The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 23, 1907, Image 1

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Vol. VI. No. 92.
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1907.
Price 5 Cents.
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BILLS AFFECTING THE UNI NOW
UNDER CONSIDERATION.
Large Amount to Go to State Farm
Provision for Treasurer of Unl
i verslty New Buildings.
House roll, number 264, Introduced,
by Representative Adam McMullln,
and referred to the Houso Committoe
on Finance, Ways and Means, Febru
ary 6, makes an appropriation of $180,
000 for the State Farm. The amount
is divided up as follows: For the com
pletion and equipment of the new
Womnn's.Buildlng, $38,000; for a heat
lng and powor plant, $40,000; a like
amount for a new Horticultural Build
ing, and as much moro for the orectldn
of a voterlnnry clinic building and tho
stock and grain judging pavillions; for
a cattle feeding plant and barn for
Implements and machinery and for the
houses of' farm attendants, $16,000;
and for a poultry plant, $6,000.
Two other of Mr. McMullln's bills
are of interest to University people,
the one, House Roll No. 76, provides
that the proceeds of tho one mill Uni
versity tax for 1907 and 1908 and tho
surplus of this remaining from tho
years 1905 and 1906 shall go to the
University for general expenses and
maintenance and for tho erection of a
new engineering building on tho cam
pus, tho cost of this last not to exceed
$100,000. This bill has been rofdrrod
to tho committee on the University
and Normal Schools. Tho othor, H.
R. 69, which went to the same com
mittee, January 14, provides that thr
Treasurer of tho State of Nebraska
become, ex-ofllclo, tho Treasurer of
the University, and ho Is authorized to
receive all money coming to tho Uni
versity from any source, excepting
the proceeds of school taxation, which
money may bo paid out only on war
rant from tho Auditor of Public Ac
counts, who may Issue such warrants
only on certificate from the Regents.
In H. R. 235, a bill by Chas. Noyos,
a bureau for tho Investigation of the
control and spread of Insect pests
headed by the State Entomologist and
the Botanist of tho Experiment Sta
tion, who becomes State Botanist, is
to be established with headquarters at
the Farm. Two field assistants aro
provided for and an appropriation of
$3,500 a year is mado to cover ex
penses. ,.
The establishment of a State Bac
teriological Laboratory is the provi
sion of H. R. 60 and It appoints as di
rector the Professor of Bacteriology in
the. College Of 'Medicine; $5,000 Is ap
propriated for equipment, and '$3,500 a
year for maintenance of this labora
tory. Rlnaker Gets It.
At the meeting yesterday of tho
board to select the Rhodes Scholar
from the three candidates successfully
passing the examinations some time
ago, Samuel N. Rlnaker of the Univer
sity was elected. The candidates were
subjected to "considerable cross-questioning,
but Rlnaker seemed to bo the
final favorite, and is nowrecelvlng the
congratulations of his friends. He
will go to England next fall.
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UNIVERSITY HALL.
A view of the oldest building on the campus from an Eleventh street en
trance 'to the grounds.
LA8T GAME TONIGHT.
Cornhuskers to Play Grinned College
Five.
Nebraska, 31; Wisconsin, 35.
Tho Nebraska basket-ball five will
play the last game of tho present trip
at Grinnoll, Iowa, tonight and will re
turn to Lincoln early tomorrow morn
ing. The Cornhuskers mot tho Iowa
University team at Iowa City last
night.
Several members of tho team wore
Injured in tho Marshflold and Portage
games and aro in poor condition for
the contest with Grinnoll. The Iowa
College five claims the state champion
ship, having recontly defeated the
Unlvorslty of Iowa basket-ball team,
which has formerly hold that honor.
The following dispatch regarding tho
Grinnoll five appeared in tho Chicago
Record-Herald yesterday:
For tho first time In several years
Iowa College has an excellent claim
to tho Btate championship in basket
ball, not only of tho college teams, "but
of tho Y. M. C. A. teams as well. In a
florpely contested game played at
Grinnell the-scarlet and black players
succeeded In defeating the Y. M. C. A.
team from Des Moines, admitted to be
tho strongest organization of Its kind
In Iowa. In the game at Grinnoll the
CongrogaUonalists won by tho score of
33 to 24.
As it Is, not expected that any fur
ther game will be played by the two
schools, Grinnell appears to have the
best claim to tho state title. Grinnell
had previously defeated all of the col
lege teams in tho state, and there does
not seem to bo any possibility of losing
the coveted honor.
Dr. Haggard, 212-213 Richards Blk.
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DENVER Vs. NEBRASKA
FIQDAY, march ONE ' ,
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INFORMAL DANCE WITH
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SENIOR PARTY.
Committee Appointed Is Planning New
"8tunts" for March 16.
In accordance with tho resolution
passed at tho Senior class mooting Inst
Tuesday, the party committee has
been appointed and tho work of ar
ranging for tho next "stunt" Is well
under way. Tho affair will probably
take place in tho Armory and Chapol
on March 15, the earliest open date.
Tho committee Is attempting to make
this party as popular and with ns wide
a range of amusements ns tho enter
tainments which proved so successful
last semester.
Tho class of 1907 has mado some
thing of an Innovation in tho number
of i.tortainmonts given for tho pur
pose of getting its members acquaint
ed rmong themselves, and the foynl
support accorded by tho class to the
movement Is evidence of its popular
ity. Tho committee as appointed Is as
follows: Paul R. Butlor, -chairman;
Josephine Frazler, Leota Lapp, M. E.
Cornelius, Georgia Field.
, - I
Y. W. C. A. Election.
At tho annual election of the Uni
versity Y. W. C. A., hold yesterday
noon, the following officers were
placed in office: Miss Carrie Schultz,
president; Miss Viola Barnes, vice
president; 'Miss Carrie Strong, secre
tary; Miss Lillian Chambers, treas
urer. Tho nominating committee, which
had the power of selecting the officers,
first secured the vote of the Associa
tion members, and from tho result
chose the officers.
Swe"ll stationery. Low prices at the
Co-op.
(PROGRAMS AFTER GAME
NEW CONVOCATION
R. W. BRECKINRIDGE ON 8PIRIT
OF AMERICAN HISTORY.
Dominating Influence in American
History the Westward Movement
The Citizenship of Today and
Tomorrow, a Citizenship
of Culture.
The now foaturo of convocation, tho
sories of five o'clock lectures on Fri
days, opened most auspiciously last
ovonlng with nn oloquont and vory In
teresting address by Ralph W. Brock
onrldgo of Omaha on "Tho Spirit of
American History."
Mr. Breckonrldgo spoke In part as
follows: Tho makers of history have
always been actors on tho stago of tho
world. But tho study of history opens
up a wider horizon thnn events and
facts and tho persons who figure In
them, It takes Into account all tho In
fluences that have boon shaping and
making possible theso things since tho
beginning of time.
In American -history nil tho Influ
ences of tho last 400 yoars have been
shaping events of today. Tho domi
nating fenturo of it all has boon the
steady march of civilization and pro
gress westward. Wo must look toward
the West to understand tho spirit of
Amorlcan history. Tho surging tides
of population and tho roBtloss energy
of Amorlcan enterprise havo steadily
pushed our frontier west across the
mountains, over tho plains ,and the
desert, nnd beyond the mountains
again until there Is no moro west.
American history must bo studied,
analyzed and Judged by certain groups
of men. Thoir mental and moral
characteristics represent tho Ideals of
tho nation nnd tho product of Its life.
In no case Is this bettor manifested
than in tho splendid personality of
Theodore Roosevelt.
As was said before, tho movement
from soa to sea, from, tho eastern
fringe to tho western border of our
continent Is the most significant part
of its history. Coronado was tho first
explorer of tho West, La Salle and
many others followed. Geprge Rogers
Clark, the Moses of the Mississippi
Valloy, Lewis and Clark, and counties
hardy pioneers opened It up and mado
it known to the civilized community.
Gradually the settlors followed, push
ing out and on until they havo con
quorod not only the fertile wilderness,
but also the Groat Amorlcan Desert,
and mado It tho garden of the world.
Fifty years ago this part of the West
was a wilderness, today ft blossoms
with all the fruits of civilization and
progress and produces most of the food
of the nation.
But the spirit of American history
has also Its dark side. The truckling
of our nation to tho slave-holder will
always bo a disgrace, our treatment
of the Indian is a shame to our neonla.
Wo robbed him of his land and, worse,
ruined him with whlsky,until today
he Is fast disappearing from the face
of tho earth. '
However, the signs of today are
hopeful, the history of the future Is
the history of culture, in the past,
(Continued on page 3.)
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