THE DAILY N EBRASKAh THE DAILY NEBRASKAN trkU rirr tf Hit l"riviTy 4 Nfl'i-Sk IVAN G. BEEDE Editor LEONARD W. KLINE Mng. Editor ARNOLD A. WILKN . A ssociate Editor FERN NOBLE Associate Editor KATHARINE NEWB RANCH Associate Editor GEORGE DRIVER.. Business Manager MERRILL VANDERPOOL . Asst. Bus. Mgr. the farmers poraur- - nf a scat fling compiaini ma -fairly turn up the paper your edi- torials are -written on" in denuncia-j tion of 'the Hoover board as a flat , fciViT. in verv respect" and efficient institution can give to A .... r,.-vrt j In the mean time, while students j are speculating, the board of regents aid tie state council of defense will 'take action on the matter, and what- ever tteir cension may -f braskans will do their utmost to carry out the spirit and the word of the decree. LEARNING TO THINK The fundamental purposes of secnr in an education is to learn how to v TTi Cniverrity Eu think, i et uae great numoer 01 ia- I'QNKtts. Eiuiiitiji Ad minis trati on Bias, j dents that leave college without hav- "Jin attained this ideal is astonishing. v.. TflWhM BufiT An students have ideas of their Nfc-haiacal I rneiji, B-Ua j own; but if e trace them down we ;ill find the ideas of the great ma- pt.shd every day -urine tie o6ege I Jority of them are" identical with "ipon price, per icir. t they hare hjard or read. They ; adhere to certain dogmas because Enter- i ti josuiflic at UdpoIh, j Professor Soaxid-So does, or because ?i-i.rsk, ? scorid-ciw il ur ; sTich-and-such a book savs thus and wt lb act of Coup March X. , CmAMj . 4det deserves fyiD. : pa thy when someone else has to tell Now that tie Pan-Hellenic council ! "hal a or wh&l ,0 th3t has shown, in Its ruling -gainst for- However, when one can firmly and . .- v . v- v i i conscientiously hold his private opin- nul parties, that Nebraska eods are u orp0fTion jS. ready to dispense with all peace-time ; raMe. .fc onJ c& s;ad lhf luxuries there remains but one" thing : abi:5e aE(J crjticism heaped upon him to clear up the sentiment for war- j YlT h:s enemies and come out of time economy, and that is individual ! ie struggle with a stronger basis action by the fraternities that under ! than ever for the foundation of his normal conditons would giTe formals i thoughts: when, through deep ,in this year. Although the inter-fratern-1 sight and clear reasoning, one can itr council recommended that fra-' o far into certain subject of , . . . . , . . special interest to him that he tan temity pares be as informal and in- . . . . , . J v , . search m Tain from the basement to expensive s practical, it made no . of Ule ,jbra. fo snbject ruliflg to that effect. This leaves it ! matTer retaining to that specific up to the societies affected to decide topic; when one can carry the in the question for themselves. It is terprettion of an idea still farther probable that their sentiment is in ; than its latest modem application accord with the general opinion ex-1 then that person can think for him pressed by the council and that they j A w students can do this, will definitely abandon formals. if j M"-T ,mo,re not - u , . , One::nal thinking is the essence of thev have mot alreadv done so. ' , . .. . ... . ir. ua - leadership. To it is due every prog- ' ress and reform ever brought about There is a storr going around & is orld. Hence, on the shoald- about a freshman who has adopted a ; "s of lhe wbo P?s"5 ' " v , , the responsibility of steerine the ship EOTel method of extracting money i Qf hu:ail,.T from himself for war relief work,: ,0 5ladeEls tQ Every time he feels inclined to seek ttin js ,ie EQOl serious C2arge eTer iTersion from his studies at the made against our present educational movies, he pulls a dime from his j system; but it is one that must be pocket and puts it in a little bank he ; faced. Daily lowan. has provided for the purpose. When he catches himself reading too, VIRGIL AND ST. PAUL eagerly about an unusually good bill j If Virgil had lived only two gener al the Orpfceum, he put the price of ; -tions later, it is probable that he admission in the bank, calls up aoaja taTe become a irequeni visi co-ed in his French class and studies I tor at the bouse that Paul hired in as in- "better efforts for the poor, down trodden, suffering public in the pres ent unpopular entrance in the war by i this country." According to our hyphenated man ipulator of the typewriter, this man! Hoover is about as unFpe-k-ole D ' atrocity as walks in shoe leather. 'Cause why? -He is a virtual Englishman. He has been at the rublic trough ever since he as II years old and has lived in England." The Courier-Journal is able to see the point Of course, it is an unpar- donable crime for a man ever to have I lived in England, because England is now fighting Germany. And what j makes Hoover a still blacker repro j bate is that he has also lived in the j United State, and the United States, ; too. is fighting Germany. But that is not all. Hoover, "like j the majority of the people who live in the solid south, hates the Ger-1 mans." and tbe principal reason" j why tie south hates the Germans is j that "the Germans were strongly rep- resented in the Union army and were j largely responsible for winning the j struggle to liberate human beings j from bondage." i It is to be hoped that none of the ! ancestors of "German-American Proud i of His Ancestors" were among those j Germans ho fought in the Union! army. For no man who fought for j the Sag in the sixties would not be ' ashamed of any descendant who, if j he had sufficient courage to sign his name to what he writes and sufficient manliness to act as he writes, would be fighting against that fag today. The fling at the south is as absurd as it is contemptible. The south i does not hate the Germans as a ' people. The only Germans whom it ! hates are those who in Europe are ' trampling underfoot the laws of God ; and man in their efforts to Prus-; sianize the world and those like our knight of the typewriter, who, claim ing to be Americans, lose no oppor tunity, wi-iin the limits of the cow ardce, to serve Americas enemies. Cowardice ? The word, though ugly, is not out of place. "German-American Proud of His Ancestors" doea not think so. "The fact is." he type writes the Courier-Journal, "you have not the courage to do so (denounce the "disgraceful incompetency" of the administration). "You don't dare. You are showing the white feather." And does he not know what he is talking about when he talks about the white feather.? Read him further: "If I was a man without any family j obligations I would sign my name. but with the country full of fanatics RESERVATIONS FOR OWA GAME AT COLLEGE BOOK STORE FOR STUDENT SEASON TICKETS ONLY Lis lesson with her instead. In the V fX - " . . , cahed Christians was. its message bank also goes the price of many . ati4 j- rfcachd some among the malted xE, package of cigarettes j uppeT cia&5es. and peasant-born and of chewing gum. When the first I poet might easily have been among tag day cone along he donates his the first to believe that obscurity savings. : cast no discredit upon a new truth. should feel constrained to deny our- jJT, "V ,7 a IT ! 13 tngiana. ... , Impenasin had proved as mcapa- I don t dare take the chance of going selves tU amusement, as this student J Me as republicanism of establishing I to prison.- as k re-giousiy oe, n wo.a o P.aC. aBd glXd on tar;lL A ,t js G.Jr German-American a gc3 thing for us if w e could all Roman who thought more profoundly j Proud of His Ancestors who doesn't adopt a similar plan, and at least than YL-gil and who had watched the dare: who has not the courage; who tithe our spending money for war ! growth of the empirj once declared j is showing- the white feather: who relief work. tLaI tt- ame anger of heaven, the ' won't stand by his principles for fear ! same Lumaa passions, the same trim- o! goirr to prinson. j inal motives, drive men itto discord. : Such cestrr shmii r,ot nnt tm In the emirors Rome. Virgil lj confidence in the cover of' wouli have found no hcr-e on which . ' a0r rmi:y under which to ply their, to feed his sou!. in Paul's house. wori arsjnst the United States. The' o-J3 tzve listened to a m.o1t poven.ment they hate is getting; and thinker preaching the kincdom tf j.y &c,ixe ferreting out sneak- God and teaching "those things whkh iug edition and treason. The prison' ccn rii -he Lord Jesus Christ i:h jt.r dread has already opened for all -tt:dence." and heard men from , nf n, ar( in etrvir.r wMrl Nebraska studetts have tot ac cepted with eniiusiaam tie projosed reces.s of three weeks dcrirg corD fcasking time, but tie timet has nevenieless been commendable. Stu dents feel that :f Nebraska fanrers reed them, and teed item so badly that it will be necessary to stop the work of the University for mere than a fortnight, then the only patriotic thing to do is t put ip French grammars for buskers" togs. But that it will be necessary to resort o such course. lkir.g of a love and y.'.y i U t more oi them. "German-Ameri- j may yet I w i-pior.ea tat -ty must be- j proud of His Ancestors ccme creative Cou.s not ti:s tew yTe to lfrfS proi2i of his twriterj rel ri-n. he wotud have cnestioned. i ttan he is of his ancestors -Louis-. ' leir -: tie human hear., and at last j Ti::e Courier JoumaL ' isi nitjonal li'e to hi-h these! ' , Cirit.r.s. insisting that the rf.it- , r..u.n n.. : ! lishej ord-r as svn to -- i rUUlUdil UtlOl dllVll Committees Appointed j ! cn-jt s.y in-afferent t create rlthte- ii j a a li'jfsuuj Mr.rrr ..-itJt , Ktfit-s tT tome. goc3 i.i at-roa'T j could recruit their husking forces to ! Could it tot infuse patriot. sm. a vir-' To general committees, one of j a much greater extent if the Ini- l -e cote to tte nearts o: most men. men and o&e of coeds, to take charge versity were close J SLOCj " ' ' . i-.Ar tl. V.J which gives students who des.:e it a - MlL;f T yM .tot furlough during comhusking. exrus- ; tred-ual kt:ss of the ing them from classes and pro-riding c.; a ef world dominate n and for coaching heavenly intellieence. tkh t.f :e decoratitr of the athletir filrl perceive that all nations are and the armory for football games school work u;on hid yeamed f or a Iresn age of their return. Not every t-tscext treed 'hecght. How fervently wculd he by recess would be of real servk w welcomed the intincitle cer- t. '-.rrt rAf- T'-oi.b;r zk 1 tatLty of Paul that the ffferinrs of u ,v.. ,v,. v,.... . a- presenx urn are no: ;t - -tv! revealed not to nmcer in ninc:nr .etrasEa n cs. But, unlit Paul more like ourselves he ouM buntper crop. These men miy have LfcTe Lc;-e-d th2t the reveltkn might their chine ty a;;lying fee a fur-1 take jlace within the actual world, if k'Ugh. The god the rest could ac-' men ould but be wCiing to lift their torn; lis- is -egiigi'tle; ft might be - eyes to "the pattern that is laii up in much or it mirit be "le. Students i I heaven for him who wills to tee and wha wc-re bom and raised o the farm ' o to plant his duelling. are skeptical about tie novices ia -s cornfield. valt of - And yet he and Paul could not have quarre-ed. with a ssxe both ileal- iit would have remembered Plato's One of the most rejasonable sug-, conclufion that the question of the gestions that have been made calls ! pretext or future existence of the for a sort of "selective conscription," I ideal state on earth is quite cnim whereby students who ncr- how to J Ptan - in ary case the man of husk enough corn a dar to pay lor i '"d adept "the prac- . . . . , , v ' ti'es of s-uch a city t the exclusion driving a team to the field can be : . v- v.r ...... of toe 01 every other. YaJe He re glftered. selected, and sent to the I country, while adequate arrangements 3 are made for handling the work here j A KN1GMT OF THE HYPHEN at their school home. This would ot ' Somtx;e renins timseJ' (with a make it necessary to halt the work j typewriter t "A Grrs - Aerk. 01 tne university, and It would select 1 Proud o? his Av"Flrr - and' football rallies were announced yesterday. Jean Nelson is chairman of the men's committee and Robert j Wenger and Robert Brown are the ! other members. Jane Kingery and j Katherine Kohl comprise the girls I c-ommittee. The two committees will ! work together. Sub-committees be announced later. rill j I Arizona Girls May , Have Military Drill j i In accordance with the spirit of j the times, the university girls are ; showing great enthusiasm over the new movement to have military drill for girls on the university campus. YVomeif-f America are fast realizing that they must soon do a large part of the work now being carried on by men. In order to do this, the bighest degree of personal eSciency must be attained. Realizing; this, the young women are enthusiasticall. awaiting the organization of drill classes at Arizona University. The plan is to form classes In this work as socm as possible, with the girls of the upper classes acting as oSeers. If sufficient Interest is rhenrn. the girls plan to have unk BANKERS WANTED We are having many calls for bank employes (four calls Friday afternoon). Proportionate demand for other trained clerical help. Courses offered in Gregg and Mosher shorthand, typewriting. Eng lish, bookkeeping, banking, normal training, ledger-posting machine, Burrough's calculator, etc, etc Enter any Monday. Illustrated Catalog Free -CREDITS ACCEPTED EVERYWHERE" Nebraska School of Business T. A. Blakeslee, President H. F. Carson, Secretary Gertrude Beers, Treasurer Corner O and 14th Sts- Lincoln. Nebraska The Esiri CLEAIiERS-PRESSERS-DYERS HAVE THE EVANS DO YOUR CLEANING TELEPHONES B2311 and B $355 wit 'Mi . V. '-:a f, : r Go rdon The college maii'i shirt. Well made of fine white Oxford. Cut in patterns that assure perfectly comfortable EL It it an ARROW SHIRT CLL'ETT. PFAEODY i CO.. i-c, J-Jrm. TROY. N. Y. V