THE DAILY NEBRASKA N The Daily Nebraskan SUIIm A. Lincoln, Nabraaka OFFICIAL PUBLICATION of the UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Undor Direction of ho Student FufcU ation Board PublUhod Tua.day. Wadnaadajr, Thuradajr. Friday and Sunday morninga during tha ata damie yaar. Editorial Officae Unlvoralty Hall 10 Offico Houra Aftarnoona with tha axcap- tlon of Friday and Sunday Talaphonaa Day. B-6891, No. 14a (1 rlni). Nlht. B-MS3 Buainaaa Offica Unlvoralty Hall 10 B Offico Houra Aftarnoona with tha excep tion of Friday and Sunday Telephonee Day, B-6891, No. 142 (2 ring.). Niht, B-6882 Entered aa aecond-claaa matter at the poetofnee in Lincoln, Nabraaka, under act of Confreaa, March 3, 1S70, and at apeclal rata of pota provided for in Section 1103. act of October 3, 1917, authorlud January 20, 1922. 2 SUBSCRIPTION RATE year $1.28 a matter Single Copy, B centa EDITORIAL STAFF William Bertwell .... dJ'or Hueh B. Co Managing Editor Wm. Card N.wa Editor Victor Hackter Nwa Editor Philip O'Hanlon x Newa Editor Alice Thuman Newa Editor Volta W. Torrey Newa Editor Margaret Long .. Aaat. Newa Editor Iaabel O Halloran Aaat. Newa Editor BUSINESS STAFF Clarence Elckhoff Buainaaa Manager Otto Skold At. Bua. Manaf.r Simmon Morton Circulation Manager Raymond Swallow . Circulation Manager ATHLETIC TICKETS Souson athletic tickets go on sale to the students next Monday inorn injr with reservations for the foot ball season. There Will be no soli citation there will be only sales. The tickets will be forced on no one; you must ask for a tickot tf you want one. Admission to a reserved seat at all football games is but one of the privileges the ticket carries. Basket ball and baseball games, wrestling and track meets and use of the tennis courts are included. The value of these admissions in money equivalent is about $26, and the cost of the ticket is less than that of admission to the four football games alone. This shows ' c'?arly that the cost is negligible. Whether you buy a tick et depends upon whether you have an interest in Cornhusker athletics. "Privilege" is correctly applied to the buying of the student athletic tickets. Those ir charge of the sales will take strict precautions to see that every purchaser is a student. And it is in the student section only that Nebraska spirit appears. Out siders want to see a winning team Nebraskans support their team in victory or defeat. Again, the viewpoint of the men on the field is important and their ability to win does not all lie in training. With a solid section of thousands ofloyal Cornhuskers cheering them on, Nebraska elevens have often snatched a victory from the hands of reputed invincibles. It was the surg ing, fighting courage of the stands that made the unquestioned defeat of the "wonder team" from Notre Dame possible in two successive years. If the students do not take the tickets in the reserved section, the team loses the benefit of playing on its home grounds. Many athletes, baseball and track as well as football, psychologically backed by the stands filled with unshakeable, staunch friends, become supermen. The value of such support must not be lost to Nebraska teams. The single tax system applied to University of Nebraska athletics is so well established that it is no long er thought necessary to launch an extended, strenuous campaign for the sale of the student tickets. The small financial support asked for the whole world of Cornhusker nthletics is little in comparison with the benefit coming directly to the individual. At Nebraska the entire expense is borne by the saie of ad missions. No alumnus is asked for a contribution. Without a large sale of the student tickets Nebraska athletes will not have the facilities necessary to de velop the best tennis, and there is danger that many will remain indif ferent to the privilege offered them. This is to be an opportunity to help win from Notre Dame, from the Jayhawks, from the Kansas Aggies! STAFF WANTED The Daily Nebraskan is being writ ten and edited by a staff too small to do this work as carefully and thor oughly as it should be done. This is a condition that always comes at the beginning of an academic year. Some of the dependable writers of the pre vious year do not return to Nebraska, some register for more study work than they can prepare easily, aome must work part time, and bo on. These changes leave a staff composed chiefly of the editors elected by the Student Publication Board and two or three reporters. Numerous mis takes in the eBily issues of the fall are the Inevitable result of this year ly destruction of a staff organization. One error particulary noticeable in the Sunday issue was the line "Continued in Next Issue" which left the list of sorority pledges incom plete. One would think the publica tion professes to be a magazine rath. ei than a newspaper. This is trace able to a makeup man who took the quickest course to get the paper to the press without running overtime on the pay roll. To eliminate this sort of mistake the paper must have a large staff of student writers. A large staff will relieve the news editors of some of the burden of seeing that all neces sary facts are incorporated in news stories handed them. Previous experience is desirable in prospective staff members, but it need not necessarily be extensive. Work on a college paper is an excel lent method of learning something of newspaper work as a profession. The staff welcomes oil who wish to help with the publication. Notices the Journalism 81. New Writing, Newspaper. Assigned seats indicated on class bulletin board (U10G) and at SS107. M. M. FOGG. Palladian. A special program beginning at 8:30 Friday, September 26 will be given at Palladian Hall in the Temule Everybody invited. Iota Sigma Pi. There will be a meeting of Iota Sigma Pi Wednesday evening at 7:15 in Chemistry Hall. Lutherans. The Lutheran Bible League will have its first meeting with Rev. Erck in Faculty Hall Wednesday ut 7 o'clock. Band. University Band members report for Freshman rally 9:50 Tuesday morning at the ease uoor to the Ar mory. HERBERT QUICK. Cross Country, Cross country practice commences at orce from 3 to 6 o clock daily Enu!pment iray bu hnd any afternoon from James Lewis or myself Conch I. LUyd MMust.ir Taart. Tho Tassels, University grlrlB' pep onrantaation. will meet Tuesday even ing at 7:15 in Ellen Smith Hall for the purport of discussing plans made by the summer committees and lor mulating new ont-s. Union. The University Union will hold its first meeting of tho year in Union Hall in the Temple, Tuesday evening September 23, at 7 o'clock. All mem bers are urged to be present. Pershing Rifles. Important meeting of Pershing Rifles, Wednesday, September 24, in Nebraska Hall. All members be sure to attend. Green Goblins. Initiation of the new members of the Green Goblins will bo hold Wed nesday evening at the Lincoln high school stadium starting at 6 o'clock sharp. All new initiates will bring three paddles to tho scene. The an nual banquet of the Green Goblins in honor of the new representatives will be held at the Lincoln Hotel Thurs day eveninir at 6:15. I Vesper Choir Tryouts. Tryouts for the vesper choir will be held Thursday from 2 to 5 o'clock at Ellen Smith Hall. Delta Omleron. Important meeting in the Art Gal lery, Saturday at 2:30 o'clock. Glee Club. Tryouts will be held Wednesday at 7:30 o'clock in tho Art Gallery, R. O. T. C. Measurements for uniforms for advanced course men will be taken until Tuesday noon, September 27, at the west end of the third floor of Nebraska Hall by Craddock, the Tail- Alpha Kappa Psi. There will be a meeting of Alpha Kappa Psl this evening at 5 o'clock n Social Science Building. Notice. Students who wish to write sports for Tho Nebraskan are requested to meet with the BDorts editor at The Nebraskan office Wednesday at 4 o'clock. This includes those who have already begun this work. Exchanges A "Get Acquainted" picnic was given by the W. S. G. A. Y. W. A. for tho women of the Univer sity of Kansas. The Kansas freshman football team boasts of sixty candidates, twentv-six of which aro more than Eiv -font- in Keic-ht and weich 100 pounds or more. The K. U. DeMolay Association, an organization to be composed of all DeMolays attending the Univer- Cirls' I ho Gir'-.i' Comniftcial Clt'b. Cornier :::! i .u'. pnrty for treshnvin plrh will be irTthe Biz ml mid Tehchers C Kt';o, Commercial rk, at illlen Sm'l'a diK day. Septe.vibot 21. from 5 until 7 ii'i i.'i k. AT r.'za ! a:.d Cotvncrcml girls go th';ie. J)a,iv."nj;. program, and -ii:..ic:. There Are a Few 1924 Cornhuskers Which Were Not Called For. These will be sold, while they last, at the regular price of $4.00 At Long's Book Store Facing the Campus Regents Book Store Basement Administration Bldg. slty of Kansas, was organized at a smoker September 12. A membership of several hundred men 1b antici pated. The totol enrollment at the Uni versity of Kansas ia 3,704, four be ing Nebraska residents. Kansas has organized a department of traffic officers to handle the crowds at her football games. Dr. Sarnest Dazier, California as somblyman has asked the cooperation of university papers in locating his son Tilford, who disappeared from home, January 11. The following description is offered as identifica tion: Ago, 20; height, six feet, two inches; weight, 155 to 160; hair, light brown; eyes, brown. He may be identified by three prominent scars on the left, center and right of the lower abdomen. Tho girls with bobbed hair are soon to bo out of style, says Paris, center of world fashions. The main reason given for this report is that "men don't like it." At the end of rush week at the Uni versity of Kansas the fraterniites an nounced the pledging of 243 men. The Government Committee on Ocean Geography is beginning a great scientific Burvey of the ocean to determine conditions of fisheries along the Atlantic coast and in the Gulf of Mexico. The committee will also attempt to take an inventory of the ocean life upon which future gen erations will have to draw for food. Information concerning anyone who might answer the above des cription will be welcomed by Dr. Do zler at Redding, California. Antelope Park Will Remain Open Until the 4th of October Dancing every nite except Sunday with the COLONIANS playing. I HALLETT University Jeweler Fraternity and Sorority Ring Pins and Crests U of N Jewelry Ring Pins Bracelets Bar pin Chains Cuff Buttons Fountain Pens Moore Waterman Parker Conklin Shaffer 1 m I WAHL PEN For writing ease and legibility The Wahl Pen was designed for writing ease and legibility. It is a perfected, modern writing instrument which will aid you in acquiring a practical hand, a readable expression of your thoughts. All metal construction gold or silver for permanence and service ability gives lightweight, fine bal ance, increased ink capacity, strength to resist wear and abuse. And brings the designer opportunity to produce a pen matching the beauty of a hand somely cased watch. Prices in gold filled or silver models $5 to $10. Made in the U.S.A. by THE WAHL COMPANY, Chicago CMtuJimm FsHtrj: THE WAHL COMPANY. Ltd, Toronto lAmtSttMrm of tht WM Ertnhnp W At WM AU-MtUi Fommtmm Ptu Eversharp is made in designs matching Wahl Pen Speier's Special Offer to University Students WITH the purchase of $100.00 worth of merchandise in any part of the store we will present a Season Foot ball and Athletic ticket Absolutely Free Any of you fellows desiring to participate in this offer are invited to enlist the aid of your friends. Let them help you to complete your $100.00 worth of purchases by supplying their own needs to be applied on your pur chase record. This offer holds good until the Thanks giving game. We would suggest your giving us a call and we'll explain the idea in full detail. We particular ly emphasize the fact that our merchandise is marked at the same low prices as heretofore. This unusual offer is made with the object of making new friends for the store. Yours for courtesy and prompt service Tenth and O St., Lincoln, Neb. Quality Corner iiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii INVITATION To those discriminating men we have al ready invited- and to their friends we repeat our invitation to view an exhibit showing the changes in Men's clothes for the coming season AT Lincoln Hotel PARLOR G TODAY Through the courtesy of Scheyer & Company, Chicago New York we are able to extend this invitation to an elaborate display of finest custom-tailored clothes. This exhibit is replete in its showing of the smartest mod els for every occasion and likewise of the newest fabrics. Mr. Arthur H. Bishop of Scheyer & Company together with our Mr. A. H. Bennell will be in personal attendance to confer with those-who would dress in good taste. The Store For Men on N St 117-119 So. Established 12th 1871 f.rtl!IIIH