Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1914)
f THE DAILY NEBEASKAN ' 'A th . kt B:! J r ?.' I l r -i pffiije Battjj NebraBkmt Property of THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Lincoln. " m v. iu-:ed Edltor-ln-Clilot Manning Kdltor AiBOclnto Editor AsBOclato Editor Kennotb. M. Bnydor ...Prod N. WollB Clarence T. Spier REPORTORI'AL STAFF. Fred L. nnlu-ock Athletics Ethel Arnold Women Ilutli SqulroH. HortoiiHo Kaufman, Rob ert Holland, Eouls Homo, Glen Evcits, t'lnru Doddfl, Wm. F. Noble, H. V. Koupal, L. H. EvnnB, Max ttnohr, Rob well Weeks. Act. Dub. Mivbt. " Frank S. Perkins Circulation Manager J. C. Beard SubBcrlpOon-price J2.00 per year, payablo In advance. Single CoploB, B cents oach Entered at the poBtolllco at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second-class mall matter, under the Act of Congress of March I, 187. Tuesday, January 27, 1914 YOUR ATTENTION, PLEASE. The retiring staff r The Daily Ne bniHkan presentH thin issue to the stu dentn. an an indication of the policy of expansion which is to be attempted this coining semester. We do not pre Bont the five-column form as perfect, for to change from the four to flvo column style in a day requires n little practice. Inasmuch us the last flve 'Siolumn Hag was published four years ngotbero are few of the present staff who are up on the intrlcacloB of the larger form. Hut the sample is an Indication of a bigger and better pa per, which the hushing staff hopes to be able to continue. It will be bet ter for the 'Undents, it will be better for the adertising department; it will be better lor the stall, it will make a is ore readable paper Willi the mil ni 1 r.rto loyal students, who will suppoit the paper to the ex tent ol their dollars. The Nebrnskan con really anomplish that for which It exist as a i ollege dally. We ap peal to Nebraskans. not for your ears, but for oiir active support. CROSSING THE- BAR. Thru an error, it was announced in Saturday-, Nebraskan that the senior hop dul not mako a profit. In refutation it K utting to remark that the din e did p.i out, abundantly, with a -i ii. his ol ilii nine dollars, and that the i la s debt is now practically innrpll.il 'I In l.u me ss management of the dance was most efficient, and as a result ot good ship Senior Class Is once again tree, having crossed the shoals ot Lost Credit. CURTAIN. With this Issue The Nebraskan goes into other hands. It will doubtless re- No Matter where vou got your k lasses'""" WCcnn duplicate any lena and repair any frame while you wait We test eyes Scientific examination and the truth Hallett Registered Optometrist Est 1871 U43 O St. SHOES - $2.50 Why pay more? M BUDD - 1415 O Street CONVOCATION. - fc Selections from Rubinstein -fc fc Mrs. Molzer, Miss Elche, Miss - -y Spencer -fa String Trio Eleven o'clock Memorial hall appear with a new and refreshing policy. Such Is the way of the college dally, and to this decree the outgoing staff bows in acknowledgment of Its own shortcomings. Exit the villian. enter the hero. And so on to the end of the play. With each urtain the scene changes. And in the finale it all ends well this we trust. In this last act, the staff has had the pleasure of enumerating many progressive changes on the campus. To start, It was a treat to chronicle the successful Innings of the football season. After came debate, when again It was a fortunate car tor the Scarlet. In the meantime, the fresh man class has now become a working unit in the system. Ushered across tile threshold by the Chancellor, the Innocents, and the Black Masques, they have seemingly caught a smat tering or the spirit which It ts their privilege to share. All during the semester there has been an under current of student opin ion, breaking out at times in class or ganizations, when plans have been suggested for the more direct super vision of affnirs by class boards of managers and commissioners. At last this has taken the form of a demand for the student council. The develop ment of tills belongs properly to the coming semester. Hut in all fairness, here Is the place In which to acknowl edge the effectiveness of the i o-ctl Influence. The feminist movement has been by for the most noticeable feature of the semester. Thru the agency of the Girls' club, the girls are coming to know n Nebraska spirit for the co-eds - a spirit which has not been manifest before. During the next semester the prob lems of the single tax. self govern ment, spring baseball class politics, campus location, and divers others will occupy the center stage. The se mester past has been a live one the semester-to-be gives promise of results Instead of beginnings. All of which makes good "copy." The Nebraskan will be in a fortunate position to re flect and further student sentiment. Just before the curtain, the editor would speak briefly in appreciation of the work of the reportorial and as sociate staff thruout the semester. A comparison with other dailies tails to show many particulars in which it would have been bettered. There has been the best of feeling and a sense of comradeship. The next semester will find the staff scattered, several not to be com. txd with the paper. For promotion did not come to several wbrv.se work w-W inefTT It. But 'the "Rag" spirit r has outlived several administrations, in the ranks of the scribblers, and it will continue to thrive still. Sigma Tau Pledges. Sigma Tau, the honorary engineer ing fraternity, has pledged the follow ing men: T. L. Frank, V. C. Albert, II. H. Goetze, and S. K. Clark. Prof. B. F. Rober was pledged to the hon orary membership. JHMMW M,ch COLLAR A Graceful Iltdlt Hand Notob Collar. 2 for 25 cent Cluett. Penlioily A Co , Inc. Maker DR. &ESSEY TALKS ON BUSINESS. Addresses Scandinavian Club on Work of. World's Great Systematic Botanist. The Si andlnanc Ian c bib met last Saturday night. Dean flessey gave an inspiring lecture on Linneus, the great Swedish botanist. The lecture was dl vided Into three parts, a short bio graphical sktch, a resume of his most Important works, and an estimate of his position In the world of science. In 1763 Linneus published the epo h mnklng treatise Species IMantnrum. Although it cannot be said that the world in 1707, the year in which Linneus was born, did not know any filing oboiit botany, the little that it did know was fragmentary and unsys tematlzed. It remained for Linneus to systematize the science. Dean Hessey characterized Linneus as the father of botany, the greatest botanist the world has ever produced. As long as the world stands, botanists will pilgrimage to the little hamlet in which he was born and be grateful to the people which reared him. Phi Kappa IM announces the plcdi.' Ing of .Merril V. Reed, '14, of Line oh GET YOUR Second Semester Supplies AT THE CO-OP Second Hand Text Books NoteBooks - Engineering Supplies - Botany and Anatomy Supplies Fountain Pens $1 to $5 Everything the Student Needs Co-op Book Store On the Square with the Student 318 North Eleventh Street TRY OUR LUNCHEONETTES They are always the best We serve hot and cold drinks all winter long. Lincoln Candy Kitchen South West Corner 14th O Street The "I Will" Man started something when he said: "SHIRTS - - It takes nerve to sell $2.50, $2, $1.50, $1.25 and $1 shirts at SIXTY-NINE CENTS but that's the way the "J WILL fellow does things. ARMSTRONG'S KEEP YOUR EYE ON OUR WINDOWS) The University School of Music Established 1894 Third Regular Term Begins Feb. 2. Ask for full information now Willard Kimball, Director Phone B-1392 11th and R Sts. Another Well Film The Lion and the Mouse By Chas. 'Klein TUESDA Y, WEDNESDA Y AND THURSDA Y Magnet Theater Lincoln's Favorite Moving Picture House Matinees Daily Admission 10c Orchestra Music Every Evening 44 CDA Try the Y. M. C. A. Lunch Room Cafeteria Plan CUyY. M.C.A. 13th and P 69c yy Known Dramatic Feature WHITMAN'S CLASSTtftNQj Meier Drug Co IS AND O STREETS A m AJ - i , ' . r-w'' )' , A - '" " It f u - , ,'s j ," 'v r ;i'. ,."-', . rjtri I 'j-'---! ubom4iil'k-t&&'vri!l t ."'- Tm" ,3T.i , .