The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 05, 1924, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE DAILY NEBBASKAN
The Daily Nebraskan
OmCML rUMJCATION
ml tfca
uravuurnr or nemaska
UaaW IHncta af lb StaaMt PablkatlM
Baara1
4EMBC
1914
Frtiv a4 Saadar unlil auriaf tha- ata-
rr-
BaHariai OMIaaaUiit varsity Hall 10
OfMaa Hours Aftsrnoona ilb tha mcap-
llsai Friday aaa Sunday.
Tatrpluaiaa Day. B-6afl, No. 142 (1
rtn.) Niht, B-.SS2
BubxM Ofltca University Hall 10 B.
Of f la a Houra Aflarnoona with tha ascep
liaai of Friday and Sunday.
Talaaaoaaa Day, B-0801. No. 14a (2
rinas.) Nlaht. B-MS2.
a tar ad aa aacond-cla mattar at
Bxtolflaa In Lincoln. Mabraaka, undar
tha
:t
il Concraaa. March S, 1879. and at special
rats al aostafe provided lor in Saction 1103,
act af October . 1BIT, autharisad January
20, IBZi
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
2 a yaar 91 M ssmastar
Single Copy, S cants
per year, eliminating 74 per
cent of drink-caused poverty,
halting: the growth of our penal
population and emptying many
of our jails, cutting the alcoholic
insanity ratio throughout the na
tion, reducing the number of
drink cures by nine-tenths, while
it stimulated all legitimate busi
ness, has helped boom home
building, has given men a chance
to take their foot off the brass
rail to put it on an auto starter,
altered bar flies to movie fans
and outdoor sports, while the
nation doubled its number of in
vestors and broke savings bank
and insurance records. Such a
policy is worth the best kind of
enforcement and it will get it.
The College Press
Ten Years Ago
A professor had recently issued
the statement that he intended to
buy a goat to feed on the freshman
themes and he had been beseiged on
all sides about his goat-feeding the
ory. It was said that packing houses
all over the country had offered him
goats guaranteed to be in perfect
condition, with the traditional cast
iron goat stomach in perfect working
order. 'The article went on to say
that the experiment might be of great
benefit to the students working their
way through school as "instead of
having their themes ignominously
consigned to the trash heap, they
might sell them to goat raisers and
in that way reap large and lucrative
rewards." One professor was heard
to remark that his freshman classes
could easily feed enough goats to
transport the German army clear to
Paris, giving each man a goat for
EDITORIAL. STAFF
HuahB Co. IZZZMiZtHTi eXE! somewhat a product of other regimes
Wn. Card - ..News Editor I
Victor Hackler Naws Editor
GIN AND SEX AGAIN.
Spectator wishes to pour a certain 1.: ei
amount of oil on the troubled waters At a meeting of the coaches of the
surging about the belabored editors Missouri Vallev in Lincoln, it was
Campus decided that the athletes must carry
of Jester. It feels the
should know that the situation is twentyight hours of gch0ol work a
year if they wished to compete in
A particularly gifted coterie once college athletics. It was observed
Pbiiip O-H-nion ta.jnr , ru)0u tne Lion s uen ana strong in thgt the average .'hothouse" variety
vohl w.ulF"rr.::rrr.:N.w. Editor, its knowledge of individual ability of gtudent wa3 only obliged to carry
ZEro-"ZZ::.A: BE. iSrl-elfishly and unthinkingly told pros- twent four hours per year and that
Notices
, pective contributors to dry their
.kn Mnmkna 1 1 tliA tonM la D 11 " L" ir k
BUSINESS STAFF . Riltianf orrot sr rnrRrl nnthino- .... .. ...
Clarence Elchholl. Business Manafar i I"'""' " o Jugt jour nours more tnan wouia De
ot swoid A"!,,.!."- M::.!for bulIdln& 8 stable understructure fc cage .f he W(jre not SQ unfortun.
l&SSi TitaiS of writers. Today, its staff depleted ate fls to be cursed with unusua, phy.
"ALL'S WELL'
It is regrettable that politics, per
by the gradual disappearance 01 mm gical development The rule probi
! element and few younger men train- biting any ath,ete from cornpetillg in
ea to step into omer mens euuoi.tu more than twQ major sports during
' r- t-i ra i nrnf t ini a rnnr it t rsi. issiih an ....
hans unobjectionable in some student one scnool year was repealed at tne
must come irom dui inree or iour
-.,-. -;o oi,i,i t.nvo ontnrorl in nnv . . . . . same meeting.
....... - unfjergraauates. Ana opening num-
degree into the choice of a football i,era are always difficult enough to
captain for 1925. Although the Uni-1 produce, without the additional bur
versity dislikes the admission that; den of a weakened personnel.
But all of this is mere background
any factor other than merit has en
tered into an election of this charac
ter, it is recognized that if harm has
been done, even if it were done un
wittingly, full investigation and re
moval of every possible injustice was ; de resistance, Gin and Sex
the best course to pursue. (comic seems unmindful, of the
Three hundred Nebraskans were in
attendance at the annual Cornhusker
Banquet held at the Lindell Hotel.
Yells and singing by the crowd,
pmmlprl wif.h. apvprAl mimim! num-
it is unfortunately true that Jester I b(irs from quartettes and sextettes
with the last vestiges of flapperism
dying violently all about u., is still
deeply concerned with its chief piece
The
fact
But the University has come well that enough is enough; the Campus is
through the trouble. The students frankly bored with any use of this
believe firmly that a better captain topic which makes it food for col
than Ed Weir could not have been umns rather than cleverly applied
chosen, and that under his leadership spice which will add piquance and
the eleven men who represent Ne- dash to wit. That must be the lesson
braska on the gridiron next year will which Jester must learn from the
be a team one of the greatest in the past few days' discussion ; Columbia,
history of the University. j whether it approves of the subject or
This aftair has ended and "digging no, is in any case wearied to death
up dead Hogs" can do no good. All 0f its continual over-use The Col-
that remains is to forget differences,
and support the team.
CHANCELLOR'S STATEMENT.
Chancellor Avery has made a clear
explanation of the stand land-grant
colleges have taken on the question
umbia Spectator.
Twenty Years Ago
A notice of sheriff's sale of at
tached property issued by the clerk
of the district court of the Law Col-
of maintaining compulsory military cge was published. This notice call
drill. They have, he says, recognized ed for the sale at 10 o'clock at the
a moral obligation in the matter. The ' front door of the main building of
Chancellor's statement appears on the University of Nebraska one hun
the front page of this issue of The dred head of cattle to satisfy the
Daily Nebraskan. i judgment handed down by the court,
Although Congress does not pro-'the amount due being the sum of
vide that drill shall be compulsory, j $2,020.50 and $7.49 costs and accru-
the Chancellor believes, nevertheless
the founders of the land-grant col
leges intended that it should be com
pulsory for all physically fit men stu
dents, and college authorities huve
kept to that opinion since the ques
tion first arose.
The Daily Nebraskan, and the stu-
ing costs.
An article telling of the marriage
of an ex-student went on to say that
the groom was well known to '11 Uni
versity students as tha trombone
player in the cadet band for the past
three years.
The mania for picking all-star
dents of the University even though team had extended to every member
all of them may not approve the ( of the college press but The Daily
stand land-grant colleges have main-1 Nebraskun decide! that there were,
tained toward provision of compul- j too many teams picked like the one
sory military training for their stu-j picked by Minnesota and so it had
dents cannot do less than to thank been decided to confine the pick-
the Chancellor for the time and ef
fort he has given to explaining that
position.
ON PROHIBITION.
In spite of many of the obvious
benefits secured to the United States
through an increasingly strict en
forcement of the prohibition amend
ing of the sturs to the selection of an
all-class eleven. Apparently the
critic wus either a sophomore or a
junior for five men from each class
were picked fur the mythicul team.
The other member was a freshman.
The Cornhusker basketball team
won its first game by defeating Wes
leyan by the close score of 32 to 31.
The Wcsleyan floor was very small
and the Nebraska team was permitted
helped to make the gathering one of
life. It was said that the event lack
ed some of its usual rough stuff and
for this reason if for no other, the
banquet was a pronounced success.
Calendar
Friday, December 5.
Delian Open Meeting Temple
202.
Military Ball City Auditorium.
Mixer Varsity Dairy Club.
Kappa Epsilon Pharmacy' Hall.
Y. W. C. A. Bazaar Ellen Smith
Hall.
Saturday, December 6.
Lambda Chi Alpha formal Lin
coln. Alpha Chi Omega house dance.
Sigma Nu pig dinner.
Xi Psi Phi fall party Rosewilde
Theta Phi Alpha house dance.
Delta Sigma Delta house dance.
Nu Alpha house dance.
Palladian banquet Lincoln hotel.
Komensky Klub Faculty Hall.
Awf wan Staff.
Meeting of Board of Editors and
Art staff of the Awgwan Friday 2
o'clock In the office.
Campfiro Guardian Training Coarse).
The campfire guardian training
course will meet in the auditorium
of Bessey Hall, Monday at 4 o'clock.
Delian.
A meeting of the Delian will be
held Friday at 8:15 in the Temple
202. The program will be put on by
a magician of known repute. The
meeting is open to all university stu
dents.
Lutheran.
The monthly social meeting of the
Lutherans will be held Friday, De
cember 6 instead of December 12,
because of the Cornhusker banquet
All Lutherans meet at the Parish
Hall of Trinity Church.
Palladian.
Palladian men will give a banquet
Saturday at 6 o'clock. All alumni
members may obtain tickets from
John Otley.
Komen.ky Klub.
Meeting of the Komensky Klub in
Faculty Hall of the Temple, Satur
day at 8:45.
Decorating Committee.
Decorating committee for the Mil
itary Ball and all cadet officers or
cadets who will volunteer to help
with the decorating are to report
to the City Auditorium, Friday mom
ing at 8 o'clock.
Christian Science Society.
A free lecture on Christian Sci
ence will be held at the First Church
of Christ, Scientist, Sunday, at 2:30.
Freshman Commis.ion.
The dinner for the new Freshman
Commission is to be Tuesday, Decem
ber 9, instead of December 4, as pre
viously announced.
Methodist.
All Methodist party in Armory
Friday evening, December 5, at 8
o'clock.
Union.
There will be an open meeting of
the Union Literary Society Friday
evening at 8 o'clock in the Temple.
Every one is invited.
Dairy Maid' Ball.
Annual Dairy Maid's ball, Friday
night in the Agricultural College
gymnasium.
Varsity Basketball.
Varsity basketball at 7:30, this
week ' on account of interf raternity
games.
OGLETHORPE UNIVERSITY
A boy of 10 years of age has been
admitted to the Oglethorpe Univer
sity in Georgia.
"U R NEKST"
SANITARY
ATISFACTION
ERVICE
Y. M. C. A. Barbershop
R. T. COPPINGER, Prop.
W appreciate your busines.
merit, the effect of discussion of the
issue has often been to obscure the . u UK0 thoi t,.Hmwrk very little, al
Vu.jc Ul though the individual woik 'is ex
it seem unenforceable, instead oi
justifying the law through recogniz
ing the excellent results thtit may
cellent.
The awarding of the interclass
.V,!1 ,L,, l ..,...l .,. 11... , ...!.
j iUULUUIl t. IIM llllUIIOIIIJJ VVUB hllU jiwu-
follow rigid enforcement, the usual 1(.m thut th(J Ath,ctc BoIird in one
tendency is to weakly approve of it of th(J gtormit!lit hcaliUmfl ln it8 his-
Grace English
Lutheran Church
All-American
14th and F Streets,
CHARLES S. BREAM, Pastor.
University Student Bible Class
F. W. HENKEL, Leader.
SUNDAY SERVICES:
9:45 A. M., Bible School; 6:45 P. M., Luther League; 11:00 A. M.,
Morning Worship; 7:45 P. M. Evening Worship.
Students) Don't neglect your spiritual needs while in school. Wor
ship God regularly. And you always find a welcome at
The Little Church with a Big Heart.
with "we ought to uphold the consti
tution, however."
This complacent attitude is even
illustrated occasionally in university
tory" was to settle. In the academic
di-partment the contests had been
won by the sophomores and in the
Law College the freshmen had come
dailies. The editor of a college paper 0ff with a clean slate. The latter
recently devoted space to pointing 1 hud chalk-god the former to a match
out that there was not a single case 1 f or the championship of the Univer
of drunkenness on a trip to a foot-'gity but the sophomores had refused
ball game, evidently an achievement to play. The Laws claimed the
for a college. i championship by default but it was
Some of the matters that are up to the Athletic Board to settle the
bound up in any consideration of the mnttcr.
prohibition question, and which are
too easily lost sight of in discussion mmimmttmimimmm
of the amendment, were outlined re
cently by Wayne B. Wheeler, promi
nent attorney. The Monitor Bureau
quotes him:
The general success of prohi
bition makes sensationally no
ticeable any weakness in en
forcement We have cut the
. former deluge of intoxicating
drinks down to a comparatively
paltry trickle. Most of that can
be stopped by closing the ave
nue through which internal reve
nue collectors now allow alcohol
to escape to the bootleg trade,
now that coast guard is choking
off the smuggler. ...
The achievements of prohibi
tion in reducing the death rate
euuivalent to saving 1,000,000
lives in five years, lowering in
dustrial accidents by 250,000
Write Your Name with
SANFORD'S INK
Will Last Forever
QANFORD'S
Fountain Pen Ink
-Tha Ink that Mad thm
fountain fan Poitibta"
MIDYEAR ENTRANCE
IN order to meet the demands of
college men graduating at mid
years, a regular course of study,
starting in February has been ar
ranged. The curriculum is the same
as that for fall entrants: the require
ments for the degree may be com
pleted by February, two years after
entrance. Inasmuch as the class is
limited, applications should be made
at once.
GRADUATES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
ARE ELIGIBLE FOR ADMISSION
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
ADMINISTRATION
GEORGE F. BAKER FOUNDATION
ADDRESS THE SECRETARY, UNIVERSITY 11
CAMBRIDGE. MASSACHUSETTS
A BIG
PEN to see
you through
a BIG
four years
Xnis is a great pen iui.kj"
men and women! It is made by
' the makers of Evcrsharp pencil.
It has a huge ink capacity ! And
the Wahl filling device fills it plumb
full every time. It's a big pen.
Rut it is so nicelv balanced and pro
portioned that it fits into the fist most
comfortably.
The Wahl Signature Pen writes the
instant the point touches paper. The
ink begins to flow evenly always
enough, never too much. The pat
ented comb feed makes shaking un
necessary
rflfl
It ' MZ X W
H1 I!" ACTUAL
if
I Hi D
'HO
IJLi I
I ('
The everlasting nib !u ft wonder.
Experts say it is the ultimate in
nib-making. It suits itself to any
hand to any style. It is extra
heavy. 1'he 1 4-k arat gold is tipped
with the hardest and finest grade
of iridium that money can buy.
The patented construction of the
cap makes it impossible for the pen to
leuk in the pocket. The cap cannot
split, for it is strengthened by the plain
gold band. There are two sizes of the
Wahl Signature Pen one at $5 for
women, and one at $7 for men ! Other
Wahl Pens, $2.50 up!
Made in the U. S. A. by THE WAHL CO., Chicago
WAHL
PEN
0
The bit pen for big business
Puhlithtiin
tht intereit of Elec
trical Development by
an institution that will
be helped ly what
aver kelps tht
industry.
are you sure
you deserve it?
"Give me a log with Mark Hopkins at one end
of it and myself at the other," said, in effect.
President Garfield, "and I would not want a
better college."
But if Mark Hopkins was an inspired teacher, It
is just as true that James A. Garfield was an inspir
ing student.
Sometimes Garfield's praise of his professor is
quoted in disparagement of present day faculties
the assumption being that we as listeners are
sympathetic, all that we ought to be and that
it is the teacher who has lost his vision.
Is this often the case?
It is the recollection of one graduate at least
that he did not give his professors a chance. Cold to
their enthusiasms, he was prone to regard those
men more in the light of animated text-books
than as human beings able and eager to expound
their art or to go beyond it into the realm of his
own personal problems.
This is a man to man proposition. Each has to go
halfway. Remember, there are two endstothelog.
r
Western Electric Company
Wherever teobU look to tlectricite for tha
comforts and conveniences of life today, tha
W tstern Electric Company offers a service as
broad as the functions of electricity itself.
Hum hr li m ttrim
Let a Nebraskan Want Ad Help You
Find That Lost Article