1 The Daily Nebraskan UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA OFFICIAL PUBLICATION EDITORIAL STAFF Carolyn Reed..... Le Ross Hammond Sadie Finch Story Harding Leonard .Cowley Dorothy Barkley........ Orvln Gaston REPORTORIAL STAFF .Kultor . ...Managlni; Editor ,;,,..AssocIuta .Editor .News Editor News Editor ....Society Editor ,....w.,..,J3port8. Editor Jack Austin Lola Hartman .. , Belle F&rman Russell Funkhauser Jessie Watson Jack Virtue Lee Yochum Naomi Buck Helolse Oauvreauz Clbyd Clark Carleton Springer Phyllis Langstaff Gertrude Moran - News Editor LEONARD COWLEY For This Issue ' BOILER PLATE AMERICANS. 1 Have you ever thought seriously on. the subject o indivlduajlBni and personal freedom? . It seems today that weare. becoming -;jace of machine type individuala. We must do and ..have everything done with all the time and energy-saving devices, with the least possible mental effort and according to a set plan; business, social, customs, . fairily life and education has been standardized to...8uch: a degree tl-nt re Vave almost forgoMen how to be original. . It. Is true, that a higher degree of efficiency is generally obtained In this way, but the human element is lacking man is merely a means to an end,. Our factories have so. adjusted their departments that a. worker,. makes perhaps nothing but a tiny bolt all day , long, or does nothing but sew a twelve inch seam in a thousand garments. , Think of.the effect of this terrible routine on his brain and the. hum-drum life he must live, merely existence. In respect to this question, we . offer a few lines from "Life" which exactly sums up our opinion. "The two national manias in America are standardization and incorporation. "Our morals, habits, private lives and reading matter are being standardized according to a formula that was used around Salem some years ago. 'The,. war on personal liberty and private opinion was long apo incorporated in a. ritual which dates from the Spanish Inquisition. Today the penal clauses have merely been changed. "The American people will soon be one individual, and will be chopped up by their standardizers and incorporators at boilerplate rates and shipped f. o. b. to any part of the planet as a warning or an exhibit." . CAMPUS TEAS. The campus teas given now every Friday afternoon at Woman's Hall are indeed very commendable affairs. They are giving all uni versity the opportunity to meet in a perfectly informal way at the girls' campus home, and we are glad to see that so many Nebraska co-eds have taken advantage of these entertainments. There are so many things to be done this semester and so little time that many girls feel that they have little social Intercourse with each other. With this new plan, freshmen and seniors mix with faculty members jind are able to broaden their friendships to a very marked degree. Campus friendship and campus democracy go hand in hand and are equally valuable to the senior, junior and freshman. Make it a point to attend the teas regularly and keep In touch with cc-ed activities. WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT CHEMISTRY? Are many students informed of the very practical and interesting lectures to be given in the Chemistry building every Friday at 5:00 o'clock? They are planned to give a usuable and comprehensible solution of problems of today. Any man or woman interested in his community life and desirous of returning to it equipped to keep out in local crises of all sorts Bhou'd watch these lectures. As an ex ample of the vital subjects discussed, it is well to note that the first of the series was on "Iron Rust How to Detect It and Get Rid of it." The rest of the courses will be somewhat of this nature and well worth the attention of wide-awake students. Go and find out bow little you really know of such common, necessary information. WHAT IS YOUR FACE VALUE? If you were judged solely by your facial expression, what would the verdict be? What is your face value? Sounds like the beginning of a foolish-questlon-silly-answer game. But it isn't. Those are queries that well merit the asking, and what is more, mighty careful answering, too. For It is the mistaken idea that some folks have relative to the importance of their facial char acteristics, that cause many a failure in life. What is the first thing you look upon when you meet another? Isn't H his face? And whether you know it or not, that first glimpse, determined largely what your primary impression of the stranger was to be. His eyes were half closed, mere slits under his forehead. And you immediately became cautious. His expression was surly, his eyebrows were drawn. You forthwith decided he was a grouch and If possible you would leave him alone. Maybe, his mouth puckered as if pouting at the rest of the wcrld, and he was glum and seemed disappointed. Did you decide he was a successful business man; the sort of a man you cared to Join forces with? Not at all Or, perhaps, the stranger you met had a smile oa his face, the lines of his mouth were drawn firm but the corners turned up; his eyes twinkled and were open wide. That is the man you wanted to meet There are college students who make one feel sick o meet them on the campus. There are some who look as if the fear of eternal damnation continually haunted them and knowing their fate, they cared not a whit to live longer. And there are others whom you consider yourself fortunate to see. Which sort are you? DePauw Daily. UNI NOTICES Union Business Meeting There will be a Union business meeting in the Temple at 1 o'clock, Tuesday night. Hawaii Wants Teacher Superintendent V. MacCaughey, Honolulu, . Hawaii, writes as .follows: ' We desire to secure ten teachers for our rural elementary graded schools. ' "Our rural 'schols are not one-room' schools but in many .cases range from six to twenty-five rooms. -Teachers are given lodging gratis in furnished cottages. Appointees . are entitled to transportation .on U. S. army, trans ports. . , . ., ... .. "Hawaii has a remarkable . public school system, set against aa luxuriant semi-tropical background.", . , Anyone interested, see Director A. A. Reed, Bureau of Professional Service, Room. 201, Temple building. , Mid semester examinations will be held March 15 20. They will be com pleted about a week and a half before spring ..vacation, which begins March, 1 and ends April 7. A tea in honor of Grace Coppock will be held in Woman's Hall, 3:30 5.:30 p. ni., Monday,. March. 1. All girls are Invited. Home Economics Club An interesting meeting for .all. Horn" Economics girls at. the University Practice House is planned for March 10. eKep the date open. Good pro gram and eats. Senior Class Meeting Senior class meeting will be held Tuesday, March 2, at 11:30, In Law 101. George Driver, president. ORGANIZATION COMPLETED FOR COPPOCK CAMPAIGN (Continued from page 1) 1'utron, 1990 Harwpod Ave. Miss Cop pork and Mrs. DePutron were in Uxo iniversity at the same time. The executive committee for the campaign has been anounced as fol lows: Alfreda MackDrancr. chairman Loraine . Hendricks, secretary; Rhea Nelson, publicity manager; Alice AJ- en, poster chairman; Esther Daley and Marjorie Harstow, catalog committee; Ruth Hutton, manager for meetings; Mary Brownell, social manager; Mary Ilerzing, manager of alumna tea; La- Verne Boyd and Dorothy Pierce, man agers of committee luncheons; Marian Wyman and Beatrice Long, managers for teams. The following will be captains of the teams: Bertha Helzer. Janet Mait and, Ruth Lindsay, Ruth Sheldon, Marian Sheldon, Hattie Hepperly. Eva Holoway, Helen Holtz, Ruth DuBols and Olive Hartley. Florence Wilcox will have charge of the freshman com mission and Nell Holtz of the Mystic Fish. WHY I AM ALWAYS BROKE OR DOWN WITH THE LUNCH HOUND Continued from Page One.) meals In the evening at the drug stores and other places. I realize that it Is a great saving to only have to buy two meals a day. I could soon buy a piano myself if I had some one to buy my meals. We had better luck at the drug store. The big bunch of the lunch bounds had not arrived there as yet with their dates. I had a "coak" with lemon. The cheapest thing on the menu be sides water. She a home style, so nourishing, don't you know, and just a club sandwich as she really hadn't ought to eat so much before bed time. While we were there the other lunch grabbers drifted in by couples and in parties so that by the time we had fin ished oud lunch the secretary was bers of the Lunch Hounds' Union were ready to cal the roll. Only two mem hbsent. One of these girls was sick from eating too many trl-chocoiates the previous evening so her absence was excused by the secretary. It ap peared from testimony offerej that the other absentee had no really legiti mate excuse for her absence except that she did not have a date for that evening. This was looked up in the book of rules and was found to come under the head of "Lack of Effort in Getting a Date." This angered the The Tongue and Buckle is t nan shown in pdctare. . LONGTONGUE Colonial Pumps Featured this Week at mm A PAIR .Among the smartest o fsmart spring styles is this pump,. How beautiful they are is the expression we often hear. And that's only half the story. They are so in expensively priced. They measure up in quality to pn nips offered elsewhere at $2.00 and $3.00 more. The very fact that they are hand turned and have the extra long tongue and large enamel buckle makes them rare and unique at this low price. They are here in all sizes,- 2 to 8, widths AAA to P. No. 1218 Patent Leather No. 1217 Black Kid No. 1306 White Kid $10 Mayor Bros. Co. ELI SHIRE, President. 1 1 !fj WE PAY YOUR COLLEGE EXPENSES We need a real live college man who is interested in working his way through college to take full charge of a sales cam paign in this territory for a staple household article. It is possible with our proposition for such a man to easily make his funds working a couple of hours a day and on Saturday. This is no fake and will stand the strictest investigation. Sterling Products Co., Dept. B, 35 S. Desplaines St., Chicago president very much and she fined the absent girl three dates without any thing to eat. After a short business meeting sev eral speeches were given by the mem bers. Miss Cherry Sundae ma an Interesting talk which was full of good suggestions for the girls. Miss Sundae has been In school five years tow and speaks as an authority. The subject of her talk was '"Many Clev er Ways of Making Them Spend Their Money." This speech was received with great favor by the union and I saw several girls taking notes on the subject Miss Pimento Cheese then gave a short talk on "Why I Always Eat." This speech waa also approved of by the girls, as was evinced by the whispering which followed it The meeting adjourned after this speech. After meeting several new members of the union my girl decided '.o go home so we set out for there. We parted with rather a cool hand shake. All the emotion bavins disap peared with the sandwich. I am 8"re that mv eirl felt that she had spent more or less of a profitless evening nd I hud not asked her for arotner w. It was a profitable evening for me however. I bad row hat. The Inner most t-ocreU of the Lunch Hounds Un ...n YxaA hmn laid ha. 9 tc me. I ml have I pen pooro- tut I vai certalnlv wiser, tl was oa . vay home tnit I decided to start the Ant! Lunch Grab- a - ka bers Club. The members are w only men. The platform of the club to be "Down with the Lunch Hound and the password of the organization to be "NO EATS." DON'T CROWD, BOYS, THE MEM BERSHIP IS UNLIMITED.