THE DAILY NEBRASKAN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1933. The Daily Nebraskan r-r-.lrtl0n A L,nco1". Nebraika . '1 unwer7,V8et publication university of nebraska t i "snta,ra ' lnSoln?dN"r"ndJ?" matter t th. po.tof'ice In " special r.t,' "?d" fct ' congress, March 3. 1879. 1103, ct of October a ?2ft"0".L.pr?vlded tor ectic"1 wciooer 3, 1917, authorized January 20, 1922. UW..h.d Tu..dJyHlweH"THH,RD YEAR SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy 5 cents il.oo a .m....r fr- "r a,rec'n of the Student Puhii",.,'''"8'1" "CP IDF 1 04T1.. ..... -- wuai u. - u.ln... oil lee Un w! Iy Sa" 4- m i Ak for NebYafkan Vdlto? 82' 8 3333 Journal 91.50 a vur ,?-50 a year mailed iMEMERc 19SS ThU paper i, represented for general advertising by the Nebraska Press Association. 'Laurence Hall .. "Bruea Nlcoll .. Burton Marvin 3IAL STAFF a 'i ing Editors News Editor Editor-in-chief Dick Moran Violet Cross ' Carlyle Hodgkln . , BUSINESS STAFF Bernard Jennings Business Manager I'.Georg. Holyoke Bu,ine" M-""aers Wilbur Erlckson Dick Schmidt Promises And Hopes jJUCH bilge flows thru college editorial columns at the beginning of every school year about the - glorious opportunities facing the current aggrega tion of undergradutes. Such opportunities do exist, and the words calling attention to them would be , highly acceptable were it not for the universal shutting of the editorial eye to the fact that few -are the opportunities which adequately materialize, and fewer ntJIl srs fhA etnantu ,v.A n,rnn.nWA wv u-hv.ilj nuu cllm auvauiagcu thereby. ' a m m mfttiAM " t . . j . . . . vi wvi, cvciy siuuem registerea in the university becomes for a time a part of the cycle of higher education. He enrolls, is for a pe riod intimately involved with a great institution and if his time is at all well spent leaves with life enriched, having acquired certain aspects of the institution of which he has been a part. Viewed from the standpoint of the individual, his academic years in connection with the institution take on sig nificance they are of extreme importance. But the longer view impels the conviction that the insti tution, and not the various undergraduates who are temporarily immerged in it, is ultimately the impor tant consideration. Every undergraduate and every conglomeration of undergraduates is involved with specific prob lems, but the university survives and fulfills its In stitutional functions long after the undergraduate problems are forgotten. So we come, after some circumlocution, to the present student body. The inception of the school year finds a new assortment of disciples of the sheepskin thrown together for a time; and they too, like those who have gone before and those to ccme. are about to find themselves involved with prob lems of tremendous importance. S the cycle begins for the parent institution, the university, and its separable and impermanent members, the students, so does September find a lesser correlative institution, The Daily Nebraskan, stirring to activity. Launched thru the various au tumns by a succession of untried undergraduate staffs, the Nebraskan has yet managed to survive as an institution dedicated to the purveyance of campus news and the flux of student opinion. Deviations from that ideal in the past have been rare, and it is the general objective of the present staff, whose work readers see for the first time today, to prolong that tradition of service to the best of their several abilities. That the inter ests of students will come always first is too ob vious to bear emphasis; even when staff members attempt to palliate enthusiasm for the rights and privileges of the undergraduate with a broader view, embracing the twin responsibilities to university and state, they more often than not find their ef forts weakened by the very circumstance of being undergraduates themselves. From time to time there may,, no doubt, be departures from the general policy thus outlined in the form of sporadic adventures into enthusiasm COED FROCKS THAT j "REGISTER" in smart company For years now . . the well groomed . . adroitly cos tumed campus favorites have been wearing the Simon label. You'll love shopping here ... of course you'll want a new ribbed silk! Or per haps you want a silk that looks like wool! Velvet . . Wool . . Silk . . whatever you want for fall ... It is here ... in a smart version that is sure to flatter. Sizes 1 2 and up . . . 1 a v v, w t-.v.v.', . .v. vr T1 A V l ... " iari Ill ..... v aMr ;:ymii!pi y'Wjl $795 SSli $1295 If t 7 : C l V v - ' " irA S y lis I ' til 1 Vs j for specific causes. To keep these adventures on a more or less rational plane will be the staff's per manent concern, realizing as it does that such bursts as may occur would prove much more spec tacular if their outcome were not a foregone con clusion. Which is to say that the form of paranoia so often afflicting student editors is In compara tively little danger ot unseating those of the Ne braskan staff. Compromise and conformity are expected as the outcome of every campaign every adventure into enthusiasm but the editors are not too greatly bowed down by this realization, for their endeavor is thereby merely characterized as human, and superhuman they do not hold themselves to be. SI J7VERY introductory editorial comes ultimately to the point where the editorial ear, which has somehow gotten into the future, can no longer neglect the cries for specific points of policy. In most cases it is certainly logical procedure to at least outline the general plan for any sort of con struction, but in the case of a newspaper's editorial policy certain concessions must be made to un predictable turns which may he given by the in terpretation of news events as they happen. The Nebraskan does have a very definite policy, however, embracing some dozen items. The bare list, without explanation of the standpoints to be fostered (which will appear as the semester ages) includes: 1. Activity tax. 2. Athletics. 3. Barb organization. 4. Chaperones. 5. Convocations. 6. Fraternities. 7. The grading and honor systems. S. Physical education and military science. 9. Social rules and regulations. 10. Smoking rooms. 11. Student government 12. Union building. JT will immediately be objected that such a list contains absolutely no element of novelty. Ard the objection will be valid. If there be those who recall earlier days of the Nebraskan, they will ob serve that some of the things with which the paper proposes to concern itself are as much as fifteen and twenty years old. Others have been sponsored more recently. But regardless of age, it Is felt that these is sues are important, and that continued work toward the objectives which they represent will be valuable until definite results have been achieved. The list, in short, almost represents the permanent policy of the Daily Nebraskan carrying on, making the pa per an organic Institution, in spite of successive staff changes. More detailed analysis of the specific issues cannot be attempted at this time; besides extending this editorial to impossible lengths such a survey would seriously threaten the virility of future re marks. It must be remembered, however, that any editorial policy is an expanding and developing thing, changing its aspect with the flux of the news. New possibilities will' constantly present themselves for discussion and investigation; new problems will arise to confront perplexed editorial writers. For the present, however, little remains to be said. The Nebraskan, with the distribution of this issue, is launched for another semester. What the semester will bring, it is hoped, will at least afford interesting reading material thruout the fall and early winter, and perhaps if everything goes well a little in the way of constructive work may be accomplished. That is as much as staff members of any student enterprise can hope, and with that hope the editorial inauguration of the Daily Ne braskan stands completed. For the Relief Of Gripes. IT goes without saying that the new columns of the Nebraska are open to student enterprises and activities, for above everything else that it may at times claim to be, the Nebraskan is a student pa per. But there is another department of the paper that is devoted to more direct student expression the Student Pulse column. Oppn to every reader with something to say whether it be a "gripe," a commendation, or the mere setting forth of a passing thought this col umn attempts to serve as a medium for the ex pression of actual student sentiment. Contribu tions will be subject to the ordinary restrictions of sound newspaper practice, which exclude libelous material and personal attacks, but in other re spects the column is open to any point of view, whether it coincides with Daily Nebraskan policy or not. Materia intended for use in the Student Pulse department should be addressed to the editor, and mailed or brought to the Nebraskan office. If you have anything to say, this column provides the opportunity to say it. COLORADO D E IS NEBRASKA ALUM IE ACHING PERMIT Truce Is Reached After State Refuses Mary Scott License. Due to an impending war of retaliation along educational lines similar to the interstate truck war, a truce was reached over the case of Miss Mary Scott, graduate of the Nebraska Univer sity teachers college, on her quali fications for receiving a certificate to teach a rural school in Colo rado. Because of the refusal of the state superintendent of Colorado to give Miss Scott a certificate Deputy State Superintendent Cushing wired "If you propose to set up arbitrary and technical bar riers against Nebraska teachers, we have an abundance of technical provisions in our laws whereby we con refuse certificates to Colorado teachers." However, when Mrs. Lucy C. Auld, deputy superintendent of in structions, was informed of Cush ing's telegram she said "There are no arbitrary stipulations being en forced in Colorado. We have cer tain laws concerning the certifica tion of teachers and any person who can qualify under the Colo rado laws will receive a certificate. The state in which they received their training makes no difference to us. Our state law provides that persons must have six hours of practice teaching or three years teaching experience before they con qualify for a certificate and Miss Scott had neither. "The law is definite and we re fuse numerous certificates on thic ground." Barter Enables Many To Attend Curtis Aa; Barter, or perhaps inflation, en abled the Nebraska School of Ag riculture, at Curtis, to smash all attendance records this fall by a 40 percent margin. Among the items received in exchange for tui tion board and room were Corn, barley, oats and cattle. One stu dent parted with a pony. The twentieth year began Sept. 4 with D. K. Douthlt as the new su perintendent. The freshman class shows the 40 percent gain while the girls' dormitory, only half filled last year, has seventy stu dents and teachers enrolled for room.i and meals. The school at Curtis is a part of the University of Nebraska. The farm has been extended until it in cludes more than 320 acres. Super intendent Douthit wanted to stock this farm so he announced that lack ol ready cash need not keep students at home tnis iau. CHURCHES GREET FRESHMEN j Welfare Council . iClig"""" j win Tnotit11t.fi Season i Of Hospitality. i As part of the Freshman wel come being extended on the cam pus this week, the student Re ligious Welfare Council is institut ing a Hospitality season. The pur- nnud ic trt PX tend the spirit of friendliness beyond the campus to students, and to olter mem nomes with Lincoln residents. According to Rev. Dean K. L,e-y land. University Presbyterian stu-f dent pastor, this extension of hos pitality by residents is to be one of the features of All-University church night. Sept. 22. At that time students are to receive invi tation? to homes. . t Miss Faulkner Hevises Proofs for New Book Miss Virginia Faulkner, former student at Nebraska, is now revis ing the proofs for her new book "Written To Sell." Miss Faulkner has, in ihe past, contributed to tne Prairie Schooner. Avery To Attend Convention Tho Honnrtmcnt of chemistry the university will be represented at- tho American Chemical associa tifin'.Q nnm ml convention to be held at tne Chicago World's Fair, from Sept. 4 to 9, by Chancellor Emer itus Avery. - ed I ia- 1 1H Miss HeoDner Urges Girls To Have Conferences At Early Date. Miss Amanda Heppner, dean of women, welcomes all new students to the university and urges them to come to her office at the earliest possible date for conferences. In explaining this request she points out that often times complications in schedules can be avoided if stu dents understand their require ments. Women students are welcome to Ellen Smith hall any time. They may use the rooms for lounging or study any hours the building is open. This hall is the center of all activities so far as women are con cerned. Dean Heppner points out. She urges students to attend the parties and teas which organiza tions are giving in honor of new students. Miss Piper Directs Housing. Miss Elsie Ford Piper whose of fice is also in Ellen Smith has charge of housing women. She has regular office hours in which she advises students as to correct lodging. The list of approved rooms is now prepared, according to Miss Piper. Mrs. Ada Westover is helping women locate suitable employ ment. In connection with this it is important that students working four hours a day should not regis ter for more than twelve or four teen hours of college work, de clared Miss Heppner. The Y. W. C. A. office is in Ellen Smith Hall which is located at 1340 R street. Discuss link's for Hushing at Meeting Sorority presidents, rush chair- n-ti aiul Pan hellemc represent atives met at 10:00 Saturday morning in Ellen Smith Hall to discuss rushing rules prior to the opening (if the formal rushing sea son Sunday afternoon. Martha Hershey, vice president of the council, announced that no Greek group had violated summer rushing rules eo that it was un necessary to inflict penalties upon any sorority. A Panheilenic calendar for so rorities during rush week was dis tributed to delegates and the pro cedure to be followed was ex plained by Mrs Elizabeth Thomp son, chairman of Panheilenic. Wisconsin Will Educate 1,000 Seeking Work The University of Wisconsin ex tension division is at the present time completing arrangements for taking care of about 1.000 unem ployed who ate seeking to equip themselves lor future jobs. Tuition for those enrolling will be paid from a $30,000 fund made avail able by the 1933 legislature's re lief appropriation. This relief, the only of its kind in the United States according to N. D. Connors, field representative, has been launched at the request of Dean Chester Snell of the Wis consin extension division. HE'S HERE AGAIN GENTLEMEN! the 1933 j0 in v RIG ABIE R HE WAS THE TALK OF THE CAM PUS LAST SPRING . . . THIS FALL HE RETURNS ... A SENSATION! The "BRIGADIER" O is tailored in every new fall model acceptable by well dressed university men . . . single and double breasteds peak and notch lapels. O created of fine all wool worsteds, serges . . . twills . . . twists and her ringbones. O featuring the GOOD fall colors of Oxford Gray . . . Brown . . . Haze Blues ... in patterns that include Pencil Stripes . . . Checks . . . Win dow Pane Checks and mixtures. and the price . . . ah, the price n 7 50 V ft -iis Jfj Pi r) 4 v,w f See the Brigadier It's exclusively a Simon outstanding value at $22.50 Delicious Home Cooked Meals Given at Special Student Prices INVERTER'S CAFE Across from Orpheum S7" j 1 1 AAAAAAAAAAAi