Sending of Band to Seattle is Endowed (Continued tsta Pag One.) f and get behind the movement. !fis !so the best thing the student body could do for their team and for CoacBearg: "I realize what a Vlg undertaking it Is to try to send a 1 Illy y9 aiei3T. XK UNCOLN. NEB. SfJ7Q THE DAILY NEBRASKAN "THE RIALTO HAS THE PICTURES" Elinor Glyn's "LOVE'S BLINDNESS" Th SoceBiw to "Three Weeks" Alia NEWS COMEDY TOPICS WEEK RIALTO w m ALL THIS WEEK Th Greatest Cowboy Star f th Screen Ken Maynard la a R4-BlooM Romance "The Unknown Cavalier" "WAR FEATHERS" Screamine;!? Funny with "OUR GANG" SHOWS AT 1, S, 8, 7, 9. TwiBirnTTTrTi'ii1' in n.i rr-sy ALL THIS WEEK Should a Woman Forsvoar the On Lotto 4 Hor UloT Dsrid Belasco's St(0 Succas with BELLE BENNETT Other Entertaining Picture SHOWS AT 1, 3, 8, 7, MATS. 20c NITE 30c LSTwiftRl iVTBYECCY kxs THURS- FRL BAT. CLIFF CLARK Impressions of Mom Yon Moot Erory Day Primrose Minstrels With MRS. GEORGE PRIMROSE Amd Jo Riley, E. Booth Piatt. Mailory Twins, Frank BrMnaa Harry Fairbanks TYPIFYING GENUINE MINSTRELSY Barr, Mayo & Renn "SHE CARES FOR ME" OLD FIDDLERS v. JAZZ With CHARLIE LINES "Th Happy Announcer frees Station J. O. Y. P. S. This I a contest in which th auejeec is th Jod at all liana al th old amd miioirn anisic. Kjusdly accept it as n coolest t New an! Coae Pictures BABICH AND THE ORCHESTRA SHOWS AT 2:30, 7. . ALL THIS WEEK A WeaoWVlul Pros raja of Screen mnd Stage Entertainment Laura La Plante In a Rotlickau R nr "Her Big Night ON THE STAGE Two Rrfinesl VaoeVeville Offerrnr ALLEN CHARLES CALM & GALE U a Bsavrlful Praslartioa "A RHINESTONE REVUE" Hth JEAN DE MAR ELEANOR FA RON ami LILLIAN FIELDS . HI-LO FIVE From the "StnoWwt Prince" Proeetirkne: MUSIC AND SONGS with MISS JUAN IT A THOMAS Coma's Prtns Winnie Boaaty BEAVER'S NOVELTY ORCHESTRA SHOWS AT 3:30. 7, . Mid-Nite Matinee AND FOOT" AT i. TKOLTC FRIDAY NIGHT AT Bis; VnnVrii! ! Mnaic Bill Soar Its 60c L- ' i band to Seattle. It would be a fine thing for the men however, and would help them a great deal in their ef forts to win the game from the Wash ington Huskies. The spirits of the team would be helped greatly." Athletic Director Gish: "I am in favor of sending the band to Seattle. The Btudent body should support this movement to the limit. Our only re gret is that the athletic department can not finance this trip for the band. Nothing can advertise the school so well as to have a band go with the team and give five minute concerts at the stops along the way. It would also be a great help to the 4 am. It would show them that the student body is behind them and help them to keep up the fight." Captain Stiner: "It is hard to put up a good fight when a team is so far away without some one to back them. The presence of the band at the Seat tle game would give the team the spirit of the students back home and the old grads present. The absence of the band is always noticed by the team and I am very much in favor of the campaign of the band. I am sure that they will do their part to help us beat the Huskies." Glenn Presnell, halfback: "It is a good idea for the band to go to Seattle with the team. It is a long way out there and the team needs the band there. The pep of the band always helps a great deal for a player to keep up his fight. I think the stu dents should back the band in their attempt to make the trip." Freshman Coach Hutchinson: "The band does more good to a team bat tling on the gridiron than anything I know of. If there is any way pos sible for the band to go the student body should support it to the limit A half-dozen of those bandmen can give a team a carload of fight. Send 'em to Seattle, students 1" "Blue Howell, fullback: "A band is always a great help to a team. This is all the more true when the team is away from home. The band is al ways 'live' and helps the team out a whole lot. I am for sending them along with us. I am behind the move ment 100 per cent." "Bobbie" Stephens, quarterback: "The band always helps to keep up the spirit of the team and I would be pleased if the student body would back a proposition which would make it possible to send part of the band on the Washington trip with us. The Nebraska songs and cheers always help the men to keep up their fight. The band is well organized and could do the team a real service with their presence at Seattle when the Corn- huskers meet the Huskies." Burlesque Proe Profitable College comic burlesques have proved very profitable. Last year thejmbued with the finest ideals of Ne "Harvard Lampoon's" burlesque of braska's spirit. And the organization Husker Spirit Fostered In Early Years (Continued from Page One.) sportsmanship and imbued with the desire to play the game clanly and fairly regardless of the outcome. Under these conditions, the student body was knitted together in a com mon interest. Emotions, roused on the field and on the sidelines, blended together in a united student body filled with a loyalty whose fires some times smoulder but never die. In ath letics, the whole student body sought to get ahead but to get ahead fairly. They had a common aim and they developed a common unity. This loy alty, this unity, these emotional ideals, went with them when they left the University. And the loyalty gained in youth never diesT It goes on working for Nebraska as it once rallied around a blazing bonfire. Innocent Foster Spirit This method of firing the emotions on the athletic field and filling a stu dent body with Nebraska's most cherished ideals has never ceased. But with the growth of the Univer sity, the spontaneity which once char acterized it became harder and harder to maintain. So in 1903, a third factor in the development and maintenance of Nebraska spirit, en tered the field. In that year a senior men's society, the Innocents, was established, led by Dr. G. E. Condra. It has played a potent part in the maintenance of Nebraska spirit. The Innocents were severely criti cized last spring. The concensus of opinion on the campus seemed to be that much of the criticism was justi fied. There are undoubtedly certain powers vested in the Innocents which should more properly be handled elsewhere. For instance, it is ques tionable as to the propriety of letting an exclusive senior society have com plete control of the selection of Uni versity yell leaders, a selection made from the whole school for the whole school. Many criticisms of the Innocents may be made but the fact remains that their influence in maintaining the real spirit of Nebraska has been of vital importance. It has furnished a compact organization which could see and feel the importance of Ne braska's spirit, to the student body in the present and to the state in the future. Compact and secret, they could formulate adequate plans for bringing the students together in the fostering of ideal spirit. Such power might have worked badly but careful leadership has kept the organization few years. Others are with us yet Booth and Stlehm Influential One would not venture to make a list of those faithful, fighting Corn huskers who have striven to put Ne braska on the highest possible plane. There was Booth, who first turned out football teams with heavy win ning records, "Jumbo" Stlehm. whose football teams had a record of thirty five victories and two defeats, while winning five successive valley cham plonships, Dr. Condra whose work with the Innocents has already been mentioned, and many others. Two others still on the campus should be mentioned. They are Dr R. G. Clapp and Coach Henry F, Schulte. For years Dr. Clapp was a leader in the development of Uni versity spirit as well as of Univer sity athletics. Those who know Coach Schulte know that those thrown in contact with him are fired with the Nebraska spirit that never dies. Athletics at Nebraska, then, have furnished an opportunity for knitting the student body together in firm bonds of loyalty. Nebraska's athletes have been filled with the idea of ser vice service to Nebraska. Some thing of that spirit has been conveyed to the spectator. It has been a vital factor in maintaining the fundamen tal ideals of the University and in continuing to spread them over the state. We have now noted the beginning and development of the University of Nebraska. We have examined the spirit of service to the state and to the state and to the youth of the state with which the University is imbued. In the next few articles, we shall take up the general organiza tion of the University today and show the functions of the various ad ministrative departments of the Uni versity, functions which keep the University going and thus aid in the maintenance of its ideals and mission. "The Literary Digest," after being suppressed by the police, sold subse quently for eight dollars a copy, Lincoln's Imieyendrnt Theatre ALL WEEK THREE BAD MEN Roman ca ana Villainy Cast ol 25.000 featuring GEORCE O'BRIEN OLIVE BORDEN Don't Miss It RALPH SCOTT AT THE CONSOLE NITE 30c MAT. 15c. SHOWS AT I. 3, 5, 7, 9. YOU BET IPS A WOW I EaVm651 HATTONI BEERY fYlJfi HATTON K7 SS tlAVY yTX Organ mmi Orchestra Specialties THIS WEEK has been an energetic factor in spreading this spirit through the en tire student body. Growth Make Unity Difficult The growth of the University has made such an organizatioa of more and more value yearly. It has fur nished a definite center of responsi bility for the maintenance of true Cornhusker spirit And the Innocents have gone on, year after year, work ing for the fullest development of Nebraska spirit In the face of growing student body which makes common unity and loyalty increas ingly difficult, that common unity and loyalty has been maintained. And each year, a class carries those ideals out into the state, carrying out the University's idealism in its members' varied pursuits, always working for a better state. A discussion of the development and maintenance of Nebraska's spirit would not be complete without refer ence to the effect of personalities. Nebraska's history is filled with out standing personalities who have aided in the development of its spirit Jack Best has been mentioned. He is outstanding because all of his time was devoted to the upbuilding of Ne braska spirit But there were many others. Some were here for but a Forum Hears Rice Discuss Fraternities (Continued from Page One.) fraternities and sororities to scholar ship deceives no one," declared Pro fessor Rice. He decried the fact that members were not the best in The Golden Candlestick 226 So. 12 TEA ROOM AND PASTRY SHOP Moderate Prices 7:30-7:30 University Players IN "The Auctioneer" Don't forget the Student's matinee at 3 o'clock Friday also Thursday, Friday, and Saturday Nights Gray Anderson's Luncheonette 143 North 12th. Formerly Lcdwich' LIGHT LUNCHES FOUNTAIN SERVICS LIGHT CONFECTIONERY EAT A BUTTER KLSTWICH IT'S TOASTED Up en unui miuiuyut The Hauck Studio Skoagland Photographer 1216 "O" B-2991 Learn to DANCE In Classy Studio Luella G. Williams Guarantee's to teach you in six lessons. Toddle and ail late steps. Reductions to students. Call for appointment B4258 1220 D St It's A Fact We derive a great deal of pleasure from being bar bers to the Cornhuskers. Mogul Barbers 127 No. 12 St, The Smart All weather Footwear . for Women Combine real beauty of design with lightness and wear afforded by superior workmanship and quality materials. I" AWN $4.00 BLACK $2.95 Wells & Frost Co. . 128 No. 10 St, "Opposite Post Office" school from the stand point of in tellectual attainment. "Rush week might better be ca'led liar's week," proclaimed Professor Rice as he returned to a denuncia tion of rush week practices. "Nation al standing, which every thoughtful alumnus realizes has little bearing on his later career, is one of the main points advanced to freshmen." Professor Rice then pointed out other tactics used to attract new men. He also declared that chapters decided whom to bid on irrelevancies Criticizas Freshman Rule Professor Rice criticised the rules forced on freshmen for their 'bene fit' which upper classmen flagrantly failed to follow. "The real inten tion of these rules," he declared, "is not to teach the freshmen regu larity of habits, but to get .them by the examinations so they can be in itiated. By some strange reasoning the chapter seems to feel that, once having given a pledge pin, it is honor bound to follow it with a fraternity pin, if it is humanly possible." Professor Rice then criticised the "loyal alumni" declaring that they were the ones who "never grew up." He then criticized the failure of fra ternities to have in their houses any of the things which might be con sidered the accessories of an educa tional system, books, music, art. "I am not talking about the training of pedanta," he said, "but the training of healthy-minded men and women." Lastly he criticised the dullness of the conversation. Little stories about the Forward The story of the rise of the Central Caf to its present high esteem with the public reads like a romance. It is a story of the success of an ideal. No magic, no "pull", no es pecial advantage of location or building contributed to this suc cess. But close attention to every detail, keeping the ideal ever in mind, patience and hard work on the manager's part brought such success that the public marvel at it. Right from the start, under the. present management, the Central has been popular with the students of the University of Nebraska. There are many reasons for this popularity, but they need not be recounted now. It is fitting, however, that the story of the Central' rise shall be told in the columns of "The Daily Nebraskan" the stu dents own newspaper. And in the weeks to come it shall be told in short installments and by easy stages. To be Continues 1325 P i , mm i ii i .mi, mi ii.ii I mil. ii ii -r T - T ! ! It! ' $k I II I I p ' lnt.y U nSBi iaai Ionia I , That's the universal and invariable remark of the college man after see ing some of the new arrivals in suits from They're the smartest college clothes that can be bought. You owe it to yourself to give them the once-over. Don't worry about the price-they're only FORTY BUCKS MAGE vie W ejrnoonn a-sWcMa) 5 Read Thursday's Papers An Occasion Of Supreme Importance 1 , I , 7 - - Mr. Ben SimonFounder of Ben Simon & Sons Ben Simon Days A Two Day Event In Which All Nebraska Should Participate Fall Particulars In Our Advertisement In Lincoln Papers Thursday Evening - ..... . vs . i'i.now