nro The Daily Nebraskan liana At Lincoln, Naaaaka OrflCIAL tTUDINT PUBLICATION VNIVIMITV OF MBHAIHA PatHa Tw4y. WUiliy, TftufWtv. frKty an ta4 mamlftaa te '" '. THIRTIITH ViA Mar.' aa mm44Im matter at to i LtfHal, taak'aaaa. llMH M '. Mart . la t J al aaa'at t f rt aa'" t V&J a 0lr a, ItW, . Linr ii a ta llvtiM Soar UaCNITION MAT! M yaa aiie Copy I ttt It M !' t4'i'Ml C-aa j'vaa.r Hail 4 MM Ofia V" ivarail r HH A. laiaaa Oayi atti Mimi IU Waurnan Aaa raaaaai aeuar. DITORIAL STAFF WHMam T. MtCJaary Sner.Mi..el Manealna Sclera Neaart Kelly .fimeM Wat Nee Severe e-ree Melvefce Arthur MH.aaM WUam Madaffm ? tueaoe Mm Rea Weaker Owy Crall . ..tearta vaiyn ,mpaai Wamtn Iomi frt'tet erenieca Maffman kac.etr H'ter BUIINtlt TA Charlaa Lawler A1in uainaaa Manautr AtalateM Bueliete Metere Nerman ftallaKar Jatfc Than pa TIIK IVMI.Y M HRASKAN MUDVY. orrnni H 17. inn. .li(,mr tli aoelal paraeitra who luinkf for ai'if nrniK'i" eak. TliU jmiliKiii W uotaronfinttl to th I'luvrr of NVbraaka raiuput. Othr collegia havt f.trtil it ami many li vt provi.L.I ftimikhig unrtt-n for tht-tr fotl But Thi Nflrakan n-irrrta tta fact that cofU liav talm little i.irt In thf iliai-iiKvion. IYt)iaj. at T. W. 1. Miiiititt, thf.v jm-ftT to iliKly the ir tliirlnir in uilili place We liult that. If ry fftiu ration U vme than the r-r.-liiik' oik', hatha niul In- waiting for th' 1'iit n)v a lgMBW J YVjTT i tit T"- 1 Tale imr a mnwM t1 awvala W Hitraafca Trmm Show Off. Cotda ifem to be taking a very milJ iatt -rest In the present discussion of aniokinp roonm in Borority housea and dormitories. T. W. I , eon tributinj to Morning Mail, believes that Thf Nebraskan is attempting to correct nn evil over which the girla tlumsilvta are not con cerned. Terhaps this Is true. There are many aophia ticatcd, languid cools whose only aim in life seems to be the creation of an impression. They parade into coffee shops to puff on cigarcts. leaving a pile of rouge-tipped stubs in the ash inn anil a hail irrtr&;ion w ith everyone' in the" establishment. We mourn the existence of auch creatures, but are powerlcu to prohibit them from flaunting their alleged superiority before a gullible public. Our concern is with the sensible coed who likes to smoke, but must behave much as these conceited false alarms in the pursuance of what she consider a pleasant pastime. If smoking rooms were established in sorority houses and dormitoriescoeda would no longer need to huddle in. the nearby eating houses for the indulgence. Some would continue to smoke in public, of course. But their colleagues and the general public would soon recognize these coeds as show-offs. Too, if smoking were recognized and accepted, these dolls who handle cigarcts like firecrackers and blink thoir watery eyes at the smoke they would realize that smoking is not criminal and that indulgence is not smart. Coed smoking is not a matter of concern to women alone. When any practice becomes as general as coed smoking it deserves considera tion by the university itself. If the coeds them selves are too busy with their caking to enter the discussion, we are sorry. Must we grovel in the dust of our own mis conduct to curry public favor? Must univer sity women who sincerely believe that smoking is a matter of. personal judgment be banished from their homes to partake of tobacco ? Many students have presented the argument that smoking by co-cds is deplored by tax-payers in the state. How about the citizens of Lin coln who must wade through squads of coed smokers to get service in coffee shops and drug stores! Are we forgetting the citizens who live near the campus and see smoking coeds cruising around in automobiles after every mealT , , . , rerhaps some parents forbid their daughters to smoke at home. They might resent the fact that sorority officials and university admin istrators had recognized the condition and allowed it. We have little sympathy for these persons. If they wish to throw about themselves and their daughters a cloak of false innocence, they are committing a crime far more injurious than smoking will ever be. This university is not maintained as an insti tution of correction for young women. Some attention must be paid to conduct, but parents should not expect the university authorities to discipline their daughters in matters of per sonal taste. The Nebraskan believes that smoking rooms should be provided for coeds at the University of Nebraska. The reasons are quite simple and reasonable. , . . , . . , Coed are amoking and it is hypocritical for sorority and university authorities to ignore the condition. . Lack of suitable rooms forces coeds into un desirable public places to smoke. Recognition of the condition would tend to Mitvr ln'ul'nl Seenc; Kroi.t room at the Shaku Handu houxe. A pnlitieal meeting is on. Prca: I will now entertain nominationa for factional nonumr for freeman ela pn si tlftit. lor: Mr. PrtVulent, 1 would like to brinif up the name of Sidney Slitn. Ilea a freahman football playtr and i will known mi the rumpu. Kd.lv: Mr. IVraident, tli ttuy Slita is all risl t, but I '.t an id. a that a boy from our house would gt more voK.. Alfred l'lujge is Ida name and lie's got a big drag with the sorontit. lie a a smooth looking ooy. Ko.i. v: Mr. President, 1 think we outjhta have an athlete for this job, because tiny re always better known. And the other faction ; bound to put up some football playem. Faction ircee.ls to elect fcOils. Pres: Now for sophomore clas president. 1 Krie: We got a boy at our house who is a j cinch for varsity track this year. Lionel Hatt-! sick is the boy's name and he's a d;ish man. : I think he's the best bet. Kob: Mr. President, George Gluppin over at our house is working in activities and has a big drag all over the campus. He's got some good ideas about organizing the class and Chorus: We want an athlete! (Faction el.cts Rattssck. And so on into the . night.) ! FACULTY GROUP ! SANCTIONS K. U. SPECIAL PLANS il'ontlmif.l from Tag 11 rlt. lnmxanta. Hollar n.nr.l. Daily Ntbraakan and olhert la a liclWd in nemirajlnf tu.lnta to rondu.t thamaelvra ao aa to r ftavl onlv crM to th o. name of the llnlvrraitv of NVI-raaka." Alan 5. IWIIIama, hfa.l of thr Innorvnt a romraiilM In charge of I ha Blunt antlona, brllrvra the Irip lo b a worth whll 'ituniiy and one of hWh tvrty atu.lriil ahould avail himself. "Kansas haa never seen anything Ilka the Ne branka cheering auction and ahould evtry student In the cheering Hon make the trip tst would he able to ahow the Jayhaw kera some allrnt therrlng." he said "Not onlv that." he. added, ' the Kansna game will be one of the toughest ' of the season and the tVrnhuakers I will need plenty of pep and spirit to help them win." ( Tbe Nebraska team will make , the trip to Lawrenrt on the siu-: ttent train, aerorting to Mr 8l leek, but will not return wllh U Corn Cobs, nien'i pep org.inwa- . tion. Is planning to make the trip. according o Art Itchell. president. I and Betty Wahlqulat. president cf the Tassels, women's pep group, states that that orranlralion ta also making plana to make the trip. The Nebraska band will also be nn the train. ! Tha committee also approved a chartered train to Iowa Oly for tha game there on Nov. 22. This trip will be made only If enough students heeome Interested In go tng. The train will consist entirely Social Calendar rrlday. lAitheran rlub. lMolay fall party, Lincoln ho tel ballroom. Saturday, Oct. IS. All t'nlversity party at Coliseum IVIta Theta i'hi. housa rsrty. I'hl Omega It housa party. All I'nlveraily party, coliseum. Kappa iviia. hmisa party. Alpha Chi. house party. I'mversity 4-H rluh, mixer. - - - a -i of coaches and tha trips will oc cupy two nights. (fMifriitliY Inrtriirtnr Orturra On Nitralca Pr. Vlllrm Van Rnyen. Inatnie tor in geography, lectured Thura tay morning to a group of civil league students from the Lincoln public schools on tha subject of i , . ,,,i.a of a mini- I fellillseia and noiiim views fioml Nitrate, and Nitrate Produc t"'';1 'K of ...,. M th. ii.l.st. fields oi I'lnl,. than." lr. Van Wnyn's l'"' ' "zZrzi; WW HALLE 11- So-12 " .i.l,.- Jevliy. riil'iste. tl.ka N.rt.lllea. lS.llaSa Ja.-Jty ' tNLy , !. .Ill r..nllli.ie al II a. 1.1 . Now'u iue Time to Buy Chrl.tmn. nd Other wrfjr:.-0"" A J.'t UmU lll h.'l'l ny snlrle V rt , ' 7 am..na SO" say on lha lM 1 H A F ,LETT-Uni vcrsity Jewelers t..f 117119 So- baii m Party season is here. Social life will be just one big crash after another from now on. How about sorority rooms in smoke houses? MORNING MAIL "The 'fnW Store" Sodas Sundaes Lunches DELICIOUS SANDWICHES RECTOR'S 13 and P C. E. BUCHHOLZ, Mgr. Drug Store Needs "Our Store . Store" our Dodging The Issue . TO THE KDITOR: I see by the papers that coeds are all excited again about the old question of private smok ing rooms in sorority nouses. I also notice that the coeds themselves are rather quiet on the topic, letting outsiders and men students do most of the arguintr. This seems significant. It seems to prove that coeds really aren't con cerned with smoking rooms at all. As a matter of fact, it seems to me that coeds like to smoke in public merely "as a matter of form." Keight out of ten that have chanced to come under my observation do not really know how to smoke. They hold a cigaret as though it were an indelible pencil or a fountain pen, and their main concern is to make the smoke curl up in as artistic and sophisticated a fashion as possible. In short, they smoke be cause it makes them appear a bit more worldly, wise than the non-smokers a bit more sophis ticated. If this be-true, then private smoking rooms are beside the issue. And one must admit that j the coeds themselves arc not especially con cerned about smoking in private. T. W. I. j Why Judge All? TO THE EDITOR: Dr. Fling's statement that the students of i today are worse than they were thirty years j ago," in my opinion was thoroughly unwar-. ranted. How a man of Dr. Fling's reputed mental j acumen would allow himselt to be persuaaea into the belief that all American college stu dents were of the same moral character is beyond my conception. It is erroneous for any man to judge the entire American student body by the compara tively small amount of them that go abroad. Those that can go abroad are children of rich parents whose home life has been sadly neg lected. When they get abroad they naturally want to get much good French wine down their gullets before they have to return to the States. I daresay that Dr. Fling was in favor of the eighteenth amendment and that and nothing else is the cause of the degradation in the eyes of the Europeans. I am surprised and disappointed that Dr. Fling should take that stand. His complete speech was a denunciation against the students who arc the victims of laws that he and others passed. There is a new era of frankness among young men and women which is evidence of advancement in civilization and not a retro gration. RASPUTIN. Some students give their professors the hah hah. That's why they get such good grades. SIX REASONS WHY "Greenedge" History Paapcr IS CTTCH HEAVIER WEIGHT CAN US! BOTH SIOES SMOOTH WRITING SURFACE INK DOES NOT SPREAD ROUND CORNERS WILL NOT BIND GREEN EDGES WILL NOT SOIL DRILLED HOLES DOES NOT TEAR SO EASV ITS BOXED BEWARE OF IMITATIONS LATSCH BROTHERS STATIONERS 1118 O St. r.,rnWy '"' ",,r en""--v MEN'S WEEK SALE rr vx. Try a: 17 RENT A NEW CAR CALL KLL NEW MODELS We Cll for Deliver National Motor Car Co. Inc. 1918 0 Street When a Shirt Shrinks The Customer is the Goat! GUARANTEED PRE-SHRUNK BROADCLOTH SHIRTS $135 Each 3 for $4.00 Shins as food or better than the average broadcloths sell ing at !.!". Pro-shrunk bv a special process! With silky, flawless texture, and permanent, iiitfli lustre. Correctly cut collar with whale bone insert holding points in place! I'hov come in White. Blue, Ureen and Tan, sizes 14 to IT. 1 n IS SHE TELLING HERTHE LATEST CAMPUS NEWS SHE IS NOT She's telling her about these light feather weight woolens that are so smart for wear now under your fall coat, later, under your winter coat, or when you aren't wearing any coat at all! (Incidcntty. if bought before Saturday they count on the wall rtifi! On to Ijmrcncc, Men!) Ptreat Floor. OiidgezxGisze! Co. STEPPING INTO f M O D hi iri WORLU, $1695 MAGEE'S CO-ED CAMPUS SHOP, 1123 R St. Downtown Store 1201 O Street After the Ball Game Come to the mm FRUIT STORE For Fresh Fruits. Hot and Cold Lunches. Ccda Fountain Service Unsurpassed 1301 "O" ST. REG'LAR FELLERS com. to the Pla-Mor with their reg'lar girla. becauiie they like It! When there la a dance the regular are called out! REMEMBER I Every Saturday and Sunday Nlghta AT THE PLA-MOR S KIUE8 WIST OK "O" PmW WflMTEK COMES Friday Night Varsity Night. mm f IS THE BEST PLACE TO DANCE RECOGNIZED AS NEBRASKA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL DANCE PALACE Located at Tenth and M Streets Always Playing Popular Orchestras. TOMDGIK1T Eddie Jungbluth and His Collegians Playing LINCOLN'S MOST POPULAR DANCE ORCHESTRA YOU WILL ENJOY THE DELIGHTFUL ENVIRONMENT Or THIS BEAUTIFUL BALL ROOM ON ALL YOUR OANCE DATES. tMaf lima" j lav AJfh .. W 1111 B JL. . it t.-- r . , j i r af ar ma Scientist and Salesman THE MODERN PARTNERSHIP Like every other modern industry, the Bell System requires the combined effort of scien tist and salesman. The commercial man has again and again shown the public how to use new products of the telephone laboratory, and how to make new uses of existing apparatus. Transmitting pictures and typewritten mes sages over telephone wires are services right now being actively promoted. Scientific selling by long distance is among many ideas origi nated to increase the telephone's usefulness. In short telephony is a business, with prob lems that stimulate commercially minded men and a breadth of opportunity in step with the fast moving world of industry today. BELL SYSTEM A NATION-WIDE SYSTEM OF MORE THAN 20.000,000 INTER-CONNECTING TELEPHONES