. .V t : THE DAILY 1 flBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Published Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday morninfi of each eek by tha University of Nebraska, Accepted for mailing at special rat ( postage provided (or in Section 1103, Act t October 3, 1917, authorised January go. 1922. THE MORNING AFTER-- OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY PUBLICATION Under the Direction of the Student Publi cation Board Entered as second-class matter at tha Postofnce In Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. Subscription rate $2.00 a year $1.25 a semester Slncle Copy ..... - Fiva Cents Address all communications to THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska Editorial and Business Offices, University Hall 10. Phones Day 142 University Exchange Night B6R82 OFFICE HOURS Evn f afternoon with the exception of Friday and Sunday. Paul EDITORIAL STAFF. C. Richardson Editor William Bcrtwell Managing Editor Merritt B.-nson News Editor Wm. Card - News Editor Hugh Cox News Editor George W. Hvltor. News Editor Ralph J. Kelly News Editor Alice Thuman Assistant News Editor Doris Trott Assistant News Editor BUSINESS STAFF Clifford M. Hicks - Business Manager Clarence Eickhoff Asst. Business Manager Otto Skold Circulation Manager PROPAGANDA AGAIN. Propaganda we always have with us. Whether it is grood or bad, dan porous or safe, depends upon our point of view. When we dislike or fear the uver of ideas and his pro duct, ve say it is propaganda. Jurt now we are the victims of propa ganda of a peculiar organization, one which has no officers that w can blame, and no permanent members. It is the most, democratic organization in the University of Nebraska, or perhaps the most exclusive. This mysterious society meets lut once a year, and this meeting which takes the form of a banquet is de scribed as a brilliant affair, and we believe that brilliant is the proper word, and that it represents no ex aggeration, literarlly speaking. The fame eligibility rules for membership prevail each year, are very strict, and the membership com mittee approves or disapproves each prospective member with nice dis crimination. It is a society out of reach of the "climbers" and "join ers,"' for one must be endowed with natural qualities to be eligible. Like geniuses, members are born, and not made. So, on March 8, the Order of the Golden Fleece will frolic and make merry at Ellen Smith hall, and hold its annual competition to determine the "red-headedest" of the "red-head gals" registered in the University of Nebraska. Eight prizes are to be awarded for WEEKLY ETIQUETTE LESSON. The pair of chop-sticks offered for the b?st solution of the problem last week was won by a gentleman who signed his answer "Three Fi Fi Omegas." He said, "all things come to him who waits and he has it coming." This week we are offering a beautifully decorated, excellently printed, picture of a telephone used by George Washington. Who'll be the lucky one? The problem was sent to us and we will pass it on to the readers. "In eating pie should you hold it in your right or left hand?". Among University students smoking is a habit that is evidently disap pearing for at an Arts and Science college smoker the other night only 3 per cent of the students of that college attended. ' And 3 per cent is a rather low rate of interest, it seems to us. But it doesn't mean a thing. ADVICE FREE AS AIR BUT NOT AS VALUABLE. To the Editor of The Morning After: "I have attended the University for seven semesters and at the end of the current one I will be graduated. I am now confronted with the problem of earning a living. Could you give me some advice in the matter?" - "PERPLEXED." My dear "Perplexed :" You are not the only one so are we. It would be extremely difficult for us to recommend the exact line of work that you should engage in but we will give you a few general suggestions. You should seek employment in some trade, or profession, or in the industrial world. Once vou find work that is satisfactory it is unlikely that your phine Shramek, Merle Loder, J. Earl Smith, Wilbur Shainholtz, Richard F. Krage, E. W. Morris, Raymond Eller, Rolland Sturm, Lucile Livingston, M. E. Dilley, T. L. Koontz, George Bur leigh, A. R. Congdon, E. Grant Lantz, Gertrude Tomson, Cora Johnson, Lloyd T. Shildneck, Marian E. Madi gan, Marion Yoder, Barbara Wiggen horn, Carrol Diller, Thilip Lewis, Mrs. Aileen Acton, Hester Chatterton, Lois Jackman, Amy Martin. Student Council. Regular Student Council meeting Monday at 5 oclock in the otuce in Administration building. Student Election. Filing for the four class presiden cies, tnree puDiicauon uuaru mem bers, and the Ivy Day orator must be made by Friday noon, February 15. File the nomination at Student Ac tivities office. Freshman Commission. Meeting Tuesday at 7:10 in Ellen Smith hall. 4 i- Viking. The Viking picture for the Corn husker will be retaken at the campus University training will be a very great handicap, but it might be just as stud:o Tuesday at 12:15 p. m. well not to mention it. Nevertheless, University graduates are frequently very successful. We were reading recently of a graduate of a large uni versity, who at his death left a fortune of ? 100,000. This was accumulated through painstaking effort and unceasing toil, coupled with a good imagina tion, remarkable foresight, and the death of an uncle who left him $99,500. You can readily see that the situation is not as dark as you 'believe it to be. We are glad to have been of service to you. Our idea of a pessimist is a man who reads the Bible to see if he can find typographical errors. , Or orders cherry pie so he can complain about the pits in it. Miss Nomei says she learns that the prohibition enforcement officers are active again for the newspapers are full of stories concerning the "Tea Pot Dome" scandal. She says that she has spent several evenings in that cabaret. ANOTHER EXPOSE. As stimulating as gasoline to a Ford are the many letters that have Bizads. All Bizads having banquet tickets check in to Philip Lewis as soon as possible. Menorah Society. The Menorah society will hold the meeting postponed last Sunday on February 10 at 8 p. m., Faculty hall. Dean P. M. Buck will speak on "Lit erary Aspects of the Bible." Viking Picture. The Viking Cornhusker picture will be retaken at the Campus Studio Tuesday February 12 at 12:15 p. m. Catholic Students. Breakfast will be served after the 8:00 services Sunday. Call L7523 for reservations. The picture for come to us asking that we reveal our identity, so we bow to the wishes of the Cornhusker will be taken after an admiring public. First we would like to state that in beginning this column we had but one purpose in mind that of service to humanity. It was pointed out to us that the serious business of University life needed its "drop of oil" and we feel that we have! been very successful in pouring forth the desired lubricant, for only last week we heard a fellow refer to us as an "oil can." In view of the fact that at the start we adopted as our slogan "Humanity First," it was only natural that the spirit of martyrdom would permeate our being and restrain us from signing our weekly effort. (No pun permitted.) Conditions have changed, however, and the daily flood of requests have convinced us that it is our duty to tell our fellow men who we are. Here after the contents of this column will appear over the signature: "HERR BRAINS." the breakfast. Grace M. E. Church. Prof. R. E. Cochran of the de partment of American History will speak 01 "Abraham Lincoln" at Grace M. E. church Sunday night at 7:30. lfi" ill A-TV: hi .1 I III" H V Ev a Olivotti, prima dona in Arthur Hammerstein's real musical play Wild flower, at the Orpheum Wednesday, February 13, with special orchestra Oroheum Mon. Tues. Febr. 1M2 THE CROWNING JOY OF THE SEASON The Messrs. Shubert Are Sending You 77 "J,, -4 A--JyJj, fore do not expect a dullard to be a star. saner judgment of college executives j and alumni and students is going to I believe that it takes moral fibre ; fi"d the solution of the problems i of the same sort to play to a finish that it takes to think to a finish or to work to a finish. Therefore I am I which are so vexing now. Have received an ad vanced shipment of spring fabrics for the college trade. Priced Surprisingly Low. LOU HILL Hit of Ages Founded on In cidents from the Life of the 7fip IflUSlCALHIT World's Greatest Composer. OF AGES FRANZ SCHUBERT ' A Brilliant Cast of 50 Augmented Orchestra of 12 A Boston critic said after seeing "BLOSSOM TIME" The most delightful musi cal play for years. Schubert himself lives before you You hear his music al) the best of it. Reserve You Seats Early They're Going Fast PRICES V1-O0, $1.50, $200, $2.50, plus tax. the different shades, quantities, and degrees of redness. To be eligible for j afraid on the field of the man who membership, every contestant must snirks his daily task or quits when it have tresses falling within a clas-!irks him or weakens when it weighs sification of twenty-eight shades and tints. Those with "chemical" or "medicinal" shades will be plucked out and their duplicity exposed. Once again the most unique of University functions will be held and the campus anxiously awaits to hear the winners of the various prizes. WRESTLERS BEAT KANSAS. The Nebraska wrestling team de feated the University of Kansas ag gregation at a dual meet at Law rence Friday night, at a score of 18 to 5. This is the first time this year that' a Nebraska team has triumphed over Kansas, and it was up to the wrestlers to see that Kansas came up on the short end of the score. The Kansas-Nebraska football game was a tie, Kansas won both bas ketball contests and the cross coun try race, so the wrestlers were forced to defeat the Jayhawks and retreiver Nebraska's prestige in the south. The wrestlers won their first meet with Northwestern and this second victory gives them a clean slate so far this season. The College Press. MY ATHLETIC CONFF.SION OF FAITH (Sigma Alpha Epsilon Record) I believe in athletics, but I believe in it as a means to an end and not as an end in itself. I believe that the body is the ser vant of the mind and of the spirit and that it therefore merits the fullest development. I believe that the primary object of athletics is recreational, for the relax ation of the nerves, the stimulation of the muscles, and the diversion of the mind; that amusement is a secondary object incidental to diversion; and that the feature of contest is stimu lating to mental and muscular pro cesses but of somewhat doubtful value as relaxation. I believe that it takes brains to be a successful athlete., that the game must be played with the head as well as with the feet or bands, and I there on him; even when he is "going his best gait," I am always waiting for him to " blow up." I am dristrustful of his grit. I believe that athletics is of the essence of play and loses immeasur ably when it becomes a business or a profession. I believe that college athletics should be college students at their play and that the so-called college athlete or varsity man should be a representative man at his play and not merely a man of physical skill temporarily domiciled within college walls. I believe that college athletics has its grave dangers, and that chief among them are the excessive de mands upon the time and strength of valuation of victory, and the com mercialization of contests. I believe that college athletics has become a burden instead of a recre ation for many of its followers, that too few are participants in its active exercise and too many are onlookers trying to get its advantages by proxy, that the college athlete is in danger of becoming a professional enter tainer instead of an amateur sportsman. I believe that while he who plays should play to win, victory is less im portant than the fine spirit of en deavor, that the object should be " not the laurel but the race." I believe that the intercollegiate contest is being made an elaborately staged theatrical instead of & simple game and that the expense of equip ment is becoming a burden. I believe that the preservation of the amateur status of college athletics is essential to its maintainance of a secure place in the college scheme, I believe that if the growing dis advantages of athletics are allowed to become greater than its advantages, there is strength of mind and purpose enough in college faculties and col lege students to blast the whole thing into a thousand fragments. I believe however, that there is too much good in athletics to allow the evil to submerge it, and that the Notices Notices will be run for only two daya. Organizations should not hand them in until three days before the event, as it U im possible to run tbem for long periods. Up 1309 O St. flight, turn to the right wm 0rpheumSNFebr. 13 SPECIAL STUDENTS' MATINEE AT 3 P. M. Pictures and Proofs. The following students are asked to call at the campus studio as soon as possible to turn in the keys to j pictures and select proofs. Pauline I Barber, Helen Guthrie, J. A. Cam- eron, Charles E. Burke, Russell F. Richmond, Robert Bushnell, Roland j H. Loder, A. J. Leisey, Frances Weintz, Paul Wellman, Margaret E. Wattles, Iva Murphy, Ida Prime, Jean Kelleribarger, Hugo F. Srb, Welch Pogue, Paul Cheyney, Jose- U-N-I DRUG CO. STUDENTS' SUPPLIES FOUNTAIN PENS KODAK SUPPLIES PUNCH FOR PARTIES 14th and S B3771 The "Bambalina" Show ARTHUR WAMMERSTEIN5 Musical Success 3 W Unique Program Menus Personal Cards Personal Stationery Graves Printing Co. The Students Favorite Printer 312 No. I2th St Lincoln j&KOtf TtJUHPH' x, , . . rvrrv- UADRaOJ f.nsCAD UAMKEBSTEIN" VINCENT yOUMANtf .A REAL MUSICAL PLAY With A" ATTRACTIVE CHORUM i H EAR "Bambalina," "Wildflower," "April Blossoms" HAMMERSTEIN SINGING CAST OF 50 Nile $1.00 to $2.50; Mat. 7Sc to $1.50, plus tax. SEATS NOW ON SALE if ' , 1 1 y km! Townend Portrait photographer. 1 J n i r ,t: - Yes, ya will admit upoa t oririnf a (armcnt fraaa us kat ra render immaculate results thm &rm heta sttrprtssne. ad satisfactory. Our prices will please ra also. "A Trial Will Convince" VARSITY Cleaners and Drers. 31 No. I2tk St. B3677 Ideal Summer Vacation See Europe June 21 -Aug. 17, 1924 England, Belgium, France, Switzerland, Italy, Olympic Games Price Complete $695 Also Special Tour de Luxe Write for Descriptive Literature Prof. L. A. Passarelli, University of Arka. as. y Fayetteville, Ark. THE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC ADRIAN M. NEWENS, Director. Offers thorough training in Music, Dramatic ' Art A large faculty of specialists in all departments, adj may enter. Full information on request. Oppose Campus. Phone B1392 jlth & R SU