ti;ksda . ri:iuu.AKV 211 m. 1 Wo Y: DAILY MWKASKAN Daily Nebraskan St.ition A, Lincoln, Nfhr.tska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Entered as secondcl.'iss matter at the postoftice r Lincoln, Nehr.isk.i, . uncle i' .net ot congress, M.ncll S. 1379 and ,it speci.il r.ite ot post.icie provided for in section 11113. ,'ict ol October 3. 1017. authorised J.muaiv 20. 1922. Published Tuisd.iy, Wednesday, Thurs day, Fiid.iy and Sunday mcinmgs durmq the academic ve,-ir thirty. SECOND vear 13 a e.ir ni.nled $1.75 semester mailed SLBSCRIFTICN RATE Under direction of the Student Pub - I It cl I ' Ull OUil' U Editori.il Otvice University H.-.ll 4. j Business Ottice University H.lll Telephones D.i v ; BtSt'91: NiQht. Be562 cr B3333 (Journal) ask for ,t-br.- k.m editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Ed.tor-ln-Chiet .Phil B'Ovm . MANAGING EDITORS Dick Mcr,in Lynn Leon.nd NEWS EDITORS George Murphy Lamcine Bble Violet Cioss Sports Editor Burton Marvin Society Editor Carolyn Van Anda Woman's Editor Margaret Thiele BUSINESS STAFF Business M.maQer . . . . Chalmer s Grah un ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Btinard Jennings George Holyoke Frank Musgrave Prtnidiny: an Outlet For fxpression. fJMlK answer to the objections raised by a number of students to the inclusion of many faculty members in the casts of the vari ous productions of the I niversity 'layers may be found, at least i.-irtly, in the effort of the Pra natie club to present original lays entirely dramatized and di ected by students. The arguments directed agaiii.-t he University Players have been o the et feet that students in the hamatics department get little or hi opportunity to receive- practical raining'. It has been as.-cited that he Playeis should provide this ahoratory of training for dramatic Indents and that when faculty n embers are given all the impor- ant par ts. the students interests ire neglected. The Nebraskan pointed out in mswer to these objections that the "niversity Players serve a further uipose than that of being a train- ng laboratory for dramatic stu- lents. The Players' productions lave established a reputation for nerit which has resulted in filling i campus need for worthwhile dra- natic entertainment. This merit ras come rather largely because of he fact that experienced actors iave played the leading; parts In he productions. Public support of he Players might easily be sacri- iced by turning- the proeiuctions ver entirely to students who are borough amateurs. ""HE Dramatic club productions should help in filling the need it by dramatic students for real xpe-rience in acting. It is true :hat the actors may miss the feel- mg of playing to large audiences. Tlx ma y also consider that these ola v; wiuien as mey are oy ania- leur playwrights, do not afford much opportunity to take difficult Parts- We will agree that the opportu nity presented in this particular instance is inadequate 10 gne me dramatic students the experience uej ciesue, uul h enumij is ter than nothing. Rather than run i the risk of lowering the calibre of the performances of the Univer Hty Players by using all student casts, the Nebraskan believes that more extensive use of the pla:: adopted by the Dramatic club would be a satisfactory solution. A studio theater instituted last year by the dramatics department wa.s also an attempt in the direc tion of giving students more prac icsl experience. By using this facility more extensively the dra matics students should find them selves well taken care of. The Dramatic club's production Wednesday, however, is deserving of student support on the grounds that it promises to display real merit. The Nebraskan feels jjsti fied in calling the attention e-f stu dents and faculty members to this f fort because it is meritorious and cause it is an effort to fill a real !i-eJ felt by student interested in Jiainatics. The League Says: A a 1 1 1: 1 1 t y, A Vi ufifily. 'PHE Loacue of Nations assembly t j ' in a rcc le mil vote rsion passee of icr.uir upon Ja pans ii'iiiy oi auK-sMon in Man churia and unanimously rceom nicrdi'd non-recognition of any ('Vt iiinii iU established in territory thus ilb l. it: iiiatoly acquir ed. Ja 'pan's .'. legation in the assembly I ajKe-el out was taken. ( The act ion has been slow in com ins;. All sot ts of political intrigues i,ut a pleasant one. In many re a n d a Hied interests hampered andspect.s the two professions are ate still hampering league action. Furthermore the vote of the as sembly i nicreiy an egression oi . . opinion. Nothing tangible is to he ! piuval. in the next University Play done to enforce world opinion over ! crs production. "Camille," opening T . ,. 1 at 1 he Temple theater, March t'. Japans pohey. , R .e piers was R But despite these fads. even ! la,K-,r.;ns- indent at the Chicago hardened cynics .mo those w ho .lusie .School of Acting- that he ob have always po..h-poohed at the:lained his first part. A Flo Ziog- League of Nations must recognize that this action is a: least a con siderable advance toward the goal of international enforcement of world opinion. The very fact that the most powerful nations of the world have at last agreed unani mously to condemn a policy under- taken by another powerful nation i hied to New ork to become a , , ., . ... , ,,!ho;ii to Proadwav. Put Proadwav is proot that it is pos.-ihle to unite i , . , , . , . J J i.vl' riTtvi .Tu-i i :ilni Int.resi- international opinion against a vio lator of intc i national ethics. And '"-fore passing- otf the ac tion as ot no account even tho it dot s show unified opinion, it should be remembered that the wry exls ter;, e of lio-tiN" wov,i , ...j.,),,?-: ean r.ot fail to have a:: e!!iit uion the poi )( - oj a nation. i:cn tljough '.;rtljei' in its it wiii. it is rl fi-el the tile leag'Ue's iiuin of noii i. oi t c n i 1 1 i - the ''.M i; 1 .e C o 's T'.C i a til 'lis, a r;d we t hi!".' rioii.illi tli.-.t .b.oa: ! m;it i ia! fleets of ' c r i- l).:u tlie ir.. j re 1 1 r.it r 'i: In : ill i torial tains. ... . four Out of fin I irv Ilulners. ULP1NC." sounds like a new woi el invented by "Pally 1 Pal it is not any foim of dis h gusting noise nor anything your best frie-nd won't mention to you, nor ever' a new prc-cess of toasling cigarettes. It is a word invented by H. G. Wells which is a very much needed word in the English language because it Is descriptive of a habit to which most people are addicted. When you assert that people who get good grades are greasy grinds who aren't really smart, thus, excusing your own poor grades, very likely you are "bulp ing." Or when you explain to a friend that the girl who turned you down for a date isn't so hot any how and that you only called he r because you knew her brother, yon are "bulping" again. We have been neeehn word to d"M nbe this ' cheerful explanation of a g e-od form f'f ,'efe r'l.-ive i;iiU:.j1,n uhi..h e veryone voi es oc- cas1(,:iallv. IV.liyanna rs probably the ,av, txair:ple of a 'Mir.er. She always had a beautiful ex- planation to make eerything wrong that happened se-crn right. Eut Pollvanna's bulping wa.s not Lf vif ioit as the bulping which Mr. wi-iW(lj: poUrav.S in the hero of his new novel, "Mr. Bulpingtoii of Plups." who always explains away his own mistakes f.m! ignorance by "bulping." Mr. P.ilpir.gton is Intended to personify a type. Perhaps the popularization of the new term will serve to call attention to the prac tice which most of us melulge in and when we make some prepos terous defensive explanation of our acts we will know that we are "bulping" and that other pee pie know we are "bulping." Dr. Mar;iili to Spiiik At S hohirlii) Dr. Sergius Morgulis of the- col lege of medicine will speak before the Graduate Scholarship club at a dinner meeting tonight at 6:30 at the University club. His subje ct will be "The Romance of Sex As Seen By the Biochemist." Students at Oklahoma Eaptist c ollege are paying tuition with i ;St chickens, produce t9d cows, j Theodore Diers, Now Radio Director, Has Had Wide Experience on Stage Kinm the dressing room to the radio stiiilio is a wide pap, but in radio work Theodore C. Dior.--, di rector of the university radio sta tion since the establishment of tho ! department in U'lT., finds the same ' ! precision, the same snap and "go" that thrilled him in stage work "hrom i lie smcii oi grease p.wne. and the noise of back stage activ ity to the clock-like precision of radio station activity is a far cry, similar, said Mr. Piers. mar. is why university theater piers will see nne 1 hoar him Portray the part i . ()f t)l0 sU.rn and set Monsieur field company was praying wioic at the time, and a member of the east was forced to le ave due to ill ness. Mr. Ziegficld, whos father owned the Chicago school, went there in search of suitable mater ial. He found it, and Mr. Diers was engaged for the part. With this experience, and thirty dollars in his pocket. Mr. Diets 1 inc indeed was Mr. Diers' modest account of his first opportunity to play a prominent part on Froad jway. The man to whom the part ! w as assigned had suddenly become I ill and eiii d: Diers came to the the ia'ei to lie gteeieel by the stage 'manager with: "Say you. they toll ! me that you know every part in this show. Do you think that you I could play the part ?" ' Within fifteen minutes before the curtain Mr. Di-rs got into a 'costume and hurried on the stage ! without a single rehearsal! The ; show iric identally. was a burlesque f two Proadwav stage' sue c ess, s. his interpretation e.f a stern Imiir-'The- Squaw Man." arid "lirl of ; gens gentleman! BSAlSEtC and HAYWIRE BY GEORGE ROUND. Now all of you little 'Iambics" should know- and that includes you coeds that there is something new at the college of agriculture an 1 it isn't triplet lambs either. This time it is a new born Hamp shire (that is a breed eif sheep but not New Hampshire i with a tail only four inches long. And can you imagine the little fellow "frisking" around this spring weather among the other young sters with tails nine inches or more longer. Now you quit ! And back on the old firing line once again if this is printed. Since the fui lough though we have envied Burt Marvin for his spurts of "hooey." His wise remark, how ever, about the listing of fake name s in this column was taken rathe r lightly - as it shouh! have been. Since this column appeared last. Professor Minteer of the vocational department has stopped his busy self long enough to put in a word to say that he reads the "hooey" once in a while whenever it is printed. He even goes so far as to say that he disagrees with some of the few things that we say in print. We never could have be lieved it. " King fish" Oengrich has been out practice teaching. Oh, to e a school "mam" now, he says... The Alpha Gamma PJio basketball team, playing under the "nora de plume" of the Nebraska B squad, has been tripping around western Nebraska this week. . .' Chersey" Blazer, Big Six two-mile cham pion, is saving his reserve power for the annual conference meet this summer ... Heye Lambertus kept his track training up to par la.st summer by running around i and over the mountains around ! Gothenburg with Bob Ostergaard, ! former Husker track star. After the last election when a coalition of certain factions swept away clean all offices on the col lege of agriculture campus, poli tics are rather dull on th rec- A PLANET MARS Harold Jones Entertaining WttJ.. Fii., Sat. &. Sun. Nioht F i I . . f i om 11:00 to 2:30 SANDWICHES. POPS and BEEP. Wen "O" Street Road L AKFVIEW the C.olden West.' The play en joyed a long run at the YVcbcrfield Musicale. Diers Joins Stock Company. With the company planning- to go on the road next spring-, Mr. Diers remained in New York that winter to study voice, an ambition which he had always cherished. Pater he joined the Clansmen & Co.. spent some time in yaudiville, ami became a member of a stock company in New Haven and Wnterbury. Conn. Shortly after this time Mr. Diers met James Haekett, a great ro mantic actor, and played with him in modern English comedy. The play, however, was a "flop." Haek ett later became a manager and signed Diers to play in "House of a Thousand Candles." Not pleased with the second venture, Diers and Haekett organized a stock company, which played all the im portant' cities east of the Missis sippi. Greatly overburdened with the duties of the stage manager on the trip, Mr. Diers health broke, and he went west to Wyoming; where he was to become food administra tor, upon appointment by Presi dent Wilson. Serves in Legislature. During; the years he spent in Wyoming, Mr. Diers se rved a term in the lower house- and a term in the senate of the state before his appointment expired. He was chairman the democratic state convention in 1020, and delegate to the national convention in San Francisco the same jeiir, In his office are numerous in scribed portraits of great actors with whom he has been associated - James Haekett. Pixlolph Canz and others. Put the strong' order of grease pots and the (.on.-tant buzz of back state life are in his blood this Monsieur Duval, and a wealth of experience lies back of tangle. However, w ill '-o popping ag I'.v tin. spring they Harold Pesack. that grand old maestro of a fire fighter, has a plan which he thinks will make Ag club a worthy organization. He proposes to partially do away with the organization and substitute in stead a club composed of repre sentatives of the various groups on the campus. They in turn, he says, would form the student governing body. The plan sounds good. Now- Joe College may have a tough time finding a job or posi tion for the coming summer vaca tion months but perhaps he has the opportunity of creating a job for himself Clayton Watkins, ex tension forester at the college, has enejersed a reforestation program for waste land and the college man could probably fit into the picture in a jig-saw puzzle fashion. Wat kins says the reforestation of one acre of land wrth eatalpa, a variety of trees, will pay $2.r per day for the time necessary for caring for them over a 25 year period. But Joe might be a little late for school a quarter of a century from now. (r;i(nalc Appointed to l acullv at Lanx-ton Information has been received at the offices cf the College of Business Aelministration that Re)lett L. Fairchilde, '31, was re cently appointed instructor of eco nomics and business aelministra tion at Langston university, Lang ston, Okl. Oltlfathvr to Speak to Lincoln omen's Club Dr. C. H. Oldfather will continue his .series of illustrated lectures on "Eternal Rome," when Monday at 2 o'clock in Faculty hall he will lecture on "The Baths" to the Lin coln Woman's club. LEATHER JACKETS It-oiling 'ri e..e Leather is difficult to clean we specialize en this class of work. MODERN CLEANERS Soukup & Westovcr Call F2377 for Service St mien ts Must Clear Keconls by March 10 All reports for the removal of incompletes and for all grades lacking must be on file in the Registrar's Office not later than March 10, If stu dents arc to be eligible for con sideration for the Honors Con vocation. FLORENCE I. M'GAHEY, Registrar. ELECTION WILL BE HELD Officers ofYlvr.C.A. to Be Chosen Next Thursday And Friday. The annual election of the li;j. versity V. M. C. A. officers will he held Thursday and Friday of this week according to information r,. leased by Secretary S. D. flays, ,,f the university Y. M. C. A. The nominations for officers (n the city campus, as released by Prof. W. H. S. Morton, chairman of the nominating committee are: President, Morton Spence; vice president, Robert Harrison; sect,, laiy, JJohn C. Bishop and Charl. s Mil lac. The Ag campus nominating ceiu. mil tee, headed by Prof. C. K. Ko-.. cnqtiist, has nominated for pi evi dent, Ar thur Peterson; vice pn si. dent. Elver Hodges, and WiU.u.l Waldo; secretary, Philip Hender son and .Tames Warner. The election of officers on t he city campus will lake place Thus eiay. Match 3, at the Y room .if I he Temple, and on the Ag c ampus Friday, at 303 Ag hall. The voting booths will le open from S :.'.() a n:. to 1 :,'$e p. m. The new officers will take- om. . sometime early in March. VALENTINE AWGWAN SALES ARE YEAR'S BEST KOTOUC SAYS Continued from Pai:o 1 steuies concerning Chuc k and i'h.vi lis, two Irishmen who be ::- themselves to be love. In Mi ',,! lariel's story the hero and i. r -in. have struck a snag on the nptia.' of love. The cover design by Morris Gor don, which is in four colors, por trays an old fashioned valentine1. "Kditoryals and Kolyums," a story by Art Wolf which also appears in the Awgwan, tells of the different ways in which a press report if the Mortar Board party mipht be written by different authors. Raymond Doyle Murray's "Hol lywood Letter" is another article in the Valentine magazine, arni a page of ' Fashion Briefs" by Kalh erine Howard, appears in the pub lication. "Awgwan's Certificate of Social Success" is a feature of this issue. An article telling how one may win the certificate and a facsimile oi the certificate itself appear in the magazine. Arrliroloical Maaint Tarries BrlPs Article The Wisconsin Archeologic a! publication in its winter quarter issues, carries an article by Pi. Earl H. Bell, .assistant professor of anthropology, on "Archeologica! Research iu Wisconsin." Sociology In-lriU'lor Speaks at Daiim lno.' Recently Dr. J. M. Bernhardt, asse-eiate professor of sociology., spoke before the Nysted Peopl'-'s college at Dannebrog on "Appala chian Mountain Culture." There'll be no Extras of the a CP husk .orn erJ $450 Over r? 10 Reduction Last Year's Boo!: See a Tassel or Staff Member G