THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Statloa JL Uacola. Nebraska OrriClAL PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NKBRAPJIA - Under airectto. mt the Stnoeat fasiicatioa Boar TWENTY -SIXTH YEAR " - PekUsnea ItmUr. Weaneeonr. Thnmdar, IHdw, ana Saadar iniiil i aiuiac the academie year. KdHorml Office Untvmity 1111 4. Business Oftot U HaU. Room No. 4. , . Omco Hi rs Kditorial Staff. : to except rlja Snaday. Buimm StasTx afternoon oacept fndar and TeJeahmealMiterial aad Business: BMtl. No. lU NUtht B8t Entered ea aecaad-emsa Mttw at the po.tolT.ee la llieota. Hefcrasfca. aader act at Ceacreaa, U trek t. 1ST, and at i "P"" rateetfpaetea provided for ia eecuoa HO. act at October . MIT. aethoriaed Jaaaary !. IMS. M a roar. SUBSCRIPTION BATS Sack Copy eaate SMI a WILLIAM CKJNJ Va Arthar Sweet Horace th babel 0-HIWm Gerald Grimn NEWS EDITORS Dwixat McCorssack CONTRIBUTING KDITOKS KDITOR-IN-CHIKF Maaaciac Editor AuC kuuiu Edjtoe .Asst. Maaaciac Editor Oocar NorBnc Iterance Swinart Evart Baat ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Mary Louise Traeau I JMa Froot Lfeicht McCorssack Robert Laack Gerald Griffin T. SIMPSON MORTON Riekard P. Vettn ., Mitten McCrew WOoaas Kearaa BUSINESS MANAGER . Asst. Easiness Maaacer Circntatioa Maaacer Cutatatisa Maaacer THURSDAY. APRIL T. UJ7 AFTER SPRING VACATION The campus ttarted functioning again yesterday after a two-day recess with a large proportion of the student body back ia harness. It wasnt much of vacation but there was enough . I.M.V from the routine of winter study (three months since New Tears) to make everybody come back somewhat refreshed. a -J vf arc all back it will probably be cheerful news for everybody concerned to taw that there are only 58 more days unui we miy-sxm n nual commencement. Not such a very long time, and yet time enough to do a great deaL For many of the underclassmen especially those who are sure of returning next year, the main concern wD! probably be successful completion of the courses But for those who are about to graduate and for those who may never come back, these few remaining weeks should afford an opportunity, probably long neglected, of reacquaintjng tnemseives wiu vx wmc University, the professors, and the many student as sociates of the past three or four years, without men tioning some of the library browsing that a few leisure hours may make possible. In some ways one of the happiest times of the hwinw it is srcrinrtiine and there are only J - a few more weeks f class work, these next two months in other ways tend toward the very opposite in tne realization that they are the last dwys of happy, care free wbool life. Within a few weeks after commence ment exercises next Jane 4, the members of the class of 1927 will be scattered in all parts f the country, and some of them may be even farther away in foreign lands. Even the swyreeding classes of 28, 29, and 30 will never reassemble intact as they now are. The faculty itself will not be without change. Impatient though we msy be of continued lectures and endless grinding assignments, and anxious though we msy be to take out active part in the fierce and intense struggle f life on the threshhold of which we now are standing, there will be a feeling of sadness at the tissght cf departure frcra tiis esspss and all the happy and sometimes sad) memories and recollec tions it holds. ADVANCE RUSHING The brief vacation period just passed was probably tttHiied by many -fraternities and sororities to stage informal rushing parties back home wherever enough members and alumni are located to make possible such affairs. The tune will be done n a larger, more systematic, and more elaborate scale next summer in preparation for the intensive three-day session here at headquarter when pledge pins are formally attached and formally displayed. Bushing f course 5s a necessary and inevitable part of the fraternity system as it is now organized. Advance rushing such as mentioned above is mandatory also out of sheer necessity in the face of competition. If there are any evils connected with such advance rushing 4-hey can not justly be ascribed to any particu lar individual r group. All are willing or unwilling victims of a system the fierce competition of which knows no bounds. And yet there are some features about this ad vance rushing which reflect badly not only on the Stu dent! hST Vt wAle fTyersievli', ( As a result f such advance rushing, many stu dents make their first contacts with the University, and their first and sometimes lasting impressions of the University, through the social, secondary side of col lege life, rather than through the really serious scholas tic side which is the only genuine reason for the exis tence of higher education. Instead of the student entering University with a realization of the seiious task ahead of him, he comes too often with a bloated, egotistic feeling of social superiority in the assurance that be h&OTecome or is to become a "Creek" pledge. What is even worse, many students come to uni versity as result of such advance' rushing with the intention purely and simply of staying in school long enough only to become members of a fraternity or sorority. That this is no exaggeration is proved every fall by the number cf students (especially women) who tici. Lack Lome ia iLe disappointment of not having been pledged. It is not strange, then, that some people unac quainted with the real workings .of university enter tain the opinion that college is a four-year emu try club vacation. BASEBALL That baseball will not be a major sport at Kebras ka for some time to come seems to be the present out look. The immediate reason advanced is the present lack of facilities for playing the game and the lack of .money to finance coaching and trips. These reasons are of course qtrtte secondary. If there were a real demand for baseball at a major sport and there were money to finalise a schedule and a coach ing staff, the facilities would be provided mighty quick ly The fundamental reason I " the discornuance of lawlall ts'a major sport at Nebraska as well as at 'ir scLol in tiJs part of the country, is the lack t ' t ' : ' r t s r.d public interest in that sport If 1' nr- rtsicst Liter t ia the sport ; i e s 5n track for instance, it would be financed n cf tbe absence of box receipts even as track li iisre Hi'tit Mt4i&'! pnUie iuUm4 in lh rport ' :' -T-i i football isr inBl&ac), it mould auto ."y be lavitlJy scrpoited and fastered even as 'J low is. it i f the matter is tbat baseball has be '.let? profeErional sport that it ' 'e t-.: - in liavor ta win -.uch popularity among college students and the college sport public. Even down in the high schools, baseball for some reason or other fails to attract public attention as much as football and basketball. - Perhaps there is a natural dividing line or sport and athletic interest as between scholastic and collegiate circles and those outside. Among the great college sports might be listed football, track, rowing, and basketball. ' Among the great secular sports might be included baseball, boxing, golf and some others. Wrestling seems to be a hybrid. Where boxing has been ruled oat of many colleges because it is an un desirable sport in the professional realm, wrestling is coming along in some favor. Perhaps this is because the ancient Greek traditions concerning this sport over balance the present decadence of it at the hands of the professionals. Baseball once quite popular in colleges and high schools, at least in this part of the country, has been losing ground, and for some time as far as colleges are concerned has been a hybrid. In some conferences it has alternately been dropped and then again revived. Tbe three greatest reasons advanced for dropping it have been lack of facilities, bad weather conditions, and lack of money. At any rate it seems to be the first sport dropped when there is a lack of money. Down farther south where they take baseball even more seriously than they do football, and where a boy would rather be a second Ty Cobb or Babe Ruth than a president of the United States, and where weather conditions are favorable nearly all the year round, baseball still is, and probably will be, a popular col lege sport for a long time. Here at Nebraska, thoch, and in neighboring schools where it has been dropped, baseball is probably destined to sit on the bench for several years at least, untO such a time as there is a real demand for the sport by the students and the public, rather than by a few ambitious baseball players who would like the op portunity of showing off in front of big league scouts. Notices THURSDAY, APRIL 7 Girt'a Ceauaarcial Club Glrl'a Commercial Club loncbeoa at tka Ckamber of Commerce Thursday noon. April 1. , Mntic Ftak , Important' Mystic Fib meetlnc Thursday at T o'clock at Ellen Smitk UalL Vikinc Meetinc at the Beta kon Thori day eveninc at T:1S o'clock. Learue af Wean Vetera The Leacae of Women Voter will hold a meetinc at five o'clock oa Thursday. Fersaiaa uira . Initiation and electioa of omeera at Are o'clock Room X05 Nebraska Halt All mem bers and pledses be present in uniform. Be prompt! Silver Seraeat ... . Silver Serpent meetinc vrill be held at T o'clock today. Trursday. in Smith HalL FRIDAY, APRIL 8 TenaU aad Freakmaa Mea Meetinc of all tennis and freshman men Friday at 4 o'clock at tbe Coliseum. Lutherans The Lutheran Bible Leacne will have a social meetinc at its parish hall at Trinity Lotheran Church. llh and H. Friday, April 8 th. In Other Columns Sacrifice for Edocatioa Every ambitious boy and girl has dreams of enter ing college. Parents also have dreams for their child ren, but miny have the idea that the student should earn his way thru college for the good of his soul. This idea may be prompted by some selfish satisfaction in not being caHed"bn to spend the money. Xo student should attempt to earn his entire way thru college. He gets a mighty poor living and a mighty poor education as welL If a student has the desire to go thru college, he should be trusted to make sensible use of contributions from his family. If it is at all possible, the parent owes a college education to his child. He owes him the best equip ment possible to meet the world's problems, and college furnishes him this equipment Jlr.y parents do not have this view of the matter. In our own university, we have a gTat number who earn their entire way thru college, and a still larger number who make some contributions to their expenses. Our advisers say that no person should work more than four hours a day, but many of our students work tbe regular eight hours a day. Many men work all night Are these students sacrificing health for educa tionor both? Campos CoBeciaa Prwnaaturity Pessimism Since books of philosophy rarely represent tssssa ity as being other than excessively vicious or extremely virtuous the young person with average intellect, who has been taught to detest vice and revere virtue, had much better not read them than to accept as facts their theories and to attempt their application to the trouble some problems of life. The philosophically inclined reader, with his pre conceived conviction that a man is either all bad or all good, conducts his acquaintance with that person ac cording to bis often fallacious judgment He over estimates the worth of and is affected when in the presence of an individual whom he likes. It is strangely difficult for him to see good qualities in a man who disagrees with him. It wll be found that the society into which one must endeavor to fit himself is not a society of extremes but rather a composition of all mankind, forming a happy or an unhappy medium, according to the codes of its components. The reader of philosophy must re member that in studying the work of a radical author be is seeing the picture from one viewpoint only and that this viewpoint is exceptional. Spending too much time in the company of sophis ticated and world-weary theories the young man or woman is apt to Jet down the natural roArd of rfcr f ulness and become depressed by the infectious germ of pessimism. A pessimistic disposition is never a builder of ambition. The person who has been prematurely supplied with a knowledge of the "way of the world" loses his eagerness for the conquest, becoming tired of life before be has lived. Daily GENERAL DENIAL WILL BE COURSE (Continued from Page One.) alleges that the University Y. M. C A., on or about January 11th, offered to pay twenty d -liars lo th organi zation submitting the best skit to be asii nr. Universiv Night Sigma Peiu Cm, hon.rar onrt-ri: Jat emity. acting -n g-id ft- -a, si.bieit- ted snch a skit and it was later judged the best submitted. The slot was to be produced by Pi Epsilon Qelta, honorary d maiic ocicty The plaint' ;:: mat ih'v ex pended a snr f ra .ney a-a to twenty dol..-u. in ct.it'ri lt.t.;.j ments for th a;t m I ma y ;. n endeavored ! r'.Urt f.m Itf t hi C A., that that nrgsrirsli n refused to pay. The result was that the plvn- tiffs were inconvenienced. "Durham Time, as the Sigma Del- jta Chi skit was called, was not pro- jduced at University Night It was to i have been an exposure of fraternity politics on the campus, and, accord j ing to the plaintiffs, it was suppressed !for that reason. The defendants, how ever, say that the skit was not pro duced because of the fact that the members of Pi Epsilon Delta were 'playing in "The Merchant of Ven ice, which was played on the same night The trial is being conducted under tbe supervision of the Student Coun cil. At first it was thought that it could be held in the Law building, but interest on the campus has been so great that a larger place will be used. POST SEASON DRAUA TICKET SALE Oil (Continued from Page One.) Campbell, Kenneth Cook, Mar on r. Rnth Clendenin. Oss Cunning ham, Margaret Dudley. Mary Dndley, Elton Fee, Florence Flodeen, Nancy Foreman. Kate Goldstein, Iuise Hil- sabeck, Harold Hildreth. Broup B: Geraldine Grole, chair man, Don Helmsdoerf er. Vinton Law son, Ernest Lundgren, Zolley Lerner. Inei Latta, Eloise McAhan, Kieth Miller. Winifred McClure. Paul Mil ler, Werner Mall, Margaret Nicholas, William Prawl, Jack Rank, Mariorie Sturdevant, Mildred Sweet, Cleo SlageL Betty Woodbury. Groun C: Helen AAch, chairman, Esther Zinnecker, Elisabeth Tracy, Margaret Peterson, Alyce Connell, Gladys Burling. Belle Howe Arey, Hawthorne Arey, Elva Bnrrett, Mar tha Bruninsr. Clark CadwelL Gene vieve Carney, Rose Cecil, Edna Chari ton, Sam Diedrichs. Ruth Dimick, Coral Dubry, Blanch Fairens. Groun D: Ardath Srb. chairman, Jane Glennon, George Gregory, Kath- ryn Grummann, James W. Higgms, Doris Hosraan. Mildred Letson. Joy Ley, Thebna Lagsdon, Ida Lustfar ten, Helen McCleery. Frances Mc- Feelv. ' Jacob Mall. R. J. Maaske, Alene Minor, Frances Noc-re, Ruth Muirhead, Lois Oberlies. Group E: Willard Bailey, Paul Pence, Daniel Richardson, Cecil Schmitt Nyle Spie'er Louise Teb- betts, Vivien Vickery. Bemice Welsh, V. Royce West, Evelyn Wood, Leon ard .Wood, Josephine Doyglaa, Mar jorie Douglas, Russel Lindskog. Work on the third of the large mural paintings with which the large museum display cases in Morrill Hall are to be decorated was started last week by the artist, Miss Elizabeth Dolaiu. There will be fourteen of these large murals. In each case the scenes depicted will be those of the supposed habitat of the specimens Lunches Candy Me.U Drink, At LITTLE SUNSHINE LUNCH .227 R ltt Door East of Tempi. 4- VFhil. C. Orr, pre para tor for the University of Nebraska museum went to Cowles, Nebr, last week to unearth an eler.h-int rok rcrenily discovered near there. He also stop- ' ped at a number of other points en route to collect specimens of various sorts. Waaaa, Fnmi Women who claim equality with men in all walks of life should remember that tbe principle is also appli cable to all tbe joys of life. Since their usurpation of many positions formerly held by men the average co-ed stands as much chance in the race for rkhes as tbe male student Why then, doesn't she assume a few of the social duties and responsibilities of her near counter part? We mean "on her own account" literally. If this business of life is to be a male and female psrtscrship, why shouldn't the debts incurred be defrayed by the capital of both partners? At least partner Even might treat partner Adam to a few improvements in the firm. Let ber draw a little monev ont of er own rarrrnt account and take Adam to a show once in a while. After the theater gi re him the chance of ordering the chicken salad or the club sandwich. Pass him the wine list be fore dancing and invite his choice on the matter. If be seems backward at first she could throw him a confident smile and take his eyes out of their old rut in the price column of the card. She could intrigue his fancy with the foreign names in the left-band column; describe the sparkle of Burgundy or the lustre of Mo selle. It should not be a hard matter to bring him around at least not in the beginning of tbe evening. Later, after depositing ten or fifteen dollars at the hoteL we can't think of any good reason why she shouldn't pay the carrying charges of the business necessary to wind op the day. Then, when she finally dismisses we taxi, we predict that that grand and glor ious feeling of having done a good day's work and eontriDuted ber snare to the partnership win fc-y z tanu never, before experienced. From this lime on votes for women, to partner Eve, will carry a new sense of justice; a sense, for the fiirt time felt, that a vota is rceiry and jrtnt to all who Lave borne the burdens of common cstizenahip, who have worked shoulder to shotdder to improve their lot and who neither ak Bor j-a-t the tightest priT. Ilege. Should we hazard whether this nitemare of abso lute equality may prove too much for her? ; MeCill Daily 1 WJtttTTTXS vrssiwam as B"fJ73 T 3is sa 1ZT ST. LINCOLN. NEB. Talks of eating: at the Avoidable Waste (continued) In our last instalment we spoke of the losses sustained by hotel and cafe operators be cause tit pilfering by guests. To a very large extent small articles are carried off by guests without larcenous intent That is to say, many persons believe that "swiping a souvenir from a hotel or cafe is really not stealing merely an inter esting game of hide and seek. And still others carry off small articles inadvertently. But regardless of tbe intent, the hotel or cafe proprietor loses, and is obliged to recoup bis losses or go into bankruptcy. And the public or those who patronize hotels and cafes pay the bill in increased prices. This is inevitable. At the Central Caf there is one form of waste which adds considerably to tbe cost of oper ation: I man or woman comes in with the morning newspaper and takes a seat at one of the tables, opens the paper and be comes immersed in the news. By dint of keeping at it, the waiter succeeds in getting the reader's breakfast order probably toast and eggs and coffee. The order is delivered without loss of time, eggs, toast and coffee piping hot, and set before the consumer of the latest news about Browning and "Peaches' or the latest K O delivered by Monte Munn. Minutes pass, the food grows tepid or cold, and then tbe reader's gastric juices begin clamoring for somethine to ingest "Bah, g-r-rh,' groves the break taster, "dsvn't want any food cold take ft awoy and get me something hot And tbe garbage can get what was a good breakfast when delivered, but ruined through no fault c the chef or waiter. (T he The Handy Place To Buy SUPPLIES is Graves Printing Company Three doors south of Uai. Temple New York University School of Retailing Experience is secured in the largest department stores of New YnrV Newark, and Brooklyn. Store service is linked with classroom in struction. , w M. S. in Retailing is granted on the completion of one rear graduate work. iwoi 3 Graduate) Fellowships. S Scliolarahipa Sarvico Fellowship Saner School July 5 to Aagast 12, 1927. Fall term opens September 15 Illastratea booklet on application. Kor farther information write n, v A. Brisco, Director School of KetaUinc, Washiaston Square East. N . vT City. H SENIORS! DON'T BE MISINFORMED Official 1927 Graduation Invitations and Announcements THEY'RE HERE DROP IN AND SEE THEM GET YOUR SAMPLE COVER Order ycur invitations now for commencement Exclusively Sold By Co-Op Book Store 1245 R Street i r it i! r Our Ten Pay udvet Pi Va IS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE We Invite You to Use It You will find it a most convenient way to pay for your clothing. . . the initial payment is but $10. The bal ance in equal amounts weekly. if I ". Pi ft CLOTHES FOR SPRING May be purchased on the Budget Plan at identically the same price . as though you paid all cash. THIS IS HOW PLAN PERIlTrS YOU TO PAY 40 Suits and Topcoats, $10 when purchased, $JGQ tettkly T - ' " - w SJ.l MV, A.. J J $50 Suits and Topcoats, $10 when purchased, $4JD0 welly $55 Suits and Topcoats, $10 when purchased, $4.50 weekly U $60 Suits and Topcoats, $10 when purchased, $5jC0 wcdJy 7 4e' 7i 1 1 I'll si 4 Sllti . KuuJt ! (