The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 21, 1928, Page 2, Image 2

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    DAILY NEBRASKAN
.1
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
' UNIVERSITY OK NEBRASKA
tinder direction of tha Student Publication Board
TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thur.dy. Friday, and Sunday
norninga durinn the academic year.
Editorial Office University Hal) .
Business Office University Hall 4A. , ... .
Office Hours Editorial Staff. 8:00 to 6:00 axcept Friday and
Sunday. Business Staff: afternoons exoept Friday and
Sunday.
"Tai-nihones Editorial: B68S1. No. 142i
77: Mirht B6882.
Businesoi B6881, No.
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice In Lincoln.
MebraekT u "dV act of Congress. March . 1870. and at spec.al
te of o.t. provided for in section 110$. act of October .
1017. authorised January 20. H22.
IS year.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
Single Copy 6 cents
I1.2S semester
that hell week ia not a carnival of joy for the upper
classman. It assumes rather the aspects of an abli
gation to the freshman'8 education, without which the
neophyte is left lacking in a primary phase of fraternity
life. He is raised to fraternal membership by degrees,
not through the process of pledging.
When hell week interfers with scholastic work,
then it should be curtailed. But the majority of
freshmen do not suffer more than a momentary handi
cap through the lack of sleep, incurred during hell
week. More, hell week is not as bad as it is pictured.
West Point is an institution that is renowned for
the high type of men that it turns out. Yet these
men, during their first years, are reminded on every
turn of their shortcomings. Their persons and person
alities seem unimpaired by such alleged ordeals.
Oscar Norling .
Munro Keter
Gerald Griffin
Dorothy Nott
Pauline Bilon
Dean Hammond
W. Joyce Ayres
Blcbard F. Vette
Milton Jsclirew
.Editor-in-Chief
Managing Editor
-The Minnesota Daily.
, Asst. Managing Editor
Asst. Managing- Editor
"NEWS EDITOK3
Maurice W. Konkel
Paul Nelson
Lyman Casa
Florence Seward ,
" Business Manager
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS
William H. Kearna
J. Marshall Pitier .
Asst. Business Manager
Clrcalation manager
Circulation Manager
The usual Omaha newspaper understanding of
conditions on the University campus was revealed in
a startlingly clear manner in Sunday's Omaha World
Herald when it referred to the Delta Chi "sorority."
WHILE THE IRON IS HOT
Pan-Hellenic resolutions recommending that the
Men's Student Council abolish "Hell Week" and allow
each fraternity "a tlree day pre-initiation period it
wh'ch all night activities will be confined to the re
spective premises" are being discussed at the Univer
sity of Kansas. This measure is, no doubt, the result
of recent unfavorable publicity following the arresting
of several pledges who had been sent out at night on
probation stunts.
This movement at Kansas is t3'pical of. the senti
ment throughout the various universities regarding the
subject of fraternity probations. Practically all have
realized that the old plan, in which an entire week
was devoted the sending of pledges through a series
of ridiculous stunts, many of them public, is obselete.
Some, fearful of the public criticism they have received,
instantly favored the elimination of any form of pro
bation. Others studied the problem and modified the rules
to suit local situations. Such was -the action taken
last year by the Interfraternity Council. Similar wag
the attitude at Michigan, as pointed out in an editorial
reprinted in "In Other Columns." In these and many
other institutions it was conceeded that certain advan
tages were gained by such a probation period.
Fraternities at Nebraska have recently completed
their probations under the supervision of the Inter
fraternity Council. While no incidents were given
publicity, there were certain minor violations of the
Council rules. In a few instances it was clearly shown
that certain rules should be revised. The most glaring
of these was the time set by the Council for probation.
While these problems are in mind a study of the con
ditions should be made and modifications, if necessary,
added. It is hoped that the Council, having started ac
tion, will continue their investigations and devise as
appropriate a set of rules as possible. At its best,
probation attracts adverse criticism.
In Other Columns
-FRATERNITY EDUCATION
The letter which appeared in the Campus Com
. ment Column of the Daily, Tuesday, revives an inter
esting topic, one rhich has been given the earnest con
sideration of college fraternities. Shall hell week be
abolished, or shall it be allowed to continue?
The complaint is apparently not directed at hell
week alone, but also toward paddling and rough hous
ing in general. The concensus of opinion among fra
ternity men, men who have undergone the ordeais of
pledgeship and initiation, would seem to vindicate these
institutions go typical of college fraternities.
When a freshman is pledged, he is likely to assume
an exalted opinion of his qualifications and merit3. He
has been singled out, from a large student body, for
prospective membership in a fraternity. The members
of the fraternity like the young man; his pledging
bears this out. But will his. ego make a desirable mem
ber? Enter the paddle. This instrument for good (or
evil), chastens the spirit of the freshman. He hearkens
back to the days of his boyhood, those days which he
thought he had left behind. The punishment is not
physical; it is mental. The freshman is no longer a
fraternity pledge; he is a bad boy who is being punished
for his sirif. And need it be said that the freshman
Rocn regains his equilibrium through this homely means
of expressing dissatisfaction with his actions?
rraternities are not made up of individuals, or,
- V -'J v.-il!, cjjotinta. These personalities will not fit in
.h ny group. When a freshman is ffoing; through
! v tk, he receives consolation from the act that
I 'rmer.ters, as he pi the norrclprff n, hevs
'. sWiiiB or deai. In the years of h;s collpge
.;..'..(' v initiation, he becomes aware of the fact
Ten Nebraska farmers who have acquired a total
of $75,000 each by farming have been styled by the
University of Nebraska College of Agriculture, "Master
Farmers." We would like to suggest that a far more
appropriate title would have been "Supermen."
Michigan Daily.
Farmers Fair Committees Are Named
ComTnittees for the tenth annual
Farmer's Fair were selected Satur
day afternoon, according to Arthur
Haake, '28, manager of this year's
fair,' which will be held May 6.
Members of the committees are:
Following are the committees
Public
Hedges,
Relations
Cd. Marjone
Brinton,
NO LOSERS HERE
Nebraska and Missouri, habitual athletic rivals,
will meet tonight on the forensic platform. Fortupate
ly or unfortunately, as the case may be, there will be
no decision. Although the no-decision system of inter
collegiate debates has been used for several years by
Nebraska debaters, students still ask, "Who won?'
Nobody will win tonight. That fact should not
lessen interest in the debate. The question, that of
government interference into the rights of individuals
is both timely and interesting, characteristics which
have often been lacking in debate questions. In ac
cordance with the custom begun last year the audi
ence will indicate their judgment of the proposition
both before and after the debate. And in accordance
with the practice of several years standing, the audi
ence will be given a chance to share in the debate by
the open forum at the close of the formal discussion.
Debate is generally considered too heavy by the
average student. It is not necessarily so. It may be
most entertaining. Invariably it furnishes food for
thought. The subject which will be discussed tonight
is particularly significant when it is remembered that
the bulk of the University community will very shortly
have to play their share in the determination of the
policy -hich will be discussed this evening.
ARISTOCRATIC SNOBS
It is true that there are a number of persons who
believe themselves to be the measuring stick by which
the less fortunate may judge their failings. How gal
lantly one of these pauses to retrieve a dainty hand
kerchief dropped by a fair maiden. How easily he
fails to see the timid sn-ile of greeting extended him
by some classroom companion whose clothing is not of
the latest style.
Yes, here is the true snob. Here is the one who
has become a common sight in society since the begin
ning of that time way back in the Middle Ages when
Knights and Ladies, Tournaments and Gauntlets, were
common. Since the founding of aristocratic institu
tions he has appeared the common person affecting
superiority.
Perhaps snobbery is of value at a proper time and
in a proper place. But in a University founded and
supposedly composed of children of people, who, in a
democratic nation, govern this nation, such pretention
has the flavor of distinct poor taste.
Here at the University of Kansas are lessons to
be taught. The socially afraid must learn to under
stand that the mechanism of our society is as dependent
on their individual actions as it is on the efforts of
those who are so willing to display their pretensions.
But, the pretentious also, with their false sense of supe
riority, must learn that it is the great mass of common
persons which is the true foundation of a government
that is and ever must be, democratic.
University Daily Kansan.
A College Bookshelf
(By Intercollegiate Press)
If there was any doubt about the success of War
wick Deeping's first and second attempts to capture
an American audience (there was none so far as we
know, for the sale of Sorrell and Son, and Doomsday
have been phenomenal) that must have been shattered
when there arrived in this country his latest, Kitty.
Like Sorrell and Son, Kitty is another post-War
story, in fact it finds much of its material in the War
itself.
Alex St. George was a weakling, physically and
somewhat a weakling spiritually, who was cast into the
War against his wishes. Fortunately for him he was
loved by Kitty before he went, and against the wishes
of the stern Mrs. St. George, the couple were married.
Mrs St. George, the "good" woman type who in
really a devil in disguise, refused to notice the marriag,
because Kitty was a "shop girl."
Ihert" iC8,the Pl0t' A,eX is wound(,d n France,
and bought back to this country with a loss of all
memory and his legs paralysed. Mrs. St. George takes
nim home, and refuses admittance to Kitty.
nmMThe 8,t0,7. hinBeS arUnd how Ki"y Ived the
ThomT lh:mTher husband to their !.
a home which she had to make for him before ,hc
could bring him to it
some of the best reading we have done in manv a
day. Kitty is as good if not better than iTm
and Son or Doomsday.
Belc
low are contributed a few thn,,u,. i
Passages from the works of both mode rn and ZZ n
authors, printed merely for their own beauty of hoTht
or style; or their appropriates: 8
"The American has n ir,Hm... .
cusseres in an article
iy on American characterist:
in the Atluntic Month-
tics.
art I to love
"I would point out that to ri.ltif-
of v." Vu. "n aaareM before the Kiwanis dub
"FV.T linnrnirLii J ...
mav h thl j."r . f. a '""Wooded American
, "' . "'""nguisning feature of his ennm.
-urtuy not humil tv."Will!am T..- tm...
- "tin ivvuii I ni mi
ter is
"Essays on Russian Novelists."
"And tha kdhJI. t... .
ness thsn she had ever known, revealinc u.. .
tnat befort was in darkness, then flickered" grew fain
and went our. nr,. . , . .. 1 8iew iaint,
of Anna Karen n fleBenb'" th
seen
or? 58 ma8riC' i8 eV0Cati0" of e un
in forms persuasive niii,i ... ...
surnrisino- "". "miliar, and
o- -"rejii unraa.
"The law of true art, even according to the Greek
;11ribrWh-!-r is tbe fou
Lafcadio Ilearn. " " '"- M g'd fr0m
"With a cluster of colored petals swaying in the
breeze, one may at time bridge centuries or Lin til
carth."-Wil,iam Beebe in "he e S Yhe
ore."
in which ho drinks it."
"it u. .
.e:n 8o.much on of what
an k, aimospnere
nnstopher Morely.
, 3? fCr8Wl 'xpr ;!ence on our br'" d- although
!YlV,BTry Vresh dve"e, the ink ha.
tnnk indelibly to m&xk our character forever "
Charles P. Brook, "A Thrwd of English Koad." '
Gordon
Jt. Ch.
Advertlstnr
Harold Marcott. Ch. Mm. HuIWIc, How
ard Ratelkin. Melvln Todd. Walter E.
White, Kenneth Anderson. Martha Schnei
der, Lucille Bedell. Jt. Ch.. Mildred Unland,
Helen Swsnson, Adeline: Woods, Mary Rupp.
.Guide Book
Dwliht Anderson. Ch. Clifford Webster,
Spencer Raymond. Masil Wendt, Don Bell,
Florence Millett, Helen Rosno, Mabel Dore
mus, Helen Rowlan.
Public! tr
Klvin Frollk, Ch. Marjorle Brinton, Jt.
Ch. Don Facka, Merlin Matzke. Boyd Von
Sefrgren, Jason Smith, Alice Forsling, Al-
lene Gilchrist. Helen Shepnernaon, JjOis
Newman, Irene Noyes. Ophelia Pearson.
Parade Executive
Robin Spence, Ch. Itha Anderson, Jt. Ch
Harold Fulseher, Fred Grau, Everett Dur
isch, P. H. Howe.
Parade Materials
Henrv Rearhell. Ch. Windsor Uehlintr,
Stanley Peterson, Clifford Stumbach, Harold
1 rumble, Edwin Vance.
Parade Entertainment
Ray Magnuaon, Ch. Howard Hardy, Har
lan Bollman.
Committee A
Paul Carlson, Ch. Margaret Staton, Jt.
Ch. A. E. Anderson, Henry Peterson, Julia
Troop, Maxine Way. Anna Johnson.
Committee B
Fred fendeen. Ch. Helen Suchy, Jt. Ch.
Bruce Anderson, Wayne Bond, Margaret
West, Fern Warren, Dorothy Kollemeyn.
Committee C
Richard Poch, Ch. Thelma Young, Jt. Ch.
Ernest Anderson, Orville Olmsted, Elizabeth
Yantii, Vera Fenater.
Committee D
Llnyd Stromberk, Ch. Margaret Holling,
Jt. Ch. Clyde Batie, Perrie Meredith, Kath
leen eeary, Mabel Johnson, Mary Krula.
Committee E
John Gardner. Ch. Winnie Powell, Jt.
Ch. Roy Benedict, Arthur Mauch, Dorctta
Koester, Almeda Jose.
Committee F
Law-ence Schocnleber. Ch. Grace Rosen
thal, jt. Ch. Joe Styskal, Leonard Schoen
leber. Harold Nichols. Irene McKay, Vir
ginia Hassler, Florence Leggett.
Committee G
Ephraim Danileon, Ch. Marie Dougherty,
Jt. Ch. Mnrion Croig, Horace Traulsen,
Manrica Alkins, A. Marie Fisher, Maybelle
Snoke.
Committee H
Raymond Wilson. Ch. Mae Balrd. Jt. Ch.
Frank Chase, Oscar Ramey, Edna Furman,
Beryl McClure.
Committee I
Clrtence Larue, Ch. Grace Giel, Jr. Ch.
Clark Gollehon, Evertt Kreisenger, May
Betts, Evelyn Green, Mary Woods.
Committee J
Harold Fulseher. Ch. Alice Holbrook. Jt.
Ch. Latrell Haskins, Rolland Owens, Ber
nice DeVore, Vera Willis, Sloniger.
Committee K
Edward Janicke, Ch. Dorothy Lawlor, Jt.
Ch.t Car! Jacobs. Clen Preston, Edith Eat
brook, Loretta Schneider, Francis Wilson.
Committee L
Claude Roe, Ch. Nettie Bailey, Jt. Ch.
Wayne Howard. Glen Rader, Gladys Hutch
inson. Evelyn Ball, Helen Shawen.
Committee M
Ralph Elliott, Ch. Marvin Applegate, Jt.
Ch. Howard Johnson, Earl Bowen, Esther
Boyer, Freda Bedee. Erma Shelburn.
Committee N
Page Hall, Ch. Cora Laverty. Jt. Ch.
Lloyd Ingersoll, George Johnston, Jean
--tr. Berdine Becker, Vesta Adams.
Committee O
hverett Beachier, Ch. Julia Hunter, Jt.
Ch. Calmer Jones, Donald Williams, Char
lotte Joyce, Fern Benson, Olga Andreas.
Committee P
Vern Jones. Ch. Fressa Haley, Jt. Ch.
Lester Larson, Alfred Christensen, Edna
Backer, Hazel Benson, Harriet Gage.
Committee Q
James Tilly, Ch. Marjorie Thompson, Jt.
Ch. Ordner Lundquist, Wm. Gross, Naomi
Gummere, Laura Ingwersen, Irma Bieber-stein.
Committee R
Glen Johnson, Ch. Erma Maul. Jt. Ch.
Kermit Erickson. Caleb Jorgenson. Stella
Jesperson, Mabel Bignell, Edna Johnson.
Committee S
Eaton Clarke. Ch. Emma Bietel. Jt. Ch.
Clifford Jorgenscn. Geo. McGinnis, Mar
jorie Zickefoose, Ruth Carson, Maxine Johnson.
Committee T
Cecil Sherfey, Ch. Irene 'Welsh. Jt. Ch.
Raymond Whitchair. Louis Kline, Neola
Holbrook, Virginia Hasnler, Ruthalee Hollo-
way, r.ilwin ilarkley. '
Exhibits Executive Committee
Clarence Uartlett. Ch. Dorothy Norris. Jt.
Ch. W. Eugene White. Glen Hedlund. Roy
Johnston, Corrine Mack Prang.
Agronomy
Nelson Jodnn. Ch. Wesley Antes. Robert
Jacobson. Alvin Roberts.
Animal Husbandry and Meats
Wm. Hnyder. Ch. Russell Batie. Henry
Hartman, Howard Means.
Agricultural Engineering
Wayne Kinney. Ch. Garland Lindbergh.
Edward ProchaHka, Leland Richards.
Animal Pathology
Wm. Heuermann, Ch. Richard Cole. Frank
Sampson, Frank Phillips.
Chemistry
Herman Miller. Ch. Martin Kelly. Garvin
Muirhead.
Dairy
Irwin Hutchinson. Ch. Clyde Batie. Elvin
Kevelt, John itcimers, Erwin Schreim.
Entomology
Wm. Wel.er. Ch. Charles Brett. Ira
Flannagan, Wa!'er Guhl.
Horticulture
Ted Hile, Ch. Bert Hayes, Rolland Swan-
eon.
Rural Economics
Wendell Huff. Ch. Peai-ley Wyatt. J. II.
Spangler.
Vocational Education
Arthur Maniuardt. Cb. Willard Dobbins.
Roland Sandy.
Poultry
Dlehl Khri.hard. Ch. Harry Fullbrook.
Bernard llalslead, RiHicoe Hill.
Soils
Wm. Buchanan, Ch. Richard CoveU, John
Oatermillrr, George Schmidt.
Plant Pathology
Karl Koch. Ch. Ralph Hawk. Peter Horn
by, Harold Foster.
Livestock Parade
Victor Sanders. Ch. Ralph Simmons.
Charles Slevenann.
HOME ECONOMICS EXHIBITS
Child Care
Kathryn Meyer, t'h. Esther McDaniela,
Frances West, Florence Counce Andrews,
Lillian Stanley, Georgia Coulter, Grace
Thompson. t
Clothing
Emma Hngeman, Ch. Lela Mae Randall,
Elizabeth Griest, Jeanette Purbaugh, Dor
othy Weathers, Virginia Corhett, Lucille
Nordholm, Kmma Johnson, Gladys Wood
ward, Ella Ilonnelson, Marguerite Chrysler,
Institutional Management
Margaret Klrhert, Ch. Sarah Spealman,
Henrietta Flerk, Haxel Mead, Mary Schaaff,
Doris Iiraddock, Mis McGahey, Minnie
loom, Agnes Richling.
Design
Ruth Levcrton, Ch. Marjorie Schultz,
Aiiuiea Johnson, opal rowell, Wljle Kay
Viola Jasa, Marjorie Joyce, Carol Swan'
holm.
Textiles
Florence Young, Ch. Julia Allam, ' Janice
Abbott, Marjorie Towle, Edith Woodworth,
Elizabeth Williams.
Food and Dietetic
Ruth Morrison, Helen McKee, Jessie Bald
win, Marian Rose, Eva Stotts, Ruth White,
Ruth Lite, Lois Sperry.
Home Furnishings
Beth Wilson. Ch. Ipha Lutz, Jeannette
Rruce Mary Mills, Evelyn Lunner, Esther
Thompson, Ruth Van der Smissen, Lesta
Walt.
PACEANT
Mildred Hawley. Ch. Hazel Mead, Esther
Herman, Mary Field, Helen Duff, Eleanor
Maker, Violet Vallery, Ellen Lindstrom,
neuie naiiaDaugn, Hazel Denton, Ruth
Meierl enry.
Pageant Costumes
1 1 f r i. in i . . .
maxine vnurcnill. ln. Anna r ora, Marie
nirks, Helen Christenson, Izola Corrlngton,
Eleanor Borrcson, Regina McDermott, Alma
Bcniicung, jane l.arvey.
Materials
Ormond Benedict, Ch. Irene Roseborough,
vi. in. lienry Handera, Marion Uuacken
bush, Raymond Jlxon, Howard Jackaon,
Vernon Peterson: Eula Martin. Walter Mi.
ers, Clyde Christensen, Joseph Pipal, Louise
urnong, uoromy Mohrman, Aiding Munseil,
Purchasing
Don Rell, Ch. Evelyn Mansfield. Jt. Ch.
Paul White.
Follies
Dorothy McCoy, Ch. Marion Low Geor
gia Wilcor, Helen Metheny, Mabel i .hnson,
Merdelle Rucka-, Kathleen Troup. (Jedr.a
lirown, Genevieve Brehm.
Snorpheum
Morrill Mills, Ch. Arthur Danlelaon. Roh.
rt DN!il,,!.i)o. I'ur Vol niitt.iii. L.mm.4
Judge, Berkley "ells. Gerace Hed .es. Elmer
Huren, Clarence Clover, James Metzger,
Notices
Wednesday, February 22
Gamma Alpha Chi ,
Gamma Alpha Chi meeting Wednesday at
5 o'clock in Advertising office.
Tuesday, February 21
Axis Club
Axis Club will entertain the Girls Com
mercial Club at the City Y. W. C. A. at 6
o'clock. ...
Tassels Meeting
There will be Tassel meeting Tuesday
night at 7 o'clock at Ellen Smith Hall.
Pershing Rifle
A second tryout will be held Tuesday,
February 21, and Thursday, February 23,
at regular meeting room. All candidates
are to be on time, with uniforms.
George LeDioyt, Bruce Snyder.
Concessions
Addison Miller, Ch. Esther Numcnburger,
Jt. Ch. Warren Rice, Marion Allen, Joe
WatBon, John Holman, Clarence Indra, Al
vin Kivett, Charles Sanders, Daryl Easley,
Mervln Eighmy, Alice Loper. Aileen Strubbe.
Marguerite Lofink, Melva Dickinson, Vioal
Hall. Clara Lirson, Evelyn Smith, Ruth
Smith.
Barbecue
John Posposil. Ch. Lois Davles, Jt. Ch.
Duane Ayres, Dean Brandt, Herman Ball,
Lloyd Bradburg, Hazel McComb, Fae Balrd,
Eunice Mauer. Clara Schoettgetr, Myrtle
Greenland, Juanlta McComb, Minnie Fisher,
Lillian Collins, Drool hy Dubacek.
Coffee
Mary TheoMald. Ch. Agnes Mattison. Mrs.
Graham, Gertrude Reinke, Roberta Reinke,
Roberta Chittenden, Niesje Lakeman, Paul
Brandt, John Munn, Edith Woodruff, Min
erva Worthman, Helen Chapman, Gertrude
Chittenden, Gertrude Clegg, George Giles.
Doughnuts
Winifred Yates, Ch. Dorothy Marquardt,
Emma Nicholson, Elsie Vostrez, Catherine
Frahm, Carol Beaty, Gretshyne Cook, Irma
Moss, Bethyne Fonda, Myrtle Nelson.
Lunch Committee
James Rooney, Ch. Helen Suchy, Jt. Ch.
Fred Grau, Elsie Pucelik, Clarice Moffitt.
Hamburger
Mabel Hazlitt, Ch. Marie Luebs, Dorothy
Follmer, Edith Guthrie, Naomi Gummere,
Mina Renlnmi.i Tmnvantt Tallot Alma TTr.
richs, irma cline. Ruth Burr. Li la Miller, vouncrer man. havinir iust learned his
Grace BenJamFlorencPerry. , science as a fact and with the en-,
George Powell. Ch. Ralph Corliss. David tVmninam nf fVia -ripnnrivte. not onlv
Tu. r- . T-i --- ' '
tinued. "A scientific man thinks
only of observation and experiment
as settling a dispute, and is averse
to any argument which does not in
volve the marshalling of facts."
Doctor Wolcott expressed the
opinion that dogmatism in science is
more general among younger men
than among the older men. Thei
Construction
Cecil Means, Ch. Howard Adam. Fred
Brandhurst, Sherman Westlin, Frank Dally,
Dean Eckhoff. Wesley Walts, Bill Egan,
Andrew Evans, Herald Gilbert, Carol Grif
fith, Elder Splittgerber.
Danes
Marion Stone, Ch. Henry Hlld. Ed Tyner,
Steven Stearns, Steen Castle, Bernard
Barnes.
Electricians
Louis Taggart. Ch. Merle Hayhurst,
Hansel Phipps, Phyllis Teal.
Barker
Wm. Lancaster, Ch. C. Means, Harold
Frahm, A. L. Long, Jay Pierson, Wm. Gal
loway. Fun and Frolic
Harvey Jacobson, Ch. Edwin Roddy.
Police
Lynn Cox, Ch. Morris Craig, Roscoe Bur
chell, Edgar Klemme, Frank Demarest,
Claude Rowley, Stanley Danekas.
Movies
Emil Glaser, Ch. Russell Jacobsen, George
Johnston, Wendell Neeland.
Tickets
James Rooney, Ch. Howard McClean,
Guy McReynolds, Glen Coble, Lawrence
Means, Arnold Oehlrich, Alton Moran, Fred
Sundeen, Edwin Soil.
Transportation
John Roth, Ch. James Jensen, Thomas
Hayes, Paul Mattox.
Signs
Howard Alexander, Ch. Wm. Manning,
John Rosse. Ross Munn, Austin Nelson,
Russell Taine, Evelyn Jolinson, Zelma Wal
dron, Bernice Worrell, Marguerite Aura,
Dorothy Downing, Stella Fujan, Margaret
Hallstrom, Hildegarde Baumgartner, Luda
Munseil, Mabel Neale.
Mannilig
Combination Lunches
Minced Ham Sandwich
Shrimp Salad
Sundae, any Flavor
AND MANY OTHER
COMBINATIONS.
30c
DELICIOUS
THICK Malted Milk and
Other Fountain Delicacies
At
PILLERS'
WE DELIVER
'Science Develops
Tolerance Wolcott
(Continued from Page 1)
way that makes it impossible for, him
to change it as soon as facts are
presented which make such a change
desirable.
"Right there is where a great
many people don't understand a
scientific man at all," he asserted.
"The public doesn't understand his
1 A. : A I T . A 1 H J 1 1 1
doubts a statement made by a per-
son, he has no thought of doubting i&
that person's honesty. He simply
doubts his observations, yet many
people are hurt by hi3 expression of
doubt.
"A scientific man is averse to set
tling anything by argument, by in
stinct and by experience," he con-
believes in his science but is mili
tant in his defense of it. As a man
lives and sees changes constantly
take place in any science, he becomes
aha AlAwnnr VMAVis AAtiaaWof-iirA I
and less aggressive.
No Sympathy With Dogmatism
"A man can't be in a science, par
ticularly in zoology, without having
seen so many radical changes and
so many beliefs fundamentally mod
ified that a dogmatic attitude is only
possible, it seems to me, if the indi
vidual be' naturally dogmatic and
possess a. relatively narrow outlook
on the field," he asserted. "I have
no sympathy with dogmatism in
science at all."
One reason for the existent feel
ing that science is becoming dog
matic, in the opinion of Doctor Wol
cott, is that when scientists have
been asked for opinions and gave
qualified answers, there immediately
arose a doubt in the mind of the
16th A O
B-4423
other persons as to the soundness of
their opinions. Scientists soon learn
ed this and began to keep their
doubts to themselves. Consequentiv
when they gave an unqualified opin'
ion on some subject which was short!
ly afterward refuted by additional
evidence, their previous statements
appeared to have been dogmatic.
Doctor Wolcott illustrated thi
point by citing the instance of onl
student who wished to drop the
course in zoology because he thought
he was being asked to believe in ev
olution. When it was explained to"
him that he was not asked to believe
in evolution, but only to study it in
order that he might make an intelli
gent decision and consider it fairly"
he replied that he had come into the
course to learn zoology, that ooloe.
ists made so many qualified state
ments that it was impossible to learn
facts, and that what he wanted to
know was facts not theory.
WIGGANS ADDRESSES
OMAHA GROUP FRIDAY
"Fruit growing possibilities in
southeast Nebraska" was the the sub
ject of an address given by C. c
Wiggans, chairman of the depart
ment of horticulture of the Nebraska
agricultural college, before the agri
culture committee of the Omaha
Chamber of Commerce Friday noon
February 17. '
Around the ankle
there is a difference
Nunn-Bush
JlnHe -Fashioned Oxfords
Ellingers
12th & P
GET THOSE
DELICIOUS MALTED MILKS
AND LUNCHES
AT
Owl Pharmacy
S. E. Cor. 14 P.
Phono BIOS
Today at Rector's
Tuesday Feb. 21
Meat Loaf Tostette
Pineapple and Banana Salad
Any 5c drink
25c
Also S Other Special
REWARD
We don't know how to write an
advertisement to draw student trade
so we are going: to give
$5.00 in Mdse.
To the student who writes the best
ad for un to appear in thtrf paper.
Drop in and ask about tha rules of
tha contest. Jt closes March 1
CHESS
HEADQUARTERS
C. J. SHIRK, PROP.
112 So. 11 St.
Evening Handkerchiefs
One of the smartest of evening 'accessories is the
very large handkerchief that is sometimes of crepe and
very often of chiffon. It is considered smart to tie one
end around one's wrst or to draw to through one's wrist
or to draw it through one's braclet it is a decidedly
chic and sophisticated accessory and must be carried as
such. The fashion smart miss will choose many of these
to match her evening gowns.
$1.95 and $2.25
Handkerchiefs street floor.
12
REASONS' WHY
Greenedge History
Paper
is better
Heavier Weight
Can Use Both Sides
Smooth Writing
Surface
Ink Does Not Spread
Round Corners
Will Not Fold
Green Edges
Will Not Soil
Drilled Holes
Do Not Tear So Easy
and
, It's Boxed
LATSCH
BROTHERS
5tafttnre
til. O St.
Ban
'Why
Automobiles
at College?
By DEAN MAX McCONN "OF LEHIGH
More than forty colleges have banned student
automobiles. Other college administrations are
considering similar action. They advance seem
ingly adequate reasons but are these reasons
really logical? If automobiles can be banned, why
not other things 7 Are the professional supervisors -of
our morals and habits already at work in our
Colleges?
The Lord's Day Alliance, by Clarence Darrow
A Chance for a White Collar, by Ferner Nuhn
Can Hoover Be Ditched Again? by Frank Kent
the Ex-Soldier a Herof by Leslie Barber
Pay Envelopes and Panics, by Sec'y James J. Davis
And many other articles are to be found in
PLAIN TALK
For March
On Sale at all good Newsstands
T