The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 22, 1939, Page TWO, Image 2

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    TWO
DAILY NEBRASKAN
Here At the Office
Today We Had a Caller
WHO TOLD US this paper was
violating the law. We are guilty
of plagiarism. We can not tell you
that "Roosevelt seeks Landon's
support," as our yesterdrty's head
line did, because that is stealing.
It has been held by the courts that
news is a property and is subject
to ownership. Property cannot
rightfully be stolen.
COINCIDENTAL with the call
of our friend, were phone calls
and several letters, one of which
is printed in today's Pulse, con
gratulating the DAILY NEERAS
KAN for recognizing the fact that
there is news outside that of this
institution.
THIS PATER has never intend
ed to be an institutional liability.
Its long established purposes are
to report the news of the univer
sity, reflect as near as possible the
views of the student body, and in
terpret the institution to the
public. For scores of years it has
been attempting to do just that.
COMES NOW, however, a time
of emergency. This is a time when
probably the most well written,
well covered continuous story dur
ing our short span of years is tak
ing place. Editors for the past
ten years have fought for permis
sion to special wire services simi
lar to those of metropolitan news
papers. It is not doubtful that
editors of the future will do the
same. There are those who are
dubious of the entire idea - there
ate others, who because of their
own interests, have not seen their
way clear to permit it.
THE JOB confronting the entire
DAILY NEBRASKAN staff is not
a simple on. Long, hard hours of
work that end in results only to
be criticized are hard to swallow.
For that reason, then, this year
special precautions have been
taken to allow no glaring mis
takes in proofreading, quotations,
RENT CARS
Always Open
Good Cars Lowered Prices
The friendly place. Established
20 years
Motor Out Company
1120 P St
2-6819
SAT. &
SUN.
Sept.
23 & 24 Sunday Is
DANCING FROM 8 TO 11 P. M.
Couplet Only
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A
TTDBADDIE IIKJ
Dk, AQ.IL JJlSUfL
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POST1 OFFICE
mars
71
or information to appear in this
daily. We trust they will not.
e
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN is
furthering its efforts to better
serve the students of the Univer
sity by relaying thru its special
news bulletin board in the lobby
of the Union the latest news of
the world-esecially that of the
war.
O
AND WHILE we're on the sub
ject of war, we're going to spon
sor a contest. We're going to give
a prize -something worthwhile
in an effort to find a name for
the present war. No one yet has
conceived the words that best fit
the fracas going on across the
waters. Just drop your entries
inta the campus mail.
HERE'S ONE on our sports edi
tor, Miss June Bierbower, the only
woman sports editor of a campus
daily. Miss Bierbower and a friend
were on their way to Lincoln last
Saturday. A highway patrolman
pulled up along side the car and
stopped the couple for speeding.
June wrote her father who relayed
her message to the judge. "You
see," said June truthfully, "we
were talking about the Canadian
Royal Airforce and I guess my
driver-friend thought we were
flying."
WE TAKE off our hats today
to Miss Webster of the Geology
deartment. Genial and true-hearted,
Miss Webster pauses to pull
weeds as she walks across the
campus mauls. It's not everyone
that has that much interest in this
institution.
To The Editor.
Congratulations on the NE
BRASKAN'S at last taking cog
nizance of the fpet that the Corn
Cobs, and Tassels, deciding to
eliminate apple cores from apples
at football games does not consti
tute the most important news
suitable for university students'
consumption.
Your daily column playing up
news of the present world situa
tion is a long-needed addition to
the paper, in my opinion. Surely
no one should be more interested
in the second World war than col
lege students, since they are of the
age which would prove most vul
nerable should the United States
be drawn into the conflict. Such
being the ca.se, the Official Pub
lication of Over 7,000 students (by
JACK LULLS
And Hit N. B. C. & C. B. S. ORCHESTRA
Champion Recordings
UNIVERSITY NIGHT
SUB-STATION
CEK2K 5TCr.E
ffa DailySNebmsmn
0i'ci'aJ Newspaper Of More Than 7,000 Students
THIRTY-NINTH YEAR
Offices Union Building
Day 2-7181. Night 2-7193. Journal 2-3333
Member Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40
Member Nebraska Press Association, 1939-40
Represented tor National Advertising by
NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE. INC.
420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
Chicago Boston Los Angeles San Francisco
Published Daily during the school year except Mondays and Saturdays,
vacations, and examination periods by students of the University of Nebraska,
under supervision of the Publications Beard.
StibscTipTTon Rates are" $1X0 Per Semester or $1.50 for the College Year.
$2.50 Mailed. Single copy, 5 Cents. Entered as second-class matter at the
postoffice in Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. and at
special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917.
Authorized January 20, 1922.
Editor-TnChieT 7T. Harold Niemann
Business Manager . Arthur Hill
e dTto R T AL DEPART M ENT
Managing Editors Merrill Englund, Richard deBrown
News Editors Norman Harris, Ed Wittenberg, Lucile
Thomas, Clyde Martr, Chris Peterson.
Sports Editor June Bierbower
Ag Campus Editor Rex Brown
Fashion Editor .Margaret Kraus?
BUSINESS" DEPARTMENT
Assistant Business Managers Burton Thiel, Ed Segrbt
Circulation Manager Keith Van Neste
your own admission) is only print
ing news of direct concern to its
readers when it gives prominent
display to war developments.
The doings of all the Big People
On The Campus are an important
part of any college paper without
doubt, but the activities of Hitler
and his playmates are not wholly
without interest t all of us, so,
again, congratulations!
i A Senior.
To The Editor:
Last spring, by some official or
der, the little red stop 'buttons'
dotting campus streets were taken
up and replaced by curb stop
signs. This was a very good idea,
since the street buttons doubtless
were the cause of more than one
chassis-shivering jolt.
However, it is almost too opti
mistic on someone's part to ex
pect all motorists to see the new
si?ns, stuck on short posts as they
are and completely obscured by
parked cars. One of these days, a
driver who is unfamiliar with the
locations of these cleverly hidden
signs is going to breeze right on
through knocking some poor soul
or souls to Uknowhere.
Why not mount the signs on tall
posts which would place them
above the line of parked cars and
in full sight of approaching
vehicles? And why not do it before
there is an accident and not after
wards as in the case with the
automatic signal at 14th and R
streets. How about it, whoever is
; in charge of things like stop signs?
Safety Man.
Bllue Print staff to meet
in Union 306 Monday
New staff members of the
Nebraska Blue Print will meet
at 5 p. m. Monday in room 306
of the Union. All engineering
students who desire to work on
the publication are asked to re
port at the meeting.
LEAEH IT
StllAD AMTCC
IRVING KUKLIN '39
1210 P St. J-rt r;. Phone 2-1616
tudent Union
SATURDAY, SEPT. 23
JODY COX
ahd fas' ORCHESTRA
Dancing 9 to 12
10c Per Person
$QQChri$ Peterson
A style expert has been defined
as one who makes a woman feel
modest when she isn't. We men
aren't bothered with such people.
But we do have our troubles.
Foremost among these troubles
is our Ind'an underwear. You
know, the kind that creeps up be
hind you.
Another thing that we have to
be careful of are suits that fit
like paper on a wall. I'll admit
that they look nice but you never
see a wall bend over, do you?
Then there is the matter of
style. It seems that if one foo!
wears it, it is bad taste. If enough
fools wear it. it's style.
Zippers will never crowd but
tons out of the men's clothing pic
ture. I'd like to see some sap try
to put a zipper in the collection
plate.
...
Well. I bought a plaid vest a
one of the clothing stores down
town, yesterday. Just a little
something to keep my apju'tite
under check.
...
Suspenders are still holding up
under the strain of competition
from the belt.
I ran see why the nudists ar
a carefree bunch of aouls.
TYPEWRITERS
rr
SALE and RENT
Nebraska Typewriter Co.
It N. I'.'lh St.
LINCOLN, St BR.
tin;
HDAEICE
vot; to nNK iv
rRIVAlK l.tXKON
at MILLER'S
vfc-via . . i rJi
K don't mind telling
yon, we do a lot of
snooping, getting the
low-down on the new,
the uniiMinl, the things
that you want to know
about.
T
AKE our SWF. AT-
F.KS, for instance. You
know we have wad of
them, but have you Keen
the snappy little num
ber of soft wool, with
embroidered flower
trim, and a ripper at
at the neckline? We
think it's one of the
smartest of them all.
und it'it onl 3.50.
c,
llKMIJl'. i no long
er confined to bed
spread and bath mats,
hot is oh, so good look
ing in the new IIOI'SK
;OATS. , Hut before
you rut li ; mothers fa
vorite spread, hasten
down to Mll.l.l It S and
buy your CIIKMI.I.K
HOliSK UT S3 in
Second Moor Kobe St
lion. I IF. lady
is trying
out our
a :tiov
fzk HUSK.
It m pleas-
(ant surprise
to her to
find h e
ran brnd to
I a b a r a
lory draw--t
without
p o pp i ng
runner at
the knrr, fur the pf
rial rlaslir band take
rare of the itrttrh-
ing. Pair fl. Ho.
iry, Strert Floor,
K think puroe are
df-ad Kive-awayn. Whal'a
we mean just this, that
we've neen a lot of
frmhnten fishing des
perately into ovrrrrowd--d
little bilsy purses.
Hut eipeririM-r is a
good Umt her, and upper
iIMmrn arc earning
PlinSKS with large,
roomy ronipartmenU,
with a plare for every
thing. I. "5 an( ,r,t
in Leather ;mhIp. -Street
Hnr.
I).
ID you know that
here at MIIJ.KKS you
ran get eipert adtire on
what, new and (mart
for bn the rampu wear?
Ask ur eollrge rlolhe
consultants (arrrsMtry
simp, aerond floor) your
iiesMHis. They hate the
Nebrashan
in Or
ft.
wotch yV-rt;
For J) A
Spied ot kiM
Miller's" yfgfl
in next ' fr ? V
Friday! fiff
Daily
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