SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. 19.lt. ii J' i ii Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nfbrk. OFFICIAL ITVJDKNT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Tnlt pa par la raprasantad for general advartlslfiQ by tha Nabraaka Praia Association, WH HP" pi"aante far Qtntrtt aaVartlalnt by tha Nabraaka Fraaa Aaaaalatlan OaWaxiatfd Cotlfolatr- &rt utaamp-KJi in tntarad aa aacond-elaaa mattar at tha postofflca In Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congreaa, March 3, 1879, and at apeclal rata of pottage provided for In aection I10J. act of October S, 1917, authorized January 80. 1922. THIRTY -THIRD YEAR. Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thuraday, Friday and Sunday mornlnga during tha academic year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE. , fl.SO a year. Single copy 9 eenta.1.00 a eomeeter. $1.50 a year mailed. $1.50 a aemetter'malled. Under direction of tha Student Publication Board. Editorial Off lea University Hall 4. Bualnaaa Off Ice Unlveralty Hnll 4-A. Taleohonee Dayi B6891I Nlghtl B6884. B3333 (Jour stal). Ask for Nabraakan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Burton Marvin Editor-in-Chief MANAGING EDITORS Lamolna Blbla Jack Fleeher NEWS EDITORS Frad Nlcklaa Virginia Sellaek Irwin Ryan Ruth Matachullat Woman'a Editor Sancha Kllbourna Society Ed, or Arnold Lavln Pr "ltor BUSINESS STAFF Richard Schmidt Bualnaaa Manager ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Truman Oberndorff Robert Funk A Delaration Of Support. DRICE for Student Athletic ticket is $6.00 this year. The sale starts Monday In the Activi ties office in the Coliseum, and is being handled by Tassels, Director of Athletics and football coach, Bible baa compiled the greatest sports schedule In the history of the university, and the tickets are going for such a low price that this Is the best athletic ducat bargain In the history of the school. Other incentives which should induce students to purchase, tickets in the drive are the facts that: 1. The university of Nebraska football team is very year one of the best in the nation. Student enthusiasm back of a team gives it drive and en thusiasm available from no other source. (The players will testify to that fact). 2. Coach Dana Bible has established a per sonal reputation as a gentleman, master of football, and director of men. He deserves the unswerving support of the student body. S. Support of the athletic department means indirectly the support of intramural athletics. Football receipts pay intramural expenses. These activities are of incalculable value to all taking part virtually tha whole student body. 4. By supporting the team, students will sig nify their commendation of good sportsmanship, strict training methods, and clean playing for which Nebraska teams have become famous. (This as sertion is founded on the opinion expressed by one of the midwest's most prominent football officials. He classed the Huskers aa the cleanest and moat gentlemanly grid machine in the Missouri valley.) 5. Last year basketball finally began to take a turn for the good, the team winning half of their Big Six contests, the best record in recent years. A veteran team, bolstered by fine freshman play ers, is expected to take the floor this winter. This la the season when support is most necessary. Therefore, the Nebraskan puts itself firmly and unequivocally behind the athletic sales drive which will take place during the next week. CAR be it from us to ay that the football team is the most Important institution on this campus. But we do say that the school spirit built up in a student body backing a football team steps out into other fields of activity on the campus, and is exceedingly valuable to the university. Our rea soning responsible for this theory: School spirit back of a team makes for a good team, a good team becomes known thru-out the na tion, eyes are centered on the school sponsoring that unit, student and alumni pride develops, and the desire is born in all hearts to make the school the best all-around college or university of all. Now for the football team itself. Coach Bible led his squad to the second place position among the college football teams of the nation last falL Only one man remains from that almost invincible crew. Coach Bible Is confronted with a terrific task, and a schedule heavier than other encountered by Hueker teams in the past Student support Is Imperative. Football shows on a par with the best In the nation will be staged on Memorial stadium sod this falL With ticket prices so low and such good ex hibitions in the offing one can scarce afford to dis pense with an athletic ticket Individual self-interest and school spirit demand that each and every student purchase a ticket TTTErUS is little doubt but what losses will be sustained by the football team this fall. What can one expect with opposition such as Pittsburgh, Minnesota, Iowa, and all Big Six schools, each one having an unquenchable desire to nip Husker heels T We should all expect defeats this fall. But What shall we do when defeat comes. Some will gripe, and howl for ths downfall of the powers that be. Popular pastime among the alumni group la Just such how liny. Our alumni have been silent probably because all is rosy. Coach Bill Ingram of California recently ex pressed an opinion we should like to repeat He stated The team will play for sportsmen. The rest can go to hell!" Is the Nebraska student body comprised of sportsmen, or Is it on its way to the hot place? A Cordial Invitation. A RE there anv opinions running; around loose on ths campus? Do any cakera, inebriates, deans, assignment committees, chancellors, Ellen Smith hall polltl' clans, Col. Oury's sand-pile playboys, or naughty pacifists have gripes to air? The Daily Nebraskan has Just the space for air lne of Brines and opinions The Student Pulse. We offer the privilege of filling It free of charge. No names will be printed, the writer having at his dis posal a cloak of anonymity behind which he can hide. But names are tn be slimed alone; with a printable substitute on the manuscript submitted to the editor. This department of the paper has possibilities, if wisely used, or becoming powerful in promoting reforms and bringing student opinion before au thorities, and administrative opinions before stu dents. There is no better medium for expression on this campus than the Student Pulse. Contributions can be mailed or brought to the Daily Nebraskan office in the basement of Univer sity hall, the building with a past and no roof. Many of us are becoming sick and tired of a namby-pamby student body and administration that have no urge for expression or progress; pre ferring much more to sit on their respective be hinds waiting to catch up with the world when It gets far enough ahead. Is there no virile spirit on this campus? CONTEMPORARY COMMENT Marks of An Educator. Recently The Californian set fort a set of standards by which a coach's true value may be measured, criterions of real success as an athletic coach. It has been suggested that a similar set of standards be suggested for the University faculty, criterions of the real worth of any professor. Here are eight points which we feel determine whether or not a professor is adding true strength to the University: 1. Does he find his greatest Interest in his stu dents, and In Intellectual pursuits? 2. Does he try to introduce them to Life and Thought rather than merely to coach them to pass examinations ? 3. Does he put himself forward as a dispenser of Truth, not as an Ingratiating vaudeville actor? 4. Does he give students all he has of scholar ship, wisdom, and understanding despite their supposed Immunity to such? 5. Does he stimulate the mind of the student to suggest ideas, to correlate loose ends of infor mation, to learn to think? 6. Is he enthusiastic, alive, free from all dull dogma and pedantry? 7. Does he strive to be a personal friend of stu dents, a guide and an inspiration? 8. Is he considerate of student weakness, of immature irrationalization, of the youthful attitude toward Life? If he can stand up under such surveillance, as The Callfronian feels most faculty members can, then he is a real asset to the institution. The Dally Californian. Challenge of Tomorrow. For those campus pessimists who are in clined to heed the dreary predictions that the world will have no place for them when they leave the university to find their niches, there is a bright ray of hope in a recent article In the Atlantic Monthly, "The Forward View," by Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., president of General Motors. The gist of Mr. Soan'a article is that just be cause there is a depression going on, America is not justified in saying, "Thus far and no farther shall we go. The limit of consuming power has been reached. We shall divide up what work there ia to do Into seven-hour days and five-day weeks. so that each person may have his share." Mr. Sloan, who has spent all his adult life in active connec tion with American industry, says there is and will continue to be plenty of work for energetic hands and fertile brains. The young engineer and scientist will find the greatest challenge in the article, for the real need of the country, Mr. Sloan believes, is for a new in dustry, one whose products will have as wide an appeal aa that of the automobile industry, so that the amount of work to be done will be increased. That Is a task for the engineer and the inventor. As a suggestion for this new Industry, Mr. Sloan looks forward to the time when custom-built houses (the universal type at present) will be as rare as custom-built motor cars are today. There is need for men who can develop and produce ma chine-made houses that will contain "facilities for heating, cooling, humidifying, drying and washing the air . . . all modern conveniences for reducing housework . . . special devices for bringing Instruc tion and recreation Into the home the teletype for news dispatches, television apparatus to portray the world's greatest events as they occur, and radio sets embodying visual projection, so that motion pictures and operas can be brought directly to the view of the home circle," and all at a cost that will suit the $2,000 salary. Such extravagant hopes may be realized in many lines If the students of today are willing to continue America's Industrial traditions, and there will be work and problems aplenty. There Is enough energy in s gallon of gasoline to drive a small car four hundred miles, but nobody knows bow to util ize it Roads need to be built and Improved. Rail road trains needs to be re-designed. Aviation has a future that is appreciated by a few engineers only. Much work is to be done in the matter of Improving and sustaining man's health, and his government And beyond these few things mentioned there Is a new world, the nature of which man. In his present "colossal Ignorance," can only guess. The idea seems to be, if the world doesn't have a place ready-made for you, it does have plenty of vacant space which you may pre-empt and develop as you choose. University Dally Kantan. TOTAL STUDENT ENROLLMENT IS 4,551 SA7UEDAY Continued from Page 1.) tton, found 640 students complet ing their registering for the fail semester. This figure is slightly below the total number of students registered on the last day ot regis tration last year. Thla, however, is explained by the fact that it was r,ot found necessary last year to extend the time wi mmi or rfs" titration, university officials ex- p!."!d. No check baa as yet been made ca tie number of aiudcnU In the freshman, sophomore, junior, or senior classes or aa to bow many students have registered in the va rious colleges. These figures will be published sa soon as registra tion is completed and accurate fig ures are available, it was an nounced. Expect Increase of 1,000. The present total of 4.551 stu dents who have already registered will be increased about 1,000 stu dents it Is believed when Ute reg istration, the College of lmCift3 at Omva, and the graduate col lege on (he city campus enrollment ia completed. Graduate students have until the sixth of October to register and these figures will not be re leased until then. The number of students at the medical and nurs ing school In Omaha have not as yet been received. StudenU at Kansas university are circulating petitions in an ef fort to secure regulations to elimi nate freshman hazing. "Kne artlon" roller akata manu facturers promise employment of 200 Oklahoma Artie students if business proves favorable enough to establish s factory. I W. INVITES NEW TO Tuesday's Service Starts Activities for the -School Year. All new university girls are urged to be present at the first vesper services or me year, wnjen will be held in their honor at 0 o'clock, Tuesday, Sept. 25, at Ellen Smith hall, according to Alkire Barkes, vesper staff chairman. Tuesday's service marks the op ening of the Y. W. C. A. activities for the school year. The program will include the first appearance of the new vesper choir, and a vocal selection, "Bless This House," by Meredeth Overpeck. Announcement of the committee meetings will be made by staff chairmen. The schedule which has been arranged Is: finance, headed by Marjorie Shostak, 4 o'clock, on Monday; social action, Bash Per kins, Monday, 4 o'clock; interna tional, Lorraine Hitchcock, Mon day, 8 o'clock; program and or ganization, Phyllis Jean Humph rey, Wednesday, 5 o'clock; public ity, Dorothy Cathers, Thursday, 3 o'clock; vesper choir, Violet Vaughn, Monday, 8 o clock; church relations, Mary Edith Hendricks, Wednesday, 5 o'clock; posters, Ruth Allen, Wednesday, 4 o clock; world forum, Beth Schmidt, Tues day, 4 o'clock; sophomore commis sion, Margaret Ward, Monday, 6 o'clock; freshman group leaders, Monday, 5 o'clock. The time for the conference group, headed by Breta Peterson, has not yet been determined. Notices concerning future vesper services will be posted on the bul letin boards of the different soror ity and boarding houses from time to time. This la the first year that such a plan has been tried, and It ia hoped that it will keep the girls informed and Interested In the vesper activities. DA TE SET FOR MU PHI EPSILOy TEA TUESDAY Program Will Consist of Selections by Several Mem bers. Mu Phi Epsilon, national hon orary music sorority, will hold its first musical of the year at 8 o'clock Tuesday night Sept. 25, at the Alpha XI Delta house. This is one of a series of monthly musi- cales, according to Marion Miller, president The program will consist of se lections by several members of the organization. Henrietta Sanderson, soprano, will sing "The Robin Sings in the Apple Tree," by Mac- Dowell, "Hayfields and Butter flies," by Del Rledo, and "Lady Moon (Mr. Moon)" by Neidlinger. Eunice Bingham, violinist, will play "Variationa on a theme by Corelli, arr. by Kriesler; "Ro- manze, by Wagner; "Danse Es panol," by De Salla, arr. by Kreis- .'er. and "Pauck," by Grieg, arr. by Achron. Violet Vaughan will give several selections on the piano. REGIOSAL CHA1RMAS MEETS Y. W. CABINET Barbara Lautz Lectures On Recent Peace Activities. Barbara Lautz, regional chair man for the Y. W. C. A., will meet with the university Y. W. C. A. cabinet at its first meeting of the year on Wednesday evening at 7 o ciocK in Ellen smith hall. Miss Lautz, who was a delegate two years ago to the convention of the World Student Christian Movement In England, will tell of her recent activities concerning peace action and suggest methods of political action for peace, ac cording to Miss Bernlce A. Miller, Y, W. secretary. A tentative meeting of all those Interested In peace or Internation alism is scheduled for C o'clock on Wednesday. The occasion is planned as a sort , of "renewal of faith" of all subscribers to the peace movement and should be of especial interest to students fa miliar with Miss Lautz's college Y. W. C. A. work at Kansas State and her ausbsequent association with the Youth Movement for World Recovery led by Paul Har ris, jr. By MEREDITH OVERPECK. Presenting the first play of tho season on Dec. 22, the Unlveralty piAvers Children's theater will open their repertoire with a Christ mas play. Under the supervision of H. Alice Howell and directed by Pnllv nallntlv. thla enterprise is sponsored by the Junior Charity League of Lincoln. Besides the rwemVmr nlav. children's dramas will be given In January, February, March and May. The plays pre sented will be selected from "Half a Kingdom," "Daddy Dumpling," "Toad or Toaa nan, oecrei Garden." "Golden- Goose," "The Tinkling Laugh," "The Silver Thread," "Jack In the Bean Stalk" and "Cinderella." . One of the ever popular mem bers of the drama department Is the dlminuitive Pauline Gellatly, known effectlonately at Polly. Last year Miss Polly played the part of Peter Pan In the mythical fav orite. This year the will continue her management of the Children's theater an active part In the drama department Besides her theatrical career, the attractive young faculty member Is sponsor of the Tassela. Friday afternoon the most dis tinguished visitor in the drama department office was Jock, popu lar member of the student body. Whether or not Jock will enroll this semester remains to be seen, but escorted by his master, Dr. Leland, the celebrated canine made his first formal call of the current season. Students who wan dered in and out stopped for a chat with his royal highness ,and Jock did not want for attention. His happy smile and friendly spirit showed how glad he was that school had started once more and no doubt we'U be seeing Jock around often. Early and incomplete registra tion figures at Iowa State college showed an increase of 40 percent in the number of new students enrolling there. "It Par to Look Well" Geyer's Barber Shop Haircuts 35c 1021 N St Lincoln Nebr. Maria Geysr, Pros'. Learn To Dance GUARANTEED In ilx private lessons. ALSO Three Lesson Course New steps Sz Step combinations. Lessons morning, afternoon or evening by appointment Lee A. Thornberry B3635 (Since 1929) 2300 Y St. Flasi-FRIENDLY SHOES AGAIN S5.00J Here's news Friendly again puts out those famous shoes priced at $5.00, Come in and re new your ac quaintance with Lincoln's most popular shoe, at Lincoln's most popular shoe store. A complete line of Fall shoes. Suedes, Sough Leathers, Calfskins. F R I E N D L Y S H O E S s5 HOE STORE STUART BUILDING. Commission Meetings Will Accommodate Almost All Schedules. Foity-nlno girla have registered for the freshmen commission groups, and others are being urged to sign up as soon as possible, Y. W. officers announced Saturday. Meetings have been so arranged that it will be possible for almost all freshman women to fit one into their schedule. Hours for the discussion groups have been arranged beginning with the week of Oct. 1. Meetings will be held In Ellen Smith hall under the leadership of junior and senior girls. These groups have been started to help new girls In getting acquainted and to discuss new problems and Ideas which the first months of college will bring. Two girls will be elected from each group to form the freshman cabinet. Freshman leaders are Faith Arnold, Florence Buxman, Corlnne Claflln, Violet cross, Bush Perkins, Anno Pickett and Lois Rathburn. Each Thursday at 10 o'clock, Violet Cross will head a group. At 4 on Wednesdays Basil l'erKins will supervise. Faith Arnold's meeting is at 1 Tuesday; Marjorie Smith's, f, Thursday; Corrinne Claflln, 11, Tuesday; Lois Rath burn, 4, Tuesday; Elaine Fonteln, 1 Friday; and Anne Pickett, 4, Thursday. Florence Buxman will conduct the ag college group at 12:20 on Thursday. lege of Stillwater, Okl., exceed ths Jobs avaiianio to me rauo or a to l. Tho 8,000 applications for stu dent employment at A. & M. col- You'll Be Having Some Garments To Clean Send them to the old reliable Modern Cleaners. For Qual ity, Service and reasonable charges they are hard to equal. Modern Cleaners Soukup & Westover "30th Year In Lincoln" Call F2377 For Service. Try Boyden's 5 Course Evening Meal Steaks &Chops 35 Boyden's Pharmacy 13th & P Sts. ' A Brilliant Selection of r SU .WITH STYLE, QUALITY AND ELEGANCE UNUSUAL AT ONLY Q75 AND $25 af 7 aaX Autumn's richest colors arc prevalent' in these luxurious fur-trimmed, jiud plain tailored suits. Suits with a de Rree Finesse that makes them look so costly. The swagger coats can lie worn as a separate coat. Other Suits at $16.50 to $5930 OUTSTANDING QUALITY FEATURES THESE NEW DRESSES 0 $i Impressive Styles AT 650 A i 1 1' - r 11 61 1 s S f Ki Rough Crepes Smooth Crepes" Thin Wools Dress bedecked with glint and gleam dresses with important necklines dresses for school for street and evening wear. Cocktail dresses that make you look smarter than you ever ex pected to look. Other Dresses $7.95 to $39.50 THIRD FLOOR