The Dcily Nebftskea OrrU Bl 6mUi HIGH COST OF FUSSING IMPR0VC8 SCHOLARSHIP. Oirte, Dont Read This. High cost of fussing lmproree scholarship. It Is noticeable this year that there la leas dating and lees social activity than usual. Last year the students, aa a rule, had plenty of ' money and the girls grew to expectl extravagant entertainment This year money la tight, but the girls appar ently expect the Mm sort of enter tainment, "and the men cannot furnish It. Therefore, K U rumored that date are at a premium in the sorority houses, and aa a consequence of the high coat of co-ed entertainment the nen are studying more this year, it la therefore expected that the scho lastic steading of the University wilt doubtless be Improved. For this beneficial result we may thank thoee eo-ede who demand a taxi and other high priced luxuries. PCTTY LARCENY. It baa recently come to our notice that the lookers and dressing room of the football Um has been sys tematlcally looted day after day. Watches, money, books and even clothing bare been stolen. It is hard to believe that any person who has received the benefits. of aa education at the expense of the state should hare show so lttUs gratitude and so Uttle understanding of the meaning of aa education as to do this sort of thing. Tot it is almost impossible for any person, except a University stu dent, to hare aa opportunity to steal from the lockers and dressing room. This matter haa gone beyond the point of any petty offense and for the benefit of society these thieves should be found out and not only expelled from school, but should also be proeeeuted to the full extent of the law. The Imprisonment of any edu cated person who has shown such a complete lack of any moral sense Is more important to society than that of some Ignorant criminal who has perhaps committed a greater crime. A single educated criminal is a greater menace to society than any number of uneducated outcasts, be cAuae the latter may possibly be criminal of circumstances and may m5eemd. Put the educated man baa bad evesy opportunity which our civilization provides, and has thrown it all aside because he is unwilling to play the square game. Stealing of the sort that has been going on about the Armory constitutes a serious offense, and the Dally Ne braskan is going to extend Its efforts to see that ample protection Is fur nished to the football men and that the offenders when caught are prose cuted. r DIPLOMACY, Diplomacy and politics are not necessarily the Bane. Although the average politician Is somewhat of a diplomat and the' average diplomat la necessarily concerned in politics, the two are in no way analagous when personal diplomacy Is used. Such a diplomat needs tact Tact is a sense of nicety In discrimination between people, lde& and steps which one must take with them. Tact Is an ability to tell whether one should uke a matter in an aggressive or a defensive manner. Tact is an espen tial qualification or the diplomat and is the mainspring of his makeup. Tbe diplomat must know wbo will take a loke and who will not; wbo will be "walked on" and who will not, in fact he must be a combined debator. politician, psychologist and up-to-date person. He must be straight forward, honest, clean and fair. He must use good judgment in all things. He must use push instead of pnjl. In UTrth, be must be able to handle peo- a .ff.irs with delicacy. True pie uu diplomacy is not the arrangement of things for personal e&rlchmeat bat la the arrangement of things for the betterment of the wholo. The true statesman I a diplomat: the eelf- centered statesman a politician. The need of thU nation, of this world and of this school is not politicians bat diplomats, men of sterling worth, In tegrity and men who are true states men, who live not for themselves alone but for the betterment of man kind. And mankind Is sorely In need of true diplomacy. V OMEN'S ATHLETICS. Women's athletics, while not creat lug the wild enthusiasm that Is ex hlbited for football, is one of the centers of interest at the present time. The inter-class soccer tourna ment is not yet completed and hockey practice began last Thursday. Five and ten mile hikes are popular ai this season If you want to earn W. A. A points and are not already working for them, begin now. If you turn out for ten practices of hockey you will be allowed to compete for a place on a class team. A place on a class team will give you one hundred W. A A. points, the number required for mem bership In the Women's Athletic Asso ciation. A place on the winning team counts one hundred fifty points. Forty miles of hiking in one semestei counts twenty-five points. The "N" sweater is awarded to those who have earned one thousand W. A A. points It Is not too late to begin working for membership In the W. A A. even If this is your Senior year, and it is not too early to begin working for the "N" sweater even if this your Fresh man year. Detailed Information about the vari ous sports can be obtained from mem bers of W. A. A. and from instructor? of physical education. If you want to have some fun and earn W. A. A points arrange to go on the next hike and enroll for hockey. Do it today. Marquette Students Pose for Art1 Class It all depends on the artist! The forma of Marquette Univer slty students may be perpetuated In marble or on canvas, as the forms of Athenian students were perpetUKted in the Parthenon friese and in the Apollo Belvedere. For a number of Mar quette students are posing as models for the life class of the Leytoa School of Art at the Layton Art gallery. It all depends on the artists. The Marquette men are furnishing the models. The art student must see to it that their work is grea enough to live. The Marquette students get 76 cents an hour for posing, and that is the reason they are doing It. They do not care whether the artists suc ceed in reproducing them In Immortal statue or painting. To be a model it is not absolutely necessary that a man be an Apollo or an Adonis. What is necessary le that he be well developed in general, e must be neither scrawny nor flabby. Above all he must not have a f'ont porch. And If, in addition to a colum nar neck, arching chest, slender waist, be has the true Grecian nose and the cleft ch'n. if he be as fair as Apollo or Adonis, then be Is an ideal model. Otherwise the art students select only that part of him which is best, taking another part from another model, until they have a composite figure that contains one model's arms, another's torso, another's head, the whole approaching what men ought to be and wish they were but only a ft-w are. Among the Marquette student models there are ideal models and the other kind. But both get 75 cents an hour. No more models are needed now. Four new heads of universities have taken their place, Former Dean Coff man of the University of Minnesota is now president, former President M. L. Durton of Minnesota is the bead at Michigan University, Prof. Walter Dill Scott of Northwestern succeedP Dr. Hough in the Methodists' presi dential chair, and Dr. Kinney takes the place of former President James at the University of Illinois. Did you ever stop to think that yes terday cannot be a tomorrow. Did you ever realize that the moment passed is no longer. If you have done nothing in the last five minutes, that five minutes Is lost forever. A great many people lose precious time in what they term as their spare mo ments. A great Jecturer once said that a man's success in life depended on how be used his spare time. This is very true. The difference between the man who studies in his spare mo ments and the man who stays out nights la the size of each other's pay check. The same thing can be applied to school students. The pupil who utilizes his odd moments carries off all the scholarship medals and weighted credits. Remember that It is what you do today that carats; the future may never be. i THE DAILY INTER-PRATBRNITV ATHLITIC ASSOCIATION. There will be a meeting ef the Istsr-Fratomlty Athletls Ae eesistis Tseeday saeralag, No vember 1, at 11 e'elesk In the AtMetlt sfrlee. Officers will be sleeted and ether Important matters will be d elded. laWe fraternity bewlisa will be die evssed, as well as the prsspsots for Intsr-fratenMny feetball and basketball. Cadet Officers. Meeting of the University cadet officers' association in Nebraska Hall Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. Thanksgiving Wllsen Memorial. All women students who were in favor of the Wilson League of Nations and voted accordingly at the last election, and who desire their names to appear upon the Thanksgiving Memorial from Nebraska women to President Wilson, will be given oppor tunity to sign the Memorial between 9 a. m. and 6 p. m. today and Tuee day at the Miller and Paine store. Just inside the O street entrance. Episcopalian Club Meeting. There will be a meeting of the Episcopalian Club Tuesday, Novem ber 16, at 7 o'clock in Faculty Hal I. Pay Your Subscription. He waited and another man landed the Job. It never pays to wait Pay your subscription to the Committee of Two Hundred at the Y. M. C. A. rooms in the Temple building now. Kids' Party. Come to the kids' party November 1 at S o'clock in the Trinity Metho dist church, 16th and A streets, and be a kid again! Admission, twenty cents. Kids' Petty. Cans be a kid again at oka party Kevab- 19 at S e'sledk at Trial ty Mexaeais 4 area. Ufa and A streets. stress bivttca far a r awed tlnte. Iran Sphinx Pine. The lrea Sphlax pins bavt arrived and ana be obtained from Mereer Alexaader at the Delta Chi Chapter B. R... P. B. Q. cordially Invites all University P. B. Q.'s to an informal reception igven November II at the Brown Betty. Please sail B44C7 er L4I40 after o'clock. Arts aad Science eonvocatloa an nounced as Tuesday, November 11, has been changed to Wednesday, No vember 17. All classes of ths Arts and Science College wMl for the Priaes far Oae hundred sad ftfty dollars is offered la two prises far ths best essay wrlttea by aa auTieulturel stu dent en Ths Relation of Agrleulture to ths Development of the Natloa." Manuscripts must be submitted he fore March 1, 19X1. It may aot exeeed 5.tM words. Detail regarding this contest may be secured from ths Dean of the College of Agrical twre. (Signed) A. BURNaTTT. English teacher: "Do you use slang?" Bright Miss: "Now, my maw'd biff me on the beak, if I made a stab at any dope like that." Ex. t Deep One Twas in a restaurant where they met, Romeo and Juliet. Twas there he first got iiito debt For Romeo'd what Juli-et. Small Boy to Sportman who has Just missed the rabbit six times. "Here's my -knife, sir, creep up be hind him and stab him." Hoax "Did your garden win any prizes last summer?" , Coax "Indirectly, yes. My neigh bor's chickens took first prize at the poultry show." Some Grammarl Be she went or am she gone? WIH her sever come back to I? Have ber left I all alone? Or me ever go to she? It cannot was. Ex. NEBRASKA!? Frank Peterson Injured Early Sunday Morning Frank 8. Peterson, '23, Brush, Colo rado, fell and severely bruised his back early Sunday morning, while working on an extended platform neai the Rock Island tracks, for the Lin cola Traction Company. He was hur lied In an unconscious condition to the Lincoln Sanitarium, where he soon rallied. Several X-ray pictures were taken of the injury Sunday. They showed that no bones had been broken. It will be several days untl Peterson is able to return to school STOCK-JUDGING TEAM OFF TO INTERNATIONAL SHOW 'AVklnsen, Clark, Hepperly, Ingham, Lambert, Rice and Schoen Com potes Husksr Team. Nebraska's stock-Judging team com posed of Charles E. Atkinson, Kenneth A. Clark, Asa K. Hepperly. Leroy W. Ingham. William Z. Lambert. Waldo S. Rice and Royal L. Schoen will leave Tuesday morning, November 18, at 10:45 o'clock via the Burlington rail road for the east The College of Agriculture has planned a rally for the team at the station before its depar ture. The team will compete in the Inter national Stock Show in Chicago Nov ember 29 and will return the first week in December. Visits will be made en route at Ames, Iowa, and at Champaign, Illinois. The Agricul tural College of the University of Wisconsin at Madison will also bo inspected. Prof. W.fH. Savin, who is acting as coach for the team, will accompany he men on the trip. Prof. H. J. Grsmlich, head of the eAnlmal Hus bandry Department at the University, will meet the team in Chicago short ly before the International Show. r Bubbles Phone rings violently in Rag office. Managing editor answers it. "Daily Nebraskan." Voice from other end of line: "Yea, I thought this was Lincoln, Nebraska, eutle." Bang went the receiver. Some women who give their age as thirty summers must have been living in a cold climate. Your azure hskr gleams in the light. Your lips are black as darkest night Your gleaming teeth are bright as Jade, Your fair cheeks have a sffron shade. i Vermilion 6hlne your witching eyes My dear you seem to show surprise. Fou think, you're sure, there's some thing wrong. Nay. nay. I'vs colored glasses on. Shy young thing: "I can't stand kissing." Veteran: "111 admit it is a bit try ing, shall we find a seat." Yale Record. The greatest "Fall" event for Sopho mores eeems to have been the Freshmen-Sophomore Olympics. Her name Is blazoned on billboards the world over. She is on the lips of men from Siberia to Spain, She has been presented to royalty. She has visited all corners of the world. Millions worship her. crave here. She greatly influences the lives or wen She was a goddess to the soldiers. When I met her it was her whiteness that first impressed me Afterwards her glowing spark or color. Her influence is as soothing as it is harmful. She is a delicate thing and yet she has the force of fire if not care fully handled. Later it was the fire of her that pot me. the fire of her that got me. Phe clnips to my lips. But finally I flng her aside she has run her course Her whiteness and flame are gone My favorite cigarette. Yale Record. Goucher College, Maryland, Is the first woman's college In the country to provide for the education of wo men voters as a result of the Nine teenth Amendment. This was made possible by the will of M-s. Elizabeth King Elllcott, a pioneer suffragist, who left 125,000 in trust to SV used for this purpose as soon as equal suffrage should he secured. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER H. Alpha Tsu meeting. Vespers, lain, EHen M' Intsr-Prstsrnlty Athletic Aeseele tion. 11 i. m. Athletic office. Episcopalian Club mswng, J a. m., Faculty Hall. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17. Arts and Science convocation, 11 a. m.. Temple. Y. W. C. A. staff dlnnr, p. m. Ellen Smith Halt Kappa Phi meeting. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER IS. P. E. O. Informal reception. Brown s Betty tea room. Roscee Pound Club meeting. Blackstons Club meeting. nssssa w k . . m a? O A Palladlan banquet, Llneeln hotel. Qamma Phi Beta fall party, Llnooln hotel. Delta Delta Delta dance, Ellen Smith Hall. Freshman Law hop, Resewllds party house. Alpha Phi house dance. Silver Lynx houss dance. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, Alpha Thsts Chi dance, Lincoln hotel. Beta Theta Phi houss dsnce. Delta Gamma dance, Knights of Columbus Hall. Wayne Club meeting, 8 p. m., Faculty Hall. Pi Kappa Phi fall party, Lincoln hotel. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21. Menorah Club meeting, S a. m, Faculty Hall. "Some men manage to dodge enough work to keep a doaea people busy." The students at Tulane University, Louisiana, have recently passed a regulation forbidding smoking la any university building. Students: Try Roberts Dairy Lunch Clean, wholesome food, well cooked, strved under the most sanitary conditions at moderate prieea. 1238 "O" Street Men's Shoe Sale On all Men's Fine Shoes 10.00 Shoes 8.50 $15.00 Shoes 9.00 Shoes 7 65 14-00 Shoes J- 8.50 Shoes 7 05 Shoes OM r lMi 12.00 Shoes 8.00 tfnoi 6.80 11.00 Shoes THE BOOTERY 1230 o St. Cr BE A UTTUt KINO. Lett be little kinder thea w Mora friendly as the awtti u hurry peat LeV spend a little time, fro re, aad worry la helping those with whoa ear u, la cast. ' Too ready we have been to Jud w kindly To utter oouuneat, eauatio ae Let's try to sea the beat there is t others. And give them words of r tyapatfcr , and cheer. Of what avail to spend ocr uvw envy, la Jealous thought unworthy, ltj fish deed? Why not with sweetness fill the p ' ing moments? Embrace a higher and holier ereaftl why not drive out the bitterness (aat cankers. By letting In the sunshine of CeTi love? We need to cheer ourselves aad 0J den others The Joy and Inspiration frora aeen. - Lena B. Ellngwoed,. a Portland Triform In Japan only one person li im ever attends a school of con res a university grade. Ws teach yon to danoe ia six priTata lessons. Facia for sppointaimt. Mrs. T. . WaiUnu Prtvats Stodie B425S 1221 D St 3C3f f Learn to DANCE Discount