THE DAILY "N; E B R- ASK A N . - - ' - 1 - - The Dally Nebraskan Property of m , THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Lincoln C A. SORENSBN Editor-in-Chief aiannRins Editor ...S Swv.ni Associate Editor R. VAKS?J Associate Editor. "fe ' Athletic Editor Henry Kyle Business Manager nKF,PeJ&!n Asst. business Manager.. Russell F. Clark Subscription price $2.0& per year, payable in advance. Single copies, 5 cents each. Entered at the postofflce at Lincoln. Nebraska, as second-class mail matter, under tho Act of Congress of ..March 3, 1S79. "WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1914. "Chew the Bag" all you want to Imt subscribe for it first. We wonder if the lord is neutral. iNapoleon once said that God was on the side of the heaviest battalions. That isn't fair. If he is going to help .at all, be ought to belp the under dog. FLOWER IN THE CRANNIED WALL. Flower in the crannied wall, I pluck you of the crannies; Hold you here, root and all, in my hand, lattle flower, but if I could understand, What you are, root and all, and all in all, I should know what God and man is. Alfred Tennyson. RENEWED INTEREST. The Greek language, historians and philologists to the contrary, is not a dead one. The multiplication of Greek letter organizations and the feverish anxiety of University loys and girls to decorate themselves -with Greek liadges is an indication of the growing interest in the Greek alphabet. It is even rumored that TJr. Xiees -will soon Introduoe a course 3n Greek signs and letters. Practical work will be given in the reading of fraternity and sorority pins. The wearing of Greek pins brings happiness. It's a sign thBt you are dif ferent or better or worse than some body else. Now why not increase the sum total of student body happiness by organizing another half-dozen Greek letter societies? We suggest that the Scandinavians, the Bohemians, the! Low Germans, the High Germans, and the Ulster Irish, organize themselves into exclusive and Inclusive fraternities and sorori ties. And why not the Blondes and Brunettes ? They hav.e nothing Jn com mon. A Brunette Kappa Si sorority would make a hit. But no more than the Blonda Chi Phis. There is one more fraternity that we insist should be organized. The Fatta liana Ns. The room where they should meet ought to have two entrances, one hy a door of moderate size, and the other by double doors. If a candi date for -this elite but corpulent fra ternity could make his entrance through the first, he should he looked upon with disdain as unqualified; hut if he stuck in the doorway and wouldn't force his "way through the double doors should immediately be thrown open Jot Jais entrance and welcome, and all should salute him as hrother, tell him of their distinguished fat alumni, and diplomatically inquire whether the new hrother wanted to pay the trifling initiation lee of $50.00 that day or the next. HAIXETT TJnL Jeweler EstaMMml l7i 1143 O A LETTER TO STUDENTS. . By Dr. Hi B. Alexander. Students and professors returning to the University of Nebraska this fall will see little change in the outward, aspect of things. The college yard and buildings are the the yard and buildings of former years; the sights of the town are the familiar sights. Except that Nebraska is blessed with a peaceful abundance which gives us all a more than ordinary feeling of security, this year is externally like the years of the past; and the stu dents' duties, - we may suppose, will follow the routine which time has made familiar. And yet an intense1, if unseen, change has taken placq. We may fall into customary grooves, but the spirit with which we do so will be unlike that of any former year. The problems of life, and above all, the problems of education have suddenly presented an aspect which they never wore before, and student and profes sor alike is face to face with issues calling for every intellectual effort of which each is capable. Outwardly we can not realize this European war; inwardly it is yet vague to us; but the certainty that it is bound to alter the whole course of our lives, individual and national, few will deny. Perhaps the most far reaching feature of the conflict, and certainly its deepest significance to lis, is hardly indicated in the daily news. 1 mean its relation to the maintenance and progress of those arts and sciences which are the heart and life of our civilization, lien are prone to gauge progress by its outer glories feats of engineering, expan sion of commerce, stabilization of gov ernments; but we should never forget that behind the .bridge is the mathe matical formula, supporting commerce is scientific investigation, and nour ishing statecraft is the wisdom which comes from the preservation of human experience in human history. Without the intellectual substructure the out ward pomp of our culture would van ish like a mirage. And what does this war mean for the intellect of the world?. France, England and Germany have carried this earth's intellectual burdens and achieved its intellectual triumphs for the past Ave centuries. The training of a mind is not accomplished in a day; its gift to society is the slow (labor of years. Can anyone doubt that whatever the outcome of the present war in a political way its effects upon the itrained minds of western Europe can he only dis astrous. The higher works of peace, when peace Is restored, will suffer more terribly than all else. Science, scholarship, literature, art, these must give way to the more pressing needs of political and economic and social reconstruction; the machine must be rebuilt before its product oan be manufactured, the garden must be regrown "before its fruits can be forthcoming. Partly this will he due to economic stress, for mental achieve ment is only possible In well-provi sioned societies; partly it will be due to actual loss of trained minds, the young men of nniversity training whose lives are lost or maimed, the gifted children to whom education must be denied, the many hundreds of men whose nervouB and mental strength will be permanently weakened by the stress of war; and in part it will be due to the fact that Europe Trill re quire all its surviving intellectual powers to repair its immediate ills France, -exhausted hy the Napoleonic wars, required the long lethargy of the region of lanis Philippe -to partially re gain its lost spiritual senergy. Can any man think that the present -war will not he far more deadly to the spirit of modern Europe? And in view of this, what is our part? America is ill-prepared lo be come the hearer of the light of cul ture; it iB to no trained runner that tho torch is cast. Tet it 1b obTious that the race 2s to tie. For the next generation, perhaps for the next cen tury, or five centuries, we must stand in the forefront of progress, per forming a great, if not the greater share of "the world's mental labors this, if the work is to be performed at all. It would be the idlest of con- celts for us to suppose that we can succeed in such a task without the most intense and serious effort; we are as vet far from the van of pro gress, and must achieve what the otter nations are losing before we can pass them; the immediate! future of the world, despite our best, is certain to be a period of retrogression; neverthe less, if we persist, we may hope event ually to save the loss, and better it with gain. In any case the duty of effort is clear. But what is the first step? It is one the students must take a step for our youth. I have already said that the training of minds is slow. It is slowest of all for work in those fields which require long and impersonal effort; for. work in science and scholarship and" the patient analy sis "of history. Without work of this character, civilization must perish; hitherto, we have borrowed its fruits from generous fatherlands; now we must mature them by our own toils. The task of the generation calls for a certain amount of abnegation of personal interest and prospect; it calls for a willingness on the part of our young men and women to un dertake the most laborious paths of knowledge, to prepare themselves with even a pajnful "thoroughness for hand ling problems for which no prepara tion can be altogether adequate, and finally to find their contentment not in immediate advantage to themselves but in the final gain of the race. We have fed upon the sugars of culture; let us now make its honest bread. For each Individual the problem of the advantageous route must be a private problem- Each must decide, from the! best light of Ms own reason and the best thoughts of friends and advisers, in -renal immediate direction his studies shall work. -The main re quirements from the individual are. first, a willingness to give oneself wholly to the evident need, and sec ond, a resolve to act only upon the naaturest judgment which nature con cedes. Starting with such a spirit the right way will sooner or later be found. But while! all is thus general, I wish none the less to indicate one great gap In our national preparation for the task that is ours as I think, the greatest gap. More than any great folk we are in need of men and women with a clear sense of the sources and promptings of our civilization, with a developed Historical sense, in its richest xaeaning. What differentiates civilized man from the savage is the civilized man's knowledge of his own history; such knowledge Is the only sure anchor of culture. We can not know ourselves -until we know the past not only of those who were our physical fathers, hut above all of those people who have given ns our spiritual heritage. This Is no light nor easy study- It calls for knowl edge of languages, ancient and mod ern; it calls for devotion to political, economic and social history ,and to the logical analysic of fact; It calls for familiarity with the literatures, arts and philosophies of western peo ples, from Greek and Hebrew to the English and German; and it calls for a power of effective use of this knowledge. Not all is open to one student, though he gives a lifetime to the field; but if many students, from many angles, give earnest effort to this -central task of preserving, as liv ing ihougbt, tie hard-earned experi ence of generations, then Indeed we may "be certain that whether America's addition to the world's -culture he great or little, it wilj yet have won the gratitude of future generations hy preserving in time of ithrtetening darkness man's moBt precious wisdom. H. 23. ALEXANDER. THE Ilniversitv School of Musk Established 1894 Opposite the University Campus ElerenUi and R Instruction given in all branches of music Students may enroll at any time. Beginners accepted. Prices;reaspnable WILLARD KIMBALL, Director CO-OP BOOK STORE Has anything a student needs. Buy and sell second handbooks. Watch This Spare Evry Pay 318 North 1 1th St. Lmcda University YMG A Cafeteria IN THE TEMPLE FOR UNIVERSITY FOLKS ONLY Quality Economy Convenience MEAL HOURS 7-8:30 U-J:30 5:30-7. Hil Souls Cburcb A Free Religious Society lth&HSts. Hrtbur X. XSCleatberlp, flMmeter Morning Service at 10:45 The Students' Liberal Religious Union meets every Sunday from 12:00 to 12:45 for the free discussion of re ligious problems. A. University ovens wide its doors to aH seeker after the truth. It Unit its i tynoionnuIcfbcIitL It face is not toward the past, hut toward the future- h'tiridt fa inhrmor thou -who dacovmarw truth. It reverences the aftatamrsts el tfee patj but smb them to secure vtogna in Hit present. ALA. SOULS' CHURCH seeks to irnMrc. sfefc igHreiailv ideal in the field ct religion. ptiiiig Strvkf if tit ytar, $ipf. 21th Subject "The Fundamentals of the Religion of Democracy A Sermon for Youth You Arm Invited RUSH ! TO- GRAVES PMNTERY For Program's, Menu's, Etc, for EUSH WEEK " To All New StwtfMts. TVe extend a most cordial lnvl- ' tation to visit oht store. To all rely ruing students ure extend the glaa land. George Broth erg, - Printing, Engraving, Stationery, School Siipjtlies, 1313 N street 1-3 C&x. to -write wi nSnHrii? Will jM TOfc:tatiMl7 sm. lMr eftciy? H -wmH ytmr sen-icee m repttpyt mrn tfce Daily XefeMiouL Xwfi? Jtotor t3Jw teaakaa Uairanttv &U, feehreea 2iW $: e'ttock. - L