The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 13, 1922, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    T II K DAILY NEBfiASK A N
THE DAILY NEBKASKAN
I'liMixhml Sun.lny. Tw-mliiV. WiMih-h.Ih.v.
Thiirmliiv an.l Vrl.liiv 'f ein'h work l.y lM
University t Nt'lirMk.
Onil lAl. MI KKNITY 1M1 IMITATION
I n.i. r tl llri.rtlon of ! Nturtcnt I'ub
Ihwllonii llimrd. .....
Kim.i-.mI ccom! ckh mutter nt the
pai.tnln.-r In I.ln.oln. NilrNka. under Act
of ..rurreM.. Miir. ll , 11179.
eubwnptl.m rule rar
SLUM er wmmter
dnKl e.,py 5 ceDta
. -i-t.v ritilor
SortN h.lltor
rsixirlk l-.intor
"i-'riink Iteiser. Helen
KD1TOKIAL STAFF
jack 1 1 KT I Kd Itor-ln-ChW
OK l H. ' M'OS Maim(cln Editor
t"i'.K V A KM AX. ...A.clte Editor
K.I...F.I liuik MKlit
;.7. ,1... Mit.-I.ell Aetli.lt N'K' f.' ",
eriruile 1'ntlrrMOii ..
Ilnwurd Hnffetl
John tlnlliiiKHHoet'i
Akhistnnt K.lltorn:
' AZTnt N..M.V K.llf.r-.: 7,lta
more !r.rtr...le t.ould, Valor.. II..HI..ce
and lone t.ardner. oiii.
tV,,men'i Athletlei! Sue
Kx.l.anre Kdltor: Mary Sheldon.
Dramalie fc.lit.ir: fyrll ( o.....l..
Military Kdltor: Leonard C !.
leatur. Writer.: Maurl.-e Mnltli. "!
KmIii.
All.- riteven. -
Koom mvb ....
Office hour..: K.ll.or-l..-.-1-i.-f ami Man
ffiiiK Kdltor Three o'eloek dally.
1UMNE89 STAFF
niiks KIDI.Ot K HuHlnena M ana err
liuiim-ry Kli.hey Ant,
IIIITord lll.-k
Typlwt
llutdneiin aivr.
...fir. Manager
ai kktimm; staff.
ott Sknlil.
U..I..I. Ko.lflel.1. Art Whiteworlh.
Addison Sutton
Delta Zota formal, Rail room, the
Lincoln.
Union Society banquet, Garden room
the Lincoln
Twins club meeting, Conover home
:'S48 0 street.
FaUadlan reyular open meeting
S:30 p. m., Temple.
The university commemiJ club
will hold the last meeting of the ee
Commercial club meeting, 1.1 a. m.
room 305 S. S;
Saturday, January 14.
Lutheran club meetinf, 8 p. m., third
floor Temple.
Christian Science society, 7:15 p
m., Faculty hall, Temple.
Ag. Eng. meeting, 7:30 p. m., Ag
Eng. Bldg.
Xt Delta meeting, 7 p. m.. Ellen
Smith hall.
Named meeting 5 p. m., Bessey hall
Awgwan is Out
1
EXHAUST
I
Kit-hard Stere.
Miclil Kdltor for thi l
KDWAK1) M. 1U K
WHITHER BOUND.
Students may bo classed in three
groups according to their scholaristic
ability the pood, the bad, and the in
different. If the student is not decid
ed to which class he belongs, he will
find out when he gets his semester
grades. He will also get a pretty good
idea of what kind of sailing he is
bound for next semester. For some the
sea will be smooth, to others it prom
ises some storms, and to ths small
remainder it may lead to destruction.
For better or for worse, the knowl
edge is preferable to uncertainty. Ig
norance is not bliss when it concerns
anything so important as existence or
annihilation itself. Some students will
have to respond to an encore in the
same course, while others will re
ceive an honorable discharge and be
advanced ons step higher and nearer
the coveted degree to which they
aspire.
The freshman is very anxious to
get h;s first semester grade and get
an idea of how he stands, provided
his conscience and his own observa
tion have not already assured him as
to the point.
The one topic that is preeminent
and all absorbing these days is, "To
flunk or not to flunk" that is the
question.
Awgwan Is Out
Contemporary Opinion
(University Daily Kansan.)
AN OPTIMIST'S OPTIMISM.
We had just arrived at what might
be termed a peaceful suite of mind,
and had settled back in our leisurely
way to enjoy a lew leagues of calm
sailing, when along came the an
nouncem?r,t f.-om the women. "We're
going to wear bloomers." This is once
when that time worn saying about a
change being appreciated even if it is
for the worse seems to be poor philos
ophy. Just a.s we had become accustomed
to short skirts ami had even agreed
with all the- arguments set forth in
their favor, whether we believed in
them or uot, blaring headlines tell
us, and photogravure sections in Sun
day editions prove to us, that it is
true. Yes, it is true.
The time is not far hence when the
whole family will go en masse to the
tailor shop or to the "hand me down
shop" an.l order their twet-ds, their
serges, or what not, in hopes that they
will be given a reduction for the- ord
er lot.
Hereafter the politician will have
to look well before he offers the pro
verbial cigar or slaps his comrade
heartily on the back. For who can tell,
the wearer of those mannish tweeds
might be distinctly feminine!
But after the men, have aged with
sur, irises from having soprano voices
emit unexpectedly from masculine ap
parel, and after they have again ar
rived at a peaceful mind, they can still
hope, that the women's styles wMll
change, as the wind does, every day.
Awgwan Is Out
University Notices.
Notice To R. O. T. C. Students.
1. By authority of the executive
dean a convocation of all R. O. T. C.
students will be held at the Temple
at 5 o'clock p. m., Wednesday, Janu
ary 18, 1922. Lieutenant Colonel Carl
II. Muller, cavalry, corps area R. O.
T. C. officer, will address the stud
ents. 2. All students attending this con
vocation will be excused from attend
ing the third hour class during the
first week of the second semester.
By order of Colonel Mitchell.
Sidney Erickson,
Major, Infantry, (D. O. L.)
An Ode, To My Prof.
I said to my prof; Oh prof, dear prof
Must I study by day and by night,
Must I labor and cram for each horrid
exam
Or be flunked away out of sight?
Oh I said to my prof; Oh prof, dear
prof
Must. I wonder and worry and stew,
Must I give up my girl, and make my
brain whirl
Just to get a good standin with you1
And my prof bent low his grey haugh
ty head
And he answered stern but true.
"You better dig in and work like old
sin.
If you ever expect to get through."
One more day exam cramming. Now
you must do it early and late.
A fellow can now have a regular
old time dollar date again since the
price of the dance has come clown.
After flinging away six-bits to the fel
low who runs the party, and buys a
new suit after every one, he still will
have two-bits left for nourishment.
With the two-bits the girl is served
with a twenty cent sundae and the
fellow tieats himself to a Cocoa cola
and is very thankful he doesn't have
to. pay any tax on the drug store li
quids. X. Y. Z.
If you think you can pick a beauty
and if you thir.k you can pick a win
ner, you have a chance to do so by
entering her in the Cornhusker Beauty
Contest wihch is conducted by the
Cornhusker Staff.
Awgwan Is Out
HARVARD
E
The Calendar;
Friday, January 13.
Closed night.
Saturday, January 14.
Foreign Students Show Great
Interest in Armament Debates
In Eastern University.
CAM Bill IK IE, MASS., Jan. 13.-Interest
here in the Washington confer
ence received an impetus a month
a;:o wlncn is so sustained in its ct
lects that at this late date it is worth
discussing.
On November l";th, six Harvard stu
dents, nationals of France, Kngland.
Japan, China, Italy and the United
States met to discuss the following
resolution, before an audience of 350
students; "Resolved: That to pi event
the next war it is necessary that
there be universal recognition of the
Open Door Policy; that there, be an
immediate and complete naval holi
day; that there be a progressive re
duction of all armaments; that there
be .frex; admission of Germany and
Russia to the family of nations; and
that tilers be an association of all
nations to establish and maintain jus
tice." The meeting was under the
auspices of the Harvard Student Lib
eral club; Lieutenant-Governor Alvan
T. Fulled of Massachusetts presided.
Seated about a conference table
similar to the one at Washington, the
six aforementioned students seriously
onsidered the problems over whicn
the diplomats in Washington are work-
ng. Three hundred and fifty other
students listened attentively and tens
ly to their arguments as each present
ed the case for his country. Ry the
time the formal speeches were over
and the discussion, thrown open to the
floor, the interest and enthusiam riv
alled that of a football mass meeting.
Men jumped to their feet calling for
the floor; many spoke simultaneously;
each clause of the resolution was hot
ly contested; and after three hours of
fierce debate It was the sense of the
meeting that there should be universal
recognition c the Open Door Policy
in China, an Immediate and complete
naval holiday, progressive reduction of
all armaments, and an association of
nations; It was voted that Germany be
Invited to Join the conference both In
Harvard and In Washington, but that
Russia remain outside the pale until
she had proven ber government re-
China Strikes Keynote.
The conference was particularly
fortunate in having an enthusiastic
and eloquent Chinese student strike
the keynote of the meeting in his
opening speech. "Young China," he
said, "wishes to greet this assembly
with a message of heartfelt good will,
welcoming it not only with an open
door but with an open mind and an
open heart Human nature is the same
the world over the instinct of self
preservation is not peculiar to any
particular race or particular nation.
From this observation, we learn. the
principle of give and take, violation
of which is the primary cause of all
wars. So, to prevent the next war, we
Chinese offer you the Open Door poli
cy in China, but wttn a new mean
ing confirmed by the Chinese idea of
justice. Hy the Open Door policy we
mean that we open our door as an
ndependent sovereign nation compris
ing all the territories belonging to us
and all the nineteen provinces."
British Defend Anglo-Jap Pact.
It fell to the lot of the Knglish del
egate to defend the Anglo-Japanese
alliance and the "navalistic" policy of
Great Rritain. The maintainance of t!i?
sovereignty and integrity of China
was declared to be the explicit object
of the first. "For will not the Anglo
Japanese Treaty restrain Japan's per
haps too exaggerated demands and at
he same time serve her in good stead .
both for her financial credit and po-
itical aspirations?" !
The navalistic policy of Kngland was j
upheld on the grounds of self defense.
For forty-six weeks in the year, the!
H.-itisli people depend entirely on im
portations for food. Every menace to
England, then, necessitates the main
tenance of a fleet, a neet winch must
be large, not in order to dominate
the seas and rule the world, but to
withstand the attacks of small fleets."
French Lieutenant Still Wars On
Germany.
A soldier blinded in the war, wear
ing the uniform of a French officer
and decorated by the Croix de Guerre
and the Victoria Cross, spoke for
France. His personal experience was
too recent anil too tragic for him to
discuss G-ermany in any terms other
than those of our "pefidious enemy."
M. Envin said: "This constant menace
to the peace of Fiance demands the
maintenance of an army which can,
under no circumstances, be reduced at
the present time. Our only hope lor
peace in the world today is an alliance
between England, France and Ameri
ca." Italian Delegation Conciliatory.
Signor Pincherie, the Italian dele
gate who left Italy only two months
ago, was convinced that European re
construction could take place only aft
er disaimament and the recognition of
the principle of "arbitration by con
ference.' '"The survival of the 'war
mind' must be prevented. "At the sign
ing of the armistice," he said. "Italy
was utterly exhausted but she showed
her spirit by giving from her deplet
ed resources to the relief of her foe,
Austria.''
Liberal Speaks for Japan.
Like Mr. Li, Mr. Iwamoto spoke for
the youth of his country, from the
liberal rather than the imperialistic
point of view. He, too, defined the
Open Door policy as one giving no
! country any special privileges in
I China, agreeing with the president of
the University of Tokio that: "It is
unfair to ask for any special privilege
whatsoever over any other foreign
country, for such privilege will tend
lo stagnate the national morality of
my country, as well as to weaken na
tional activity."
"In connection with the Open Door
policy in China, every country'," paid
Mr. Iwamoto, "beginning with Japan,
should give up her lease when the
present term expires. No country
should lease part of another country
Some of the Japanese will object that
ZZIZZZZL 1
I
Private Studio
Phone For Appointment
Mrs. T. E. Williams
B-4258 1220 D
W ill I I . , , 3 1
fl PROPERLY FITTLD
U GLASSES 0'
: are an wt twit will change 1
PROPERLY FITTLD
GLASSES
are an anwt twit will change
rmor evMlEht Into good yc-
lent and tb-ntT lnrreai
your earning- porr and ef
ficiency. H A L L E T T
OptBMirlt
Et. im IMS O M.
witholt special privilege in Manchuria
in the face of an ever growing popula
Hon with scanty national resources,
the Japanese nation will starve or de
moralize. All right, the starvation of
seventeen million Japanese Is as noth
ing compared to the establishment of
these two fundamental principles in
the new international law, because
nothing else can do more to .safeguard
futuie peace of the world."
United States Speaks for League
Contrary to the example set by the
Washington conference, the delegate
from the United States was the last
to speak. In the aims and purposes
of the arms conference he saw two
discernible questions: "the demand for
relief from the increasing burden ot
expenditures for armaments, and the
defense of each country from the de
struction following another war."
"America's 'position differs from that
of any other country," said Mr. Fan
ning. "She is- not likely to be invaded
nor exploited. She is geographically
isolated, but anything which interferes
with the world trade of the produc
tion of things civilization needs is her
injury. The United States is in a very
anomalous position. She has refused
to join the legue of nations, but she
has called a conference in which she
asks other nations to subordinate their
interest for the good of the whole."
Awgwan Is Out
WANT ADS.
LOST GOLD WRIST WATCH. BE
tween social science and McKinloy
school. Call L-S0SS. Reward.
WANTED THREE GOOD BASKET-
'oall players. Call L-7748 'it 6 p. m.
ROOM FOR RENT. MEN. H25 R.
B-4S13. Mrs. Francis Smith.
ROOM FOR RENT $15 PER MO.,
for 2 men; $14 for 1 man. L-6051.
LOST FOUNTAIN PEN, WITH
gold band and initials E. T. W.
Please return to student activities
office.
r?
Oh! Man!
That news
Cured my rheumatiz!
Two Hundred suits
formerly priced
from $40 to $50 now
$30.00
Quality Clothes
TAILORED AT FASHION PARI
Evening
Dress
idle
Dress
Collars
TUX-KAY
THE TUX-KAY IS THE MOST RECENT
DEVELOPMENT OF OUR DESIGN
ING ROOMS AT FASHION PARK
JND COMBINES THOSE ELEMENTS
OF ELEGANCE AND AUTHEN
TICITY WHICH ARE ESSENTIAL.
MEN WHO CONFORM FAITHFULLY
TO THE REQUIREMENTS OF GOOD
GROOMING RECOGNIZE THE COR
RECTNESS OF TUX-KAY AND FIND
IT A SEMI-FORMAL GARMENT
OF UNUSUAL CHARACTER
New
Tux-Kay
Vests
$32.50 & up
CUtTOM tZtriCK tPlTHOVt
Thi jsnorjsct ot j Tr oh
KtjIDT-TO-rUT-ON '
TJlLOklD Jtt TAtHlON tAtt
New
Tux-Kay
Shirts
' r
Dayl i hl5mftv
liore
sponsible.