The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 15, 1908, Image 2

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THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
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Cbe Balls Heftragftan
Tnl3 PROPERTY OF
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA.
Lincoln, Nebraska
fIBtllHEQ EVERT DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY AND MSHDAT
BY THE STUDENT PUD. BOARD.
PiblicttlM Otflci, 126 No. 14th St.
EDITORIAL STAFF.
Mtor Clyde E. Elliott, '00
..nalno Editor. ..Herbert W. Potter, '10
Newt Editor Lynn Lloyd, '11
Afcloolate Editor Victor Smith, H1
BUSINESS STAFF.
Manager Qeorge M. Wallace, '10
Circulation ..J. Roy Smith, '00
t. Manager Earl Campbell, '10
-.,.. .I ! I I I
Editorial and Duilnen Office!
BA8EMENT, ADMINISTRATION BLDQ.
Pottofflco, Station A, Lincoln, Neb.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, 12.00 PER YEAR
Payable In Advance
Single Copies, 5 Cents Bach.
Telephone: Auto 1888.
INDIVIDUAL NOTICES will bo charffod
for nt tho rato of 10 conts por innertlon
for ovory flftoon words or fraction theroof
Faculty notlcos rtnfl University bulletins
will Kindly bo published freo.
Entered at tho postodlco at Lincoln,
Nobraska, aB nocond-clasn mall mutter
undor the Act of Congrosn of March 3,
1870.
TUESDAY, DECIfiMDIsSK IT., 1908.
ONLY A MI8UNDER8TANDINQ.
Tho dlfforoncoB botwoen tho two fac
tions on tho athlotlc board ovor tho
proposed changes in tho government
of tho university athletics wore
brought to n peaceful Hottlomont Sat
nrduy aftornoon, and now, in their
calm niomontH, boiiio of tho men con
cerned in tho llttlo squabblo aro won
doting If too much promlnenco was
not given to tho affair. Undoubtedly
tho same end could have been reached
If tho troubles of tho Btudont mombors
of tho board had not boon aired. Tho
publicity of tho disagreement only
nerved to bring into a bad light boiiio
mombors of tho faculty who really
meant no wrong. The student mem
bers of the board however, are not
entirely to blame for their actions.
for tho course the loaders of the sug
gested changos pursued boro the ear
marks of Bolf-nggrandlzoment.
The students, who possess equal
rights with tho men of the faculty on
the athletic board, were not taken Into
the conildenco of tho moverB back of
tho proposed changos. Tho plan of a
new rule was sprung on thorn 'With
out giving them tlmo to carefully con
sider the Bailout features of the recom
mendations to tho board of rogents.
All (hoy could vyeo in tho resolutions
U4I;0. Two Stores 1415,0.
was a move to establish the oHlco of
athletic director, the occupant of
which was to havo full sway In ath
letic matters. They believed this
meant tho usurpation of tho pow
ers of the athletic board. The reso
lutions were bo indefinite in their
details that they gave the students
good grounds for their conceptions of
Ill-intentlonB. If these had been drawn
up moro in detail tho trouble which
arose over tho recommendations to
tho regents would never have come up.
It was In not doflning clearly JiiBt
what the real status of the athletic,
board was to be that the faculty moil
who drew up tho resolutions were
wrong. This mistake gave tho stu
dents gopd grounds for protesting, but
not for making their troubles public.
Tho dissenters from fho proposed
plan could havo accomplished the
same at tho same time they would
havo saved the faculty members of
tho board from, rocolvlng n censure
which they did not deserve. Both sides
to the deplorable affair meant right
but both pursued the wrong methods
to accomplish their ends. A little
cooler thought on the part of both
would have dope away with all cause
for" tho trouble. It was simply a mis
understanding that gavo rise to the
disagreement and should have boon
settled' before It was given publicity.
University Bulletin
December.
Tuesday, 15 Prof. H. W. Caldwoll.
"Tho ProBldont'B Mossngo."
University rocontlon to Chancellor
and Mrs. Andrews, Music Room
Temple, 4 to U p. m.
' Forestry Club meotB.
Zoological Club moots.
Sonior class moots at 11:30.
Intor-clasB athletic board moots 7: 45
In U. 102.
Wednesday, 1C Y. M. C. A. mld-wo'olc
meeting 0:50-7:30.
Friday, 18 Christmas vacation begins
at 6 p. m.
January.
Monday, 4-ChrlBtmas vacation onds
at 8 p. m.
Friday, 8 Junior hop at Fraternity
Hall
Saturday, 9 Sophomoro hop at Lin
coln Hotel.
Friday, 15 Non-Com Hop nt Fratern
ity Hall.
Mooting of tho Graduate Club.
Frldnq, 22 Senior prom at Lincoln
Hotel Annex.
Friday, 29 Sophomoro Informal at
Frntornity Hall.
Saturday, 30 Intor-Frnt Indoor Meet
in Memorial Hall.
February.
Friday, 5 Junior Prom at Lincoln
Hotel.
YALE f REPARES NOW
CREW WILL STAY ON THE WATER
UNTIL HARBOR FREEZES.
ILLINOIS NINE TO MEET PENN.
Famous Ball Players of Coach Huff
and the Keystone Men Plan a
Carnival for May in
Urbana.
NEW HAVEN, Conn., Dec. II. In
an attempt to defeat one of the strong
est crews Harvard ever put out, Coach
John Kennedy of Yale will keep the
Yale varBlty oai'Bincn rowing on the
harbor till they are forced by freezing
weather to quit.
Fall training for tho Yale crews will
continue longer than over before. It Is
expected that the closing of Yale for
tho Christmas vacation about Dec. 15
will mark the last row on the harbor.
Coach Kennedy wns obliged to be
gin work with only tho nucleus of a
beaten crow and with few of the
Last Call
$5.00, $5.50 and $6.00 Shoes
at.
T lnul 100 iniirs Fndav and sold
Still have a good lino of sizes left, so you had hotter got busy.
NEW STORE 1415 O
oarsmen left of even that eight. The
varsity was kept at work during the
period of practice by the class crews
for tho fall regatta, when for the first
time three varsity eightB were entered
in competition. When fall work began
tho varsity squad was divided Into
three eights. They have beon kept
at work all the fall and will continue
together while fall rowing Is ordered.
Tho task of finding a new stroke oar
has proved difficult and the problem
Is far from solved. Capt. Howe was
tried In the position for several weeks,
but he weighs more than 185 pounds
and is practically a physical impossi
bility. Yet his technique Is clonrly the
best of any of the three strokes tried.
Wnllls, who stroked the varsity four
last year, and Brnlnerd, a former sub
stitute, being the others tried. .Capt.
Howe has gone back to his former seat
at No. G, but nothing has beon de
cided about the permanent stroke.
Illinois.
URBANA, 111., Dec. 1 a. George
Huff's Illinois baseball nine, which in
past years defeated Yale, Princeton,
Pennsylvania, West Point, Amherst
and Williams imd only lost to Har
vard on the djaniond, will bo pitted
against anothor eastern nine this sea
son. Pennsylvania state college, one or
the best nines in the cast, is anxious
to try conclusloiiB with the Illinl and
negotiations aro ponding for a game
on Illinois Hold cither May 21 or 22,
during tho big Intei-scholastlc 'athletic
carnival. The collegians will mako a
western trip and want to moot the
Ullni.
As they are scheduled to piny all the
big teams In tho oast, the Illinois fans
welcome tho game as a means of com
paring the college baseball strength
of the east and west.
Yesterday's report that a football
game had been dated with Marquetto
wnB Incorrect. No games nt all have
been scheduled.
Chicago.
CHICAGO, Dec. 14. Maroon ath
letics will be boomed this week by
Coach A. A. Stagg, who returned yes
terday from a trip to Colorado, where
he has been sojourning since the Denver-Carlisle
football game of December
5. He announced that he would get to
work on the Midway schedules today
and that ho would have the track pro
gram finished before Christmas.
The coach spent most of last week
in learning the ways of the mountain
climber. Ho attained the modest
height of 9,500 feet on Mount Bellevue
at Idaho Springs, Col., and made num
erouB less uinbltlous excursions. He
declared he would make up for his
outing by putting In a strenuous week
at his office at Dartlott gymnasium.
Coach Stagg wishes to close arrange
ments with the teams he will have on
his winter track schedule Immedi
ately. Illinois Is already practically
assured for two meets, and Wisconsin
and Purdue are tho other western
probabilities for tho Indoor track sea
son. Coach Stagg has not heard from
Cornell In regnrd to tho Cornell-Maroon
winter meet, which ho expected
to arrange when he roturned from
Philadelphia after Thanksgiving.
REVIEWS OF FRIDAY'S DEBATE.
Nebraska Judges Will Tell What Was
Done at the Contest.
Ileies of last Friday's contests in
given today at 1 o'clock In U 107A.
tlu central debating league will be
Dean Henry B. Ward and Prof. H. H.
Wilson, who were judges of tho Iowa
Wlsconsln debate at Iowa City, will
speak on it; Prof. W. G. L. Taylor,,
Who served with Prof. G. E. Howard
and Albert Watklns at Minneapolis,
will review the Iowa-Minnesota con
test, and ProT. Edwin Mnxey, who ac
companied the Nebraska team to Mad
ison, will tell about the Nobraska-Wls-consin
debate. The meeting will be
open to students generally and to
members of the facility.
on High Cuts
$3.50
half of thorn.
Only twelve "M's" have beon award
ed to football men nt Michigan this
year.
Tho Oval club at Washington state
will buy a cabinet for varsity em
blems. Three now concrete tennis courts
have Just been begun on the California
campus.
One of tho literary sociotles at In
diana has published a history of tho
university.
The sophomore girls at Michigan
inslBt that the freshmen girls wear
green sunbonncts.
Nine hundred and twenty-two are
registered in the Massachusetts Insti
tute of Technology.
Tho University of Knnsas claims to
rank second among universities in the
matter of extension work.
The Knnsqs students have started a
sale of Capt. Crowell's pictures they
have disposed of ill so far. .
The '08 class at Missouri gave a
loan fund as a class memorial and
$200 is on hand at present.
An all-star dance is to bo held at
Kansas to which only the most grace
ful dancers are to bo Invited.
Tho Western Law club of tho Uni
versity of Washington has 'secured a
charter in Delta Chi, tho legal fra
AffAIR IS A SUCCESS
OLD MAIDS HAVE HARMONIOU8
CONVENTION.
MEET UNSOPHISTICATED MEN
8oclal Affair of Y. M. C. A. Proves To
Be Popular and May Be Re
peated in the Near
Future.
Tho flrBt of a number of social
affairs was given Inst Saturday even
ing by the Y. M. C. A. and tho Y. W.
C. A. The entertainment took the
form of an old maids' convention, but
after the convention finished its busi
ness the people all adjourned to the
Y. W. C. A. rooms, where an Informal
entertainment was provided.
Tho convention proper wns held in
tho temple theatre, and about 300
were present to witness the delibera
tions of that august body. This part
of the entertainment was declared by
all to be a greut success and was
carried off without a hitch.
Wear Appropriate Costumes.
Tho old maids in attendance at the
convention were costumed in a man
ner appropriate to the occasion nnd all
who had failed to safely reach the
matrimonial harbor, whether "long or
short, fat or thfn, pretty or homely,'
were welcomed with open arms. One
of tho features of the evening was a
machine which guaranteed to fulfill
the wish of the old maid truthful
enough to correctly tell her age.
After the conclusion of tho conven
tion "the winsome maids practiced
their wiles upon tho unsophisticated
men," and It Is confidently believed
that the ranks of the fair maids were
seriously depleted. At any rate every
one declared that they had had the
best of good times.
Affair Is Enjoyable.
Tho affair was the first joint social
function of the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W.
C. A. that has been given this year,
and wns a great success. Tho even
ing wns spent in an entirely informal
manner and resulted in many people
broadening their circle of acquaint
ances. It Is expected that other so
cial affairs of the same nature will fol
low In the near future.
Tho members of the second team at
California this yenr have been denied
emblems because in the paBt tho men
have not warn them and have not
seemed to appreciate them.
The Syracuse Y. M. C. A. is soon
to try a mock breach of promise suit.
In which Constance Hope sues Gay
Deceiver.
I
UNIVERSITY JEWELER & OPTICIAN
C. A. Tucker
JEWELER
S. S. Shean
OPTICIAN
1123 0 STREET. YELLOW FRONT
Your Patronage Solicited
COLLEGE
TAILORS
COLLEGE VIEW
ORDER
ET-
Hot Lunohofl
&64'&7V
1307 0 St.
WE WANT YOUR FRAT TRADE
We can give you the best
Capital Grocery $H.i!ffis 1435 M St.
8TUDENT8 LIVE IN LUXURY.
American at Oxford Thinks Life There
Is Too Easy.
Morrison Beall Giffen, a Missouri
college union scholar at tho University
of Missouri last yaar and now a
Rhodes scholar at Oxford, has written
an Interesting letter to tho head of
tho Cosmopolitan club, of which he
was a charter member and the first
chairman.
Mr. Giffen says that during the last
two months he has beon kept busy
preparing for an examination which
he must take before the Christmas
holidays.
Oxford hns a peculiar system of ex
aminations. There are three examina
tions only during tho entire course,
one for entrance,' one In the middle
of the course, and one at the end.
Life is very easy at Oxford perhaps
too easy thinks Giffen. There are ser
vants for everything. A day's pro
gram begins at 7:30 o'clock in the
morning when a servant wakes the
student nnd gets his bath ready.
Breakfast Is brought Into tha room
at 8:30.
From 9 o'clock to noo'n the student
is supposed to study. At 1 o'clock, a
light lunch is brought into his room.
At 2 o'clock he goes out for physical
exercise and may not return until
about 5. Then conies the afternoon
tea, to which one usually invites a
friends.
Dinner Is served at 7 In the common
dining room, where students and
teachers dine together. The place In
which Giffen has dinner Is a big fine
room with a high celling. The sides
are paneled Iji oak and hung with the
portraits of ancient benefactors of the
college. The silver used at the table
Is -from 50 to 300 years old. After din
ner, the students usually go out to
amuse themselves.
Giffen will spend his Christmas holi
days In Germany.
Iowa university has started basket
ball practice. She says lier prospects
are the brightest in three years.
Hot Drinks
are now In season. Do you know
any place where you can get as
..Quick Service..
as you can at our new store? No
need of being crowded.
Lincoln Candy
Kitchen s. w.hctr er
SUIT OR O'COAT
made to order
No di No
More M,1 Less
any stvlo you wish
Tlej
9
WORLD'S'LARGEST TAILORS
133 S. 13th St. M. M. Crandall, Mgr.
Lincoln, Neb.
QlElWlBSr
BEST TAILORING
at the
BEST PRICES
Auto Phone 48
YOUR PUNCH AT FflLSMI'S
a. finpm'nltxr
' Candies ancf Ses.
Phoms: Auto 2214, Bill 466.
prices, best goods, best service
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