1 THE DAILY NEB K AS KAN The Daily Nebraskan Published Sunday, Tueiday, Wdntdy. Tkurtdny nd Kiidny Bmii of ch k by th Univrity ot Nebraska. Accepted for mntlinf at apecial rate el posts je provided for in Section 1103, Act f October S, 1917, authorized January 20, 1922. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY PUBLICATION Under the Direction of the Student Publi cation Bond. Entered as second-class matter at the Postofftce In Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress. March S, 1879. Subscription rate $2.00 a year $125 a semester. Sin(le Copy Fiva cent Address all communication to THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska Editorial and Business Offices, University Hall. 10. Phones. rav 142 University Exchange NiSht B6882 Em"mc V. Maun Editor Howard Buffett... Managing Editor EDITORIAL STAFF William Bei twcll - News Editor Hugh Cox News Editor Paul C Richardson News Editor BUSINESS STAFF Clifford M. Hirks Business Manager Clarence Eickhoff Asst. Business Manager Otto Skold Circulation Manager OFFICE HOURS Every afternoon with the exception of Friday and Sunday. HERE'S SOME TONIC Before the frame with Harvard a week ago, the Dartmouth paper, in tryinjr to show the students that dope was not always right, published the following;: "Coach Gilmour Iohie said before the Colgate frame: 'To beat a team of pood football players, you have to have a team of football players. Our chances against Colgate? We haven't any more chane than a snowball in Hades!' Score Cornell 34, Colgate 7. "Coach Rockne before the Prince ton game: 'I honestly believe that we will be beaten. Of course we will do all we can to win, but we will con sider it no disgrace to lose to a Princeton team!' Score Notre Dame 25, Princeton 2." And then Dartmouth, against all the odds of dope, gave Harvard a de cisive beating. It is our turn to think it over. RAG CARPET Contribution Are Invited The Rapr Doll says that she, too, would roll around in a limosine only it isn't ladylike. said the Kansan after the cyclone. One of our teachers used the cur tain cord for a compass string. No wonder the buildings are deteriorating. Predicament Time: 12:29 1-4. Place: Sorority porch. Situation: Hairnet caught on coat button! Noah paced the deck. He was solitaire. He had a wrathful royal flush. So he gave two birds the air. "Something seems to be missing" The Rag Doll says that if the boys with the vivid checked shirts will call at the office, she will arrange for a checker tournament. We have decided the only way to stop tardiness to eight oVIoiks is to broadcast the lectures by radio. afternoon at 4 C V v. v . o'clock fraternity athletes of the Uni versity of California will again be een in action. This time it will be an intetfvaternity track meet on the California oval. The meet will be run off on Tues day and Thursday. The first live plxees will count so each houe will have abetter chance rt B..ie noints. Any nan is eligible for entrance but all Varsity and nu meral men will not be able to com. pete In their own event. The Sophomores and Freshmen are officially friend at McC.ill University, and all rivalry is over. Last week the campus, saw the festival of the ta.w burning. All Unl. of Oklahoma freshman medics will grow a mustache as tingulshlng "mark'' from other medic students. A vigilance committee 0( ten men has been chosen to enforce this mustach tradition. Doctor: Young man, you have a l.utM t. llaL- Aft Kiivainflfl itrtkli and two missing teeth. What hap-i pened? I Weary patient: I dropped my fountain pen while entering U hall. ...,.7rr 1 yy v wuiiuvi u mi.y uuc iri.-c una no ticed the great disagreement among j the clocks on 12th street. house, 1438 R street. The meeting will be called at 5 o'clock and will be short but important. In the College World Bizad Magazine Staff. Business staff of the Bizad maga zine will meet in Commercial Club room in Social Science at 5 o'clock Monday. ISSUES GALL FOR VARSITY WRESTLERS GO, GANG GO! Nebraska students moan about Ne braska spirit, pointing to the K. U. rooters as examples of what we should be and now to show how differently the eyes of the world see, K. U. comes out with a sad song of how the Aggies out-rooted and out cheered the Jayhawkers. Every school in the Valley must be pointing at every other school to show how the students should yell or sing. That's interesting indeed. Maybe we aren't so poor after all. Maybe it was all a mirage. It would be good to think so. And now, sifting the evidence down, how do we know how our cheering sounds to other ears? Nobody has ever said that we were poor backers. Nobody has ever ac cused Nebraska students of being a bunch of sphinxes. Let's call the whole thing a boomerang and let the sport world know that the Corn busker team and the Cornhusker stu dents are primed with TNT for that big explosion Saturday afternoon. This is to be a pep week ending Saturday night with a disappointed lot of Notre Dame football players. Kellogg, 125 Pound Class, Is Only Letter Man Back for Mat Sport. PLEDGING FRESHMEN. Even though fraternities know that freshman pledging is not highly satisfactory, they insist upon follow ing the common practice of .matching skill and speed against careful con sideration. They grab blimfly and wildly for young men who signify their intentions of entering Ne braska. Freshman pledging is neither logi cal nor highly successful. It is merely the result of lack of co-operation among fraternities, and it is a kind of co-operation that would ele vate the typo and character of all men within the organization. An agreement among fraternities would be a successful and easy manner of getting the most desirable and vain able men. Such, however, would not be pos sible without dormitories. There would be no place for freshmen to stay and there would be no means of keeping them under the supervi sion of authorities in the University. If there is a time when dormitories are given to the University, then it will also be time for fraternities to consider sophomore pledging as an advancement that follows the prog ress of the University with which they are connected. Head Wrestling Coach Dr. R. G. Clapp has issued the first official call for varsity wrestlers. There is almost a whole new team to be made this year due to gradua tion. Only one letter man has re turned to school, so the coaching staff has a big job on its hands. John Kellogg, 125 pound class last year is the only man of last years team to report. Kellogg is over weight this year and may be used in the 135 pound class. Nebraska was strongest last year in the heavyweights with Renner in the 190 division, Captain Troutman, winner of the western inter-collegiate matchin 175 class, and Ex-Captain Floyd Reed also winner of the west ern intercollegiate match in the 1581 pound class. Pickwell, 145 pound last year's man, did not return to school. Isaccson, 135, graduated, and Probst, this year's captain, is not in school this semester, but is expected back the second term. The 145 pound class is the most promising this year with Skinner, Moobery, and Thomas, a former member of the squad two years ago, all bidding strong for berths on the team. So far the actual dates for the schedule has not been made out but all of the games have been arranged for. The four meets on the two-year contract are Minnesota and Iowa at Nebraska, and Ames and Kansas there. Other meeting that are sure ' are the ones at the western inter-col- j legiate meets. In this big meet there ! are all the teams in the big ten with i the exception of Michigan plus Ames and Nebraska. ' Coach Clapp will have charge of , the wrestling again this year. He j will be assisted by Swindell and for-1 mer captain, Floyd Reed. Everyone interested in wrestling: is urged to report to Dr. Clapp im-1 mediately at 206 Memorial hall. ; The engineering extension depart ment of Penn. State is giving varied courses to ti e inmates at Rock View Penitentiary. More than one-fourth of the five hundred prisoners have enrolled for this advantage. The subjects range from "harmony" in struction and the reading and writ ing of the English language, to fundamental studies of electricity, heating and ventilating, mechanics, business salesmanship, chemistry, agriculture, etc. The prisoners great desire "to be able to get somewhere when they get out" may now be ful filled. The enrollment ranged from men who didn't even know their A. B. C.'s to High School Graduates. tiat In our Downstairs Cafeteria Ol rs I 1 D rJ . in iitt Feminine Apparel for Ihe School, College and University Girl. Co STORE NEWS The Annual underclass tilt will be staged at Syracuse University soon. When the two classes appear on the field of battle the sophomores will be supplied with bags of salt to use on the freshmen who attempt to gain the summit of the hill. As the Freshmen, won the Flour Push three weeks ago, and the sopho mores triumphed in the impromtu rush held between the halves of the Alabama game, class rivalry is at fever heat, and both sides are organ izing for the. struggle. RENT-A-FORD Shove it yourself. Munson Motor Co., phones B1550 and B1H7. 112.5 P St. "Indian Skin" Silk Hosiery Alongwith the Paris Vogue of using rouge that instantly bestows a tanned complexion comes "INDIAN SKIN" hog. iery to give the ankles a sim ilar tint, a very smart effect one must admit. As the name implies "IN. DIAN SKIN" is a warm tan with rose lurking in its depths. Silk, sheer, and smooth and of fashionable weight. $3 Hosiery Street Floor. . STUDENT ENGINEERS TEST POWER PLANT Work Is Part of Curriculum of the College of Engineering. Notices Meeting of Catholic students club, Sunday at K. C. hall at 8 o'clock. Wrestling Candidates. All candidates for the varsity wrestling are urged to report at once to Head Coach R, G. Clap, gyn, 206, as training starts immediately. Freahman Committee. All members of freshmen Olym pics committee are requested to be pressnt ait the committee meeting Sunday afternoon at the Ti Kappa A complete test of the University power plant is being made by the junior and senior engineers. The work in the test is a required part of the curriculum of all engineers, and while the actual test requires only 16 to 24 hours, the compilation and filing of the data into a complete report will Tequire several weeks. This is the first experience juniors have had in power plant testing. Sen iors act as leaders and supervisors in this test, conducted in accordance with the standard test code, arranged by the American Association of Me chanical Engineers. The determination of the efficiency of boiler room equipment, of engine room equipment, and finaily ofthc plant as a whole, is the problem be fore the group. This test is carried on once a se mester, the Tesult showing an effici ency favorably comparing with that of the average commercial plant. Forty men are taking part in this test, in four hour shifts of ten men each, under the supervision of Pro- feasors A. A. Luebs and J. W. Haney. Change Your Shoes Each You Change Your Suit! lime Super Values in Hi and Lo Shoes for Men Staight Last and Wider Haige Last There is little use in putting your best foot forward if it's poorly shod. A variety of shoe will not only make each pair look better, but they will last longer. You are not in style merely because you change your suit. When you dress for dinner . you wouldn't put on the same collar that youVe worn all day. And your shoes are even more prominent than your collar. The Speier Shoe Store has so revolutionized prices that a shoe wardrobe is no longer con sidered a luxury, but a necessity. Speier Character Shoes are made for a reason rather than a price. In our windows, you'll find just the shoe you want for just the occa sion you want it. Dress up your feet or don't dress up at all! A Few of the New Ones Light and Dark Calfskin (like cut) Black Vici and Calfskin on straight last. 7 other new Styles in Beacon Shoes (Union Made), Rubber beels on nearly all shoes. Shoes arJ I j Oxforit Super Values in Hi and Lo Shoes for Men 'in ti m ihiilLi TTt SIMON Otf THE COPNEB lOLtdnd OST. Herman Speier , SUCCESSOR ON THE CONE,B !0&AndOST i -V'-'r tV .