The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 17, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKA N
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln. N.ara.ka
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
TJNIVKK.SITY OK NEBRASKA
TJndar Direction of tha Studant Publleatloa
Board
Publi.hrd Tuaaday, Wadnaaday, Thuraday
Friday and Sunday morninga during tba
aoad.mi. yaar.
Editorial Office. Unlraraity Hall .
Buainaiia OIHcaa Wait atand of Stadium.
Offio. Houra Afternoona with tha excep
tion of Friday and Sunday.
TalnphonM Editorial ! B01. No. 142;
Bmnla.a; B6H91, No. 77 i Night, HtH2.
Kntrred aa aecond-claiia matter at tha
joatnfflca In Lincoln, Nebraaka. under
a Conirreia. March S. 1878. and at apeclal
nl nnataira Drovlrtrd for In Section 1103
act of October 1, 117. authorised January
fA, IWV2.
cats. It is those persons who deliber
ately seek erudition who will wel
come it, and who will ultimately help
in its success. They will be the ones
who will be able to understand and
appreciate its point of view, and in
time perhaps add to it.
This new venture shows that Ne
braska University is not solely an in
stitution built around a stadium, but
that it still has some scholars who are
eager to show that there is real worth
in higher education.
cintanuiPTinN RATE
II a Tear 1.26 aemeater
Single Copy, B centa.
G-niTnttlAI. STAFF
Victor T. Hackler ...JIdltor
William Cainar Managing Kditor
a..h... fi..t Afla't ManairinK Kditor
Lea Vance .Am't Managing Editor
NEWS EUllUrta
Horace W. Gnmon Neola Skala
Fred R. ZlmnuT
laeiCTiWT F.nTTORS
riMiwe A. Hcaley Kuth Palmer
Kenneth K. Randall
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Ellaworth DuTcau Robert Laach
Mary Loulne Freeman Dwleht McCormack
a u Arthur Sweet
Klica Holovtchlner Lee Vance
BUSINESS STAFF
T. Slmpaon Morton Runineaa Manager
Richard F. Vette....Aaa't Buaincaa Manager
Milton McGrew Circulation Manager
William Kearna Circulation Manager
U HALL AGAIN
Old University Hall is no longer
a tradition, and has no real cause
for remaining on the campus, save
that the appropriations are not large
enough to allow a new building in
its place.
There are still those who cry that
it should be left standing till its
foundations crumble because of the
memories of the days gone by.
They picture a touching scene when
the old grad returns, and with tears
in his eyes, gazes fondly on the ruins
of what used to be a place of tor
ture for conjugating irregular french
verbs. One romantic alumnus de
clared that he hoped it would stand
forever, for when he first saw his
wife, she was coming out of the old
building, but it is rumored that an
other less sentimentally inclined in
dividual wished it torn down for the
same reason.
U. Hall is no longer a tradition.
Had it remained a normal, full-grown
building, with a bell in its tower,
which tolled on state occasions we
would all do homage to its age, and
reverence it for memory's sake. Each
initial scratched in its limestone
foundation wiuld; recall the days
when fond couples walked about the
campus in the evening, enjoying the
scenery.
In its present state it is more than
an eyesore. A picturesque ruin
could be tolerated even in an ultra
modern, mid-west town, but a lopped
off building, with no pretence to
beauty left, is a disgrace. The bell
and tower have long since vanished,
along with the upper floors. What
remains is disgustingly sticky with
tan paint that refuses to dry after
many months. Doors spring rpen
at surprising times, and during the
winter months, the winds blows a
regular gale through the drafty cor
ridors, and whistles about the loose
window frames.
There is no reminiscence connect
ed with the unintelligible names
scratched on the stones, for the
young people who put them there
have been gone for years, and the
present students are not the type
to take a day or two to dreaming
over the old sweethearts who put
them there. The campus is a place
to work, and the very nicest moon
light night does not tempt even one
amorous couple.
A tradition should rightly be some
thing worthwhile which could be
handed down with the idea in view to
benefit the persons concerned, or,
as in this case, the school. U Hall
can claim no such justification for
its existence, or any good reason for
not being razed, save the purely
financial one caused by the legisla
ture. The old Armory had no such ro
mantic hold on the men's athletic de
partment when they moved into
their new building, and it is unfor
tunate that the scholastic side of
school life should be handicapped by
such illusions. U Hall is no longer
tradition, if it ever could lay any
claim to the title, and it should be
torn down to make place for a build
ing where people will be able to
think of the future, not of the past.
Other Opinions
The Daily Nebraskan assumes
no responsibility for the senti
ments expressed by correspon
dents and reserves the right to
exclude any communications
whose publication may for any
reason seem undesirable. In all
cases the editor must know the
identity of the contributor.
Send The Band
Next Saturday night the R. 0. T.
C. band is giving a benefit dance at
the Coliseum, the proceeds of which
are to help pay the band's way to
Notices
the Washington game. Besides this
money, each band man who makes nut Problem", after which there will
Sophomores fof Olympics
' All Sophomores who wish to try
out for Boxing or Wrestling repres
entatives in the Olympics will report
at the Coliseum, Wednesday from 4
to 6 o'clock.
There will be three classes in both
boxing and wrestling, 135, 145 and
158 pounds.
Ramsey Chapman,
Sophomore Class President,
Alpha Kappa Pel
Alpha Kappa Tsi meeting Thurs
day afternoon at 5 o'clock in the
Commercial Club Rooms.
Dramatic Club
Dramatic club will meet Thursday
night at 7 o'clock.
Iota Sigma Pi
Iota Sigma Fi meetirg Wednesday,
November 17, at o'cloct in Chem
istry hall.
Xi Delta
Xi Delta meeting at 6 o'clock
Thursday evening in Ellen Smith hall.
Math Club
Math club meeting Thursday, No
vember 18, at 7:30 o'clock in room
204 Ttmple building. Miss Schitl will
give a short discussion of the "l.ocoa
th-j Dramatic Club Room. Program
begins promptly at 7 o'clock.
XI Delta
A very important XI Delta meet
ing, Wednesday at 5 o'clock at Ellen
Smith Hall.
Lutheran Student Club
Lutheran Student Club will meet
in the Temple, Room 204, Saturday
evening Nov. 20. Program and re
freshments. All Lutheran students
urged to attend.
Awg wan Contributors
Awcwan contributors are re-
mipsterl tn bee-in turning in copy for
the Christmas number, to be issued
December 10. All contributions must
bo in bv November SO; copy turned
in before Thanksgiving will be con
sidered first It is suggested that con
tributors look over the exchange
niatrazines in the office for ideas.
Copy may be submitted at the office
or given to Betty Bell or Dwight
Wallace.
the trip is paying twenty-five dollars
out of his own pocket. There is no
reason why every student on the cam
pus who is financially able to do so
should not buy a ticket to this dance.
In the past, tag days and other
. i j.1
means were resorted to wnen ine
band needed money for a trip. But
this year, every student who buys a
ticket will be receiving full value for
the money he gives. This dance is not
charity or anything of the kind. It
is simply a business proposition. If
enough students buy tickets and the
affair is a success, the band will prob
ably make the trip.
If the band makes the trip, it
means that there will be forty loyal
Cornhuskers in the stands, backing
the team with every iota of energy
they have. And it will be one of the
best advertisements the University of
Nebraska has ever sent half way
across the United States.
No one needs to be told that the
R. O. T. C. band is one of the most
useful organizations on the campus
and no one needs to be told that there
is no group of men on the campus
that does more to help the team, our
team, win, than the band.
How about it students? Do you
want the band to go to Washington?
If you do, the best way you can ex
press your opinion is to buy a ticket
to the next varsity dance. The band
is paying part of its own way, and is
selling tickets to the dance. The rest
is up to you!
LEON D. LARIMER,
College Press
THE PRAIRIE SCHOONER
The announcement last week of
the publication of a literary maga-r
zine meets with the approval an re
joicing of many persons on the cam
pus, both students and faculty mem
bers.
There is undoubtedly a great deal
of remarkable material here witness
the caliber of the few works of str
dents which have been published, and
probably the main reason that others
have not been beard from is because
there has been no suitable vehicle.
The Daily Nebraskan is unable to
publish a literary supplement, as
many school papers do, and the Aw-
gwan would hardly be interested in
this type of work. So it remained for
an entirely different sort of magazine
to come forth, and we hope that the
Prafri Schooner will take this place.
At first it may be hard to arouse
enthusiasm from the hard working
University people, but this is to be
expected. Other schools have similar
publications, and Nebraska has grown
so tht it too should be represented
in the literary field with student ef
forts. The Prairie Schooner will not be
t'is lind of a magazine to pick up
n in a V.f Y.t or frivolous mood,
but it is for those ho have distinct
Kterary taste, aij-irationa, or intei-
THE PESTIFEROUS ALUMNI
(The McGill Daily.)
Under this suggestive title Percy
Marks, notorious for his contribution
to the literature that depicts college
life, deals with the problems arising
in the relation between the alumni
and the college in an article which ap
peared in a recent issue of Harper's
magazine.
He tells the story that several col
lege presidents were discussing what
they would do after they retired.
What would they be fit for, was the
question. Well, said one of them, "I
don't know that I'd be fit for any
thing, but I know what I'd like to
do. I'd like to be the superintendent
of an orphan asylum so that I would
never get any letters from any par
ents."
"I've a much better ambition," ex
claimed another, "I want to be a war
den of a penitentiary. The alumni
would never come back to visit."
Mr. Marks is concerned with the
problem as it exists in the American
colleges where the continued inter
ference of graduate societies in the
administration of university affairs
has rendered the lives of many col
lege heads unbearable. Especially do
the alumni manifest an insatiable de
sire to control the athletic policies of
their alma mater and in this there
is no bounds to their enthusiasm.
There can not be enough of rah-
be a social hour.
Lutheran Bible League
The Lutheran Bible league will
meet for Bible study Wednesday at
7 o'clock.
Y. W. C. A.
The Y. W. C. A. on the Ag campus
will tfive a tea in the Home Economic
parlor Thursday Nov. 18 from 4 to
6. All members invited.
Oikia Club
The Oikia Club will meet Wednes
day evening for their regular meet
ing. All members are urged to be
present Professor Bloomer will speak
at the meeting.
Farmer'i Formal
All committee chairman are to get
in touch with their members and re
port at room 305 Ag Hall at 7:30 P.
M. on Thursday evening. Important
business is to be brought up so all
committees are requested to be pre
sent one hundred per cent.
Phyaical Education Club
An important meeting of the Phy
sical "Education Club will be held
Thursday evening, Nov. 18, at 7:10
p. m. in S. 101 Women's Gymnasium
(West Entrance.)
All sophomore, junior, and . senior
physical education majors should be
present.
Corn-Coba
There will be a meeting of Corn
cobs Thursday night in Room 154
Temple, at 7:15. This will be one of
the most important meetings of the
year. No excuses will be given Fresh
men for not attending. There will be
a meeting of active men immediately
after the general meeting.
Dramatic Club
There will be a meeting of the
Dramatic Club Thursday Nov. 18 in
Good taste and good health
demand sound teeth and
rweet breath.
The use of Wrlgley'i chew
Ins sum after every meal takes
care of this Important item of
personal hygiene in a delight
fuL refreshing way bf clear
ing the teeth of food particles
and by helping the digestion.
To result Is a sweet breath that
hows car for one's self and coo
ideradoa for others both marks
of rflnnvnti
G12S
rahing and blatant exhibitions of or
ganized cheering to satisfy their hun
gry souls.
This tendency in American educa
tion is to be deplored. "While pre
tending an appreciation of the spirit
behind this enthusiastic interest in
the affairs of their alma mater, uni
versity heads should not permit
themselves to be intimidated by blus
tering alumni. The graduates who
have passed out of the active arena
of undergraduate activity have not
the right in the administration of the
college; they may not dictate the
policies of the university of which
they no longer form an integral part.
Two Years Ago
Dr. W. T. Elmore, pastor of the
First Baptist Church addressed Ves
pers on the subject "Detours". He
declared, "It is the bumpy detours
which our parents encountered in the
louise of their lives which gave them
character."
Dean Carl C. Engberg awarded the
Pan-Hellenic scholarship cup to the
Gamma Phi Beta Sorority for main-
taing the highest scholarship average
during the year of 1923-1924.
The question selected by Delta
Sigma Rho, national intercollegiate
debate society reads, "Should State
Government make the Ku Klux Klan
Illegal?"
Three Years Ago
PLANS FOR BALL
ARE UNDER WAY
(Continued from Page One.)
and entertainment is already schedule
ed for the coming attraction.
Tickets Are) Limited
Tickets are to be placed on sale
today at the Military offices for all
advanced course R. O. T. C. officers,
and by fraternity representative
An allottment of fifteen tickets has
been allowed each fraternity and
fifty tickets will be sold through
Lntsch Brothers for the convenience
of Lincoln people desiring to attend
the Ball. It is the first time that
the Ball has been open to the Lincoln
alumni and only because of the or
chestra feature is it possible this
year.
John Boyer, who is in charge of
the ticket sales, is desirous that all
fraternity representatives announced
in the Tuesday Daily Nebraskan who
have not yet received their tickets
get them this afternoon at 6 o'clock
in Room 205 Nebraska Hall. The
limited tickets placed on sale makes
it necessary for them to be sold im
mediately in order that representa
tives who are unable to dispose of
their number may turn them back to
be distributed to those demanding
more.
The entire ticket committee will
meet next Monday afternoon to re
port and check in tickets unsold in
Nebraska Hall, Room 205 at 5
o'clock.
vembcr 18, 1, ana v, w.
nouncod yesterday.
Mo Fininskl Zollcy Lemer
Mrs. Simon Levy nt Goldstein
Mrs. Sampson Elizabeth Coolidge
Minnie Sampson Joyce Adair
Helga Levy Helen Aach
Mrs. Eagen Ruth Schrank
Callahan Thad Cone
Jacob Sampson Harold Sumption
Simon Levy Ry Ry
Dawkins Paul Tence
Groodo Robert Reade
Customer Royce West
Richard Eagen...- Harold Fclton
Miss Manning Eloise McAhan
Miss Finch Esther Zinnecker
Misses Crompton Ruth Barton
, Lucille Harris
Louise Jenkins
Critch Jack Rank
Lechner Frank Moore
Swimming is a compul80ry ,ubJ
in the elementary schools of i
tralia. 1 Au
The student council t rw.. ..
- vnrtffj II w!
versity has decreed that all frcshm
university women must .
caps as class insignia. 11
This is the season when evcry
is thinking of how they can best re.
member friends and loved oncj
homo. There ia nothing that will be
more appreciated than a Townsend
Photograph. They possess character
and styl that are representatives of
the better things in photography. An
range for your sitting now Adv
r CLOTHES
Ready-mad
And Cat to Order ,
ESTABLISHED ENGLISH UNIVERSITY
STYLES, TAILORED OVER YOUTHFUL
I CHARTS SOLELY FOR DISTINGUISHED
SERVICE IN THE UNITED STATES.
Miss Rosa Ponselle, prima donna
dramatic soprano, appeared in the
second number of the Great Artist
Course at the City Auditorium. Miss
Ponselle was assisted by Mr. Stewart
Ross, pianist.
Chancellor Avery attended a meet
ing of the association of American
Universities at Charlottesville, Va.
From Charlottesville, he went to Chi
cago to attend a meeting of the Na
tional Association of State Universities.
The Sigma Alpha Iota sorority of
the University School of Music fur
nished the music for the first Vesper
services of the year at the Y. W. C.
A. The musical numbers were given
by Ruth Lindsey, Myrtha Lunn, Ver
na Trine, Mrs. E. C. Baehmer, Mir
iam Righter, and Bernice Thompson.
New Courses Will Be
Discussed Thursday
The new four year course for
majors and the four year motor ac
tivities course will be discussed by
the staff members Thursday evening
Nov. 18, at the Physical Education
Club meeting in the Women's gymnasium.
PLAYERS ANNOUNCE
CAST FOR NEW PLAY
"The Auctioneer", To Be Given By
University Players This Week
Has Cast of Twenty
The cast of "The Auctioneer"
which is to be presented by the Uni
versity Players in the Temple theater,
Thursday, Friday and Saturday, No-
Wrist watches
for
Men and Women
Swiss and American
movements
Fenton B. Fleming
Jewelry Shop
Fine Watch and Jewelry Repairing
B3421
1143 O St.
(Jttttrtet louse
Suite and Ovarceata
40, 45, 50 ,
5&. ,.imr
BY SPECIAL APPOINTMENT 3
OUR STORE IS THE
r(JHxrtevlottei
OF LINCOLN
The character of the suitsand :
overcoats tailored by Charter House
will earn your most sincere liking.
Speier's
10th and "O"
SALEM'S
Home of the
Real Malted Milk
A drink that will satisfy
All HOT OR COLD
LUNCHES
B4584
We Deliver
ipgp f)
nil, mm iniiiiti'-'-'-Vi'-'"'-1 3J
THt coca-eova comamy Atlanta, ca
A Cut-In
Both Can Enjoy
A Coca-Cola cut-in is
always good taste.
So shines a good drink
in a thirsty world.
IT HAD TO BE COdD TO GET WHERE IT IS 7 MllUON A DAY
Mero-Win Merode's Superb New Rayon Underwear
CHIC
DAINTY
DURABLE
MERODE MERO-WIN
A superb new rayon fabric perfected by "Merode" after
years of careful experimenting. "Mero-Wir." unlike or
dinary rayons, is comparable in value, bea.iy and ser
vice with the best qualities of pure silk. In styling and
tailoring "Mero-Win" garments are decidedly different.
Vests that are properly shaped and correctly sized.
Bloomers in exact hosiery shades and designed for real
bloomer comfort. Union suits with narrow panel back
and flared skirts that drape from the hip in easy grace
ful lines, with no binding across the seat or sagging at
the stride. French Nauvette Panties, correct in every
detail.
11 I 1
"Merw-Win" made only in "Mer
ode" is unsurpassed by any other
rayon fabric adaptable to the
making of dainty, attractive yet
thoroughly serviceable under-gar-ments
for the duk-riminating
'Miss" or "Mrs."
ku
Mero-WU Veat $1.50 ..a $1.95 Short.. Uaio. Suit. $3.S0
Mero-W,. Bloomer, $2.oS M.roo. Cn.mia. $2.95
i." I? PBt: $, 9S 52.50 i. pink a-a p.c
, "lif mn lu . V'K Pink. Fr..ch ery. '-
Mrrod. ob Floor Tm