, rJWMMMY ftp! F AILT HBBIAIKAM The Daily Nebraskan!- - - Button A. Unco!. Nbmkn. OFFICIAL PUBLICATION f I'MVKRSITY OF NEBRASKA Cnlr Dirwiion of Ik Student Publication Board lhMi.fci Tundar. Wdnlair. Thuro T. FnUy n Sunday morninii dunng In aradrmk yrar.- -Afttrncon with In Jf-plf. year. The students have been called all kinds of names. The student opinion column of The Daily Nebras kan have been replete with comment giving reason for this lack of sup port, remedies for it and so on. I The lack of spirit, however, is his jtory now; so is the football season with one exception, the game Day with Notre Editorial OffV UniwraKr Hall It. Offico Honrt Anmoon wi TiPn it. b-ii. . No. i,on Thanksgiving (Editorial. 1 rm; uu.inM. I nnri. ., n B-st. ,uame. ., thJ Each university has one rival m- Kntvrrd at cnd-la innttw at tna ..... , .v v poaicffK n Lincoln. Nraka. undr - !stitution which it would rather beat r.,.Tt.,foVV'on than any other on the football field, ms. a of tvtob,r . 1it. authonmcd , At yae it's Harvard, at Missouri it's January to. ins. ;Kansas and at xebraska it's Notre It . TrSCBSCRlrT,0,r.Et ct;Dame. To use the sport term, we Sinti Cqpt. wt "point" for Notre Dame. EPIT01UAt staff I Ther is no use to talk now about Ednrd Hwrw J!,,or:what the spirit has txen or what it 5'? 22!Ur M""! e.' 'might have been. What we have to intiua F-.4.n. Jr n- J'i now is to create a new spirit for .f r fliiw i v- 5"!'", the coming game. SLATE BLACKBOARDS ARE REMOVED FROM "U" HALL (Continued from Page One.) I L. Fik Ruth Mti Do- K. Trett MillK-rnt mn Arthar 5H To relate how the Nebraska spirit At't. Nw Editor A"t N FJ'I"')...!.! x- tv ,- Voiu w. Torryy JL. citH.uti- F4 tor jn 1923 would be to repeat what ev- rv.i K T-tt Cotnbu?iti KS-tor 4 , . , . , v. RoTci vni ctnr.oiin Editor eryone has heard time ana time -again. Let us just remember that it o,,. kM BtTlytSS tEIL.. M.rican be done and it was done two Fimiwo Mvt At. Buiti Viitfr yfsrs ago. tUefcard F. Vu lcrruatioa M.n.ccr' We should stop wondering what is the matter with the Nebraska spirit. REBUILDING U HALL jwe won't have time for that, we will Old U Hall is in H last days. busy building up that spirit . lor lliK .uirv a-'ainc game corridors and classrooms are empti-j ness and desolation. Some work STRIP UNIVERSITY HALL has already been done by the wreck ers and within a few weeks the first building f the University f Ne- ROOMS OF EQUIPMENT (Continued f ron Page One.) rooms where the new slate black boards had been installed. They did not like to write on the cement glaied black plaster. One of the examination questions was worded "Construct line values of the function of an angle which falls in the second quadrant?" From which present day students will admit that mathematics was no more a pipe course then than it is now. There was a parting admonition on the board "Bring your tables on Mon day," indicating that the questions were probably a weekly or monthly test administered on a Friday week end. Some more mathematical problems were found left on the wall in room 201. They were worked at least twenty-seven years ago, as 1S98 was the last year that the mathematics department was in University Hall, and the slate boards were probably installed earlier than that date. A Latin sentence was found on the south wall of room 203, where Latin classes were held in the decade before the twentieth century. The slate in most f the other rooms was set durir.g the summer months as the walls uncovered were found to be washed off clean and black, as they generally are over the vacation periods. Bengtson Publishes New Geography Book A new book entitled "The Pupil's Workbook in Geography of Nebras ka" by Prof. N. A. Bengtson of the geography department, has been pub lished by Ginn and Company, Bos ton. This volume is intended to supplement the descriptive texts al ready in use, and carries out the problem method of teaching Nebras ka geography. It contains a series tof problems dealing with soil areas, 'climate, natural resources, various i agricultural and manufacturing in dustries, highways, railways, and the 2. Miss Helen Shearer, soprano 3. Miss Ruth Zimmerman, con tralto. 4. J. Iian McDaniels, tenor. 5. Solos by: 1. Mr. Decker, bass. 2. Miss Helen Shearer, soprano 3. Miss Ruth Zimmerman, con tralto. 6. University of Nebraska R. O. T. C. Band, under the direction of William Quick. Notices cities of the state. It is especially ! suitable for use in the seventh and j eighth grades , schools. or in junior high Syracute Art Eahibit Her An exhibit of student art work j from Syracuse University will be , (hung in rooms 30" and 310 of thej i Library building this week. The ex- j 'hibit includes several different types of art work and is expected to at tract much favorable attention. It ; will be open to the public. ; j Wear Oranfe Cords Orange-colored corduroy trousers! have recently been adopted as the of-; f ieial insignia by the junior engineers at thp I'niversitv of Oklahoma. I I FAMILY ATTENDS UNIVERSITY; braska will be reduced to an exceed-of the collection. Parts of the old ingly ugly and doleful reminder of its tower be saved. j former self. j Akuaoiml Was Unexpected j As soon as the weather permit? J jhe complete abandonment of the , some building will doubtless have to i,uflding ws totally unexpected by j be constructed to take care of the physical plant department of the departments formerly housed in f University, which always has plans Hall which are now scattered about ,ady for emergency schedules cf the the campus in a most unsatisfactory ; ciaKS rooms. This was a "super fashion. The kind of a bunding this ' emTgency" in the words of Op rat will be and its location are matters J -lTlg Er.giueer Ellis, who yesterday ex f considerable interest. "pressed satisfaction at the coo per- About old U Hall hovers memories : ation i department has received and traditions dear to the alumni fj, aij concerned in meeting the and undergraduates as well as to the unprecedented emergency demand faculty bo figure in their formation. ' f0T sraoe. Every class has been lo The building has been the center f Cj.ted. and the whole readjustment the College of Arts and Science and ma;e only a re&lively few hours as such the center of the entire insti- j cf C;AS time, tution since its founding. It has be- j Every building on the down-town come the symbol cf the spirit cf the campus has been pressed into service University in a way which no other to jts capacity, and in addi- building can hope to fulfOL It em- t5on ?ererai buildings adjoining the bodies legitimate tradition. campus have been drafted into ser- Architectorally U Hall is attract- AH available rooms in Tem- ive and distinctive in its unpreten- pie including all faculty rooms, Pal tiousness. Ita symttrkal line are fcdian and Union halls, cafeteria ! a relief in contrast to the uelmest cl rwms arid Y. M. C. A. headquarters the Teachers College building, the are use3 fcr tcs. useless pillars of Social Science and ; The University Episcopal church the glary decorativeness of the Ad- J basement is being used for English ministration building. ! classes. Accient language classes There is of course the possibility mee.ting in the Presbyterian par that the building which replaces U 'age oa Fourteenth street two Hall may be placed in some other jth cf R street. Several more part f the campus and it may even English classes of Professor Stuff be a repetition of the familiar crack- and his co-faculty members are lo-fT-box type. The suggestion is rath- ciUd in tiiree rooms of Bancroft er frequent, however, that a replica 1 nchod. Some of the smaller classes of the present building be placed in t,f Professor Buck are meeting at lis the present location, retaining in that jn Even the stadium has been way the symbolic meaning which ' pressed into service for publication Hall now portrays. If it is possible ciffioes. to use the same bricks for the outer walls the appearance of the building j ue Mental Teu ia Mmic eed be changed very litUe. In case j paQ Thomas, instructor in this is impractical an effort could at 'theory and history of musk, is em least be made to secure an imitation ' ploying psychological clinic methods of them, 'under the direction of Dr. Winifred Here is a problem which should p. Hyde, professor of psychology,. ia On The Air Father aad Childrea Have Beea ia Nebraska Institution Seven children of E. P. Sturdevant, who attended the University of Ne braska in 1ST?, have since been reg istered at the University, according to The Nebraska Alumnus. Two of his daughters, Marjorie Sturdevant, "2?, and Florence Sturdevant, '26, are now attending the University. Louise Sturdevant. the oldest daugh ter, received her A. B. degree from the University in 1?03, and is row an instructor in Arsenal Technical School at Indianapolis. C. F. Stur devant, a former student who was in the same class, is now division en gineer for the Burlington railroad 11. S. Sturdevant,' cx-l 2, and Dr. E E. Sturdevant, ex-'17, are Lincoln dentists, the former being a member of the faculty of the College f Den tistry. Dr. A. B. Sturdevant, ex-'lS, is practicing dentistry at David City. Requests Received for New Bizad Book '"What to read on Business, a classified bibliography recently pub lished by the committee on business research of the College of Business Administration has been well receiv ed as a useful guide to the best books and magarines on every phase of business activity. Eequests for it have come from every part of the United States, and even from for eign countries. I Taesday, November 17 9:30 to 9:55 a. ra. Weather re port, road report and announce ments, jj 10:30 to 11:00 a. m. Prof. F. M. Mussehl, of the department of animal husbandry, will give his second lec ture on "Artificial Lighting for the,; "Egg Production." i 1:15 to 1:30 p. m. Address by ; iW. W. Curfman. assistant superin tendent of Lincoln city schools, on "Adjectives." j Musical numbers by Mr. Phillip Hudson, pianist. 3 :00 to 3 :30 p. m. Address by Prof. R. S. Boots, department of political science, on the "Short Bal lot." S :05 to 10:30 p. m. 1. Prof. Maurice H. Weseen, of the department of English, radio correspondence course for credit, will juk on "Dead Letters." 2. University string orchestra, , under direction of Paul W. Thomas. 3. Mixed quartette, with orcbes ,itra accompaniment. i ! 1. Mr. Decker, bass. Xi Delta Meeting of Xi Delta Thursday at 7:15 in Ellen Smith Hall. Delta Sif ma Pi Delta Sigma Pi will hold a dinner Tuesday, November 17, at 6 o'clock at the Grand hotel Horn Economic Women Freshman women and new mem bers will be initiated into the Home Economics club Tuesday at 7:30 o'clock in the gymnasium at the Col lege of Agriculture. TasseU The Tassels will meet for an im portant business meeting Tuesday at 7:10 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall. Iron Sphinx Iron Sphinx meeting tonight in Social Science 201 at 7:15 o'clock. Church Workers There will be a luncheon for lead ers of church affiliation committees and other interested persons at the Grand Hotel Tuesday noon. Profeitor Stepanek'a Clat.as Slavic 91 in Bessey Hall 218, Sla vic 93 in Chemistry Hall 815, English 2b in Chemistry 810, English 2a in Bessey Hall 218, English 127 In Bes sey Hall 218. Luthnrna Lutheran Bible League will meet Wednesday at 7 o'clock in Faculty Hall for Bible study. Gamut Club Gamut Club dinner at 6 o'clock on Wednesday at the Grand Hotel. Phi Taa Theta Meeting at the Grand Hotel Wed nesday at 6 o'clock. Books Rooks left at The Daily Nebraskan office in University Hall may be had at the new office in the west stand of the stadium. Have you seen the new Dollar Pen made by the same people that made the Ingersoll Watch famous It's sure a lot for the money- HALLETT University Jewelet Est. 1871 117-19 So, 12 MimuiiiuiwuiiimmininuBnOTmMiiHEnnmniiuiiuiw 1 TAILORED AT FASHION PARK Eighty freshmen at the University of Iowa have responded to the call for prep basket ball men. Hotel De Hamburger EtfiJ 5c Buy 'em by the sack 1141 Q SL Phone B1512 receive the attention of individuals and organizations interested in main- J taining real traditions. Campus i sentiment can be made to count pod- ' tivtly in the decision of the aBtbori-j ties in regard to the new bunding. special study being made this year of musical capacities cf students. LETS FORGET IT Serious charges have been made against ihe Nebraska studect body DANCING SCHOOL OPEN DAILY Learn M Dance r S50 FRANZMATHES ACADEMY 101S X St. Pbont B 0S4 OUR CLUB PLAN IS DIGNIFIED BUSINESS-LUCE IT IS TIME TO BUY FOR CHRISTMAS BOYD JEWELRY CO. CLUB PLAN JEWELERS g r Our Eye Examinations are made according to the newest methods of Optometric Science, without the use of Drugs. You need not be without your vision after our examina tion. Kindy Glasses are guaranteed to give you comfortable and clear vision. AV to ee the Kiadjr Special iBclnd- AkfJ r"f iDf Inr. frannen aad the eye e- 7J ajciratioa connplrt at Kindy Optical Co. 12vj O Largest ia the Wett Street Pfco B1153 1042 O Cold's tmiimiiimminiiiiniimmiiiumiiniiiiiiimiiiMCiiiiiiiiiiimitM iimiittiiiinimi mm miuimm im ON NOVEMBER 1, 1925 THE OWNERS OF THE HOTEL WIND SOR TOOK OVER THE MAN AGEMENT AND OPERATION AND HAVE CHANGED THE NAME TO THE NEBRASKAN. HEREAFTER THE POLICY OF THE HOTEL WILL-BE TO CAT ER TO STUDENTS AS WELL AS THE GENERAL PUBLIC. REDUC ED RATES ARE OFFERED STU DErrS ON A LIMITED NUMBER Cr ROOMS AND ALL STU l.ZllTo ARE INVITED TO MAKE OF THE LARGE AND COM- ;lobby. Mi ileam the economy of wearing Stetson hats. They pay for theny selves in long service. STETSON HATS Styled for young men i i The Correct Style for Men A Worthwhile Buy 50 Style value that cannot be matriied. This assortment of Royal Derby nodels provides the utmost at this price. Parktown Worsteds 55 j i i Unexcelled clotLf wt Jwtustial wearing qxiality tailored in Royal Park and Royal Derby styles. In Foreign Cloths Produced by fine rpality mills una the water. Tailored in. tie custom ahep: at Fasluon Park. 10 &o Su. For5lefcy i Farcr w-haVa, Leoti's Inc Ilsyer Crot C, Era Simon i ! '.f r-s's, ; e C ;t.1 Co f pt'ers. & Sons, Lincoln Neb. i 1 "HMmmmmmmHmmmnmmmumm m,mmmm,mmm,mm,mm The Phantom of the Opera" with Lon Chaney-at the Lyric all this week! here at last is your chance to see at popular prices, this magnificent spectacle of Paris ian gaiety and intrigue! Five thousand people were required to carry on its breathless ac tion; the Paris Opera House, was completely reconstructed for its making! See Lon Chaney in his most remarkable make-up; so complicated that it required three hours each day for its application. And for a thrill, watch the 16,000 pound chandelier fall from the ceiling of the Opera house upon the audience below. A real eve ning's entertainment the "Phantom of the Opera ! No Wonder the Grand Hotel is so Popular! just try one of their fried chicken dinners served every noon and ripht in the cafe for 50c! Then YOU'LL know too, why so many students eat here. They also serve a daily 25c luncheon in the cafe cne that will give you new respect for the buying power of a quarter! All of their pies are home made, even unto the minemeat. The Grand is first in the minds of student organizations, too, when they want a real banquet for a reasonable price! It's Christmas-Card-Time at George Brothers! perhaps you have never seen as many in one place 5ut neither have you ever seen as many so conveniently arrar.ced for sJection! Artistic cards that require only an address to be ready to go; cards that are waiting for your distinctively ergraved names; those too, that may carry both your indi vidual serjtiment and name (fine for fraternity and soror ity greetings). Framed mottof at George Brothers, too chosen with characteristic Georev? Eros, discrimination. And "Kampus Compact!" See them with thir pennanted cov ers and you'll want one. Try tbir powdt-r,' and youll bny more of thrn for gifts. tl sirr!e; f 1.50 double. Hats for a Mere Dollar at Ben Simon & Sons! but they are not mere hats of that yon may be sore! They're smart chapeaax of fell and velvet that formerly told as high as $7.30. Wednesday only at $1, in Ben Simon Sons' Bargain Basement. Hers is a solution to the prob! of what to do about the fact that Harold likes 'era smalL plain, and upturned cf brim, while Henry prefers t3x-m large, droopy, arnd fussy! One f each kind, and no great invest ment in case Harold and Henry become Percy and George! Distinctive Aids to Beauty at Piller's! the nwrt roceeMfaJ looking feminine faces are those that are careful to use only tigh grade eonnftics! Ui&ht as well wtar any old hat as to use any old powder, rouge or lipstick. That is why campus beauties i their shopping at Piner. Here you win find compacts, lip sticks, rures and perfume from Coty, Houbigant and other equally renowned firms. So extensive is the assortment that y,u are rare to find your fa-orite shade and aroma as.jr time at Peer's! annnnnnnns