fKZ DAILY Xf S BBADttAn The Daily Nebraskan THj! BEST UNIVERSITY NEWSPAPER IN THE WORLD EDITORIAL 8TAFF Eva Miller Editor-in-Chief George Grimes '. v .Managing Editor Vlvlenne Holland Associate Editor Ivan Beede ..Associate Editor Dwight P. Thomas Sporting Editor Agnes Bartlett Socletr Editor BUSINESS STAFF Walter Blunk Business Manager Homer Carson Assistant Business Manager REPORTORIAL 8TAFF Jean Burroughs Dorothy English Lenore Noble x Luclle BecVer C. H. Gribblo Gertrude Squires Roy Bedford Fern Noble Ralph Thorpe John c. Wright v Carolyn Reed Richard E. Cook Offices: News, Basement, University Hall; Business, Basement. Administration Building. Telephones: News, L-4841; Business, B-2597. Published every day during the college year. Subscription, per semester, $1. Entered at the postofflce at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second class mail matter tinder the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. The Iowa-Nebraska game will be played in the Temple theatre Sat urday afternoon as soon as the special leased wire can bring the re turns from Iowa City. The Daily Nebraskan has arranged for the special wire, with a Nebraskan reporter at the other end, to be run to the Temple theatre, where the returns from the game will be given out both vocally and by means of a bulletin. A blackboard will be placed on the stage and the ten-yard lines marked off on it. A marker will show the relative positions of the ball on the field. The details of the game will be announced by the re porter at this end of the wire. Students of journalism, members of Theta Sigma Phi, and Sigma Delta Chi, the professional Journalism sorority and fraternity, will sell tickets at five cents apiece to defray the expense of the wire. Any profit will be turned over to the European prison relief fund. To sit in a comfortable seat and to get the returns of the big game play by play before the city papers have them, and all for a nickel, that is the. opportunity that we will have Saturday. The engineering department will open night classes, after January first, for the shopmen and mechanics in Lincoln. The men who have never had the opportunity to become experts and are merely ordinary laborers, will be able to get the technical knowledge they need and the professors who have the classes will be doing a great good. The success of the courses has been assured by the demand of the men. That Kansas was determined to boat us Saturday is shown in a copy of the Daily Kansan for November IS. Here are some of the ideas they had: "Team Leaves to Win Conference Title; Rooters Follow Tonight "Real Kansas spirit Is running in veins of team and rooters. Predictions are for a game unequaled in 'fight' in six years. "Line-up for tomorrow's game presents strong front to Nebraska's line. Only one injured. "Large crowd at depot last night put final punch In men on squad. Team will spend day in rest before Husker game. "One thing is ce-tain. "The Cornhuskers cannot go on winning from Kansas every year. There must come a turn in the lane. "This year, Kansas followers believe, the Kansas Jayhawk will feed on Nebraska corn. "That's the sort of spirit which permeated the throng of Kansas rooters which gave the team a rousing sendoff at the Santa Fe station last night, even though the train was an hour late. That's the port of spirit which made the departure a warm one which sent the boys on their road to Lincoln feeling that the school stood behind them; that Kansas was proud of the men who are to represent her on the Nebraska field tomorrow. "That's the sort of spirit that has made Kansas famous. That's the sort of spirit that will make her football team fight to the last ditch. That's the sort of spirit that will make tomorrow's victory If it Is one all the more glorious because it has been so long denied. "It's Our Turn "Tradition has made the Kansas-Nebraska conflict a classic in valley football. The two institutions have been battling away for supremacy for nearly a quarter of a centnry, and Nebraska, Kansas must admit, has had the edge. This year, however, the Jayhawk will have his turn. Kansas adherents are firm in their belief that their team will win tomorrow. "With the exception of Palkowsky, there is not an injured man on the squad which left for Lincoln last night; and Kansas may well hope for a royal battle tomorrow. Her team is fit. "Team Optimistic " 'We're going to win,' Captain Lindsey told a group of his personal friends before his departure last night. 'We've got the stuff this year, and we're going to win.' " FORUM To the Editor of the Daily Nebraskan: Your editorial in the "Nebraskan" under date of the 20th last., comment ing upon the recent Kansas-Nebraska football game deserves comment. The game is said to have been a "psycho logical victory." We outplayed our opponents, we were defeated because we were courteous enough to place the "three hundred strong from Kan sas in a body and in a favorable location. To our minds, these statements, ven If correct, evidence a spirit which is hardly representative of the student body. Certainly a majority of the tndents at this University are able to take defeat in a proper spirit. The representative paper of the students is not representing the student body when it voices such a sentiment as was set forth in the editorial above referred to but is misrepresenting the true attitude of the students. It may be that it was a psychological victory, or some other mysterious, hidden or obtruse reason, perfectly apparent to yourself, may have defeated our splendid team, but tfter all, the only I plausible reason lor tne defeat to a great portion of those present is that Nebraska faced an able team which outplayed her at a critical time. Let us all join hands, not to beat psychology, but to support our team. ROBT. B. WARING, W. F. HETLER, L. W. KLINE, J. G. YOUNG, CHAS. SCHOFIELD. 1 Let's Slioiv Thorn That WE CAM ' Do It By a Roal Live Bote Q nn n AT ' JV hi) 11 U wwm m TRR Reseras Your Seat Once! South Dleacher 16) UNIVERSITY NOTICES Christmas Awgwan The Christmas Issue of Awgwan will be published early so as to avoid the rush. Do your Christmas shop ping early and send in your contribu tions for the Christmas edition as soon as possible. Today is a myth, get busy, forthwith; today is a fact, act, man, act. Old Man Awgwan. Lutheran Students The University Lutheran Students' club meets Saturday evening, at $ o'clock in Faculty hall, Temple. Visi tors are welcome. D. G. V. Initiation D. G. V. initiation Thursday even ing at home of Anna Luckey. Take state farm car from Temple at 7:30 or 7:45, go to end of car line and walk one block east. All old mem bers are requested to pay their dues. XI Delta There will be a meeting of Xi Delta at the Y. W. C. A. room, Wed nesday at 5 p. m. , Senior Football The senior football team will prac tice Wednesday afternoon at 4 p. m. The first interclass game, seniors vs. Juniors, wil ltake place Friday afternoon. News Writing Assignment Those members .who were unable to attend convocation, November 14, and report the address by Rev. Dr. Gilkey will report the lecture on "Mexico," by Lincoln Stef- fens at All Souls church, Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. Tables will be provided for their use. Same instruc tions (see bulletin board, U. 206), as for covering the Gilkey address. M. M. FOGG. STUDENT'S PHOTOS AT BLAZEK'S From 75c to $20 per dozen, 1306 O St THE DAYS GONE BY Five Years Ago Today Girls were to be admitted at the Cornhusker banquet for the first and last time. Business men in Lincoln were sub scribing money lor the extension of the University campus. Nebraska was making big prepara tions for the coming Michigan game. The Lincoln Commercial club was helping decorate the city streets. Michigan alumni established quarters at the Lincoln hotel, where a commit tee received the visiting Michiganders. Two Years Ago Today The first freshman girls' party was held at the Armory. A sheep experiment was being con ducted at the State Farm. The ex periment lasted 100 days. A similar experiment had been started at North Platte. One Year Ago Today Thirty-nine pledges were announced by twelve sororities at mid-semester pledging. Prof. R. G. Clapp announced the organizing of a faculty gymnasium class. Meal ticket $5.50 for $4-50. Newbert Cafe, 137 No. 12th St Classified Advertising LOST Four Prc-medic hop tickets; nu. nbers are known, no don't try to j : ss them, hetnrn to studen ai'v ities oflice CO SO LOST Open-faced gold watch. Wal tham thin model, and tlii'i. .'nft ials "O. H. D." on bac . Lost at Antelope i rk Olympics Satuiday morning. Return to Brown Doyle, Undcrtak";. Reward. . 50 IT WILL PAY YOU to, consult us. about your eyes. My advice i a unprejudiced and costs you nothing. W. H. MARTIN, O. D. Optometrist EYESIGHT SPECIALIST, 1234 O St Opposite Miller & Paine's How About Those College Men in Europe ? If you are interested in giving them a lift, and make things a little easier for them, cut out this form, fill in the blanks and leave it at the Student Activities Office or the "Rag" office: Fund for the Students and their Comrades in the Prison Camps of Warring' Europe In consideration of the gifts of other American stu dents for the. relief of students and their comrades in the Prison Camps of Warring Europe, I promise to pay the sum of Dollars by December 8th. NAME ADDRESS ... Papable to W. C. BLUNK, Student Activities Office, University of Nebraska. Don't let Nebraska be a back number in lending a hand to those who need it most. "A boost by EVERYONE makes a big job look small." u thoughtless talker is like a blank cartridge. He makes a loud noise but never hits th target. When you stop to think, it's little wonoer that VELVET is so good. Every bit of it has been naturally agmtt for two years. 1L 1UL 3Efc 3 3tL4cfent Register for tout musio work at THE UNIVESITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC Twenty-Third Year just commencing . Many teachers in all branches of music to choose from. Dramatic Art Aesthetic Dancing Ask for information WTT.T.ARD KIMBALL, Director 11th and R Sts. Opposite the Campus CHAPIN BROS. 127 So. 13th St lOVVerS ALL THE TIME THE Telephone 82311 33S North 12th St. Cleaners, Pressors, Dysrs For the "Work and Service that Pleases." Call B2311. The Best dnipped Dry Cleaning: Plant in the WeL One day service It needed. Reasonable Price, good work, prompt eerrice. Repairs to men'a garments carefully made. . LET A NEBRASKAN WANT AD do It for yon. Find yon employment hire your help (or 70a find that lost article P"t yon In touch with a trade on that motor cycle. Old Book, eta. See T. A. Williams, basement Adm. Bldg. 12 words 10c yso for each additional word, t Insertions 25e