The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 05, 1922, Image 2

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    Wednesday, April 5, 1022.
THE DAILY NEliJASKAN
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
PutillHhiMl SniiflHV, Tiu'Iht. Wednesday.
TtmrMilH.v and fc'rlilHV (if each week by the
Uiilvermtv of Neliriwka.
Acwptiiiirn for iniilltni; nt spoelal mto
of imxtaKH provided for 111 section 1103,
ct of October 3, HH7, authorized, Junu-
ry mi.
OFJKIAI. I'NIVRKSITY ri'llUCATIOM
I'mirr tlir dlwilon of the Student l'ub
llrariunn llmtrd.
Kntrred an wcond cIh matter nt the
peKtollb-e In Lincoln, Nebraska, under Aet
of (oncrCHH. SI urc b 8, 1K7K.
DbMritloii rate M.00 per year
HnKie enpy eenu I to enlightment. So are you. Me
likes it.
No professor is infiilllblo. No sta
dent can understand everything. Edu
cation is not a process of taking notes
mechanically, and firing them back
That's stenography. Education builds
itself up by attention, and discussion.
When a professor goes too fas
raise your hand. When he is not clear,
raise your hand. When he says some
thing you disagree with, raise your
hand.
Kick when you don't agree with
him. Argue with him. He is still open
1 DITOKIAI. STAFF
rRVIN It. t; ASTON Kditiir-ln-Chiff
KK1.I.K FA KM AN MiiiuiRring F.dlter
liertrude I'littersnn Assnelnte Kdltor
Herbert Browned, Jr MRht l-.ilitor
Kdtvard Huek Micbt llditor
Chnrlt-x A. Mitchell Niitbt Kdltor
John Hcntley Sports Kdltor
Howard llulfett A't. Sports Kdllsr
Cyril I., t'oombs .. Priinmtlc F.ditor
JnNFph Nob Military Kdltor
Alice Mvviin - ...Typist
ASSISTANT KP1T10K1 A L WKITtKS
Keiinctb McCnndless 1-eonard Cowley
Roy H. liiistafson Helen 1. Peterson
OFFIC'K HOI KM
Edltor-ln-t'bief and MuiiukIiik Edltoi
4 II Daily
BOOM -Mid. "I'" II AM,
lirslNESS STAFF
9AM KS VHMMK'K Ituslness MnmiKer
fllAl Nt'F.Y KINSKV Ass't. litis. Mitr.
CLIKFOKIl 1IKKS Cirriilation Mgr.
Advertising Assistants
A(l(li-iin Sutton lonnld Fierce
Kalpli Kedfleld Art Wbltwortli
Otto Skoid Klcbard Mere
Jess Kandal
Nielli Kdltor for this issue.
KIIWAKD M. 1UTK
SINGING
The enthusiastic reception accorded:
the plan of the alumni association of
Publishing fraternity songs in the
second edition of the Nebraska Song
Book is testimony of the lack of sing
ing which has long been felt at Ne
braska. For years singing has been
neglected as one of the essential pas
times and the students are few who
can sing more than one or two Corn
husker songs.
The issues of the song book which
will come out this spring are to be
sent to all the high schools of the
state and will be one of the best
means of advertising Nebraska than
has ever been devised. Nebraska has
some splendid songs and if prospective
students learn these songs before com
ing to Nebraska they will have made
one grand step toward making them
selves excellent Nebraska boosters.
Support of the students in the com
ing campaign in behalf of the sont'
book is necessary to make the book
a success. Need of singing is an
old story and the students should
start now to remedy the situation. Fia
ternities should make it a point to
have their Jiew pledges qspecially
and the active members as well learn
as many Nebraska songs as possible.
Singing is one of the finest spirit
builders. Nebraska heads the list in
every thing else and it should head
it. in singing.
You ought to. Ohio State
Lantern,
University Notices.
GREEN GOBLINS
The meeting of Green Goblins
scheduled for Thursday night at the
Delta Chi house has been postponed
until a week from Thursday.
SIGMA DELTA CHI
An important business meetinD r
Sigma Delta Chi has been called for
Wednesday, April 5, 6 p. m. at th
Grand Hotel. All members are urged
to be present.
Home Ec Club Party
All Agricultural college students a:e
invited to the Home Economics Club
party which will be held Saturday
evening, April S, in the horse barn
at the Agricultural College campus.
Iron Sphinx
There will be a very important
meeting of the Iron Sphinx at the
Thi Psi house at 7:30 tonight. All
members must be present to turn in
the names of their successors for the.
coming year.
Art Gallery
The university art gallery will be
open Wednesday evening from 7:30
to 10 o'clock to enable the public to
see the exhibition of Cheny silks be
ing held there.
Change in Date
The meeting of the Cornhusker
Glee Club, which was announced in
Tuesday's Dally Nebraskan for Thurs
day evening, has been changed to
Wednesday evening. The Glee Club
will meet at 7:30 in the Legion room
at the Temple.
Union
All members will meet at the hall
Sunday morning at 6:30 a. m. pre
pared for a hike to Bethany Grove.
Delian
The Delian girls will give their
Annual programme and Stunts, Fri
day night in Faculty hall at S p. m.
SPRING PRACTICE
A scant thirty candidates for var
sity football have so far reported ior
the spring gridiron practice following
the call of Coach Dawson Tuesday.
Barely enough men to make it pos
sible to have scrimmage practice are
working out in the buttle ground.
Spring footliail is one of the most
important training periods for a var
sity candidate. If Nebraska is io
have a winning football team next fall
every man who ever bucked a line
or who ever imagined lie could plow
a hole in the oposition should be out
every night during the spring practice
period poundintr away at the call and
bid of the coach.
Students of Nebraska feel optimist
ic over the prospects of having a large
part of the 1!'21 team back in the har
ness when the next football season
rolls around. But unless these men
get re;: :nd work this .spring they will
r.ot be able to play their best in the
coming string of hard battles.
Practice and practice only will make
a winning aggregation for Nebraska.
Coach Dawson is a great footbail
mentor but he alone cannot make a
team. He must have a large squad
who are willing to work behind him
and training as he tells them if he
is to make a winning aggregation
such as he turned out last season.
W. A. A.
Board meeting tonight at 6 p. m
at Ellen Smith hall. There will be no
general meeting following, because ol
practice for the dance drama.
Square and Compass Club
Meeting tonight at 7 o'clock hi So
cial Science 1 U7. A short businVss
meeting will be followed by a U;k bs
Edgar F. Suavely. Past Master of
Lincoln Lodge No. 19.
Ag. College Students
The Home Economics club will en
tertain all Ag. College students nt a
party Saturday evening at 7:30 in the
Horse Barn on the Ag. Compus.
Contemporary Opinion
KICK WHEN YOU DON'T AGREE
Scene any classroom. Time any
hour. riace any university. Pro
fessor has just stated three or four
important points either his own
opinions, or proven facts, or both.
"Now is that clear in the minds
of everyone?" asks the professor. "Is
there any doubt? Are there any ques
tions?" Not a stir. Smiles from some;
Bnores from others. The class lacks
ambition to raise its hands and object.
"I presume, then, that the matter
is clear to all of you," says the pro
fessor, and goes on. The professor's
assumption is only logical. The ma
terial appears in the next midterm
examination, and half the class
passes it. The other hair wonders
why it missed iL Professor won
ders whether he taught it right. Ra
ult, disappointment and worry.
A. A. E. Meeting
The regular monthly meeting ol
the American Association of Engin
eers will be held at 7:30 Wedneslay
night, April 5, at M. E. 2G. A short
address will be given by Prof. Gen. N.
Foster of the Law College. Following
will be held the annual election of
officers with an installation cere
rnony. Every member should avail
himself of the opportunity to hear
this address and to become familiar
with the outline of events for engin
eers week.
Correction
The University calendar yesterday
listed an Alpha Camma Itho party for
Friday, April 7. This was a mistake,
as no such party has been scheduled.
oration between engineering societies
and students, and lastly, to give the
engineering students a good time.
The program for the week will be
ns follows: On Wednesday, April
26, a "pep" meeting will b held.
Thursday, the Daily Nebraskan w'U
be in the hands of tne Engineers and
composed of engineering news, and
also a convocation will be held in
the Temple, when a prominent en
gineer will speak and in the evening
all the shops will be open for inspec
tion by the public. On Friday, there
will be a parade to the State Fair
grounds where a ball game will be
played and many athletic events and
sports held. Friday night there will
be a dance at the Rosewilde. The
week will end with a banquet at the
Lincoln Hotel.
The Freshmen engineers will take
charge of the workshops on Thurs
day night and all thoa wishing to
volunteer their services may do so
by handing in their names at the
1 ""lm Trint office.
Dean O. J. Ferguson of the En
gineering College spoke on "Phases
of Electrical Engineering" for the re
mainder of the period. "Electrical
Engineering can be divided into two
mrin parts, namely: Technical and
Economic," declared Dean Ferguson.
Under the heading of technical
electric engineering there are the
following branches: lighting, Elec
tric Railways, Electro-CMnmunication,
Electricity and Agriculture, Trans
mission and distribution, Manufac
ture of electric power, etc., and un
der the heading of Economic Elec
trical engineering their are the Con
trol of Public Utilities, Government
ownership of Public Utilities, Public
Utility monopoly, Cheap rower, etc.
"The dependence that we put in
electric lighting is getting greater and
greater." stated Dean Ferguson in
discussing some of the sub-topics list
ed above. There are many problems
to solve in the use of electricity for
lighting purposes, rrot more than
3 per cent of the energy that comes
f:nii the fuel is given out as light,
wl.kli means that 97 per cent of the
energy is wasted as far as light is
concerned, therefore wnnomy of op
eratic! 's of great importance. An
electrical disiribution system has to
be kept a ne all day even if only one
or two lights are on. If an electric
meter was placed at a power station
and all the current trowing out was
measured and the sum of all the cus
tomers meters taken, they would only
total 60 per cont of the power plant
l eudiiig.
If the Electro-communication sys
tems stopped for one week, business
would be prostrated, there would be
lack of fire protection, etc. There is
one telephone to every eight persons
in the United States, over eleven bil
lion calls are made every year, aver
aging one hundred calls per person.
If all the telephone poles in the
United States were placed side by
side they would form a stockade
around New England, New York and
Pennsylvania.
Research is a very important
branch of electrical engineering. Sev
eral messages can be? sent at one
time from one antenna and received
simultaneously by another antenna
without confusion.
In closing. Dean Ferguson urged
the Freshmen to help advertise En
gineers week and take an active part
in it, making it a great success.
Scabbard and Blade meeting, 7:30
p. m. Nebraska hall.
University Party Committee meet
Ing, 5 p. m. Ellen Smith hall.
Mvstle Fish sunner. 6 p. m. Ellen
Smith hall.
Wednesday, April 5
Kappa Psi meeting, 7:30 p. m
Pharmacy hall.
American Association of Engineers
meeting, 7:30 p. m. M. E. 206.
wnmo Kicnnomics club meeting. 7:lo
p. m. Ellen Smith hall.
Square and Compass club meeting
7 p. m. Social Science 107.
W. A. A. board meeting 6 p. m. Ellen
Smith hall.
Vnlkvrle meeting 5 p. m. Ellen
Smith hall.
Sigma Delta Chi meeting, 6 p. m
Grand hotel.
Theta Sigma Thl meeting, 5 p. m
Ellen Smith hall.
Thursday, April 6
North Platte club meeting, 7 p. m.
II. hall 111.
Pershing Rifle Drill 5 p. m. Ne
braska hall.
Phi Omega meeting, 7: 15 p. m. Law
building.
Lutheran Club mooting, 7 p. m.
Social Science 107.
All Alumni Week Committee meet
ing, 7 p. m. Social Science 107.
Friday, April 7
Delian open meeting, S p. m. Fac
ulty hall.
Union closed meeting, S: 30 p. m.
Beta Theta Pi dance, Chamber of
Commerce.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon house dance.
Lutheran Club banquet, 6:30 p. m.
Grand hotel.
Wolohl campfire, 4 p. m. Ellen
Smith hall.
Xi Psi Phi spring party, the Lin
coln. Saturday, April 8
Delta Gamma spring party,, Com
mercial club.
Acacia house dance.
Delta Chi house dance.
Pi Kappa Phi spring party, the Lin
coln. Omega Beta Pi spring party, K of
C. hall.
ALARM CLOCKS
$1.50 Up
Eversharp Pencils
$1.00 Up
Moores and
Waterman's
Fountain Pens
$2.50 Up
F. B. FLEMING
4.
"1
'By Jinks!
That new Dunlap
sure shows up
the old winter hats
doesn't it?"
Spring Blocks $7
QualBgGoUies
Ph
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armacy
Hop
ROSEWILDE PARTY HOUSE
FRIDAY, APRIL 7
Northwall's Six Piece Orchestra
Dancing 8 : 30 Admission $1.10 with Tax
&
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Syracuse University The Romance
Language club held an extremely
clever entertainment recently. The
affair was an imitation of the original
French Mardi Gras.
ENGINEER'S WEEK
AT END OF APRIL
Annual Celebration of College is
Most Important Period of
All Time Granted
to Colleges
"The last weok of this month is
Engineers Week," stated Paul Krech
at the freshmen engineering lecture
last Monday evening. "It is the most
important period of time granted t
any college of the university," he
continued.
Engineers week is put on for three
chief reasons: to advertise the En
gineering College, to further co-op-
The Calendar.
Tuesday, April 14
Vespers, 5 p. in. Ellen Smith hall.
De Molay meeting, 7:30 j. m.
Scottish Rite Temple.
Silver Serpent meeting, 7:15 p. m
Ellen Smith hall.
Iron Sphinx meeting, 7:30 p. m. Phi
Kappa Psi house.
Newest
Creation
Peppermint B- J
vored chewing gum
with Peppermint 1
ougar ixtating.
Sugar jacket
"melts in roar
mouth," leaving.
the deiicaotuly
flavored gum
-atcr to aid
.igeition,
briffaten teeth
and soothe
aottth and
Grcat
54
TrcatJ
Expressing Your Personality
in "House of Youth"
7, Clothes
HE representative College Girl
eagerly awaits, each season, the
fashions from "The House of Youth"
the foremost creators of Youthful
Clothes in America. For, this establish'
ment has studied the College Girl verily
on her native heath, and has woven
her characteristics, her dreams the
very csscnccof her refined, modem self
into its fashions.
Have you seen the new "House of
Youth" Frocks, Suits and Wraps for
Spring? You will find them admirable!
A certain smart shop in your town has
them. If you do not know which one,
please do us the honour of communicat
ing directly with us.
THE HOUSE OF YOUTH
SCHULMAN &. HAUPTMAN
38 East 29th Street, New York
3 Avenue De L'Opera, Paris
Every genuine "House of Youth" garment
bears this label
r - 1 v i i l b