TUESDAY, NOVEiMHER 27, I92H TWO' THE DAILY NEBRASKAN. The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRA8KA Under direction of the Student Publication Boar TWENTY. EIGHTH YEAR Published Tuesday. Wednesday, Thunday, Friday, an Sunu'ay mornlnga during the academlo year. Editorial Office Unlverilty Hall 4. Dullness Off Ice University Hall 4A. Office Hours Editorial Staff, 3:00 to 6:00 except Friday and Sunday. Business Staff) afternoon! except Friday and Sunday. Telephonej Editorial: B-M91, No. 12 Buelness: SMI. No. 77; Night B-6SS2. Entered as second-class matter at the postofflce In Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of Congress, March 3, 1171, nd at special rate of postage provided for In seotlon 1103. act of October 3, 1917, authorized January .20, 1922. SUBSCRIPTION RATE U a year Single Copy 6 cents 11 M a semester VV. Joyce Ayree vdck Elliott cuff F. Sandahl MONRO KEZER EDITOFWN-ChKF MANAGING EDITORS Dean Hammond Maurice W. Konkol NEW! EDITORS Lyman Case Paul Nelson Douglas Tlmrnermart ICtltTINT NEWS EDITORS Vernon Ketrlng William T. McCleery Betty Thornton CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Clrff F. Sandahl " Hunt William McCleery Robert Lalng Eugene Robb MILTON McGREW BUSINESS MANAGER ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER William Kearna Marahall Pltasr Richard Rlcketta CONVERSE, EE VERSE ET AL Conversation Is reputed to be one of the lost arts of too modern age. Acquaintance with the average collegian might Boon destroy the illusion, korne educators hare even gone so far as to claim i hat one of the chief weaknesses of students in I heir group life, is their tendency to "talk them selves out of school" In continued and prolonged series of aimleHS conversations. However much the student talks among his friends, his public appearances are becoming rarer and rarer. Most students tend even to forget that there Id Bach a tnlug as organiieU speaking In the university's Intercollegiate debating activities. Tonight Nebraska debaters meet representatives from the University of Sydney. Three well-trained representatives of Cornhuskerdora will take the plat form in a thought-word-delivery contest with a trio of youths from the other side of the world. Greatest Interest falls on the Australian de baters. The attractive appearance here last year of the Cambridge debaters was in marked contrast t general conceptions of debate as a dlcdln-the-wool series of uninteresting talks. Reports are that Australians are just as likeable, just as breezy, Just as entertaining, as were the Englishmen last year. Effect of English debating in the United States has been most remarkable. It has tended to bring i. bating from a dry formalism to a living person alisra. Debate has become Interesting. Students, with a sparkling of curiosity of the development of o'her peoples, can enjoy an Insight Into America's r.nglish-speaking neighbors at the Coliseum this ven'.ag. PROFESSOR OR PEDANT? Not a few professors are possessed of the dis ease known as the "school habit" mentioned In a re cent opinion in The Dally Nebraskan with ref-er.-iice to students alone. It Is a serious charge to make but it must be admitted that some of Ne braska's Intelligencers are merely pedants and not professors at all. The concern is not with any particular indl- idual of the faculty, nor is It with any department. It i.s with any of those instructors who stand before the class spouting the same stream which they have emitted since they were accepted on the fac ulty, using the same outlines which they used at this time, and holding to the direct statements of the text. The Instructor who does not allow the class to benefit from his own intelligence is unfair. When h". repeals the words of the text he is smothering any interest which the student may have had when he. read the text. The fresh, the crisp, and the new never fail to demand attention. Students who have any excuse for being en toiled in a university are able to read the text, l ick out the central idea, and be prepared to ap preciate any clarification which the professor may be able to accomplish through his own experience. A real foundation in a subject could be built for the fudsnt by the instructor who will credit the stu nt with some degree of intelligence. The true professor will draw out the originality in the student. He will encourage him. He feels that thre is some hope. The pedant will dis courage originality and kill Interest. He falls to f any hope. THE RAOGER: One does not have to send a laundry rase home to let his parents know he is Mill In school. The delinquency slips take care of t'nat. college-boy pi: y. It is plain thievery, and should be punished a : . mil. Among ;?ollc-,'e people, like all other classes, tlici" ore. u few who have a very peculiar sense of :' ! t and wrong. They are the. kind of people who begin by stealing clothes and sneaking behind the ticket-taker, and often end their career by breaking rocks out on South Fourteenth street. To expose this type of obnoxious person would take only a little united effort on the part of the student body. After exposure, the legal sentence of from three months to two years doing free work for the state would not be more than they deserve. L. C. The campus dumbbell said yeiterday that after all the talk about, school spirit, he is beginning to fear the place la haunted. Sorority girls can cease Jumping when the phone rings. The sponsors have been selected. The Blue Shirts and Yellow Jackets took an active interest in the election of the "Sweetheart" of Nebraska. Roth factions will probably claim t lie credit. OTHER STUDENTS SAY A STUDENT LOOKS AT PUBLIC AFFAIRS By David Fellman UNBEATEN SYDNEY Nebraska students will have a chance in the near future to show just how much interest they take in things of intellectual value. The student body as a whole Is very generous with its enthus iasm, when an athletic contest la concerned. Ilut just what will their reaction be in regard to the international debate tonight In the Coliseum? The debating team of the University of Ne braska Is a very important factor in advertising the University over the country and abroad. When Cambridge debaters competed here last year there was a fair sized crowd to greet them. The coming debate should draw even a larger crowd as the students and the general public should know what to expect. The University of Sydney" has won all their debates In this country to date. This should give some Idea as to the caliber of the team. A victory for Nebraska would mean a great deal. The boys on the team will do all in their power to bring victory to the school and it is up to the students to stand behind them and give them the support they deserve. W. C. A contest among sophomores to see who can raise the longest beard Is being staged at the Uni- entity of Washington. This should decrease class tardiness considerably. With the addition of the course In aeronautics t the university curriculum, students will soon be heard to complain about the noise of the air traffic. Tbe days are beginning to be numbered. Only seventeen more class day until Christmas. MULES ARE MULES George V, emperor of nearly a hair a billion subjects, is a very sick man, being confined with a Blight cold which developed into a congestion of the lungs, compli cated by pleurisy. The whole world i.s anxlorsly awaiting word from the sick room. The last re ports Indicate that he Is breathing easier. The health of the head of Hn empire that stretches from one corner of the globe to the other is h very important matter to the world. Old General Feng Yu-hsiang, the so-called Christian general, in u speech before several thousand students, expressed in no uncer tain terms his opinion of Chinese students who study abroad. An exponent of the "good old days," this stem war lord dresses In stern simplicity, but, curiously enough, travels about In an expen sive touring car. "Returned stu dents," he fumed, "think more of expensive suits, polished shoes, MieH-rim glasses, slicked hair and free love than they do of with standing the hardships and incon veniences being suffered by China In her struggles for a place among the nations." Shades of Cato! By Catherine Elizabeth Haneon Well, the Army game is over, And the mule is in his clover. Stubborn mule! He thinks he's clever, But I ask you, did you ever See a mule that didn't kick? Well, the score was three to zero. And the team was playing "hero," And the crowd was yelling crazy. (Should have heard 'em, Uazzy Daisy!) When the mule began to kick. Kickin' this way, kirkiu' that. way. And he brayed, how he did bray! "What in blazes?" aftked McDuff. Then the HusKers cried, "Enough!" When the mule began to kick. Well, we didn't get the "bacon," For the mule would not be taken. But, If we're not mistaken, When the Acs start aggravatin", EVERY MAN WILE DO HIS STUFF! Now that election is over, statis ticians ara hnnllv pneaecd with post-mortem examinations of what might have happened. Mark Sulli van, republican, figures it out that If Herbert Hoover had received just 275.UU0 additional votes, prop-.Hctt-lhiitaH ho wnnlH have received the unanimous vote of the electoral college. In the same way, Professor Frank G. Dicken- i son of the university or Illinois i shows that Governor Smith lacked i . . . . i only oi4.niu votes, property placed, to be elected president. This number of votes is only about one percent of the total, yet It would have given Smith 268 elec toral votes, enough to give him the office. The explanation of this situation will he found in examining that I peculiar institution known as the electoral college, worked out Dy the venerable framers of the Con stitution to prevent "excessive de mocracy." of which they were more apprehensive than Mabel Walker Willebrandt, th Joan of Arc of the recent campaign, was of Governor Smith. As the vote of the majority of the state goes, so goes the entire electoral vote of the state. For example, if 2.onn,nnn votes are cast for Can didal A in the state of New York, and 2.000.001 for Candidate R, then all 4S electoral votes of the state go to I). OTHER EDITORS SAY Thus. Professor Dickenson ex plains the real meaning of the Hoover "landslide" In the follow ing way: "Take ten voters. The Tuwincnd portrait photnjrophcr-Ad BRUISED AND BATTERED That gallant band of Cornhuskers, who waged an unsuccessful battle on the plains of West Point la it Saturday afternoon aza.ln.st Uncle Sam's West Pointers, Is returning to Lincoln bruised and bat-: tered In body, and depressed In spirit. They had ' set their hopes high and the failure of realization was a crushing disappointment. Not only they, but , vheir thousands of adherents throughout this west ern country, felt keenly the loss of a thrilling foot ball game, in which both teams battled so desper-1 ately, so courageously, and so evenly throughout i a greater portion of the struggle. Under the circumstances, It is difficult to find consolation, even in the thought that this was Just j a football game which quickly passes Into history, to be forgotten along with thousands of other lnci-1 dents. It was more than a footbnll game for the , Cornhuskers. It was the apex of their ambitions! to crown a glorious season with a valid and Impos-; ing claim for consideration as national champions, j It was the fervent hope of the folks back home that j the boys would win, but failing, there Is the duty of soothing that keen disappointment which was tbelrs. In the crowded we .'..- of the football season, the young men who aspire to places on the team take bumps, which result in painful hurts, smilingly. They endure them because they love the game and because they shower devotion upon the institution i whose colors they wear. They restrict themaelves ! to careful training, to arduous grind, to hard work, to abstinence from the social pleasures and festlv-! itles which ilisraeirrl.e college circles. They are I entitled to a word of cheer for the fight which thoy j made against a resourceful and equally Inspired j enemy. Let's see that they get it. j Lincoln Mar, THE PLACE TO EAT RECTOR'S PHARMACY 13th A P St. n,i miii v,itoj fnr Hoover, the second for Smith and so on to the ninth man, who votes lor Hoover. The manner in which the tenth liinn now votes decides the land slide. That is what happened In the election. Had the tenth man followed the examples of the other even-numbered men he would have voted for Smith, But he did not. so Hoover Is our next president." Law and order are taking their usual back seat In Chicago. The great bustling metropolis of the Middle West celebrated last Sat urday the setting off of the ninety fifth bomb for the year 192S. "Ver ily, the cry of Sodom and Gomor rah Is great, and, verily, their sin is exceedingly grievous." John A. Swanson, who defeated State's Attorney Robert E. Crowe, of Loeb and Leopold fame, for the office, will assume the position of prosecutor for Cook county on De cember 3. He has a man's size job on his hands. Judging from the activity and statements of the new administration, reforms will h tnit Inter on an Imoresslve scale. Rut we've heard that before. rtnntnunla emereed from the con trol of a powerful family of dic tators that dommatea tne goveru intit nt thnt pnuntrv since the foundation of the kingdom In 1881, with the forced resignation oi Prime Minister Vintlla Bratiano on November 12. He was suc ceeded by the leader or the Ma tional Peasant party. Dr. Juliu Manlu, who was caled upon to furnl a Tl P TV Oft blnet. Immediately upon his assumption of the office, he abolished the traditional nra tlonn rnnnorshin of nosts. tele graphs, telephones, and press. Sstd the new Prime Minister: "Ours is the triumph of Constitutionalism over Despotism. We shall immed iately call for the dissolution of Parliament and hold new. honest elections. . . . We shall guarantee mn fiili.m full nolillcal liberty and establish complete liberty of the press, we snail aiscuss sta bilization of the currency Bnd ne gotiate a foreign loan. We shall revise the present oduoxious anii foreign mining law passed by Prime MinUter Jon Bratiano In 1924, as well as other laws which him maile Rumania a most un popular country abroad." This new- regime, and its new policy, seems tn Vinlrl out a ereat deal of horje for a kingdom that has been tor mented with internal dissensions for years. l y shall I do with Call B3367 CLEANEBS AND UfERS that m 0 i ORIENTAL BEAUTY tjj IN ATTRACTIVE NOVELTIES, PLEAS ING GIFTS OF EVERY SORT . . . REASONABLE PRICES NIPPON ART GOODS CO. 128 N. 12th DREAMERS It is said that it takes all kinds of people to make this world. So long as we are happy we should have few regrets. That Is the purpose of our educational institutions to give us a good sense of values so that we can ultimately decide upon the type of person that we care to know. Of all of the groups that one could name, the dreamer seems to have the most varied and, per haps, the most interesting experiences. In his own mind be builds nations which he shall some day conquer; he plans his life years In advance; he dreams and he finds his happiness In working for those dreams. He lives. But his life is not all one of carefree happiness. For when the man of dreams Is sad then he Is truly sad. If he Is hurt be "covers with a laugh"; and If he wins, then be smiles. This Is Just one of the many kinds of people that go to make up this world. Daily Trojan. Notwithstanding the Oh fTff m ETHIOPIAN IN THE WOODPILE Guests at a certain sorority house party last week were astounded and angered when after the party they found that some light-fingered guests had carried off their hats, gloves, scarfs and even an overcoat. This very vexing custom has cost university students several hundreds of dollars and no end of embarrassment during the lust few years. It has gone past the stage of mischief. It is no longer AMBITION Ambition for a college education prompted a Texas youth to ride a bicycle 22 miles dally to school I for six years, during which time he was a straight "A" student. Undoubtedly, this youth knows whither he Is bound aud undoubtedly he will reach his goal. He is one of the few who realize why and how be is in college and his steadfast efforts are to be commended. Most of us accept a university training as a mutter of course; we know neither why nor how it is that we are enrolled in an lnst'tutlon such as the University of Kansas. To most of us it is simply the thing to do; we live gracefully and easily, ex pending the least amount of effort possible. Unlike the Texas boy only a few of us cherish a desire that is strong to call forth our greatest efforts. As university men and women are we to be commended? Daily Katitan, 1 ROFS You can retain your eligibility or your good scholas tic record more easily when you feel wide awake and energetic. There's plenty of roughage and bran to assure this in EAT IT WITH WHOLE MILK foredded BennettsFlugstad Whea IN THIS CORNER Folks, we have B&Fs latest atrocity the pearl gray and sand tan Campus Crushers --These Hats have taken the University by storm Wherever you go you will find them just like new Fords and All-American football prospects. More than any other piece of clothing-they have received your endorsement, Nebras ka Menwe bow, deeply. IF WINTER COMES How are you, gentle reader, going to keep warm? What will you do for frost-bite, wet feet, numbness, fallen arches, chills and fever? Consult B&F, kind sir, for ready advice, wise counsel, etc., etc. We suggest Over coats, long and straight, single-breasted in blues and ox ford gray s--v e r y, very smooth. The scarfs too, are red hot; featuring a wonder ful selection of bright wool plaids and figured silks. And Gloves done in the popular new slip-on mode look pretty fair. And Wool Hose from one buck onward, Ties at one and a half. Sweaters for almost nothing, Pajamas practically given away, Un dies at a terrific sacrifice. "BOB" OUR CLOTHES 'utj&j-jzjxtsjza uA.a.Aiiiaj m jttimU Are rotten we know it Plenty customers have told us so. But we have to do something for a living. Across From the Campus BILL FLUGSTAD Officiating: 8