THE DAILY NRBRA 8 KAN Engineering Society Palladian Society Dramatic Club Mystic Fish Chemical Club IT. -or N. Union Society Seniors Dlack Masque Silver Serpent XI Delta P. B. K. Sigma XI School of Music Civil Engineers Cadet Band Saddle and Sirloin Always in Stock UNI NOTICES The Daily Nebraskan UNIVERSITY Of NEBRASKA OFFICIAL PUBLICATION College-Wits Contest Number Infletders Report All Infletdena; eligible, to Varsity luaoball report In heavy clothes at the athletic field 3:80 today. N S Christian Science Society The Christian Science Society of the University meets Thursday evnlng in Faculty Hall, Temple, at seven-thlr-t All present and past students anl faculty members arc cordially Invited. 105-Si. March 13th Issue EDITORIAL STAFF Carolyn Reed Kdltor Le Ross Hammond Managing Editor Sadie Finch Associate Editor Story Harding News Editor Leonard Cowley New Editor Dorothy Darkley Society Editor Orttn Gaston Sports Editor REPORTORIAL 8TAFF Jack Auttln Jessie Watson Cloyd Clark Lois Hartman Jack Virtue Carleton Springer Bell Firman Lee Yochum Phyllis LangsUff Hespor Bell Dorothy Jones Gertrude Moran Eleanor Hinman Heloise Gauvreaux Dorothy Englisn BUSINESS STAFF Roy Wythers Business Manager Fred Bosking Assistant Business Manager Jesse Tatty - Circulation Manager Newa Editor 8TORY HARDING For Thia Issue GO TO THE MASS MEETING. Today in the I.w Building will be held a maw meeting to pre sent to the student body two Important questions-p-a new or revised constitution for the Student Council, and the honor spirit. This is the time for" Nebraska students to get up and "say their say." If you don't believe in either proposition, go to the meeting and say so. Don't wait until the matter is decided and then come around and ask why it was done without your consent. We are decidedly interested in both questions and we hope to see the students take an interest. The present Student Council constitution is wholly inadequate and through it, the students cannot gain their desired ends which the council is supposed to consider and assist in putting into action. So it is for the school as a whole to make the necessary changes. In regard to the honor spirit, we will print during this week and later, articles from other college papers over the country. Almost every large school is discussing it and we will try to give you some opinions of others. A DEARTH OF Dishonesty stalks the campus. In class and in the study room cheating is so prevalent as to reflect disgrace upon an upright and enterprising citizenry of the University. No one can disregard its presence. Copying notes, cribbing, and appropriating knowledge oi others is the most common meihod of scholastic thievery wiih which the least observing siudent is acquainted. The practice is so common as lo be looked upon in the light of misdemeanor rather than dishonesty. Evil practice becomes habit. Habit soon sears the conscience. The trend of the limes may in part be responsible for waning integrity. Periods of high tenison are naturally followed by intervals of unrest. Restlessness is accompanied by a relaxation of moral be havior. Perhaps we are passing through that struggle today. College students are not the only class affected by the aftermath of the war. Governments are uneasy; dissatisfaction is broadcast; all mankind is restless. It would be an unjust accusation to charge the rollege student as being less honest than other groups. Fifty laboring men, fifty preachers, fifty college professors would doubtless contain as many exceptions to integrity as fifty students. All man kind is affected more or less by the passing of the gTeat war. That reaction upon ihe college student is reflected in his scholaslic in tegrity. A few students have been dropped from the University during the past year for dishonest work. Others (19), for the first offense have been failed, and dropped from the course. "Failed in the course be cause of dishonest work," is the red scrawl that decorates their re port cards. Many have been saved from such disgrace by the leni ency of the professor. Such action is the result of the administration in the detective role. His findings are not adequate to the situation. Daily lowan. THE WAR AND EDUCATIONAL VALUES. Have educational values been cheapened by the war? A woman writer in The Independent bewails the supposition lhat post-bellum wells of knowledge are poisoned by practicality. A quotation epitomizes her thought: "I am assuredly not so narrow of mind as to ignore the great potential educational worth of the sciences. I do mourn to see them degraded in the popular mind solely to the uses of feeding and cloth ing us It is literally a cheapening of all our national ideals to pervert education to such ends, to distort the experiences of the war into such lessons." This sharply raises the question: Is man to be the slave of education, or is education to be the servant of man? Pursuing The Independent writer's hypothesis to its conclusions, our own Dr. Babcock must have been a ftcientific perversionist on an international scale. Let us clear our minds of cant. Just as art for art's sake is the wornout shibboleth of the dilettante, so also the Idea of culture purely for culture's sake. Art is for life's sake. So is science. So is educa tion in general. If war has brought a new emphasis on meeting practical needs of society, then that emphasis is only the emanation from a new, more highly developed social conscience. Of course we must Insist that the humanities continue to be taught to help interpret the present and tie future through an under standing of the past. But narrow classicalists who sneer at social amelioration as the ultimate justification of education are out of tune with the times. Practical ends are not irreconcilable with social idealism. Daily Cardinal. INTEGRITY. Union Union business meeting tonight at seven o'clock. It Is necessary that every Union attend. Important busi ness. Palladian Open meeting at eight o'clock, Fri day evening. Program will consist of a live debate on a timely subject. 105 4t, Notice to Engineers Juniors and seniors who Intend to co on the Inspection trip, meet In the E. E. Building, eleven o'clock, Tuesday n orning, March 16. Valkyrie Valkyrie will meet In Woman's Hall u five o'clock Thursday afternoon. Important! Oetian Business Meeting Important business rteetlng will be held in Faculty Hall at six-thirty p. m., Wednesday. 105-2t. Sigma Xi The next meeting of Sigma XI will be on Tuesday, March 16, at 8 p. m. in the Physics Lecture Room. Professor H. H. M.T-in will speak on "Some Aspects of the Theory ct Relativity." All members of the faculty are in vited to hear this presentation of the famous Einstein theory which Profjg sor Marvin has followed closely for fveral years. EMMA N. ANDERSEN, Secretarv. U. S. Civil Service Examination April Veterinarian Inspector, Grade 1 :nal). Addressocraph Operator, Automatic Addressopraph Operator. Director of Bureau, Division, or Sec tion of Protective Social Measures, Su pervi.-o;- of Protective Social Measures. Held Agent, Protective Social Veas u:es. Assistant Field Agent, Protec tive Social Measures, Special Assis tant Agent, Protective Social Meas ures, Inspector of Structural Steel Erection, Philippine Civil Service Ex amination, Teachers (M. & F.) Teach ers, Ordnance Department at Large. Persons desiring to take any cf these examinations may obtain the i ecessary application blanks and in formation concerning -hem by apply ing at Civil Service Window, Tost Office, Lincoln Nebraska. A. A. REED, Director of Bureau of Professional Service, 201 Temple. Phi Alpha Tau will hold a luncheon at the Commercial Club Tuesday noon, March 16. All members and pledges invited. 104-St. WANT ADS. LOST Engineer's notebook in Phys ics Laboratory- Return to Student Activities office, and receive reward. WANTED Tutor for Mathematics U. Call B-1416. FOR SALE E Flat Alto Saxophone low pitch, good condition. Phone B 464. Have the inbignia of your fraternity or your initial embossed on your sta tionery. Select a box from onr large assortment and have it embossed now. George Brothers, Printers Stationers Embossers, 1213 N St. LOST Silver eversharp lead pen cil Return to Student Activivties office. Reward. At the Prom Friday an olive green torsalino, size 7, sold by Magee's, was exchanged for my dark green one. If the owner of the Borsalino cart to trade back, call Kenneth McCandlest, B-4407. LOST 3x6 black loose leaf' note book. Return to Student Actlrttlet office. iKv I "Bomb FrfenJa" WOW! t-fc... t.ia iTieourasr a lot ot young literary idealist by pnnting their immature but earnest compositions In a gTeat national magazine. The cover design is fair sample of how unsophisticated ere these modern students. Unsophisticated hell! Th.y're un principled young devils. Absolnv-'v no restraint. They ought to be suppress not encouraged. And gosh ! The way they tik N jt girls. They kiss a girl with about as r.iu.h shy reserve as you would feel picki.-.; a fat lady's bundle in a siieel ct- And drink! Why you would thick prohibition had driven all the joy oi:lcl tbir lives -taken the edge out ot cillej;e. as you might sy. There, we thoagl.s up a Joke all ourselves. Say, but the VUsare clever. There's something about S'.iis. v:t youth that gets you a fre ri. ess irresponsible sparkle sorreiliing : ; wild, untrammelled. devthsb;-yo.:: v that old.. men feel when they s;ip into the wcfcxls tor a holiday. We can't describe ii btit n.:hir-r jc: i like this issue cf JUD " K was ei published before. in its way, it' masterpiece. We've caught on the vir.T the erf em o of lhat glorious elusive fcon-.ethir.g ll"t makes eld men I ng for one ny polden hour on the umpus tor tbe f , t ; true-hearted jollity of the iiav wh.--(rood fellows pot together - for the oy;. -citm that was happy, the wit th.-. sting, the oath lhat didn't cuix-, '.! i sin that didn't soil. And an! There are at least thi-t.--rine different schools of art born ir, t... issue. All the regular J'JDoIi feeirrs -' course-Walt Masrn loreifrn .kt- tho Theatre "Bad Ertaks". Are you rea:;-is these "Bad Bn.i Thy are great a dollai's won.-. 1 laughs in this one department. Don't miss this wonderful issue of Judge "The Happy Medium " 15c all newsstand M0N. TUES. WED. ALSO NUMEROUS J'1"' "S Also NumtnMM ALL . WEEK SSaSSfcS 'Z yniiall Neilanl Wm TheRiversEstd J V James Oliver Curwoo , Xrosnace of God's Costs try H A L L E T T Uni Jeweler EsUb. 1871 1143 0 3-1432 B4785 (.001) MUSIC Mentis a GOOD PARTY Ralph Theisen's Orchestra Mar. 20 Open Dates Mar. 26 MONDAY TUESDAY Alice Joyce IN ' "SLAVES OF PRIDE" S Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p uutwii!citii!Bi!iiiBiii;:;ii:K;.:iifiii:-S Wed. Thurs. Fri. Sat. A Sparkling Muscal Comedy EXTRA DRY FRANCIS RENAULT -The Parisian Fashion Plate" R AWLS & VAN KAUFMAN FAY COURTNEY (Of Courtney Sisters) STEELE A WINSLOW McMAHON SISTERS IVAN BANK0FF & CO. THE KINOGRAMS TOPICS OF THE DAY 1000 Seats Matinees at 2Sc Shows Start A Un 5:00, 7:00 4 aJ (7homai7C7nce m - 5fTS0lIGLAS 1 kUki OORIS'YIlAY-- OTHER ATTRACTIONS P Shows Start J at 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00 & 9:00 Other Attractifis S T' J ?l