Jutnday, September 27, 1942. lAILY NEBRASKAN 1942 :g 'V th 'oid fiS tr- en vi; I. m fo f-i- 8 I Filley Spooks . . . esiawreiice Heads History Society for Third Time '' j Courtesy Sur.!y Journal and S'sr. J. E. LAWRENCE . . . third term for him. "The only way to curb inflation in the present vr.r is to place a ceiling on wages," Dr.-H. C. Filley, chairman of rural economics at ag college, told Nebraska Historical society members in annual meet ling at the capitol yesterday. Speaking on "Prices and Presi dents," Filley pointed out that ;'tho increase in wage rates to more than triple pre-World war I has already resulted in an increase in the cost of producing goods." These increases in production costs, he said, arc necessarily re flected in increased prices, i' "Each increase in price reduces ,tlv purchasing power of all thr d)Ilais secured as wages. If srd ferios and wages are increased so .""i.telil Grey 1910 Football Team Left r j Lincoln in 'Blaze of Glory' By Shirley Crc:by Looking through th; Daily Ne braskan of Nov. 4. 1910. we find. Freshmen Decide on Caps Will Wear Light Grey Headgear with bark Red Numerals." Different colors, and imagine the freshmen of today being able to decide any Thin! This humor was fn the "Rag C -tract" for M?rch 11, 1924. "Even x blotter has an absorbing life." An1 playing at the Rialto was G.vr?e Arliss in "The Green God- ,deSS." In 1910 our football boys left for Kansas in a 1 Blare of Glory." No substitutes for that team 'leven and only eleven toured to Kansas that year. On Dec. 1. 1010. the students .were in a dither because some ' "was" had changed an announce ment reading "limited to 80 cou- i r-les' to "limited to 800 couples." 'j,.eming to necessitate enlarge ment of the Lincoln hrtel. One of the first Corahusker banquets was 1ieM that December, too. ... Group Meets r .4 , v. H. C. FILLEY . . . place ceiling on wages. that the purchasing power of the wage earner can be maintained, the cast of producing the product, and, therefore, the price of the product is increased. "It is now time," he continued, "for everyone -including the poli ticiansto admit that it is impos sible to maintain pre-war living standards when one-half of the productive capacity of the nation is devoted to the war effort." At the same meeting, general assembly of the group attending the 65th annual session of the so ciety, James E. Lawrence of the school of journalism and editor of the Lincoln Star, was named pres ident of the state society for the Aird consecutive time. With Dark Red"' No "Society" in those papers: no ' Spoils" or "Horse Sense" ei ther. TTicre was no mention of hour dances, or recreation of any kind. Just a generation or two ago, but so much improvenvent since then. Former UN Chaperone Retired Mrs. Hill Was House Mother of Tri-Delts, Gamma This, Wilson Hall Studonts returning to UN this fall will miss Mrs. Hattie Hill, zation and of the Lincoln Wom an's club, she has taken an active Thousands of IUsrfl 5 VS' Long's MebrasEia Campus History Revealed Noticed University Corners, (Editor's Note: Nebraskan re ports, Mary Thorns is also a Tassel. This story tells what she learned in conducting freshman tours last week). By Mary Thorns. Lying about the campus so un obtrusively that few of the wise and aged seniors know of their existence are many relics of the past which contribute to that well known volume known as "campus history." A tour of these land marks and relics provides many interesting tales for the interested visitor. Take heed of these for they are things that make interesting tell ing in retrospect. Many have seen the large rock lying between the library and ad ministration building, but few know of its history. This rock was excavated near Hartington, Nob., by a university expedition and brought to this campus. The queer impressions upon the rock were figures thought to be the imprints of birds' feet, but have been proved to be hyrogly phics, an ancient Egyptian written language. Fountain Was Gift. Few students ever notice the fountain between the library and administrattion building, or the love seat between U hall and the library, but there is a story behind them. Both are gifts to the univer sity by past graduating classes. The class of 1906 presented the love seat, and the drinking foun tain was a gift from the class of 1900. The love seat had to be reset some time ago because the tre in the center grew to such proportions that its roots cracked the gift. There are two other trees be tween the library and U hall, both of them memorial trees. The tree with the small black iron fence around it is a linden tree brought to this country by Dr. Fossler from the famous street in Berlin, Untor den Linden. Fossler, Greatly Loved. Upon the death of Dr. Fossler, former head of the German de part in many of the city's civic and social affairs. who has served on the campus for 24 years as chaperone at several houses. Mrs. Hill retired from her work this summer. She served as housemother at the Gamma Phi Beta. Delta Delta Delta, Phi Omega Pi and Alpha Delta Theta houses lor 14 years. For the past ten years Mrs. Hill has been at Wilson Hall. A prominent member of the Chaperones club, since its organi Active in Woman's Club. Mrs. Hill was active in several of the departments of the Lincoln Woman's club and has been an active member of the organization since its beginning. She is al.oo a member of the Plymouth Congre gational church. - Mr. and Mrs. Hill were pioneers in western Nebraska and moved to Lincoln in 1900. They entered into civic and social affairs imde diately and were prominent in city circles. She has gone to live with her sister Mrs. Howard S. Sherman at 4711 Saratoga Ave, Downers ! Grow?, Ill, a suburb of Chicago. J y-j .- 3sm on Which You partment and ot.-e of the most be loved university professors of all times, the tree was dedicated in memory to him. Along the wall near U hall is a small rock which escapes most students attention. This rock covers the ashes of Dr. Lees, an other beloved Nebraska profes sor. As a professor of Greek his office and classrooms faced this view of the campus, and before his death he asked to be buried in that spot. Duriag his time U hall still had its three stories and the bell tower, but the building was be ginning to deteriate. It was upon his insistence that the bulging walls were reinforced with the iron rods still visible in the pres ent building. Bell Still ings. The bell which hung in the U hall tower, used formerly to call students to their classes, is now used as a Victory bell for our athletic games. This bell always heads the pep rsllys. Besides being the first building on the Nebraska campus, U hall holds another first distinction. (M ROTHLEY TAILORED BLOUSES featuring the smart new "Lord Bron" collar 2 Quality needling, quality fabrics, quality details the famous Rothlcy blouse is here iih the new wider collar and neat, tnug wristband In blue, I mil fug', rod, Krllry, mrrj pimk. Sizes 30 to 38 4th Floor. Iks' r M eoh in Seldom Tassel Finds This building's cornerstone was the first ccrnerslone placed by the Masonic lodge of Nebraska. Thousands of women students have attended physical education classes in Grant Memorial, but probably few of them have known that this building is dedicated to the former University of Nebraska men who lost their lives in the Civil and Spanish-Americans wars. The east end of the building is dedicated to the casualties of the Civil War, and the west end is in memorium to those in the Spanish-American War. The new library and the field house are not the only unfinished buildings on the city campus. The third building which is still in complete and most certainly will be finished is former museum. The bricked up corridors at the west side of the building were in tended to lead into one of the ther three sections of an E shaped building. At the time of its construction former museum was to have been the main building on the existing campus, but only the southern most wing wasever completed. 1. ; 95 Store i TO -