The Daily Nebraskan I'lilillHlivd Sunday. TiiMmliiy, WMlin'Hrtiiv l'.,kr"i'!V"'".1. f'rl,,"y """ "f eurt 1 tin. CnlTiTHlty ..f N. l.riiKli.i. Aor.i...l fr mulling tit iq.cHril rati- of poMiiifii t.n.vi.liMl f,.r In S.-.MU.H 110:1, .,. 'j',',. '"'r ;1- 11)17. niitliorlwMl .liiminry M Orrit'l.1. I'MVKKMTV 1-1 III.K ATI Imlrr Uie illrmll.in r II.. M11.L1.I (,. Iliutinn llounl. KniiTi-,1 in mTiinil cliiH tt,.r it th. piiHtofrii-e In I.ii,.,i1m, NVIirimkii. iiiuI.t the Art of Cmiirri'M. .Miin-li .1 IsTIl bubmrlinliin rule S2.U0 it year S1.2A a Nenimtpr "'' Five CenU Aililri'Nii nil riimiminlrntloiiN to TUB DAILY X Kit It A S K A N Sliitlnu A, I.IiipoIii. Npb. TKLErilONK Inivrr.lty 144 Killing ItliHH? Killtorlnl ami ImihIiiokii office,. In Boulh et corner vf Imw-uii'iit t AJinlnlmra lion Hullilliiir. ueue rurmun Kitltor Offli-p Hours 10 11 mill 4-5 da I y llrbrrt Hruwncll. .Ir MiiiiukIik Kdltor Office houm. II to I!, M.inilnr, Tinmluy V pdnmdiiy, Thnrmlay, Siituriliiy. Murjorte M yniuii An-ok-IiH.- KdUi.r LilwiirU Illicit Nlg-lit Kdltor Knbrrt V. C mi Mailt Kdltor rlmrlen A. Mitchell Mull! Kdltor Cliauncey Klney IliihliieaM Mummer Office Hours 4 to (! Pally. ( lifforil l. Illrku, AiiK't. llllliic Mimuerr Frank F, Fry 1 Irculutloii Mummer MkIiI Killtur for ttiln lue. Charles A. Mitchell. MIIIIhw Card .WUmnt Night Kdltor THE RALLY. A display of school spirit which is rarely euualed marked one of the greatest mass meetings in the hisioiy of the University of. Nebraska. As tfe students marched through the streets of Lincoln to the Stadium Kally Monday business stopped as Lin coln citizens caught the spirit of the students. The enthusiasm shown during the parade was just a fore runner of the spirit of the Rally. worm? Then, to make things a! I worse, in my next class, its I sat is; fear and trembling. I was asked to go lu front of the class and recite a;u'. niPivy me! as I got up, first down went nty four books sprawling all ow tho lloor, then as I stopped to picV them up, my pen and pencil dropped iiiiti rolled merrily down the aisle with me scrambling after them so fast that I stubbed my toe Just us I lumen to face the class and with my cheeks tho color of crimson roses. I went slow.y back to my seat fcr I'd forgotten what I was going to say. Oh! it's terrible. Am I just born unlucky or do you think there's any hope for me? Now another thing is also bothering me. I am a freshman, as you have probably imagined by this time, and before coming here, I heard that this was a. very democratic place where everyone knew everyone else Just line a big family, you know, so I've been saying "hello" to most everybody, but. Miss Chatterbox some of them don't even look at me, and others don't sa a word. I got to wondering if, I was doing the proper thing and am sure you can settle this for me, too. A UEWILDEHED FRESHIE. THE RESPONSE. Nebraska is living up to the repu tation for doing things. Reports on the first day of the Stadium move ment show this. Up until Monday Ne braska's Memorial Stadium was a won derful vision. Every pledge is bring ing it nearer to being a great real ity. The response on Monday to the call for voluntary subscriptions from the student body was one worthy of the high standards of the school. The students showed that they feel the sig nificance of the movement. The re sponse on the first day will give added impetus to the carrying out of Nebraska's great project. "LET'S GET WHERE WE ARE GOING." "Let's get where we .ire going." General Pershing is quoted as having once told his troops. That is the spirit every Uusker student should feel about the Stadium Builders pro gram. The program will go across. .We must reach our goal. What is the goal? A magnificent stadium, capable of accommodating 40,000 spectators; a fiting memorial to Nebraska's part in the war; ac commodations for our athletes that will be worthy of the splendid teams that Nebraska every year turns out a lasting monument and o'iect of pride in years to come to those stu dents and alumni who now contribute to its erection. That is our goal. To reach it the students :;re asked to give ninety thousand drd't.rs; the alumni will take care of the rest. Twenty-five dollars apiece is just a paltry sum. It M the least ve can give to show our appraiatiDn for the educational opportunities -nirh have been given to us at practically no cost. It is not unreasonable to ask the students to help build this stad iunm which is to so obviously for their own good. It is a sacrifice for you to give? So much the better! The things in life that come hard are the things that are worth having. What if you do have to forgo some pleasures? If you do it cheerfully, ten years from now you will remember the sacrifice you made with keener pleasure than if it had been easy for you to con tribute. The student who fails to contribute now will regret it in the future when he returns to his Alma Mater and realizes that he had no part in the erection of this memorial stadium. Huskers! This program is an acid test of your loyalty. School spirit is not measured in yells and cheers; It is measured in willingness to sacri fice. We have set this stadium for our goal. "Let's get where we are going." My Pear Iiewilc!ered i-'reshie: Why, everybody loves you you just have a mistaken idea, that's all. Don't ou know that instructors always love lu-ir pupils? About t'i:;t French class episode, well honey, I'm afraid to say I. at it was m istly your fault. 1 you ! .:!.! !ue Mil 'fed Uem a lit'Ie bit when mi did have a chain e to 'ecitc. . a y, ur ic r une would have been made. I'm sure. You must learn that these wise instructors never notice a ;aised hand, so when you don't know anythinu then wave your hand franti cally and you're sure not to get called upon, t'o'd looks a: e very common around lu ro and l:::er you have beet; in the university a trille longer, yon will not even eivo them a second thouuht. It was veiy fortunate that you -tuldied y,.i;r too. but that is charac ters' io of fn s'lmen. so yes, I believe that there are hopes for you. Now as o your other problem, I am a little hazy about it myself. I'm a I senior, honey, and 1 ve never neeu a!;!o to cct eer'body to say "Hello" to me. It's just impossible. You know, you can't chance human nature and it is some people's nature to be just nat ti: ally unfriendly. You can't do a thine about it. If I were you. I would keep up my cordiality and some folks will "bite." I wish more folks around here were like you. then we would have an honst-to-goodness demo cratic school. Well, I want to hurry on to the Sta dium Drive rally. Are you goin' to give your five dollars? Yours in an awful hurry. MISS CHATTERBOX. U-NOTICE Pardon Me But Hark Down at the Temple the Other night there was A BUSINESS MEETING of the Rag Staff and a Feed and the Whole thing Was conducted in a PARLIAMENTARY manner so There wasn't Much lun because there Were a LOT of unbuttered Toasts and the EDITOR Made a SPEECH that was DRY and nobody Talked and They All came home at EIGHT RUT Tin y surely learned a lot: : Ann D. Episcopal Students. All Episcopal students dinner a' the Lincolnshire on Tuosduy evening, i)'-:orjr 17, at 1! o'clock. Block and Br Club. Block and Bridle Club meeting at the home of Professor Gramllch, 3220 Starr street, Tuesday evening at 7:45. Proctor's Meeting. There will be a meeting of the proctor's of all sorority and rooming houses and dormitories at Ellen SmiCt Hall, Tuesday, October 17, at seven o'clock. P. E. 51. All classes in P. E. 51 meet in street clothes Wednesday, October 18. BIG AND LITTLE SISTERS. The Big and Little Sister dinner has been indefinitely postponed. Alpha Kappa Psi. Alpha Kappa Psi luncheon Ti ou tlay noon at Chamber of Commer"" Green Goblin. Green Goblin meeting Tuesday night at 7:13 at the Alpha Sigma Phi .iollse. Square and Compass. Square anil Compass meeting Tues- ay n.yht. 7:1.". Faculty Hall. Washington Girls. The Washington Girls' Club of Lin- .!! has invited all girls who have l)i en in government work in the cap ital to lunch with them Thursday i. on. Reservations may be made by ..; in; L-77M. Phi Omega. Ph; Or.u-ga business meeting Wed nesday, 7:30. Law building. Ccmmcrcial Slub. Th l'ni ersity Commercial Club will hold its fall initiation Thursday. October lfl. at 7:43 p. m. in the Y. M. C. A. room of the Temple. Junior Class Meeting. All members of the Junior class are asked to meet Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock in Social Science Auditorium. DeMolay. No Dt Molay meeting this week. R. O. T. C. R. O. T. C. students are excused from classes at 11 o'clock Tuesday to attend convocation 'at the Temple. General Duncan, Army Area Com mander, will speak. Corncobs. All last year's members of Corncobs are urged to attend a meeting at the Sigma Chi house, Tuesday at 7:15. Calendar Tuesday, October 17. Block and Bridle Club meeting, 7:43 p. m., 3220 Starr street. Episcopal club dinner, 6 p. m., Lin colnshire. Big and Little Sister's dinner, 6 p. m., Ellen Smith Hall. Iron Sphinx meeting, 7:15 p. 111., Delta Chi house. Friday, October 20. Kappa Delta dance, Ellen Smith Hall. Bnshnell Guild dance, Chamber of Commerce. Phi Gamma Delta dance, the Lin coln. Delta Upsilon dance, the Lincoln. Saturday, October 21. All University dance, Armory. Girl's Football luncheon, the Lin coln. Acacia house dance. Delta Upsilon banquet, the Lincoln. Farm House dance. Phi Camilla Delta annual pig din ner, the Lincoln. Sigma Chi dance, Ellen Smith Hall. Delta Tau Delta dance, K. C. hall. Students Show True Cornhusker Spirit In Stadium Parade A stream of students, six and eight abreast, six blocks long, marched to the City Auditorium yesterday for the Stadium Rnlly. All classes were dis missed at 9:45. The Laws met at the Law building and headed the proces sion of yelling Cornhuskers to Thir teenth and P, where the Dental stu dents took the lead. There were between three and font thousand students in the line and it took t-.bout thirty minutes for them to reach tho Auditorium niter classes wee dismissed. The in bers of the colleges gathered in front of their respective buildings. The band led the parade with some spir ited music. Personals. Madeline Stoiigor. '22, has returned from her trip to Europe and is visit-J tng at the Alpha I hi house. Esther Marshall, '22, and Gertrude Nye, '24, visited at the Delta Gamma house last week end. In the list f newly initiated Iron Sphinx, printed in the Friday Nebras kan, the name of Leo Ford was omit ted. Ford is a member of Sigma Nu. Special Convocation For R. O. T. C. Men Today In the Armory General George B. Duncan. Com mander of tho Seventh Corps Area, will address the students of the R. O. T. C. of the University at a special convocation in the Armory at 11 to day. All R. O. T. C. men will he r used from classes to attend the meet ing. This convocation was originally an nounced for tho Temple, hut becauso of a conflict in dates, it has been changed to the Armory. Because of his high rank and his interest in the students who are training in his corps area, all students are particularly urged to hear General Duncan. A Complete Fall Outfit wating here for a form just like yours! w A Arrange fcr a sitting before the busy winter season starts let it be Photo by Dole 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 11th & R Sts. TUCKER- SHEAN JEWELERS Diamond "Watches. Fine Jewelry, flocks. Sterling Silver, Cut Class. Kxpert Watch. Clock mid Jewelry Repairing and Ma 11 11 fact 11 ring. Opticians Eyes examined KRKK. In our Optical IV partmont yon may select pist what, you want in Eye Classes or Spectacles. Fine Optical Repairing. Broken liOnses Duplicated. Stationers Stationery for Ihe Office, School and Home. "Waterman's Fountain Pens, Office Equipment and Sup plies. Crane's, Whiting's and Ilurd's Fine Stationery. Complete line of Supplies for all departments of Schools and Colleges. !BF.WHBJ'1JM.I Sweet Apple Cider 100 per cent pure apple juice mad' from sound Jonathan tipples. We cater especially to University, Fraternity and Sorority parties and social functions of all kinds. Ice cold cider in kegs with spigots will be furnished on six hour not:cv We also serve cider at. our 12:h Street Mill. Idaho Fruit Company 213 No. 12th B2472 Speak Four Magic Words To EVERYBODY'S MAIL. Dear Miss Chatterbox: I s'pose you think I'm troubled, else I wouldn't be writing you. Well! troubled Is no name for it; I'm per fectly desperate! Do you think you could by some hook or crook haie time to bestow a hit of advice and sympathy upon me? It's just this. Miss Chatterbox ereryone on this campus positively hates me, I know even my Instructors, and I try. Oh! 1 try so hard to please them, Miss Chat terbox. Oh! What can I do to make them like me? Tou know, In French class this morning I waved my hand frantically for half an hour but all f cot was a cold look and then I did get called upon. I didn't know a thing so besides the cold looks I cot a little round lero. Now, wouldn't that make anyone want to just to or and eat a Teachers' Forum Of Omaha City Schools Hear Le Rossignol Dean F. E. Le Hossignol delivered the fim of a series of lectures in Omaha yesterday afternoon before the Teachers' Forum upon Elementary Economics. Every teacher who reg isters for all ten of the lectures will receive an hour's credit, others having the privilege of listening to the lec tures. The Teachers' Forum is an associa tion of teachers in Omaha which brings prominent men to that city to lecturo upon various subject. iJean I.e Kossignol will lecture there every Monday afternoon for the next ten weeks. Two Uni Professors Visit Printing Plants At Kansas Schools Trof. E. E. Brackett, principal of the Ttade School, and Prof. M. M. Fogg, professor of English, in charge of Journalism and University Public ity, recently inspected the printing plants at the Kansas Agricultural Col lege, Manhattan, and at the Univer sity of Kansas. They also visited the State Printing Plant at Topeka, from which tons of school books have been sent out daily for a half year. They called on Governor Henry J. Allen, who exhibited rest at soon returning to the editorship of his paper, the Wichita Beacon. A sport car never will reach its b'ghest development until manufac turers Iiara to nickel-plate Urea. ,T'' Kf - "-j.liy-Ci'rve" is a I'arkcr patent which employs the nc!tnt:ncpnn tilile or cap'l 1 -try, iitrai turn 1 3 make a snoit h - How in led kp roof (t d. Nootiier pen ha it. 1 ir -it . 3 .1X1 Fills toy a qA Filler That's Not Exposed So Can't Catch and Spill Ink THIS is one of the vital reasons why the Parker Pen ranks highest with America's educators and student bodies. Its filler is"safety-sealed" beneath the neat screw cap end. There's no exposed lever to catch on the clothing, spill ink and spoil your suit or blouse. Remove the cap, immerse the pen in ink, press the button and the Parker is filled. This simple, perfect filler was created by Geo. S. Parker, inventor cf the celebrated leak-proof "Lucky Curve" feed. And in no other pen can you obtain these features so importan. .0 operation if a pen is to perform without a hitch. And that's what you want in a fountain pen not one that distracts your mind when you're trying to concen trate on study or class instruction. All Parker points are 14 K rolled gold, so th;y can't rust, corrode or tarnish and are not affected by czlia. Prices range from,$2.50 upward according to style and mounting. These pens are made with the same mechanical perfection and jewel er's accuracy and finish found in the famous Parker 25-year Duofold the lacquer-red pen at $7 that has taken America by storm. Come pick out the point that best suits your hand extra fine, fine, medium, coarse or stub. Well give you a Parker Accident Policy free insuring you for one year against any breakage, damage satisfactory service of any kind. (f The Man From Gugenheim's" n. - PENS Made by The Parker Pen Co., Janervdle.Wij. George Bros., Harris-Sartor Co., Miller & Paine, Latsch Bros., H. SerpoMieimer, Tucker-Shean, Lincoln Book Store. It's the Best Place to Shop After All! FELLOWS! Give Our New Fall KIRSCHBAUM CLOTHES The Once Over! They've Got the Pep and Style You Like. Come Over to N Street. goi2 j No Rough Edges Wears Longest win: 1 m in ' 1 THE VAN HEUSEN has an air of easy individ uality, of smartness and style that appeals to men who pride themselves on the neatness and dignity of their dress. Buy your collars of a reputable retailer. He won't offer you a sub stitute when you ask for a VAN HEUSEN. He knows there isn't any. VAN HEUSEN the Worlds-Smarted COLLAR PHMJPS.JONES COUP, Un. 12Z5 BROADWAY, NEW YORK I