: The Daily Nebraskan Sialisa A. t '. tuMuM OFflCIAL STUOtNT ULICATION UNIVSHSITV Of NtiAA PwfcUafcaal TnHir, n44t. TSmraSar. FriSa an TMlNTISTM VIAR I fix-' m I-i'i4 ma I tar lva pftltf lit tlll, Nth'aska. l frM. Mara a. itTt ! aawal aa aaa '' ' aana llui a el 0ar I, Itif. awtar Jaftwary SO. tU Cr ira tHa luMl PvkltMHa M'S uatCNIPTIOH KATI II yaar tiofi Csy I J samsaa !4Mll (Wtlca Cnnra.any Mali . t.a Ortn cirs-ty Hail 4A. ttloM-Cl MI NiMI MU. 11 Jursi Aa ' NltrtMM Mil'. lOITOMIAL STAfF William T. MCiM'y UhoMmMiI Manift Kun Ubal Kelly tints WU Naws tillars francas Mlra Arthur M tckati William Ma&atfm Sv(a4 MtH'm ) WRtr Guy Crt's Sraeia t Hiy .ia Wi Sparta SS'tof lUtlMII TAF C Karl at Lswlsr Aclinf aainM Manaaar AaslaUM Buslnaaa Manaft't Nsrmsft Oailahae .: ThmM4 MCMBCRr A7cc Start. Nebraska won a football ftm Saturday, but that U not the only ignUiraiit thing about th rornhunkfiV activities with Texas A. and M. The student body pave representatives of the southern school a real reception. And I hey appreciated it. Some individuals praise football as an ad vertising medium for college! and universities. If games were won without the support of stu dent!, howeTer, the rictorious gridiron men would not causa the school's came to be praised. Hospitality, courtesy, fairness ex tended to visitor will brand any school as worthy cf recognition, despite the fiual score of its encounters. Those who attended the Friday afternoon reception for Texan must realize the value of such a display of spirit. The southerners were not greeted like foes, to be hated and mas acred, but like friends. That 6pirit should be encouraged, for when any school engages in athletic games simply for the thrill of victory it sacrifices ita claim to sportsmanship. At the rally Friday evening, studeuU ap plauded Js'ebraakan. and Texans with equal enthusiasm. They did not growl at Aggie rep resentatives, but cheered them and wished them luck though not success. The rallies of other days, during which fighting collegians howled their derision of op ponents and threatened them with everything from manslaughter to disgrace, are gone. Ne braska want to win fairly and honorably, with the support of a student body which rec ognixc the right of opponents. It shouldnot be necessary to work a mob of students into ever heat by branding the opposition as scums, rata, Totters. If Nebraska students will continue to con duct their rallies in an orderly fashion, show iug visitors that this university is enthusiastic but friendly, wo need not fear for our school spirit But when it becomes necessary for any organization or individual to spread malicious propaganda before a game so that we may strain our vocal chords in cheering then foot ball is a farce and school spirit a ghost. Now wa see why Nebraska has compul sory military training: to get ushers for the football games. If there's anything to this getting-jobs-for-athletes tost, a lot of shops must have been closed daring the game. How About It? T. "W. L brings up a new point in regard to the value of football in his Morning Mail opinion. It ha long been a defense of the over emphasia of football that this sport con tributed to, in fact maintained, the physical education program and minor competitive The absence ot a swimming pooi ai Ne braska ha been a sore spot for several years. Past editor have commented on it students are always puzzled at the university's failure to provide facilities for this sport. Am T. W. L explains, the coliseum is pro vided with space for a swimming pool. But it is not being used lor aquatic purpose. How atSTJItt itt All is not gold that glitters, but anything in a white uniform is a cheerleader or an official. operation of stealing from anyone or any t stitutlun. How can the life of the party roi. aider hi swiping artivltifa clever when they make it mrtasary for him to grovtl before the eheek stand. "Tlure are sliopliftrrm," the imlulg-iit tlili-m may reply, "and there are rollrgiauk." What, if we may aak, is the diffrrrnrr f Souk brilliant collide men do uot limit their practice to souvenir snitching. They pick up whatever cornea within reasonable reach of their eager hand. It is not klepto mania. Stealing is the word. 3, RALLIES TUT. IU11.Y NT.nRASKAN Sr.NDAY. OCTOHFH 5.' 1930 wELCOM EI XA FRIDAY E E 1 Nebraska ia helping the unemployment situation by having hundreds of people live thing away hefor football fame. Now the university has to hire men to pick paper up off the campus. ! MORNING MAIL ! J hanks. Largest Assembly of Two Years Stage First Prp Display of Season. WARNER LEADS CHEERS Varsity Yell King of 76 Takes Stand Again in Greeting Aggies. Rally!" Thl waa the cry of SOOO aluilrnta Nebraska spirit broke forth Friday night In the first rally of tht year. Ld by Don If. O. T. C. I'ni Still , reding IS Officer Thar a fa anil about fiftaan placaa epa) In tha aanc4 trill taction, according to word glvan out at tha military dapartmant Saturday morning. Any Junior Mho ar aligiblo and daairo to taka tifro additional yaara of mil itary ocianco havo baan aikad to raport at (bo aocratary' daak for registration. Texag TO THK KDITOll: Full appreciation of the cordial treatment ami eourteay extended us by members of the Nebraaka student body, the Innocents society and Lincoln people during our visit to Lincoln cannot be fully expressed by letter. We can only say that wc have enjoyed nuratives to the fullest extent while here and will feel forever indebted to all of you for your hospitality and courteous treatment dur ing our visit. To use the words of Dana Hime. loved alike by Agpic and Comhuskers, "True hospitalitv is moat certainly not reserved to the Soulk." On h. half of tln isitinff Aceies and their and a number of the f.Klball tram sunnortcra we thank vou and ask the prive-! m"nbe"- 'ncUJ,nK Harold Frahm supporters, we tnaiiK you, ana brk inc pnu , wh0 captalnfd ,he tfam ,,6ainjit lege of showing our complete appreciation to the Ttxwn Saturday, were Intro- you m the future when, we hope, you will pay duced by Bill McOeery. premdmt us a return visit. Sincerely yours. K. M. MOORK. ROBERT L. HERBERT. (Editors of Texas A. and 31. annual and weekly newspaper, respectively.) Teiaa taam and auprtortara wera Cuth Bible, ism Warntr, yell Iralfr. Dr. G. t' Oomtra and a grimp of Taaarla. Urd by their own enter leader from tha hotal baliony tha Texana cava tha No hraska atudenta a aample of their ehiM yella. Tha pep aeloo at tha Unroln ended with tha sincuig of tha O.mhuaker" accompanied by tha band. Snake Oano. From tha hotel another parade led buck to tha campua. Kollo. inf tha band, the Corn Coba and Taxsela formed a long anako danea down tha middle of tha atreet. Traffic waa atopped until the atu- Warner, vamity iheer leader four i ,,,nl mnb ha(J yeara aifo. tho ar(tet student ' (IHiire Crrntanic Courve la Startrtl group attending a rally in two yeara ahowed a real npirit bark of the team preceeduig Saturday a game. Beginning at ? o'clotk at the armory, the rally lantcd nearly two hours, (leading tha program at the armory wa a medley of col lege aonga by Edward Butler, or ganist. Warner led the atudent yella and Billy Qultk'e It. O T. C. band played a (roup of Nebraska aonga. Coach "Indian" Schulte I of the Innocents. ! Parada Downtown. I From the armory the ralliera led i by the band paraded tnrougb down j town Lincoln and to the Lincoln I hotel where the viaiting team waa I presented from the balcony. The appearance of the Texas team waa greeted by the band with the ' Aggie school song followed by a group of Nebraska pep aonga. From the hotel balcony Warner led the yella which greeted the preaentation of the coaches of both teams and the Texas captain. Coach D. X. Bible talked to the studenta a short time recalling his connection with the Texas school as head football coach until a year ago. He and Matty Bell, now Aggie coach, have met in many football battles while both were di recting teams in the southern con ference, he said, predicting a hard battle Saturday and hope for a Ne braska victory. Bell Introduced. Bible introduced Matty Bell. Texas coach, who commended the Nebraska hospitality and said that I be hoped that the Texana might be as happy Saturday night after the game as they were Friday night after the first taste of Cornhusker Supporting What? TO THE EDITOR: Big time athletic contests are necessary, according to the department in charge, so that enough income may be assured to enable pro vision of facilities that students in general may enjoy. Iu other words, the football gate pays for the intramural program, the tennis courts. handball courts, coliseum facilities in general. This is a very nice theory. It is working just well enough to prove that it could be a very practicable theory. So far, however, most of this income seems to go "back in the business." Intramurals are paid for in part at least by a sizeable fee paid by each group entering. And it really takes very little for upkeep on tennis courts, coliseum facilities, etc. Most of the money is turned back to football, for kaopKob nine now pmiinmpnt. ftp. Which is all very well. But to justify the whole idea, ; 2"f2 K some money must be spent on things the whole uced by Coach Bible, but calls oj student body can use and benefit from. I "speech" from the crowd failed to For instance, we have no swimming pool. bring -ponsem him. Women cannot secure swimming instruction m j wiln whom gie was associated this university. There is no pool. Men must i while coach at the Texas school use the all-too-cranipcd Y. M. C. A. facilities, two years ago. How about a real university pool, the hours to On the hotel balcony with be divided between men and women students, j to enable every student to work out as he de sires? Our swimmers took the Big Six cham pionship. But still no university pool is avail able. Space awaits construction of one space in the coliseum. How about justifying the de partment's argument? If football is made a big sport so that the tudent body in general may enjoy athletics for themselves, surely a swimming pool should be provided. And if the athletic department's idea is workable at all, there must be ample income for its construction. Or does football, after all, support nothing but football? T. W. I. Dr. Laurence Fouler, chairman of tho department of Germanic language, this semester is teach ing a new advanced course In M'lrntific German and Fred Hell man, instructor in Germanica, la teaching beginning German cour ses at tho agricultural college. This is the first time German courses have been given on the agricultural campua. Denting and Hamilton Mrrt With Client Prof. H. G. Deming and Prof. C S. Hamilton attended the Septem ber meeting of tho American Chemical society at Cincinnati. Nearly 2,000 chemist wero present at the convention. Saxony Invented the harmonica, and now exports 60.000,000 a year 40 percent of them to the United States. Y ATWOOD WILL SPEAKTOSTUOEHTS Noted Lecturer Scheduled to Address Students at Temple Tuesday. Harry Atwood. lecturer and con-, LXA WORCESTER f.'S to VS Inclusive Mmt lie Corrected tludenta whoao names begin wilft O. M. I. J. fr"" aikad to eorreet tbeir names on the atudant directory Hats posted in Social teisncea, at onoe. Hyoro and Mrs. C K. Abbott, re gents of tha Nebraaka D. A. ft. atltutional authority, will speak on The Conatitutlon and Preaent Day Problems" at a university convo cation Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock In the Temple theater. Governor Arthur J. Weaver will Introduce Mr. Atwood. Aa president of the Constitution Educational association, with na tional headquarters at Chicago, Mr. Atwood la known as aa au thorty no problems of government. Ho has written three booka deal ing especially with tho constitu tion: "Rafeirusrdlng American Ideals," -Batk to tho Itepubllc." and "The Constitution F-xplalned." Mr. Atwood has led the rounty In national observance of Consti tution week through tho Constitu tion Education association. Tho nation-wide oratorical contest dealing with the constitution was started aa a result of an addreaa he made at Loo Angeles, Calif, In 1822. At hla suggeatlon tho new two million dollar D. A. R. audi torium recently erected In Wash ington waa named Constitution hall. Os the platform with Mr. At wood will be: Judge E. B. Chap pell. Chancellor E. A. Burnett. Regent Earl Clino of tho unlver ally. Mra. Clinton J. Campbell, president of tho Lincoln Woman's club. H. It. Wilson. Lincoln attor ney; Charlea Matson. president of the Nebraska chapter of the American Bar asaociatlon; Edgar C Westervelt, commander of the American Legion; Mra. W. J. ATTEND CONFERENCE Prof. E. W. Lanta and Prof. D. A. Worcester of tho teachers col lege faculty attended county leather Institutes last week. Prof. W. H. 8. Morton will be on the program of two others during tho coming week. Monday Professor Morton will speak at a joint city and rural In stitute at Greenfield, la., and Sat urday will go to Phllllpsburg. Kaa.. wnero he will appear on tho pro gram of another teachers meeting. C. J. rfrlffrr I Nw Clinnifttry Instructor A new Instructor in tho depart- mrnt of chemistry la Dr. tl. J. Pfelffer. who will teach rourare In general chemiatry. Dr. Pfelffer re reived bis PhD. degree at tho University of Wisconsin Isst sum mer. He will work with Prof. H. Q. Deming here, Yellow Cab Co. Phone B 3323 "Orgniied Responsibility" TYPEWRITERS I S us for the Royal portable type I mrr, ibe Ideal machine tor tha , piudent. All makae of marhlnaa i for rent. All make of used Bia ; rhlnea easy payment. Nebraska Typewriter Co. Call B -HS7 1ZU o St. For Students Special Sunday Church Bus From the campus to Westminster Church, passing in the vicinity of larger downtown and south-Lincoln Churches. Leave 16th and U 10:30 A. M. South to R atreet West to 13th street South to K street Eaat to 17th street South to South street East to Westminster Returns over same route at the close of service at West minster. The Great Cathedral Choir begins next Sunday morning, October 5th, at Westminster Church. You are invited to ivonhip with if. i tan B-zisr is v m. 11 i the Among My one is to ce a Souvenirs.'' If one ia to be a dyed-m-the-wool coi- letrian. it aeems that he must engage in a four '. "year souvenir hunt, preying upon food shops, trains, hotels, drug stores and sign boards. Thia deplorable practice is not limited to col- ; lege students; high school students, who are really more collegiate than the men they at tempt to imitate, enter into the swiping activi- ties with spirit. Youth apparently has a misguided idea of amartnesa and a well subjugated idea of honesty. Taking another's property is steal- ' ing, whether the loot ia to be sold, traded, or nailed on the wall of a room. The fault i not entirely with those gallant, fearless moderns who stick glass ash trays under their coats, but also with their less daring companions who admiie this practice. Colleges of today are suffering from a too I apparent lack of honesty among their students. Cribbing has become a popular trick in class- - room ; political corruption on any. college cam , pus seems to be the accepted practice; extra curricular graft, though it has lost its prestige at Nebraska, still holds sway in many univer sities. Lifting souvenirs from hotels appears to be an innocent practice. Perhaps tvery hotel budget contains a fund to cover these indes creet disappearances. One spoon or ash trsy will not render the institution financially de funct. But it does something to the youth wio divides honesty and cuteness into too niacv departments. Seldom -does the enterprising souvenir rieker operate openly. A certain amount of sneaking is necessary to complete the delicate Raising Canes. TO THE EDITOR: Evidently the members of the law college are again called upon to answer insidious and slanderous remarks made by unwitting or un knowing reporters or what-not from your au gust publication. Misled both as to the facts and as to the ultimate effect, the Rag Man at tempted to poke fun at the law students by stating that the only claims of the laws to dis tinction had vanished. We not only resent the inference that we are nothing but a group of portfolio carriers, but also wish to correct an erroneous idea with regard to the hats and canes. The senior law class will carry canes as in previous years. The canps have been or dered and the senior laws will soon be able to satisfy those who require some mark of that sort to separate them from tbeir fellow stu dents. Those canes were ordered three weeks ago, so the Rag Man may see, if he has that much perception, that it was not done as a defensive measure to his vicious lashings. The senior laws have also ordered hats. There was some dissension as to the type of hats to be worn, but an order has finally been placed for a hat similar to the one worn two years ago. The hats are not yet one of the real traditions of the law college, as the Rag Man stated, although they may be in a few de cades. If a thing that has existed only two years can be called a "tradition", we would like to discuss the meaning of the word with the Rag Man in person. The law college has several real traditions, bred from years and years of experience in the professional field, but an idea which has glimmered for only two years is scarcely a tradition. The laws are bound together in a closer spirit than any other group on the campus. There are eighteen fraternities and one soro rity renresented in the senior class alone. The various students do not segregate themselves j by fraternities or by factions, but enjoy a gen- j eral spirit of friendship. The law college has i its own original songs, which are sung lustily ! on various occasions. Scholarship is admired j in the law eollege, and not scorned 83 it is in ; many of the non-professional schools. We j could go on and on, but the thrusts of the ' Rag Man were scarcely worth it. We merely.; wish to point out that even if we were minus j the canrt and hats, which we are not, we have ! none the les a distinguished school. X. X. and now Halloween am, I Football Parties While Choftp. Gohlins nl Witches eris those nexl few meeki get in the fun. Have a Party! Here l Vvervthinir In make the Hallowe'en Party s Screaming Success.'- SEE OUR WINDOWS FOOTBALL PARTY FAVORS Football Playere. Place Car4 . . . Novelties . . . Everything for the Party. GEORGE BROS. "The Weddni'j Stationer". 1213 N B1313 Did You? Did you write a let ter home this week? Maybe you put it off because you had no appropriate writ ing materials. Eaton Crane & Pikes Correspondence Papers Should be always available. Our stock was arranged to fit your requirements. Pound Papers and Papetries. TUCKER-SHEAN STATIONERS 1123 "O" St. bJilvlVlVXaXaT 4 H 1 1 " 4 aV Pi '0 4 33 m ,zr4 33 Lai 33 :-sj I l! m 2U 1 Si m YOU MAY BE "ALL THE WORLD" TO YOUR MOTHER BUT You're just another face and suit of clothes to hundreds of fellow studes and ifs surprising yea - even alarming the impression your clothes have on new acquaintances ITS SO EASY to make the "right" impression when you re wearing a trim FALL SUIT tailored by Hart Schaffner & Marx Authentically Correct University Styles and Priced Authentically Correct Too i $ 35 The Popular Fall Shades DUSK BLUE BRIAR BROWN PEWTER GREY 2 and 3 Button Coats PS e SmSmwii&SettS' FORMERLY ARMSTRONGS m Li ' . ,. . . t k ,ii ni i ... . ii . i .. ... iii 1 1 i in 1