The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 18, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    TIIE DAILY NEBRASKAK
The DauV Nebraskan
rutloa A. LlaaolB. NUiwkt
orrirML public ation
irNlVIRSITY Or NEBRASKA
Uaa.r UlrMllaa of ta. 8tuJ.nl rablUatloa
Bo.nl
rubll.k! Tunday, Wdndr. ThuKdy
rXdar 8uaaa muwnlnga during taa
araa.ml. ar.
Editorial 0e-Unlv.r.lty Hall 4.
Kutlnnt OIHtM-WHt ,tand of Btaolonv
OrT.r Hour. Aft.rnoon. wlia l. o.p
tloa of Fridar and '-. ....
Tl .on Kdlloriali BMM. No. 141.
Bo.nlM.i B4H91. No. 1U Nlahl. BfMI.
K-to-a .-ond-elo.. matt.r at th.
MtfllH- U Lincoln. N.bm.aa. aad.r a
(Con.-... M.h . ll7. PTe';1
( oo.t..o protd,d for In Btloo 1U1.
,.t of O(obor I. 1IT. author".. Januar,
. 111. .
6UBSCRIIT10N RATK
It o ,r . '
Slnrlo Copy. r.m.
EDITORIAL STAFr
.or T. HaeaUc. ,- . 1 !
.,.-..r Imi A.. t Mnain Editor
LV.neIl"rrri..- M.n..io Kdilor
L y.ne..ws DITOK3
Boroe W. Co , NooU 8kal.
p d R. flm-r
ASSISTANT N-WS KPrr0.RSp...r
K.nnrth R. Randall
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Mar, Lul' Fr--- D,hih5, Rw 't
r.rrmld Ortffln Arthur Bw-t
Kliro Holotrhln.r L VBt
HUSINKSS STAFF
T. Hlmp. Mortoa .. u.ln.
R chard F. Vt.J..-t. Bu.ln-i
Lnion UrGm Oinrulation Mnar
w'ln.m K7,.r:Cir,u..tio Mn.r
ceived elsewhere. This will be their
flrst trip of any length away from
the tcene of bright light end metro
politan commerce. They will no doubt
be keen observer of our customs
and actions; and our hospitality win
be cause for them to judge us.
We believe that the students of
v iTnlwmitv of Nebraska should
take utmost care and give every ef
fort to make a good impression upon
the minds of our visitors. This, of
course, appliea to all our visitors, but
this being our last home game and
our opponent being easterners we
would suggest that students endeavor
to Rond them back to the "big city"
declaring that never have they re
ceived such hospitality as at Ne
braska. Everyone knows the embarrass
ment to Nebraskans following the
Notre Dame game last year when
scheduling games between the two
schools was broken oft. we an ieu
that the chargea of the South Bend
folks were false and entirely with
out grounds. Nevertheless, the fact
stands that we no longer play the
Notices
THE POOR FRESHMAN
The New Student publishes an -article
by C Ralph Bennett denouncing
the present method of treating the
freshmen in the large colleges of
the country. As a teacher of fresh
men in his college, Mr. Bennett has
a sympathy and understanding of the
average first-year student that is not
rivaled by many. Instead of the
usual picture of the young country
lad who comes to college to become
the victim of the pranks and jeers
of the upperclassmen, the freshmen
of today are just average human
beings, full of energy and enthusiasm
for the life in store for them.
"Freshmen are beginners," con
tinued Mr. Bennett "They are tak
ing their first step alone. They
haven't yet learned that step. They
have been accustomed to high schools
and prep schools and their methods
nu a v -wmw-w i ta o tut tjur.v Y A V - a ....
and their teachers. They have never crners wno have never been out here.
. . . ... it I - . . . .....
felt so unimportant, so very smau ye j0 not intend to imply mat me
a ripple in so very large a pond. But j Xew York footballers believe such
they aren't certain that they didn't 1 things, but we want to be sure that
- . L I . . . . . ;i
DaCK wim similar
Alpha KPP P
Alpha Kappa Pai meeting Thura
day afternoon at 5 o'clock In the
Commercial Club Rooms.
Dramatic Club
Dramatic club will meet Thnrsday
night at 7 o'clock.
XI Delta
Tl TW.lt. meeting- at 6 o'clock
I Thursday evening in Ellen Smith hall.
Math Club
Math club meeting Thursday, No
vember 18, at 7:30 o'clock in room
204 Temple building. Miss Jscnui win
riv a abort discussion of the "Cocoa-
nut Problem", after which there will
be a social hour.
Y. W. C. A.
The Y. W. C. A. on the Ag campus
will give a tea in the Home Economic
parlor Thursday Nov. 18 from 4 to
6. All members invited.
Farmer's Formal
sldered first It la suggested that con
tributori look over the exchange
magaiines in the office lor laeaa.
Copy may be aubmltted at the office
or given to Betty Bell or Dwight
Wallace.
Pep M acting
TVn nAiHno for Freshmen boys
Thursday night at 7 o'clock in Social
Srfanea auditorium. Discussion vi
Olympics. Every boy out .
Freahmaa Engineers
On account of Olympics there will
h nn nripntation class held for en
gineering freshmen on November 20.
Delta Omicron
Members of Delta Omicron meet
I at Ellen Smith Hall Thursday at
7:15. Important I
Pi -medio Banquet
Pre-medic banquet Thursday eve
ning. 6 o'clock, at the Grand Hotel.
Dr. II. H. Waite, department of bac
teriology and pathology, will speak
on "The Evolution of Medical
Science". Dr. Marvin, physics depart
ment and Dr. Brown, chemistry de
partment, will be guests.
Mrttie run
An important meeting of the Mys
.!... n nn avail, to
college eaucnuu"" -
y nothing of being unfounded. Un
less of sub-moronic mental capacity,
no one should go through college
without absorbing a certain amount
of information without effort For
tunately, most of those registered in
colleges are there to make the most
of the possibilities, and not merely
let knowledge "soak in."
Unlimited achievements nre
-i-u - tho riupated class of the
Biuro v
future, despite the rabid predictions
of the cynics in regard to college
'educations.
,v. m.
Rocknemen. And our impression on All committee cnairm.n -r , w Thud November 18, 7
eastern schools was no doubt injured touch with their members wd re-, AU
.o. j a i . a. a. v ii k e ii a 1 1 r i "wi . w -
by the incident. AU this nappe. ur- port at room ov- ... . i. , b rresent. Important!
-ii a :....if. hw NVhras-:xr An Thn-Hav evening. Important , Ders Piease oe present v
cause oi am-gvu uu" - V. n
kans on the Notre Dame team. business is to be brought up so all
We should not allow another such committees are requested to be pre-
embarrassment to be broupht upon sent one hundred per cent
us. The way to insure ourselves Ph,ical Education Club
against another such indictment is to An jmportant meeting of the Phy
sical Education Club will be field
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-Cob
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
ve the New Yorkers and thir fol
lowers the biggest and best reception
ever given a visiting team at Ne
braska. Although we feel that we did
no harm to Notre Dame we must
Drove to the east through our cour-
tesv to our Saturday opponents that
the charge of the Notre Dame author
ities was false.
No doubt most of the Violet grid-
ders and most of the persons who ac
company the N. Y. U. team here Sat
urday have never been this far west
before. It might seem humorous to
some of us that many New Yorkers
still believe that Nebraska is in the
midst of "the wild and wooley west".
and that the Btage coaches are still
.u. thrnrtirtmnf tho itotp. ThlS lda
c. . 4. .... wuv - - -
is still quite prevalent among east-'Dramatic Club Thursday Nov. 18 in
the Dramatic iud kocih. rruKiam
j - i - o
take the wrong road at the cross- j they do not go
. t t r i f- -... I -1
roaas. iney are xrum -'"" ; ideas.
these youngsters. They need to be
helped. They need to be encourag
ed." The article continues that the very
thing that tends to discourage the
freshmen is done in most of the col
leffes. Instead of assigning the best
instructors to the first year students
so that they may have the counsel of
a man experienced in the institution,
one who would make the course in
teresting and at the same time im
part something of practical value to
the class, the youngest teachers are
usually assigned to the yearling
classes. In a good many cases the
instructor is striving for an advinced
degree, so that he will not have to
stay in the ranks of the freshman
instructor, but may advance to the
ranks of the instructor of upperclass
men. As a consequence his class is
merely a fulfillment of duty, a spend
ing of the allotted hours in the class
room. It is not strange that the
class soon assumes the same aspect
. . 1 . . 1 . 1 A
to ue memners wno nave m cuunm --w
to the dreary, lifeless teaching ofJth east the true Nebraska spirit
the one whose interests are else
where. Upon the teacher of freshmen
rests the responsibility of creating
the initial impression of the college.
Upon him to a large degree depends
the interest and enthusiasm of the
remaining years of the student's
college life. A man in this position
then, should better be one of the
older men of the faculty, one who
begins promptly at 7 o'clock.
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.
Awgwan Contributor
Awgwan contributors are re
quested to begin turning in copy for
the Christmas number, to be issued
December 10. All contributions must
be in by November 30; copy turned
in before Thanksgiving will be con-
that it will continue its work. At
nresent the council is non-workable
through lack of representatives. It
may remain that way.
So it is. The fraternities ae Here;
they will probably stay here ; and im
provement will come slowly, if at all.
Therefore one mav accept tha situa
tion placidly, with occasional out
bursts such as the World Forum s to
remind him that some one, at some
time, regarded the fraternity as
less than perfect
College Press
Not only Nebraska, but the middle
west and Missouri Valley will be
judged by the easterners. So it be-
hooves the Nebraska student body to
do three things. For Nebraska, for
the University of Nebraska, and for
the Nebraska hospitality, we must
make the Violet aggregation realise
the true Nebraska of today, give the
easterners a good impression of the
University, and correct the impres
sion made following last year's Notre
The big rally and torch light par-.tirely unaware that their very exis-
ade scheduled for Friday night is to tence was at staite. ineir complete
ADVANCEMENT
(Daily Trojan)
'Motion Dicture colleges" in which
the professors appear to the students
on the silver screen, delivering their
lectures by a machine for voice re
production are heralded as the next
development in the educational world.
Under such conditions faculty mem
bers would be "immortal" since their
lectures could continue after their
death.
At a meeting of the New York
Electrical Society, Dr. E. B. Craft
demonstrated the educational possi
bilities of the Vitaphone, talking mo
tion picture. The system is said to be
"not only possible but probable,' by
Dr. Craft
With this system being instituted
into our already high class colleges,
it is hardlv conceivable to what
! heights the higher education will rise
(heights the higher education wiu rise,
fraternities, en masse, did not rush M the present time every facUity is
against him; they seemed to be en-lemployed for th betterment of the
,;w1vr nnon-OT that trllMf WTV Tlft-. . .
culture, Z
Vverv are awenunm - ,
.wery, . fir.nf Col-
the AsHocianon - - ----
u. hara nresenv n
leges. Ae .
0. J. Ferguson of the College of En-
v. tj m nrnkaw. dl-
rtcwr u aaB Btant
. If.'.a IW ovtrnrPT.
experiment station,
Fedds, professor of home economics
and Miss Mary-Ellen Brown, state
extension agent in women's work.
AVERY CHOSEN
PRESIDENT OF
ASSOCIATION
(Continued from Page One.)
University of Idaho, where he was
professor of chemistry and chemist
of the agricultural experiment sta
tion from 1899 to 1901.
With the exception of the years he
was connected with the University
of Idaho, Dr. Avery has been a mem
ber of the University of Nebraska
faculty since 1896, when he was
made adjunct professor of chemistry,
a position he held until 1899. In
1901, he was appointed professor of
nnalvtical and organic chemistry in
the university, and in 1902 he was
made professor of agricultural chem
istry and chemist of the University
of Nebraska experiment station.
From 1905 to 1908, he was head
professor of chemistry in the univer
sity. In the latter year he was ap
pointed acting chancellor of the uni
versity, upon the resignation of E.
Benjamin Andrews. He was acting
chancellor until May 20, 1909, when
he was appointed to the position of
chancellor.
During the world war, Chancellor
Avery was connected with the United
States army in the themical warfare
service.
Seven members of the University
of Nebraska faculty, including Deal.
E. A. Burnett of the college of agri-
Hardy Smith
BARBER SHOP
CUaa tow al ttd on each cat.
tomcr.
CHAIRS
116 No. 13th Street
I
CHRISTMAS CARDS
EASTMAN KODAK STORES INC.
(Formerly Lincoln Phot Supply)
1117 O St.
v J
B I S C U ITS
7
flde of real whole
Yheat, crisp and appe
tjiking, nourishing and
AUrgizing that's food
thought and exer
. For a ood warm
akfast on a real cold
jnbrning try
i
serve two purposes: a send-off for
Nebraska's Cornhuskers before their
departure for Seattle and a welcome
for New York. This is the last rally
of the year and heretofore the torch
light parade was used only to wel
come Notre Dame. Nebraska students
should take this opportunity to do
these things. This is the chance for
Nebraska to show New York a good
welcome, show the east the grounds
for Notre Dame's action, and show
THE COLLEGE CLUBS
The World Forum's battle of words
over the merits of the fraternity sys
tem ended Wednesday with the ad
dress of Prof. John A. Rice. Mr.
Rice, in his criticism of fraternities.
has stated the matter quite pointedly
(and we think, fairly); but he has
added little to the discussion
Nebraskan
ignorance of what was going on was
crushing.
This, perhaps, supports Mr. Rice s
opinion ihat fraternity men are not
interested in anything beyond foot
ball, dates, and "getting by". But
it at least illustrates the point we
are about to advance; that th frat
ernities are too firmly entrenched to
be done aw7 with and that the be.st
that can be done is in intelligent di
rection.
The Inle'frateinity Council acted
wisely last year in limiting probation
weeks. It should have done away with
them. But, at least, it moved in the
right direction, and one may hope
mental development of the younger
generation.
Disparaging are the claims that
DANCING
CLASS
Every Tuesday and Fri
day 8 p. m. 6 lessons
$3.00. Two hours prac
tice free. Open daily for
private lessons.
Franzmathes
Academy
1018 N
Lunch s
Candy
Meals
Drinks
At
LITTLE
SUNSHINE
LUNCH
1227 R
1st Door East of Temple
Formal Invitations
SEE THEM AT
GRAVES
3 doors south of Univer
sity Temple
can devote, his whole thoughts to j spent considerable space in denounc-
leacaing avnu uno ta : S"Mlng me supposed lauiLS i irswrrui-
1 1- ' V I . ... . . V
kind of an example for the members
of his class.
It takes the genius of the faculty
to take the freshman in hand and get
the results from him that can be ob
tained. The normal freshman is ap
palled by the college, he regards his
instructor as some kind of a super
human who is totally unapproachable
by any le than a fellow-great. This
impression is heightened by the aver
age young instructor who is trying to
create an aura of majesty about him.
self. The beginning instructor wishes
to appear dignified and a stern
fount of wisdom, he appears so to
the first-year youngsters when he
is trviiur to he affable or humorous.
In his sterner moments he is a fiery
tongued dragon, ready to act the
part to the extent of removing the
strident from school.
Small wonder that so many fresh
men fail in their initial attempt.
They are treated as upperclassmen
when what they need is a breaking.
in to the college and its methods, an
acquaintance with the ideals and pur
poses of the institution. It is a sub
ject that is of vital hnnotrasce to
the rapidly-growing college that is
rjefT-ecUnsr ita freshmen in the nnr
soit of higher laurels in the field of
education and it is one that should
receive the consideration of all such
inSt-lBtlOTJS.
ties, which were catalogued with
thoroughness and zeal. Such matters
as deferred pledging. probation
weeks, scholarship, and others, were
taken up. Letters were sent to the
national presidents of a number of
fraternities asking their opinions.
As far as the editor was able to
observe, he accomplished nothing by
this, unless one is to regard a few
arguments with members of his own
fraternity as an accomplishment. The
WELCOMING THE VIOLET
Kext Saturday the University of
. . t urbi.k -ortil7Ufcker9 will meet the
University of New York Violet mnA
At "four centaurs" epem the grid
iron, i ue isew 1 orkers will come to
I.i tccln wiih the record of eight vie
so m tnar.y rfcarta. Of course
York ecbedu'e wiih a defeat of
" v.-t, r-t vt vi T'T' them a
' i" 'j 'vc r re-
There's a treat for you and
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in the Pepper mint - flavored
gum inside that is
- WRIGLEY'S P. K.
value in long
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I'M HERE
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THEY'RE GOOD
V3
Wrigfcr's aide digee
fkn and takes tha
next cigar taata better.
Try It
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