The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 09, 1909, Image 2
k t DAILY NEBRAS y y.1" jw , f ! F ft . -v.j;3:?"!gi. ' ! i I fi if,r ' the foaily Nebraskan ' 'yTHrt PROPEIlTy OP TIII3 UNIVERSITY OP NBBUA8KA, . - ( Lincoln, NqlmmKn. pV jyilB STUDENT PUD. BOARD. RDITORIfL STAFF. 'Editor Victor B. Smith Ma'naglno. Editor ..K. P. Frederick ttMOoTnte Editor Carl J. Lord Auoclate Editor T. M. Edgecombe BU8INE88 8TAFF. Manager W. A. Jonee Aulatant Manager Q. C. Klddoo Circulator V. C. Haioall Atilitant Circulator P. T. Sturgla t , Editorial and Bualnels Office! BA8EMENT, ADMINISTRATION BLDQ. Poitjfflce, Station A, Lincoln, Neb. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $2.00 PER YEAR Payable In Advance. ' Single Copies, 0 Cents Each. Telephone: Auto 1088. Night Phonea Auto 1888; Auto 2083. . 1- INDIVIDUL NOTICE8 will bo clmraod for nt thoTato of 10 cents per Insortion for ovory fifteen wordB or frnotlon thoro of. Faculty notices nnd Unlvoralty bul letins will bladly bo publlshod froo. Entered nt tho pOBtofflco at Lincoln, Nobraska, ns Bocond-clnnH mall matter under tho Act of Conffross of March 8, 1879. Advertisements for tho want ad column 6hould be left at the business office, basement Administration build Ing between 10 a. m., and 12 m., or between 2 p. m., and 5 p. m. Cash must accompany all orders for want ads, at the rate of ten cents for each fifteen words or fraotlon there of, the first Insertion; three Inser tions twenty-five cents; five Inser tions forty cents. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1909. KAN8A8 THE VICTOR. Six to nothing. Thnt Is the tnlo of Saturday's game. Dosnlto all tho work of loyal students In preparation for Kansas, tho Jay hawkers won. Nebraska was again beaten by her long-tlmo rlvalB. Kansas won fairly and squaroly. Let there ho no talk of "luck" and tho like, and assert that it was that which did tho winning. Luck Kansas certainly did have, more, perhaps, than did Ne braska. But she also hud a Tommy Johnson, which Nobraska didn't. With perfect Justlco NubraHka students may follow tho altitude of tho Kansas City Star, which bonded its report of tho game with the line, "Johnson Beat No braska." Let us give tho credit to Johnson rather than Kansas, if we wish, but lot us admit fairly that credit Is due. Johnson mado a sensa tional run, just tho sort of a run which lias won Nobraska games In tho past, BUDD $2.50 HATS-$2.50 and $3.50 SHOES and Popular Priced Furnishings. WHY PAY MORE? In tho days of Johnny Bender and oth ers. Let us admit that and do honor to ono of tho great football players of the west. FRE8HMAN MA88 MEETING. Tho freshmen are trying a unlquo idea In calling a mass mooting in prep aration for tho Olympic contest with tho sopliomoros next Saturday. Tho first year men believe It is just aB nec essary to have' a class spirit for a class contest as it Is to have Nobraska Bplrlt for an Intercollegiate game. Consequently they Intend to lose no chance of developing tho winning grit. Tho call for a mass mooting tonight has been Issued by President Wherry and it is to be hoped that the fresh men will attend In large numbers. If no other reason than novolty can bo assigned for the success of that un dertaking, that should bo Bufllclont. So original an enterprise, original at Ne braska at least, should not be allowed to fall. HAVE YOU HEARD THE NOI8E? Prom the gonoral tono of tho fol lowing comment by tho San Francisco Argonaut, ono might think that Chan collor Avery is attempting strenuous reforms .In the university of which ho is the' lead. So far as is known in Lincoln thero has boon, no unusually noisy housocleaning about the campus, and it is to be doubted whether there i 'any intended, other than the grad ual systematica dropping of undesir ables which nrqtioeds ordinarily under ,the direction;, of the delinquency com , mittee, .'The Argonaut, in reviewing the OQC00OQ909Q9oSoSSwBRm9Q9,0 8 CONVOCATION, , -A W. M. li Tle QencVa Jubilee11 000000000000QGO000K000 chancellor's opening address to tho students, says In part: "Tho Nobraska Stato University Is trying to weed out from Kb student body two classoB of undesirables; first, tlie swnggorlng tough, conspicuous for vulgarity in his manners and his .clothes; second, tho sissy boy who frivols away his tlmo, don't you know, In social and sentimental inanities. Strength to tho arm of those back of this movoment. Botween the profes sional rufllan nnd tho natural-born fool, modern collego life has becomo so cor rupted as to becomo a hindrance rather than a holp to the scholarly-ambitious youth of tho country. A col lege which can combine the modern spirit and teaching mothod with old fashioned scholarly enthusiasm will surely win for itself a great and use ful career." 8ET8 MEN FREE. "Education is the great liberalizing force," says Dean Vincent of the Uni versity of Chicago. "Education sots men free from fear. It liberates ono from the dull, sordid nnd potty rou tine of llfo, which Is so lacking In Im agination to many people Who have not had the opportunities of educa tion. "Liberal education emancipates ono from narrowness and prejudices. Last ly, it frees one from the limitations of IiIb own impulses, emotions, nnd pas sions, and emancipates him from his lower powers." In other words, Dean Vincent might In part express his thought by saying that education sets free and invlgor izostho Hcnslbilitles of man. The senses are realized without education, at least in part. With education the 1415 senso are made more acute and more highly refined. But the principal heritage of education is rather in its effect on the sensibilities than on the senses. It is the Bensiblllty of tho educated man which glveB him the Imagination to see that which the uneducated man cannot Bee. The unculturod man soeB no great power In Meredith, no beauty In Hawthorne. Through study and ac quaintance with men of knowledge, tho educated man Is able to appreciate the power and' beauty of the workB of these men and others of th.elr kind. Ho haB acquired a sensibility an understanding- which onnbles him to seo that which does not exlBt for tho unlettered man. But tho rule applies In a much moro practical manner. Tho man who Haa never had a tochnical education may look upon n groat bridge without a passing thought of tho triumph which is thero wrought by the engineering, skill of some other man. But the man who has been educated to an appreci ation of such things 1b able to under stand the labdr, the mental and phy sical toll, and tho genius which have combined, to. wield that structure out of the raw materials. In either case whether the thing in point be a work of art or of practi cal mechanics tho educated mat) sees something which tho man without the learning doeB pot realize. By his edu cation bo Is liberated "from the dull, sordid, and pptty routine of life," and Is enabled to see the greater, grander, nobler, things. And as the cultured man., ceiues to an' understanding of thesis higher things ho loses his; narrowness and H. Wilson TUESDAY his prejudices. Those are two things which cannot survivo a broadened view. His sonses, too, becomo loss important to him, for he has now con trived to find a new set of Impulses his sensibilities. Thus he is "freed from tho limitations of hlB own im pulses, emotions, and passions, , and emancipated from his lower nature." PROFE880R WJL80N WILL 8PEAK. Nebraska Representative at Geneva Jubilee to Tell of Meeting. At convocation thlB morning Profes Bor H. H. Wilson of the law college will speak on "The Jubilee of tho Uni versity of Geneva." Professor Wilson attended tho Jubilee as the representa tive of tho University of Nebraska. Tho celebration marker tho 350th an niversary of tho founding of the In stitution and tho 400th anniversary of tho birth of tho reformist, John Cal vin. GIRLS MEET TO 8AVE "RAT8." Pupils in Brooklyn School Will Ignore Principal's Edict. Two thouBnnd girls attending the Erasmus high school, Brooklyn, have hold a mass meeting at which they de cided to ignore an edict Issued by tho Isslstant principal prohibiting the wearing of "rats" and "puffs" In their hair. The order to discontinue tho use of such aids to feminine adornment cre ated such consternation that the girls held a mass meeting after school hours nnd agreed that the new rule would not be obeyed and that all girls who bo desired might continue the wearing tho puffs and rats and have the support of all the girl students. The school faculty has taken a de termined stand In the matter, and it is expected that a clash will result botween the pupils and tho teaching force. O TOF The Tailor JJLaj SPECIALIST ON Refitting and All Kinks of Altering Particular attention to ladies work and uniforms. CLEANING and PRESSING UPSTAIRS, 1328 O ST. LINCOLN November. 9, TuoBday, 7 p. m., Moinorlal Hall Freshman mass meeting. 9, Tuesday, 11 a. m U102 Intorclass athletic board. 110, Wednesday, 12 to 12:10 m., Y. M. C. A. rooms Divinity Club meets with .students preparing for min istry. j. 10, Wednesday, 6; 30, Lincoln Hotel Uplverplty Dinner Club. 11, Thursday, 8 p. m.-r-Dramatio Club try outs ' 11, Thursday, 9 a. m- Bpard of re gents meois' 12, Friday, 7 p. m., Memorial Hall Freshman mass meeting. 12, Frjday, 8:30 p, mf, Lincoln Hotel Junior hop. 19, Fifday, 8:30 p. m., Fraternity Hall Engineers hop. 20, BaturdayDenvor University vs. Nebraska, at Denver, 24, Wednesday, 6 p. m. Thanksgiving' recosrtyittaB. ' t 25, Thursday, NWraska Field-rHajkll' Indians yVNobraska. vi 80, Tuesday, S. m.-JThaBkacivingr. University Bulletin Sp5SSSSS55S5Si 1 1 WlfftM Y.TMe I BE 8 , ! ;- : : tk;.t , 8 Dress You Up --- Hi o , '. -v .. ?.. II r ft - .- 9 Mil Hill . H I AND HAS THE. FINEST T "I AND HAS LINE OF WINTER THE CITY. HIIUU , llll MkM - Sb '"c r Y ii i -By,. : - . ' ' 'J' I!1.1 1'. ,1 '" yr j-jiuxxx- iiutci1 vy 5 Nov. 12, f$ X X TICKETS 1.25 X ' t -1 ' ' ' ' " - - ' JUST RING UP! The Goodyear Raincoat Co's Tailors 1140 O Street $2.00 Worth of Cleaning and Pressing $1.00 Thoy will get your suit and bring it back in flno shnpo for only C0o or will sond you a Club Ticket good for four suits in ono month for $1.50. Wo havo a Now Dry Gleaning Plant to do tho work with. LADIES' FINE CLOTHES A SPECIALTY The Uni. Mandolin and Guitar Glub wants more members. An opportunity will be given everyone to join a club. Apply to BYRON W. WAY, University School ol Music, 11th & fi St. For Your Noon Lunch STOP AT THE F0LS0M Jnt what you want and served tho way yon liko It. Student' Trade Appreciated. Auto 2214 Doll 460 SEE OUR WOOLENS Elliott Bros. TAILORS 142 SOUTH TWELFTH NOTCH The "ARArNOTCH" makes the "BELMONT" an ARROW COLLAR sit perfectly 5c., 2 far 25c Cluett, Peabodjr ic Co,v Makers ARROW; CyFFS. 25,centM a, pair 'L'l'l" 'I r i T i. m OHlZC ftvr F-x&B,M' Know, How to ' - -1 I THE FINEST FALL AND GOODS IU : : : Y ': I 1307 O St. H n ' mi h' iiii j UN r He"makes good punch and serves first class light refreshments U-AU-No Tommy Find him at Herpolsheimer's w Advertisers i .V! ' i MWMWWI