T II K DAI L Y N 15 B It A S K A N The Daily Nebra&kan ul.il..li,.d Siunl.iy . Tiii'Hi:i.v. Wnl-i.'s.l.-n IhurnUv mi, I I'rl.ln.v mi.riiln; .f ik'. wwk l.v rin CiilriTMiiy ..f .Neiiniskn. A'i'vit'il fur niiilllr-r ill nh-HuI r t.' "I jmsi 'ir- iiit.viilf.l for in Si'citmi lln:;, Af' ',yo.,,'""1"'r 3' '"I'liorlzca Jittiictry 'JO Ol'J'KI.W. IMlliUMTV I'l lii.K ATI.IN I ml.-r IJ ill rot I ii n or tli Miiilonl' I'm. llvntli.ii lloiirt . Kill' nil II HrO"H.dilll, lllllltlT lit III' pnni.'ffic.- In Lincoln, Ni-liniHkti. Hiiil.r tin' Aot "t iVinin-m. Mnri'li 3. 1ST'.). ttulx.i riplltin rule f i.W) a .-nr Mnuir iy l'lve Conli AililnxH nil ciMiiTuitiilt'iitUiiiM In TIIE DAILY JiKHKASKAN st.iilnn A, l.lni'oln. Noli. TKI.M'llll.VK I ill verity 14'i Kvi'IiIiikh HUSH! Killinrlul ivml hiiNiiiiKn ol'fkvH In south went 'ii i ii it nf IniHt'iiii nt of AiliiiliiiMrii tl"ii Itnlliliiiit. Ulli l-'Hriniin i:.lltu Offlo,. ll'inrH 101 1 iinil iliiliy llrrlirrt lirownfll, Jr. ... MuiimkIiib hililur Office lionrn, 3 to li, Mnnilny, Tiumlay. WimI . i-xiliiy, 'I'liiii'Miliiy, Snl iininy. Mnrjnrlr W yniuil Mtmrlnl t K.lll.ir E.i.M.ril Utiik -Mhl Kilit.ir Kol.t-rt K. rill Niiilil K.lit.ir 'linrl.- A. .Mit.-lull - IS iiclit K.lilor rliuillirey Hillary .. HiihIiicn M;ltl;lKr Ofrii-H lluurn I to t! Kally. (lirrnril M. IHi kM, Arna't. II..lii.-, Muni.K.r l-'rwrik !'. try Mr.-ululion :an:ii;i,i iirin lliiliur tor tills I.ih. Charles A. Mitchell. llouiiril llulfrtt slitnnt Nlitlit K.lilor GENEROSITY. Tin- generous Individual is the one who does to others as he would 1 1 : 1 1 they shoulil ilo to him. The person who depends upon the goodness of his sonorous friend to do his lessons for him is not In the kiuiip class, be cause he would not he willing to turn tables and be done by as he Is doing. The contention that the other fal low is smart and it is easy for him, Is no reason why hp should be preyed upon by those of lesser intellect. IIim wisdom was not a gratitons gift of a natural endowment. It was acquired by self generosity of time, effort and application. A generous person Is a consider ate person. He will give gladly of his time and effort to his friend if the occasion warrants it, but he re sents impositions at the slightest pro vocation upon his good nature. Doing favors is a by-product of his disposi tion, not his specialty. He has a sense of justice that revolts against such an unfair procedure. He has learned, too, that a simple act of kindness is not a favor. The generous individual does as ho would be done by, (and therein lies his popularity. PROFESSIONALISM. The press has been rather prone to attack football as becoming a money game. It is very true that football does enjoy large gate re ceipts, but the pride of the panics have not risen to exorbitant prioes, nor has professionalism been toler ated in the inter-collegiate sport. Amateur sports very seldom become as popular, as football has berome in the last decade. It Is the only game in which the concentrated action of a number of men lias one objective in mind. It is quite akin to war and for that reason it has risen to popu larity. There is as much of a dis play of head work as there is of physical advantage. Most of the college and universi ties must depend upon football In pay for the deficit suffered In vh other sports. Our own. university s an example of such a case. The minor sports do not pay for the expenses suffered In training the athletes for inter-collegiate competition. One might venture to state that the grid iron sport is the life of other sporls. The season for football is (-hnrt and the training must be severe. The greater part of the time Is spent in training tse men to act as a ma chine and not as a man. Baseball is a one-man game. Football is an all star game. The very nature of the game makes It a popular rr,rt. Who would not rather see two tin salaried teams fight on a gridiron for the love of the game and to uphold the honor of their schools than to see two highly salaried baHclinll teams play their best sd that the gate receipts would swell and inci dentally their salaries? There may be some men in baseball playing for the love of the sport more thnn for the money but there are too many "holdouts" every spring to Justus first statement. Professional football has not bren . nd everyone can nop If nnvnr will bo. With scout flashing tempting offers in the face of the gridiron stars, college iom,...,. would suffer distinct losses. Let us . consider professionalism the greatest enemy of inter-collegiate football anrt fnr amateur games while never uttering a word in favor of professionalism. On empcrary Opinion D.antv and Materialism. "'Beauty is truth, truth beauty' ffinf la nil. Te know on earth and all ye need tn know."-(Keats) "Beauty Is truth, truth beauty." How Impracticable ana unieasioie these words appear io muj " present generation. "And all ye need to know,- Is clause that seems to cap the Inanity or tne wnoie statement. Today and there Is not much doubt of this the large majority of people tiro inclined to seek, unceas ingly and utiL.ingly, the materialistic benefits of life. We fall on our fares and worship those who have been successful in this race those who have reached the pinnacles of finan cial fame those who have perfected a new system or those who have pat ented the latest ingenious device for th fnmilv kitchen. Moreover (and this Is the regrettable part of the whole matter), we, as students, have a tendency to train ourselves along those lines which are likely to have the greatest material results. As a group, we arc the followers of that mighty, coldhearted god, Mammon. The appreciation of beauty is a quality which wo all possess in vary ing decrees: hut if this sense is not exercised and cultivated, it, like an unused muscles, will shrivel away, burdened down by the weight of ml 'terialistic specialization. Is it not a regrettable fact that we are neglect ing to train ourselves, partially at least, to appreciate truly the immoral works that have been left to us as n priceless heritage by the great inas trs in the fields of literature, art and music? Th majerily of us knew of the var ied exploits of the militaristic Na poleon or facts concerning the accu mulation and distribution of the mas sive fortune of the late Mr. Andrew Carnegie. We know some national sattistics: we can tell an ignorant fel- lewbeing the world's record for the hundred yard dash or can state past season batting average for the Amer ican league. And rightly so a wide and varied knowledge is an envia aMe thing. But here is the real ques tion. How many of us are truly cog nizant of the marvellous beauty te lie found in the poetry of Shake speare. Shelley and Keats? How many of us appreciate or even have knowledge of the marvellous works of Tie Vinci. Reynolds. Raphael or Michelangelo? And what percentage of the student body can become whole-heartedly enthusiastic over an artistic rendering of one of the com positions of Beethoven. Bach, Mosart or Handel? We fear that the num ber would be deplorably small. But fortunately there is a cure for every ill. and this is no except'on. The use of a muscles is bound to strengthen it, and so the develop ment of the sense of beauty can be accomplished if we will only take the trouble to exercise it. If we make an effort in this direc tion we shall experience a wider mental development and our minds will be treated with a little artistic polish, which previously we might have larked. The great masters will descend from their lofty classical pedestals and become to ns undying sources of great joy. Moreover, we sliayy find ourselves able to appreci ate not only the beauty of the pasl but the beauty that is springinn up around us in the world of today. The final results will be two-fold, for we shall become the owners of an inex haustible treasure store, which can never cease to be ours and we sha'.l be able to distribute to our fellow men the magnificent and undefinable joy, derived from intimate relation--hip and .-v.-rlaMing beauty McOill Daily. U-NOTICE . V,.., ... . f ;. p. -rill l.i,T. t 111 I" Ii . I I". II ' i-..l:.lliil '"! IV.' Mri. .In. -,., l,,il.l ! In tin- N . :,.!. l.y 1 1 v . .."lock ! Company "G." All Company ";" men are Invited to attend the smoker in room 210 Ne braska Hall, Thursday, November 23 at 7:"0 p. m. Chemical Engineer's Meeting. Reculnr monthly iiieellnR of the ('In luteal Engineering society will In held Thursday at 7 p. in.. Chemical Hall, room ini. Dr. I'pson will speak. Inil'iii't.iiit business. Sigma Gamma Epsilon. . Sigma Camma Epsilon smoker in boi.or of I,. V. Wbyman, Thursday at 7: HO p. in. In the northeast room of the main floor of Temple build ing. Palladian. Balladlan will meet at S o'clock Friday evening in the ball in the Temple. MIsh Krma Appleby, t'niver ity Y. W. C. A. secretary, will tell about her vlnit to the Bassion Tlay the past summer. The meeting i'i open I i all students. Student Council. Begular meeting of the Student Council will be hold today at 5 o'clock in Social Science 107. Calendar Thursday, November 23. Sigma Delta Chi meeting, 6 p. m., Temple. Alpha Chi Sigma meeting, 5 p. m.. Chemistry 102. University Commercial club meet ing. 11 a. m.. Social Science 805. Christian Science Society meeting,. 7:30 p. m.. Faculty hall. T. W. C. A. membership committee meeting, 5 p. m.f Ellen Smith hall. j Theta Sigma I'hi meeting. 7 p. ni., Wlcn Smith ball. Alpha Chi Sigma meeting. 7 p. m Chemistry 102. Green Goblin meeting, 7:15 p. m, Alpha Gamma Bho house. Sigma Gamma Epsilon smoker, 7:30 p. m., Temr Sigma Lic'ua C;.i meeting, 6 p. m., Temple. Kappa Till social meeting. 6:45 p. m. Miss Miller's, G.'iS South Seven teenth street. XI Delta meeting, 7:15, Ellen Smith hall. Friday, November 24. Chi Omega Fall party, K. of C. hall. Delta Chi freshman party, Lincoln hotel. Phi Tau Epsilon freshman party, chapter house. Lutheran Club social meeting, 8 p. m., V M. C. A. Saturday, November 2"5. Union closed meeting, S:30 p. m. Kearney club party, 8 p. m., Fuc ulty hall. Teachers' College club, Ellen Smith Hall. Kappa Delta dance, Lincolnshire. Mystic Fish party, Bosewilde. Kappa Sigma fall party, Llncotn. Phi Gamma Delta house dance. Gamut club party, 8 o'clock, Ellen Smith hall. Football, Ames-Nebraska. All-University party. Armory. Alumni Notes. '98 A. L. Keith, 'lis. is now professor of Creek at the ruiver-uly of South Dakota. He "can see good old Ne braska jusl an oss the river and is planning to come bark for the twenty fifth anniversary of his (lass next year." Mr. Keith susirests that the members of the cla-s of '9S get ready to come back in style and with 100 per cent representation. William L. Halstcad is now living at Onekama, Midi. Mrs. Jesse Wilson (Ci'.rscadden) Is living at 241 South Mariposa. Los An geles, Cal. 00 Henry Nielson is living at 2S13 East Ninth street. Pes Moines, la. George C. Shedd is the author of a new novel. "Cryder of the Bin Wood." published by Doubleday. Tage and Company, Garden City. N. Y. Carl Shuff is living at 371.". Thirty- eighth avenue Fourh, Seattle, Wash. Oscar A. Danielson has moved from Omaha to Creighton. Neb. 02 Charles E. Billiard is living at ".07 South Fortieth. Taeoma. Wash. I.nc'en B. Fuller is living at 10.40 South Twenty-first street. Lincoln. Neb 03 Mr-'. Nelson Furbiish (Hacenowl is living at IS Pearl street. Kingston. N. Y. Mis Lucy Clark was chairman of "-( English section at the meeting of :li sixth district of the Nebraska S!;.te Teachers' association. She took steps to organize a branch of the Na 'ional Council of English teachers at that time. 04 Martin Welsh of Welsh and Welsh, well known attorneys of Western. Wash., with offices at Raymond and South Bend, has been in a hospital at Portland since last March with kid ney complications. His brother, John T. Welidi. 'fl. is carrying on the work ef both offices. H. D. Lute is secretary-treasurer of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federa tion. Thomas F. Konop, former member of the Wisconsin Industrial commis sion, has organized a law partnership with .Tames T. Droupht with ofifces in the Railway Exchange building. Mil waukee, Wis. Francis ,T Peter, M. IV. has moved from Oakland to Turin, k, Cal John Mills Is assistant personnel manager of the Western Electric com pany of New York. There are num erous Nebraska alumni in that depart ment, among whom is G. W. Elmen, A. B '02, A. M. '04, who has been for some years a member fo the research department and has made contribu tions in studies of magnetic materials. X r.port on Fome portions of this work was recently published in the Journal of the Amerlcnn Institute of Electrical Engineers under the title "MaKiieile Properties of Compressed Powdered Iron." Hugh n. Edwards is consulting en gineer for the Hammon Construction company of San Francisco, Cal. Ho is at present in Nome, Alaska. His home address Is 105 Mesa street. Piedmont. Cal. Mrs. E. C. Campbell (Herbert) is a primary teacher at Auburn, Cal. '05 Arthur O. Kennedy, assistant pro- Remember to Attend Chas. W. Fleming's ANNIVERSARY SALE Saturday, November 25, 1922 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. 1311 0 St. fessor dt English Philology, now living at 1527 Waverly nfreet. Palo Alto, Cal., has just returned to California from a year's absence In Boston, Lon don and Oxford. W. L. Hartzell is assistant electrical engineer of the Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance company of Chicago. His home address is 2645 Prairio avenue, Evanston, 111. 00 Dr. Clyde Moore, A. B.. B. Sc., M. IV, nil of the University of Nebraska, is a practicing physician at Omaha. Sarah V. Greene is teaching Span ish. English and HI tory at Grenvilie, New Mexico. L. W. Morsmnn, M. D., was granted the degree of F. A. C. S., by the Amer ican College of Surgeons at their con vocation In Boston. Mass., October 27. Dr. Morsmnn is practicing at Hibbing, Minn. Ina E. Gittings, director of physical education for women at the Univer sity of Arizona, Tuscon, Ariz., was in structor of women's physical educa tion classes nt Northwestern during the summer. Miss Gltting helped in the direction of the Fourth of July celebration given by the citizens of the North End. Following the cele bration. Miss Gitting turned her ef forts toward more carnivals and con tents on the swimming beaches on Lake Michigan. After the close of the mi miner session. Miss Wilma Wood 'OS. and Miss Gitting nlitored from Chicago to Estes Park and spent two week In remote regions hiking, climb ing, fishing and swimming. Miss Git ting then returned to the University of Arizona. She is laying stress on horseback riding and tennis. '07 Charles O. Stewart has moved from Hnntsville, Tex., to 3121-2 West Forty-fifth, Los Angeles, Cal. 08 O. C. Wisdom has moved from Pen der to Wakefield, Neb. P.. B. Murphy is now living at 2T.23 Post street, Jacksonville, Fla. '09 Grace Eatough is a teacher of Latin at Chester. Neb. Isabel Wolfe Hemenway, associate professor of English, Transylvania col lege, Lexington, Ky., in a recent let ter to the alumni association, says: "Once in a coon's age (and after liv ing in the south for nine years I have learned that that is a very uncertain period by which to measure time). 1 stop and take a breath. During this process I nearly always think about Nebraska. I have 103 stu dents in my courses in English and Journalism this semester, as my small daughter put it, retenlly, 'The whole family goes to school every S o'clock.' The 'family' includes daddy and moth er, both of whom teach In Transyl vania, and Arthur, aged 7. and afore, mentioned daughter, Janice, aged 4. who are in the third and first grades respectively. I have always cherished the hope that some day enough U. of N'crs would migrate to eKntucky to enable us to form an alumni club. However, up to this time three has been our limit, and this year it Is re duced to two." Edward Bishop is superintendent of Schools at Fairbiiry, Neb. At the meeting of the Sixth district of the Nebraska State Teachers' asso ciation at Alliance, October 12 to 14, Miss Emma C. Steckelberg presided at the meeting of the Latin and mod ern language teachers and was elected president for the next year. 10 Ada M. Morgan sailed August 9th for Honolulu, where she spent some time slRhtsoeing and visiting friends. From there she went to Lihue, Kauai, Hawaii, where she is teaching school. 3 It's the Best Place MILK CHOCOLATES From Rudge & Guenzel's! TI . .1 1 Tpucker.ghean 1123 O STREET. Jewelers Opticians Stationers Complete Supplies for all Departments of the University. Make Your Football Reservations Here. D C Mitchell Is director of physi cal education at G.ntavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, Minn. '11 Mrs. Walter Duisenberg (Brcta Bills) is now living at S15 Brooklyn avenue, Oakland, Cal. 12 Earl F. Walker is a professor at Santa Barbara, Cal. His homo ad dress Is S23-E. Pedregosa. Edward B. Jacobsim Is president of the' Ironhound Community and Indus trial Service branch of the Y. M. C. A. at Newark, N. J representing some 105 social workers in northern New Jersey. He is also serving as chair man of the committee of Education and Americanization of the Newark Rotary club. Mr. Jacobson is editor of The Bettor America l In Ironhound. a quarterly publication by the Iron bound Community nnd Industrial Serv ice. 13 Asa M. Lehman is a major M. C. in the United States army stationed nt Manila, P. I. Maud W. Wilson is state home dem onstration leader at the State Col lege of Washington, rnllmnn, Wash. Margaret Woostcr is a teacher at Northampton, Mass. '14 C. G. Goinan is a' minister nt Auro ra, Neb. F. D. Koim writes from Ithaca, N. Y., under dnte of October 1. asking for a list of alumni in New York. Nebras ka graduates planned to attend the Syracuse-Nebraska game in a body. Mr. Keim sent a warning in regard to Nebraska's invasion of the east. He said in his letter that Syracuse started training a month before the opening of school. Charles F. Moon, M. D., has moved from Superior, Wyo., to Ashland, Neb. Margaret. Burrows is teaching at University Place, Neb. F. Wayne Coon is president of the Riverside (Cal.) City Teachers' asso ciation. '15 A. II. Dinsmore, boys' work secre tary of the Y. M. C. A. at Harrisburg. Pa., was graduated in the department of boys' work at the Eastern Associa tion School at Silver Bay, N. Y.. on August 29, after having completed (Continued on Tape Four). FOR SALE Thanksgiving Date Nov. 30 ROSEWILDE Call L6061or F5012 For LUNCHEON Hot Chocolate, Whipped Cream 10c Drop Cakes 5c Cinamon Toast 10c Lettuce, Thousand Island Dressing 15c Oysters 25c Hard Oyster 1-2 Doz. 35c THE BROWN BETTY F2525 1720 So. 17th Gt. to Shop After All! mat sometning gooa if for the "sweetest girl" i