. -VHfr as".'- t - -J, erf J V.'-etoBe ' THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Published Sunday. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday mornings ol each mi ny toe university ei nsorasaa. Accepted for mailing at special rata ! stage provided for in Section 1103, Act f October S, 1917, authorised Jn Mary 20, OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY PUBLICATION Under tha Diraction of tha Studant Publl. cation Board. Entarad as sacond-clasa matter at tha Peetoffice in Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act I Congress, Marco 3, lou. Subscription rata $2.00 a year )1J9 a semester, dingle Copy Fiva cants Address all communications to THE DAILY NEBRASKAN a..t A I I i mi 1 Editorial and Business Offices, University Hall 10. Phones. Day 142 University Exchange Night ... Hoooz Emmett V. Maun Editor Howard Buffett.... .....Managing Editor EDITORIAL STAFF William Bertwell News Editor Hueh Cox News Editor Paul C Richardson......... .Niwi Editor BUSINESS STAFF Clifford M. Hicks..... Business Manager Clarence Eickhoff Asst. Business Manager Otto Skold Circulation Manager OFFICE HOURS Every afternoon with the exception Friday and Sunday. at CRITICAL MOMENTS. The Kansas Aggies are coming to Nebraska Thursday to take home a victory over the Huskers. For a year they have drilled daily upon the gos pel of a Cornhusker defeat. They will be desperate when they get here They will be out to defeat, to crush, and to down the greatest team in the middlewest. The invaders can beat Nebraska, but before they do it they will have that Cornhusker fight, that Nebraska spirit, and that student morale to de feat and crush. It is strong if it is so willed. This is an important game. It may decide the championship of the Val ley and that is important to Ne braska. Cornhuskers, there are but a few days left before the football team closes the season. These last days should and must be the greatest days of the season. Make them so. that the editorial staff should ' be changed every quarter, the rul'ng going into effect for the first time yesterday. The editor in charge of the paper the first half of this semester wi h( in this, his last editorial in this ca pacity, to thank the students for tho fine support given the paper upon every occasion; to thank the faculty for the interest shown in the student publication; and to express his ap preciation of the aid that organiza tions gave in helping to publish greater Daily Nebraskan. With the aid of slightly more than twenty students, the paper has been published five times a week since the middle of Sptember. In that time it has enjoyed generous contributions of news, it has been able to choose its reporters with care, and it has been able to develop into a better Daily Nebraskan by such merit. MAKE A SCHOLAR OF HIM ' Professors in every university us ually have the occasion to receive let ters or calls from fathers who want to know why their sons were flunked in courses or why they were not getting the work as they should. A professor in an American university wrote a lengthy reply to such a father, excerpts of which follow: " Has your son ever heard you ex press a broadly rational conception, ever joined with you in any fine sport of the mind? Have you brought him up on noble legends, read Shakes peare to him before bedtime? When he awoke, did his eyes rest on beauti ful pictures? Did you ever take him to an orchestral concert or to a really good play? Your son's face and actions and speech have already answered these questions for me. You have stuffed his mind with dull platitudes, have done everything you could to convince him of the impiety of original thought. You have crammed his soul with ugly chromos, jazz, movies, yellow journals, and sensational magazines. You have addressed your son every day, for eighteen years, in ungrammatical, ill chosen, and fumbling words. Yet you do not blush to toss him to me with a 'Here! Make a scholar of him.' "I conclude that you have cast your son for a role which he cannot play because you are the victim of certain widely prevalent delusions. You believe that every American boy should go to college, whereas only a few American boys should go to col lege. You believe that education can remove fundamental defects of her edity and the results of adverse home environment, whereas it stands pow erless in the face of such obstacles. You believe that liberal studies are intended to increase earning power, whereas they are intended to illum inate the mind and spirit. You be lieve the ' college life ' has great edu cative value, whereas most of the ac tivities included in this term are forms of play under pompous and wasteful disguises." Mortarboard Tea. On Wednesday afternoon will be held the first of a series of teas given by Mortarboard for freshmen and sophomore girls. It will be from 3 to 5 o'clock at Ellen Smith hall. Silver Serpent. Special meeting of the Silver Ser pent Thursday at 7:15, Ellen Smith hall. ATTEND THE RALLY For the last time this season Husker students are asked to attend a football rally. It will be held in the Armory Wednesday night. This is the last time that several of the Cornhusker football players will appear at a rally. It is the last time that Captain Lewellen will speak to the student body as captain of the football team. This last rally must show Corn husker spirit at its highest pitch. It must typify Nebraska as the institu tion of loyal students. Cornhuskers, the rally Wednesday night is a farewell rally. You will be there. . A LAST EDITORIAL, With the next issue of the Daily Nebraskan, th new staff will take charge of the paper. The publication board made the ruling last spring A FAILURE. "I couldn't make the grade." Men and women going home from the University dishonorably dis missed for failure to exert effort enough to meet the requirements are uttering such words. But those same persons are adding a slight alibi. They are offering excuses. Their parents must greet them with a smile; must sympathize with them in their failure; but back of the smile there is that word "failure;" failure in the greatest days of life It is unfortunate to be dismissed from the University now; to be sent home; to be asked to sever connec tions with this noble institution. He, who has left through failure to meet the requirements, is certainly not a man of courage and energy. Notices All notices for this column must be in the Nebraskan office by 4 o'clock on the day preceding the pub lication of the notice. Practical Idealism Club. Meeting Wednesday night at 7:00 in S. S. 102. Devon C. Eyer will speak on "The Ideal Politician." Everyone is invited. "Backward" Party. A "Backward" party is to be given by the Home Economics faculty for the girls of the Agricultural col lege, November 30, at the gymnasium on Ag campus. Soccer feed Tuesday at 6 at Ellen Smith hall for all girls who have had at least one soccer practice. Sign on the W. A. A. bulletin board in Me morial hall. Student Council. Regular Student Council meeting Let Ui Tell You About Lef x "Leaf Fact." rhe bast LOOSE-LEAF pocket eiaa note system devised for students' handy reference. condensed information on leal subjects. tech- RAG CARPET Help! Help! DO YOU KNOW. They use roosters for weather vanes so they don't have to gather eggs. Many a fountain pen has gone dry without an amendment. Where y' been? Ain't been. Just come from not going. Many a miss has flunked many a man. Is it a rash act to use the knife instead of the fork? No, it's a sleight of hand performance. HERE LIETII. Poor little Ettie Quette, An uncouth sir, Used his knift And murdered her. HEARD IN ETHICS. "University bred" means a years' loaf. four- tonight at 6 o'clock at Burroughs cafe. Very important that everyone is present. ' Freshman Commission. Freshman Commission meeting at 7:10 Tuesday at Ellen Smith hall Please bring dues. Bulletin Encourages Old-time Parties for Thanksgiving Senior Advisory Board. The Senior Advisory Board will have a meeting at 12, Tuesday at Ellen Smith hall. Green Goblins. Regular meeting will be held this evening at the Farm House, 26th and O streets. New members will be initi ated, starting at 7 o'clock. All men to be initiated will bring ten paddles. in rnrnmmflrulod to add Pep 0 these gatherings. Foliage makes an attractive decoration for the house. The guests might be asked to come dressed as "Maiden Aunt," "Uncle Ebenezer," "Little Annie," and other characters of the "fifties." . Old fachlonH Aann. .. Goes the Weasel," "Old Dan t...l! J imr . . . . nuu luuney IVlUHk " nr. .i gested by the bullnfin 8U" "Let's not let the old-time Bpirit ' enjoyment grow old," the l . Old fashioned Thanksgiving par- tina are beine encouraged by the State Agriculture Extension service in a bulletin released last week. "Button button," "blind man's Muff." "charades." and "drop the handkerchief" are games suggested fnr Thnnkstriving parties. Marshmal- low toasts, corn pops and candy pulls Kearney Club. Kearney Club meeting at Faculty hall Wednesday at 8 p. m. Corncobs. An important meeting of, all Corn cobs at 5 p. m., Tuesday, the second floor of the Temple. AH pledges and members must be present. World Forum. Ben Wilson will talk on "The Brit ish Labor Movement" at the luncheon Wednesday at the Grand hotel. B1553 Franco-American Beauty Shop Liberty Theater Bldg. 143 No. 13th St. Room 8 Wave and Hairdress, 75c Bob curl and wave $1 All Saturday Marcel $1 Dinner Discussion. Ben Wilson will speak on the Chris tian social order at the Grand hotel at 6 o'clock Tuesday. Enrollment fee one dollar. Calendar Wednesday. Pi Kappa Phi house dance. Beta Theta Pi house dance. Alpha Sigma Phi fall party, Cham ber of Commerce. Thursday. Phi Delta Chi dance, Lincoln. . Delta Chi house dance. Alpha Phi house dance. Phi Omega Pi house dance. Gamma Phi Beta freshman house dance. Phi Mu house dance. REMEMBER Vall's Barber Shop 131 No. 13th St. MOGUL BARBER SHOP 127 No. 12th. B Architecture, motors, business, chemistry, machine design, elec tricity, highway engineer, hy. dralice, mining-, petroleum, rail way construction, concrete, steam, structures, surveying. place log tables .. 35c Stediua conversion tables 5c TUCKER-SHE AN 1123 O St. LEDWICHS TASTIE SHOPPE Fountain Sc Luncheonette Service B2189 12th A P St.. Butler Drug Co. The U. of N. Student Store Drugs, Stationery, Candy, Cigar, Soda. Sandwich, Ha Caecelato, Puackw Wa appreciate your business. Guy Butler, Ph. C ISSl O Proprietor BUM Annual Fall Membership .Round Up The Young Men's Christian Association Red Triangle Ranch Lincoln, November 26, 27, and 28 Special Rates for Students Special rates to students will be $6.00 for remainder of the school year. Students should see Wendell Brown, loreman; or Abe Martin, assistant, and their helpers. 1 fl i 353 N. 12 t 1 Laundrt& Cleaning B-3555 KEEP CLEAN THE EVANS WAY For Thanksgiving Use the Evans Cleaning Service. Suits, Overcoats, Dresses made to look as new as the day you bought tbem. Just Call Our Number Thanksgiving Footwear of Modish Smartness and Modest Price! FINE CHROME PATENT OXFORDS with welt soles and military heels having rubber top lift comfortable and dressy pair 5 95 FINE DRESS PUMPS of black or brown suede or satin new and novel styles Including one Htrnpn with fancy cut nuts. high or low covered heels styles of real (rj smartness service and comfort as well 6! FINE BLACK KID OR SATIN PUMPS in plain or fancy one-strap style with hiirh or low heels, smart, excellent fitting and dressy offered at an unuauoj y low prico for low shoe i of such ap parent worth pair GOLU'3 Uascment. 4 95 Thanksgiving candy GOLD'S BEST CHOCO- LATES a delicious milk fsnwX chocolate pack with de- it liirhtful enters, each "vf-f piece individually pack- M ed handsomely boxed . J at the POUND OLD FASHIONED PEANUT BRIT-. TLE Great, big peanuts, toothsome- Iv candied, pound 25c BLACK WALNUT TAFFY another delight, pound 35c GOLD'S First Floor. Smart Leather Bags 95 Stunning new ithapes Including Envelopes, vaniuo anu otner lav. orite styles in these leather Hand Hairs of boat. 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