Tllifi DAILY MIBIAIKAU Ten Years Ago Registrar V. R. Greer vinited at the Universities of Chicago, Illinois and Iowa to investigate the methods of keeping records and office ac counts. He was satisfied that the method at Nebraska were better than some and as good as any that he examined. Mr. Felix Newton of 1908 received a letter from the Authors' League oi America asking him to become a member. Winston Churchill was the president of the organization. , A listless crowd of rootors watch ed the game between Wesleyan and Nebraska. Wesleyan held the Hus kers for several downs but the play ing was too slow and Nebraska plow ed their way through the Coyotes to a score of 30 to 0. The sophomores had a complete Special Armistice Week Program Big Double Bill DoubtleM thai- U an veiling of higher enjoyment to be had than at the Lyric thii week, but we don't know where it it sea TWO LIFE LONG PALS WHO LOVED A WOMAN WITHOUT A, SOUL WILLIAM FOX Presents THE SCRIIN VERSION OF THE INTERNATIONAL STAGE SUCCESS A mfghty cfwma of wifdiied women with. GEORGE O'BRIEN MADGE BELLAMY LESLIE FENTON MARGARET LIVINGSTON WALTER M'GRAIL IULALIB JENSEN fttf Ij HENRY WALL tfonowJEDIlUND GOOLDINQ ROWLAND V. LEB production ALSO NEWS COMEDY AND TOPICAL PICTURES ON THE STAGE A MINATURE MUSICAL COMEDY Paul Rhan and Company A Juvenile Prodigy and a Versatile Quintette in "LEAP YEAR" PRETTY GIRLS. BEAUTIFULLY STAGED valkaway at the interclass track ncet, when they piled up thirty five points against three for the sen iors, seven for the juniors, and six teen for the freshmen. Seventy one athletes participated in the meet. Twenty Years Ago The Forestry club met, and Pro fessor Loveland spoke of the effects forest had upon rainfall. The Nebrasknn had received an invitation for all students of the world to assemble at Milan for a Congress held in 1900. , Registration at the Nebraska School of Agriculture for both the long and short coures, opened and a hundred and thirty seven register ed. This was an increase in attend ance over the record of any previons year. The farm was improved with new walks and buildings Agricul tural Hall, the newest and largest. In the last number of Science, Professor Bessey reviewed a recent ORPHECJM 2 NIGHTS WED. MAT. November 17th and 18th. EARNEST HARRISON'S LYRIC ORCHESTRA MRS. MAY. M. MILLS, Organist Show. At 1, 3, 6, 7, 9. Holiday Mate Night Prices. Hat. 25c. Nile 40. Chil. IOci Lincoln THEATRE ALL THIS WEEK CHAMLIE !HAPLIN wQ! "the tLM GOLD, v vJi I U Dramatie Comedy rtlijWiUfe Charli Chaplin. J . GiaSQ , ,..Lm t e H Til" " -u mm-" FLASHES GREAT WHITE Trices: Nights 1.00 to 12.50 flu r r i n i r. . a - : mx... special ropuiar rnte iv.n&.i.w ed. sue to fl.uu. seats now selling. book on the water lilies of the world, bv Dr. Conrad. The book appeared as one of the publications of the Carnegie Institution. The freshmen met in the chapel and completed the election of offi cers. They also resolved that the freshmen class refrain from any un necestary or barbaric manifestations of class spirit, and to cooperate with the sophomores in preserving peace between the two classes. College Press RIALTO-Today WITH GRETA NISSEN BESSIE LOVE MONTA BELL PRODUCTION The King wasn't in the countinf room, countinf out his money; he was in America (rollicking and call ing cuties "honey." Adolphe Menjou as the handsome heart-breaking Kinc . Greta Nissen and Bessie Love as two of the cuties. The season's smartest comedy 1 SHOWS AT t, 3, S, 7, 9 p. m. Mat. 20c Nite 30c ON BEING AN INDIVIDUAL Students are in revolt; at least some of them are. They always have been, ever since the day when Heraclitus passionately denied the changelessness of Being and asserted the universality of Becoming. They always will be revolting. As long as all the forces of socioty are concen trated upon making the student con form to conventional rules, remould ing him and turning him out upon the world, the colourless, steretyped product of a mechanical system, he will be rising in rebellion and stren uously demanding from society that he be accorded the sovereign right of man, recognition as an individual. To be an individual is a privilege open to all, in varying degrees, and taken advantage of by surprisingly few. Year after year thousands of young men and women are thrust forth from the obscurity of towns and villages and given the golden opportunity of acquiring that nebu lous something known as a college education. Year after year a few men and fewer women emerge from the mouth of the educational hand mill, flushed and struggling and sometimes rather profane but exult ing in the realization that they have conquered, broken free from the musty dusty cobwebs of convention that had enmeshed them almost as surely, but not quite, as the golden threads of the Lilliputians, and achieved what men throughout the centuries have sought for but seldom gained, freedom, individuality. The rest of those thousands of young men and women are turned but from that same educational hand- mill, tepid, colurless as when they went in, a long line of steretyped nonentities, uniform, monotonous, uninteresting, thinking the same thoughts, talking the same inanities, and doing the same conventional things in the same conventional way. Smug, complacent, contented they are because they have never known anything better, never known the joy of thinking their way through to conclusions as individuals regardless of the opinion of the mob, never ex perienced the thrill that always ac Companies an action done because it is the most worthwhile thing and not because the world dictates. Out into life they go, into business where they chase the almighty dollar just as they managed the track team, into teaching where fearful of a mistake they follow the text book with pain ful exactness, into engineering where like cyclones they tear down upon the world destroying the beauty of nature and increasing the complexity of the civilization that produced them. Each generation is like the last, the great mass of youth accepting without protest or even question the traditions of their elder, meekly adapting themselves to their environ ment, fitting themselves into the in numerable ruts of a soul destroying civilization, throwing all their energy into perpetuating and developing systems and organizations which may be and probably are unsound. But always there are the few, the indi viduals, who protest against being mere puppets, who break loose from all these insufferable bonds, and see things in a clear light, and have the courage to pick out the things that are worth while doing and do them. Then it is when we get a Galileo or a Bruno, a Carlyle or a Ruskin, a Socrates or a Jesus, men who stand out above the centuries, who will live "when Lloyd George, Foch and William Hohentollern share with Charlie Chaplin that ineluct able oblivion which awaits the un creative mind." Anyone can achieve individuality who but allows himself. There is an insistent little voice in each of us, al most smothered sometmes but still there, crying out against this prison life, demanding release from its iron fetters. Lsten to it before it dies away, and before the burden of years and habits make self expression im pessible. Hear what it says, "Wake up I Assert yourself I Be an individual The McGill Daily. Kappa Phi Takes in Nine New Members Members of Kappa Phi initiated nine 'new pledges Saturday evening. Kappa Phi is an organization for the Methodist women who are attending the University. The new members, who were chosen last spring, are: Margaret Beeler, Virginia Jordan, Ruth Lang, Mayme Swan, Evelyn Wallwey, Elizabeth Wilson, Gladys Woodward, Alta Ilauck and Eva Hauck. Spanish Program IS Presented Saturday A Spanish program was given in Teachers College Saturday night. This was the fourth of a series of pro grams being sponsored by the mod ern language department. An ad dress in Spanish was given by John McCoy. Spanish songs of various kinds were sung, and Spanish games played during the social hour. Plans were also made for the pre sentation of a Spanish play at the next meeting, which will be held the latter part of this month. Attend Meeting of Council in Lawrence Miss Erma Appleby, secretary of the Y. W. C. A., and Cyrena Smith left Friday morning for Lawrence, Kansas, where they are attending the meeting of the regional council of the association. They will return Monday. Miss Appleby attends the conference in the capacity or joint chairman for the Estes Park- summer conference. Miss Smith is a member of the council representing large universities. There is nothing the home folks would appreciate more than a really good photograph of yourself. A glimpse into Townsend's display win dows on South Eleventh street will demonstrate the superiority of their portraiture. Here "you will always find familiar faces." The Chaplin Genius SwUcW ttn UrdaKp Wt.rtbre.ks cf Itumarnhj'. oenj WUriou. fu mA .hs.ai laughter. Yt tlr i V CkafUn 1V wto world Uujli - Chaplin of ft b.J .Vices, trick derby, little cane, the bagft trousers and the funny,, snuffling walk. MON. TUES. WED. VAUPEVltLI (TvrHtRf. tVtKTBWiflf COCS- MON. TUES. WED. WHERE THOUSANDS MEET THOUSANDS DAILY BIG ARMISTICE WEEK BILL The Orpheum Circuit Favorite Emily Darrell Vaudeville's Jolly Comedienne in "LATE FOR REHEARSAL" I Th Amazing Entertainers mike Alvin & Kenny georce Sensational Comedy Aerialists Venetian Masqueraders OLGA BOEHM WITH COLLETTE BLEIN And A Company of Eight in "A Spectacular Sonf, Dance and Musical Fantasy" The Unusual Artists KARL & ERNA GRESS In A Series of Distinct Novelties BILLY MARIE Hibbitt & Hartman In A Rollicking Comedy Skit "BEFORE AND 'JFTER I "HER MEMORY" Show. t 1, 3, 5, 7,9p.m. Mat 35c, Nite SOc. COMING THURS, FRi., SAT. Jack Allyn - Alice Tyrell i IBT-'f ft And Their Apaches in "A PARISIENNE "CVELTY" And a Great Supporting Bill UAKirtl AND "HIS ORCHESTRA cunwt ATX-.30. 7.O0. 9:00 MAT. 2Se. NITE 50c. GAI 20c. J JtK HliHv Mats. Nite Prices J The campus is well inhab ited with canny shoppers. List' to this. An alumnus motored to Lincoln to a game recent ly (she wa3 a married wo man of about 35) and spealcing to her compan ion said: "These young men look different, somehow, from the young men I met here on Class Day, 15 years aero. They seem more practical, more business- P like, closer to the world. Lincoln is no larger out in the wide open spaces in the literal sense th e automobile, radio, tele phones and modern news papers have ended its old time seclusion' This explains why an old alumnua who wanted a safety razor, got it at Rudge & Guenzel's. It explains why another alumnus sent to Rudge .& Guenzel's recently for a particular kind of silk hose and some colored handkerchiefs. College folk remember the stores of their college days, and the farther col lege folk want their pur chases to go in service and value the quicker they will find their wav to Endue & Guenzel's 8 Do your shopping a t Rudge & Guenzel's NOW. I Personal Barrio Bureau Badge A Oaensel Co. That Light Top Coat Is Too Light for this weather instead of flapping your arms like a windmill invest in a new winter-weight Kuppenheimer $50.00 MAGEE'S ifo kens Jj&iptxftbehmjAo&shiJM r I II r ! j 1 1 J i 1 L i J SPECIAL ARMISTICE i 'filjIJMJ Jl WEEK PROGRAM I I Ii " 1 1 T I I The Groatrit Adventure Story of Thcl Bl 1 Dim c TTTTn of l m jr y Most Adventureome Life Pre- B nmmmi''''mm - mnntmA nit hdt .Silver Screen B ! I -. sen n H I IT ROARS THROUGH A STORM Ur i iiikil.lo r f- mink sW-i, V 1 A THUNDERING MELODRAMA, SIZZLING WITH EXCITEMENT "Strong for Love" A RIP-ROARING CONVENTION OF LAUGHTER VISUALIZED NEWS & CARTOON SMILES ADDED ATTRACTION THUR., FRI. and SAT. "THE ACE OF SPADES" Shows At 1, 3. S, 7, 9. Holiday Mat Nite Prices Mat. 20c Nite 25c Chil. 10c J. C. N. RICHARDS and D. FRANK EASTERDAY, Organists COLLEGE COATS SNAPPY SERVICEABLE WATERPROOFS dll llte&o with College mon Varsity Slickers (VCLLdV OH ' OLIVl (YELLOW OH ' OLIVl Sport Coats v AJ TOWER 00. BOSTON MASS