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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1922)
Sunday. January 2D. 1D22. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN IMlhlWIil'll SlIMllHT. IlKHllllV. WlilllMllHT. TMirwUv nml krlilav of eHfta wei-k ly the C'nl'Titv of Nelirmtka. OMK IAI. I'MIKKMTY I'l HI.K'ATID.N I mlrr ! dlrtllou of tlio Ntutlrnt I'ab II.Hlliin llanrd. Kn tired nm .eennd cl mutter nt III pli.lHf In Lincoln. Nlrikji, under Acl of .lirr, Muroh S. 18)11. Sabmripil.in rnli M0 prr year ft. INI per Kvmrntrr Nnirle rony eenti KD1TOKIAL. STAFF Orvln B. Mtin Kditorm-Clili'f Itelle Fnrmim Mminitliiif Kdlliir tiertruile 1'nttersnn iM-lule Killtnr ili'rlrt lirownell, Jr Micht Kdltor Kdwnrd llm-k Signt Kdil.ir (.hurle A. "Mitchell Ninht Kdltor liiiiini KuN "I Hull. OITii-e hour: Killtur-ii.-i -Hef mid Mn ' srinv Killtnr Three oVIim iliiHv. IM'MNKHS STAFF i imks MIHIIK k Hulne .-nwinKer :AXn"ni.rJiiI lr- Mniff Imnm i-y Klnsry rllfr.ird Hlckn .V.MJ-T.VNT KD1TOKIVI. WRITERS Kov II. iutifHon Kenneth Met nndlemi Helen I. TeteTf, n ' l KRTISINIi STAFF. Otto Skold. Ralph Kedfleltl. Art Whlteuorlh. AililUnn Milton HI. hard Mere. Night Killtor for thin i-ue. t HAKI.1S MIT( Ill l-I- THE PRAYING COLONELS Di'ja ever hear of "Bo" MeMiHin and the "Praying Colonels" and have you ever wondered where the kick came from that helped 'em whip Har vard and some of the other big boys? If you have, and are curious to get ha ttrmVlit rlnne. read what "Bo" . . . ,lt ,, ( i McMillin has to t-ay about it in an . , , , , -,. fi,-' article in the February issue of The . American Magazine entitled "Fight ing for Old Centre." it lint the Dolicv of The Daily Neraskan to go out of its way to toss sweet bouquets at other publicatoins. but when something like this comes out, something which will have a kick back and make the reader a better Husker, a better man, and a better woman, we say: "Go to it." Centre college and its football team have received unusual mention in the press during the past 'hree years but this is the first time that "Bo" has opened up and given the inside stuff in a straight from the heart and shoulder way that "gets you." Nebraska students who read this slory will feel a greater apreciation for the zealous devotion which hun dreds of their fellow students are showing for "'Old Nebraska" in many lines of campus activity. To read is to feel to feel the glory of fighting for a worthy cause. Fighting for Centre even as fight ing for Nebraska meant a lot to that loot ball team. "Bo" and his mates were earnest enough to pray about it. "We don't pray to win," he says. "We play to win, and pray to play our test. We make no request for glory or for any of the 'breaks of the game.' We ask instead that, whatever the outcome, we may fight like men to the last ditch, and live up to the tra ditions of Old Centre. "I wish that folks would see what this really means, and not make such a fuss over it. None of us has broken any records in church attendance. Any of us might hand you a wallop if you charged us with being 'pious.' ; But we believe there s a God who wants people to be square and give the best they've got to everything they go into." CHANGES. It is written somewhere that all things must chanpre. Astronomers and geologists tell us that the Heavens and earth are changing, that neither our celestial sphere or our firmament remain the snme. Of course change is the fundamental reason for prog ress, for it was only through change that this earth grow out of chaos and our social order rose to its present level. People do not rebel against change for it seems to be a law of life, and it is due to come to the world and every individual in it, but it does oc casion much sadness and many re grets. We are more or less uncon scious of the world changes, but 1n the college sphere where there are so many little things that w? should like to preserve just as they are, we wonder rather sadly why It is that nothing can pause or stay. Former Btudents who are coming baclr to con tinue their work are conscious of a change Surely It causes msny re grets to visit old scenes after a long absence and find them go altered tat they can scarcely be recognized. Esch semester brings many chrnges to the student in the nnlrersity. Eve Ty graduate leaves a vacancy, and though it Is filled by a newcomer, it requires readjustment While we say goodbye to one we bid another wel come and as quickly as -we write finis at the end of one semester's work we begin on the preface to mother. Aye, verily, "all things must change to something new, to something strange. Nothing that Is can pause or stay." The Cornhusker basket flippers put up a game fight against the Sooners, losing by a Barrow margin The Ne braska team was minus the services of Captain Smith. HandkiaTrped In this manner and playing on foreign territory, the team is to bo congratu on the showing made. Let's stand behind fhem and boost, win or lose They have called the National Guard to Nebraska City to take care of the stiige situation. We saw them march ing to the depot to entrain. From a military standpoint we would much rather trust our fate in the hands of the It. O. T. C. They look and act a great deal more like soldiers than do tha guardsmen. We understand that the Cornhusker renowed artist or beauty expert" to management is in search of "a world renowned artist or beauty expel" to judge the Vanity Fair contest. Any artist could probably handle the sltu- ation tout what possible use can they have for a beauty expert! You have all read recent opinion of Trofesor Lowell, of Harvard, to the effect that inter-collegiate football is receiving too much attention, too much prominence. By way of com ment, what has enhanced the re putation of Harvard herself more than the great gridiron teams she has developed? Contemporary Opinion REFRESH YOUR MEMORY Every now and then a story appears in the newspapers that a few college ' . . . students, omewhere, have committed . ... great harm, such as brutal hazing. various forms of larceny, and vandal ism in general. The average reader at once looks over his spectacles & says with a neer, "Uh huh! College boys again!" and judges all undergraduates by actions of the reckless few. Such occurrences have taken place hero at times. There were several at other Ohio institutions this fall. And onlv recently a youthful student from this University was haled into police headquarters for taking el- trie bulbs from a dance hall an act, directed, he said, by upperclassmen. who had forced him to do it. The police are entirely right in ar resting students for such lack of gray matter. Stealing electric light bulbs from street cars, dance halls, street lights, etc., is larceny as much as safe-robbing. Tossing rocks into win- idows and pulling trolleys off street cars are vandalism as much as church wrecking. It is time for students of all universities to realize this. There is apt to rise in the under graduate mind a tendency to think that he is a privileged character, merely because he is a student. Con sequently, he thinks he can with im puxity upset moving-picture signs, skip out of restaurants without pay ing, carry on with hots and yells long after midnight, and become idiotic in general. But students must realize that they have no special rights. In fact, they must reflect the good name of their university as well as their own in every action, and are res tricted by it. Individuals and organizations who have forgotten that, should refresh thejr memories.-Ohio Lantern. University Notices. U. S. Civil Service Exams The United States civil sertitt ex aminations for February and March are as follows: Chemical technolo gist, fS.GOO $5,000; supervisor, pro tective social measures, f 2,800-J4,O00; assistant examiner, patent offiee and Misc. examinations. For further information call at civ il service window, city posteffice. A. A. REED. Director. University Masons All Masons of the University and city meet to hear Hon. Lewis E. Smith, present Grand Master of Ne braska, Wednesday evening, February 1, .1922 at 7:30 o'clock in the Art Gallery. Library. Chemistry 1 A section in Chemistry I will be offered this semester at 12 o'clock, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Laboratory will be arranged. First meeting of the claps will be in Room 208. Chemistry Hall, Friday. All Flu ents interested please report at that time. 1922 Cornhusker. "1922 Cornhnskers" may still be or dered in the Student Activities of fice. Candy. The Y. W. C. A will sell candy and popco u on the campus all day Wed- nesday. Ag. Student Notice. The committee in charge cf the greater Omaha agTlcu8turaI college student aid farmd have announced that they wfH undertake to ctnUnue their assistance to needy agricultural students by making short time loans, upon the proper recommendations of college authorities so that upper class- THE DAILY NEBltASKAN men who need financial assistance to complete the year may be able to do so. A number of such loans were made Mast year and practically all of these have been taken up promptly when due. The money paid in this way will be available for students this year, Application should be made to the dean of the college of agriculture These loans are available for both men and women, in the agricultural college. Phi Omega. Phi Omega will hare pictures taken for the Cornhusker at Townsend's Wednesday at 1 oclock, February 1, 1922. Come a few minutes early. Catholic Student Club. Meeting of Catholic Students' club Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock, at K. C. hall. Episcopalean Club. Episcopalean club picture for the Cornhusker will be taken at 12 noon Tuesday, January 31, at Townsend's. Green Goblins. Green Goblins will meet at 12.15 sharp, Wednesday, February 2, at Townsend's studio to have group pic ture for Cornhusker taken. Every member must be there on time. Block and Bridle Club. Block and Bridle club meeting, Wednesday. 7 p. m., at Judging pavi lion. Election of officers. Daily Nebraskan Staff. Daily Nebraskan staff meeting Thursday evening. February 2, at 7 o'clock in the editorial office. Silver Serpent. Silver Serpents meet at 12:45 Mon- 'day noon at Townsend's studio for group picture. XI Delta. Xi Delta's meet at Townscnci's Thursday noon, February 2, at 12.30 for group picture. Art Students. All students in drawing who have a grade of SO or above are eligible to the University Art club after they make a drawing of some sort and submit it to the judging committee. If the drawing is accepted tiie stu dent will be notified as to the time cf initiation. Special Convocation. Ag. college convocation at Ag. hall, Tuesday, 11 a. m. All Ag. college classes excused. Iron Sphinx. There will be an important n.eet-l ing of the Iron Sphinx at the Delta Upsilon house at 7:15, Tuesday, Jan uarv 31. All members are requested to be there. The Iron Sphinx will have their pic ture taken for the Cornhusker at Townsend's Wednesday, February 1, at 12:30. Anyone coming late t111 be out of luck. The Exhaust. Open House. You have repeated the classic sen tence of identification and welcome to all the members of the fiist two frats which have passed you, with out having encountered a real friend You have changed your rings to the left hand, and are wishing for Jack Best to administer his services to your right. Then, at the far door, you see the man you quarreled with last night. You resolve with all your maidenly bulldoggishness, that you will simply tell him your name. Oh, if you could only run! Perhaps yon could get to the kitchen or be absorbed in some Tucker-Siiean l JEWELERS Diamonds, Watch- J ss, Fine Jewelry, Clocks, Sterl- Si Ing Silver, Cut Glass, Expert :i Watch, Clock and Jewelry Re- 1 pairing and Manufacturing. I; I OPTICIANS Eyes examined I1 Free. In our Optical Department ;! rou may select Just what you i want in Eye Glasses or Specta- :ji ties. Fine Optical Repairing, jl Broken Lenses Duplicated. IS', iTATIONERS Stationery for ;j the Office, School and Home. Waterman's Fountain Pens. Of- l fioe Equipment and Supplies. Crane's, Whiting's and Hurd's Fine Stationery. Complete line of Supplies for all departments of Schools and Colleges. 1123 O Street Lincoln, Neb. Phones B-1S34. B-S306. l-3307. II other man! No one In the line whom you leally know! No oasis of refuge! Then you must brazen it out. Oh, If there wero only some one behind him! What is the commotion? Another frat! And the girl next to you says, "The Sig Gars," Hurrah! the first man Is Otto Nobetter, ond he's from home! In the nick of time! Yon thank your lucky stars as the line ad vances Two more men before your dear enemy. And you sigh deeply you can rush on to Otto. "My name" Ting-a ling! goes the telephone bell, and someone snys, "Kath, they want you!" When you've waited more or less patiently for your instructor to cor rect the papers and average final grades; when you've chased to Chem. hall twice a week, only to find your grades not yet posted; when you've driven all your friends nearly crazy by your eternal speculation about your 65; when you yourself are a nervous wreck because you're so afro Id you'il have to take it over ttiratnM Then when you stand in front of the class list, and ycr eye- jumps to your own name, and you find your grade ain't it a grand and glerious feeling? It's 78! "I haven't seen you for an age," said the comet Halley upon seeing the earth again. "The Busy Bees are the financial boosters, from $40 to $50 being real ized at almost every monthly meet ing," says a local raper. Evidently the Bees are in the habit of stinging somebody. Every day one reads of bootleggers and ill-made wines and whiskeys. The prohibition oficers seem to be work ing hard and they sometimes find in dividual making liquors, so it doesn't matter what we say: 'There are still more, or mere are more suns. "There is no evil in the modem skirt," says one writer. After all the truth of the matter is quite plain. 'Honi Soit Qua Maly Pense." Here are clothes worth while," was the statement by an advertiser in a daily paper. We might mention that clothes have been worn by most ee- ry one since Adam's time, so that now they are a necessity as well as being just "Worth While." To whom it may concern and to those who are merely interested: We have the pleasure of announcing that in the near future different individ uals possessing real wit and humor will conduct this colym in the way they think the same should be, thus ccoeooo9ooeoooo9soooooooeeooooooooooococooo& 8 Ladies You Couldn't Dream of so many wonderful creations as are offered in our showing of Silk Dresses for Spring Come in and see the new ideas fr VI. I Quality GCOSGCOOOCCOSCCCCCOCCOSCOCCCeCCOOOCCOOCO Allowing the readers a taste of some of the "57 varieties " The Calendar. Tuesday, January 31. Y. W. C. A. staff dinner, 6 o'clock, Ellen Smith hall. Sunday, January 29. Menorah meeting, 8 p. m. Faculty hall. Temple. Catholic Students club meeting. Tuesday, January 31. Vespers, 5 p. m., Ellen Smith hall DeMolay meeting, 7:30 p. m., Scot, tish Rite temple. he New Spring Caps Are here Pretty New Tweeds9 are the Fashion Favorites . New Low Prices $1,50 to $2.50 Get here and be an early bird this year. A DaylilKGlSTtmilor Clothes, Wednesday, February 1. Phi Omega meeting, Law building. Women's chamber of commerce, p. m., SS-305. Friday, February 3. Phi Kappa Psi formal, Lincoln ho tel. Saturday, February 4. Delta Delta Delta iormaL Lincoln hotel. WANT ADS. WHY NOT A NEW FORD COCFE for that date Tuesday afternoon? Drive it yourself. Capital Aut: Llr ery Co. B-264S. Adv.