The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 19, 1917, Image 2

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THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
oilUtal I'npiT of the
University of Nebraska
IVAN 0. mounti Editor
LKONAKO W. KLIXE. . . .Mng. Editor
FERN NOBLE Associate Editor
K ATI IAUIXE XE WBllANCH
Associate Editor
ARNOLD W1LKEX. .Associate Editor
M. L. SPUING ER. . .Business Manager
C. E. JOHNSON Ass't. Bus. Mgr
Reportorlal Staff
Harriet Ashbrook, Eleanor Fogg,
Carolyn Heed, Edna Rohrs. Nellie
Schwab, Ruth Snyder, Gaylord Davis,
Lyman Mead, George Newton.
News Hisenient University Hall
Telnnhones
News. I.-SI16 lUlsiness. T!-23;7
Mei'lianloul lvpiirtment, B-oJ4j
VuliliHlied every day (luring the college
year except Sat unlay anil Siunaay.
Subscription price, per semester, $1.
Vntereil at the postofflce at Lincoln
Nelmiskn. as second-class mail matter
under the act of Congress Of March 3,
1S79.
Following a custom established
twenty years ago the University
chorus will sing the ".Messiah" at
the annual Christmas program in
Memorial hall tomorrow. In all these
twenty years there has never been a
time when (he hope, the faith, th
promise of peace, contained in this
great oratorio was more in place than
now. It is our Christmas duty to re
dedicate ourselves to the task of
bringing someday, somehow, peace on
earth, good will toward men forever
more, and we will go far to find finer
inspiration than there is in listening
to the "Messiah."
Whatever opinion students have ex
pressed about the war-time Corn
husker is decidedly against this plan
and who of all people should have any
decided opinion about Cornhusker
plans but the students, the persons wno
will buy it? They would like to see
emphasized, of course, the military
tide of University life, for all are
proud of what Nebraska and her sons
and daughters have done. In a time
like this the war should dominate the
yarbook just as it dominates every
thing else, but it should not gobble the
book up. The Cornhusker is a stuaeni
yearbook, devoted primarily to student
interests, to the portrayal of their ac
tivties, to the fixing of their identities.
This is not only of interest to those in
school, it is also of vital interest to the
Nebraska soldiers whose devotion to
their college has not lessened and who
are naturally as anxious to learn of her
activities as of their own. It is just as
inconceivable, from both the point of
view of i-he student in school and the
soldier in the war to neglect the cam
pus side of the 1918 Cornhusker as it
is to eliminate all mention of the Uni
versity's military activities.
What is needed is not the peace-time
Cornhusker, nor is it the proposed war
time book. But there can well be a
combination of the good ideas a Corn
husker trimmed of all its frivolity and
much of its reptition of names and
fares but a live, representative stu
dent yearbook, dedicated to Nebras
ka's soldiers.
consumption but for Americans as
well. It pictured the Americans as
lino, clean-cut, daring young fellows,
who had surrendered only after all
hone of retreat was lost. But these
bravo boys were the innocent vic
tims of circumstance, grabbed up by
a heartless government and forced
into the army to fight for a cause
which not one of them could Justify.
Asked by the fat German commander
we may imagine he was pudgy, since
the story emphasizes so strongly the
stalwartness of our men the reason
why America was at war with Ger
many, not one of them could answer,
according to dispatch. All in all, it
was a corking good story for a hungry
German mother to read it would dull
her powers of perception and increase
her determination to see it through.
But the obviously false story of a
group of American soldiers, none of
whom could give a single reason for
fighting Germany, is tainted news indeed.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
man who refuses to take his place in
production," he said.
In conclusion Dr. Newens gave an
interpretation of John W.- Jones who
was the homlicst man in town. Dur
ing this recital Dr. Newens was many
times applauded.
ART LECTURE AT
GALLERY TONIGHT
Prof. Blanche Grant Will Tell of
Artists Work in War
Time
Prof. Blanche Grant, associate pro
fessor of drawing and painting, will
lecture on "Artists' Work in War
Times" in the Art Gallery tonight at
8:15 o'clock. She will tell of some of
the interesting things that artists are
doing in the war; such as camouflage
work and will discuss the work of fa
mous cartoonists. She will use the
interesting collection of posters which
she collected on her trip east last
summer to illustrate the lecture.
The collection of posters includes
some or the best worn oi iamous ar
tists, both those of our country and of
foreign countries. The famous "Cardi
al Mercier Protege La Belique" is per
haps the most widely known of the
war posters. The collection which she
use will remain i nthe gallery for one
week and then will be started on a
circuit including the larger of Ne
braska towns. The money received
from the exhibits will be donated to
the Red Cross.
Xo admission will be charged for
the lecture this evening. Ten cents
will be charged for the poster exhibit
and all profits will be donated to the
Red Cross.
GERMAN PROPAGANDA
Americans who have seen the evil
resujt of insidious German "flress
agent work" in Russia and in Italy
can well believe the statement of Gen
eral Tershing that this propaganda is
more formidable than von Hinden-
burg's army. But few of us realize
that a dangerous campaign is being
carried on in America as well as
across the sea.
It fs not to the I. W. W.. to the
"pacifists" that we should look for the
work of the kaiser's gossiper. The
system is too subtle, too finely ex
pressed, for that. As Charles Edward
Russell told a Lincoln audience
month ago, the expressions of Senator
LaFollette, the report of "peace meet
ings" are valuable to the kaiser's pub
licity man in allied and netural na
tions but they are of little use in this
country, where the public is thor
oughly awake to Germany's methods
It is the little things, tLe bits of news
the seemingly trivial occurences, that
the Prussian taints with slow-acting
poison in his effort to breed disloyalty
Every day, almost, you read some
thing in your newspaper, always a
foreign dispatch, which has escaped
the watchful eyes of the censor and
editor but which, we may be sure, has
the approval of the Wilhelmstrasse
publicity department. Examples of
these may easily be called to mind
You probably remember one in par
ticular about the capture of the first
American prisoners. The dispatch
came from Berlin, and it was evi
dently intended not only for Berlin
UNIVERSITY NOTICES
Junior Play Committee
Junior play committee will meet
Thursday morning at 11 o'clock, in
U-106.
Phi Alpha Tau
Phi Alpha Tau will hold an im
portant thirty-minute business meet
ing at the Bushnell Guild house at
7.30 o'clock Wednesday evening.
Farm Reporter
Applications for the position of
state farm reporter for The Daily
Xebraskan may be made to the man
aging editor today or tomorrow at 5
o'clock in The Nebraskan office, base
ment University hall.
Assistants' Club
The Assistants' club will meet in
the Psychology laboratory, basement
of the Library building, at 7:30 o'clock
Thursday, December 20 All assist
ants are urged to attend.
All Cadets
All men who take work in the mill
tary department and who have been
vaccinated will be required to show
their certificates of vaccination to
their captains at drill Wednesday eve
ning. Those who have not been vac
cinated will be required to present
their certificates of health.
PEOPLE MUST CONSIDER .
WELFARE OF OTHERS
Dr. Adrian Newens Says War
Has Taught the Value of
Brotherhood
"The war has made us realize that
we no longer have the right to do as
we please. We must consider the ef
fect of our actions upon other people,"
Dr. Adrian Newens, director of the
University school of music, told an un
usually large convocation audience
yesterday morning at 11 o'clock in
Memorial hall. Dr. Xewens was only
recently elected to his position in Lin
coln. He formerly lived in Des Moines,
la. He is nationally recognized as a
reader of remarkable ability. His fa
mous interpretation of "A Message
from Mars," which he gave on the
Chautauqua platform, is known of
throughout the world.
No one has the right to say he is
doing his work for himself alone,
whether he be a professor, a student,
a business man. or a workman, Dr.
Newens said. The only place for such
a person is on the other side of the
von Hindenburg line, he asserted.
"Our relationship to one another is
developed through the idea of brother
hood," Dr. Newens summed up his ad
dress. "And the war has taught that
brotherhood means more than mem
bership in the same church or even in
the same nation."
Dr. Newens pointed out the responsi
bility of every individual. "There will
be no place in our government for the
Waffles and Coffee 15c
HENDRY'S CAFE
136 North Eleventh
Phone B-1589 Lincoln, Neb.
GS1APITJ BROS.
127 So. I3ih St.
Flowers ALL the Time !
Cchristian Science
The Christian Science society will
meet in Music hall. Temple, Thursday
evening at 7:30 o'clock. Students and
faculty are invited to attend.
Physical Educational Girls' Dinner
The physical education girls will
hold their annual Christmas dinner,
Thursday noon, December 20. Miss
Beatrice Dierks is in charge and asks
that all the girls in the department be
present.
Chorus Rehearsal
Final chorus rehearsal for the sing
ing of the "Mesiah" at the annual
Christmas convocation Thursday morn
ing, will be held Wednesday evening
at 7 o'clock in Memorial hall. The
class will not meet at 5 o'clock in Art
hall Wednesday evening as it usually
does. All members of the chorus are
expected to be present. The string or
chestra will be present and it will be
the only rehearsal with them.
At the
Big Gift Store
You Will Find
XMAS
GIFTS
"Brimful!" of Christmas
Joy
Christmas Stories Told
At Vespers Yesterday
Christmas stories were told by Miss
Clare McPhee, a graduate of Ne
braska university, at Vespers Tuesday
The Elgin $25 Bracelet Watch
Gifts Of
GOOD JEWELRY ARE
MOST APPROPRIATE
0
Your Inspection Solicited
Tucker-Shean
Diamond Merchants
Jewelers Opticians
1123 0 Street
afternoon in the Y. W. C A roo
tho, Temple. Helen Lewis pre85 h
The first story told by mi3s M "
was "Fulfilled- by Nora SmltJ ?
showed that greediness always brine
punishment and kindness its reward
Ono should not be Joalous 0f hi
neighbor's prosperity.
Miss McPhee then told the "nefor
Christmas" story, which she followed
with the story of the "Three Wi
Men."
The meeting was held before an
open fireplace. Candles furnished the
light. About thirty girls attended.
PHONE B-3308
R PHEUM
THE BEST OF VAUDEVILLE
ORPHEUM CIRCUIT
Wednesday (night), Thursday, Friday, Saturday
December 19, 20, 21, 22.
(For Joy)
and the SEVEN YOUNGER FOYS in
"The Old Woman in the Shoe"
"THE ACT BEAUTIFUL"
William Egdirettu and His
Posing Horse and Dogs
Harriet Florence
LEACH SISTERS
Vaudeville's Songbirds
Harry Holman and Company
in "ADAM KILLJOY"
LIBONATI BETTY BOND
in
Ragtime Xylophonist 'Five Flights of Musical Comedy'
THE PATHE NEWS ORPHEUM CONCERT
World's Greatest Animated ORCHESTRA
News Views Prof. A. J. Babich, Director
Percy Bronson and Winnie Baldwin
in "A 1917 Songology"
Matinee every afternoon except Wednesday at 2:30. Night per
formance at 8:20. Matinee: Any seat reserved, 25c.
Nights: Reserved at 25c, 50c and 75c.
War Tax Additional
ESTABLISHED 1887
PHONE B-1422
HEFFLEY'SABLORS
Now in New Location, 138 North Eleventh
SPECIALTIES FOR STUDENTS
Style Quality Workmanship. LINCOLN, NEBR.
TThe Evans
GLEAHERS-PRESSERS-DYERS
HAVE THE EVANS DO YOUR CLEANING
TELEPHONES B2311 and B335S
EXEMPTED from TRENCH DUTY
to handle Important and intricate business detail
This is the order being given to the "Sammies" who have special
business training. Join our business training camp.
NEW TERM, JANUARY 2
A few months intensive work will equip you.
Ask for Catalog.
Lincoln Business College
Fully Accredited by the National Association of Accredited
Commercial Schools
14th and P Streets B-6774 Lincoln, Nebr.
Kopjes
GIRLS!
Put Our Name on Your Xmas
SHOPPING LIST
BOYS!
Your Xmas Hat Is Here
As Always $2.50
Omaha Hat Factory
1234 "0" Street
LINCOLN