THE DAlIiYNERRASKN The Daily Nebraskan t UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA OFFICIAL PUBLICATION Published every day except Si- urday and Sunda during the col lege year. Subscription, per sem'-ster $1.25. EDITORIAL STAFF Carolyn Reed - - I.e Rosa Hammond - Sadie Finch Story Harding Leonard Cowley Iinrnthv Harklev ,. ., ... Sports Kditor A niter W Into Kditor Managing Kditor .Associate Kditor News Kditor News Kditor Society Kditor REPORTORIAL STAFF Jack Austin Lois Hartman Pellc- Farman Fiear or Hinnian Rut her Johnson jessii1 Watson Leonard Ilamniang Lee Yoehum Ileloise Gauvreaux Khiridge I.owe Cloyd Clark Caik-'on Springer rhvl'is Langs t aft Gert-ucle Moran John Neff BUSINECS STAFF i;ov Wythers Hasinas Manager Fred Bosking Assistant Rasiness Manager Jesse Patty Circulation Manager News Lditor LEONARD COWLEY For Ti;i issue KEEP UP THE PEP News of !)w memorial drive sound especially encouraging. Ne braska will seen have a real gymnasium worthy of her name and fame in athletic atid activity circles. It is good to see the alumni . dM'.e Ki the front to hack up the fund and also the student bod v. 'Die campaign to send the track team to l'enns lvania was called , if so thai all efforts miht be concentrated on the memorial drive. ', our turn will come then. Don't let your enthusiasm pan out now 'list keep i' in re-serve. We will want all your support and loyal N.-hrasku backing then. Watch for the call to arms. LIMITING ORGANIZATIONS Should Nebraska lake any steps to limit organizations on this rumpus? Kvcry week the report comes of the founding of some new club until it appears that there will soon be nothing but clubs iMid societies in the running order. As one student remarked. 'There won't be lime to go to school at all after while." It is true that a larger number of organizations gives more opport unit ies for ;11 students to take part in school affairs, but there is a grave danger . f over-indulgence in this form of democracy. Scholastic work at ; n educational institution should come first, with the social and socialized experiences second. It is all very well to have enough organizations for every student in the University to be truly demo cratic, but there is no need of having six or eight. THE FORENSIC CAUSE A very worthy but much neglected activity has begun action. Nebraska debaters are preparing to meet the foe for the lirst time liis year. The best men available have been picked for the dual teams which are to meet Iowa Thursday and Friday. Debating ha never had proper recognition here and the true spirit is vital to help put over any school interest. How would the ornhusker football team ever carry off any honors if they received '.-.: more support than the debaters? Debating means long weary hours of study, memory work and practice. Let's give them some credit for that work, plus our interest and best wishes. ARE YOU GUILTY How students of today amuse themselves was shown in Monday's special edition of The Daily Kansan. Dancing and attending movie snows seem to he the main channels which students follow to find d:vergence from the daily grind of studies. A ganiH which has been a favorite with American school children, iilsn .seemingly so for students of the University, and which was not mentioned in the Kansan, is the old game of "Fox and Geese." Impossible, you say. But we cite you to the numerous paths across ti.e University campus, anywhere, everywhere. Some of them lead to ii-) place in particular, and many of them are not even justified as time savers. Thoughtless students have carried the practice to such an etent lhat the campus is begining to resemble a huge "Fox ind t.eese" playground. The campus of the University should be a thing of beauty, the pride, of every true Jayhawker, and he 6hould attempt to keep it beautiful. Promiscuous cutting across it, thus making innumerable paths, will not add anything pleasing to its appearance and certainly ten minutes between classes is ample time for the students to go from one building to another and get there on time. Assuredly University students should be more advanced than to indulge in such a childish game as "Fox and Geese." Daily Kansan. UNI NOTICES Senior Guest Committee Meeting of Senior Guest Committee in U 20fi at five p. m. today. Student Council The Student Council will hold a special meeting Tuesday at five o'clock. Hastings Club A meeting of Hastings people, Tues day evening. April 27. seven to eight. Room 203, Social Science. Lutherans Please Notice! ! Owing to the rain of last Sunday. 'the hike and wiener-roast has been 'postponed t Sunday, May 2. Fun and fresh air! Meet at Temple, 2:30 j p. m. sharp! , The Commit tee. 1 University Union Business meeting Tuesday at seven o'clock. Be prompt. Senior Class Meeting ' Senior class meeting. Thursday, April 29, at eleven a. m.. in Law 101. i . Socio-Economic Club Dean Le Rossignol will report on the "Second Industrial Conference" at a dinner meeting of the Socio-Kco-noinie Club in the Blue Room, city Y. M. C. A.. Wednesday, April 2S, at s: p. m. where would we be who do not usuallv wear overalls? Here again with our "Society Brand," or what .., von may call it. Had we played the game successfully? Not so, to my mind. No' being their regular cus tomers, what should we (to it me profiteers, who would play their game, too, should raise the price of their nunodities again? But by that time we had probably thrown away our old overalls, or had perhaps sold them at nominal pi Ice. We should secure for ourselves new ones, for overalls were again fashionable. Could we plav the game over and over again with the shrewd and moneyed profiteers? In conclusion, 1 wish to say that in my humble opinion the wearing of overalls would not lower the high cost of living. It would simply add that much to the varied items of our necessities or luxuries. The case, therefore, to my belier. calls lor the wearing of old clothes, and not the buying of new ones, whether overalls or not. Yours for the Alma Mater. MKL1TON L. LK.1ANO. THE DAILY DITTY by Gayle Vincent Grubb STUDENT OPINION ROBERT PARKINSON DIES AT DAYTON To the Kditor of the Daily N'ebra.-kan: Coming across your editorial of April 1H. on the subject of "Overalls or Not." I wish to express my opinion on that interesting and most vital t;uesiion. That the subject is inter esting is manifest ; it is widely (lis cussed, and the affirmative conclu sions arrived at by those who take ip the subject, individually or in group, are put into practice. I! is vital because it involves one of 'he 'prime necessities of life, clothing, as 'well as the all-important problem of the high cost of living, i Before I take any stand on thi" ! question. 1 should like to make the for every University student, or is it i issue clear. Is it a question of overall only for those who must of necessity thave to buy new suits? As our pur i pose in view is to lower the high cost : of living generally, we should elimi nate the secon dissue. because the 'effect would be hardly ft It by the ! profiteers on woolen goods it only a few of us should wear overalls. The question, then, for our con sideration is this: Shall we students lot the University of Nebraska do ! away with the woolen suits we have now, and wear overalls in order to 'help lower the high cost of living? On this issue I am on the negative side for the following reasons: Firstly, because to buy something which we do not need means unneces sary and extra expense. How many of us students can really complain that we have nothing to wear in the strict sense of the word "nothing"? Nowadays when we say we have nothing to wear we do not mean that we are back in the days of Adam and Kve, or an thing verging on the fashion of their clay. We simply me an in most cases that our suits are not uplo-date. Why not make it fashionable to wear our old suits, in stead of creating an entirely new. though apparently "democratic" fash ion by wearing overalls? Secondly, the wearing of overalls will force the price of denim up. One of the fundamental principles of eco nomics, the law of supply and de mand, explains the matter. It would be highly probable lhat the price of overalls would reach a point where it would be extremely hard for working npor.le to secure them. Nothing is improbable now as far as the rise of prices is concerned. Why should we apply another evil in trying to elimi nate one? Yet that would be the oitnaUnn if we all wear overalls. Then when we are all wearing over alls and have brought down the price of woolen goods, we should perhaps set aside our overalls because the craze for fashion newly created by the profiteers on woolen goods would overcome us. Where would the work ing people be? They would be left to solve their own problem of lower ing the price of their clothiiv,-. And Prominent University Student Victim of Heart Trouble. News of the death of Robert Mc Kee Parkinson, c '1",. at Dayton. Ohio, has been received by friends in Lincoln recently. During four years in the Ungineering College at the Uni vrrsity, Mr. Parkinson wvs uron..nen! i:i . jj.'en! affairs. ervinjr on several c-euss committees and being a mem ber of the staff of the Cornhtisker for two years, lie was a mi an office i; the cadet reginu-nt. He was a menioer of Sigma Nil. Mr. Parkinson was employed by the State Oil Com pany in Lincoln up until December. !!!! Perhaps you read the Ditty n ,hp overall brigade In which we thought it best to live.. w ithout the clothie rs aid And crack the profiteer smack-ilat) eliminate the cost Or clothing, bill I've come to think it's but another frost. No soone r had the people s'urteu wearing overalls And blue became the fashion of H score of college halls Than overalls advanced to .-n ani 'leven bucks a pair And Unionalls went higher than h rocket at a fair. At lhat it might be cheaper than a profit-seekers sun At what they ask, a man might ; a house and lot to boot ; Put what about the working man wti dollies double price Who's slung because we think t;.;.t profiteering isn't nice. Fear not. 1 love no profiteer, if power fe ll to me I'd fill hint full of "s's and chuck him in the sea. But why make hardships on the ci;y tha tluxuiies have larked'? I volunteer the not ion ihai w- tlr.nk before we act. Kslher Johnson. '22. ret ui ne.l ye--, torday from Stanton, lew a. v.n-iv she had spen the latter part of last week. Ml-. Bachelor, of Yah mine. i vifiting her daughter. Ruth, at the Alpha Chi Omega house. ! I I II I .1: ! M it I II . wv we I i i::; J : w .y i i I'm- I VI How Much Must You Earn This Summer? Chances are we can double it for you. a any rate, let us know the amount required and the time in which you have to earn it, and we will tell you frankly what we can do. No obligation whatever. A Money-Making Opportunity For You W mi's YVi.rl.l is face 0 f.K e- willi I tie cri'iiti'Mi render ili'inaiol hax ever t'.;icrti'hi'il. ' nr imiiitv i.l uimiiI nri'SW'M Is cell tit-iiillv it, olicl'lll Hill L4 III i v. I', days :l week -lllnl M III I- ill lll.'ll l U llKlllllS till' Xllpl'lj. ii a ir.'.Ml. Iii-iillliy cniiil.l ion. t.,.,.1. ii liiimiiiiie lilll ll.Uil'V. lake cure et t In siijipiv l. .live tu annex the whole HCHl Kill"' nf Chieiii"". 1; in what we want new Is I'M! cirerg'-iicy men ti help uitnitle ili-Iliallil 1 cl-VNllllll'e il sdlcs- In liimk ilie unlets, waul men nf piTHoniiliiy. iTsi-vcl a lire- 11 11(1 inlsll illlll are ri'iuly to i-ny the prbi'. f you want outdoor work At top-notch pay run want iniini'V vii'n- mlreiiMifv iiiel ii glunl'M' ns ' I leii rv snw il urcii i n line to. lay. I'. .11 .... llllll-ll Villi (lllllt ii earn. I In tini"' in which In earn it. nnu inc ' in which yciu invtei- to (hir ircinisitliin will I" mi nt line. If .mil M'' it ill rich! : if vi. ii (len t. Ii" re m hi iililigalien. If cm- i,f lite li.-iv tnrr work cut 1'liKKNS I.. V. KOIHVV WOMAN'S WORLD MAGAZINE fMNTON STKfKKT, 111 ' Fine RUGS c?l e a n e d! Many do net know of our spleYidid clean ing service, which takes the terror out of housecleaning. Send your Upholstered fur niture, draperies, etc. O. J. Fee Phone B23U 333 No. 12th n m n