The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 17, 1921, Image 2
'1:1.1" THE DA1LT NIB UbiAN THE DAILY NEB R AS KAN CuhliKliiHl Monday. TuniUj, Wdne rtnj. ThnriMtay uid Krlly f ccl wrk liv TIik Inln-mlty f Nrlirnitkn. OKMCIAI. INIVKRS1TY PHIMCATION Itul.T hi !Iim IIiiii of the Student Pub llrntliiim Honrd. Rntrrrd a woiid rlmis niutliT at 111 liKlnrrU' III Lincoln. NrhrHNka, undi-r Act of Cm rrH, March S, 1B1B. Su!iHri!itlon rntn S'.'.SO pir yc-iir Sl.tA per m-mmtor. Mngli copy - 8 w N. STORY HARDING....Editor-ln-Chlef JACK AUSTIN Managing Editor JESSIE WATSON Associate Editor ORVIN GASTON News Editor GREGG McBRIDE News Editor ROY GUSTAFSON News Editor KKl.I.r. l'AKMAN Society Keillor Ml Mil. EH MITrilKlX Sport Kdltor Trl. plKine HMlli room S00, "V" Hull AKNiHtimt nlllorlnl rltpr! Helen llowr. Vnl Kanilnl nml Harlan ltoyer. AsUtniit miclety editor: ;ertrude I'at- terson. BUSINESS STAFF GLEN GARDNER. ...Business Manager JAMES FIDDOCK. Asst. Business Mgr KNOX BURNETT ...Circulation Mg'r ROY CilSTAKNON Ne- Editor lor thin Inii DAILY NEBRASKAN'S SEC OND SEMESTER PLATFORM 1- Clean politics In competitive campus affairs. 2. More paid readers on the campus. 3. A wirier scope of news. 4. Realization of the new gym nasium and stadium. 5. Lower prices to University students. 6. Each student an "unofficial" staff member of the Dally Ne-braskan. guiso ol the familiar and traditional robin but lu the torm of that won knownjnalady known as Bprlng fever Delian Hall, Temple t: wns not a case of "some lit bird" this time but "some little bug." The two unseasonable days of this week, when the termometer hovered i round the June uolnt. hit students (?) with a slum. Th,ey were not pre- party house pared for the advance of spring so :oon and as a conseqneuce a number of cases of sleeping sickness were re ported in various class rooms. It )s Ple Th"ter ruriiored that in those classes where the lights art turned out and lantern slides shown, three-fourths of the members were found asleep or dozing at tho end of the period Monday. If the bug of spring has infected you already, there is no hope for you during the hotays which will follow In April and May. Now that the elec tion is over, you can settle down to your studies again and forget about spring lever and other excitement, foi we ARE promised cooler days ahead. iltiiurrsihj (fjiiruftar AMBITION VS. SELFISHNESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17. Pershing Rifles, 7 p. m., Nebraska Hall. Wayne Club meeting, 7:30 p. m., University Hall III. i Christian Science Society meeting. 7:30 p. m., Social Science Hall. University Players, 8:15 p. m.. Trmple theatre. Alpha Zeta open meeting, 7:30 p. m., Agriculture Engineers Hall. Mathematical Club meeting, 7:30 ' p. m., Mechanical Engineers Hall. ! .Xi Delta, 7:15 p. m., Ellen Smith Hall. "Yn Forum, 7:30 p. m., Temple theatre. John Marshall Club, 7:15 p. m., Law Hall. A certain professor onoe saui thi ambition is in reality '.selfishness. Ambition for a goal is laudable, u contended, but ambition for that goal in preference to another's ambition for the same goal is selfishness. In this statement we cannot agree. The tlesire for supremacy over anoiut. icrson to fulfill our ambition is only I University Hall III a nntural human instinct and to uo, Alpha Zeta open meeting, 7:30 p. it does not seem bred of ieh':sn- m., Agriculture Engineers Hall. ,iess. j Christian Science Socbty meeting, Without such desire for a mar !7:30 p. m., Faculty Hall. of attainment ovt r someone tlse all University Players, 8:15 p. m., I em Roscoe Pound Club, 7:15 p. m., Law Hall. Mathematical Club meeting, 7:30 p. m., M. E. 296. Wayne Club meeting, 7:30 p. m., pie Theater. Pershing Rifles meeting, 7 Ncbra-jka Hall. friendly contents would be done away with because they would come uu der the brand of "selfishness.' Al though, selfishness is the desire for a nan.icular thins to the exclusion i .anyone else, tha desire to satisfy an j FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18. ambition to win a certain goal over the ambition of another is only -hu- A,Pha Phi house dance- . . ,, ! Cental Student Organization dinner, n;;.a to us aiL , j Y. M. C. A. j Kappa Sigma informal. Knights of ARE THE REQUIREMENTS MORE ! Co'umbu.l Hall. cv.rTlwr, i Kappa Delta Valentine party, Ellen EXACTING! t Sm.th Hall. We were approached yesterday with j Union open meeting, 8:30 p, the statement that the requirements Union Hall, Temple. are becoming more and more exacting j each year t this University and at j m.. PI Phi Chi dance, Victoria hotel. Delian open meeting, 8:30 p. m. Men's Greater University luncheon, 12 m., Grand hotel. Lutheran Club, 7:30 p. m., Faculty Hall. Alpha XI Delta Informal, Rosewilde Lutheran Club meeting, 7:30 p. m., icu'ty Hall. University Players, 8:15 p. m, Tern- Phi Kappa Psl house dance Palladlan patriotic program, 8 p. m., allartian Hall, Temple. Basketball gamo, 7:30 p. m., 'oliseum. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19. Alpha Delta PI banquet, Ellen Smith Hall. Kappa Sigma banquet, Lincoln hotel. Valkyrie freshman and sophomore Oirl party, 3-6 p. m., Ellen Smith Hall. Phi Gamma Delta house dance. Basketball game, 7:30 p. m., Coliseum. University Players, 8:15 p m., leu. pie Theater. Alpha Sluma Phi house dance. Alpha Delta PI dance, Ellen Smith Hall. Pi Kappa Phi banquetj, chaptei house. Alpha Chi Omega house dance. Delta Upsilon house dance. Sigma Alpha Epsilon house dance. Komesky Club, 8 to 11:30 P. M.. Faculty Hall. Candidates for Swimming. All candidates for Swimming leAu. be at the V. M. C. A. Swimming Pool between ::30 and 5:15 today. Student directories may be tib tained at the Y. M. C. A. office in the Temple. The next public pianoforte rfcital of t,hi students .of Uie School cf Fine Arts will be February 23 a! the Temple Theater. English 190. Small town newspaper and country journalism class will meet Thursday night this week instead of Tuesday. J. E. LAWRENCE. Delian. Delian men will entertain Delian women, open meeting. Friday 8:00 c'ock. at University School of Music. Outlook Class. The Trip Around the World class meets tonight in S. S. 21S, 7-8 o'clock. Mr. Cooper, for five years vice-counsel in Peru will give an illustrated .ecture. AH students may attend. other universities throughout tne country. Whether thi3 in in fact true or not. ! we shall have to admit that it is ap parently so on the surface. Again we must realize that conditions arc again approaching normalcy and that these conditions themselves are mora strict hau those existing during the war period. "Everybody seemed to be real'y studying last semester," you say, "and yet a larger number of students came up before the delinquency commute than ever before." It Is true that the instructors ai Khr&kA University are marking you with more severity this yezr. Ill will be necessary this semester n only to study, (but , to concentrate and absorb what you study. In tits way even Jhe most exacting p rotes sors wm find that they cartnoi anare ye in a trap of bard Ques tions when examinations holl around -6&in. After yon have ' regulated your tui'Tlng again to coincide with tho normal methods of living which havi rcylsced the slip-shod methods o war time inefficiency, you will find that tven the exacting conditions, n'n" icquiremcnts of the Universities of 1921 are coinri.Ung wj Ji yvr af f": HAS THE BUG GOT YOU YET? Someone has said that the harhin Ker of spring has arrived, not In the Spring Oxfords NEW SPRING STYLES ' in Women's Low-Cuts at 1921 Rock Bottom Prices 5.50, 6.00, 6.50, 7.00, 8.00 Pr. We are special agents for Dr. Scholl's Foot Remedies. Consult with our Mr. Roscoe Ward, the foot specialist. Fred Schmidt & Bro. City Auditorium DANG H Lincoln's greatest amusement center Dancing under the direction of Mr. and Mrs H. H. Carroll. Admission only 10 cents. I Wellington I A QUALITY PIPE And We offer a complete line 8 The numbers that appeal to young men G. R. WOLF & Co. 119 No. 11th St. Little Bldg. j rjl UNI NOTICES New Management SOFT WATER We answer your "Beck and Call" with High Grade Work and PROMPT DELIVERY. GLOBE LAUNDRY G.-L. Supress, Vice-president and Manager. RA7 E. W. Truman, President. OU You Can Buy A Really Good Looking SPRING SUIT for $5() IN OUR SECOND FLOOR FASHION SALONS Short box jackets, braided and embroidered, vie for popularity with trimly belted models. Navy tricotine is favored as a ma terial. SECOND FLOOR n I