TUB DAILY NERRASKAN Wednesday, Decembor 6, 1922. The Daily Nebraskan ed Smirtny Tui..lay. Wedm.s.lay '.i""'.1, ?'rl,," iHornliiB f eBl, the 1'nlwt.lty f N,l.rak. I'liMliihrd IhuinilaT by pommre urnvlilPit for In Ration 110.' AW of Octotu r S. 11)17. aut borhl l J. L 7i 1B22. OFFICIAL I'MVKKSITY l'l'lll IT 41 ION Ural on Itonn.. Knterod g (ond-claM mntter nt th p.mtorfloe tu Lincoln. Nebraska, umhr tlu Act f I iKr-aa. March S, 1870. Bubxrlpllon r M , ,,, . . mnle BIiirU) ropy FlT1 U Address all communications to TH DAILY NKKKASKAN Station A, Lincoln, Neb. TK1.K1MIONK Vnlvrr.lty 142 Kvrninc 1MUM Kdltorlnl and business offices In south went corner vf basement of AduiluiKtru tlon Hiilliilnir. Hlle FarmaA Edltoi Off lea Hours 10-11 and 4-5 dally Herbert Uron nell, Jr. . Office hour. S to , Wedi.enday, Thursday, Marjnrle j man . Kdwnrd llurk ... Hubert Cral Churlen A. Mitvhrll .. Managing Editor Monday, Tuesday. Saturday. Associate Klltr Night Kilitor Mgbt Kdltor Night Kdltor Cbautirey Kinney tiffire Hours- HuslneHH Manuicrr to tl Dally. 4'lirturd M. lll,k, An'!. Hakim-Ma Manager Frank F. Fry Clrrnlntlon Munuger Nislii iMlltor for tills liue. Robert F. Craig. better and more worthy citizens. At the present time the people nuppoit Ing the University have not had the opportunities that the Htudent has now. Many of the people in the state din not have a chance ' enter a high school but they support unRrudglngly a State University. It ha.-- been said that the Incoming legislature men who have vowed to give the Vnlversty a thorough clean ing to eliminate many of the unde sirable and unnecessary expenses. The majority of the students are do ing their best to profit by the op portunty that is offered but the few who are not are giving the school a black eye. There is no means of eliminating the undesirable other than that of dismissing him from school and that is what has been done. the Vi lli lam Itertwell Asa't. Night Editor SPIRIT. On Thanksgiving day we saw Ne braska in her glory, we saw her rise to the heights of her ambitions ami remain there flaunting her proud pres ence before the eyes of the world. The slow rolling of spirit the first of last week swelled and rose into a hilar ious, determined, and supreme type that culminated when the mighty Notre Dame football team fell before the Scarlet and Cream. Who didn't experience a feeling of pride when the Huskers smashed th Notre Dame defensive and marched down the field to a touchdown? And who wasn't alarmed when the re doubtable South Benders came back in the third quarter and threatened to take the game? Such moments when one feels the extreme of hu man expression are the times that tell you whether the game was good or not. The Cornhusker students at tained the level of spirit that day that is worthy of the team that rer jepresents this institution. The won derful Notre Dame spirit is a big (fsKjtoriJfl helping, them to win their games, ,; but Nebraska even outdid tlvem here too. , i .. r. That is the spirit that makes col lege and amateur athletics out-dis tange professionalism so far that the salaried players are playing a second (fiddle to the University football. Let tfiat wonderful spirit of the Thanks giving game continue in the realm of Nebraska sports. , , GIVEI ! contributions to Near Fast Relief fund are asked of the students today. Those who are acquainted with the appalling condi tions in the Near East must realize the need for assistance. It is a chal lenge of necessity. There will be no forcing of students to contribute to the fund. The great need for relief work is enough to make the thinking students give as best they can. U-NOTICE nffi. fiTwrnl Interest milium for U" iv xlioulil I'f In l'.y f i i oHock.; wIP ! tlie Si- , ., ... INDECISION. , One of .the hardest .things for many LudeoU to le:vrn is to make up their sinds to a course of action and then carry it out without any wavering. It it so much easier , not to decide. This lack of decision, while it does not materially affect, on"' lif- a'l of the time, if allowed to take hold, be come a hal.it. which has a deprerat ina affect on the character. A 'decidcii character Is quick in forming Judgments and firm in ndhr. ing to them.: ;Yhat he has decided he. is likely to carry out resolutely. Sometimes tlio decisions may he the wrong ones. But it; is Ml groat deal better to decide- wrong once in a while than not to decide at all. Most students waste a great deal of time in making relatively unim portant decisions. Whether to order a Home St vie or a Peran Perfecto. whether to go to the Lyric or th Rialto. are. comparatively speaking, insignificant matters. Yet how many times do we hear students hesitat ing over Just such questions. An In credible amount of time is also wasted in deciding which lesson to str.dy first and beginning to study it. If you have the habit of indecision it Is time to begin at once to make tip your mind promptly on the less im portant matters. It will savo- your time and prepare yon to make your decision quickly when confronted with an important problem. The football player cannot vacillate when he is playing the game. Just as it Is important for him to make his decisions quickly in the game of football, it Is important for the student to make his decisions prompt ly in the game of life. SCHOLARSHIP. It is alarming that more than two hundred students in the University are unable to keep the majority cf their hours above passing. It is not only alarming but it is especially ap palling to think that such a percent age of the students through either incapability or sheer laziness were dismissed from school so that the cholastic level of the Institutloi might not fall. For these students who are absolutely incapable of car- rvine university work one feels sorry but for those who came here for the octal advantage, they have gained their Inst dues. i c. T-tttvorairv is at a disad f uia - nch aa there are fe O 11 KXfyH auu restrictions that govern those who would enter the achooL As a result it is necessary to dismiss those who are not worthy of the time and money that Is being spent to make them Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Meeting. The C abinet of the Y. W. C. A. will entertain the Cabinet of the Y. M. C A. at a dinner Wedensday night in Faculty hall. Sigma Delta Chi. Sigma Delta Chil will hold an in iation and business meeting Thurs day, December 7, at the Grand hotel at 3 p. m. DeMolay. The following will occupy the chairs during the ensuing term: Ronald Button Master Councellor. Howard Hunter Senior Councellor Wendell Berge Junior Councellor. Other offices as announced at t?ie ceremony. Everyone invited to attend, espoc ially the members of the Masonic lodges and Eastern Star. Parents and friends of Demolays are also invited. Teachers College. Preparations are being made by the Secondary Education Club for a wiener roast to be held Thursda, December 7. The students wni fieel at Teachers' College at 5 p. m. Tick ets will be on sale Tuesday at to cents each. Big and Little Sisters. Every freshman girl is invited to a Big and Little Sister Xmas party a Eli.ii Smith hall next Saturday. Dee. !. from 4 to 6 o'clock. All Big and Little Sisters and bring them to mis ; ;i ri y . Viking. YiVii.g meeting Thursay evening at 7 o 'thick at the Silver Lynx house. Commercial Club Meeting. Commercial club meeting, Thursday .it 11 in S. S. A. Talk delivered by IX. I". Campbell, general marager Mill'-r & Paine. Club dinner will be ii-lfl Thursday at 6:13 Grand hotel. Basketball Student Manager. Meeting of candidates for student managers in basketball at Athletic of fice, Wednesday. 3 o'clock. Alpha Kappa Psi. There will be a regular business meeting of Alpha Kappa I'si at me ilver Lynx bouse at 7:30 Wednesday vening. Candy Sale Today. The Girls' Commercial club will sell andy today in Social Science hall. The proceeds will go toward paying or the club pledge to the stadium. Scabbard and Blade. Reenlar meeting. Nebraska hall, Room 205 -it 7 o'clock, Thursday, ue cember 7. Uniforms not required. W. A. A. Meeting. W. A. A. meeting at 7:30 Wednes- Hou evenlne In Ellen Bmltn nan. Board meeting at 7 o'clock. Theta Si am Phi. Theta. Sigma Phi meeting, Thurs day, 7 p. m., Ellen smun nan. University Players, 8 p. m., Temple. Military ball, Auditorium. Acacia informal, Rosewilde. Saturday, December 9. University Players, 2:30 p. ni., and 8 p. m., Temple. Phi Mu formal, the Lincoln. Btishnell Guild house dance. Palladian Banquet, the Lincoln. Kappa Sigma house dance. Menorah Society meeting and inla- tion. Sigma Nu Pig dinner, Chaple house. Big nnd Little Sister party, 4 p. m Ellen Smith hall. Personals Marjorlo Woodward of Shenandoah, low ar.d Ruth Ringland of Wayne, Nebraska, are guests at the Alpha O house. Guy Born to Mr. and Mrs. Guy C. Thatcher, a son, Robert Richard, on November 26. Mr. and Mrs. Thatcher are both alumni of the University Mr. Thatcher having graduated from the Civil Engineering department. If It has a kick In it, nobody seems to care what else Is in it. Wives are people who kick your shins under the table when you pick vi the wrong fork. You will note that when the sul tan ran away to insure his freedom he left his wives back home. It isn't humanity that makes a man say he is unworthy of her. It is a desire for a compliment. Ballots and bullets bring new gov ernments into power, but the same ! old crowd controls business. Correct this sentence: "The alarm ( '.ock clamored and the man smiled atid leaped cheerfully from his bed." Most of the tobacco is chewed by men, whwo can't get over the convic tion that a safety razor is rather ef-i'-miuate. The chap who takes two hours for lunch is the one who can talk most eloquently about the dignity of labor. We must have a merchant marine. It would be very humiliating if we had to rent ships for our relief work. You see, there must be servants to do the work in order that one may have time to t4ke exercise and keep fit. et's see, wasn't it the fireless that linked all nations together in this charming and delightful brotherhood? A poetic nature is the kind that enables a man to feel abused for at least three months after his girl has jilted him. Daughter's idea of thrift is to buy seen new dance records and then use the same needle all evening to save money. Efforts to solve the European pro blem interest the average man nines less than the effort to locate the knoc k in his motor. The contest between faiths in the Near East is complicated by the fact that both have faith in the oil districts. A hick town is a place where peo ple gather at the grocery store to discuss the reading of their various thermometers. As January 1 approaches, kindly tell the world what you did with the money you saved by quitting your other bad habits. As we understand it, the bbusiness of an official observer is to kep an accurate record of the advantages Uncle Sam loses. OPEN ALUMNI CLUB 111 NEW YORK GUY Fraternities Reserving Floors and Sections of Rooms for Alumni Members THE COST IS VERY NOMINAL Building to be Sixteen Stories High and Will Accommodate Club Rooms and Parties A woman candidate has been charged with buying votes, and yet the skeptics said women wouldn't be able to understand politics. The Lincoln Star Calendar Wednesday, December 6. Omaha club dinner, 6 o'clock. Grand hoteL Y. M.-Y. W. joint Cabinet dinner, Faculty hall, 6 p. m. Thursday, December 7. Vikinr meeting, 7 o'clock. Silver Lynx house. Lutheran club business meeting, 7 o'clock, S. S. 107. Kiirma Delta Chi. Grand hotel, 5 p. m. University Players, 8 p. m.. Temple Christian Science Society, 7:30 Faculty hall. Friday, December 8. Phi Delta Chi fall party. K. C. hall Y. W. C. A. bazaar, Ellen Smith halL Herbert B. Clay, Colorado Springs sophomore at Harvard collegp. who called for police protection recently after threatening messages . from supposed members of the Ku Klux Klan, has left college, it has been annonnced. A real alumni club for fraternity men is to be opened In New York City by October of next year. It will be a home where members may live with all the comforts of a modern metropolitan club house and associate with fraternity brothers, all at a cost so small as to be within the reach of the young man just starting in business. ' Many of the fraternities have ar ranged to have thirty-five bed-rooms and its club space on the same floor. In addition to these rooms for resi dent members the fraternity has ar ranged to have a certain number ot rooms set aside for transient service, for which the charge will be $3.00 a day. The building, which will be sixteen stories high, will be occupied jointly by several member-clubs of college fraternity alumni, and will be oper ated by a central management, thus reducing the bug-bear of overhead ex pense that has made the operation of club house quarters in New York City a long record of financial de ficits. A group of well-know capitalists, representing eighteen fraternities, were interested in the proposition of building the club house. They formed themselves into the New York Frat ernity Clubs Housing Committee to look after fraternity interests and deal with the building and operating company. From the first it has been empha sized that this is not to be an inter fraternity club house or an inter fraternity movement. The quarters of the member clubs will be as sep arate as though they were in differ ent buildings, and there will be all the privacy of a first-class apartment house. Men of national importance are in terested in the project. The person nel of the honorary board is as fol lows: Hon. Newton D. Baker, Maj. Gen. Robert L. Bulard, U. S. A.; Hon. Bryon Patton Harrison, Hon. Will Hays. Hon. Charles E. Hughes, Hon. Joseph E. Ransdell, Rev. Dr. Ernest Stires. Hon. Oscar W. Underwood, and Hon. Charles S. Whitman. The members of the general committee are William A. Starrett chairman; llenrv H. McCorkle. vice chairman: I'iv' ' .V Ross, treasurer; Archibald R Giblmns. secretary; John S. Ballon. U rt S. Bard. Charles W. Gersten i.r John M. Gibbons. Harry S. Corpas. John C. liegeman, J. Harold Johnston, James D. Livingston, John Marchmonl. Philip H. Senior, George V Smith. Rudolph M. Tries. Samuel B. William, jr.. and Lawrence it. Bandler, director of organization. The building is located on Madison avpnue and Thirty-eighth street, and is already built np above the ground. In the basement will be a barber shop, peneral billiard room and amplt- storaee space. On the main floor. GRAVES PRINTING CO. Student Printing. 244 N. 11TH ST., Lincoln. with the entrance on Thirty-eighth street, will he a large general lounge, library and reading room, writing room." tho operating offices of the building and the national hendqu ters of a few of tho member fraterni ties, with a largo dining room for restaurant and banquet needs. A broad stairway will lead to the floor where most of tho private club rooms of the member-fraternities will be located, and where there will also be a private dining room for lunch eons and dinners. The third floor will contain addi tional private club quarters, Turkish baths, gymnasium, squash court and handball courts, A Biin pnrlor and root garden will adorn the sixteenth floor. The remainder of the building will bo given over to bedrooms, which will be apportoled among the member-fraternities. These rooms will rent for $9 to $16 a week, and no lease will be repulred. A few suites will also be provided. Emphasis is made by the governors that the club will be limited strictly to club members. Resident member ship will cost $20 a year, and non resident membership will amount to $10 a year. Men who have been out of college three years or less will be required to pay only half these amounts. Experienced men will have charge of tho operation of the house. There wll lalso bo a house commttee com posed ot one member from each par ticipating club which will co-operate with the management committee through representation on its bonrd of directors. Santa Starts From HereWtihaGift From You Diamonds Watches. Cuff Links. Eversharp Pencils. Ivory Toilet Set. Manicure Set. Ladies' Leather Hand Bagrs Gold and Silver Mesh Bags. Order Now Your Printed or Engraved Christmas Greet ing Cards. Boyd Printing Co. 125 North 12th St. Beating Old Man Webster Noah Webster became famous when he wrote 70,000 words IngersolL Pencil carries in its magazine 15 double length leads with a writing mileage of 540,000 words. It reauires a new lead only once for every 36,000 written words and is so simply con structed that it always works. Will not clog at the point. The r.IFT-shown here of Rolled GolJ $3.00. In Rolled Silver $1.00. See this and orhcr models at your stationery or cooper ative store. Ingersoll Redipoint Co., Inc. Wm. H. Ingcrcll. Pre. 461 Fourth Ave.. New York City Alpha Xi Delta Bazaar 1527 M 1 P. M. to 11 P. M., SAT., DEC. 9th. TEA and DANCING i I ENUS Y PENCILS ?0: t':e r'i.(V"t or proL t'.j f. -;!, iAUS out rival i-'l f r pcrf rt rr.ci v r. Ill ,j( k Jcj 3 ci.j l - '. Fcn.il Co. re:s and M -1 SALESMEN New Proposition For Summer Work A strictly high-class Slid digni fied selling proposition. Not regular house-to-house can vassing. You work on leads and see best class of people. You do not have to make nf deliveries. Easy for customer to buy. Prices range from $5 00 to 117.50 andis made In two payments. Does not require capital. You get your compensation at once. Salesmen are averaging over $60.00 per week and selling to over SO per cent of their calls. Come and see the original re ports of our salesmen. Opportunity Limited to Dec. 8th. For Interview Call B1546. Act Today Best in The Long Run Magee's Shoes! $7.00 to $12.50. Ar-ranfro fnr a eittinfr hpfnro t.riA hnsv winter RPfljsnn fcj: i -- "t v - j ;:'r ''A starts let it be fifS iiH A M 1 B I TEACHERS Second semester vacancy cnlls arf nnv comiti'r in. Knroll now, so that we can fret y;air civdcntials together in time to serve you. Enrollment free. FISK TEACHERS AGENCY J. A. DEVLIN, Manager 1020 McGee St. Kansas City, Mo. atromze Our Advertisers THEY STAND READY TO GIVE YOU QUALITY, SERVICE AND SATISFACTION . . . The