??W?' ' IB ; . -M u I w THE DAILY NEBRAIKAN AV X, U ? r tM. W ' THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THB PltOPBIlTY OP TUB UNIVXJKglTtt, OP NBBIIA8KA, Liheoln? Nobraoka, i i i i Published by ' TUB BTUDBNT PUBLICATION HOAUD EDITORIAL STAFF. Editor ... ..."i ...,.i... C. J. LORD Managing Mor........Q. T. LIDDJCLT-AKela"tJSdltor.,.,-...TV J HAROHAXI'l AsB0clat6 Editor. A. H. DINSMOIU3 BUSINB8S STAFF. Manager , ...a. 0. KIDDdO Afisistnnt Manager,,. ....V. C. IlASCALL Circulation Manager.. C. C. BUCHANAN Etllterlal anri Business Offices BASEMENT, ADMINISTRATION DLDQ. P&ftsfttee, Station A, Lincoln, Neb. SUBSCRIPTION fRICE, $2.00 PER YEAR fyabl In Advance. Single Copies, G Cents Each. .Telephone! Auto 1088. Night Phones Auto 1888; Auto 2083; Bell 1123. INDIVIDUAL NOTICES will bo charged for ut the. rate of 10 conta the insurtlon for every fifteen words or fraction thoro of. Faculty notices and University bul letins will gladly bo publlnhcd free. Entered at t)o poatodlco at Lincoln, Nebraska, aa Hocond-clnHB mall matter, timler the Act of .CongWBB of March 3, 1879. Advertisements for the want column should, badeft at the business office, base ment Administration building, between 10 a, .m, ana 12 m., or between 2 p, m. and 5 p. m. v Cash, must accompany all orders for ad vertising, at the rato of ten cents for each fifteen "wore -or fraction thereof the first Insertion; three Insertions twenty flve cental five .Insertions forty cents. wnmn m !! ii ' ' " ' OCTOBER 20, 1910. rrho more walks that aro built tho" mora 'tho studonta of thla Institution wilf poYsist In "cutting acroBo." Porhaps tho student who has boon wiBhlng for cooler wcathor so that ho could' study commenced to work ycB torday.' Schodl .has been In session for nearly a month now and still no-university hops have been hold'. Who said that Nebraska students Bpont all their time, in social affairs? Tho girls' mass meeting which "will bo held, this morning Ib a step in the many privileges in this Bchool as the men. That' they should have nothing to do with athletics is an idea which "" should ho abolished. The paily Iowan comes forth this week with1 a curt bit of irony on the' crowd who .watched tho football game last Saturday between Iowa and Mis souri, in which tho Hawkeyes were defeated, It appears to be a caso of tho pot calling tho kettle black. Can you remember, iowans, when you were 'beaten .on your own field by tho Cornhuskers several years ago and f SWEATER COATS i your rooters wero so peevish ovor tho defeat that 'they cbperod tho Nebras ka players vvfth a showeTb7rbrickB and 'tender remarks that would hot loolrwelMn print? WITHHbLDINQ GRADES. , Perhaps the plan suggeB'ted of with holding grades on rhetoric themes is all right, but tho students cannot see it that way. ,lt is only fair that the university student should know what his work is graded. Non-publicity of grades is 'all, right iQ a high school, but not- in a university. - GET READY FOR DENVER. Denver I the ,iroxt lamb.- to bo of. fered up on ' iho Nebraska altar. Whether it will kick hard enough" to ret away as did Minnesota remains to be seen. "However, It is tho duty' of every . Cornhusker tocomo out and show the defenders of the Scarlet and 4 tJream that every student is with them," They need your support Tou Meed their spirit of never giving In. The time has come for old Nebraska , to flock around the good old, colors vfd fight, fight, fight! Wevef say lVe1 v Tt is' only fair to the university, to the team and to yourself that you go to the football field Saturday ,and v eheer'lor Nebraska as you have never thtere'Oefore. Moln hands, students CONVOCA TION TOD A Y Silence Dales-Knapp 'Violin Recital TEMPLE of tho -University of Nebraska, and show tho world that this is a school for men and women, who fight to the last for tho Scarlet and Cream. DR. HOHLFELD 8PEAK8. Points Out Changes In Germany Since War In 1870. . Prof. A. It. Hohlfold, head of tho de partment of Germanics of tho Univer sity of Wisconsin, delivered a lecture Tuesday evening in tho Temple audi torium on tho subject of "Impressions of Modonj .Germany.'1 Tho lec'turo consisted of impres sions of tho European nation that he gained during a year which ho spent in tho kaiser's empire. Ho stated thai Germany was no longer to bo consid ered as a minor factor in the decision of international affairs. Professor Hohlfolt stated that at the beginning of tho nineteenth century Germany was looked upon as a nation for tho cultivation of idealists .and en thuBlasts. Many thought ''tor a long time afterwards of it only as a Jand of idealistic thought and romantic poetry. Slncp tho war of 1870 with France, Germany has .developed from an agricultural country Into a com mercial- power. This change has left its mark on the German people, and as a result there haB been many alterations in tho oxternal appearance of tho people and their surroundings. Professor Hohlfeld said that he notedthat thla changciftd'Tiot'b'eW'sp marked in the organizations of tho great German universities. That a large amount of tho roughnesB o forty years ago had bocn abolished, but at tho present timo tho students still maintained the life and dash that had marked thol? lifo in tho middle of the nineteenth century. Professor Hohlfeld also pointed oui NIFTY, NOBBY, ALL WOOL 1415 O STREET that the pooplo of Germany wefe growing in spirit, and concluded with tho generalization that people can maijatalntbQliyJiwiwerso.long. jib .thoy contlnuV.ytWln"siJltIt Coach Reed of Cornoll created a sensation at Cornell because he called off varsity practice. Theroason was that half 'the regular team did not re port,' The cdachesVhave gbfce on d Btrik'e. 1 'A't "cJbrneH"tne college work of tho .men breaks up the practice, I many being unable to report until I late in tho afternoon. The coaches say no more work until a definite ar rangomeat is made whereby tho men can practice every night. ' A. Cleveland memorial .monumentis "to bo erected on the. golMinks. at Princeton. It Is to take the form of a tower about 160 feet- high and 40 feet square at the base. It will stand on the ground of tho old Princeton battlefield 'of the tovolution, and is A very appropriate place, both bis torJcallyiaB&'for Us scenic environ tteht. ikWdlcal cbaige htS'beeii mU la th,a attendance rules' at Williams the maximum number of cuts allowed now totals one' week of work- in each sem ester. ' - , " 4' V- ' it . II A. M. COMING EVENTS All University organizations are re quested to send in announcement! which they desire to have published. Organizations. Dramatic club try-outs will be hole Thursday, October 20, Phi Alpha Tau will meet In science hall in tho Temple, Thursday at 6:3( p. m. The. University Men's Glee chili wi(l glvo a dinner tonight at tho Liu doll hotel. The Catholic Students' club wll. give a recoptlon Friday evening in- tlu Knights of ColumbUB hall. Tho Agricultural club will meet Sat urday for election of officers. Tho German club will meet tonight at tho homo of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Relnsch, "30D" North 24Ih7 street. Elec tion of new merahera. Union Literary sociutl will meot Frl day evening in Union hall of. tho Tern pie building. An alumni program wll. bo given. The sixty-first regular meeting ol the Nebraska section of the American- Chemistry society will bo held In the chemistry lecture room Saturday, Oc tpber 22, at 8 p. m. Rd, C. F. Crowlej will apeak. His subject is, "A Con tract of the Natural Resources of Ne braska Compared with Thoso of the Pacific Coast States." Committee0, Meetings. Sdphomore hop comraltteo will meet at 11:40 today in U112. The Olympics committeemen from tho 'senior and . junior classes will meet at 11 o'clock this morning in JJ1.06. Athletics. 'Football,' Denver" ys. Nebraskn, Sat prday, October 22. $2.50 BUDD Girls' mass meeting will bo held at Memorial ball at' 11:30 thiB morning. Classes. ...Junior-, class. meeting will be-held in thoTTemple theater'at 11:30 a. m. to day. The 'much discussed rulo compell ing fraternities' and sororities to pledge only sophomoreB haB been abandoned Tfor"thlBy"ear at the Unl versity' of -Kansas. Records for tho first year showed that the fraternity and sorority students made highor scholarship averages than those out side. Tho senior class at Illinois has in itiated a movemont looking to the abolishment of final examjqatlons in tho second semester of the senior year. Moving pictures of Interesting fea tures of campus activities are to be exhibited thronghout the state of M'issouri for tho purpoBe of advertis ing the university. ' Harvard, in an effort to win the in tercollegiate cross-country race thlt year, has employed as coach of the lorg distance rhnners Alfred Shrubb who holdB many of the professional recordr, from one o twelve miles, Work Callod For and Dolivorod Students Work aSpecialty lAiricisor Sultoriiirri Opon Saturday Night All Night t WOLFE- & YOUNG Stills Cleaned and Pressed 41.25 Piceeed BOo Auto 4728 FRATERNITIES & We Want Your Goal Orders. Give Us a Trial Order. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED WHITEBREAST COMPANY 1106 0 STREET AUTO 3228. BELL 234 Typewriters ALL MAKES SOLD OR RENTED Rent applied on purchase price. lTwoyear written guar antee with every machine sold. Distributers New Model, L. C. Smith .& Bros, visiable. Call or write for catalogue and special price list. Auto Phone 2080. ' Bell Phone 1299. B. F. 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