t Sundav. February 2f. 1022. THE DAILY NEBftASKAN THE DAILY NEBRASKAN I'litiltsln'rt Miniliiv, Tni'HilMT. WiMiiphiIht, Tinr(lnv iiiiii I'rl'lnv f each wei'k by the rnlversitv f NVtirmika. Acceptance for mulling at Kpoclal rate of lioHliit-f provided for III section 1103, act of October 3, H'17, authorised, Jauu arv 'JO, ll-2. OFFICIAL IXUKRMTV I'l IU.ICATION I'ndrr t lio dirretlun of Hie Mudrnt I'nb llrmloiiN Htmril. Knlrml an Krrond rln matter at III ptulli- la l.lnmln, Nchraaka, ondrr Ael f ( cjnirrM, Murrh S, 1M79. HabM-rmllon rlr -00 pn year $I.HI prr pnimtrr Slnrl cony B nU K1IITOKIAL STAFF ORVIN H. ;TON Kdltor-ln-Chicf KKI.I.K FARMAX Manna-lna- Kdltrr (ierlrude rUrrt.on. . Anam-iate Kditnp Hrrhrrt ltrownrll, Jr Mirlit Fdilor KUnurd llm-k NIkM Fditor CbarlrH A. Mitchell Nlclit Kdllor John IWnll.v Sport a Fdilor Howard HuffrU ....Am'I. SporU Kdllor Cyril L Coomb - Ilranuilic Kditor Johrph Nob - Military Kditor Alice Steven.. ... Tyit ASSISTANT F.nlTlOKIAL W K1TKKS Kenneth Mc'amllcN Leonard Cowley Roy H. (iiihtafaon Helen I. rcternon OFFlt'K HOI KS Editor-in-Chief and Managing- Kditoi 4 n Ilnily ROOM SOB, "I" H ALL HI S1XKSS STAFF HMKS FIDHOt K lliiwncK Mnnntrcr CHAI X KV KINSKY Wt. Una. Mgr. CLIIFOKII IIUKS Circulation Mer. Advertising AssiMimtN A (Ml -on Smton llonald neroe Kalih Riwlfifld Art WhitMorth IMto skold Richard Stere Jrs Randal MkIh Fdilor for thin Im-ne. KDH'AKI) M. RICK WORKING OVERTIME "It lakes sixty-five muscles in your face to make a frown and only tllir teen to make a smile; why work over time?" So reads a motto on a 1022 calendar hanping in the Daily Xebraskan office. There is plenty of food for thousht in those few words. Volumes arc con tained in them. Did you ever see any frowning and then immediately after try smiling? Try it! See is your face doesn't feel a lot more rested and a lot less strained when making a smile than when making a frown. You get the same effect as when you climb into bed after a frightfully long day of work, when every muscle in your body aches trom the strain. Students who are always trying to get out of work in their studies are usuaKy the ones who are overworking the muscles in their face. If they realized how much work they are caus ing themselves they probably would change their ways, but they don't, and therefore this little contribution. But neither do we admit for one minute that we are the recipients of charity at the hands of the state Though a consideration of this ques tion Involves the whole theory 01 state-supported education, we do not hesitate to take a stand. State auth orities are not established for chart table purposes; they are not operated as eleemosynary institutions. State universities r.re an investment In good citizenship. The whole arangement is a business proposition: We have no money at this stage of our careers but we have ability and capacity to learn; the state has the money, and knows from actual experience that educated men and women make the best citizens. Therefore the state backed in turn by the confidence of the taxpayers, invests some of its money in our futures with a very de finite intention of getting the fullest returns, not immediately, but in the future, when we will begin to capital ize on our training. The state does this because it pays to do so, not alone in actual dollars and cents, but in higher standards of living and better homes. We owe Minnesota a great debt for our education, it is true. But charity is a poor term to apply to a business propostion a long term investment Minnesota Daily. University Notices. Cornhuskers, Attention! In order to facilitate the work of the Cornhusker, the Townsend stu dio will close at 5 o'clock d.uij. Re turn your proofs early In the d:. Xorth Platte club Cornhusfctr pic ture will be taken Saturday at Town bend's, at 12:30. Every mtmbci should be present. ture taken tor Cornhusker. Cadet Officers Club A group picture of all Cadet Officers will be taken at 3:00 o'clock Wed nesdav. March 1st. Meet in Cadet Officer's Room. The Exhaust. Yes, (.od He made the negroes But He made them in the night And 'twas done in such a hurry That He forgot to make them white. A little girl who wras puzzled about theological problems asked her moth er if Charlie Chaplin would go to Heaven. When the mother rather dubiously responded in the affirma tive, the child asked: "Oh, mother, won't God laugh?" CHEMISTRY EXAMINATION For removing condition in Chemis try I, all students who recevied con ditions for semester's grade should report at Chemistry Lecture Room, Saturday, February 25, from 2-4 r- m. to tako a special examination for removing conditions. When the wind is whistling loudly And the frost is in the air And you pass the rtracks a shivering Why, you're not warm anywhere. When you near Xebraska's campus As you pass the first girl's dorm And you shiver in your collar Then you wish that It were warm. When the air is hot and sultry And it's one-ten in the shade Then you lie in a swinging hammock And drink ice-cold lemonade. Then you wish for icy sidewalks Like we had in days of old "Oh," you said "if I had only Some of that last winter's cold." The following, as you can readily see, was suDmittea dv a mere man: If the Y. W. C. A. girls who sold the candy on the campus the other day would spend the time and energy and candy in individually trying to show some fellow a pleasant evening as tney .used to ao in ye omen imes," we venture to predict that a large number of frat pins would change possession, by June 1. And, he nervily adds, "W net try it, girls?" Were lots of interesting ri.-.ces you didn't Know anything about. Pid'Jii ever? You should. AINT CHA? Aint cha ever Got to Class Ten minutes Early? Aint cha ever Watched The others Straggle in With news Of an Exam? Aint cha ever Hoard the bell Ring And yet no Instructor? Aint cha ever Waited Xine and one-half minutes With still Xo instructor? Aint cha ever Seen The instructor Dash in At nine and Three-fourth minutes After? And Aint cha ever Seen him Carrying A ream of Exam paper. Aint cha ever? GROUCHING If you have a pet grouch, ness sake do not entertain prtsenee of your friends, depend on it, they have enough of their own, so for good it in the You can troubles don't air your grievances and start blue smoke to circulating in an otherwise clear atmosphere. The grouch seldom has a real reason for being peeved, his affliction is generally the product of an imaginative and easily outraged temper. The best advice concern ing grouches is to forget thern. Xine times out of ten they are not justified anyhow. If you do not agree with someone about a subject, it is your privilege to differ; and if you are not satisfied with the grade you get, there is one to keep you from remonst ra ting. Therefore, differ or remonstrate and be done with it. Do not nurse your ill humor lest it become chronic Habitual grouching will earn a per son a reputation in a hurry, but it will not be a very desirable one. The people that you meet while in this nood are very liable to remember you by it. The fellow that constantly knocks on his professor ought to conduct a self-analysis, and without much doubt he will find that the inconsistency ex ists in himself. The professor may not yet perfect, but neither is anyone so it is a case of two of a kind. The grouch is a general nuisance. If you have a tendency to grouch and find fault, forget it. Contemporary Opinion CHARITY AND INVESTMENT ARE NOT SYNONOMOUS The statement frequently apnears from one source or another that we as University students are accepting the charity of the state, and that for this reason we should refrain from doing th!s or that, or we should do some thing else. It is time that such one sided ideas be given an airing. At the outset, let it be understood that there is no person in the Univers lity who does not realize that he is getting much more than be pays for. We realize as well as anybody else the great difference rendered in this exchange of tuition fees and educa tion between the University and the student. Indeed, realization of the debt we owe the state by the time graduate is one of the few steadying influences upon our University career A fellow feels that after all this money, time, and effort has been spent on Lim, be's bound to make good at ny cost. Whatever edse we may be, we are laboring under any delusion Jhat we pay in full for what we get Catholic Students Club The Catholic Students Club will have their picture taken at 11:30 a m. Saturday February 25 at Town sends Studio. Pailadian The annual girl's program will be presented at Faladian Friday even ing at 8:30 p. m. All students are cordially invited and assured a gocl time. Kearney Club The Kearney club social meeting of this month is to be a colonial party at Faculty hall, Friday evening at S o'clock. Come in costume if possible. Menorah DID'JA EVER? Just winder about the Campus and run onto Some place That You didn't know existed and Did you get real Interested And start out to See just what this School was like anyway And did you Find that your College was only A part of a great School And that there Miss Lena Forsling, 25, will ac company Henrietta Newman '25 to her home at Columbus for the week end. . 009000090900909 8 For choice 8 Beef call 8 139 ooooooooooo Corn FetJ at Braun'sS Market 5 So. 11th n eccoooooooooooooeoooocoooo ft 8 OH! LOOK 8 Expert Shoe Repairing First Class Work Shoes Shined Sat, & Holidays for 5 CENTS The KEYSTONE SHOP 240 No. 13th. 00900000090060900900009000 Members will meet Saturday February 25 sharp at Townsends. for picture?, at 12 o'clock A meeting February 22C ball. Temple. wi:i at S held Sunday, m. in Faculty Important Notice. The Nebraska university baiid will meet at 7:15 Saturday at the armory to play for the Iowa-Nebraska wrest ling meet. Every member must be present. Philippino Students Club An illustrated lecture will be given Thursday, March 2 on the Philippines under the auspices of the Philippinos Students club. It will be given in the Social Sicence auditorium at 8 p. m. and everyone is invited. Vikings An important meeting of the Vik ings is called for Thursday evening March 2 at the Sigma Phi Epsilor. house. The meeting will begin prom ptly at 7:30 and every member should be there. Awjjwan Art Staff All art work for the "BREEZY" number of the Awgwan is due in to the Awgwan office not later than Feb ruary 28. Let's "BREEZE" along gang ART EDITOR. Square and Compass Club Meeting Section "A2 Square and Compass Club will meet Sunday 3 p. m. at Ma sonic Temple 23G So. 11th St. All Master Masons interested in the study of degree work are cordially invited. GEORGE S. SPALDING, Chm. Pershing Rifle t All active members of Pershing Rifles see Major Ericson in Room 202, Nebraska Hall before Wednesday noon, March 1. Important. SODA COUPONS Book of 20 soda coupons Value 5c each $1.00 - at CAPP'S FOUNTAIN With Pease Drug Co., 1321 0 St. V dD)C Vt with Ff0 Artistic Corsapcs is one of O our Specialties. Jonquils, Tulips, and dallodils now in season. FREY& FREY K !a 'H !' is a (a ZCCGCCCCGCCCGGCGGGCCCGaCC&Se&ySGGGGC Nebraska Rifle Team Members of the First Rifle Meet in Cadet Officers Room at three o'clock Wednesday, March lsL, to bave pic- "ICeepin: Clean" A sermon from a newly discovered manuscript as old as the New Testament manuscripts, namrtinp: a dramatic encounter between Jesus and a Pharisee, Sunday, February 26, 10:30 a. m. First Congregational Church Dr. John .Andrew Holmes, Preacher f i m v-; w 4 TFnP SMART SPRING TOGS for Misses Many wonderful creations are arriving daily in our Ladies Department. Come in and see the new ideas Quatitg Clothes The University School of Music ADRIAN M. NEWENS, Director Offers thorough training in Music, Dramatic Art. A large faculty of specialists in all departments. Anyone may enter. Full information on request. Opposite the Campus. Phone B1392. 3ti 11th & B Sts. Sincerity Service Satisfaction levrdg iCb Apparel for Gentlewomen Clothing for Gentlemen STORE NEWS savi s - - You'll Like to Trade Here Qudge, StGucnzef Co