pmmmiMpHtwtmwiaiattimitm iwiiiwi MmiMaw WWWilimn -M tt&4 . KMs'f.3Vfi tfcmiMNUM i . . - 7i?i'ifiW!WaJi.iiiiTr7i,Wi)WiriVii'(iTi,iittui. vPTirv- swff5rttr "?--arsiS J V, --A?& fc- ' J " ';:: -fy$K.y:'.. .-P j$A!, .$'. xjj THE DAILY NEBRASKAN i y.WBHWWtlWWWWWMl".' i jy - - ---.-- H.r,-lWW,.-.-v- : a l !f IU. ft?"'1 . i.;c'. p ... 'M' l',5 ' The Daily Nebraskan y . THB.PhOPERTY 'OP .. TUB UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, Lincoln, Nobrnnkn. Published by ... THE STUDENT PUBLICATION HOARD EDITORIAL STAFF. Editor,. .... K. P. Froderlck Managing Editor ;;cr2 J' UoEd Associate Editor T. M. Edgecombe Associate Editor R. D. Hawley BUSINESS STAFF. Manager G. c Klddoo Assistant Manager V. C. Hasoall Circulator. ... .4 .... C. Buchanan 1 i' j r.1 J. ' '."" ; " Editorial and Business Office! BASEMENT, ADMINISTRATION BLDQ. Postofflce, Station A, Lincoln, Neb. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. 12.00 PER YEAR Payable In Advance. Single Copies, 6 Cents Each. Telephone! Auto 1BS8. Night Phones Auto 1888; Auto 3844. INDIVIDUAL NOTICES will bo charged for at tho rato of 10 contB tho Innortlon for ovory nfteon Swords or fraction there of. Faculty notices and University bul letlnj MU bladly bo published free. I TON1GH7 ra KM e5 o TEMPLE rASTOP INTO THE FOLSOM FOR REFRESHMENTS. ICE CREAM AND ICES, LIGHT LUNCHES, CANDIES AND BON BONS. Junior-Senior Debate fe 1307 O STREET Eritored at tho pontofneo at Lincoln, Nobrnnkn, an aoeonrt-olnsB mall matter undor the A6t of Congress of March 3, 1873. , Advertisements for the want column should be left at the business office, base ment Administration building, between 10 a. m. and 12 m., or between 2 p. m, and 5 p. m. Cash must accompany all orders for ad vertising, at the rate of ten cents for each fifteen words or fraction thereof the first Insertion; three Insertions twenty-five, cents; five Insertions forty cents. TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1010. 7;3o MUSIC HALL O0000000000090000000000000 EXAMINATIONS AGAIN. Was It yestorday that wo Bat pon dering over reams of examination pa per? Waa It yostcrdny that wo folt rolloved that tho wholo buslnoBB wns over? A moniont'B roBt n moment's sloop und ngaln wo bgo tho nnnounco mont of tho mldBomostor oxnmlnn- tlons. Tho flurry of dust loft by dopnrtlng students wending tholr wny homeward una hardly loft tho horizon. Tho echo of tho volco of tho delinquency com mltteo Is Btlll In our oars. Have wo learned our losHon? In a few Hhort days tho examinations will again bo hero. Yet In those few short days hack work can ho mado up; preparation for tho tests can be mado; henslon, quick comprehension and quick notion," and mlndB of ' "un Bpeclal" cultivation that may turn with oqual onBo In any direction. Tho college Js Intended to Btlimtlate theso qualities in a considerable num ber of mon which 1b "nature and cir cumstances woro alone dopended upon, would remain latent In all hut a few. It 1b for tho trnlnlng of men who nre to rlBff nbovo tho ranks." "Tho real work of the collego, tho work of its class rooms and labora tories, Iuib hecomo tho morcly formal and compulsory side of Its life, nnd a score of outside Ibbucs, groupod undor tho torm of 'undergraduate activities,' have become the vital, spontaneous absorbing ijnlltleB of nine out of overy ton mon who go to college." "Tho Bldo-showB have Bwallowed tho circus." "AmuBoments, athletics, the zest of contest nnd competition, all theso are wholosomo Btiinulnnts for the under graduate, but thoy should not nssumo tho front of tho stage whoro moro serious and lasting Interests are to be served. Tho collogo Is meant for a severer, more deflnito discipline thnn this; a discipline that will fit men for tho contests and nchiovcmontB of an ago whoso ovory task Is conditioned upon some intelligent and effective' use of tho mind, upon some substan tial knowledge, some special insight, some trained capacity, some ponotrn- TO GET CHARTER TYPEWRITERS ALL MAKES b, ww in SQLD QR BENTED Ront Applios on Purcliaso Prlco. Flvo Days Froo trial boforo you pay. Two yours guarntoo whon you purchase. Easy Torms. Got our Hat. Auto. 2080; Boll 1209. B. F. SWANSON CO., Inc. 143 So. 13th St. mat I Marcl 12, 1910 Fraternity Hall First Real Co-Ed Honorary Fraternltyr In School. The five girls In the lino arts school who formed -a. local honorary sorority to petition Alpha Psl, were visited lost week by tho grand Secretary of this organization, who said that their petition would he granted and tho In stallation take placo this spring. Alpha Psl Is purely honorary and member ship Is gained only by those who excel In music. This is tho flrBt honorary fraternity in the university to which only tho co-eds aro admitted. Denn Skllton Bays ho Ib In favor of the es tablishment of an organization of this nnturo In the flno arts school. The Dally Knnsan. I Fresliman Law Hop j T i $1.25 Walt's Orchestra Memorial Hall March 12 The union mooting of tho Cotner, Wcsloyun, Union and Nebraska mis sion bands of tlie student volunteer movement Saturday was a decided suc cess. Aftor supper In the Temple banquet hnll Mr. McCaffrey, a returned missionary, Bpoko briefly concerning conditions in Africa and mission work thero. Vormont cleared over $10,000 on the football games played last fall. i Senior Masquerade i i TICKETS 50c ip Two new engineering buildings wore dedicated at tho University of Kansas last week. FUR HATS NOT LADIES', BUT THAT NEW FUSSY KIND-THE KIND NEW YORKERS WEAR WHEN THEY HIT TOWN. 1415 O St. BUDD and the Btudont can go to tho oxnm InntlonB with n light heart and an caBy conBclonco. ' Some havo perhaps already tried on that panama; others have undoubtedly made a c1obot study of tho baseball schedule than of mathematics. The soft spring air as It drifts through the open windows furntshoB an almoBt lr reslBtablo call. Yet thoro will prob ably bo other spring days. Ba thero may not bo another examination. Whon a' student comoB to tho uni versity ho docs so with tho Intention of mooting university requlromontB. If the university roqulrcs moro than tho student can furnish It Is only an acknowledgement that ho does not be 'long In tho university. As a matter of fact, fro requirements aro not too high to ho met by all but a very fow students. Tho fact that they are npt mot by a certain' percentage is duo only to lack, of application at tho right time. WHAT COLLEGE IS FOR. It seems strange that, after the col lege haB been in exlstenco for a num ber "of yonrs, tho question should bo raised as 'to Its purpose. It Is as if a housewife, after using a washing ma chine for ten years, should ask What a Is for. Yet the collego presents such a wide field of activities and different colleges present them so differently that tho purpose of tho college Is open to a number of Interpretations. President Wilson of Princeton ex- proBsed his views on the subject us follows: "No one," he says, "ho over 'dreamed of imparting learning to an undergraduate Learning Is tho enter . prise of a.llfo-tlme," Social, physical (and mental activities aro all In "tholr particular degree necessary, but their relative and proper Importance is not. perceived! by too student. Tho world calls for men of "quick appre-. tlon that somes from study, not from natural readiness or moro prnctlcal experience. Tho Bido-showa need not bo abolished, but merely subordi nated." President Wilson, wo take It, In his characterization of .the college studont has particular referonce to tho Btudent In tho academic college. Ho speaks of the general comprehensive education ns tho kind demnryled by the world. Yot this attitude of the academic Is llttlo to bo wondered at. Ho gazes upon tho "clrcim" and finds llttlo that ho can put to lmmedlnto use. But per haps In one or tho other of tho nu merous "sldo-shows" ho may find something that has special bearing on his futuro occupation. In consequence ho makes that side-show ns important as any of tho studies Included 'in tho curriculum. Becnuse tho average stu dent prefers tho Immediate' and tan- IHblo to tho distant anil Intangible, Is ho bo tj(uch td blame? Minnesota agricultural college' will eroct a threo thousand ddllar brewery. Is this a progressive movement, or only n drawing enrd? Tho tdlm lights burn long nnd lato In tho ofneo of tho Cornhuskor these nights. What, with unravelling the cobwebs and slinking the dust off of Jokes which havo long mouldered In the archives of the university, It Is. a buBy time for tho editors. Whether overy sentence will begin with a giggle and end with" a curl pa per, we aro loth to say. But tho co-eds of the Y. W. C, A. will emblazon tho front page of tho Dally Nebraskan tomorrow wlth-the doings of tho asso ciation. In addition, the columns usually filled with tld-bjts of .wisdom mutilated in tho procesn of passing through- the mind of x the. editor will ,be occupied by real editorials from the co-ed pen. NEVER KNOW if you NEVER TRY Vbon you wnnt to got Clonnlnpc nnd Preaalng dono by hand nnd not by mnchlnory bring your clothos to JOE The Tailor who 1h nlso n BpoclnllBt on nltorlng nnd refitt ing your clotLos up-to-dnto. MARGARET M. FRICK Dressmaker of Style and Oualitv UPSTAIRS, 1328 O ST. LINCOLN University Bulletin MARCH. 9, Wednosday, 7:30 p. m. Engineer ing Socioty meets. Gejhit crit,0fci&&s tV J!lomn:li'W-l'h ' .-Mm mm MW.mJl 9, Wednosday, 7:30 p. m., Music Hall, Tomple--JunlorSenlor debate. 9," Wednesday, 8-p. m., Music Hall, Temple Platform Club meets. 10, Thursday Convocation. Musical Program. 11, Friday Vesper services, Memo rial Hall. University Chorua. li, Friday, 5 p. m. Special convocaj tlon. Prof. H. W. Caldwoll. 12, Saturday Freshman law hop. 13, Sunday, 3 p. m., Temple Y. W. C. A. vesper service, 13, Tuesday Convocation. Prof. Q. B. Condra. "State and National Con servation." Illustrated. 17, Thursday Musical program. Con vocation. 19, Friday, 5 p. m. Special convoca tion, Prof. W. L. Stophebs, super intendent Lincoln schools. 25, Friday, 5 p. m. Convocation. Prof. G, W. A. Lucky. "Shall Or- ganlzed Play Bo Made a Part of the Public School Curriculum?" L0STJ If you have lost or found art icles, rooms for rent or books to sell, advertise in the Nebraskan's WANT-AD column Our rates are low and we get results IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE :.. 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