THE DAILY NEDRASKAN Iowa Wrestling Honort Ames, Iowa, Dec. 15-Special: An ' 11 collet wrestling tournament. ' Xfwto mcet nd var9ity V ii illl occupy the time of the SCe nit team until the holiday V n Iowa State prepares for ifa!t ' Hrive for national wrestling mom" ALL THIS WEEK n. PThT..k..A.lHoJ.xwKl "The Girl Who Wouldn't Work" A Am.tlnf Drama With Marguerite De U Motte Other Entertalfilnf PIcturM SHOWS AT 1. S, 8, T, . ALL THIS WEEK "The Lone Wolf Returns" A Tnrilllnr Adventure With BERT LYTELL B1LLIE DOVE Other Entertaining Pictures utT 1.1c NITE 25c M SHOWS AT 1,9,5,7, 9. Greater Grata Garbo and Antonio Memo in a Romance of Pan and Argentina THE TEMPTRESS ON THE STAGE "IN ARGENTINE" THIS WEEK ALICE TERRY IN REX INGRAM'S THE MAGICIAN' A Metro-Coldwyn Picture f ALSO Our Gang Comedy RIALTO NOW i va i; i zJJw - - - a"--V. "- 1 .aJL.1 MON. TUES. WED. All Will Enjoy This Bill MILDRED ANDRE AND GIRLS Presenting a Symphony of "TONE AND COLOR" Fred Hagen & Co. In the Laurh Provoklnf Comedy "THE BEAR CAT" By Willard Mack Griffith & Young Offer a Comedy Concoction "AINT LOVE GRAND" Edwards & Lillian Presenting a "CYCLE OF SONGS" Frank & Mae Stanley Versatile Entertainer In A ROMANCE OF THE LARIAT New and Comedy Picture Bahich and the Orchestra SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:00, :00 RPHEUM ALL THIS WEEK Ho thought she i "Just Another BLONDE" The Liveliest Romance Ever with DOROTHY MACKAILX. JACK M LHAj UPPERCUTS" A Laura Coe-vuLloa with JACK DUFFY ON THE STAGE A Colorful Muiical Offering Badalie & Dean Revue Talented Coaapaay PwMtUa "A NIGHT IN THE ORIENT . BEAVER and his BOYS Foattfrinf "GYPSY LOVE SONG SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:00, :O0 Future Policy Of University Is Discussed (Continued from page 1) continue to be difficult to secure a state. There is no use denying that. The only question that remains is whether the result to be secured Jus tify the expense. When we look at the University Ideal of service to the state and what it is accomplishing for the state, when we realize the University's success In bettering the citizenry of the state and conditions in the state, and when we realize the value of offering opportunities for development of the highest order to a constantly increasing proportion of the youth of the state, we can hardly fail to justify such expenditures ao may be necessary for the continued development of the University. In the long run, can there be anything of more fundamental value, anything which will have a more lasting bene ficial effect on the state and its peo ple? Some criticism has been directed at the University for the emphasis placed on athletics. Such criticism has not been as great nor as vigorous as similar criticisms of many schools because the position of athletics has not been as disproportionate at Ne braska as it has in many institutions. The needs of ti e athletic department have, however, to large extent been satisfied, much better satisfied than the needs of the University as a whole. Athletic rued have been sat isfied because peopla have been more willing to furnish money for ai'i?ctic development than for the satisfying of other needs of th5 University. Adequate Fund a. Necessity Until people are willing to provide THE HONEYMOON EXPRESS With IRENE RICH COMEDIES FOX NEWS SONG SLIDES SHOWS AT I, 3, 6. 7, f. NITE 30c. MAT. 15c What Will you take home to him? You will always find the newest men's things at Ellinger's 12 & P st. money necessary f.ir satisfying the other needs of the University, it will proper balance bet.wecn Interest In athletics and intre.'t in education proper. Money was supplied for ath letics because the uhletio work cciU not bo carried on BHtislactorily with out it. The same line of reasoning should be iu'lowod in regard to the rest of the University. The other im portant cuiicn of the University can not be carried on satisfactorily un der unfavorable material conditions. One dirforenre exirts. Athletic needs have been satisfied to a considerable extent by voluntary contributions. Other needs of the University, for the most part, have had to be satis led by taxation. Nevertheless, it all comes back to the fact that people have shown themaelvcs more willing to contribute to satisfying athletic needs than to satisfying other needs of the University. The pioneers of the state made heavy sacrifices that the University might be established. They believe in it as a factor in building a better life for the future. The state of today, which has been benefitted by those sacrifices, owes it to the state's pio neers to provide for the University, that it may continue to work for al better state in the future. The state of today should pay this debt by ju dicious choice of expenditures, or, if necessary by sacrificing along less important lines. One of the chief arguments for University training in recent years has been the greater earning capa city of University graduates. The day when a large majority of Uni versity graduates can readily pile up a fortune is fast disappearing. Grad uates are too numerous in compari son with the number of opportunities for garnering great wealth. The ar guments for the University of the future must be of a different type. Should Stress Cultural Aspect The training which has been given and is being given is steadily elevat iny the general level of life on the material side. As the general mater ial level adfances, more opportunities are opened for spiritual or cultural development, as we may term it. The University of the future should con tinue its efforts for the material ad vancement of the people. It should also aid in the development of this other side of life for which more time becomes available as our mater ial level advances. If the graduates of the University can carry with them from the Uni versity such knowledge and insight as will make them able to appreciate the achievements of mankind, in gov ernment, in art, in literature, in science, and in philosophy, such in sight as will enable them to .develop as satisfying an internal life, as the external life which is being developed for them, the University will have begun to achieve what we may call its ultimate mission. Training Should Be Inspiring If the University graduate who finds himself in a routine job has such interests, he has the sources of inspiration which can keep him from feeling and seeing only the relentless monotony of the world's work which must be done. He can be a better man both to himself and to others. The point we are trying to make here is that the University of the future has a mission in training for leisure just as the University has a mission in training for work. The University of the future must do both. As the ma terial level advances, there will be more opportunity for development of the things which, throughout man's history, have stood out as his great est and most significant achieve ments, things which can be accom plished only after the satisfaction of man's material needs. Youth is en titled to the opportunity to so de velop that it can appreciate and evaluate these interests. Thus, hand in hand, with its readiness to train for service which will raise the ma terial ocdlntlon of the state, the Uni versity of the future should be In a position to supply all, rather than a few, as is the case now, with oppor tunities for this non-material devel opment. We see then that the state owes it to itself to maintain the University in such a manner thnt the institution can continue to develop. We realize that, as it develops, it is constantly turning back into the state citizens hotter qualified along one line or another to work for the development of a better state. We see that the University can develop only as it is supported and that if the state pro perly supports the University, it re reives untold benefits in return. And finally, we see that as the general welfare of the state advances, the University holds the key position for the development of a citizenry with higher ideals and interests, living in a steadily progressing civilization. New Books T 6 I hpRIHTEPSj S-f78 Capital graving Co. 60. 12T ST. LINCOLN. NEB. GET YOUR DRUGS, STATIONERY, BOX CANDY AND SODAS AT Fillers' rescription harmacy 16 & O B4423 Gray Anderson's Luncheonette 143 North 12th Formerly Ledwich's UGHT WSCHBS-JOTOTMM SERVICE CONFECTIONERY EAT A BUTTER KISTWICH r IT'S TOASTED The Nebrasknn will publish from time to time lists of the more inter esting new books thnt have been placed on the shelves of the Library for circulation. For the convenience of reader, we are giving the call number of "each title. These lists do not, by any means, represent the en tire amount of the new additions to the Library. They are simply a selec ted group of the more interesting of the recently published books that have been added. )40.27-AsS Ashley, rercy; Europe from Waterloo to Sarajevo. KlS.49-BS8t Beck. I Adams; ine Treasure of Ho. K81.0K-B4S Betnire, Hans, urgs; Deut sche lyrik seit Lilianrron. K2S.6Z-Db Biancnara, r. i.; rieiainK, ,The nnvelist. 97.8-An6 Bolton, Herbert r... ea : at rendondo's Historicae proof of Spain's ttile to Geortna. 81 1.49-n99gs uynner, wiuer; uren 891.R609-C47 Cbudoba. F.:A short sur- VJ.V of Czech literature. 917.S-l;s6v: urevecoeiir,, ot jonn ae; su.trhes of eighteenth century America. 170-FBBm Kite, Warner; Moral philoso phy. 91S.7Z8-U10 binn, l nomas; mysicry cities. 890 9Z-D74ir CJide. Andre; uostoevsny. 828.89-G87i Gilbreath, Olive; If to-day have no tomorrow. 928.1-G94ir Gmvey, ixrjise Imogen; Letters. 2 vols. 809-G69 Gosse, Edmund: Aspects ana impressions. 94S-69 lioocn. treo. r. MnHern World Series). 978.B-Y2 Hawthorne, Nathaniel, ed; The yarn of a Yankee privateer. 8S0.97S-J44 Jennings, W. W.; History of economic prosrress in the TJ. R. 767-L97 Lumsden, E. S.; The art of etching:. 671-M18 MacCurdy, Geo. Grant; Human oririns. 2 vols. 947-M442 Mavor, Jas.;An economic his tory of Russia. 2 vols. B72.966-M47 Meek. C. K. ; The northern of Niflreria. 97 8.8-Ob2 Oberholtier. F-. P.; History of the TJ. S. since the Civil War. 941.6-OcB O'Connor, Sir James; History of Ireland. 2 vols. 896-P2BS Parsons, Alice Beal; Woman's dilemma. 789.B-R86 Rice. Wm. G. Carillon music and singing towers of the Old World and the New. 944.04-K76S Roustan, M.;The of the French Revolution. 88S.89-K892d Salburg, Edith. Dynasten und Stande. 2 vols. 811.49-Sa5s Sandburg, Carl; poems. 680.4-SaB Sanderson, Eira Dwiirht; The farmer and his community. 028-ScoK Scott, Temple; The pleasures of reading. 675-Sm5 Smith. G. Elliott; Essays on the evolution of man. 8 18.49-tot4b Stevens, Jsimrs; Brawny man. 160-W88b Watson, John B. : Behavior ism. 828.09-WB4 Weygrandt, Carnelius; A century of the English novel. 792-W72d Winds, Adolf; Drama und Buhne. Oldfather Discusses Ancient Civilizations For Radio Audiences (Continued from Tage One.) problems of the freer womanhood, such as decreasing birthrate, divorce, reducing and the bobbing of hair. "Manufacturing, banking, indus trial crises, capitalistic domination colonial exploitation, were all fac tors in ancient economic life. Even the problem of what to do with the farmers to keep them on an economic level with the rest of the country was very pressing to the ancients. Politics Data Back "In politics it is especially notice able that the classical civilization s our contemporary. Our revolution ary statesmen were raised on classi cal polity. There were the same bosses, the same machines, the same grafters, the same filibusters. In deed it is only today that we can be gin to understand the politics of the ancients. The Greeks were essentially new in their outlook upon life, laying securely foundations in this respect for our own time. The German his torian Beloch has a magnificent sen tence in which he sums up our debt to Greece: "It is the Greeks to whom we are indebted for those possessions which alone make life worth living: our art, our science, the ideals of spiritual and political freedom." "If one be truly educated, he must know a civilization other than his own and what better one could he find to study than this one of the Greeks which is so contemporaneous to our own? The choice spirits of every generation will more and more ponder the minds of the classical civilization." Six $1000 Prizes Arc Offered To Freshmen For Best Chemical Zssayo Six prizes of $1,000 each will be awarded to freshman students of col leges and universities who write the best essays on the following six sub jects: The Relation of Chemistry to Health and Disease, The Relation of Chemistry to the Enrichment of Life, The Relation of Chemistry to Agri culture or Forestry, The Relation of Chemistry to National Defense, The Relation of Chemistry to the Home, and the Relation of Chemistry to the Development of an Industry or a Re source of the United States. This is a chance for freshmen in terested in writing essays to enter a national contest. The subjects are varied so that there is an opportunity for many to enter. A cotitcstafU may submit only one essay, and the es says must not exceed 2,600 words. The essays must be submitted not later than March 1, 1927. For any students wishing to enter this f on test, additional information concern ing the rules may be obtained from Prof. Frankforter, Room 6, Chemis try Hall, before Friday afternoon. This will give students a chance to work on them during the vacation period. Members of the Chemistry depart ment feel that students from this uni versity might as well b the ones to win these prizes as students from other institutions for it is possible to win more than one of them. Magazine Publishes Papers by Nebraskans Germany (The pioneers graf in ; Selected Sesqui-Centennial Failure Attributed To Lack of Publicity Philadelphia should have known better. How could the Clij of Broth erly Love expect to attract a crow.? without advertising? When the Ses- qui-Centennial's onening date ar rived, few neopl outside of Phila delphia's tributary territory knew about the exposition, its scope loca tion and duration. Few of them would have learned more but for the pub licity of distress and failure. Cer tainly the Pacific Const was not fav ored even with requests for free pub licity. The secret of tin exposition could not have been better kept if the management had hirH a suppress agent to keep exposition news out of the papers. Half a million in adver tising would have saved Philadelphia a fifteen-million dollar loss. January-Sunset. The December issue of AMERI CAN SPEECH contains a number of articles of interest to Nebraskans. Its contents are in part as follows: "The Language Consciousness of Col lege Students," by J. M. Steadman Jr. ; "The Plural Forms of 'You'," by E. C. Hills, "You-All and We-All" by Estelle R. Mrrison, "Popular Var iants of Yes" by Louise Pound, "Some GermanAmericanisms of the Middle West" by A. W. Meyer, "American Political Cant" by L. C. Wimberly, "Headline Words," by Harold E. Rockwell, "Legal Lingo" by Reuben Oppenheimer, "To One Editor" by Ellen B. Heckel, "The Current Expansion of Slang" by F. W. Pollock, "A Note on Anglo-Saxon by Kemp Malone, "The Impor tance of Speech Defects as a Per sonal Problem," by Sara M. Stinch field. The editor-inrhief of the maga zine is Prof. Louise Pound of the University of Nebraska Department of English. L. C. Wimberly is a member of the faculty of the Univer sity of Nebraska. Estelle ' K. Mor rison, now a member of the Junior College at Kansas City, is an A. B. and A. M. from the University of Nebraska. South Dakota Changes Debate Award System Vermillion, S. D., Dec. 15. A change in the conditions of the award of the national bank prize of $100 offered annually to the debate squad at the University of South Dakota has been announced by the depart ment of public speaking. Hereafter the prize will be given to the two women and the four men, who, in the judgment of the speech depart ment, have contributed the most to the success of the debating season. The object of the change, accord ing to H. G. Barnes, instructor, is to make the prize more worthwhile and to make the honor more significant than in the past when every member of the souad has received a share of I the prize offered. The prize is the gift of two Vermillion banks, the First National and the Vermillion National. "Bagdaddies" is to be the eighth musical comedy to be presented by the School of Journalism at the Uni versity of Missouri. CHRISTMAS CARDS GRAVES 3 Doors South of Temple Students in the classical "human ities course" at the University of Wisconsin led all others in scholar ship last year. The Golden Candlestick 26 So. 12 TEA ROOM AND PASTRY SHOP Modwrata Prices 7:30-7:30 GIFTS THAT PLEASE WE INVITE YOU TO SEE THEM Eastman Kodak Stores, Inc. (Formerly Lincoln Photo Supply Co.) 1217 O St. f "sk """""""" ,jy S Vi HBRSHEIM SHOE Learn how long, how very long, a pair of Florsheirn Shoes will wear. Then you can really appreciate what Horsheiras arc worth. xMast Srjles We Know It! 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