The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA ftsfioriatrd gt)H$tatf tyre entartd aa saeona-elaw matter at th postoff ice in Lincoln, Nebraeka, under act of eongreae. March 3. 1879. and at special rate of poataage provided for In section 1103. act of October 3. 1917. authorised January 20. 1922. THIHTV.THIRD YEAR Publlihed Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday. Friday ano Sunday mommas during h acadenno year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE 31 50 a year Single Copy 6 etnts $1.00 a aeni.-stei 12 'so a year mailed H.M a semester mailed ' Under direction et the Student Publication Board. Editorial Office Umvarsity Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4A. Telephones Day! B-6891; Night: B-6882. B-3333 (Journal) Ask for Nebraskan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Laurence Hall Editor-in-ehiat Managing Editor Bruce Nicoll Violet Cross News Editor Burton Marvin Jack Fischer Margaret Thiols Virginia Selleck Society Editor Sport Editor Irwin Ryan BUSINESS STAFF Bernard Jennings Business Manager Assistant Business Manager George Holyok Dick Schmidt Wilbur Erlckson About These Rallies. pOR the last great push rally! Or that, at any rate, is the burden of. the pepsters' cries as they prepare to stage the pre ganie celebrations calculated to send an inspired team to Pitt. Preparations have been made for rallies Wednesday morning, Wednesday night, and again Thursday morning at the Burlington station just before the squad leaves. All the pep-sessions must be well-attended, the pep organization leaders urge. They announce that the Wednesday evening affair, culminating in zest around a bonfire, will climax the rallies, and cer tainly it promises to be the most spectacular. An undefeated football team, Big Six champions The Student Pulse Brief, ronrtte contributions perti nent to matters of student life anil the nnlTerslty are welcomed by this dp-ut.nent, under the usual restric tions of sound newspaper practice, which excludes all libelous matter and personal attacks. Letters must be aimed, but names will be with reld from publication If so desired. Another l ieu: TO THE EDITOR: Thinking a few thoughts in favor of an armory on Nebraska's cam pus, I wonder just who's guessed right, the pacifist (so-called) or the militarist (violent type). For everlasting peace in the U. S. our pacifist says, "Do away with ev erything military"; our militarist savs, "Strengthen our military power till we are so strong no one will dare stuck us. tsotn agru ments are equally weak. Taking all military organization out of our country would leave us an eco nomic prize for the world powers, Militarizing our own country to extremes might also cause the powers to force our government from its policy of non-intervention Military science in our univer sity today provides something more in the line of education than the art of destroying human be' ings. All persons in any civiliza tion are controlled by customs, law, and conscience which amounts to nothing more than disciplining oneself to do right, that right which the majority of intelligent individuals have decided to be right. Such discipline is necessary for civilization and is to the bene fit of the individual. Courses in military science not only talk about discipline but they "enforce it What is more educational for men than to contact other men of their own age. The military de partment brings together all of the men in school, not for a brief in terval but for a sufficient time for great numbers of them to become acquainted. An ordinary four years in college does not and has not provided for this broadening con tact in any other manner. The world is crying or leaders in civil life, has cried and always will. Leadership may be a gift, a person may have been born to be a leader, but checking up on great leaders shows that many have been developed. This ability can not be developed by reading about it. Practice and experience are essential. Here again we find our military department furnishing and being a practice ground for the builders of our nation, the leaders cf our civilization. Thru the military department the federal government has helped put many men, the beat kind of men, thru their last two years in college, for that advanced military science student's check, though small, means a lot to a chap work ing his way thru school. If the University of Nebraska can build an armory with federal money at the present time, why should there be any talk against it? The world will progress, the faster the better. The disposition of money has placed temporary blinders on this progress. If we can open them a little way by building an armory, let's do it. It might be a stepping atone to more campus buildings. The national government has not made it a part of its program to build libraries for different state universities for the benefit of the Intellect of the nation, nor to build theaters in our leading universities to raise the standard of drama and literature in our country, but, our national leaders have taken over national defense. I believe that these national leaders think that by Hhowlng mil itary life to the masses as civil ians, thru the medium of our uni versities, chose shown will become the true pacifists and thus peace will be insured by preparedness. I M. P. Butler Directors Dismiss President INDIANAPOLIS. (CNS). After demanding his resignation, which was refused, the board of directors of Butler university this week an nounced the dismissal of President Walter Scott Athearn. The directors had expressed dis satisfaction with Dr. Athearn's Ag College By Carlrle Hmlpkiil SUGGESTION. From Ruth Carsten, home eco nomics sophomore, came the sug gestion that the announcement of speakers for the Vespers meetings at Ag college on Tuesday noon ap pear regularly in this column. That suggestion will be acted upon, and hereafter Ag women may depend on regular announcement of Ves pers speakers and programs. THE SENIOR JUDGES. Friday morning the senior judg ing team, Ray Murrey, Cletus Reinmiller, George Shadbolt, How ard White, Leonard Wenzl and Willard Waldo, and Coach R. R. Thalman will go to Kansas City to enter the Intercollegiate contest at the American Royal Livestock show. Fifteen teams will be entered in the Kansas City show, so that any honors coming back to Nebraska will be rightfully earned. The con test there will include twelve class es of animals, two classes of fat cattle and one of breeding cattle; two classes of fat sheep and one of breeding sheep; two classes of fat hogs and one of breeding- hogs; and two classes of mares and one of stallions. Additionally the boys will have to give reasons on eight class es out of the twelve. One week after the Kansas City contest the gang will go to Chicago for the International Livestock Show. That contest will be similar except there will be twenty-two or twenty-three teams entered, mak ing the competition keener even than at Kansas City. Company for the boys at Chicago will be the agronomy and the meats teams, both entered in contests at the In ternational. The men who will go to Kansas City on the International Senior team are well known on the Ag campus. Every one is a Block and Bridle Club member. Murrey served as a member of the Farm ers' Fair committee. Reinmiller has been one of the leaders in Ag college baseball. Shadbolt has been active in A. H. department activi ties. The same is true of Leonard Wenzl. White has headed Ag or ganizations and is now a member of the student council. Waldo, a former member of the Coll-Agri-Fun committee, is manager of the show this vear. These contests will be the last chance these hoys have to do their stuff as undergraduate judges. Perhaps in a few years they will be the officials. ON OTHER CAMPUSES. Anti-war controversy flying back and forth on the Nebraska campus is not without its counter part at other colleges. According to Associated Press reports, 75 students at Wellesley College, at wellesley. Mass., parade with the Anti-W ar placards on Armistice day. The student group got into the parade and trailed along behind the American Legion waving their peace banner. When the soldiers formed for the special Armistice day services, the anti-war students demonstration knocked most of the grandeur out of the ceremony, and according to the report, the Legion men "expressed indignation." on the other side of the Atlantic ocean similar things were happen ing at the same time. Students at Cambridge, England, flaunted "No More War" banners at an Armis tice celebration. At Pembroke col lege the party got the wildest, the college gang got thoroly pelted with eggs, and the affair ended up Accessories . . . wear longer . . . look better Cleaned Expertly Hats, Scarfs, Ties, Gloves, etc Prompt Service V7AHGITY V CLEANERS B3367 Joe. Tuckar 221 No. 14 Roy Wythara THE with an enviable record, will be the cause lor all this, remember, and It the campus is going to give the team a sendoft, the Nebraskan Joins in urging that it be both whole-hearted and enthusiastic. If. you're going to rally have at it. Still More Peare. pKOM the tenor of letters that have been coming to the oltice, it would seem that the motto of the Student Pulse correspondents is "strike while the iron is hit." tor recent subjects ot the communica tions center about the armory controversy. In a majority ot cases the subjects are not presented with any degree ot thoughtfulncss, for the common tendency is toward violence, abuse and shouting. Most of these cannot be used. It is a relief, then, when a contributor gives evi dence of an attempt at restraint in order to pre sent a reasoned argument, and altho the Nebraskan cannot agree with every conclusion expressed, the communication in today's columns from M. P tails into the class with the presentable opinions Since that is the case, some consideration ot the points M. P. makes would seem to be in ordei. Those points are, brietl, built on tne fundamen tal assumption that "preparedness ' is the way to peace. Under this topic heading, it the thought ot M. P.'s letter were to be mtiined, come the sub stantiating arguments that military training is edu cational because it is productive of 'II discipline, (2) friendships, (3i leaders. Considerable difference of opinion on these points wastiN time and verbiage in the perennial conflicts between military training advocates and dissenters, but examination reveals that none ot the three arc actually concerned with the question at issue, tor M. P.'s thesis is preparedness as it applies to justi fication for the erection of an armory on the campus. And that thesis the Nebraskan cannot accept, in the face of the ideals ot enlightened no bility for which the university declares itself to stand. with the police settling u free for all fight. Oxford students carried a banner announcing that "Students Must Fight War.' At Oxford, Manches ter and Glasgow it is understood that students have passed resolu tions that they will "under no cir cumstances fight for King or coun try." The girls at Wellesley college i have decided not to speak to one another on the campus. They say that speaking to the same person several times a day grows tire some. News pictures appearing in sev eral Wisconsin and Chicago news papers showing women students the University of Wisconsin sip ping beer, supposedly in one of the rooms of a woman's dormitory, were entirely faked photographs, it has been revealed. At Fordham university it ap pears that the faculty are appoint ed by name: Father Deane is dean, Father Whalen acts as dean of discipline, Mr. Shouten is in charge of debating, and Mr. Voekal is in charge of the glee club. BIS- A ?LX rv V::.i;.yi-. learn v v - t- wiit; "X my v r m L lyliesteriield DAILY NEBRASKAN Interviews With Ghosts by Maurice Johnson This is one ot aeries of Imaginary dtnloKiK's concerning the Ideal university life The dialogues will appear at regu lar bi-weekly intervals. SIR FRANCIS BACON. CIR FRANCIS BACON smoothed the ruff at his throat and said, "Universities? Indeed, I have often contemplated the ideal unl- vnrsitv. What sort of place would it he?" I asked. "A foundation to obtain the knowledge of causes," he an swered. "For if you would have knowledge, vou must know the inner motion of things." Then it would not be unlike a modern research institute," I said. "You would make scientific dls eoveries ?" "And much else besides. Dis covery is of value to no one unless it is a boon to mankind. In my university one would learn how to cure diseases and prolong life; to perfect nature by experimenting with trees, plnnts, and grains; to master divers mechanical arts; to understand the functions of light, and heat, and motion, and sound." Would there be no time for lit erature and art?" I asked. "They, too, would be included," he said. "For the student must take all knowledge for his prov ince. But the student in my uni versity must not be content to compile the knowledge of others, merelv interpreting it and com menting on it. He must indulge in independent discovery." "I like the sound of that," I said. "Indeed," said Bacon. "The stu dent must find out particular truths for himself and from them reason toward general principles." "This is called the age of science," I told Bacon. "And yet there are few universities such as you suggest. Why is that?" "The reason," he said, "lies in man's obsession with his own small conceits. Knowledge waits for him who contemplates nature, and seeks its inner laws. Science is the road to Utopia." "You put great faith in science," I said. "Yes," said Bacon. "Nothing is beneath science, nor above it. The true scientist is the savior of his people, and universities should embrace science as their hope and sustenance." Increase Income By Joining Circus Act YPSILANTI. Mich. fCN'S). Her bert Bean, 21, and Lyle Higgs, 22, of Bay City, Mich., have discover ed a new way of working their way through college. The two have signed up with a circus tumbling team for a series of professional appearances begin ning next week. They hope to re turn to Michigan State Normal college with enough money to al low them to complete their senior vear. emM A oi cisarcUc ttalh LEGION VOTES POR E Give Minimum Preparedness Thru Military Training in Secondary Schools. Claiming military training in secondary schools the most practi cal and economical method to at tain I he minimum of preparedness necessary to national safety and that the construction of tho pro jected armory will give work to many desperately in need, the Lin coln Post of the American Legion unanimously voted approval of the plan to secure federal funds for the erection of an armory on the uni versity campus Ht a meeting Mon day night. The resolution, as adopted, reads: Kenlv-d 'hat I.incMn Post No. 8 of Pie American 1j-ki" rxprea its unquali fied approval of the movement to secure federal fund for the hulldlni of mi artnorv on the I'ntverslty of Nehraska rampii. to he used lor the activities of the K O T C. aid other purposes for whtrh 'im.-h huildlnn is rnitaWe. The American Legion has always aliened iiself aBainut me eiaminnieiu of kii ancresslve nnlltnrism, hilt has fa vored and fostered adequate preparedness, hased upon a small army and an organ ized reserve of citlrens trained and avail kM for military duly In an emergency. The memhers of the Lesion envision an eventual world disarmament ano onuo their wholehearted neKire ror irnri un"' their experiences of war. But these same experiences nuleiv oepnven wm-iii oi n, demic anil cloistered viewpoints and taught them that the catastrophe of war may suddenlv emerse from a seeming atmos phere of peace Thus tney appreciaie in stern reantv mm a nninm, iiitviu neither a large army nor citizens with a measure of military training, has neither security within nor respect without Its borders and that its very veakness Is an incentive and not a deterrent to war. Con siderini; military training in secondary schools the most practical and economical method to attain the minimum of Pre paredness necessary to national safety, Lincoln post No. 3 of the American Legion approves and supports the upbuilding of the R. O. T. C, and Its corollary, the citizens' military training camps." "Approving .he purpose ol tne nuiiaing. the Lincoln Post also believes its con struction s timelv. Building construc tion In Lincoln the last few years has rtualiy stot.peo, tnrow-ing me men com prising the building tranes out or em- plovment for long ptriods. The construe tioii of the projected armory will give many of them the work they desperately need." A 'AMERICAN LKUK'M ISO. 3. "H. R. JOBST, Commander." RECORDED AS PACIFISTS Columbia Students Pledge Themselves to Jail Rather Than to War. NEW YORK. Pledging them selves to go to jail rather than fight in the event of war, 200 Co lumbia university students, in ad dition to a score of faculty mem bers, this week were on record for pacifism. In addition to adopting this pledge at a peace meeting, the students laid preliminary plans for a national convention of college students to further pacifist princi ples. Co-eds at the University of Mis souri who signed a pledge not to eat more than 15 cents worth of food when they are out on dates are finding themselves popular. at talking about is the seasoning MILDER WEDNESDAY. OFFICIAL BULLETIN Ail students rganuafi ot taH groups deeirlng to pu blish not law ol meetings or other Information lor membera ma have litem . P'lnteJ fcf calling the Malljr t-ebraalmn offlc AT THE STUDIO. A. W. S. Board, Thursday, Nov. 16, 12, noon. Barb Council, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 5 p. m. Motar Board, Friday, Nov. 17, 12, noon. R. O. T. C. BAND. All membere of the R. T. C. band will report In full uniform to the north steps ot Morrill Hall today at 5 p. tu tor a group picture. Henry Kostnan, President. Y W. C. A. Y. V. C A. cabinet will meet Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall. Professort Meet. There will be a meeting of the American Association of Univer sity Professors Wednesday after noon at 4 o'clock in Social Science hall, room 101. Lutheran Bible Class. Kev. H. Erck will conduct Bible class with Lutheran students Wed nesday evening. Nov. 15 in room 203, Temple building at 7 p. m. FILLEY ADDRESSES AG Y. M. C. A. H. C. Filley, chairman of the Department of Rural Economics, will speak at tho Ag Y Freshman council Thursday evening at 7 o'clock in room 303 of Ag hall. His topic will be "War and Peace." Tap Dancing. Tap-dancing section of Fresh men Hobby groups will meet at 7 o'clock this evening in the wom en's gymnasium. Y. M. C. A. meeting will be held in the rooms in the Temple at 7:15 this evening. Dr. Fred Eiche will speak. The German club will meet Fri day evening at 8 o'clock in room Duke University School of Medicine Durham, N. C. Four terms of eleven weeks are given each year. These may be taken consecutively (M. D. in three years) or three terms mav be taken each year (M. P. in tour years). The entrance re quirements are intelligence, character and at least two years of college work, including the subjects specified for Grade A Medical Schools. Catalogues and application forms may be ob tained from the Dean. good taste you're Turkish Tobacco - I of the men who buy Turkish to bacco for Chesterfield. "Our men live in Constan tinople, Samsoun, and Smyrna in Turkey; and Cavalla, Serres, Xanthi, and Patras in Greece. The best known Turkish tobaccos come from these sections, and we try to select the best grades for Chesterfield. "There is no other tobacco just like Turkish it has a taste and aroma all its own. Chester field seasons them just right. "That good taste you're talk ing about is the 'seasoning' of Turkish tobacco." ttat TASTES NOVEMBER 15. 19,11 203 In the Temple bulldin ., members and friends of th. ? man department are Invited to m tend. Ag Y Freshman Council ., hold its regular weekly me(,tj 111 Thursday evening at 7 o'clock 1i! room 303 of Ag Hall. Prof j? Filley, chairman of the depirto,; of Rural Economics will speak Tickets for the Mu Phi Enniin Founders' Day banquet to be Vv.1 Saturday Nov. 18 can be brffi from Marian Stamp or xtBH Miller for one dollar. Rosen-atim The Harvard astronomical 0b. servaiory nas announced the die covery of the source of thr- corn., that brilliant halo of white ffi faneenlinlinf, tho Inn r. from oxygen and not from J known chemicals. MAIDEN FORM ' It . uVrrtfimiN. $tim riidt mw for vrj, of by UnifV.nform'sWWw 'Ihah.H mMrfn rnt that jahun m mu u ht' trtm onrf fJim, y four Hia phracmntrfi smonthing 'nbonik, tdii'firTt) Wrt mh ff 7 tm- or tali n I ,m tir4n n siJt all "hit tti&itnlfir"ta svti thr fknff, mniiJii.iirirm yn want in aVm if th, buim W bump that inotf Jtium turn nmt urulh . Mumn on thr liKure irr Malta Furm'a ntw Am hrurt "Dw-l-Tay driijinc! id jtivp width m wrll aft uplift to the and"Rifh fc aint firdlc Nn. 17 W, in eiijuatt "treain -line" 1 ft -inch tvni-itrp-a of elaptir and i.itiii brncadt, Urt trimmed. Tlii-ft ;m only tfconulofi frrat variety nf Mtidt-n Form rm lion. -A"k jour dfiltT tn ho thr fti vnti or H-rite f.w frte buolk I t. 1 i Maulcn vm Rrauvrt 1 u.. Inc.. 21" Mil. W.. V Yak. AT ALL LEADING ST0HS LOOK fO M NAMl Ti' UG. V. J M. Iff., EMS llkltll .CAS.TIS. at IT I I . . -J 7 ( Til rlllaiaei HAPPEN to be one i Zfrf. 0SIL f BETTER policies. He had been president for less than two year. e i9i), U&cm myiu Tosacco Co.