THE DAI Ii V NT EHRA8KAN Nebraskan i h. ll h"' Tm-l,i.v, We.lmvs.l.iv, Mk by the I nlwrHltv (,f NVI.iaska. Acwiitml for mnlltin nt i.-vlnl n .l posiiik-.. pr.tvt.ltMl f.r In KiM-iinii llo;l. A." V,' 'lu ''r 1Ul7' hoilit.l Jnmiurv an I'fHIIAI. IMVKKNITV I'mlir lit dlrm-llon of ! I'l lll.ll A rio III NliuliMit I'lih. iiratiun Iloati.. l'.iit. ml na icoiiU-cIiibn nuttier til tlif p.mlolflo,. lu Lincoln, N,.irl(n. uuJrr the Actiif longrogg, March 8. 1N71I. ttnhmrlnllun rat i a nr Sl.g.'l a lllrit( Hlnl ropy j-v ,t Ad.ln-m all cmnniiinlcnitonH to THE DAILY NK.UKASK.W Station A, Lincoln, N,-b, TEI.l:rilUN K I'nlverally Hi Kvrnlnaa Miss Editorial mill bimtntMni offlvn In koiiiIi. west oornor of bnmiiicut of AiluiliiWirii tlon Hull. linn. Itolld Far man K.IKu: Office Hours 10-11 ami 4-3 .lal'.y Herbert llrnwnrll, Jr. . Offjrc hour. 8 to (!, Wcilnemlit.v, TluirBilay, .. Manattlnic Editor Monday, Tiu'siliiy. Saturday. Marjnrle Wynmn Aimorliil? Editor Ed word llu.-fc Mitlit Editor Hubert E. l'rnl . Mitlit Kditor t'barlra A. Mll. licll Null! Killliir Cliauncry Klny , Office llotirs- . Ilunlnrmi M.iimncr I to Pally. 1 tllfford M. lll.k., Enk E. Fry AfuTt. HuMlino Mitniiir.'r Circulation MuniiKer Mglu Eduor for till lNur, Robert F. Craig. Hanard Huffott . AIMnnt Miilit Editor THE GIRLS' CHANCE. The girls who hold student tikets for the Kansas Aggie game Saturday will be seated in the reserved sect'.r.ii on the North side ot the field. The section which it is customary for girls to fill will be given over to the men of the school and their Dads. It is expected that the south bleach ers will be filled solidly with men football enthusiasts, old and young. From their point of vantage on the opposite side of the field, the girls will be able to get the full effect ot the unified cheering of the men of the University. In their regular places doing their best to follow the cheer leader in the yells, the girls have not had the opportunity to hear how the cheering sounds from a distance. Dads' Day has Incidentally given the girls this chance. At the game Saturday, the girls will also be able to show just how they can give the Nebraska yells and sing "The Cornhusker" without the stimulating influence of the meu rooters In the adjoining sections Though the girls cannot pretend to put the volume Into the yells which men's voices give, they should make it up in melody in singing. The girls' section will need good cheer leaders. If the regular Univer sity cheer leaders are needed to lead the cheering on the south side, spe cial men w women cheer leaders should be appointed for the girls' section. "The girls are anxious to help make Dads' Day a success at this institu tion. The way the girls sing and the way they cheer will contribute to the impressions made on the guests by the Cornhusker school. BUSY. The busy American is either very busy or else he is utterly wasting his time. We may offer a defense for the lounge lizard and we may of fer a defence for the incessant work tr, but after all we are but creat.ires of environment. Onr ideal is rroh ably the representative person of our nation, who. not unlike his brothers, is also a victim of circumstances. However, an education tends to break down that age-old observation and we are able to make ourselves what ever we would be. Dartmouth has picked out two hun dred undergraduate students as a fair representation of the entire col lege and has sent them quest :onnalr8 to get an estimate of the manner in which the average student spends his time. Many people will probably express f-urprise that the student is so busy. There Is no one but Yc who has been a student !n a University that realizes just bow busy the aver age student can be and usually is. Tie 1s mocked by comics as livirg a life ef ease, but let some r.f those who mock the student around for but one day and on ennld venture that some one would go home mum bling. "I don't see how they do it," or words to that effect. Oilier colleges will take a second ary place tomorow when the Bnsl ness Administration college celebrates the annual "Bizad" Day. This com paratively new college, which .as grown so rapidly since its inception, has made an enviable record. This dav held early in the college -oar tcm rive the students of the college an opportnnlty to become ac nnainted with their college associates It will help materially in creating a unified college spirit. tta nress agents are certainly de im attractions which win be provided at the Military Carnival In .o,tr, termi. The Armory should twa rka Saturday evening. " No one could resist the lcre ot nch enter tainment. Contemporary Opinion Dlaoers of the Pest. Archaeology has limited following n this eoontry. and la held In a mars ot less Jocular Ught by the average The Daily r rZ?ttWt T! llZZ KMIUI'Ill. Ill" li-in.n ....v. i'. v cuputloiris delving aiming the ruins of the past Is frequently looked upon as a hopeless old fogy. Kew students ever consider seriously this profes sion as n life work. Hut tho eonirl buttons made by nrchsiologolsts to our modern Ivili.alton tiro ns great ns those made by scientists in othor fields and are of inestimable value to the student of history, art, or litera ture. The life ot the earliest recorded races who inhabited the region cen tering around the Nile river and the valley of the Tigres and Euphrates would be almost a closed book to us were It not for the excavations of archaeologists. The art of primitive people can be studied today largely because of tho copies of statues, paint ings, and works ot sculptors unearth ed by archaeologists. The recovery of ancient manuscripts, which were writ ten about the time of Terlclos giving us the foundation of medieval and modern literature, is largely due to archaeologists. Max Shiemnnn. w,ho excavated the region around the ancient city of I Troy, finding innumerable valuable vaes and works of art and bringing I . hm ihn existence of n civilization which had hern unknown, before, was an archaeologist, as was Howard Hullcr, a graduate of Princeton uni versity, who recently lost his life In n successful nnest for the coitrs of King Croesus ot I.ydia among the bur ied cities of the Syrian desert. Possibly, the apathy ot students to wards this science may be explained by the fart that it is practically im pi ssible to give very adequate train ing in archaeology in a college course in any more direct method than that supplied by a classical education. Hut while the accomplishments of archae ologists have been great, only a small part of what is to be accomplished has already been achieved. Archaeol ogy Is a science which is worthier of a larger following among university graduates Michigan Daily. U-NOTICE v.,ticc ef pcncral Interest will be orlnted In tlii column for two consccu- ivc da!. opy should be in the iirakan office by five oclock Kappa Phi Meeting. Kappa Phi open meeting. Address by Dr. Huntington, Thursday, Novem ber 16, at 7 o'clock. Social Science, :o5. Dads' Day Reservations. Dads' Day tickets may now be re served in blocks or individually either at the Student Activities office or at Tucker-Shean's. A. S. A. E. Regular A. S. E. A. meeting Novem her 18 at 7: SO p. m.. In A. E. hall, Agricultural College campus. Teachers' College Mass Meeting. Mass meeting of all Teachers' col lege students who do not belong to either the "Kindergarten Primary Club" or "Secondary Education Club" at Social Science Auditorium on Thursday November 16 at 4 o'clock. Co. H. The following men are selected to fire on the rifle range this week m inter-company match: 1. Foss, V. 2. Smetana, L. ?,. IChlers, H. 4. CiiiTier. R. ',. Craig. R. F. Sigma Gamma Epsilon. Sigma C.amma Epsilon will meet Thursday at 7:30. in the Museum. All m.-mbrrs are expected to be present. Scabbard & Blade. P.egular meeting. Nebraska hall, r.iom '.. Thursday, November 13, t 7:20. Members need not appear in uniform. Student Council. Regular meeting. Social Science 107, o clock Thursday. Menorah. Regular meeting Sunday, November 19. Faculty hall, 8 oclfxK. itoi. Stepanek will be the principal speaker Industrial Luncheon. Rev. Slocumb ot Haveloclt will sneak on "The Principles Underlying bn Railroad Strike." Grand hotel. Friday, November 17. Calendar Thursday, November 15. Y. W .C. A. staff dinner, Ellen Smith hall. c P A meetlne. 7:30 V. m.. A. E. hall. . Green Goblin meeting, 7:15 p. m Thl Delta Theta house. Tjittioran business meetin a. 7 p. nu Social Science 107. Dramatic club, Clnb Room, 7:15 Friday, November 17. Union closed meeting 8:30 p. m. "Bizad" Day. Kappa Alpha Theta freshman party, Chapter house. Alpha Omicron PI freshman party. Chapter house. Saturday, November IS. Football KansM Aggiea vs. Ne- I braska. Scabbard and nindo. Military Car nivtil. the Armory. Acoclti house dance, Sigma Cht party, Ellen Smith hall. Alpha Sigma Phi fall party, Com mercial club. "Dads' Day" luncheon, Armory. KomeiiHky club mooting, Faculty hall, Tcmplo. Minnesota Students Return From Eight Thousand Mile Trip After travelling 8,000 miles since July, visiting four countries, buying and selling two cars, and working nt a number of different Jobs, Jack 0. Smalley and Paul Stoner, former Minnesota students, returned to Min neapolis yesterday for a short stay. They will leave soon for San Fran cisco and tho Orient. Mr. Smalley, who aroused comment last year whtiu he announced his in tention of taking the trip, recount ed oxperieiues which ranged from working as n lumberjack in tho northern wooks to climbing coconnut trees in Costn Rica. The jaunt which he completed Sunday Is "Just an ex cursion" in comparison with the one which he will soon begin he said. The Minnesota Daily. Student Council of Ohio Uni. Considers Question of Traffic Fata for the use of Men's Student Council's newly created committee on automobile parking, presented by Of ficer William North at council meet ing Thursday, show that the traffic problem on the campus will be a dif ficult one to solve. A committee was named to work out a solution. Five other committees on finance, athlet ics, sings and rallies, customs, and statistics were also appointed bj council. Not only do the machines parked in front of campus buildings look un sightly, but their moving about from class to class Is a real danger to stu dents, the report proved. The number of automobiles moving about every hour between classes has, by actual count, been found to average BOO. The lowest count taken, from data collected Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, was 460, and that was at 4 p. m. Two hundred and seventy two machines have been counted passing through the campus on Neil Avenue In one hour. The Ohio State Lantern. Fourteen Schools Send Delegates to Press Convention FoFurteen schools sending eighty eight delegates, will be represented at the third annual convention of the Iowa High School Press Association, to be held Friday and Saturday, Nov. 10 and 11, although about one hun dred and thirty delegates are expect ed to attend. The delegates will be the guests of the Grinnell Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi while they are in Grinnell. and the only expense they will incur for the trip will be their railroad fare to and from Grinnell. Under the arrangements of the Hos pitality committee of the Student Council, the delegates will be housed in the Men's Dormitories and the Wo men's Quadrangle, and they will take their meals in the men's and women's dining rooms. Grinnell Scarlet, and Plack. Nebraska Graduate Is Re-elected to Bench Victor R. McUicas, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. McUuas ot ttiis city has Just been elected as a judze of the superior court of Los Angeles countv California to succeed himself. He was appointed less than a year ago to fill a vacancy. Mr. McLuras is a graduate of the University of Nebraska and ot the law course at Ann Arbor where he was a law Instructor for some time. Tjiaer he was associated with John I,. Webster of Omaha in the practice ot law. Eleven years ago he moved to ... r t.aBIK Va Vl40 southern caliiornia m-ij since been a member of the law fac ulty of the University of Southern California. While in Nebraska he served as referee of the supreme court; was number of the bar examination com Tnliteer secretary of the Omaha bar association and a member ot the fac ulty ot Crelgbton law school. Jolly Jesters. May What did Noah do for laughs on his voyage in the ark with no radio to tone In on Topics of the Day" Jokes form ABC ard XTn? Ray Ton recall that te took two of every animal known? May Tes. Ray Well, she hyenas were tae langhlng stock ot the ark. Topics of the Day" Films. No Free Lunch. The radiophone lias wonderful possibilities. Teah. When they get It perceted we can visit with re la tires without having to feed 'em. Cotton Development of Forty Centuries Is Shown in Exhibit "Thlrty-nlno Centuries ot Cotton Development." Is tho theme of a cot ton exhibit. In Homo Economics build ing on the Agriculture College cam pus. The textiles nnd clothing di vision of the department has charge of the exhibit which Is being shown in the laboratories on the third floor. About, two hundred pieces nre In the exhibit; nnd nre from India, Java, China, Japan, Mexico, Gunte. mola, nnd tho Philippines. Rich em broideries, batiks, nnd black printed fabrics nre Included In tho collection. Thirty-six costumed dolls represent the classic periods In cotton history. The exhibit Is tho property of the Prooklyn Museum and the Museum ol Natural History of New York. It is the work of the design department of Women's Wear. Students nre Invited to visit the exhibit in tht afternoons, nnd the laboratories will also be open to the public Thursday, Friday and Satur day evenings from 7 to 9 o'clock. Student Presidents To Hold Conference Acceptance of California's Invita tion to an Intercollegiate conference of student body presidents came yes terday by telegram to President E. G. Steel, '23, from the president of the University of Washington student as sociation. This conference will be held on the University campus over the week end of November IS; at least twenty western colleges are expeeted to be represented by officrs of their stu dent organizations. Student problems will be discussed and means for furthering the more general adoption of the honor spirit Tlie FLORSHEIM SHOE makes a strong appeal to ths man who knows that shoe economy isnotfiguredinlowfirstcostbut in net economy as measured over a long period of service. The "BRIGHTON" Black and Brown Calf $10.00 Pair. Fred Schmidt & Bro. 917-21 O Street. FOR THE MAN .0 It's the Best Place to Shop After All! Look well dressed on the Campus! Wear our rightly tailored, stylish KIRSCHBAUM CLOTHES Ei iza If you are to celebrate right you'll wear a' distinctive cap on Friday 60c while they last. VARSITY B-3677. will he considered. Special Interest will be culled to the visiting delegates in regard to the operation of the present A. S. V. C. government under (he recently adopted constitution. University ot Culifo rniu Press . Bulletin. Scientific Problems Will Be Discussed in Ag Engineer Contest The contest launched by the Ag ricultural Engineers nt the beginning of the semester Is in full swing now, and many sflidonts are showing In terest in the prizes, which are sets of tools made by students In the Ag ricultural Engineering Department, nnd which are on display in A. E. hall. The second Instalment ot speeches and discussions by contestants will be held Thursday, November 16, in A. E. hall at 7:30. Anyono inter ested in the scientific problems con fronting the farmer Is Invited to this meeting. Will Make Record of Dartmouth Song "Hail Dartmouth," the new College song composed by C. G. Newcomb '12, will appear on a Columbia phono graph record nert month, played by the Dartmouth College Rand. The band will go to the laboratory of alio Columbia Grapophono Company in New York at 9:30 Saturday morning. vhon the tune will he recorded. The Dartmouth. Order Now Your Printed or Engraved Christmas Greet ing Cards. Boyd Printing Co. 125 North 12th St. (i WHO CARES 1G Caps 316 No. 12th St SHOPPE Dean of Engineers To Attend National Educational Meeting Dean O. J. Ferguson of tho Coi lege of Engineering leaves Saturday or this week for a meeting in Wash ington, I). C, or the Land Grant Col lego Association, Tho engineering di vision or tho association has a pro. gram planned Tor Tuesday nnd Wednesday of next week. The engineering division will dis. cuss tho problems peculiar to engin eering education, especially ns thoy affect land grant colleges throughout tho country. Such topics lncludo: the varied aspects of research, en gineering experiment Btatlons, uni form patent practice In engineering experiment stations, the fiveyenr en gineering curriculum, the cost ol technical education. The chairman of the engineering section Is Dean R. L. Sackett of Pennsylvania State Col lege. Intangible. CClever Lawyer Now if you will let me hnvo some of his love letters Rrench-of-promlse Gertie I haven't any. We both had radio sets. Too Cold for this ill! The only solution of the Underwear Problem for these days is our Superior Medium Weight Knitted Union Suit $2.50. 11 L. Tuning In on Radio Lau0ht "Have you a llttlo radio h, " homo?" Our question may b9' answered affirmatively by ft gooJ1 percentage of our citizens. Thi modem Invention is furnishing ente" tninnient here, there, nnd everywh,,6' It provides nn easy way of beto' nniusod Just tune In and listen u reminds us of a man arguing Wth his wife. All ho has to d0 u listen while his wife broadcasts". On poor hubby enn not turn off the J tertninment (?) ns the radio tan can Of course, if the nenrly happyWft)3' havo a radio, hubby can turn on tte machine when wlfie becomes temper, mental, and let her hear n tej, mental opera star vocalize. should prove a distraction which erase all thoughts of argument from the wedded pair and the evening should continue happily ever after as long as the radio Is in tune. The largo number of jokes centering around radio that nre appearing in the press, attests to tho popnlarit of the new Invention. On the screen in "Topics of the Dny" Films, radio jokes meet with hearty approval. Here follows our program of radio fun. Tune In nnd be jolly: Judge. ift) Too Hot for this I I