I THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Ststlon A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFF10IAT, PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Under direction of tha Student Publication Board TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR Published Tuasdsy, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Bunday mornings durlnu the academle year. Editorial Offlca University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4A. Office Hour Editorial Btaff. S:00 to :00 except Friday and Bunday. Business Staff I afternoon! except Friday and Bundiy, Telephone! Editorial : B-68B1, No, 14Zj Business! B-6891, No. 77! Night B-8S82. Entered a second-class matter at the pustoffic in Lincoln, Nebranka, under act of Congress, March , 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for in section 110S, act of October 8, 1917, authorised January iO. 1922. 2 a year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Sincie Copy 6 cents Oncer Norllng Munro Keier .., Gerald Griffin . Dorothy Nott share of the" recognition which should be theirs. The coach and his work are continually in the public eye, and every detail of accomplishment is broadcast far and wide. The football team has a physical appeal; it is simple; the same can hardly be said for the sphere in which the scholar moves. There is competition, to be sure, that keeps the football coach abreast of the newest developments; but there is an intellectual urge which keeps every real scholar not only abreast but in the forefront of the accomplishments in his field. There is no doubt but what football teams go on the field inspired with the task before them, but it is an inspiration much akin to mob psychology and animal impulse, and has no coun terpart in the inspiration of the classroom. If conditions at Cornell are really as bad as pre sented, which is scarcely credible, then affairs have YTHttnr in-Chief ICtttiicu a buiij biomj inuccu aim lb 19 nigH Vlllie mat ..Managing Editor revulsion was lonncommg. ii mere are no teacners Notices Dramatic Club Dramatic Club meeting tonight at 7:30 o'clock. A. I. E. E. Meeting A. I. E. K. meeting Thursday, March 22, E. E. room 104. Student talka will be given. Studio Assignments $1.25 a semester ..Asst. Managing M " . .-.; t, Pnrrmll i'o f f,mi.ol t A Aist. Managing E.aitor "i-"-, .o ui niutm.au universities, and should look to its internal condition Pauline Bilon Dean Hammond NEWS EDITORS W. Joyca Ayres ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Clifford Sandahl Lyman Cass Maurice w. Konkel rather than criticize the whole process of education. :"' - Faults there doubtless are everywhere but to allege in a sweeping, statement that the athletic instructors of our great universities are the outstanding inspira tional teachers at present employed in education is either a fallacy or a condemnation of our athletic em phasis and it is doubtful if it is the latter. The Michigan Daily. Every man believes in freedom of speech until p.-u.-j F Vetta .Business Manager Mil?n McGrew T....... Asst. Business Manager William H Kwrni ZZ1.-..-. Circulation Manager J"M haU Titr ZZZ:. Circulation Manager WHY NOT? oi:. Ai.or TTnll" a the name for the new dental and English building being erected added someone ele starts to criticize his work or accomplish- anTther step to the tendency to identify the Univor- menf .-Michigan Daily. sity's buildings by names of men who have given the best of their services over a period of time. NOTEBOOKS VS. TEXTBOOKS Few students today know anything of former . Chancellor Andrews. In the course of time, more will The mistake of assuming that all students come become acquainted with his share in the upbuilding of to college for the purpose of learning is seldom made the University through this recognition. any longer. On the contrary, an ever increasing body There are still echoes on the campus of the inspira- of unsuccessful educators and disillusioned parents tion left by Dr. Bessey. The building dedicated to his would have it that nobody comes to college to learn, name makes a fitting monument to his services to the which is an equally erroneous conclusion. For many University. The gifts of former regent Morrill have kinds of men attend college with as many different an added significance now that they are displayed in ideals of achievement. Some wish to be scholars and the building bearing his name which stands as a tribute some wish to be "college men". The trouble is that all to his multifold endeavors on behalf of the University, are treated almost alike, as if unwilling to learn. Another has recently withdrawn from the pressing One type of man comes to college with the ideal executive duties of the University to devote his re- 0f the campus giant in his head. He wants to specialize maining years to research in his chosen field. Samuel in athletics and activities. There is no' use to bewail Avery, for eightqen years Chancellor of the University tyiis attitude; the fault, if there is a fault, lies 'in the of Nebraska, has given perhaps more of himself on background. The parental woofers are themselves to behalf of the University than any now connected with biame And this type is beginning to dominate most the institution. colleges, which become, in consequence, conglomerates A chemist of no little promise, he abandoned trie 0f overspecialized activities. .,!;(. rarrvina- on of his studies for an extended period There pre, on the other hand, the "scholars". They while he served the University to the best of his ability. are not necessarily intellectual giants or grinds. They Today he has returned to the chemical laboratory to merely want college to be college and not a hectic work on some of the problems which have long at- piace to heel oneself through, to the glorious goal of tracted his interest. It would seem most fitting if Chem- B charm-laden watch-chain and an expansive D across istry Hall could be renamed "Avery Hall" to place the chest- his name wheTe he can be remembered as one of those he professors, however, present their courses, most sincere Nebraskans who gave willingly, exhaust- perhaps necessarily, as if their students were all the ively for the institution at the sacrifice of self-interest, "college man" type. They throw textbooks at their classes, with quizzes and hour exams to insure hitting The Cynic Say: ne mark. Sometimes they do and sometimes they do In the spring a young man's fancy lightly turns not, but they always antagonize. Those who want to to what the sorority girls have been thinking aoout be really taught quite naturally protest, all winter. I'm so tired 1 Four exams tomorrow .... Last week's assignments must get in, Gotta get that degree! Such tantalizing, dreamy-eyed weather! The bunch just went on a picnic But I had work to do. , I'm so tired! In Other Columns If students of both kinds are treated as if they have the lower attitude, the indifferent will take the'ir degrees minima cum labore, while the eager will receive theirs, even though magna cum laude, with a sense of frustration. The ideal solution gives everyone the opportunity to drink from the unstinted fountainhead. Let courses be individualized instead of mechanized. Let professors color their subjects with their own personalities. Let education become a matter of notebooks rather than textbooks. For notebooks are personal, are records of inyrcssions made on the individual mind, while text books are alien things, are pills to be swallowed whole with a wry face. And then, if some fail to profit from their opportunity, let them be placed in classes to gether and, if necessary, be bombarded with textbooks and quizzes. The Dartmouth. ' Following is a list of the men re quested to report at Townsends this week in uniforms: Leon W. Ashton, Albert J. Bartos, Casper M. Benson, Ira Brinkerhoff, Virgil Byers, Harry E. Cook, Mac Gordon Cress, Ernest L. Dane, Ad dison D. Davis, D. Darrel DeFord, A. L. Frolik, Delbert C. Leffler, Ken neth K. Mallette, E. E. Matschullat, Wm. Matschullat, Parker Mathews, Keith Miller. Lumir It. Otradovsky, Harold A. Robertson, Richard D. Reed, Jas. W. Rooney, Marion W. Schewe, William J. Simik, J. Donald Spiker, Louis V. Smetana, Gordon T. Steiner, Arthur R. Sweet, Wm. L. Stuckey, Ilo Trive ly, William A. Van Wie, Stuart Campbell, Roy Hilton, William Steph ens. 'Mrs. True Homemaker of Radio Fame Is Sponsored By Home Ec Department For the past two years the home makers of Nebraska who have radios in their homes have had the oppor tunity of listening to "Mrs. True Homemaker's Half Hour" every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday af ternoons from 9:30 until 10 o'clock. This program is sponsored by the department of home economics and the University Extension Service. "Mrs. True Homemaker' is Mrs. J. P. Colbert, a graduate of the depart ment of home economics of the Uni versity of Nebraska and a homemak er in Lincoln. Recipe and Menus Every Monday and Wednesday morning Mrs. True Homemaker gives recipes and menus to her radio au diences. These are practical recipes that every housewife can use. After the recipes are given over the radio they are mimeographed and distrib' uted to people who request them. Since last September Mrs. True Homemaker has received 2661 letters asking for recipes and menus. More requests ar coming in every day, no only from residents of Nebraska but also from Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Minnesota, Florida, Tennes see, California, New York, Oregon, Idaho, and Canada. But recipes are not the only things that Mrs. True gives her listeners. Manv homemakers are benefited by the suggestions which she gives on diet and its relation to health, home furnishinor and decoration, books, games, and parties, as well as other hints which are of intense interest and of immense value to housewives. endorsed the required milita'ryT I comDulsorv drill, o.i vred tl. , -- - u many can,. organizations endorsed u "P1 Three Years Agc Just three years ago the TJniveJ check for 1024.84. What hapS to their pherk thl. r,an.o "PPmeji i J veil J Practice for "Tut Tut" . teenth annual Kosmet Kluh nrJf ' tion began. "v In an attempt to improve the En lish of th avemo-n iij. . "fr all seniors at Syracuse uruveSh must nass a enmnrohono;... , . cAaiiiiuawtviii lis! "Had a puncture, my friend?" "No sir, I'm just changing the air in these tires. The other lot is worn out." Crestiad. GREEK LETTER BOARDING CLUBS PROMINENCE In a recent challenging editorial on the whole pro cess of education, The Cornell Daily Sun made the as sertion that college coaches are of a much higher grade comparatively than their compatriots who teach in the Thomas Arkle Clark recently stated that if a man classroom. "In athletics we find coaches who are out- put pledge pins on the first men who came along he standing in their respective fields," the editorial de- would make as good a selection of pledges as are ob clares, "fa contrast to this we have the instructing tained with our present complicated system of lushing, staff of the university, made up of many individual Rushing is bad enough at its best and whether scholars, some experts in research, a few noted as Dean Clark is right or not, as far as quality is con teachers, and a handful who Inspire. Rarely are their cerned it seems that some of our local chapters are assistants, that is the instructors, entirely competent." competing to secure the largest membership. Disregarding all phases of the question but the Fraternity association implies a close relationship side presented, and looking charitably on the viewpoint gained through careful selection of members and con of the Sun, it appears as though there might be a grain BCj11tious pledge training. That there is lack of solid or two of truth in the assertion. One would not have to arity jn those iarp.e numbers is evidenced by the many investigate very deeply, however, to find several fal- persons who hand in their pledge pins, flunk out, trans lates in the case presented errors which materially fer to other schools or do not return to school to be alter the situation. initiated and by disharmony in the active chapters. In the first place the assumption that our men of It is temptation to chapters carrying out extensive letters, teaching in colleges and universities, do not building programs to pledge as many persona as can compare in excellence with their brothers who teach contribute to the coffers of the organization, but this toe-holds and tackles is not well founded. It would be boarding club idea is not a true fraternity ideal. Some hard to find an average university campus upon which natjonal organizations have thought enough of the m- the men teaching are not of comparable eminence with portance of small chapters to limit the size of their the men coaching. An example of this fact is not hard local gro.ups. to find, for on the Michigan campus balancing Michi- The ideal situation would be for every person gan's Yost and Meiman there are Michigan's Wenley, desiring fraternity membership to be affiliated and VanTyne, Cross, Hobbs, Hayden, Cooley, Bates, Sun- affiliated into that organization into which he fits best. derland, Aigler, and a host of others. The approach to the ideal is not through bigger chap It is perfectly true that these scholars do not re- ters but rather through better chapters. The fraternity ceive the wide public acclaim that accompanies every movement is experiencing a steady growth but can action of their athletic contemporaries, and the very only do so as long as existing chapters pave the way nature of their profession cuts them off from a large for future organizations. The Ohio State Lantern REV. ERCK DISCUSSES SIGNIFICANCE OF LENT (Continued from Page 1) added Rev. Erck. Lent Last Six Weeki Lent is that period of six weeks preceding Easter, beginning on Ash Wednesday and culminating on Good Friday, during which early Christians gave especial consideration to that portion of the scripture which deals with the passions of the Lord, he ex plained. A continuous passion his tory is found in the intervening gos pels, Mathew, Mavk, Luke, and St. John and none is complete in itself. "Sections of this passion history are read in the services of the churches. Incidents or personalities of this history form the topic for sermons. The point that is stressed above all is that Jesus Christ was our substitute in vicarious atone ment," declared the pastor. What is known as Moundy Thusr- day was explained by Rev. Erck. On this evening, which precedes Good Friday, the institution of the Lord's Supper of Holy Communion is com-i memorated. "At this time, Jesus, according to the Jewish custom, cele brated the feast of the Passover with his disciples. "After His last celebration of the Passover with his disciples, Jesus in stituted Holy Communion and de clared that Christians should -at all times celebrate this in his memory," continued the pastor. "He likewise tells us that in His Holy Communion J he gives us his body and blood, the price of our redemption, as a seal and pledge of the full forgiveness of our sins." Student la Sinner That the observance of Lent is not only a source of strengthening a Christian's faith but also a stimulus for conservation of self to the Lord and Savior, "who has loved us unto death," was another point empha sized by Rev. Erck. In showing the relation or signi ficance of Lent to the student, the clergyman added: "The student like all other human beings is a sinner. He needs Christ not only as a model but as a Savior just like other men. He should have proper consideration of the Lenten message because it is a source through which his faith is strengthened, his love towards Christ renewed, and his character strength ened so as to lead a Christ life." As a final charge to Christians, St. Faul in his second book to the Corin itians 5,15, has the following to say, which Rev. Erck especially empha sized: "He died for all, that they which live should not henceforth live untd themselves but unto Him which died for them and rose again." DOCTOR WELCH DELIVERS TALK (Continued from Paz 1) side of it. And he fancies he likes some other kind of work because he knows too little of the unfavorable and relatively much of the better sides." Linking this answer with the med ical profession, the doctor stated that the glamour that accompanies this sort of endeavor often wins over many adherents and new members. "For example, there is the name 'Doctor' which goes with the profes sion. Many are to be led on merely on that account. And then there may be the good automobile and the per sonal appearance, all of which tends to attract more and more young men into the work. It Attract Me?" :But thai question is whether the medical profession attracts me or not," he continued. "Am I to be hoodwinked by this glamour or false view? My answer to this is for every candidate to make contact in every possible way early in his student career with as many phases of medi cal work as he can." Secondly, the question of chances present in the medical profession for service to God and man was pro pounded by Dr. Welch. Replying to this questirn, he mentioned several methods by which doctors can give service to humanity in an appreciable degree such as work tn foreign fields as well as that done here in the United States. "The field of research especially offers exceptional orpurt unities," as- se.-ted the doctor. "There are so many diseases for which cures have not been found that it is obvious that anyone would be doing wonder ful service to man and his Creator should he be able to secure some of these cares. It challenges every man and woman daily in every phase of the great profession." "After the bread and butter de- gree of earning power in the yrofes sion is reached, align yourself with some phase of community uplift such as the church, the schools, and civic betterment and you will find your status in the community taking care of itself," he advised. A short informal discussion follow ed the lecture during which the stu dents were given the opportunity to ask the doctor questions concerning the profession of medicine. Dr. Welch is a graduate of the University of Nebraska and the Northwestern Medical school at Chi cago. He also hes studied aoroad having attended the University of Vienna, University of Berlin, and numerous clinics in Japan, India, Siam, Philippine Islands, Jiava, as well as Europe. Next week "The Ministry" will be presented by Dr. Clifton H. Walcott, pastor o. the First Bapti-rt church. This will be the fifth lecture of the series. Dean Holmes of Harvard Gives Views on Present System of Education Cambridge, Mass. (New Student Service) "Education suffers in American from confusion of pur poses," H. W. Holmes, dean of the Harvard graduate school of educa tion, told a Crimson reporter, in an other diagnosis of the country's edu cational ills. "Justified a hundred-fold in our faith in schooling as an instrument of democracy," he said, "we have cared more for the spread of education than for its fitness for specific ends, "The root of the difficulty lies in the relationship between the secon dary schools and the colleges. Our students come to college 'prepared' but with hardly the beginings of an education. Contrasted with the stu dents in English and Continental sec ondary schools, thsy msst be rated, ge for age, markedly inferior. There is no thoroughness or consist- necy in- our school system. Credititia la Diaeaae "Our schools suffer from that di sease that keeps them permanently enfeebled 'credititis,' lie itch for credits, points, units, and semester hours. We are in the midst of a generation of students and teachers obsessed with the notion that organ- Social Calendar Friday, March 23 Corncobs Dinner Dance, Hotel Lincoln. Omega Beta Pi, House Party. Xi Psi Phi House Party. Delta Chi Spring Party. Saturday, March 24 Varsity Dance, Agricultural Col lege Activities building. Alpha Thcta Chi House party. Cosmopolitan Club initiation, Tern pie 203. Zeta Beta Tau house dance. ization in education means more than anything else." "The commanding problem of lib eral education in America is the problem of unifying secondary edu cation and collegiate education with out denying the essential characters and modern dcvelo'pment of either, according to Dean Holmes. "To find a remedy for the existing situation is a difficult problem," he continued. "The system of concen tration and distribution, now used here at Harvard, with general exam Bigger and Better Hamburgers 5c Pies Chili Soup Sandwiches Drinks Clva Ua a Trial Hamburger Inn 317 No. 11th. V, Block South oi Unl. Library 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 Stationer 1118 O St. Thlrd Cabin Created for young people, professional and educational people. Jolly entertainment. Moonlight dances. Every comfort, even to afternoon tea. Round trip at low at $184.50. Collegiate All ExpenaeTonraaalow m $385 for 32 dayt. 15 ereat Unert j from Montreal and Quebec Lawrence water-boulevard . . ; 2 daya Ieai of open teal Atk for detail a at oot . . tbHh a taau R. S. Elworthjr, Staamahlp Genual Astnt, 71 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, 111., or mny local ataain&hlp agent, t or Freijht apply to G. F. Nichols, District Freifht A.ent, 72S W. O. W. Bide Omaha, Nebr." World's Croat est Travel Syttcm inations at the final stages of prog ress in the subjec'ts of concentration might be tried in the preparatoiy schools, and prove the solution to the problem. There must be, however cooperation with the college, and one college must take the lead in start ing a new system." Two Years Ago The Mu Sigmas now the Theta Xi, and the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternities were winners of the inter-fraternity shoot and were each awarded skins. 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