The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 22, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKA
The Daily Nebraskan
Statioa A, Lincoln. Nsbraika.
OmOAL PUBLICATION
at tha
UNIVERSITY OK NEBRASKA
Jadar DirMtioa of tha 8tdnt Publication
Board
Published Tuasdar. Wednesday. Thurs
ay, Friday and Sunday mornlnas during
Ue acadrmlc year.
Editorial Offices UnWeralty Hall 1.
Office Houra Afternoon with the ex
eaption of Friday and Sunday.
Telephones Day, B-891, No. 11
(Editorial. 1 ring; Business, t rings). Night
B-mi.
Entered aa eJ?:;J-lnas natter at the
postnfflce in Lincoln, Nebraake, under act
af Cont-ress. March t. 187. and at special
rate of postage provided for In 8ection
IKS, act of October , 117, authorised
January to. 1921.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
It a rear SI. 2ft a aemeiter
Sing-la Copy, I centa
EDITORIAL STAFF
Edward Morrow - Editor
Victor T. Hackler Managing Editor
J. A. Charrat .Newa Editor
Juliua Frandaen, Jr Newa Editor
I.. L. Pike Newa Editor
Ruth Schad News Editor
Doris K. Trott Newa Editor
Millieont Glnn Ass't. News Editor
Arthur Sweet Ass't. Newa Editor
Paul Zimmerman - Contributing" Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
Otto SVold . Business Manager
Simpson Morton ....Ass't. Business Msnafrer
Nielaml Van Arsdala Circulation Manager
Richard F. Vetta Circulation Manager
The condition is quite natural and
quite laudable. For the student
who is disgusted boffins to take
stock of what he has accomplished.
Often he finds it is little. But he
inquires into his reasons for going
to college and tries to understand
just what his goal is.
Such thought is excellent, for by
it the student may, if he stays in
school, profit immensely Jn wiser
selection of courses to work toward
his goal. Ho also thinks over the
courses he has taken and begins to
grasp their relation to one another
and to his life. He realizes that
after all, he has accomplished some
thing and that by continuing he
will accomplish more.
We recommend that all students
become as disgusted with college as
possible at the end of the sophomore
year. They will profit greatly
thereby.
THE DECEASED
One of the outstanding jokes on
the campus is the Student Council.
It is a body which is solemnly elect
ed each year and which solemnly
meets and elects a president. Its
activities then end until the presi
dent begins to feel pricks of consci
ence and calls a meeting for no
good reason at all except that he
feels the body should meet some
time. The members gravely consid
er various unimportant matters and
refer them to 3omeone. If. by any
chance, they are of the slightest im
portance, the Council does nothing
because someone might object. Such
is the glorious record of the Coun
cil. There are two reasons for this
defunct state: first, the students who J
are members are interested only in
" being elected so that they may add
another activity to their list of col
legiate trophies, and, second, the
constitution of the Council, while it
reads well, means little or nothing.
Under the constitution the purpose
of the Council shall be "the relating
of all extra-curricular activities to
one another and to the University as
a whole; the creation of such other
expressions of student life as shall
supplement those already establish
ed; the direction of such other mat
ters of student interest as shall btj
initiated by or referred to the Stu
dent Council."
Two other duties complete the
Council's burde.i to call mass meet
ings and to supervise elections.
Truly, here is a little for the Coun
cil to do; but the Council does not
even do that. It is dead yes, as
dead as the well known dodo but it
continues to- go through the formal
ity of electing new members each
year.
Perhaps the Council might dis
cover some activities for its august
attention by interpretating liberally
the vague language of the constitu
tion. But it will not Unless the
constitution tells the Council ex
actly what it can and must do it
will continue in its cataleptic state.
The continuation of the Council
may add to the campus humr, but
it is really a rather sorry
Either the Council should have
something to do or it should be abolished.
College Press
one of intolerance and barbarism.
We are not living in an era in which
minorities are crushed by force. Mi
norities that allow themselves to be
erased are unhealthy; they lack in
dependence. The world has many of these mi
norities. Some will never extermi
nate minorities that have real of
them thrive. Others are silent, await
ing for the time when they, too, may
thrive. But force backbones.
Calendar
Ten Years Ago
DR. BUTLER ERRS
(Syracuse Daily Orange)
"This is an intolerant and barbaric
era, which hounds men for their con
victions and crushes minorities by
force." From address of President
Nicholas Murray Butler of Colum
bia University to annual Newman
club convention.
Dr. Butler, we fear, has beaome
too much of a pessimist. His conclu
sion apparently reveals that the Col
umbia executive has seen so much
of blue laws, -so much of censorship,
so much of suppression, that he has
been led to believe that there is noth
ing else but intolerance in this grow
ing land of ours.
True, one does not have to go far
to find intolerance. Every commun
ity in the world possesses it in some
degree. It is only natural; where-
ever there are liberals, there are
bound to be conservatives, and so
the other way around. No Utopia
exists either for liberals or conser
vatives. Degrees of liberalism vary. What
is considered even radical in the
United States may be regarded as
ultra-conservative in some other part
of the sphere, Europe, for example.
But that is because the Old World
is the Old Worid and that the
thoughts the New World today cher
ishes were long ago digested by the
Old World. Of course, there are in
this country today a number of think
ers whose minds are of the same
stuff as those across the seas; these
are different, and they do not repre
sent the great majority.
Obviously, many institutions are
founded on a conservative basis. A
safe and sane policy is the most ad
visable in establishing the policy of
the administration of these entities.
After all, there is a far greater
chance of going wrong on the adop
tion of a liberal policy than there is
in the acceptance of a conservative
policy; at least that is the case today.
The time may come when more lib
eral stands may be assumed; in many
instances wisdom advises a take-it-easy
plan.
So there is little occasion for Dr.
Butler's education. The age is not
The Nebraska State Historical
Society celebrated its annual ban
quet at the Lincoln Hotel. Ap
proximately two hundred well-known
citizens and friends attended. The
banquet was preceeded by a recep
tion which enabled friends to get
together and recall the days gone
by.
The pre-medics held a meeting and
listened to :.n illustrated lecture on
"Advantages of the Medical Man in
the East" This was followed by
an oyster stew and a talk by Dr.
F. M. Patton on the "Necessity of
Specialization in Modern Medicine."
The Nebraska Legislature Refer
ence Bureau was made a state de
partment, placed by legislative act
under the Board of Regents of the
University. The purpose was to
carry on research in subjects of
special public interest."
Friday, January 22
Delta Sigma Pi ilance Ellen
Smith Hall.
Delta Gamma formal Lincoln
hotel.
Phi Omega Pi formal Scottish
Rite Temple.
Phi Kappa house dance.
University Ice Carnival 7 to 10
o'clock.
Saturday, January 23
Alpha Delta Pi formal Lincoln,
hotel.
University Ice Carnival 7 to 10
o'clock.
Basketball game Armory.
cott
Saturday, Jan. 23
9:80 to 9:55 a. m. Weather re
port by Prof. T. A. Blair. Road re
port and announcements.
8:05 to 8:80 p. m. "Three Hun
dred Pounds The Standard for
Dairy Clubs," by M. L. Flack, state
extension agent in dairy husbandry
"The Corn Situation," by Harold
Hedges, assistant professor of rural
economics.
On TheiAir
Twenty Years Ago
The Commons of the University
was the name given to the newly
organized Junior Club, which was
an organization in the barb associ
ation. Its purpose was closer fel
lowship and equitable distribution
of college honors. Since it was so
democratic, members of the other
organizations or fraternities were
eligible to the Common member
ship.
The management of the Univer
sity Band decided to give a concert
at the Oliver theater to raise funds
for the remainder of their pledge
to the Temple fund.
The regents required that candi
dates for all athletic teams pass a
satisfactory physical examination be
fore taking part in all atheletic contests.
The annual girls' interclass bas
ketball tournament was planned.
The winner of this tournament was
to have possession of the girls' pen
nant for one year.
A musical was planned at the
home of Miss Pound to raise money
to defray the expenses of Nebraska
delegates to the Nashville Conven
tion. This was under the auspices
of the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C.
A.
University Studio broadcasting
over KFAB, (340.8).
Friday, Jan. 22
9:30 to 9:55 a. m. Weather re
port by Prof. T. A. Blair. Road re
port and announcements.
10:30 to 11:00 a. m. "The Bride
and Her Budget," by Miss Ruby
Simpson, instructor in the clothing
division, department of home eco
nomics. 1:15 to 1:30 p. m. Musical con
vocation. The entire program will
be given by Mr. Roy Wall, baritone.
3:0 to 3:330 p. m. The sixteenth
of a series of lectures by Profes
sor Paul H. Grummann, director of
the School of Fine Arts. Profes
sor Grummann will review Goethe's
lyric-drama, "Faust"
8:05 to 8:30 p. m. "How Birds!
Fly," by Professor Robert H. Wol-1
cott, chairman of the department of i
zoology. This is the second of a !
series of lectures by Professor Wol- i
Notices
Palladian
Palladian Literary Society meets on
Friday evening at 8:30 in Palladian
hall. The new members of the soci
ety will have charge of the program.
Delias Literary Society
Open meeting of the Delian Liter
ary Society Friday at 8:30 in the Fa
culty Hall.
Corn Cob
Corn Cob meeting tonight at Tem
ple at 7:15. Meeting short but im
portant Eccleaia Club
Ecclesia Club luncheon Friday
noon at the Grand hotel.
Awf wan Contributors
Awgwan contributors are request
ed to begin turning in copy for the
February number. More contribu
tors are desired. Each student
should make it a point to drop at
least one piece of campus comedy in
the Oontrib Box in Long's Bok Store.
All copy must be in by January 81.
Cosmopolitan Club
Pictures for the Cornhusker to
have been taken on Thursday at j
12:30 will be taken on Tuesday,
January 26.
University Epiacopal Club
TVio ITniVnfaitv lvnionnnl f!lnh tt-ill I E!
hold a dancing party in the Club
room at the University Episcopal
church at the corner of Thirteenth
and R, Friday evening, January 2.
1 Little
lr"J eaaaaaaaaaaaB eaa aaV BBW BW aaaar
1 1 nings
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D
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farce.
I
DISILLUSION
Quite often, about the end of the
ID3
1
first or second years of their college ' &
careers, students become disgusted 'fij
with college and think that tbey!j
would be earning more and getting s
farther outnide. j3
1&3
1
Al7J ' 7
wVmttfs CapilalfcjiarisgCo.
VILI ! S,9 SQ ,2T ST.
TtfTr LINCOLN. NEC.
Bf78
Heart Boxes
for your
Valentine
You Will
Feel Better
In A Tux
That is up to the
newest requirement o
iS in style.
i B-1540
14th & O
Chic Felt Hats,
For The Co-ed
r
We have just receiv- jj
r
ed another s h i p
ment of our Special
Tux.
o
Another Shipment
Just Arrived And Unpacked Today
New! Bright!
olored Felt Hats
iFECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
?at a jar It Is t appear in ehery new Hat
Season. It brightens up ones entire
end anjr ol th smart little shapes feat-
this AKjderatelr I-i-ed mmi9 will elo
,- . v,rH rt FVILRV COLOR IN THE
RAINBOW IS PRfcafcNTfcD.
his
l:r4 In
"1
95
This is a hand tail
ored garment. The
o
notch lapel and
snugged hip lines
o
put it in a class by
itself.
Price
n
.9 J
iifiiiiiitmiiiitiiiiftfiiirfiiMiMiiniiiiimimiiiiiiniititrifiJiftitiiiirifttinmmiiHitifR
I Hotel II
Lincoln )
Sunday 1 1
i Evening Dinner
I $1.25 j
6 to 8 p. m. j 1
Served in the !
Beautiful
I POMPEIAN ROOM
Music
I HOTEL LINCOLN
Meals that surprise
u
I
COFFEE SHOP
240 N 13 St.
Opposite Bank Bldg.
OUR
CLUB PLAN
MAKES BUYING JEWELRY
EASY1
Parker and Waterman
Pent and Pencila
BOYD JEWELRY CO.
CLUB PLAN JEWELERS
1042 "O." Acroaa from Colds
NTuminmnnmiHtnmmintninmuttainatmtiititiHnuimiitniimimimiiHmiit -
Play the Leading Role
Paris gives accessories the
leading role, and makes
the costume a sum total of
smart "little things" that
create perfection.
At Rudge & Guenzel's
you will find the newest.
The smart gay purses: The
last word in necklaces and
bracelets. The brightest
of scarfs and kerchiefs.
The correct gloves and
hosiery. In short, all the
delightful accessories to
make your costume a har
monious whole and your
appearance one of smart
distinction. Very moder
ately priced.
I'll be very glad to help
you make your selections.
--v
Persenal Serrice B area a
Badca A Guensel C.
SI
Starting Thurs., Jan. 21.
" Ending Sat., Jan. 30
SEMI ANNUAL SALE
MASK
SHIRTS
Including Manhattan
Pajamas and
Athletic Underwear
DISCOUNT Manhattan Materials' and Patterns are Supreme
As usual thia Store Presents the best selected stock of Manhattans
in Lincoln.
So important is the mere announcement of a reduction in price on these
High Grade Shirts that many men will be tempted to lay in a season's
supply during this Sale which offers a straight discount.
Broadcloths
Madras
Silk Mixtures
Neckband
Collar Attached
Collar to Match
French Cuffs
Stiff Cuff
Pleated Bosoms
$2.50 Manhattans now $1.88
$3.00 Manhattans now 2.25
$3.50 Manhattans now 2.63
$4.00 Manhattans now 3.00
$4.50 Manhattans now 3.3s
$5.00 Manhattans now, 3.75
$6.00 Manhattans now 4.50
$6.50 Manhattans now 4.88
$7.50 Manhattans now 5.63
a ha 1 la don sonars ieatured o tM pa
during the manhattan sale at O w OUC
We Give Cash Savings Stamps
- r . ' 1 a - . - 1. ' 1 1
I!
1
: I.
ELI SHIRE. PRES..
TEACHERS needed now.
BOOMERS TEACHERS AGENCY.
1926
Senior
Class Pins and
'Rings
Now Ready
HALLETT
University Jeweler
Est. 1871 117-19 So. 12
n n mi 11 rrn
I ..a5
scroti: Saua :
Wear "Bobolinks"
from Gold & Co.
and your hosiery troubles
will have taken flight! There
are more good qualities than
greet the eye alone in this guar
anteed stocking. Of course,
you'll admire its sheer even
weave, and fifty-three colors in
which it is obtainable. Know
also that Bobolink has a three
seam back, a tight-fitting ankle,
narrowed foot, a run-stop
top, and is made of pure silk.
Moreover, you may bring 'em
back if you are not thoroughly
satisfied with their wear and
appearance. $1.25 a pair, S
pairs for 3.50 at Gold's!
Bargains for Men
at Mayer Bros. Co.
tindings of great joy to the
campus Beaux Brummel is this
news of a 25 per cent discount
on Manhattan shirts at Mayer
Bros. You probably know that
these shirts set the standard by
which all others are judged!
Choose them in white broad
cloth or attractive patterns in
neck-band, collar-attached, or
collar-to-match styles. You'll
find Mayer Bros.' Manhattans
marked very reasonably to be
gin with therefore the dis
count assumes -added signifi
cance, as does this same reduc
tion on Manhattan underwear
and pajamas. Another spec in I
at Mayer Bros. Aratex soft
collars, three for 50c!
Twenty one years
in Lincoln the
Modem Cleaners!
with all this successful ex
perience as a background, no
wonder Soukup & Wectover
know all the little extra quirks
and turns in the cleaning busi
ness! Send them your choicest
party frock; you may be sure it
will come back to you incredi
bly refreshed, with color and
fabric greatly enlivened. The
Modern Cleaners will also im
part new life to your campus
clothes, your sweaters, y ur
, scarfs, your hats, your dancing
slippers. And does this super
service they render cost more
than ordinary dry cleaning?
Not a cent !
Sensational Apparel
Clearance at Ben
Simon & Sons!
former prices and even costs
have been totally disregarded
in this pre-inventory sale of
coats and dresses! You'll find
the sort of clothes in this sale
t'.int wil' enable you to dress in
the height cf fashion for the
rest of the season, and that will
serve, you well next year.
There hre dresses, even, that
will make a smart spring ap
pearance! Not thes reduc
tions,, then hurry down to pick
the bu gain plums! Coats worth
to $45, $13; coats worth to
$85, $23; coats worth to $135,
$33. $19.50 and $25 dresses
are $5; $29.50 to $39.50 dress
es are $10; and $45 snd $49.50
dresses are $15.
D
'1301
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