K ?( $ r" k: Ml" r. r r - H-A, V f- "' r 'J. ij 11 Tjif. ts r: University Bulletin FRESHMAN class meeting Friday, 10 a. m., Unl. 20G. BASE BALL. All candidates for battery will report at base ball cage 1:30 to 3:00 daily. SENIORS. Class election, Tuesday, February 10th, at 1 p. m., In old chapci. Ralph W. Buck, President. BEqiNNINO FRENCH will be given at 10:30 dally, but there will bo no be ginning Spanish clasB. Tho Registrar. Y. W. C. A. The regular Sunday af tornoon meeting of tho Y. W. C. A. will bo held In Union hall at 4 o'clock. All womon are most cordially Invited to bo presont. CHORUS CLASS will meet hereafter at lour to flvo o'clock Tuesdays and Thursdays, Instead of flvo to bIx. Membors pleaso take notice of tho changed hour. Tho Registrar. ENQINBERINO SOCIETY Bpeclal mooting lq called for Wodnesday oven lng, Fobrunry 4th. at 7:30 o'clock. Business: 1902 Blue Print. Program: J. C. Stovons, assistant state onglneer, on "Tho Work of a State Engineer." OMAHA MEDICS OBJECT Protest Against Double-Examination Bill Recently Introduced. Tuesday evening's News: Students of tho three Nebraska medical schools, tho Crelghton and Omaha Medical Col leges of Omaha, and tho Lincoln Med ical of Lincoln, aro Indignant over a bill recently Introduced Into tho legis lature by W. H. Wilson of Pawnco county requiring graduates of medical colleges to appear before a state board of medical examiners and pass a spe cial examination before being granted license to practice. Heretofore licenses have been grant ed to all studont8 who hold diplomas from reputable medical colleges, but tlio state "board of health Is of the opin ion that sufficient supervision cannot bo kept of tho particular cdSes and that therefore many have been grant ed licenses who have not the right to practice medicine. Tho membors there fore preparod tho bill and had it in troduced with tho Idea that reputable pbyslclanB would bo placed upon a higher plane and that quacks and in sufficiently prepared men would be barred out. Whllo tho Omaha medics feel that tho bill Is an injustice, the impression seems to bo that to raise any protest would bo a useless and even asinine moye. Tho seniors who graduate this spring are not affected by the bill, and honco tho protest Is confined to the Dr. Ward, when interviewed about tho school's attitude on the above measure, said It wpuld be Impossible (or him to say anything definite until ho had Inspected a copy of the bill. Tho general feeling seems to bo that tho attompt will not result seriously, and will lose rather than gain by In difference on the part of the medical schools, VVili Tillman Do? Wisconsin Is engaged in a dis cussion rather similar to that which dlsturbed;fqur,senlor class" of a year ago. The. following" clipping from tho Dally Cardinal gives thonegativo sido of tho case: &' "Tho Oratorical Association of tho ujnlversity in ondoavorin , to aapuro Borne lecturer, have DroD&sjSl to brink Senator Tillman here, ahdfltjie literary; societies, or some of theBr hav$ rati fied tho attompt. The association finds It necessary to raise funds for ex penses and it has been thought that this could best be done by securing some good lecturer. But Is It not pos sible that a better selection of speak ers might bo made? Ho might prove a good drawing card and his engage ment be eminently satisfactory from a financial standpoint but there is an other point to bo considered. Does Senator Tillman advocate principles which aro worth our while to listen to? Aro the Ideals of statesmanship and manhood represented by him, such as to ontltle him to the patronage of a uni versity association? It cannot be for gotten that his conduct and language in tho senate have gone boyond what we as individuals would care to tolerate in our homes. Wo have no quarrel with Mr. Till man, and If he came he should have a respectful hearing, but the propriety of having the fury southerner promul gate under university auspices his well known ideas of southern problems Is somewhat doubtful." Concerning Frats. Dear Kid I learned from mother's last that you are scheduled for tho X's next month and aro plugging hard. That's right, sonny; get the best fit you can and tho rest will como fairly eaBy. There's nothing like starting in with two or three conditions to keop a man down for the whole of his course. I'm not going to give you a sermon on behavior or anything of that kind, so don't get scared, but I do want you, Billy, to make a good frat. There's more depends on a secret society you Join than you have any Idea of, for tho brothers you got In with thero aro going to be your closest friends during four years. There are almost as many different frats as thero aro combinations of tho twenty-seven Qreok letters, and of course each fellow will toll you that the one he belongs to is tho best. But between you and mo, Billy, there's only three or four that really amount to much as national organizations. During the first few weeks you'll probably be rushed pretty hard, and you'll have a great opportunity to save money, for your coin won't be good whon you're out with any of the bid dors. By the way, it won't do a bit of harm to salt that money, for when you como to Initiation fees, jeweled frat pins and dues you'll need every cent. There aro lots of good men who go to college every year and aren't frat men, some' because they can't afford It, others because the jjatgr objectst and still larger crowd that tho rushers never realize are good men. Tho fol lows who will bid first, and, mark my words, Billy, for I've been through the wholo thing from A to Z, and have been tho chairman on three commit tees for bidding now-men, the fellows who aro asked f$ajt .are the ones who are the bo'fit; di-Qfajfpd and act as if they'd seen high bun$gsr' before. I don't mean bV this tha,t a man must be a dud or have his .clothes made in the limit of stylo, but as ,a littlo hit of preliminary advice, I'dHtell you to have the bags pressed out ot your trousers, shlno' your shoes and don't try to got more than two weeks' wear out of your linen. Yon know from personal ex perience that first impressions count for a good, .deal and no ono Is very strcmglyJatfrracted to a fellow who comes down out of the woods irrHr tno hair, hanging in his eyes, chewing a toothpick and shying at every cable car that goes by. Don't think you're up agalnBt a bun ko game, oither If a fellow you've never seen before comes up and wants to know If you're not John Brown, from Oskaloosa, or somo such place. Ho hasn't any gold bricks in his pocket. It's only a sort of crude way me rushors have of getting acquainted with new men that they like tho looks of. If you don't queer yourself In the next flvo minutes' conversation It will probably end In you're getting a bid out to his frat house to dinner. But when you aro once out there, then's when your real troubles begin. It's a mighty hard position to be in, for evory man there will be sizing you up, taking mental notes of your gen eral appearanco and anything you say, and It's a sure thing that some of the crowd won't like you at first I sup pose if tho truth were known, It takeB as much log-rolling and wire-pulling to get a man Into p. frat by somo of the fellows' votes as it does In a sena torial election. If you don't talk much some will say you're a stick and dopoyy while, If you try to appear bright and sociable, some other chap will say you're too fresh; so, you see you're not going to find any easy thing. But don't tall all over yourself trying to bo nice, if you do strike a fellow whoso croVd you like. Thero's many a man boon thrown down just because be was "too willing." "They'll get you In a corner and some fellow will come and sit down beside you for a little talk. It won't amount to much what he says, only he wants an opportunity to size you up. He'll ask you whore you live, what prep you went to, and how you like college. They're all stock ques tions, but whon that chap gets up and makes way for tho noxt man to Inspect you he'll have settled in his own mind how ho'll voto If It ever comes to vot ing on you. Marie Oren Cummins In The Wostern Follow. Students, do you want to earn some money? . If so, address J. H. Loper, Lincoln, Neb. CRESCENT BOWLING ALLEYS 134 N STREET Equipped with Brunswick Continuous cAlleys The Omaha Bee says that the sheriff moved the business center of Lincoln two blocks east. He moved lis. Here's where the students and professors meet and talk It over with Tommy. He's wise. T 1 RIGGS' PHARMACY, 1321 O STREET 4 mJJJJmJmJmJmJJHHH 'M'fr'M''fr'rir'MH''M''lHfrM,tl',H4- New Model No. 5 BLICKENSDERFER. The universal favorite with all classes of operators who desire a simple and speedv machine. 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