PACE TTO THE DAILY NEBKASKAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1937 What a Half 3Iill Levy On $1,000 Would Accomplish (Th fallowing t-ible of figure thowt the build ing! necem.iry to th city cumpui nlono and their cost estimated In ttte report of the board of regent! to the Ut legislature. Buildings are arranged in the order of the urgency of their need.) New library $975,000 University classroom bldgs 400,000 Electrical engineering bldg. . 500,000 Auditorium seating 1,800.... 175,000 Addition to Morrill hall 100,000 Art gallery 500,000 Teachers college H. S 150,000 Administration building 250,000 Student health bldg 150,000 Land 120,000 The imperative need for the first building on this list, the library, hns been adequately presented during the past week. The Lincoln Journal and Star and the World Herald have taken up the hue and cry. If these newspapers are followed by other influential journals in the state, the neeessary public consciousness of the university's retrenchment for lack of buildings will be established. It is Iho hopo of the Nebrnskan that the library will be emphasized as the spearhead of the university building campaign. Full reali zation of the building condition on the campus, however, is vital to any campaign. The five structures listed after the library must be built before the state's No. 1 educational institution will he even with the board, before actual progress becomes thinkable. A brief resume of the conditions making these buildings necessary is this: U hall and Nebraska hall, classroom buildings, must bo abandoned, despite the fact that present class room space is congested; engineering facilities are curtailed and engineers being turned away. There is no decent medium sized auditorium on the campus. The coliseum with its poor acoustics is too large and too expensive for most purposes. The Temple is small, poorly equipped and poorly built. Neither is appro priate for lecture and art programs, which should comprise a large part of university life.' Morrill hall, housing the university mu seum collections, is overcrowded, altho many specimens and works of art are being stored rather than exhibited. The need in regard to larger quarters for the art gallery and for arcnaelogical and paleontological displays especially suggests itself, because the mu seum is of interest to grade and secondary school children and to many adults in the state. But prior to these urgent needs comes that of the library. The fact that many build ings are required on the campus, only sug gests that a start must be made. The place to start is on the library. He thought it the only legitimate activity on the campus. Mike's faith in the Schooner was a faith in Doc (Editor L. C. Wimberly). "Doc's a strange chap," Behlen was fond of saying, "he's always looking for something different. He bridges the gap between the commonplaces of today and those of tomorrow. He's against anything that establishes ruts in our thinking, be it science, religion, or the craze for two-bit hero worship." Behlen will be glad to know that his friend Doc is off to another ten years of Schooner editing. 9nquihutc bv Mi'rrill '.'iilt.'iinii Daily Nehraskan rnlerwl at art onrt crn"" miller at tin potloUlte In Llnroln, Nebnifkit, unlir act of cormreia. March 3, 1N79, and al Mike Behlen Will Be Glad. Herbert P. Behlen everybody called him "Mike" but nobody knew why was a strange kind of activities man. He came to the univer sity from Columbus, Neb., in 1933. He got into what might be called, by a stretch of the popular conception of the term, activities. He worked his heart out at it, but nobody ever heard of him. Behlen used to keep the boarding house awake until the wee hours pounding out cir cular letters that went to every state and na tion in the world. Sometimes he had them mimeographed, but usually it cost too much. He was always drawing cartoons or painting signs which he put up on the campus. Once he worked out a display whose dimensions were 8 feet high and 30 'feet long. The boys in the boarding house were a little peeved at his blocking up the whole upstairs corridor, but they said little, because they liked Mike and figured that a guy who was that sincere must have something. Mike organized campaigns with the Tas sels and the Y. "W. C. A. He was always mak ing speeches or talking shop to newspaper men. Sometimes he took time off to write. He wanted to land a story. He said if he could land one story, he'd figure his college days were worth while. Behlen left the university early in 1935 because of lack of funds. He turned his ac tivity oyer to a friend with a long pep and instruction speech. Mike will be glad this week when he gets his fall Prairie Schooner. He will bp glad to know that the activity on which he spent the best part of his short college life has survived the ugly perennial fall rumors that it had breathed its last. Behlen, as Schooner business manager, used to circularize the world for subscriptions. He advertised it with signs. He got the cam pus sales organizations to sell it. He wanted to write a short story for it. He believed in it. The Union of Course, But Now a Lihrary. (Excerpts from an article in the Lincoln Sunday Journal ami Star by Constance Syford. University of Nebraska graduate.) Our Student Union nears completion. Its lounges, its great hall, its dining rooms, its browsing room, its geographical centralization of student activities will go far to build a genuine opportunity for an increasing culture in the student body. It is a halfway house of which we may well be proud and to which all who can should contribute something. But to stop at this goal would be to create a new evil of exaggerated interest in social and extra curricular activities an evil which, indirectly, the union itself seeks to avoid, by promoting that "contagious" spirit which should better balance, thru fellowship, the varied interests and activities of a united and happier student body. Presumably the emphasis is on "stu dent." Certainly the new Union is a first step toward a still greater Union which will come onlv when the, book instead of the pine or the pigskin becomes the symbol of its ideal. But the book demands contemplation. And con templation demands quiet, comfort, ami that seclusion which a beautiful treasury of books should offer the eager mind. No Contagion of Culture. Above our parched prairie stubble, warmed by the glow of prairie sunsets sur passing any over Monte Mario or St. Peter's in Korne, looms our prairie eapitol. But on the university campus a small red building offers bare and shabby comfort to greet the young student eager for his first great adventure in learning. Good general reference books, a handful of rarer ones, a very few for the deeper researchers there are somewhere crowded and stuffed and therefore unseen in the inadequate quarters in which staff and students work without the atmosphere of books that they may see as living representa tives of the past and present. Of any inviting comfort, too, there is little to produce that "contagion" of culture and of scholarship which awaits the will the will to give of a generous people. 1 Our Nebraska eapitol is inspiring. Our Student Union is one step toward a greater fellowship of students, on the moral and so cial side. But there still remains a sad need for that stimulus to the spirit of scholarship and of intellectual endeavor, for that oppor tunity for the widening of intellectual hori zons and the deepening of vision, for that heightening of cultural ideals which the world of books, made available thru an ade quate library, alone can produce. A library, adequate to the needs of the varied intel lect, should become would become the haven of a student's spiritual individuality, the source and home of his intellectual free dom and power. "Ignorance is the curse of God, knowledge the wing wherewith we fly to Heaven" Shakespeare had a character say in Henry the Sixth. Bulwark Against Unreason. The state of Nebraska was built by pio-nt-er men of learning and of culture. It can tie true to their vision and dream it can grow only as the knowledge of the past, preserved in libraries, is diffused widely enough in youthful minds, to temper and give balance to the daring of the future. This is the great purpose of a university. It is for this that the citizens of Nebraska forget crop failures and stock market comets and business uncertainty and national whimsies and vagrancies, risking their last savings in that life trust fund and insurance policy offered their sons and daugh ters in a university education, the safest of all investments a bulwark against any tide of unreason. Let all ot us spcetl, hy generous contribution, thru legislative appropriation and private endowment, a great and beautiful, an adequate university library, the ever living mind and soul of the university, the measure of its potentiality. It won't be long now before the Student Union building' Is com pleted, and that panacea for cam pus ailments will bo going full blast. Many benefits were clulmed by the backers of the movement which swept the building Into be ing. Dire results wore predicted by those who opposed It. Among the latter was the unknown gen tleman, who had his reasons and stated them last year in his vitri olic "let 'em eat cako" letter to the Ncbrnskan. In that epistle, ho raged, to the effect that, when a university, needing a new library and lacking the barest essentials in classrooms, erects "a monument to the herd Instinct ol its 0,000 students, truly the inscription over the door ought to rend 'Iet 'cm eat cake!'" What dues the student on the campus tiling of the .Student Un ion? What benefits will it per form? Erna Motl, Graduate college: "It will concentrate student ac tivities in one place. It will center thcni all at one point; and, by placing them side by side, It will be much easier tor the one dcsir ous of entering an activity to evaluute the various activities and make a choice between them. "It will give to the university a center for both activities and so cial life which we lack now." Bizad sopho George Cameron, more: "As I see It, the barbs will have practically all the benefits of the Student Union, in that it will make available to them countless social activities which they cannot take advantage of at this time. "All the Btudents will gain, how ever, as it will provide a place for mutual acquaintance which is surely needed, and which has so far been entirely lacking. 'One thing should bo watched it way provide a means for ad ditional graft. In any organization there is ample opportunity for graft, but in the Student Union, unless it is exceptionally well managed, there will be a wonder ful opportunity for someone's per sonal gain at the expense of the j whole campus." Hazel Lawrence, Teachers college sophomore: "Hy providing a place for stu- j dent activities offiees, meeting, and reading, the Student Union j will be a much nepded addition to I the buildings on this campus. Of especial benefit to those who are affiliated with no social organiza tions, it will serve the whole cam pus by bringing the individual students into closer contact with each other. "The cafeteria is a wondeful Idea in itself. Too many of the students have nri decent place at which they can eat, and at the cafeteria, they will be able to se cure good food at a reasonable price." Anonymous, Arts and Sciences junior: "I have a rather peculiar atti tude toward education. I feel that no amount of knowledge benefits one unless one ran use it. The dis cussion of lectures and of books gives you far more than sitting and dozing in a class, listening to a very boring prof for an hour. And it is there that the .Student Union building will serve its pur pose. Where can you go now to talk over some new theory or idea? Practically nowhere." Leo Butler, Engineering colloge sophomore: "Although other buildings were needed much more, the Student Union will have its advantages. It will relieve the congestion in some of thu buildings, ami provide many social benefits for the students. "The cafeteria and the informal library are two of the best ideas that have bcon proposed around here for a ling time. Then, it should bring the students closer together by providing a common meeting place. It will probably do much to break down the barriers that fraternity men build between themselves and the barbs. "I only wish they'd get it fin ished." Alma Glade, Teachers college Junior: It will be wonderful . . The Student Union building at Minne sota has unified the campus. In stead of each little group having n party in one corner of the cam pus, they all have them in the student union. Then tne miu lng has brought the students into closer contact with one another and they co-operate with each other for the school. That same thing can be done here. Katherine KHbuck, Teachers col lege senior: "On the whole, I am very fa vorable toward it. I hope, however, that we may have a new library soon. If there are any objections to the Student building, they must be based soley on the fact that it went through ahead of the li brary. "The building will localize the campus activities that are now scattered all over, and by local izing them, it will make for a bet ter spirit between organize! ions and between students." Mark Rasmussen, Arts and Sci ences freshman: "A pretty good thing , . . I've been told that the library should be the center of student activity, and I do not feel that it is true. A library may be the center of the intellectual life of the student, but it cannot serve as the student ac tivity center. This function Rhould and will be performed by the Stu dent Union, doing just what its name implies, forming a union of students, bringing them closer to gether, building a better university." BUSINESS WOMAN TALKS TO Y.OESPER GROUP Miss Wisncr Will uiscuss Significant Living At 5 Today. Significant Living from the Business Woman's Viewpoint" will be the topic of a talk by Miss Mildred Wisncr, head of the per sonnel department at Miller & Panic's department store, at the meeting of the Y. W. vesper group this afternoon at Kllen Smith hall. The address will be the second ot a series of discussions entitled 'Significant Living." Virginia Wheeler will lean uic devotions. Under the clirecuon oi Maxlnn l'ederle. the choir will sing the. recessional and processional as well as a special number. Fran ces Marshall is chairman of the vesper htaff. The service taxes place at 5 p. m. NU-MEDS HEAR GRIFFITHS Head of State Hospital To Speak Wednesday. Dr. P. G. Griffiths, superintend ent of the Lincoln state hospital, will speak nt the Nu-Med society at the Grand hotel nt 8 p. m. Wed nesday. This is the second meet ing of the group this year and all pre-mrd students are invited. Any former members are still mem bers. All new members will have a clues of 511 cents. Approximately 80 students attended the last meeting. u c H i ; 2-d " - c3 V) I SH--H--H!! I JUST ROBBED " A BABY'S BANK1 1 Co I'd stoop to anything just to be able to see "VARSITY SHOW" at the Stuart Saturdayl Now! Ronald COLMAN in The Prisoner of Zcnda" with LOOK! .M;ii1'Yine irmll Done Ir. Murv Afctnr STIJAIIT Friday Mlf 11:14 Gala Homecoming Jamboree Sr.turdny! "Varsity Show" 1 'Bunch of Fugs' Scatter Debris in Stadium Press Box (Continued from Page 1.) coop, they should call it a pig sty," Ernie Bays. "When those guys get thru in that box up there, it simply is a sin." Broken glassware, cigar and cigarette stubs, crumpled papers, odds and ends and all hard enough to clean up, but the hardest part, according to Ernie, is to clean the tobacco juice splotches from the windows. Spittoons or no spittoons, the reporters always aim their Juicy quids at the nearest open window. If they hit, it's a hit. and if fiey miss it's still a hit, but it's a lit le harder to get off. "And the bottle." mourned Ernie, "it's just too, too sad." The Nebraskan staff members tried to console, surely It can't be as bad as all that we said. "Ask Joe there." said Ernie, pointing to the Nebraskan's taciturn sportswriter, Joe zeiley, "he II tell you it's so." "Yes," said Joe, "it's pretty bad." Miss Nan Gerry, lnstuctor in case work, Is to conduct an insti tute on "Recent Trends in Case Work Factors" at the Nebraska conference for social work 6tate meeting to be held In Grand Is land Oct. 17, 18, and 19. 5 (,li:.4T STAHS! JOAN CRAWFORD ROBERT TAYLOR FRANCHOT TONE with LEE TRACY LIONEL BARRYMORE MELVVN DOUGLAS THE GORGEOUS HUSSY plus "BEHIND THE HEADLINES" COME TODAY!! ToiIiiy & Tomorrow 2 Big Features In "The Tenth Man" IVIrr It. l,Mif'' "One Man Justice"' n V Any Scat IK Any Time ly 3 more days see . . . Norma Shearer Leslie Howard In lifi;iii a Juliet Thursday for 3 Days 2 FEATURES - 2 i-:-yn . 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