The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 26, 1916, Image 2

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
The Daily Nebraskan
THE BEST UNIVERSITY NEWSPAPER IN THE WORLD
Eva Miller ,.,,...., .... . . . ,,,,,, . .Editor-ln-Chlef
George Grimes .....,......,., . . Managing Editor
Vivienne Holland . . .Associate Editor
M. L. Foteet.,, . .Business Manager
Homer Carson ..Assistant Business Manager
Larue Gillern .Assistant Business Manager
Offices: News, Basement, University Hall; Business, Basement,
Administration Building.
Telephones: News, L-4S41; Business, B-2597.
Published every day during the college year. Subscription, per
semester, $1.
Entered at the postoffice at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second class
mail matter under the Act of Congress of March 8, 1879.
The band is going to Portland, and when it gets there and plays
"Come Arunnin Boys" when our football team shows the people in
Oregon how we play the game out here, when Cook makes a touch
down, or when "Tim" kicks goal from center, and we're all standing
"round the bulletin board in front of the Star office, making bets and
going wild, well certainly be thankful we dug down in our pockets and
paid our dollar to go to the benefit dance at the Auditorium, October
13, so that the band could be there to put "pep" into the players.
And we'll say that the Innocents knew what they were doing all
right when they gave that dance to raise the money. Won't we?
The Girl's club membership campaign starts this noon and by Fri
day noon every girl on the campus should be wearing either a red or
white tag which will signify membership in the Girl's club, the largest
representative girls' organization in the school. The dues are prac
tically nominal, and balf of the money is put into a scholarship fund
which is loaned to deserving women students at the University.
Wouldn't a big permanent concrete stadium be nice out there
where those ancient planks are placed?
A PROBLEM FOR PROFESSORS
A. Given Professor Smith, always cheerful, kind and considerate.
His courses are popular, his classes filled.
B. Given Professor Brown, critical, sarcastic and irritable. His
courses are unsought, his classes filled with only the few he could rope
in at registration.
Question: Granted that both are natural teachers, and that both
teach equally important subjects, which one are you going to be like,
Mr. Professor?
in the Philippines, arrived Saturday
for a few days1 stay at the Silver Lynx
house.
M. . Evans, 'IS, recently instructor
of mechanical engineering at Penn
sylvania state university, is now with
the Commonwealth Edison company at
Chicago.
S. C. Westerfleld, 11, resigned
his place in the state department at
Washington to accept a position as
professor of mathematics in Kittrel
college, N. C.
Professor W. B. Pillshury, 2, head
of the department of psychology at the,
university or Michigan, Is visiting his
mother here in Lincoln. He visited th
campus last week.
R. F. Lyman, civil engineering
is a corporal in Company C of the
Fourth Nebraska at Brownsville, Tex
Company C recently won the competi
tive drill held there.
Behold our first Woman's Page for this semester,
to have one every week.
And we're going
UNIVERSITY NOTICES
Comu8 Dance
Thirty-five tickets have been vali
dated for the Comus club dance to be
held in Music ball, Saturday evening,
September 30, 1916. No more tickets
will be validated for this dance. No
complimentaries will be given.
T. A. WILLIAMS, Agent
All Track Men
Couch Stewart asks that all track
men report in uniform on the Nebraska
field this morning.
Masons Meet
Lincoln lodge No. 9, A. F. & A. M.,
will have work in the Master's degree
at 4 p. m. All Master Masons be
longing to the university, students and
faculty, dinner at 6 o'clock, in ban
quet rooms. Acacia fraternity will take
part in initiation services.
D. G. V. Meeting
The Deutsche Gesellige Vereln will
meet Thursday, September 28, with
Hermine Hatfield, at 1213 South Twenty-second
street. Take South Eigh
teenth or Sumner car. Everyone out.
Engineers' Notice
Pursuant to custom of several years
standing, the first meeting of the en
gineering society 1b designed to be
of interest and benefit to freshmen.
All freshmen engineers, and others
newly registered in the college of en
gineering, are therefore expected to be
present at the first meeting of the
Engineering society, on Wednesday
evening, September 27, at 7:30 in M.
E. 206.
O. V. P. STOUT,
Dean, College of Engineering.
Notice to Graduates
All students regularly enrolled in the
graduate college, University of Ne
braska, are eligible to membership in
the graduate school of education. To
all persons looking forward to teach
ing and school administration in high
schools, normal schools, and colleges,
enrollment in the graduate school of
education will be found of special bene
fit. It is not necessary to major in
education in order to be enrolled in
the graduate school of education; in
fact, the students are encouraged to
make their majors in other subjects.
Only those who desire to teach educa
tion and philosophy are encouraged to
major in those subjects. But every
thing possible is done to make the
graduate year or years of the members
profitable. -
'The graduate school of education has
existed but two years and sent forth
but thirty-six graduates with the
graduate teachers' diploma (recognized
and credited in thirty-six states), but
the aim of the officers has been from
the first, quality rather than quantity
It is hoped that this school will bring
great credit to the University or Ne
braska for the quality and worth of its
work.
Students wishing to confer concedn
ing work in the graduate school of edu
cation will find the dean in room 209
University hall, every day at 11, and 3
. G. W. A. LUCKET.
George H. Morse, who resigned as
head of the electrical engineering de
partment of Nebraska in 1912, is con
nected with the National Metal Mould
ing company at Pittsburg, Pa.
Dr. C. P. Fordyce, former student
of the university, who has contributed
to several periodicals on outdoor life,
has just returned from a tour through
the. mountains in Alaska. He has
spent the last six months in collect
ing matter for contributions that are
soon to appear in different magazines,
Professor Ttufus C. Bentley, 12, as
slstant in the philosophy department in
the Leland Stanford university is visit
ing his sister, Mrs. W. L .Hall in Lin
coln. Mr. Bentley has secured a year's
leave of absence and is going to spend
it tudying at the University of Illinois
Prof. Bentley is a former pupil of Dr.
H. K. Wolfe, present head of the Ne
braska department of philosophy.
BRIEF BITS OF NEWS
Dr. Winifred Hyde, assistant profes
sor of philosophy, spent her summer
vacation at Crandall's lodge, Spirit
Lake, Iowa.
Registration for chorus is still open,
also registration for the men's special
Monday evening class. Those who
join either of these receive tickets to
the May festival. Attendance at both
courses entitles one to a credit each
semester, or attendance at either gives
one credit for the year's work.
ALUMNI NEWS
A. J. Dunlap, law 16, is the superin
tendent of the Central City schools.'
Clyde B. Dempster, 17, spent the
week-end at his home in Beatrice, re
turning Monday morning.
Leon Chamberlin, 19, returned to
school Monday. He has been spending
the summer in northeastern Nebraska.
Wilria Wood, '08, and mother, are
traveling on the Pacific coast and ex
pect to Bpend the winter in California.
Orin Stepanek, 12, has resumed his
position as instructor of EngliBh in
the Frank Soldan high school In St.
Louis, Mo.
Miss Caroline C. Cilek, who took
her degree at the close of the summer
session is teaching algebra and Bo
hemian 5n the Wilber high school.
Paul F. Bell, 10, and wife (Miss Wil
son, 11), spent a few days visiting
friends here in Lincoln on their way
from San Francisco to New Tork
city.
Ade Barstow, ex-14, Don Stewart,
14, Willard Folsom, law 18, George
Swingle, 14, Clifton Monahan, 17, and
Don Gallagher, 19, will leave Friday
for O'Neill, Neb., where they will spend
a few days hunting ducks with "Eddie"
Gallagher and Hugh Birmingham, both
13.
Dean R. A. Lyman was elected head
of the American Conference of Pharma-
eutical Faculties at its convention held
in Philadelphia and Atlantic City, the
first week of September. Dean Lyman
says that this recognition came to Ne
braska as a tribute to the work done
here in the last few years.
On his way home Dean Lyman in
spected the drug plant gardens at the
universities of Minnesota nad Wiscon
sin and found that the Nebraska gar
dens are more extensive and contain
a greater variety of plants than either
of the other universities.
N. P. Han Ben accompanied Dean
Lyman on the trip.
1 PAN-HELL, THAT DON'T DESCRIBE
IT, THE GIRLS THOUGHT
WORSE THAN THAT
KOSMET KLUB PLEDGE
The Kosmet Klab announces the
pledging of Tace Woods, 19, of Lin
coln.
EN-
H. O. Bauman, 10, civil engineer in
the United States government employ
STUDENT FROM BULGARIA
ROLLS IN UNIVERSITY
A native Bulgarian whose father
is a Presbyterian missionary in the
Bulgarian colony of Kansas City, Kas.,
is numbered among the cluss of 1920
at K. U. He Is Henry Christoff and
is nineteen years old.
Christoff was graduated from the
Central high school in ansas City in
1914, and was among the ten honor
students. During his senior year he
acted as school, cheer leader and re
ceived considerable publicity for his
work. He is a nephew of the com
mander of the Bulgarian army which
captured Adrianople during the last
Balkan war.
Christoff is enrolled in the school of
engineering and expects to take up
chemical engineering as his life work.
Exchange.
Who put the hell in Pan Hellenic
Why, the United States postoffice,
Dantes' idea was aTJ wrong. The orig
inal inferno is a mob of intersorority
delegates chewing their nails because
their second week date books sup
posedly delivered bright and early on
the Sabbath morning by special de
livery were not delivered At all nntil
the gray gloom of lato Monday had
settled down over the city and the
rushees had made out their second
week social calendar -without know!
edge that all the cards had not yet
arrived.
There are many sad points in this
storv. but the saddest of all is the
complete disintegration of an ideal
The girls of Pan Hellenic had alwayi
thought of the United States postof
fice as a perfect, infallible, gray coated
organization that could do no wrong
Tie mail service downed the idiosyn
cracies of the past winter, has lived
through the Seattle fire and survived
the Christmas rush for more than fifty
years, but down it went last Sunday
under the -unexpected onslaught of the
350 special delivery letters directed by
the unseen hand of the eternal femi
nine on the University of Washington
campus.
And the brunt of the -whole misera
ble affair was an innocent fledgling
who had been left in charge of the
special delivery department while his
superiors went on a -vacation. The de
luge began to overtake him at 5 o'clock
Sunday morning. The girls stayed tip
all night to get their mail off in the
first delivery. They had a mental pic
ture of a phalanx oLmailmen on motor
cycles starting out in the foggy, gray
dawn with the letters in their bags
and grim delight in the pursuance of
their government's business written in
their faces.
What actually happened was a fren
zied scurrying of the postal service's
delivery staff of one over the hills of
the Queen City, in a vain attempt to
deliver fifty specials as opposed to the
usual five or six. By 4 that afternoon
weak and wan and "agin the govern
ment," the lad was beginning to see
the end of the awful siege. And now
comes the most horrible part of this
horrible tale. Triumphant, he reported
to his office, his duty done and food
sight and the man in charge pre
sented him with the answers to the
notes he had been distributing all day
One hundred and fifty there wore.
In the meantime Pan Hellenic had
called a meeting to consider the matter
calmly. One sorority was absolutely
without second week dates; not a
single card had been answered. Oth
ers had heard by divers means that
the precious letters had not been re
ceived. That was when everything
broke loose at once at the Chi Omega
house at 4 o'clock Monday afternoon.
hen the meeting was held. Conster
nation settled down on the group and
the jinx Tuled. Imagine a rushing sys
tem which it had taken months to
perfect gone flat at the most crucial
moment and all because the United
StateB mail gummed the cards. By
means the answers should have
reached the sororities by noon of that
Monday. It was 4 o'clock and few of
them had been heard from. The mat
ter was beyond even the feminine re
sourcefulness of Pan Hellenic and it
has concocted some of the most elab
orate schemes the" campus has ever
seen. The meeting broke up in dis
gusted confusion to meet again that
night.
In those few intervening hours the
lone messenger who had the key to
the situation and the special delivery
lotters Bald thumbs up on the propo
sition. By 8 o'clock all the answers
had boon received with the exception
of one sorority's answers that never
came back. The Jinx was off and the
girls breathed. They gave the sorority
without any second week engagements
the right to rush on Wednesday night,
which was to have been a holiday for
everyone, and agreed that when the
bids go out by special delivery next
Friday tight the postoffice should be
notified a day in advance. Exchange.
HOUSEWIVES MAY COME FOR ONE
DAY COURSES
A series of oneway housekeepers'
institutes may be held during the year
by the extension division of the Uni
versity of Washington under the di
rection of Mary F, Rausch, it such a
series would be desirable to the wom
en of King county.
Those women whose arduous duties
within the household have prevented
attendance at the five-day housekeep
ers' institute held on the campus are
nol to be deprived of the opportunity
for improvement in the arts of the
housewife. Miss Ttansch Is organii
ing a "'great drive,'" the objective of
which is to be the homes themselves.
Any group of thirty women can have
a conference in a private residence, a
school a club or any other place
where a room with a little necessary
equipment for demonstrations can be
had. The fee will be $1, for which
they will receive, in addition to the
advantages of the instruction, printed
recipes and rules for table setting and
serving.
""We do not care to get more than
$50 out of any course," said Miss
Rausch, ""but we have to finance our
work. So any time the nnmber I
students exceeds fifty the group may
have the excess fees to be nsed in
charity, self-improvement or as they
see fit. Churches, societies, parent-
teachers' associations and similar or
ganizations may find the giving of
housekeepers' conferences a profitable :
undertaking."
Different programs win be arranged
for each meeting. Exchange. i
and institutions; modern historv
(since 1S50) of Europe, South America
and the Par East Exchange,
FOR
COURSE RECOMMENDED
FOREIGN SERVICE
Because there has been no depart
ment in schools and colleges for the
preparation of those students who
wish to enter foreign service, consu
lar and commercial, the United States
bureau of education has just sent out
a circular letter to the schools and col
leges of the United States recom
mending that they give this subject
some attention.
The letter informs ns that there is
a committee of fifteen representatives
from educational institutions making
an investigation on this subject at the
present time, a.nd in view that it
might be some time before the com
mittee can make its report, the letter
calls attention to the subjects In
which the candidate for consular serv
ice is required to take a written ex
amination. They are: International,
maritime and commercial law; politi
cal and commercial geography; arith
metic; modem languages (French,
German, or Spanish, and in addition
any others that the candidates desire
to submit); natural, industrial and
commercial resources and commerce
of the United States; political econ-1
omy; American history, government
Purchase
Your Next Pair
of Shoes
at the store that can
give you the most
for your money.
Th CUde,
Tan xtr Slack
If $5 or $6 is the price
you 'will pay, then come
to -us well fit you In a
pair of Florshrams the
heat value for the money
-you get Style, comfort
and quality, the three
points in which you are
interested and you get
them right" at this
store for $5 or $6.
917-21 S1..1WCIIN
Fre! l&zlX & Ero.
A Store lor CvwTkosj
One almost new military suit coat,
28. See Wilson. Temple desk.
Loeb's Orchestra, B-2708 B-1282.
Classified Advertising
WANTED A room-mate bv younc
man in the University, rhone B43G4.
1810 M. 25-27
S HEWATUD for the return of a Moore's
vnleakable fountain pen to Station
A. (25-27)
LET A NEBRASKAN
WANT AD
do it for yon.
Find you employment hire your help for you find that lost Article
put you In touch with a trade on that motor cycle. Old Book, etc.
See T. A. Williams, basement Adm. Bldg.
12 words 10c S Insertions 25c
B-egister for yemr music work at
THE UIxlVESrTY SOICOL OF IJUSIC
Twenty-Third Year just coTrimtmriTig
Many teachers in all tranches of music to choose from.
Dramatic Art Aesthetic Dancing
Ask for information
WTT.T.ATiT) TmTBAT.Ti, Director
11th and Bis. Opposite the Campus
THE
PZ3
Mb
Telephone
23 Worth 12th St.
C!."r.:rs, Pressors, Dj:rs
For the "Work and Service that
Pleases." Call B22U. The Best
equipped Dry Cleaning Plant in the
West One flay service If seeded.
Treasonable Pricee, good work, prompt
service. Hep airs to men'1! frarmenta
carefully made.