Thurnday, February, ), n'J' T N 15 HAIL Y N K H It A S K A N RESEARCH IRK EUROPE 15 STOPPED Severe Suffering Being Under gone By All Professions Vienna Hard Hit. Research work In one of the great est European ' University cities. Vienna, is practically at a standstill The distress Is so widespread and so acute that no clas or profession has escaped from severe suffering these days. Apart from tho very poortit of the working classes, however, in vestigatlon shows that one of the hardest hit sections in Vienna is found amongst the members of Mio University. Reports from this country show that living costs have increased out of all proportion to the increase In wages and Incomes. It is just such condi tions ns this that will make paupers or beggars of any class of people. The highest income paid any Viennese official is flO.000 crowns a year, and the minimum cost of living for a fam ily of four per year is estimated at 176,00 crowns a year. Kven before the war the salaries of tho professors were never high. Now a year's sal ary could only support them a month in anv real comfort. Every day pro fessors are obliged to sel all their most cherished possessions in order to buy food and keep a i"f over their heads. When the depreciation in vaue of the kronen is expressed in understand able terms, it is then clear how im possible it is for these men to make their only very slightly increased salaries meet the enormously In creased prices. Before the war, 21 kronen were equivalent to one poun-I storling, now S25 kronen are equiva lent to one pound sterling. Tnese figures speak for themselves. Prior to the war, students came to Vienna from all over ( the world. Owing to the stringent linancial con ditions of the present time, hcwevei. It has been Impossible for them to go home so that today there are many students in the University of Vienna who have beeu there since 1914. The housing and living cona tions of the students are indesciibablj wretched without light, lacking heat and very unsanitary. There are a great many reasons why these stu dents are willing to subject them solves to such poverty and distress. One would think that no sane in dividual would continue on ont meal a day and live in unseated dirty quar ters fully realizing that even after the completion of his course, he will be unable to find employment paying a .living wage, if any other resources or means to better his lot existed. Economic conditions, physical unfit ness, old prejudices against student labor all combine in making 1t prac tically impossible for student, to se cure work. The unemployment problem In .Vi enna is such a critical one that nearly every foreigner is boycotted. Whtn a foreign student graduates, he has completed his course In every seiib. of the word for nothing renulns for him to do as it is an imposslb'"ily for him to secure any kind of employ ment at a living wage. DEAN DAVIS RETURNS FROM MONTREAL TRIP Dr. W. Clyde Davis returned Hit latter part of the week from a meet ing of the National Teachers' asso cialior. hold in Montreal, Ca.TS.la. Lr Davii was especially Interested In the matting as the research work lie lirs been doing on pulpotomy was substantiated by the leading reser.rcli mnn of the United States. Dr. Dais is very much In demand among the dental societies and study clubs thru- out the country to present his find ings. The work consists of th- structural changes within the pulp p.nd the technic of th& work. The University of Nebraska dental clinic has over four hundred cases which have been thoroughly tested and the results are less than 1 per cent fail ures. He has given his work to the Southwestern Dental society of Ne braska and the Kansas City Dental society. He goes to the St. Louis Dental society nexjc week and Is scheduled for several meeting In be future. COLTON BRINGS BACK SET OF TEXAS FOSSILS Mr. E. Q. Colton, who hnB bcou absent on leave to assist Mr. L. O. VVhyman In petroleum surveys n Oklahoma and TexaB, has Just re turned to the university bringing wlt him a complete set of characteristic fossils of central Texas. This, is a large and varied collection of extra seloct material and is being prepared for Instructional work. Students in oil geology are given series of fossils characteristic of the formation of var lous localities. This auds a new re gion to the list. Youth. if I had youth I'd bid the world to try me, I'd answer every cnatlenge to my will; Tho mountains stood In silence to defy me I'd try to make them dubjeet to my will. I'd keep my dreams and follow whcie they led me; I'd glory in the hazards which abound; I'd oat the pimple faro whW pi n a tions fed me And gladly make my couch, upon the ground. If I had youth I'd ask no odds of dis tance Nor wish to tread the known and level ways; I'd want to meet and master strong resistance And in a worth-while combat spend my days. I'd seek the tasks which call for fu.ll endeavor; I'd feel the thrill of cattle in my veins; I'd bear my burden gallantly, and never Desert the hills to walk on com mou plains. If 1 had youth no thought of failuie lurking Beyond tomorrows dawn bliduh' fright my soul; Let failure strike it should find n.e working With that someday I should reach my goal. I'd dice with danger aye! and glory in it; I'd make high stakes th5 jurj.ofe of my throw; I'd risk for much, and should 1 full to win it I would not even wTumper at tiio blow. If I had youth no chains of fear shoul bind me; I'd have the heights which older men must shun; I'd leave the wel-worn lanes of life behind me And seek to do what men have never done. Rich prizes wait for those who nevjr waver; The world needs men to battle for the truth; It calls each hour for stronger hearts and braver; This is the age for those who stui have youth. Edgar A. Guest. mathematics in the Missouri Valley high school, Missouri Valley, la. Forest R. Hall, '18, Is an englnoor at Saratoga, Wyo. Walter Anderson Leonard, '03, 1b consular at Washington, D. C. Martin C. Swanson, '15, Is te chlng In the Omaha Central high school, Omaha, Nebr. Personals. Faye Clark of Fairbury and Mr. O iff on of Omaha are guests at the Delta Chi house this week. Mr. and Mrs. Richie of Omaha are visiting their daughter Pauline Rit chie, 26, at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. Ruth Scholes of Onawn, Iowa, vis ited at the Gamma Phi Beta house last week end. THOUSANDS HEAR SHERWOOD EDDY (Continued from page 1.) thought. As a man thinketh so is he. Thought provokes habit, habu provokes character, and character pro vokes destiny." "Taking chances with cha acter. ' continued the great student leader, sometimes gets a man in hi. body, sometimes in his family, sometimes in society and his country but al ways in himself." "We need a new world, a world of different standaido, and to get it, we need new men and women," said Eddy in expla'ni.ig ,ihv connection, between campus life and the problems which face the coun tries all over the world today. Gripping personal experiences on the three continents which he has visited made clear impressions on the hearers. "Education without charac ter is useless," said Eddy, "and a col lege student who takes chanc;s with vice, although they be in what mny seem at the time to be mild forms. is not worthy to be selected for the opportunity of an education." TWO MEETINGS FOR THURSDAY (Continued from page 1.) will be the final address of Mr. Eddy in Lincoln at this time. The committee again ha-s stressed to the student body the fact that Sher wood Eddy is paying all his expenses for the Nebraska trip r.s he has done for the past twenty-three years in his travels on three continents where he has spoken to thousands ud thou sands of college undergraduates. Wednesday Luncheon. About one hundred and fifty stu FOREIGN STUDENTS REVIVE BIG GIFTS A sum of $500,000 for a club house for foreign students have been fciven by John D. Rockefeller, jr., to the Intercollegiate Cosmopolitan club of New York. Plans call for the build ing on Riverside drive opposite Gen eral Grant's tomb. It will accomir.i date 500 students. This club, the largest of its kind, has 620 rnembeis from sixty-five countries, attending forty-one colleges and universities In New York city. Alumni Notes. Visitors at the alumni associativa office during the past week include Mrs. Blanch K. Robey, '18; Vera K. Rigedon, '21; Grace M. Mars, 17; O. A. Elliss, all of Lincoln; F. J. Lewis '21, Broken Bow, Neb.; and Marjorse L. Ilornberger, Omaha, Nebr. R. J. Fosnot, '15, is superintendent of schools at Schuyler, Nebr. Paul L. Martin, '15, of the law firm of Mcintosh & Martin, Sidney, Neb., writes requesting information rela tive to the formation o. an alumni organization which will be the Shey enne county alumni association. J. A. Green, '08, is receiver in equLy lor the Mid. Co., Petroleum Co Yula, Okla. Rev. B. A. Moore, '98, Is superin tendent of the Creston district, Des Moines conference of the M?lhodist Episcopal church. He is residing at Clarinda, la. A. S. Harding, '997, is teaching in the department of history and poiit' cal science in the South Dakota state college of agriculture t Brookings. Mr. Harding states that by next Ju:h he will have completed twenty-five years of continuous scrvico in th.it colege. W. R. Pate, '17, superintendent of the Bchools of Alliance, Nebr., states that two former graduates of Ne braska, Earl ' Meyer nd Lee Bayse are located at Alliance. Mr. Bayse has been county atorney for 6evcrol years, and Mr. Meyer is counect-su with the law firm of Boyd, Mela & Meyer. Dorothy G. Cleveland, "19,9 Is teaih Ing in the Southern seminary, Buena Vista, Vir. W. O. W. Reynolds, '11, is chip -.in U. S. army, Ellington Held, Texas. Mabel L. Johnson, '18, is teaching If You Like Pleasant Surroundings Good Service -Pure Foods You will enjoy coming heie to dine or lunch. Your order must be rifiht. We lo not wnnt your money iinli-RH It is list what ynu think it should he. Meet your frlondB here, order your favorite dishes from our larte nenu. Central Hotel Cafe flENUSff 1 VPEMCfLS 1 FOn t'n rtudW or prof, l ! . j r YIINLS out- riv;:!i r'l r perfect pct.c-il v 1 1. i T i ... k djrecj and 3 M yli.j. Atioricgn Lead 1 cik-iI Co. iioFifthAve New York EM B3J in MP (m Newest v.- . . r Great m - - - - VTrcatJ Peppermint fla vored chewing gum with Peppermint Sugar Coating. Sugar jacket " mcl.s m your mouth," leaving . the deliciously flavored gum center to a d digestion, brighten teeth nil soothe "aouth and throat. dents and some members of the fa ulty met pt (tho Grand IioteJ or luncheon Wednesday noon and hud as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Eddy. The students represented every campus organization Bnd called upon Mr. Ld dy to explain some of the dotails ol organization for the Thursday and Friday meetings. Mr. Eddy appeared groatly satisfied at the largo acdlon-t which ho had had in the morning tnd urged that the attendance be kept up during the coming meetings. lie said that the meetings weie serious and demanded thinking that was serious and earnest. lie askeu tho students not to take his opinions on the problems that he presented but to think out their own answers to the great Questions raised. He told ot several universities which had been entirely changed by similar series of meetings and asked that the students of Nebraska "come across" In ihousM and in action. imffllfffflffiffiiMtra Oil WANTED! Fifty Cornhuskers a day to sit for pictures Come early in the day Townsend Studio 22G South Eleventh St. Daily Nebraskan Ads Pay FIMAL 1 illiliiiJ "QUALITY IS ECONOMY" T7 TT3 f TH A TV7ft if ii ii 1 1 n ii ii t r i ai Hart Schaffner & Marx Siuiits That Sold for $35, $40 and $45 far? 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