The Daily Nebraskan VOL. XVIII. NO. 78 UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1919 PRICE FIVE CENTS BROAD FIELD FOR UNIVERSITY GIRLS jliss Cannon Emphasizes Woman's place in Red Cross Peace Pro gram at Convocation Asks the Support of College Stu dents in Work of Recon construction In order that women who have been interested in the work of the Red Cross during the war may not lose their interest in peace times, the Am erican Red Cross has evolved a peace program which deserves the support of every woman in the country. The central division of the Red Cross, composed of the states of Nebraska, Iowa, Wisconsin, 'Illinois, and Mich! jan. wtih headquarters at Chicago, are sending to different parts of the divis ion field secretaries, women best post ed and most actively interested in the work. Miss Marie Gannon presented this plan to the women of the uni versity Tuesday morning at eleven o'clock in the Temple. 'The Red Cross felt the support given it by the central division, and especially Nebraska," Miss Gannon caid, in her introductory remark. The Nurse Represent Spirit of Red Cross Miss Gannon declared that the fig ure which stood out most prominent during the war as representing the spirit of the Red Cross was the nurse. The corps of nurses was the only body of women recognized to serve with the army and navy at home and abroad. In time of war nurses enroll ed under Red Cross are subject to call at any time. Although there were only 7.000 enrolled nurses before the war, there are now 35,000. All are gradu ates of a three years' accredited hos abroad. In time of war, nurses enroll able to pass a physical examination which would fit them for active ser vice if called. More than 25,000 of the S5.000 are now in service. These 25. 000 are coming back with a new vis Ion, it is expected. They will never be satisfied to go back to private nursing, they will want to do public health service. Opening Up Broad Fields The American Red Cross, appreciat ing this and the future possibilities, is opening up broad fields. It hope? to awaken communities to their in dividual needs, to have a public health officer in every community, and .to have many become nurse instructors for elementary hygiene and care of the ick in the homes. This home instruc tion will be free to everyone. If such a condition had prevailed )efore the influenza epidemic, the country would never have suffered such a terrific death loss. Another thing which the peace pro gram intends to correct is the enor mous death rate among; children. For tvery man killed in battle, nine chil dren under five years of age died. Men who return suffering from hell shock must be restored to nor (Continued on Page Four) ENGINEERS TO HOLD THE FIRST MEETING OF YEAR Tle engineering society has aga in taken life. The first meetinsr of the ear will be held this evening at 7 30 o'clock in M. E. 206. It is important ina all engineers, freshmen cially. attend this meetinr. espe- Election of officers will be held Gen- m business wm be discussed, plans or regular meetings and for one or 0 nKineers' smokers will be fned. Any first t-ur mAn ,tii AnI dis- the eetlngn very valuable as a means of ing acquainted with their profess .ILand hearin Practical lectures by 'Perienced engineers. ANNOUNCE COURSES IN GREEK NEXT SEMESTER Dr. Lees ' announc es the following courses open to all students during the second semester: A two-hour course in the study of Grecian history and literature. A one-hour course in archeology and ancient art in Greece and her colonies. A three-hour course in "Greek and English" for technical and scientific students. A five-hour course In beginning Greek for all who desire to knew the fundamentals of the language. ARMY SERVICE BRANCHES TO UNITE WITH R. 0. T. C. Co ordinate of Unversity Courses With Different Sections is Plan of Military Department Co ordination of the different branch es of the army service with the univer sity R. O. T. C, w ith specialized work being taken up in the regular univer sity courses is one of the latest plans in connection with the program of the military department. The new plan is the evolution of a co-operative idea worked out between the war depart ment and the higher educational insti tions of the country. Dean O. J. Ferguson of the engi neering college, who has returned re cently from the east, conferred with representative officers of the aviation, ordnance, chemical warfare, signal corps, heavy and field artillery sec tions in regard to the work. In rela tion to the university the ordnance division will have especial significance because of its connection with the mechanical engineering department. Substitute Special Training For Drill In this section the men will be taken from the mechanical engineering classes. As far as possible work in the special studies designated by the ordnance corps will be substituted for drill. After the completion of the course in mechanical engineering the men will be given a years' training in the Watertown arsenal. New York. At this time the men will be under gov ernment orders and will receive gov ernment pay. At the end of the year of special training the graduate will rec ive his commission as second lieutenant in the ordance department. The extra year of work will be voluntary en listment upon entrance into a course in college. The graduate will either be placed in active service or in re serve. The course specializes the men for" the steel industry in case they should take up that work. These units will be installed in different colleges and universities throughout the country, one or more departments to an institution, accord ing to the facilities of the school. These proposals are only being work ( Continued on page 4) Students Dust Cobwebs From Books and Brains--Exams Start Next Week As there is but one taste to all the water in the ocean, the taste of salt, so there is but one taste to all of my teachings, the taste of deliverance." So said the great and autocratic Budah in the days of long ago. This week university students are struggling ith a single, individual, and none too pleasant taste.-the taste of final examinations. Their wor ried expressions seem to portray the fact that knowledge is so much more to be desired at the end of a semester when it is lacking, than they ever dreamed it could be when they so blithely jotted a list of supposedly in teresting topics ccornpanied by ..fives" "threes." and "ones. They were regarded then as merely "hours." but seem now to be endless centuries. All thUwas done way back In the mid dle ages, or rather. In reality at th MEN TO GATHER AT VARSITYBANQUET Annual Feast in Honor of Corn husker Football Team is Not Forgotten Thursday, January 30, is Date Set For Nebraska Men to Make Merry Nebraska men will gather Thursday. Jan. 30, for the annual Cornhusker banquet. This affair is usually staged soon after the close of the football season to commemorate the work of the Husker team. The war has so de layed all school activities that the big rally for all men in the university was almost forgotten. Every man in school is expected to be present. Stunts are being arrang ed by the committee in charge. Music, free speech and yells will take away all formality from the affair so that even the most timid freshman need not fear coming alone. A committee consisting of D. V. Stephens, chairman; Paul Dobson, and Cable Jackson are working out the details of the banquet. The place for j tne Dig reea win De announce! in me next few days. The price will be very reasonable so that everyone can afford to attend. Rowdyism Thing of the Past There has been ungentlemanly con duct at these banquets in the remote past, but such action has been dis couraged by the men. Last year the faculty had planned to take away this privilege of getting all the Cornhusk ers together, but a few alumni who had the real Nebraska spirit conferred with the officials and received their sanction for the banquet. Iast years' rally went off In a man ner very pleasing to everyone. Music was rampant among men at the tables. Some clever skits were staged, one of which portrayed all the players getting ready for a big game. Several good talks were made by faculty mem bers. If the men are to have this men's Cornhusker gathering every year, they must not give way to any rowdy ism or boisterous conduct. With this year's banquet as complete a success as it was last year, this affair will probably return to its place as a per manent university tradition. A soldier who had fought in the war with conspicuous valor obtained after his return home a situation in the ser vice of a lady in the south of Ireland. One day his mistress was talking to him about his military career, and asked him: "In all your experience of the war what struck you as the most wonderful of all ?" "Well, ma'am." he said, "what struck me most was all the bullets that missed me." opening of the semester. But now, everything is vastly different. Stu dents are hurrying about the campus laden with the instruments of knowl edge Which were bought for the ex press purpose of dilieent use. but which were carelessly thrown aside at times when social distractions were more commanding that French gram mars or math looks. However, we must mention the folks who have been consi.-tent enough to get their lessons each day without permitting their work to pile up. Ver ily, these people are to be envied, for they toil not, neither do they spin." Lucky is the student who is able to display a scholarship which is invul nerable against the onslaughts of exam wek. Never has the truth of the old proverb been eo apparent: "Consistency, thou art a jew el." l THREE NEW MEMBERS FOR 1919 CORNHUSKER STAFF Three new students have been ap pointed on the Cornhusker staff by Editor-in-Chief Robert Wenger. They are the following: .Patricia Maloney, girls1 athletics. Richard Hadley. Benjamin Lake. The new members will begin work at once and assist other members of the staff in putting out the book In record time. So much material is be ing gathered for the "Victory Annual" that the present staff is working day and night on the production. COMMITTEE WOULD GIYE LIBERAL DRILL CREDITS Believe That Men in Service Should Be Well Repaid For Military Work A liberal allowance of drill credit for former members of the S. A. T. C. unit will be granted if the recom mendation of the special committee on drill credits is adopted by the university senate. The committee composed of the deans of the undergraduate colleges, the registrar and the commandant, representing the senate, met Tuesday afternoon to make their final recom mendations. These will be referred to the members of the university sen ate at a special meeting Saturday morning and they will pass the final decision. The committee in their discussion considered the case of the S. A. T. C. men and recommended that liberal credit be given for miltary work at the first of the year. The senate, how ever, must give first their approval before definite announcement of the hours can be made. Credit for Military Service That six months of actual military service as the equivalent of one year of university drill be granted return ing soldiers was another recommen dation of the committee. This credit will be applied on the regular univer sity drill requirements for graduation. Although they took no definite ac tion in regard to granting non-military j credits to men who have been in the j service, the committee formulated a plan whereby these students may re lieve credit based on accomplishment. This will be determined by special ex amination or by reference to the com mittee on advanced standing. Credits which will be applicable in this case are based on such subjects as math ematics and engineering, which have be-n followed in training camp. TO STUDY SOCIALISM IN ECONOMICS COURSE LeRossignol Announces Plans For More Extensive Work in His Department A much more extensive, course in socialism, economics 37. will be taught next semester by Professor J. E. Le Rossignol of the economics depart ment. This will include the following subjects of discussion: History of so cialistic thought before the French revolution; Utopias of Plato More, Canipanella; relation of the French revolution to modern socialism; Ut plan theories of Owen. Saint-Simon. Fourier; communistic experiments in Europe and America; Proudhon, Blanc and othr French socialists; Marx, Engels. Lasalle and other German socialists; growth of socialism throughout the world; socialism in the United States; syndicalism; recent socialistic theory and criticism. In regard to the study of socialism in the United States, particular mention will be made of the i. W. W. socialism In modern Russia will also be considered, especially Bolshevism, and socialism in relation to the war and to reeon (Continued on Page Four) STEWART HAS HIS EYE ON EXCHEQUER Nebraska Coach Cuts Down Ex penses on Basketball Tour Through Hawkeye State Saves Night's Lodging By Piling Out of Bed at 3 O'clock This Morning Doctor Stewart and his boys who carry the honor of Nebraska in their finger tips are by this time depositing their luggage tn the lobby of some Des Moines tavern and may be planning their initial attack on the Drake Bull dogs for this evening. It was quite an effort to kick off the covers at 3:00 a. m. this morning, but Doc and the rest of the Cornhusker crew had method in their madness. In order to cut down expenses they sacrificed a day trip and a stop-over at the Drake hamlet. Ordinarily they would have l-.t sometime yesterday afternoon and hit the hay at the DM. T. laat night but the Husker director has his eye on the exchequer and is trying to keep down a big expense bill for the bas ketball season. The players are also in on the con spiracy and have promised to read the menus from right to left and to pretend that they are eating at an army mess table. In fact, Stewart is trying to make the trip pay for itself, which has rarely been accomplished in other years. He is even leaving two players at home who might claim the right to be taken along and his outfit includes Just eight men besides himself. The men are: Jackson, Patty, Schellen berg. Neumann, Bailey, Gillilan, Kacer and Reynolds. The basketball team has been forced to draw upon the profits of the foot ball season In order to meet its ob ligations as the indoor sport has sel dom been self-supporting. The indiff erence on the part of students to sup port the games and the lack of an at tractive gymnasium have been largely responsible for the small gate re ceipts. Freshman Plans Brewing "While the cat's away the mice do play" runs the ancient adage and Coach Kline's Husker freshmen are knocking their heads together and a surprise may be looked for while the varsity is touring the Hawkeye state. The basketball public must be enter tained and it's up to the yearlings to put on some kind of a program. Noth ing definite has been settled but the warning has hereby been issued. "Dear me." observed Mrs. Languid, lazily, as she settled herself in her steamer chair and gazed leisurely about her through her one-hoss lorg nette. "How wonderfully convenient these ocean steamers are, to be sure. Why, we won't even be troubled to punish little Algernon when he is naughty. All we'll have to do is to lay him across a coil of rope in one of those spanking breezes we read so much about" DEAN STOUT REOUESTS DISCHARGE FROM ARMY A communication from Dean Stout of the engineering college, who has been absent from his university duties while in the govercment service, states that he has sent in his request for an immediate discharge from the army. Present prospects seem to in dicate that he will be able to take up his university duties shortly after the opening of the second semester. The engineering course has been so changed as to permit men returning to school from cantonments to take up the work successfully without losing much of the valuable first semester In struction. A general review of sev eral of the subjects will be given for the benefit of the men who have re turned to school. i