The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 18, 1919, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    f
TIIB DAILY NflDRASKAN
t
The Daily Nebraskan
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
EDITORIAL
Howard liurfln ,
Laurence E. Slater
Marian He&aUf er !
Carlial Joawa
Forrest Bate
Sadie Finch
Or In B. Gaston
BUSINESS
""
Roy Wrtbeiri
Fred Boaklag
art Coryell
Office.: News, Baaement. University IUU; Business. Basement.
Administration Buildlac
Telephones News and Editorial, B-28H; Business. B-IM7.
Nlht, all Departments, B-4204.
Pobiiatoed ererr day except Saturday and Sunday during Ue col
lege rear. Svbaeritioa, per aemeefcer
Entered at the postoffice t Lincoln, Nebraeka. aa second class
nail matter under the Act of Congress of March I. 1871.
For This Issue
CARLISLE JONES
News Editor
TAKE TIME TO STUDY
Mid-semester examinations are over. Announcement from the of
fice of the executive dean have informed delinquent students ol their
shortcoming In scholastic achievement. And. as usual, there are
many-far too many-who have fallen below the safety mark, who
have failed to keep pace with ihelr studies.
It all simmers down to the fact that we are here to get an educa
tion. Studies are essentially the basis of this education, although hy
no means do they constitute all of it. We owe the fact that we are
here at all to the fact that we are here to study.
There is no reason why the average university student should not
at the same time have sufficient enjoyment outside his allotted period
for study and work. It requires the utilization of waste time. Jme
which is ordinarily spent with profligate indiscrimination, on the cam
pus, downtown and at the house. These few hours every day directed
into the channel of profitably applied study will get the mathematics
lesson, make up the back theme and write tomorrow's essay. There
will still be time left to play for those who must have their good
time."
The subject of "mid-semesters" has raised the usual question about
higher scholastic standards. It is a subject which is of pressing con
cern to us all, not because we owe it to the university and to our in
structors, but because, first of all. we owe it to ourselves to suDject
our natural wants and desires to the beneficial training which must
come from study. It is a matter of personal honor and spirit tha. we
reap the benefits of instruction and then use what we have received
as an incentive to learn something for ourselves.
NEED OF COLLEGES
The colleges have never been needed more than they are today.
Nor have their own needs, been greater. It is education that must
rescue the world from the plight into which it has fallen. If educa
tion is perverted, or if it is confined to a few. or if it is hampereu Dy
lack of public support, the conditions of life will surely grow worse.
The war has increased the need for highly trained minds; at the Fame
time It has gravely diminished the supply.
In Italy, England and France the young university men are very
few Europe is not only left impoverished and desolate of its intel
lectual capital, but also depleted, and this is the capital that is more
precious to civilization than any other form of wealth.
It is necessary, therefore, that American institutions of learning
should enormously increase their output. Europe looks to America
for help, not only in restoring its material losses, but also in recruiting
its mental and moral strength. American universities, not ltn.tan,
English or French and certainly not German or Austrian, will be t'ae
most importanL centers of higher learning now.
But they can only carry on the work that is being required of
them if they repeive the unstinted support of the public. The nieie
approval of the public is not enough; the public must open its purse.
The college teacher has always been poorly paid, his salary has
not been increased and his family is keenly aware of the shrunken
value of the dollar. College professors cannot be inspiring and cut
clent if their minds are always occupied with cost-of-living proble.K.
The college must be provided with funds so ample that they can
pay proper salaries to their teschers and carry on without handicap
their vitally Important work. Ohio State Lantern.
COLLEGE
Whenever a person speaks of football he always speaks ot colleges
in the same breath, and from the back of his mind comes forth souie
preference to college spirit. Why is this? Is It that college spirit Is so
important that athletics could not prosper without it? Yes, this is
Just about the truth, for college spirit is the dominating force whirh
makes possible all college activities.
What is football? Is it merely a trial of prowess between two
teams of eleven men from different institutions? No. it is a great deal
more than that. Football holds such great interest not thru the mere
movement of a small leather-covered oval from one chalk-marked Hie
to another, but rather because of the spirit that is behind it all the
college spirit.
Each team knows that Its student body has faith in it. whether any
members of that Btudent body were actually upon the sidelines or not.
These eleven men exert their best efforts to show their supporters that
their every ply the will to do, the sense of institutional pride which
makes real college activities in general, and which promotes and
broadens the spirit of the college Itself.
This Is what college spirit will da but low describe what it actual
ly Is? It can't be done, for college spirit is an indescribable something
that must be presenL whether we know what it la or not. It cannot be
defined by enumerating its elements any more than a house can be de
scribed by tabulation of the number of boards snd nails used in its
construction. The Industrial Collegian.
STAFF
Editor
Managing Editor
ZIAaoclate Editor
Newi Editor
Hews aMltor
......Society editor
SporU Editor
STAFF
Baslnes Manager
Assistant Buslnees MuiMW
Clrcmlation Manager
SPIRIT
c
PERSONALS
Alumni who were quests at th Sig
ma Alpha Epsllon house for hoine.u
Inf. were entertained at a smoker on
Sunday afternoon at the chaptei
house.
Margaret KllUan. ex '17. of Auburn,
spent the last weekend at the PI Beta
Phi house.
Merle llowey. II. E. Murphy, oi Om
aha, were guests at the Beta Theta
Pie house, lor Saturday and Sunday.
Mrs. Uhlf. from the chnpter at Law
rence. Kanxas, has been a visitor at
the Alpha Omrlcon PI house for the
last few days.
Atemus Carson, of Grand Inland;
Walter Gibbons. '21. of Comstock.
were guests at the Kappa Sigma
house for the weekend.
Fiances Irwin. '23. Ethel Nlmmo.
'23. and NHlba Hradshaw. "21, wre
visitors In Omaha for the past few
days.
Alumni who were guests at the Beta
Theta FI house for homecoming were
Frank Barton and Kenneth Wherry,
of Pawnee City.
Ea Woodslde, of Una. Coloiado.
and Esther Murphy, "19. who Is teach
ing In Harvard this year, left yester
day for their homes after spending
the week-end at the Alpha Omrlcon Pi
house.
Guests at the Sigma Alpha EpsPon
house for homecoming were: imtln
Grimes. Lane Dutton, Davis Sanlford.
Walter Wort. Walter Mandeville.
Joshua Williams. Gvorge Bracken.
Charles Shafster. Paul Jones. Richard
Stoddard. Edward Lindsay, all of
Lawrence, Kansas.
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Murphy. o ia
ney. Iowa, were guests of their daugh
ter. Eva Murphy, at the Alpha Omrl
con PI house for Sunday.
The following were visitors ai ine
Sigma Alpha Epsilon house for ine
week-end: Rex Dalery, Utica; George
and Paul Sturgers, Sioux City, Iowa;
Max Shelley. Fairrield; Ernest Frank,
York; Marion Shaw. David City; M.
Calder, Seward; Charles Norris.
Clark; Walter Spear, Peru, and Wil
liam Diller. of Diller.
Visitors at the Sigma Chj house
for homecoming week were: Har
ry Cummins, and William Goeh
ner of Seward; Victor Hermanson of
Omaha; Marion Dixon of Valley; Karl
Brown of Papillon; DeWitt Hansen
and D. A. J. Coats of Falrbury; ViaS
Sheldon of Nehawka; Robert Adams
of Sax City; and Carroll Sharman of
Des Moines, Iowa; and Albert Gross
of Champaigne, Illinois.
Right End Arthur Longborg. Roy
Gress, Russell Cowgill. David Lupher.
and Gordon Sanders of the Kansas
Varsity team; Warren Henley, M. B.
Henderson, George Hale, Kenneth
Adams, and Clifford Johnson, of the
Kansas Freshman Football Team, and
John Kinkle, Eldrick Sharp, Charles
Fratcher, all of the Kansas chapter of
Sigma Chi, were guests of the local
chapter at dinner, Saturday evening.
The Nebraska Alpha chapter of Al
pha Omega Alpha of the University of
Nebraska College of Medicine held Its
annual banquet at the University club
Thursday evening. Dr. I. S. Cutter
gave a brief talk. Those pledged we.iv..
Drs. W. N. Anderson, E. L. Bridges,
W. A. Fahrenbruch. H. E. Harvey, J.
Clyde Moore. H. It. Mulligan, J. M.
Pat ton, J. B. Potts. S. E. Ravitz, F. X.
Rudloff, A. C. Stokes, J. Weinberg, SI.
Grodinsky, and C. A. Weymu'ler.
Kathryn Howey, '19, who has been a
guest at the Delta Gamma house for
the past few days, left yesterday for
College, Kansas, was a guest at the
her home in Beatrice.
Referee E. ('. Quigley, of St. Mary's
Sigma Chi house for Saturday sua
Sunday.
Frank Long, '16, and Wallace B. Mc
Donald, '16, of Buffalo, Wyoming, nave
been visitors at the Phi Gamma DIta
house for the past week end.
Nell Youngers. '17, of Geneva, and
Virginia Gallentine, '18. of Kearney,
who have been guests for the past
few days at the Delta Gamma house,
left Monday for Omaha, where they
will be visitors for the rest or the
week.
Dean L. A. Burnett has been seri
ously ill the past few days, but is
able to be at his office again.
R. J. Passau, '15, of Washington. D.
C; Boyd Rish, '16. Beatrice. Nebr.,
and A. V. KJelser, '15, Stromberg,
Nebr., were Farm House visitors cur
ing the week-end.
L. A. Wilson visited at Raymond
during the week-end.
L. T. Skinner and wife were guests
at the Farm House dance on Satur
day night.
Chase to Leave
Professor L. W. Chase has li.aoe
known to the Board of Regents that
he will resign his position as head wf
the Agriculture Engineering Depart
ment to take up bis new position as
manager of the Chase Plow Company.
He will, however, continue In his fom
ent capacity for a time at the pleas
ure of the regents.
1 I UNI NOTICES I
Basket Ball
Basket ball practice for Agrleullui
College at Armory at 1:30 Tuesiay
evening.
Vespers
Vespers will be In Faculty hall. 5
oclock today. Miss Gertrude Mici
will play a violin solo, and Professor
Williams will be the leading speakei
on the Boclal service program.
Wayne viut
Wayne club meets In 101 Social Sci
ence building Friday. Everyone who
has attended Wayne Normal is Invlt
ed.
Arts and Science Men
There will be of all the men of the
Arts and Sciences college at 7:30
Tuesday evening, in the chapel.
Theta Sigma Phi
Theta Sigma Phi will meet Tu
day evening at 7; 15 in Faculty ilai!
Komentky Klub
The Komensky Klub will have Its
picture taken Tuesday noon. Novem
ber 18. t 12:15 p. m. Meet at Town
send's studio.
Girls' Reserve
Girls Reserve meeting at the City
Y. W. C A. Professor Gregg, hoad ot
the department of psychology at Wes
leyan. Is to be the speaker of the eve
ning. Wednesday, evening at 7: CO.
H. E. Club Picture
The Home Economics club pit.-ie
for the Cornhusker will be taken at
Townsend's Thursday, November 20
at 12 o'clock. 5-3t.
Student Volunteers
Regular meeting of the Student Vol
unteers, Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock
jn the Y. W. C. A. room. Social Science
building. The rooms will be open at
6:30 o'clock. Come early.
Engineering Society
The regular meeting of the engi
neering society will be held at M. E.
206, Wednesday evening, at 7:45.
Faculty Men's Dinner
Thursday, November 20, at the Ho
tel Grand. Plates 60 cents. Reserva
tions should be made before 5:00
o'clock Wednesday at city or lain Fi
nance office. Dinner promptly at 6:30.
Professor H. H. Vaughan will upeak
on "The Place of Modern Languages
in American Education." F. W. San-
ford, R. D. Scott, W. W. Burr, commit
tee, a-ol.
Thursday Convocation
Thursday's musical convocation will
consist of a program by the university
band under the direction of Mr.
Quick.
W. S. G. A. Council Meeting
W. S. G. A. council will meet n S.
S. 101 Tuesday at 7 o'clock.
W. A. A. Board Picture
W. A. A. Board picture will be
taken Tuesday at twelve o'clock and
not Friday as announced.
The Ag. Club will give a hop at the
Rosewild on Friday, November 21.
Tickets may be obtained from any of
the following: Hall, Yates, Sinity,
Noyes, Fortna, Freidenburg, McMa
hon, Baldwin.
THE AMERICAN
OF TOMORROW
Nobody can tell what the American
of tomorrow will be like, but mat ue
will be intelligent, strong with the ho
mogenous qualities that compose a
united nation Is the deduction we
make from Dr. John Oabesmith's new
book, "Race and Nationality." just
published by Stokes, in which he de
scribes the fallacy of the common be
lief that the national character of the
country is unchangeable or infusible.
Great Britain, he says, Is a Biumg
example of the way in which different
races can be welded Into a homoge
nous nation with the strongest kind of
characteristics. For the Englishman
is the result of the fusion of the Sax
on, the Norman and the Briton.
Concerning the League of Nacions
Dr. Oakesmith says: "There is noth
ing revolutionary or Impossibly ideal
istic either In the conception ot the
League of Nations or the construction
of machinery for Its practical appli
cation. Both are In harmony with set
tled historical principles. Nor can It
be regarded as rash or unstatesman
like to take advantage of the interna
tional atmosphere prevailing after the
war an atmosphere in which peace
is naturally tnvisaged as the greatest
of all the common interests of human
ity In order to secure for the concep
tion support which would have failed
a few years ago. and might possibly
fail again a few years hence."
FIVE MORE
AND T11K OHKllNAL
SOUTHERN RAG-A-JAZZ BAND
EVERY MEMBER A UNIVERSITY STUDENT
Will be lNH.kl -.lid t Jim :!
BERT L. REED, Manager
114' M Street
Phone B-2193
ORPHEUM DRUG STORE
OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT
A Good Place for Soda Fountain Refreshments after the Theatre and
after the Rosewllde Dance. Try the Luncheonette
CARSON HILDRETH, '95 and 9
rooogqi?i?fjuuariocor),i lwwmn" mnnooooooooooocxjuLme
THEY SAY--
"Clothes do not make the Man"
But don't try gong without them.
Keep them in good shape by
The "ABLE" Process
"ABLE"
B2304
CLEANERS
"As Good as Any"
fMywwiiiirrifinnrrrrinnnn
ALUMNI
Mildred J. Weesen, '17, sistei of
Professor Maurice Wessen at Oakland
and Clare A. Newmyer, '16, who
teaches home economics at uyuua.
called at Alumni headquarters Men
day. They announced their intention
of organizing the alumni of Burt
county into an association. Tekamah,
the county seat, and the towns whrre
these alumni are located oil have
many University of Nebraska grad
uaies.
Delbert Williams. 'i4, visited the
campus recently. He has a new posi
tion as geologist at Caney, Kansas.
Among the graduates of the Uni
versity who attended the game Sat
urday and spent the week end on
the campus were:
Fred Laird, '06, attorney at Fre
nlont and member of the alumni board
of directors.
C. W. George, a farmer of Cumro,
Nebraska, brother of Arthur C. George
of the Nebraska Farmer.
H. C. Hughes, '08, of Ceresco.
V. C. Graham, '19, assistant sales
man for an Omaha firm.
Ernest Lundeen, '19, who teaches
history at Columbus.
W. G. Kieck, '14, of Springfield, who
will probably be the youngest member
of the constitutional convention.
H. W. Garrett, secretary of the Y.
M. C. A. at Beatrice.
Luke Cheney, '87, came over 200
miles to see the game.fi He is county
attorney at Stockville. Mr. Cheney
says that A. H. Bigelow of the same
class, of Omaha, will be a delegte
to the constitutional convention.
Alvin Kezer, '04, of Fort Collins
College of Agriculture
Edith L. Scriven, '16, teacher of
home economics in the Wayne high
school.
Major E. A. Froyd, '09, has just
been discharged after two and a half
years' of service. He and his wife
stopped over in Lincoln on their way
to Wakefield. Mrs. Froyd was Sarah
Herrlngton, of the class of '11.
Alumni of the University of Nebras
ka held a homecoming dinner In Pitts
burgh, Pennsylvania, on the evening
of November 15. Charles Blioaugn
was acting president and Fred Kabe
acting secretary.
IN DAYS GONE BY
One Year Ago Today
Huskers clinch valley champloiisuip
by defeating Kansas in a bitterly
fought game, 13 to 3.
Four Years Ago Today
Hawkeyes defeat Huskers 26 10 .
Ten Years Ago Today
New system of football methods in
troduced by athletic board. Gold foot
balls were awarded to all men who
had played three years on the tem.
NIGHTS!
139 No. 14
AND DYKES
"Better Than Many"
PUNCH
"THAT'S DIFFERENT"
For tbat next hop get ay price.
OCT CAPP
Faontata tUm
at Pease Drug Ce.,
mi o 8.
THE CHICAO CLEANERS
& DYERS
Phone B-S01S
HARRY LYONS, Mgr.
We Klean Klothes Klean
315 So. 11th Street
DANCING EVERY NIGHT
At
Antelope Park
I Loeb A Hampton's Orchestra
JOHNSTON'S CANDY
in One and Two Pounds
P
ILLERS'
RESCRIPTION
HARMACY
N. S. CAFE
A Good Place to Eat
139 South 11th sveet
BECK'S SYNCOPATED
SYMPHONY
Playing the Rasewilde
Wednesdays ud Saturday
Onen for Uni bookings Friday
nights Can also supply small
combinations for week-end nights.
Boole Your Parties Early
lt Nat'l Bk. laoo 8. 22d St
B3343 F2288
H E F FLEY'S
TAILORS
OF QUALITY
1M No. 11th St. phone sVIOS
DAWSON'S CldZUll
Anything in Music
Open for Bookmf
Jokm B. Dawson 71874
DANCE MUSIC
year Hesse
r". hitftsw
sUeaa. CALls
CHARLES FLINtt
tasni
5;