge ' victorious. HUSKERS FULL OF FIGHT Team in Fine Condition for Panther Tilt Saturday At the Stadium. . p'llpiSS'''' J . - ' i ' Brimming ovsr with fi'jt and enthusiasm, two Husk:r teams concluded practice for the week Thursday with a sparkling signal drill as the final step in prepara tion for their intersectional game i with the Pitts burgh Panthers 'Saturday at Memorial sta dium. t Keyed for Pitt as they have for no other foe this season, the Ne braska team is i-awrriKf Kiy. at razor edge - Courtesy Journal botn physically and mentally for Dr. John B. Sutherland's undefeated outfit from Pittsburgh. Bruce Kilbourne's knee is still giving trouble, but the injury is not so severe that it will prevent him from getting into the fray. Altho pre-game forecast na turally favors the Golden Pa because of their great record this season, tne (jornhuskers have gone at their workouts this week with such unusual vigor that it has brought smiles of satisfaction to Coach Bible and his aides. New plays, pass defense and tackling have come in for considerable em phasis, and with Saner and Mathis back in the lineup it should be a much stronger Nebraska eleven. Must Stop Pitt Stars. Linemen have been studying the play of the Panther forward wall and also the deceptive running of Heller and Sebastian, star Pitt backs. Fast, alert play character izes the Pittsburgh team which has victories over Army. Notre Dame and Pennsylvania this fall. Game Captain Lawrence Ely will lead the Huskers into the game Saturday, in which Nebraska hopes to reverse last year's 40 to 0 trim ming at Pittsburgh. It was the. worst defeat in Scarlet grid his tory. Revised weight statistics show that Coach Bible's team holds a tlight advantage. The Cornhusker line averages 185 pounds to 184 for Pitt, while the Nebraska back field tips the scales at 181 to 179 for the Panthers. Jack Miller, 177 pound ball lug ger will start at right halfback Saturday, Coach Bible indicated yesterday. Bernie Maslerson, Chris Mathis and George Sauer will complete the backfield, with Tater Fahrnbruch and Hub Boswell cer tain to see plenty of action. Probable starting lineups: NrbrMk FlUnbanth PrrMwy 170) I 12 ILitrj HaltMTt (1871 It........ l3 uha KUhop l2 I( m Hartwic Kiy (AO I7) ... (181) lomwy Irbu (1771 rr IIM) Ondrr O'Brtrn (ZIM) rt l7 Valta Hokof (19 re.... (1H5) Kkladaay Maxb-rfton (IH) ...n (I89 Hutu Mathln (147) Ih (19 HrlW-r Mlllrr (1771 rh. .. (1 KrhaMian Haurr (197) Ih... IM) HHnfitoek Campus Calendar. Friday. Morning Between-class ral lies, burning of Panther in ef figy. AftcrrsowM Armistice parade, followed by regimental rally in stadium. Evening Giant rally in Coli seum, 7:30. Saturday. Dads Day luncheon, Chamber of Commerce, noon. Pittsburgh-Nebraska football at 2:00. All-University party, Coli seum, evening. ... ft ft ft V;