The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 05, 1923, Image 2

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THE DAILY NKHRASKAN
Fri(lny. January 5, 1923.
The Daily Nebraskan
wJii Tbv ih. it.,i V ,'' f "'i
I it l'nlvinltj of Nehrmkii
1B22 7' u,horl Jmnwry SKI
Vn.Ur Hiil!rM!,TY ' 'Wl.H'ATION
Ilrutlnn It nan
5iT HJ7.l" ,-1"co'"' Nol'ru.kn. uml.r lhi
, Act nf lonyrwu. Marrh S, isto.
Habm-rlpMnn ritl $tM
lnl cut ,.V1 ,.
AiIiIivm all cominiiiilmtlmui (,
THIC A1LY NKIIRAHK AN
Stntlon A, Lincoln Nob
Eviln iKiiuit
Killtnrlal anil luminal offlcei In miuih
went Um'Ut f AilmlnMvn
Hon Itulltlin.
ttolle Farmnn i;,llui
Offlo llonra 10 11 and 4-5 dully
Kvrbvrt Itronnell, Jr Mnnadnc hilitot
Office boiira, S to 0, M.imlnv. Tuvmlnv.
w iHlnenilny, Thurvilny, 8ntiirln v.
Murjorl X ymnn
Kiln-nrd Muck
Robert K. Only .......
Clmrle A. Mltrhrll . .
.... Annnrlnt rMlltir
Mailt Kriimr
Night I .ill.. i
Mali! Killtnt
Cbaunrey Kinney
OfTli-e llonra-
IkimlneMii MrtimatT
to 6 Pally.
Cltrtnrit M. lll.kn, A't. tulnn Mnnrnin
litnk r. Fry Clrralatl on MnniiK'
Mlit Kdltor for thin lui.
Robert F. Craig.
Howard Itnffett An.lKjnnt NIM Killl.tr
"PIPES."
It is registration time again nnil
here and there are seen the melan
choly figures ol those juniors and sen
iors who have taken the "pip-1''
courses the University offers. Thi-y
are seen wildly scanning the rata
logue in a vain hope that there is
yet one course they may have nil.si'il
ami are found rushing madly from
qua.i.tanco to acquaintance inquirinc
If hy chance they know of one. Y
sympathize with these people. Hut
sympathize is all that can he done.
There Is no hope for them ever un
doing the mistake they have made
They have perhaps worse than wast
ed the best four years of their lives.
They all regret It now and under-classni-.-n
should profit hy the lesson
they teach.
First of all every freshman should
begin at once to work oft the re
quired subjects. There is no way of
avoiding taking them sometime fo
the student's selfish good it is better
to take them in the freshman year.
Otherwise a high grade must he
made. To first take required wort
heirs the student in two ways. It
keeps him from developing habits of
sloth and it enables- him to devote
the last two years to subjects that
are necessary to his chosen vocation
Tt Is tar better to leave school with
the knowledge of your work fresh
in your mind than to s-pend the last
year takin freshman subjects.
It also seemg that everyone should
have some idea of what he wants to
do bv the end of his first year. To
go to college for a diploma is not
onlv foolish but, considering the
crowded condition of the school, pos
itixely selfish. It would be well if
everyone were to take this mid year
registration as a time to check up on
himself, to see Just where he is go
ing and if he is aimlessly wondering
to bring himself back to a definite
course.
having their minds moulded by en
vlronment and will. They will lmve
a tendency to follow examples soi
while In school, consequently wo arc
confronted with (ho tasks of keeping
our school as wo would our country
and (hn first Job Is abolishing the
tendency to fall Into classes.
Contemporary Opinion
Blessed Be the Curious.
It is the Inquisitive mind which
succeeds. The matter-of-fact mind
may acquire, tt Is true, what has
been discovered and passed on. Hut
it does not make for progress
neither for decay. It nrnkes for fix
edness. The student who believes what he
reads, who takes everything tn totv
will find himself at the end of h'if.
college career repenting only plati
tudes, . uninteresting and nninstruc
the. And it Is (his same type of
student who does not pause to t'iv
tangle what he does not, understand.
How often do we hear "That's too
dicp for me." A truer statement
would be "I'm (oo lazy and disinter
ested to figure this out."
The inquisitive mind Interminably
nsks "Is this true?" "How does It
check up with hy experiences and
what I have been taught to believe?''
"Is there ground for believing it?"
The inquisitive mind is not content
to let others do its thinking for It.
It stretches out for itself.
And when this mind comes to
something abstruse, not easily under
standable, it goes- to 'work. It anal
yzes this something. It studies i.
And nine times out of ten it conn
to an understanding of it Montana
Kaimin.
CCRNHUSKER PICTCURES.
Individual Junior and eenior
photographs for the 1923 Corn
husker must be taken Immediately
nt Doles Studio, because of the
limited time available. Individual
pictures for rorority panels must
also be taken at once, the tame
time limit applying.
U-NOTICE
CLASS DISTINCTION.
When things seem to have gone to
rot and the whole world is upsil
down, people begin to r.ion and ie
ciare that we are pasing throuch tl.c
most critical time in history. Tin
philosophical Tuck comes to the res
cue and janntly gives solace by .is
suring the fearful that it was evi r
thus.
However we must feel that it is
critical period in history, with the
world in turmoil, the liberal el- men!?
in our country showing a decline,
and great men searching for a pan
acea. Our lives in school are typical
of the life of our country. We aie
but a miniature and the actions of
the country are as the actions of IU
people.
Compare this country with the Eu
ropean nations and you may think
us on easy street, but with the fi
nancial system suffering from the
post-war strain, prices hovering be
low the cost of production, and taxes
beyond reason the condition of the
United Slates is hardly what might
be called normal. Our salvation res.s
in the thinking people of the nation.
There is no state on earth where
the people do the thinking that we do.
and therein we may hare hope. In
telligent public opinion is the life of
democracy.
One of the disastrous effects of
the abnormal period is the tendency
of people to fall into classes, destroy
ing the very foundation upon which
the government was built. Fven here
at school the tendency is marked
and should cause people to wonder
whether it were for the betterment o.
detriment of the Institution. It could
hardly be called good and yet it is
very noticeable and indeed called
very honorable to belong to a class
that distinguishes he individual from
others.
University graduate are but about
two per cent of the population, but
they are called upon to do many
times that per cent ot the nation's
thinking. In this school at this time,
there are men who win help solve
the world's problems and who are
i N.. I ii i's of cimhthI Interest will hi
prinli .1 in IhU i-nluinn f.ir two ronsocu
I'opy pht ulil In the Ne
hnisk.m offiec by flvo orlork J
Freshman Basketball.
Freshman basketball practice
Thursday at 7:30 p. m., and Friday
lit 4 p. m.
Physical Education Normals.
All physical education normal Un
dents shoolh consult Dr. Clapp ns ad
visor. Make appointments at G-IOS.
Debate (English 104).
Students wishing to register for
debate (English 104, membership lim
ited to twelve) should confer with the
Instructor.
M. M. FOfiG.
Corncobs.
Corncobs will have an Important
meeting tonight at :30 at the Sigma
Chi house.
Inter-Fraternity Basketball.
Entries for the inter-fraternity bas
ketball turnament must be handed in
to the athleti office by January 15.
Silver Serpent.
Regular meeting of Silver Serpents.
Monday at 5, Ellen Smith hall.
Gamut Club.
Gamut club party. Ellen Smith hall.
Friday, January 5.
Mid-winter Class Graduates.
All studenits who graduate at tht
end of the first semester will meet
at 4 r. m., today in Social Science
Room 301 to arrange for announce
ments and graduation exercises, and
to complete a permanent organiza
tion. Delian Open Meeting.
Delian open meeting tonjght at
8:15 in Faculty Jiall.
Delian Business Meeting.
Delian business meeting Tuesday
night at 7 o'clock in Faculty hall.
Friday, January 5.
Mid-year graduates. Social Science
301, 4:00.
Gamut club party, Ellen Smith hail,
8:00.
Farm House winter party- tnformsl
the Lincoln.
Junior-Senior prom, Scottish Rit-
Temple.
I Saturday, aJnuary 6.
Alpha Delta Pi formal, the Lincoln.
Bnshnell Guild house dance.
Sophomore Spree, Rosewilde.
Phi Delta Chi house dance.
Farm House annual banquet, the
Lincoln.
Union Society banquet, 6:30 p. m..
the Lincoln. ,
Kearney club party, 8 p. m. Faculty
haX
Phi D It? Chi house party.
APPROPRIATIONS
FOR NEBRASKA U
ARE NOT LARGE
Other Universities of the West
That Kate as High ns Ne
braska Are Favored
With More Money.
NEBRASKA TENTH ON LIST
Yit rmnhiisker School Stands
High as a Western Leader
in Higher Education.
A comparative statement of state
appropriations to State Fniversltles
for 1021-23 was published In the bl
ennlel report ot the registrar dlstrlu
uted to the members of the Nebraska
leglslatue this week.
The tablo shows interesting differ
ences In appropriations at some ot
the middle western states. Student
tecs, sales, and federal funds are not
included In the statement which I
a s follows:
Now Iin the Movies
"Ever read 'Aesop's Fables' ?"
"You moan the stories in
which the animals nre supposed
to talk?" asked Senator Sor
ghum "The same"
"Yes I've read 'em (and scon
'em in the movies) Aesop was a
smart man. He realized it was
almost impossible to interest the
public in a simple statement of
honest truth without mixing it
with some gilded and fantastical
whopper." Pittsburg Press.
A Dog's Paradise
Every dog has his dates.
Sometimes liver wurst may
taste best.
Wise dogs make the butcher
shop their moating place.
A butcher takes little thought
of the marrow. t
Even dog has his day is the
moral screened in "A Dog's Par
adise" of "Aesop's Film Fables".
A mad dog may only be flea-
vish. .
All butchers are not golfers
Fniversity of Michigan Jfi.000.000.00
Michigan Agri. College 2.000.000.00
Total-Michigan (8.000,000.00)
I'niversity of California
State I'niversity ot Iowa
In. Agr. College (Ames, la.)
Total Iowa ........
I'niversity of Illinois
I'niversity of Minnesota ...
Ohio State I'niversity (including
Acriultural Kxperiment Station).. 4.579.SS0.00
I'niversity ot Wisconsin 6,521,070.00
I'niversity of Indiana 8.064,000.00
Purdue I'niversity 2.772,000.00
Total Indiana (5.S36.000.00
I'niversity ot Neraska 3.B65.7SO.0O
I'niversity of Kansas 2.129.000.00
I'niversity of Texas 2.661.321.00
University ot Missouri 1,812,100.00
I'niversity of Kentucky 1,154.497.00
I'niversity of Colorado 1,150,000.00
I'niversity of No. Pakota 1,053,160.00
I'niversity of Wyoming 760,000.00
College ot Agriculture not included.
For peratlon For Ind and Total for men
an maintenance Buildings nlnm 1921.1923
$4,800,000.00 $10,SOO,000.00
990,000.00 2,990,000.00
(5,790,000.00) (13.790.000.00
1,000,500.00 9,313,000.00
622,000.00 4.675,294.00
315,000.00 4,547.000.00
(937,000.00) (9,222,294.00
1 ,500.000.00 R.S60.000.00
1.120,000.00 S.S03.179.00
8.312,500.00
4,0:.3,29I 00
4.232.000.00
(8,2S5,294.00)
7.350,000.00
7.6S3. 179.00
2,415.000.00
467,0000,00
125,000.00
(123.000.00)
,100,0000.00
1,290,000.00
S23.599.00
3000,000.00
300,000.00
170.000.00
475,000.00
6,994.880.00
6,979,070.00
S.1S9.000.00
2,772,000.00
(5,961,000.00
3,665,750.00
3.419,000.00
2,661,321.00
2,637,699.00
1,454,497.00
1,430,000.00
1,223,160.00
1,235,000.00
Warm as toast!
a biff, roomy, woolly
Kuppenheimer Overcoat
Now On Sale
$34.75 to $54.75
MAGEES
ALL SOULS' UNITARIAN CHURCH
12th and II Streets
JAMES W. M'DONALD, Minister
An avowedly liberal church whose members do not all
think alike, but who are all alike, free to think.
Sunday Morning Service 11 A. M.
Regular meeting of Young People's Society Sunday
evening at 6:30 at the home of Guy Hyatt, 2135 South
street.
The Secret Is Out
n
that the reason students of this school find ready admittance to
banks and business institutions, is due to the high standard of
training which obtains In this college.
NEBRASKA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
T. A. Blakeslee, A. B, Ph.B President.
Fully Accredited
Cor. O and 14th Lincoln, Nebr.
but they know their links.
The theft of nn ounce of meat
mnv put n dojr in the pound.
lUitchors sell tonpuo by the
weijrht but women pive thcir's
away. , ....
Throwing a fit may be an alibi.
Kansas School Asks
For Larger Budget
Less for buildings, but increases in
other items nmri'egntinff n little less
than 12 ier cent, in fuco of a pro
spective student increase of 14.2 per
cent, will be asked of the forthcom
ing session of the Kansas legislature
by the University of Kansas, accord
ing to a special story in the current
issue of the Graduate Magazine. The
budget requirements total $1,003,573
u year, ns compared with $1,7S5,500
for the current year.
The building program offered an
the minimum of the University's needs
includes the second unit of the new
hospital at Kansas City, Kans., to cost
$100,000, nn auditorium on the campus,
to cost $300,000 and a new science
building, to replace Snow hall, first
condemned ten years ago and now
pronounced unsafe, also to cost $300,
000. The million-dollar program
would be spread over four years and
is two-thirds as large as the appro
priations of two years ago.
Ask For Auditorium.
The auditorium is asked in view of
tho growth of the student body to a
number fully twice the capacity of the
gymnasium hall..
Tho largest increase is for saluries
amounting to $2(12,751 from $780,000
of the present year. However, almost
one-half of this increase is needed for
expansion of faculty to meet the pros
pective increase in student enrollment.
University Daily Kunsan.
Iowa School Granted
Agricultural Medal
The Wilder medal, emblematic of
the most notable contribution to hor
ticulture for the year, has been award
ed to the Iowa Agricultural Experi
ment station for its work in dcvelon.
nf u.e Ames apple soedings. This
award is mado each day by the Ainer
lean Pomological society and wns
given to the Iowa exhibit of scedings
reconty displayed at tho Midwest
Horticultural show at Council Bluffs'.
The awarding of tho Wilder modal
according to H. D. Lantz, in charge
of applo experimentation at the l,wa
Agricultural Experiment stntjon, is tt
recognition of the great value to Iowa
of the work of the lute S. A. Reach
who spent the last 15 years of hi,
life developing seeding apples for
Iowa and the Mississippi valley, which
would withstand the severe winters
of this section. Iowa State Student.
:i:H::H:::Hi:H:S:nS:i:!iH:::!!:i!i!:i!ii::i:!::&
.: ""i:l
(Sophmore Spree)
ROSEWILDE, JANUARY 6, 1923
Stratton's Merrymakers
Refreshments $1.10 Entertainment 1
Just 1 wo More Days
of Gold's Greater January
Discount
ale
7heStore thatseh the be,
for just a little less -
A 7 I Ml
Jg-'- 'jg-n n M
lT ill--vfajrr-i. JTT f i .m 1 1 "
J0Z9-M3 O Street "Ti" -.lOTI UNCOIM.NEBR,.
Everything is Reduced
i fir o
to
50
(Three or Four Contract Lines Only Excepted.
Thousands of wise shoppers daily throng this busy store, taking advantage
of the wonderful opportunities for saving brought by the general reductions
prevailing in every section. And just think what it means 10 to 50"
DISCOUNT from Gold's low regular prices! No matter what you buy or
need, the saving of 10" to 50 prevails. EVERY ITEM IN EVERY
STOCK INCLUDED only a few contract items reserved.
On Sale for the First Time This Special Purchase Sale Lot of
17.50 to 22.50 DRESSESS
(7
Just in time for Thursday's sale comes the big special purchase
lot of beautiful Frocks for women and misses, bought at a frac
tion of their worth and offered to you in turn at away below
usual prices. Stunning new Dresses of tricotine, wool crepes,
velours, brocaded velvets, Poiret twills, silk taffetas, crepe de
chines, satins, Georgettes, etc. in navy, brown and black delight
ful models that would sell in a regular way at 17.50 to 22.50.
Another greater Januarv sale sensation at your choice only $10.
GOLD'S Third Floor.
J '- I 1 ! 'A -k'
27.50 COATS
Coats and Wraps that will be a delight to wo
men of every age and type. Fur trimmed Coats
of deep, rich pile, with great fur collars velvety,
draped styles, blouse-back, belted, with self or
rich collars ; Sport Coats of two-tone and revers
ible fabrics ; beautiful garments regularly priced
to 27.50 in another great lot on sale 8.30 a. m.
Thursday for the first time only
GOLD'S Third Floor.
ALL OTHER COATS AND DRESSES AT
SENSATIONAL REDUCTIONS!
5.95 SKIRTS Only
(5)95
The're all wool Dress
Skirts in checks, plaids
and stripes, in black and
write effects, brown
navy, etc Smart and
up-to-the-hour in style
regular values to 5.95
at this greater sale.
Wool MIDDIES for
Another big sale offer
is this special lot of
Middy Blouses, tailored
from good weight red
or navy wool flannels,
trimmed with white or
' gold braid. Offered
while they last at
Everything Else Ready-to-wear
Reduced 20 to