THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Under direction of the Student Publication Board TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR Published Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday, Friday, and Sunday mornintra during the academic year. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4 A. Office Hours Editorial Staff. 8:00 to 6:00 except Friday and Sunday. Business Staff: afternoons except Friday and Sunday. Telephones Editorial: B-e891, No. 142; Business: B-$8S1, No. 77 i Niltht B-682. Entered as second-clasa matter at the postoffice In Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of Congress, March 8, 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for In section 1108, act of October 8, 1917. authorized January 20. 1922. 12 a year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy 6 eenta $1.25 a semester Oscar Norling Munro Keser ., Gerald Griffin . Dorothy Nott Pauline Bilon Dean Hammond W. Joyce Ayres Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor ..Asst. Managing Editor ..Asst. Managing Editor ftEWS EDITORS Maurice W. Konkel Paul Nelson ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Lyman Cass Richard F. Vette Milton McGrew William H. Reams J. Marshall Pitzer , Business Manager ...Asst. Business Manager Circulation Manager Circulation Manager THE "STRAW VOTE" POLL A "straw vote" poll in which students will have an oportunity to indicate their presidential candidate choices will be taken next Wednesday morning at all nine o'clock classes. The vote is being sponsored by The Daily Nebraskan. Information concerning the can didates is being supplied through the courtesy of the Department of Political Science and the Independent magazine. Too many students are indifferent to everything except that directly related to campus life. The attitude of indifference thus developed during their collegiate career continues when they enter the business world. And such terms as civic responsibility and citizenship merely recall vague ideas of some speech made at the club or noticed in the headlines of the daily paper. Such an attitude is deplorable. Since education is primarily a training for life, it is important that the student should keep in contact with daily happenings and the problems under discussion. And the problem now holding the center of attention is the discussion concerning possible candidates for the next presidency. Since many students are really interested but feel that they cannot take time to read the many articles in magazines and newspapers on this topic, The Daily Nebraskan is making an effort to outline briefly the high points of the discussion by presenting short fea ture articles on each of the prominent candidates. "My lord, the castors on your buffet squeak when it is moved." "Ho, knave, haste and bring me the castor oil." Sou'wester. SOMETHING ELSE IS ABOLISHED! University Night is now only a title to be tucked away with the class society pins. For after bravely striving to regain a place in campus affairs this year, it wilted under faculty disapproval and the University Y. M. C. A. has finally decided to do away with the program entirely. The action followed the report of the University Night committee that it was impossible to submit a program that would meet the approval of both the fartlty committee and the student body. The faculty desired a talent show such as that now presented an nually by the Kosmet Klub while the students preferred a burlesque on campus personalities. While the faculty committee admitted that there was nothing particularly bad about the skits, they felt that there was nothing elevating or worthwhile about them. After a few at tempts to obtain other skits the undergraduate com mittee decided that it would be impossible to reconcile the two opinions as to what a University Night should be. The omission of University Night will be a disap pointment to the student body. It was the one night of the year that students could enjoy wisecracks on others and themselves. It was the only entertainment that smacked of campus life in the past when the en rollment 3 small enough that everyone knew prac tically everyone else. But the action of the Y. M. C. A. in ridding itself of the program was a wise one. How they ever came to sponsor such an entertainment no one knows. For the staging of a good burlesque does not usually coin cide with the general policies of such an organization. But since it was a good money maker and no criticism was voiced against the idea, the "Y" shrugged it3 shoulders and continued the programs until last year wb.,n the storm of disapproval was so great that the Night as formerly staged was abolished. Now the at tempt to stage a University Night that would merit the sanction of the "Y" has ended in a dismal failure. With the recent action the organization has rid itself of a blierht that broutrht nothing (eliminating the finan cial side) but adverse criticism. Whether a University Night sponsored by some other organization might be permitted is another ques tion. It would certainly be welcomed by the students. A faculty committee, with censorship based upon the standards of a clean burlesque rather than an appro priate Y. M. C. A. entertainment, would probably have supervision over the skits. Responsibility for the stag ing of the acts would rest entirely upon those partici pating. But it is doubtful whether any organization would care to sponsor the program and whether uni versity authorities would allow the reinstatement of such a University Night The Cynic Says: Perhaps if the time on University parties were to be extended until midnight there wouldn't be so :nuch interest in this parking situation. P' tly Nebraskan reader are cordially Is lted to contri bute arrirles to tbte enigma. This peper, bow rer, ansowee no responsibility for th sentiment expreeeed herein, and re Hitu the right to exclude any libelous or andesirable matter. A limit of sis hundred wores has fceea placed oa ail eon-tritwt'.ona. To the Editor: V As chairman of the University Nifht Committee 1 ie-.A t'r.-;t I ehould make a statement explaining the i: ion cf ti-.ut committee in dropping its plant for Uni- At a Tr-:-z lait Friday afternoon the committee ' -i rjfil'y tha possibility of continuing with '. I ron-ers of opinion of the member t'.e conception of the faculty com mittee and the conception of the University Night com mittee as to what University Night should be were so very divergent that it would be impossible to stage a show which would please both the faculty committee and the student body. The faculty committee maintained that it should be of the nature of the Kosmet Klub Revue of last Thanksgiving, that is, a talent show. The University Night committee thought that it should be a burlesque on campus personalities, but it recognized the fact that obscene and vulgar jokes, stfch as were some of those of former programs, should be eliminated, and it had eliminated what in its opinion was objectionable material. There were to be absolutely no drinking scenes or obscene remarks such as had appeared in programs of previous years. The University Night committee felt that it had arranged a program devoid of dirt and smut. In fact members of the faculty committee, ad mitted that there was nothing particularly bad or evil in the skits, but the fact that they possessed nothing of j a high and good nature was sufficient reason for their being stricken out. The faculty committee held that the entire tenor of the acts was too low. They required that no mention be made of smoking or drinking by uni versity students and that campus gossip and scandal be completely eliminated. That is, they desired a talent show of a nature similar to the Kosmet Klub Revue. The University Night committee felt that by post poning the affair it could arrange a show that would meet with the approval of the faculty committee. But the opinion of the committee was that even though such a show could be staged it would not then meet Notices Senator Curtis Has Outside Chance (Continued from Page 1) attorney of Shawnee County. Pro hibition, at this time, was three years old in Kansas and far from a success. Curtis went at its enforcement with I the same energy that had brought with the approval of the student body, for it believed him under the wire first in more that the student body expected and desired a burlesque thai one county sweepstakes. He Wednesday, March 14 Grenn finhlina Cireen Gol-lins will meet Wednesday at 7 o'clock at the Beta Theta Pi house. Farmers' Fair All chairmen and members of executive committees for Farmers' Fair will hold a meeting in the Home Economics building, Room 218, at 6 o'clock Wednesday eve ning. Gamma Lambda Meeting Meeting and dinnc-i' ut Alpha chapter of Gamma Lambda, Grand Hotel, Wednesday, March 14, 6 o'clock. Phi Tn Theta Phi Tau Theta, Methodist men's religious fraternity, will have a meeting at 8 o'clock Wednesday. March 14, at the Wesley Foun dation, 1417 R street. All Methodist men are invited. There will be entertainment and refreshments. Thursday, March 15 Biz Ad Men All men in the College of Business Ad ministration are invited to a smoker Thurs day. March 15, at 7 o'clock in the evening in the Y. M. C. A. room of the Temple building. show. So in view of the fact that the conceptions of the two committees as to what type of show should be presented were so divergent that there was no hope of reconciling them the University Night committee decided to discontinue its plans for University Night. WILBUR MEAD, Chairman, University Night Committee. In Other Columns WOMAN AND THE WEED One symbol of her emancipation woman has agreed voluntarily to cast away. No longer need weary traveling men vacate their habitat before a feminine influx, or harassed deans tear their hair at co-eds who refuse to obey non-smoking regulations; not, that is, if the vote of the National Convention of Sororities means anything. A curious twist to the usual older-younger genera tion quarrel reveals itself here. The present upper- classmen apparently form the party of the right in the had been elected to his office at the age of twenty-four, and he was re elected at the age of twenty-six. There followed four years of suc cessful practice as a lawyer. In 1892, the same year that Henry Cab ot Lodge published his seventh book on government and took his seat for the first time in the Senate, Charles Curtis was elected to the Lower House of Congress. Different Mode of Living The career which began at this point is in striking contrast to the career which had had the Kaw Res ervation, the paddock, the hack stand, and the county attorney's off ice as its background. For one thing, the new career had none of the sud den, startling changes which were characteristic of the old. Curtis was elected to the House of Representa tives in 1892, and thereafter contin- controversy on smoking; and they, in no uncertain lied to be reelected to the House of terms, reprimanded the alumnae whose visits to college are signalled by clouds of smoke hovering around the sorority houses. The conservative Juniors and Seniors complained, too, that the alumnae give incoming stu dents a false impression, and lead the young to over indulgence in the vice f tobacco. They cited evidence to show that college women are losing their health be cause of smoking. No doubt they gave graphic details of floors strewn with cigarette butts, of smoking bouts fought with grim determination, of gloomy morning afters from nicotine orgies. The alumnae had no come back; they meekly agreed to this drastic prohibition. Drastic, that is, if the reactionary upperclassmen can enforce it. One wonders if they themselves really expect to. Harvard Crimson. He "Please.'' She "No !" "Oh, pretty please." "No!" "Please, just this once." "I said NO!!" "Aw, please, ma; all the other barefooted." Purdue Exponent. kids are going ILLUSIONS AND PARADOXES Norman Angell, the British journalist, whose title to fame was established by the publication of his sweep ing of modern militarism on the eve of the World War, has now directed his keen and incisive powers to an analysis of some of the more fundamental faults of democracy which make possible some manifestations as armed conflict between democratic peoples There is some significance, perhaps, in the fact that the people of a great democracy who fought so strenuously to save the world from militarism and now plan to seize the septer of the seas from their former ally, the British, should be pointedly told that the volte of the people is the voice of satan. There is suggestion in these words. But with such notable examples as fur nished by Chicago and Oklahoma, Mr. Angell's criti cisms of the present workings of the democratic system may be better appreciated in reference to the American Ritnation whon he says: "Political failure has not so far mattered much because the captain of industry has been so successful. But the magnificent industrial structure itself, despite the great capacity of the busi ness man, may be put in jeopardy, unless the defects of an outgrown political system can be corrected." In the wider field of world politics much interert must be attached to the lecturer's criticism of democ racy when he points out that the nations which made the war and peace, imperialist and democratic France, for instance, is a highly educated nation, and that Ger many was ruled by the most educated class in the world. Athens and the Pelopyncsian War come readily to mind. Pericles ruled on the Bcma by the art of per suasion, oocrates lectured in the Academy; Phidias worked in marble and Aeschylus was still writing his immortal tragedies for the Attic stage. Yet at the point when genius seemed on the threshold of the greatest triumph of the social group, the Helenic world was hurled into an abyss of ruin by the insane policies of its demogogues and warriors. In reality Mr. Angell is dealing with paradoxes. He finds in the jury system, the most discredited feature of an antiquated legal system, a suggestion for his remedy of the present difficulties besetting democracy. Nevertheless, there is much merit in the suggestion. It provides for the solution of fundamental issues oh the basis of appeal to professional merit, deliberating under expert guidance, insteod of submitting compli cated issues to the mob inflamed by newspaper banners and partisan propaganda. Daily Texan. led. I asked her to marry me, And she said, "Go see Dad." She knew that I knew that her Dad was dead. She knew that I knew what kind of a life he had She knew that I knew what she meant When she said, "Go see Dad." Purdue Exponent. '31 "I didn't do my homework." SO---"Not prepared." '29 ''The books were out on home use." '28 "The available materiel was not sufficiently valuable to undertsko a comprehensive report." Cor nell Daily Sun. Representatives with unfailing regu larity for fourteen years, from 1892 to 1906. For another thing, there were now no gallops down the track and no neck-and-neck finishes under the lash. Curtis had landed a place on the important Ways and Means Committee of the House; but after twelve years of plugging, his name still stood eleventh from the top of the august body. In 1907, after a hiatus of fifteen years, thpre came another turn of fortune. The unexpected happened. A Senator in good health and sound mentality actually resigned from his office. He was a Kansas Senator and Curtis was elected to succeed him. Now Near Top With one short lapse of two years from 1913 to 1915 Curtis has stayed in the Senate ever since he en tered it:gradually bettering his com mittee posts and advancing toward seniority. He is now firmly estab lished near the top of several com mittees which control the expendi ture of public money. He is chair man of the committe on the Senate's rules. Three years ago his party honored him by electing him to suc ceed the vastly different Lodge as Republican leader in the Senate. Yet in all this time there has been no important law enacted which bears his name. There has been no great adventure in which he suddenly flashed before the public. He has advanced to power and responsibility through the successful repetition of an orthodox routine. And between the colorful career of ol' Cap Curtis' boy and the conventional existence of Charles Curtis, Senator, there is a gulf as if these two were different persons. The fact of the matter probably is that public life in our own times is poorly organized for great adventure and much better organized for reg ularity. Adventure has made a few successful men in politics, but it has unmade many more. Men like Cur- Typewriters For Rent All standard makes special rate to stu dents for long term. Used machines portable typewriters monthly payments. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 1232 O St. B-2157 Still the Same Delicious Lunches And Service Unsurpassed nebraska students At Owl Pharmacy jl!it largest sellingl quality poncul inthwoxld 17 K-clr degrees 3 kopyind At all AeaXcrt Buy a doren Superlative in quality, the worIdiamou I7E V ;nus olvo boat cerv1r eatl longest wear. Plain ecu!, per doc $1.60 Rubber ftuU. Dec doe. lUO Atew Peadl C. 2T5 Fifta Art.,ILT. MalvrtofVNIQWTHml-i CulartJ Ptmnh la 11 colore 1-OOper doe. tis picturesque, daring, headlong, vivid come to Washington and are swallowed by the system. Hitherto bold, they cover up, play safe, risk nothing, watch their chances, and ad vances, nnd advance by inches. Sticks With Regular There is no surer road to party eminence than regularity, and Curtis is nothing if not regular. He was so regular on the occasion of that important test of regularity, the great schism of 1912, that he not on ly stood by Taft though he came from the insurgent West but con fidently predicted that Taft was the only man who could win and that he would be triumphantly reelected. The same regularity has been evident in other important crises in his party's history. Curtis does not make policies; he unveils them. It is his business to sound out the opposition, plan a cam paign, arrange a compromise if one is necessary, and muster the votes when the skies are stormy. Does Little Speaking Curtis seldom takes the floor in Congress, and then chiefly to make a point of order, remind his col leagues that they have strayed from the matter theoretically under dis cussion, call for a vote, or move an adjournment. His legislative efforts, if they can be called legislative ef forts, are chiefly of a domestic na ture. In the last session of Congress he introduced seventy-six bills. Sixty- nine of them were pension bills. Five were bills to settle claims One was a bill to provide an Indian memorial atj Medicine Lodge, Kansas. And" Picnic Lunches that appeal to all at Reasonable Prices THE IDYL HOUR Students Eating Place Call B-1694 136 No. 12 pi?! Where have you been all your life? Europe ? For $193.50 you can sail and return in the modernized CARMAMA and CARONIA to Plymouth, Havre, and London, or in the ci-devant three-class ships SCYTHIA and LA CO XI A to Liverpool . . . gateway to picturesque England ... Cathedrals, the Lakes, the Dukerics, Ox ford, Cambridge, London... Recognizing the justifiable popularity of tourist travel among those willing toecon omize on the ocean to have more money to invest in memories of Europe ... we have taken two new 20,000 tonners the SCYTHIA and LACONIA from first class service and made them Cabin and Tourist Third to Liverpool ... staterooms sold up to a few weeks ago at second cabin rates now available at Tourist Third . . . one of the world's best steamship bargains. Dancing to the syncopation of a college orchestra no feet have yet resisted . . . long wide decks on which you can do your 'mile' ... or work up your back -hand at deck tennis ... or start that casual conversation which becomes a tete-a-tete the third day out ... And, of course, that well considered food ... that cheerful attendance you are traveling Cunard. CUNARD LINE "S46 Ne. MichJfaa Ave. Chlcae." 1840 1928 EIGHTY EICHT Yaudtfl OF SEIVICB J the other a bill to create the most innocuous of all farm boards. Nevertheless, despite these facts, Curtis is a power in the Senate and a great man in his own enviorn ment. His is usually the shoulder that makes the wheel turn round. His is usually the conciliation which finds a basis for agreement. He is (Continued on Page 3.) DAVIS COFFEE SHOP 108 No. 13 Day & Nite Double Deck Sandwiches Home Made Pastry Unexcelled Coffee ALSO DAVIS COFFEE SHOP (Formerly Long's) Students Headquarters 7 A. M. 7 P. M. Lunches Fountain Service Smokers Supplies $rtiiafeiifs 0" O o Take the shortest way, and the fastest ships. Sail from Vancouver on one of our 3 great White Empresses. Large, well aired cabins. Plenty of deck space. Good food. Second Class fares begin at $185. First and third class also. Only 10 days to Yokohama . . . then Kobe, Nagasaki, Shang hai, Hong Kong, Manila. Ask your steamship agent about it, or write to R. S. Elworthy, Steamship general asent, 71 E. Jack son Blvd., Chicaro, HI., or any local Steamship asent. For freicht apply to J. A. MacCi-egor, Diat. Freight agent, 430 Merchants Bank Bldf., Indianapolis, Ind. Canadian Pacific World's Greatest Travel System Carry Canadian Pacific Exwu Travellers Cheque! Good the World Over jit BARNEY GOOGLE Announces The B&F Lodge OF SOO 00.000 STRONG IB COO0 STMISrtt tt OTHCK4ISC y -v i res z r UAIIE&AKCO! MEMBERSHIP CARD After months and months of untiring effort we are all "horsefeathers" to announce that we have been granted a charter for the B&F Lodge of this great, secret and mysterious order. Membership is now open to all Silly Goats at the University of Nebraska who bring a copy of this ad to the B&F Lodge. Our initiation "horse play" is approved by the Pan-Hellenic Council. Get your membership card today. CHAPTER NEWS Appears daily in the Lincoln Journal and on the Bulletin Board at the B&F Lodge, 1127 R Street. AND FOR The Co-eds Fannie Bell Finch Announces The B&F Lodge OF ' 1 'X T W M eX etf0J rrzt 20.000,000 STRONO IS C00D STMW1K- rt. oTMeipc roet an Jy The B&F following will soon be over 20,000,000 strong. Every day more and more Nebraska men enter our portals to learn the B&F secrets of correct University clothing. For spring the Billy Goats are grabbing up suits, top coats, small-shaped hats, ties, shirts, crew neck sweaters, j'olf socks, knickers and what-wear-you by B&F. "BOB" "BILL" BEMJETT & FLDGSTAD Across From Campus K W 1 X 0