THE DAILY NEBRASKA N The Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRAFKA Under direction of tha Student Publication Board TWENTY-8IXTH YEAR Published Tuesday, Wednaadajr, Thursday, Friday, and Bandar morning uurinc tha academic year. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Office U Hall, Room No. 4. oXe Hours-Editorial' Staff. 8 :00 to 8:00 except Friday and Sunday. Buaineae Staff i afternoons except Friday and TelephoneEdi'torial and Bu.ineaat BW1. No. 142. NUht B6881 Entered aa aeeond-claaa matter at the Pm ' L'"" n Nebraska, under act of Congress, March 8 1879, and at apecial rata of postage provided for in aection 1108, act of October S, 117, authorised January 20, 1022. 12 a rear. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy 5 centa 11.16 aemeater WILLIAM CEJNAR Laa Vance Arthur Sweet Horace W. Gomon Ruth Palmer EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Managing naiiur Isabel O'Hallaran Gerald Griffin James Kosse Florence 8wihart NEWS EDITORS Dwlght HcCormack CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Assi Uanaginc Editor Oacar Norllng Evert Hunt ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Mary Loulaa Freeman Dwlght HcCormack Robert Lascn Gerald Griffin T. SIMPSON MORTON Richard F. Vette Milton McGrew William Kearna BUSINESS MANAGER Asst. Business Manager Circulation Manager Circulation Manager WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30. 1927 UNIVERSITY NIGHT "Well, it's history now, let's forget about it". Remark of one student concerning University Night. That may be one way of looking at it, but 12 months from now another University Night perfor mance may be staged. If some of the disgusting fea- ,.o th 1927 show are not censured, the chances are that the 1928 show will be even worse, because the idea will again prevail "As soon as it s nisiory, u u be forgotten." a University Night yes there was a lot of Night to the whole performance, but as to the-University part, it was sadly lacking. All in all it was an example of an indecent way of making a few dollars for an otherwise decent Uni versity activity the Y. M. C. A. The entire production centered around frater nities and sororities, drinking, and other extreme and absolutely unrepresentative features of college life. Instead of a display of some of the decent wit mnst nsiirdlv must abound on this campus, stu- something auite a few notches below what might reasonably be expected of a semi official University performance. There may have been a general lowering of stan dards since the last war. The stage and the press has reflected all this in great part. But even the most cynical observer of campus life would be uncharitable if he tried to make out university students collectively or individually as some parts of University Night made them appear. Instead of a wholesome, entertaining portrayal of student and college life, University Night for a period of years has gradually gone down the toboggan into more and more of a mire of drink and sex. Instead of an all-round presentation of all-university student life, the Night has become the one evening of the year when several favored fraternities and so rorities give themselves a lot of free publicity. The truth of the matter is that the student body, numbering over 5 thousand as it does, is too big and unwieldy to make successful any affair on the order of University Night. That this is so has been evident more and more of late years as more and more of the supposed puns and jokes fall flat because they have a point intelligible to only a few of those who happen to be acquainted with the circumstances. And the most inconsistent feature about the whole works is the fact that the Young Men's CHRISTIAN Association was sponsoring the show, and even now has a few hundred dollars in its coffers as a result. The Y. M. C. A. is one of the few organizations which along with the University pastors is supposed to be looking after the higher spiritual welfare of the students. Now the Y. M. C. A. officials and the organization itself are probably not to be blamed directly, and yet if that organization sponsors the show, and what is more, gladly accepts the money made by it, it is tacitly and openly approving such practices. If University Night ever was a decent and useful annual student affair, it certainly has degenerated to the point where the Y. M. C, A, for whose benefit it was started, should revolt in virtuous disgust, salvage its self-respect, and wash its hands of the whole matter. It is hard to imagine that money got by such shady means can be consecrated in any way for the declared worthy purposes of the association. Those worthy purposes are probably just a little bit more difficult of attainment. THE GLEE CLUB Next Sunday the members of the University of Nebraska Glee Club start on their annual spring tour of the state. This trip in year after year coming to be one of the features of the spring season. The Glee Club may rightfully be regarded as one of the most worthwhile and value-giving activities in the University. For the student the Glee Club provides an expres sion for his musical side, it gives him something that is not harmful in nature with which to occupy his spare time, and it gives him this trip every spring. But it is to the University that the Club probably proves to be of the most value. Unlike other organizations that are in the custom of traveling through the state, the members of the Club stay at private homes while on the road. Usually they stay either with friends or with alumni, but in any case welcome places are found for them. One of the primary instructions given to the Club members is that they are to spread the gospel of the University of Nebraska while in. private homes. They are told that they are agents of our state institution end should conduct themselves as such. Each mem ber thinks over some of the salient points and features of the University so that he may be prepared to tulk intelligently on the subject. There are other functions performed by this or ganization. It appears before schools of the state white they are in session. It appears at luncheons, and in ail of these engagements it is spreading the idea of the University as represented by as perhaps a model college group as is usually assembled. It is one of the few phases in the life of the pres ent colleges that is not permeated with the spirit of pontics, over-due publicity lor members. The Glee Cbb, together with a few other organizations, stands F.ri l, a small but respected part of the University. In Other Columns Ain't Sh Dumb! Accosted in the vestibule of a small town library, a trim little woman was found carrying an armload of the latest novels and travel books. As the uneducated wife of a truck driver, she excited the curiosity of a college woman who met her there, and asked, "Why do you read these books Mrs. ?" "It's just this way," the lady replied, "my hus band takes an interest in such things. And with ether women up on all this literature, do I want him to be saying 'round, "Ain't she dumb!" Whether or not the girls of Grinnell college are in the mcrriage market, with respect to- two important fields of knowledge they may well ask themselves, "Am I dumb?" What does the average Grinnell girl know of international relations? How often do Grinnell women read the daily paper? In dormitory circles it has often been charged that girls don't even peruse the official college paper, The Scarlet and Black. Grinnell Scarlet and Black Notices The Preaa and the Individual We sincerely trust that Mr. David Lawrence was incorrectly reported when he spoke to a group of school editors at a recent gathering at Columbia University. He was made to say that the American press was the best in the world and that none of its faults were of its own creation. So able a journalist as the head of the Consolidated Press Association, and the founder of that extremely useful publication, the United States Daily, can hardly have maintained the second thesis even if he uttered the first. Every tyro in the. trade and every intelligent reader of dailies knows better. It is, of course, to be said that if the public would not buy low-grade newspapers they could not exist. But that the public supports the debased and debasing tabloids of New York City, for instance, is no excuse whatever for the degeneracy of their conductors in offering the matter that they print; nor does it relieve them from the responsibility of their acts. And when it comes to the exploiting of the misfortunes of the individual who happens to get into the lime light, there is no press on earth as cruel, as cowardly, as low, or as brutal, and none which goes to such lengths. Can Mr. Lawrence or anyone else maintain that this is due to the public and not to the publishers? The Nation WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30 lota Sigma Pi Iota Sigma PI meeting Wednesday, March 80th at aix o'clock in Chemistry Hall. Junior-Senior Prom Committee Meeting of the Junior-Senior Prom Com mittee Wedneaday at 6 o'clock. Student Council n i . . . . . . : - tUm Qtti - ncxuur oi-monimy urni council win oe neia niuc.j - -o'clock in Temple 204. All membere are requested to be present. Alpha Kappa Pal Initiation and Banquet at the UnWeraity Club at 4:80 Wedneaday, March 80. Tha Lutheran Bible League will meet for nioie atuay wedneaday at i p. m. in cm' pie 202. Some queationa will be answered THURSDAY, MARCH 31 ' VI TV.lt. XI Delta meeting at Ellen Smith Hall lhursday at seven o clock. Freshman Commission Freshman Commission meeting Thursday at 7:10 at Ellen Smith Hall. Senior Invltationa A copy of the senior invitation card la on display at Long's Book Store. All sen iors should arrange to place their order for them as soon aa possible. University Night People All University Nisrht persons who have outstanding bills will turn them in to Koyc West, the chairman, by Thursday noon. All billa will be settled at that time. The Campus Pulse Letter froaa readers are aarcUaDy walcoaaaw la this aopartsnaat, and will be printed in all caeee aubjact asly t th. aN , airsrar ltic.! kaatrinc out all libel sua Butter, and attacks against tndlvkluala wad raUgiaata. , One Year Ago Theses and Thinking Eight or nine months ago Palmer H. Craig was working for his doctor's degree at the University of Cincinnati. He had majored in physics so his thesis consisted chiefly of reports on numerous experiments. He spent weeks on experiments of different kinds. Some were failures, some were partially successful. He labored on and he labored hard for he was interested in his work. . His thesis was accepted and he took his degree, doctor of philosophy. So far the story might apply to any one of hundreds of students who do the same thing in American colleges and universities year after year. But here it differs. Dr. Craig, still young, is now the head of the physics department of Merder University, Macon, Ga. He is rich, for he recently sold an invention he made while working on his doctor's t.heis fnr $100,000. The invention is a device to take the place of batteries and vacuum tubes on the ordinary radio receiving sets. Probably it will revolutionize the entire radio sup ply manufacturing indi3try for batteries and tubes add greatly to the expense of radio sets. And now the young professor is rich because he enjoyed his work, because he used his brains and because he stumbled on the invention. The moral or point to all this, if there is any, is that experimental theses are not necessarily impractical. And you seniors who have to write theses, bear in mind when you work on them that you may make a discovery or an invention while you are thus engaged that will make you rich for life. Remember further that Dr. Craig used his brains or he wouldn't have made the discovery or known its value after he made it. Ohio Stat Lantern Why Activitiea? While there may be some undergraduates who are engaged in activities for the love of Alma Mater or for the love of ourselves, it is probable that most students are more naive. We, undoubtedly, row, write, go to rallies and Varsity Shows because we are interested in these matters for themselves. This is hardly as obvious a statement as it appears. The casual observer, visiting from Mars, perhaps, would gain the impression that some student organization was striving for something or other. Forgetting this out sider, it will be interesting to consider these activities which engage so. much of the undergraduate's energy and time. What are they? What ie their spirit? Why have they only appeared within the last fifty years and in America? These questions require much the same answer. We find in each of the activities, a replica of some form of active life in the professional and business world. There are publications, which strive constantly to imitate the national newspapers and magazines. There are plays, staged with as much finesse as is pos sible. There are debates, more thoroughly organized than their downtown fellows. There are musical clubs and orchestras as carefully trained as circumstances will allow. There are athletic teams, earning more in an afternoon than a world's champion baseball team could, and managed with an eye to utilizing this earn ing capacity to the full. There are student governing organizations; having remarkably little to do, but exist ing tenaciously. It is a group of minature imitations of national institutions which composes the "activity world". Call it a toy world, if you choose, and class the orgiiniza tions with mechanical construction sets and ten-line printing presses. They are models of various institu tions of the world which most of the students are soon to enter actively. They are unrelated to the academic life. They have no concern with books or research. They are personifications of action. There will be exceptions to the big business spirit Many of the undergraduates proceed without remark ing on this general atmosphere. But the particularly those in charge, are well permeated with the urge to do things, and to do bigger and better things seems quite natural to find the "Times" remark ing that President Hopkins may suggest what he will to alter football, but that he is fighting America. For it is tins passion for success, for doing every task well, and the easier tasks are always to be chosen when one insists on success in no matter what. The American college student is sent out to make his mark in college. It is easier, more natural, and more concretely visible, if he makes his scratch in the activity world. Is it any wonder that he turns there, where his interests lie? Activities, then, are simply the indications of the American civilization, which has altered the European character of educational institution. They are the real native side of .the College life. Undergraduates will find their interests in these preliminary trials of what their fathers are actually engaged in. They will turn to them rather than to the studies which are less evi dently bound up with their own future. Columbia Spectator Prof. M. H. Weseen of the depart ment cf English addressed the mem bers of the Lincoln Ad Club on "Bet ter Business Letters." Prof. J. A. Rice and Prof. H. H. Marvin of the University of Nebraska left for the University of low to h present at an honor course confer ence held there. Governor Adam McMullen '98, was selected to preside at the Nebraska- Iowa intercollegiate debate held at the Temple Theater. The question was, "Congress should be given the power to overrule by two-thirds vote of both houses the decisions of the Supreme Court declaring acts of Congress inconstitutional." The order of the speakers on the affirmative team was, George Johnson, Volta Torrey and Alexander McKie. Mem bers of the negative team were David Sher, Ralph Brook and Lloyd J. Marti. W. W. Burr, professor of agron omy, broadcasted over Radio Station WLS giving a series of special seed corn talks featured by the Sears-Roebuck Agricultural Foundation. Dean O. J. Ferguson, of the Col lege of Engineering, issued a state ment regarding the engineering in spection trip to Chicago urging sen ior and junior students of the engin eering college to take this trip if they possibly could. The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Rudolph Ganz, with Frederick Fisher, assistant con ductor, and Miss Kathyran Brown, soloist, appeared in a concert at the Lincoln Auditorium. "Romeo and Juliet" was the con cluding: presentation of the Univer sity Players. The famous Shakespear ian tragedy was at the Temple The ater. Halycon Hooker, of the class of Mrs. Louise Zumwinkle Watson, of the University School of Music ap peared in his post-graduate recital at the Temple. Orchestral parts on the second piano were played by Mrs. Will Owen Jones. Dear Editor: Well, I took my girl to the Uni versity Night program la3t night and I am proud to say that she could not understand the jokes. I am told that the event was sponsored by the Young Men's Christian Association. Perhaps the reports of ex-service men concerning that organization are not so unfounded. I would like to suggest to next year's University Night com mittee that they give two perform ances. The first performance should be for men only and the second for other morons. Do you know Where I could get copies of this year's jokes? I have attractive offers from Whiz Bang. I have sent Eugene O'Neill in vitations for next year's perform ance. I am sure he is always glad to get new ideas. Trusting you are the same, I remain Salaciously Yours, , Lon. Perhaps a ,e of them saw how flat their attempis at cheap humor fell. E. D. Two Years Ago Dear Editor: Monday night I was in the audience at the annual University Night. This was the first time I had viewed the heralded spectacle. My confession was that I was sadly disappointed. I went there with the expectancy that the "cracks" would be pointed enough but the clever ones were obscured by those which savored of a cheap vau deville house. Why was it necessary to make re marks that might ruin a student's college career? Although there might have been some basis for the "cracks", it seems to me that the stu dents involved did not have to be branded so publicly. Gossip and scan dal spreads quickly and remains long er in the memory, and so will the worst things that happened Monday night. I think something should be done to abolish such "dirt" that ruined the better parts of the show. This is difficult as I understand that most of the worst "cracks" were extem poraneous. But if the actors who were responsible had their parents present in the audience they might feel how the remarks would seem in other people's eyes, and think twice. What Would r&riit Think? To the Editor: Good Christians, trained to huve implicit faith in the ministers of the gospel, the church, and such affiliated organizations as the Y. M. C. A., are scoffing at and vigorously denying the charges of rank hypocrisy which Sinclair Lewis makes in his latest vituperative novel, "Elmer Gantry." The author, they say, has made a round-up of characters and incidents of imagination and perpetrated on the public an unwarrentedly abusive and false volume of muck-racking. At least, they avow here in Lincoln, such conditions could under no circum stances exist in this fair city .of the virtuous middle-west. Perhaps the good Christians are right. But the performance which the University Y. M. C. A. gave us at the Orpheum Monday night makes one wonder, to say the least. The show itself was good or bad according to one's own taste. But I can conceive of no process of reasoning, mental gymnastics, or mysticism by which the Y. M. C. A.'s relation to the affair can be justified. There is hardly a scheming political organization or perverted minister that would dare to be so rankly hypo critical. The Y. M. C. A.'s answer, I sup pose, is that it needs the money. It needs money badly because its sup port from students has become almost negligible. It wonders why students do not support it. PerlS?: its answer in University NiKrt S , far underestimates the intelliln ' 14 Nebraska students if it itfe do not see the falseness of fn ori f zation that professes to he devoSl the "highest ideals" and at tie 1 time snonaora TTni ia possible, of cours 7 .ut est ideals" have changed sinwi learned of the Y. M. C. A.) 1 The Y. M. C. A. Professes to exist for the purpose of spreading JlJ Putting, nto practice thn,e idcfl, ideas which Jesus Cnri,f . , rna the world. May I ask the officers' and members of the University y. Jf Ga Aa What do you suppose Jesus Christ would have thought of Un.W:.. Night? . "iy C Y. N. The track numeral has popularity until it is now set as the goal for every Freshman out for track. Cummins9 143 No. 12th FORMERLY LEDWICH'S HAVE YOU EVER TRIED OUR HOT BUTTER KISTWICH? Curb Service Luncheons DANCE Don't forget that Wednesday nite special at the L1NDELL PARTY HOUSE 50c Per Couple Revelers' on ihe job every Wednesday night Publicity for Track Markers - Much publicity hs been given to the set of markers for track and field events recently devised by Coach Henry F. Schulte. Talks of eating at the Avoidable Waste Not long ago a prominent hotel man wrote an article on a certain phase of the hotel busi ness for one of .the leading magazines. It created consider able comment, because of some-, startling revelations he made regarding the large amount of pilfering done by guests. Blankets, sheets, pillows and pillow cases, towels, stationery, pencils, penholders, ink-wells, and pictures in great numbers are carried awy from the rooms by guests; and in the din ing room the silverware and china is looted alarmingly. This writer showed that the traveling public, as a whole, "must pay for the pilfered goods or the hotel "go broke". And the successful hotels are obliged to recoup themselves for such losses by rates higher than they could be made if no such losses occured. Manager Harris of the Cen tral Caf finds his losses from this source growing lighter each year; and other hotel men cor robrate him in this experience, which would indicate that the public are learning that "sou venirs" collected fm cafea and hotels must be paid for by the public. ' (Ta ba conrlaiuad) 1323 P rear c Announcing For Wednesday and Thursday, March 30th and 31st A TV , fa- r a rremier enowincr or Hart Schaffner & Marx College Clothes r To Be Held In Our College Room Mr. Ben F. Wolfe, personal representative of Hart Schaffner & Marx, will present the newer versions in College Clothes, as styled by Mr. Sturbuch, who has just completed an itineracy covering the Big Colleges of the - country. ''Nebraska" men will be interested in this showing of advanced styles They are the clothes that will be worn this fall. Come in Wednesday Look at the new models the newer colorings and patterns See the extent to which these world clothiers have gone to furnish the authentic for University of Nebraska men. taOray aa. iaVrra.