The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 06, 1919, Image 2

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The Daily Nebraskan
UNIVERSITY OP NEBRASKA OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
EDITORIAL STAFF
Howard Murfln K,,i,or
Lawrence Slater ...1 Managing Kdlior
Forrest Estes Newa Editor
Marian Hennlnger ....! Associate Editor
Kenneth McCandless sPrU Kdilor
Helen Howe Contributing Editor
Sadie Finch Society Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
Roy Wythers sle8 Manwer
Earl Coryell Circulation Manager
Fred Bosklng Assistant Business Manaser
Offices: News, Basement, University Hall; Business, Baw-ment,
Administration Building.
Telephones: News and Editorial, B-2S16; Business, B-2597
Night, all Departments, B-4204.
Publlbtied every day except Saturday and Sunday during the col
lege year. Subscription, per semester $1.25.
Entered at the postofllce at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second-class
mail matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
NO TIME FOR DISCOURAGEMENT
This is no time for discouragement. Nebraska was defeated by
Iowa and while we all regret the outcome of the first game, it
should only spur us on to greater determination to win the games
ahead. It was a hard struggle and the Huskers were handicapped
by playing the opening contest away from home. Press reports tell
us that the breaks of the game were against Nebraska and that while
Iowa has a wonderful team, the result might have been different m a
mid-season combat. But why waste time mourning over defeat It
is easier, forgotten.
Next Saturday Nebraska meets Minnesota. It is a second trip
away from home and the result is perhaps the most doubtful of
any on the schedule. Minnesota has always been a dreaded oppon
ent and it has been only a super team which would wrest victory
from the lads of the Gopher state.
The present week will be one of inlense preparation io rthe
coming conflict. Every force and every effort which Cornhuskers
can marshall must be vitalized if Nebraska is to win. In face of one
defeat the odds will be against us and the struggle to overcome
weakness will be doubly hard. The battle is not one for football
men alone; it is for every loyal son and daughter of Nebraska wno
lays any claim to supporting Cornhusker football.
It is not alone for Minnesota that we must prepare. The games
which follow are of equal importance and will be fully as hard to
win. A week from next Saturday Notre Dame comes to Lincoln.
The visit of the Hoosiers recalls some of the bitterest fights ever
enacted on Nebraska field and the tally card of games lost and won
shows an almost even balance. Last year the game ended in a tie
and this year both sides will fight to swing the result their way.
Following come Oklahoma, Ames. Missouri, Kansas and Syracuse,
all mighty teams and formidable opponents.
Meanwhile let us not forget that the outcome at Iowa has a lesson
for us all. Have we been mindful of the stiff opposition that the
Huskers must face and have we developed a spirit in keeping with
a remarkable team and a remarkable schedule? It is not too late
yet. In the weeks ahead let every Cornhusker throw every ounce
of spirit into the fight with an undaunted determination to win for
Nebraska.
THE NEBRASKAN POLICY
College editors are often prone to magnify the importance of
the year's events which they are about to chronicle. In their eyes,
each year becomes propitious and noteworthy. The reason is not
hard to see. The constant growth of various colleges and universi
ties is, in itself, a factor which compels attention and as each year
comes and enrollment invariably rises, there is every real reason to
believe that the happenings of student and college life will be mem
orable ones to relate.
And so the Daily Nebraskan, as it introduces to the University
a paper under the guidance of a new staff, finds it hard to avoid the
trite utterances characteristic of writers as they venture into tne
sponsibility placed upon it of recording the events of a period wfcicl,
promises to be one of great achievments 'and significant undertakings.
I looks hopefully forward to what it believes will be the biggest
era of development that the University has ever seen.
The policy of the Nebraskan will be founded more than ever
upon the ideals of service to the student body and the faculty. In
its news celumns, it will strive to relate in an impartial way all
news of the campus and it will be the aim of the editorial staff in
the same manner to help in what way it can to direct student thought
and opinion into useful channels.
There are movements under way at the present time which rep
resent the outcome of student demands for a better University and
In mirroring the wishes of Nebraska men and women, the paper
will sponsor and support these measures. And following the pre
cedents of years past, the Daily Nebraskan professes the doctrine of
constructive suggestion rather than of destructive criticism and the
espousal of causes of very real concern to student hearts.
A MOVEMENT TOWARD EFFICIENCY
Columbia University has introduced this year a scheme whereby
all entering students are examined in regard to former college or
preparatory school work, and are given a mental and physical test
to determine their fitness to enter the institution.
Too many young men and women go through college gluing
nothing and taking nothing. They derive nothing from the school
but a knowledge of the way to spend money easily and extravagantly.
They leave school no better, sometimes far worse, than when ihey
entered four or five years before. These students are not physically
or mentally fit to profit by the advantages offered.
The Columbia plan alms to eliminate this waste of energy. The
book knowledge" which a student takes with him from college is
oftentimes of minor Importance. The mental training and broader
viewpoint which he acquires make his college course worth while.
If he cannot attain these things which are necessities to the success
ful college mas, he is wasting his efforts and his professor's time.
The Columbia experiment will be watched with interest by those
who believe in better and more efficient colleges and universities.
THE DAILY NERRASKAN
i .. -
Friday, October 3
About thirty couples attended the
house dance or Delta Chi. Red and
buff, the liatinlty colors, were used in
decoration. William SteantB of Chi
cago was a guest. Mr. and Mrs. Van
ell K. Greer, Mr. and Mrs. Lester L.
Dunn were chaperones.
Br.:l:r.c!l Guild entertained twenty-five
couples at a house dance. The
The house was decorated in black
and gold. The party was chaper
oned by Mr. and Mrs. Vanderpool.
Seventy-five couples attended the
fall party of Chi Omega at hose
wilde. Margaret Roebling, of Sew
ard, was an out of town guest. Miss
Mary Anette Anderson, Dean and
Mrs. Charles Fordyce, Mr. and Mrs.
A. Gaddls, Mrs. H. Tonner, and Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Westerfeldt chaper
oned. Kappa Alpha Theta entertained
about thirty couples at a dancing
party at the chapter house, which
was decorated in autumn flowers.
The chaperone was Mrs. C. C. Stivers.
Alpha XI Delta entertained at a
house dance at which Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Rimlenstracher, of Hastings,
were guests, and Mrs. Blakley and
Miss Lulu Runge were chaperones.
Pi Beta Phi gave its first dance
in its new chapter house at 1414 G
street. About forty couples ' were
present. The decorations were of
autumn flowers. The out of town
guests were: Mildred Bowers, of
Verdun, and Dorothy Adkins, of Oma
ha. The party was chaperoned by
Mrs. A. M. Eberly, and Mr. and Mrs.
A. W. Richardson.
Alpha Phi 'entertained thirty-five
couples at a house dance. Miss Mary
Casper of Wahoo was a guest. Tne
chaperones were Mrs. E. M. Paynter
and Captain and Mrs. Brian O'Biian.
The active chapter of Delta Tau
Delta was entertained at a house
dance by its freshmen members. Mr.
and Mrs. N. H. Gardner, and Mr. and
Mrs. H. J. Hall were the chaperones.
Twenty couples attended the house
dance of Phi Gamma Delta. Captain
and Mrs. O'Brian, and Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bell chaperoned.
Chancellor and Mrs. Avery enter
tained the members of the faculty
and their wives, at their home at
2001 Washington street. The misses
Marguerite McPhee, Louise Brown
ell, Katherine Kohl, and Margaret
Feddle served.
Saturday, October 4
The freshmen of Delta Upsilon en
tertained the active chapter at a house
dance. The motive of the decorations
was blue and gold, the colors of the
fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Waugh chaperoned.
Achoth entertained at a dancing
t.arty at the home of Gladys Beaij
mont, 1725 South Seventeenth street.
The house. was decorated in autumn
colors and flowers. The chaperones
were: Mrs. Burr, Mr. and Mrs. H. J.
Young, Prof, and Mrs. Gramlich, Prof,
and Mrs. Chatburn, and Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Hayes.
Alpha Phi entertained at tea, Sat
urday afternoon, in honor of the new
chaperone, Mrs. E. M. Paynter, of
Kansas City. Pink tea roses were
used in decoration. The guests were
received by Mrs. Paynter, Mrs. Carl
Rohman, Misses Helen Wahl, Gwen
McCoy, and Genevieve Roberts.
The active chapter of Phi Kappa
Psi entertained its freshmen at a
house dance. The decorations were
of autumn flowers. Mr. and Mrs.
William Noble, Leroy Cromwell, Rich
ard Baliman, and Paul Whitney of
Omaha, were out of town guests. The
chaperones were: Mr. and Mrs. Cal
loway Van Decar, Mr. and Mrs. T.
Roope, Mrs. M. I. Aitkin, and Mr. and
Mrs. A. L. Haecker.
Eighteen active and alumnae mem
bers of Valkyrie, Senior society, took
lunch together Saturday noon, in the
Chinese room of the Lincoln hotel.
The decorations were Ophelia roses
in Dresden baskets with streamers of
orchid-colored tulle. The toasts were
impromptu. Dorothy Wetherald, Kap
pa Alpha Tht ?. : Adelaide Elam, Kap
pa Kappa Gamma; and Chailotte
Hannah, Alpha Phi, were Initiated in
to tLe society.
Gold and white, the fraternity col
ors, were the decorations at the
bouse dance of Pi Kappa Phi. About
thirty couples were present Out ol
town guests were, Harlow Weatberby
and Reuben Claussen of Beatrice, and
Jaima Barker of Pawnee City. Pi of.
and Mrs. George Foster chapeoned.
Thirty-five couples were present at
the house dance of Alpha Delta PI.
Ward roses were used in decoration.
Out of town guests were, Gladys Cool
ey. of Wahoo, and Blanche ShWert.
of Cambridge. The chaperones were:
Dean and Mrs. Charles Fordyce. Dr.
and Mrs. Stewart, and Mr. and Mrs.
H. H. Freeman.
The following pledges were an
nounced by the women's fraternities
of the university at the special pledg
ing set for Saturday:
Alpha Chi Omega; Grace Goodwin
Sheridan, Wyo.
Alpha Delta Pi; Alberta Skeen, Au
burn; Mary Jane Boyd. Auburn; Hel
en At wood, Beaver City.
Alpha Phi: Mary Anna Rogers.
Scottsbluff; Merle Rogers. Gibbon;
Thelma Harnly, Lincoln.
Chi Omega; Lillian Blanchard,
Grace Pegler, Lincoln.
Delta Delta Delta: Carol Ayles
worth, Lincoln; Maude Ernst. Teoum
seh. Delta Gamma: Gretchen Wa'sh,
Pierre, South Dakota.
Kappa Alpha Theta: Doris Alan,
Douglas, Wyo.
Kappa Kappa Gamma: Faye Loucks
Falls City; Dorothy Murty, Weeping
Water.
Ti Beta Phi: Gertrude Hailon,
Katheryn Hinton, Lincoln.
PERSONALS
Louise Stahl. ex-'17, of Beatrice, and
Jeanette Wilmarth of Omaha, were
week end guests at the Delta Gamma
house.
Lawrense Ortman, '22, and Lee Huff
Jr., '22, spent the week end in Omaha.
Almarine Campbell, '22, and Marjor
ie Temple, '22, attended the Nebraska
Iowa game in Iowa City.
Jean Pierce, 19, of Orleans, and
Mrs. Harry Rindenspracher, formerly
Helen Larson, ex-'21, of Hastings, are
guests of Alpha Xi Delta.
Alpha Sigma Phi announces the
pledging of R, C. Mason of West
Point.
William Mackey, '18, and Clarence
Parsons, ex-'21, of Omaha, are visitors
at the Sigma Nu house.
Lorena Evans, '23, and Eulalia Ry
an, '23, spent the week end at their
homes in Columbus.
Richard Baliman, '18, and Paul Witn
ey, ex-'20, of Omaha, were week end
visitors at the Phi Kappa Psi house.
Paul Mansfield Spencer, grand chap
lain of the Sigma Nu fraternity, spent
a few days last week at the local chap
ter house.
Mrs. J. H. MacPrang, of Cedar
Bluffs, Mrs. C. S. Tourtelot, of Adams,
and Mrs. H. H. Muzzey, of Blooming
ton, are visiting their daughters at the
Achoth house.
Winton Harper, '23, spent the week
end at his home in David City.
Marvin Meyers, 22, Lee Yochum, '21,
Fay Pollock, '21, and Sidney Goodl'el
low, '21, were among those who at
tended the game in Iowa City.
Dorothy Cavenaugh, '23, and Kath
ryn Thompson; '23, spent the week
end in Omaha.
Roberta Chitterfifield, '17, is a visi
tor at the Achoth house.
Phillip Owens, from the University
of Washington, and Joseph Knapp,
from the University of Colorado, have
registered in school here.
Burnetta Hepperlin, '23, and Jrma
Fellwock, '22, spent the week end at
their homes in Beatrice.
Al Cerney, '17, of St. Paul, is visit
ing at the Alpha Sigma Phi house.
Olive Means, '22, spent the week
end in Omaha.
Adele Plumer, '23, spent the vcek
end at her home in Council Bluffs.
Helen Parish of Omaha, is a guest
at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
Stanley Hall, '22. Ernest Haveily,
'22, Robert Kerr, '23, Raymond Wat
son, '21, Clarence Ross, '22, and Har
old Bing, '22, spent the week end in
Iowa City.
Ann Peterson, '20, spent Saturday
and Sunday at her home in Nehawka,
Ralph Brehm of Talmadge has re
entered school.
Pi Kappa Phi entertained thirty
couples at a chapter house dance Sat
urday night. Decorations were in the
fraternity colors. Professor and Mrs.
George Foster chaperoned.
WANT ADS
For good dance music, call Blazck,
L5223.
Students at special prices. Blazefcs
Studio, 1308 O street
p
For Music call Cliff Scott B14t,2.
LOST Men's ring, engraved H. H.
S. '19. Finder leave it S . A. office.
Reward.
The University
School of Music
twenty-sixth year
just commencing
p,AbRaTnEdandorchestrXlICE
INSTRUMENTS
PUBLIC SCHOOL MUSIC
DRAMATIC ART
Playground Supervision and Story Telling
ANYONE MAY ENTER
COMPLETE COURSES IN ALL REPARTMENTS
ADRIAN M. NEWENS, Director
FULL INFORMATION ON REQUEST
Phone B-1392
osopsooocoocoopooeeopooo
8 Business Phone B-3022
DUDS BARBER SHOP AND TAXI SERVICE
119 North 12th Street
J. E. DUDLEY, Propr.
SPECIALIZING
Private Parties and Weddings, Country Drives
7-Passenger Cole, 8-Sedan and Touring Cart
Sooaeceooeooeooooooooeoeeeoooooooeooooeecoooeoooooooo
W ithout Reporters
The Herald, at Haslings, Fla.,
seems to be trying to publish a paper
without hiring any reporters. Its
own advertisement:
HAS ANYONE
Died
Eloped
Divorced-
Embezzled
Left lowu
Had a fire
Had a baby
Had a party
Sold a farm
Been anested
C.nne lo town
Had twins or colic
Sold a cow or lost an auto
Laid in a stock of whisky
Stolen a dog or a friend's wife
Committed suicide, or murder
Fallen from an airplane, or
Fallen into a coal hole, or
Fallen into a legacy?
THRAT'S NEWS!
Phone or mail it to the
CITY EDITOR
of the Hastings, Herald.
Earn $1000
San Francisco, August.... .Can you
create the one word which will best
denote the United States and all p.'.rts
of Britannia? If so, you will be
paid at the rate of $1000 a word. The
World Trade Club of San Francisco
has offered $1000 to the person who
suggests the word in which, in the
judgment of the club's Metric Cam
paign Committee, is best adaptea to
the world-wide use.
The competition is open to all hu
mankind. The money will be p8id to
the winner at noon on 15 May, 1920,
by a committee appointed by Presi
dent W. H. Hammer of the World
Trade Club.
"BriUAm," "Ambria," "Ambritlica,"
"Br-Am," "Sam-Bull" are some words
thus far suggested. New names are
constantly coming. The World Trade
Club is offering this award because in
carrying on its present campaign for
the adoption of metric units by all
English-speaking people the Unlieu
States, the British Isles, Canada, Aus
tralia, New Zealand, Tasmania. Unit
ed South Africa and so on, it was
hampered by the lack of a single short
word which would express all thes.
The metric units of weight and
measure are now used by all the
world except "Brit-Am' or "Ainbrit
tica" or "Sam-Bull."
A man who was wanted by the police
had been photographer In six different
positions, and the pictures sent to the
chief of police of a provincal town,
where it waa thought likely the fugi
tive was hiding. After the lapse of
a few days the following reply reached
headquarters: "Sir I duly received
the portraits of the six mteu-eant
whose capture is desired. I have ar
rested five of them, and the sixth is
under observation and will be se
cured shortly."
I'M
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11th and R Sts.
Residence Phone B 2454 K
HALLETT
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Established 1871
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PALADIAN
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DRAMATIC .
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CHEMICAL
ENGINEERING
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COAL is COAL
Hut if you will buy it at
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TRY KOMO or EUREKA
Whitebreast
Coal & Lbr. Co.
107 No. 11th St.
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Phone B-3018
HARRY LYONS, Mg"
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315 So. 11th Street
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138 No. 11th 81 Phone B-1422
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