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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1923)
II E DAILY NEBRASKA N The Daily Nebraskan l'nlililifil Ml. id. iv. Tiii'Hilny, Vi"ii.i'Hii:iJ Thiirsiia v uml I'rMny imiriiluur of iiuli wwlc hv'tlic l i ivi isiiy i.f NcliritHkn. A-l--:mI fur niiillliiu' lit hihtIiiI nito nf pn,l i pi.i vm!i.I I.iI- ill Sivlion llo;l, A I i,f Viiilu'i' II, liii", aiiliiiirizcil .IiiiHinry L'O, nr.':'. oil 1(1 VI. l.lCKSITV J'l lll.ICATION I I..I..I. Iki. It.rri-I I ill lit' t'.f Slllllrilt l'lltl- llrilllilll iiOi.nl. ml lis si' nl'i! i-'.-ii-h lllllllrr lit Mil liOKtoi't'ii'i- '' l-li '"1"- Ni'lH'HHkii. iniiNr till Art if ; Miiri-li , 170. MiI.m r.,liun rule $?.00 a year a niK'Hlor Miv :.- py . - V-r Cent I h si :i!l I'linnn 'im iil ions to 1 II iC I) lll.Y M)Hlt ISKAX hi; ioii A. l.in n!ii, Ni'li. TKl.i:iilXl' l nirMt.v MS. Fc:hiit lit.HH-J 'il.lnl-i.il ''I I'llsilnr-s rfflri't In Kiilllll-Wi-M r.irn r .1 l'iim'ii.riit nf I In' Ailniiiiln Ir.iiliii Iln.l. llcrlit 't Iti-nu im-II. .Ir. Iililor Murj.ir ii'HM .. .MimnKlnit l-iililni llficn Kiiiii:nrr Akmh lute Kililor lai :- A. 'iti-l I'll' Niht liillliir Hon aril lti;:'fi-it MM lvlltor Km-' - l V. lii n n .... ... Mulit Kiiilor rim!' I', it; M-y r.:vlil"s Ml!.i:"ir (111; ir. I M .lii-l.i ( lar, c ' : c. 1 f A?.fct. Humiicnn V.tzr. '-T M !: HOIKS. l-'-.ii.-r. I ."i ilnilv. v.. rdim Kii'l -r. R-.S .l.-i!lv. Hni- i-ss Vtii-.isfr. -Mi ilsilty. j ut Tin i:. Nlitlit t-V'i.w- Iitn'tt V. laiin Richard KMer Wt. Xicht Kditor 0:;lv t wo wvclcs roniii i n until til ted! hundred Ncl)i'.'i;;K;i huh school boys conic to Lincoln for the annual high school basketball tournament. V. i y of these students will receive their first impressions of Nebraska's campus. We have a big opportunity to do our l'nivc:-;t y a real service by ex tendhis a royal welcome and worth while entertainment to our future Cornhuskers. it unie:s wo push right on and con tinue to keep politics stamped ut Ve have pnactcd a Hotter Nebra? v"., n w let's enforco it. Official records show that women students who are under supervised study in the dormitories and sorority houses have a smaller percentage of scholarship delinrueiicies than those who are not living under these study rules. This is the best hind of evidence that Nebraska needs dormitories. A bill providing for construction of a system of dormitories near the cam pus, especially for students of the first two classes, is now pending in the legislature. A dormitory system is one part of the program of ad vancement outlined by the Alumni Association. The figures announced by the Dean of Women endorse the wisdom of these moves. Nebraska students take more than ordinary interest in the announcement that Dr. Paul Harrison, an alumnus of this University, will be in Lincoln this week. Dr. Harrison has won In ternational lame for the fine work which he has done as a medical mis sionary in Arabia. Many will remember that Sherv.. Eddy, who gave a series of lecture, here last spring, praised Mr. Harrison and regarded him as one of Nebras ka's most distinguished alumri Al students may hear Mr. Harrison tell of his work in Arabia Tuesday noon and Wedensday at convocation. Go to the polls and vote today. Notices iV'lln-H if jrri'iTiil InfroKt will hi iiiliitnl In this column fur I wo i'ihinitu live litem. Cpjiv hIii-iiM !' In I lie N' liriihkiin office hy fiv odnrk.i Nu Med RcRular Nu Med banquet at Grand Hotel Wednesday r.t 6 p. m. Dr. Har rison will speak. Kotncnsky Club Komensky Club meetinjr Saturday, February 24, Faculty hall. Alpha Zeta Important business meeting: Wed- resday, February 21, Ajr. Club room at 7:30. Commercial Club Commercial Club initiation for new -,crbovt; Wer'nes-'py evening at 7:15, at the Temple. A. A. E. Important meeting oi! A. A. K.. Wednesday, at 7:30 in M. E. 206. S. ect ion of officers and announce ment of chairman of engineer's week talks and eats. Phi Omega. j Phi Omega will meet Tuesday eve ning, at 8:00 o'clock, at the Ii Smoking Room. It is essential that every member be present at this meeting. Student Volunteers. Dr. Paul Harrison of Arabia, a University of Nebraska graduate, will speak to the Student Volunteers of Nebraska. Wesleyan. Cotner, anfl Un ion Universities tonight at 7:00 P. M. S. S. 105. Nebraskan Staff. Picture for the first semester Ne braskan staff will be taken at 12:15 at Dole's Studio. The picture for the second semester staff will be taken at 12:30, Thursday. Please be prompt. l . . . . Alpha Kappa Fsi Luncheon Alpha Kappa Psi luncheon at Cham ber of Commerce, February 20, at 12 o'clock. Alpha Chi Sigma Dinner at the Temple at 6:i5, fol- ! lowed by a meeting in Fraternity Hall, Tuesday at 7:30. Ptrshing Rifles There will be an important meeting Wednesday, February 21, in Nebras ka Hall. Kecommen'lation.s'for mem bers next year will be made at this thvie. Other important business will be taken up at this meeting. Practical Idealism All students interested in this move ment or in solving present day prob lems through serious thought and earnest effort, and who therefore like to exchange ideas with like students of other universities, here and abroad, please sign name on paper posted on I l-jb:-:.ry and on Sooicl Science bulletin ! boards. Iron Sphinx A copy of the Iron Sphinx picture is iiow in the student activities office. All Sphinx who wish copies of the picture may leave their orders there. PROFESSORS TFLL WHAT WOULD HE IF THEY HAD ANOTHER CHOICE rcutlnued from Page One.) Department admitted he had often imagined it would be pleasant to be a missionary to China. Miss Reyn oldson would also like to ho a mis sionary in the foreign service. If Prof. R. D. Scott weren't enjoy ing himself showing co-eds the beau ties of English literature, he would be an actor. He was an actor before he became an instructor. Prof. Laurence Fossler, of the Teu tonic Language Department, was caught entirely unprepared. "Why, I never thought seriously of anything except teaching." Someone suggest ed preaching as an alternative. "No, no" dthe jirofossor replied, ' y 1 1" 1 couldn't make good with young folks, I'd have no chance at all with the old petrified ones." At length he con fesscd he had often wanted to be s locomotive engineer, because he thought it would be "just fine to go racing across the country." Professor Alexis, of the Modern Language Department, admitted he also had wanted to be an engineer, but once when he had an opportun ity to examine a locomotive carefully he was struck with the astoundinr potentialites of the thing for blowing itself to pieces, and so he decided to choose a career which, although not so exciting, at least was a little safer. Now, however, he believes that if ho weren't a professor he would like to be a diplomat. In connection with lo comotives, Professor Stuff admitted his stock dream is that he is an en f ic-. He said that he has backed an engine ou-. ma.iy times from the Burlington yards, although he has he has never been on the payroll of the C. H. & Q. He also has a fatal tendency to run the big locomotives off on open switches. This is merely dreaming, of course, and he knows that he will never be an engineer. His driving in reality is confined to run ning his automobile. The law professors were easy and uninteresting. If they weren't teaching law, they all would be pracl tising it. an opportunity to be what I'd rather Prof. N. A. Pengston, of the Geo logical and Geographical Department cannot imagine any profession "more honrable than that of law. It would be fine to work some years an at-torney-at-law and then become jui let." Professor Sennning, professor of po litical science, would choose law as an alternative to teaching. "I would not want to be a practising lawyer in court. I would want to be a con sulting lawyer to whom people took their troubles for settlement and ad vice. I would prefer the preventative, to the curative side." Sherlock B. Cass, of the English Your election is being held today. Whether your class and your school is conducted in the manner you de sire depends largely upon the inter est that you take in choosing thosij who are to represi-nt you. You may be the student who spends, his nights and his spare hours at the study table, but you may not be a true Kebraskan. You may be one who spends his evenings at dames or other social functions, but you still may not be a true Nebraskan. No matter what you are interested in. you are not real Nebraska stork, a? long as yon feel that the school is "bought and paid for," and that your duty, and your spirit is to end the closing of a book or the paying of a fee. You are in an institution which is and should be with you a business proposition. Just as it is true with any investment, with any business program, your returns will vary pro portionately to the amount of energy and interest that you put into them. You may be a big rooter at every football game, but it your rooting and If your interest ends with the foot ball season and on the football field your not rounding yourself into an all round Nebraskan. If you can't "fol low the ball" all through the years at Nebraska, either fightig hard In the fray or giving your shoulders to help on the sidelines, then you're like a garbage fed chicken yon may look alright on the outside but there's something lacking on the Inside. If. with the pasing of the old political fights, we lose interest In the elections we are still no better off. We have now a better Ne brFka but we can never maintain Calendar Tuesday, February 20 La. Trentaine, 7:30, Faculty hall. Union business meeting, 7 p. m. Wednesday, February 2i A. A. E. meeting, 7:30 at M. E. 20G. Nu-Med banquet at Grand hotel at 6:00. Xi Delta candy sale in Social Sci ence building. Girls' Comercial Club meeting, fj o'clock, Social Science 30.5. Thursday, February 22. Iota Sigma PI meeting at Chemis try hall at 7:15. Saturday, February 24 Girls' Commercial Club subscrip tion dance. K. C. Hall. SALARIES The following news item found in a recent issue of Science is suggestive. "Professor John F. Worley -of the Transportati --' Engineering de partment of the University of Michi gan has refused a salary of ?25,000 with a large manufacturing concern. His university salary is less than $5,000." There are professors at Iowa State, we are credibly informed, who have refused offers much more attractive financially than any the college could make. It indicates that there are other things beside the size of a check in deciding and following one's life work. Love of the profession and of the institution often-times swing the balance though an offer of a larger salary may weight the other side. Iowa State Student. WW.JIHUW1H WW.!,' .WJ IBUJLt-W IlL-X GET YOUR WARDROBE in Shape for Week End Parties EARLY! Phone B3677 Varsity Cleaners IKBU SENIOR Pins 2.50 Rings 6.50 Letter "N" Pins 1.00 to 10.00 ALLE i T University Jeweler Estb. 1871 Department, when nsked what ht would do if ho weren't a prolVssor. replied: "Well, it I didn't have the engagement to come down here and teach, I should probably stay at home. I would do what I now do whenever I pan road jand write. I might travel, although I don't know how I could if I had no salary. My parent? wanted mo to bo a minister, but I myself, had no such desire. I believe I prefer the alternative proposed ny Socrates at his trial to be supported at state expense." Professor Frye would like to be a soldier of a sailor. "If I really had an opportunity to be what I'd like to I would enter either the Army or the Navy. There are certain advan tages, You're fairly sure ol your position, that is, unless the adminis tration gets some fool notion to cut down armaments just when they're needed most. Then again you'd earn an honest living. That counts a lot. because you know nowadays, it's quite a problem to be honest and live. 1 think I'd rather be a soldier and kih my enemies, than a business man a".! cheat my friends." Dean Engberg, if he were not a dean, would feel as a naturalist. For a long time, however, he had planned ! to be a storekeeper. As a young boy his favorite recreation was mak ing currency from bits of papers and glass and weighing out bricks and mud pies. Chancellor Avery, before he was in terested In academic work, planned to become a technical chemist. "1 would probably now be the superin tendent of a sugar factqry or con nected with the research department of a copper mine," ho said, ir , wero not the Chancellor." HER AWAKENING He hugged her in the shadow, hallway. "Oh," she giggled breathlessly , neved realized the power of fae i,regg until this moment." Ameripnn ' gion Weekly. 17ENUS Ypencils fffplui" FOR the Btn dent or prot, the superb VENUS out-rivals all for perfect pencil work. 17 black degrees 3 copying. American Lead l'cnril to. 220 Fifth Ave. New York WZEL Writ tor hnoltlpt on Venttb l'encils and VENI'H Everpointkd Mechanical Pencil! jiitinttwitiiitf After Every Meal J Chew your food well, then use WRIGLEY'S to aid digestion. It also keeps the teeth clean, breath sweet, appetite keen. The Great American Sweetmeat You'll wish your neck was as long as a giraffe's so you could wear a dozen or so ties at once when you see our wonderful spring neckwear at $1 to $2.75 A PACH OF A al. ft T. J it THE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC ADRIAN M. NEWENS, Director Offers thorough training in Music, Dramatic Art. large faculty of specialists in all departments. Anyone may enter. Full information on request. Opposite the Campus. Phone B1392 11th & It Sts X played by Bennie Krueger's Orchestra Hear it. Two pianos, saxa phones, spailvlirg brasses worth waiting a mils to hear. "The Thief," cnoll, r hip hit, on the d'-cr :d". Ard The all Brunswick Records, a true reproduction, not a note lost or slurred. SMOOTHER AND BETTER A collar scientifically washed and ironed by the EVANS system is a collar fully as good as new. Many say that it is even smoother and more comfortable than when new. It is a simple matter to give the EVANS a trial. ?O0jrK in 355 N. 12 th Laundry Cleaning B55S5 Economy Satisfaction Promptness A Good Place For You Many calls come to us for well-trained Stenographers and Accountants. NEW TERM BEGINNING FEB. 26. Call and Talk It Over. LINCOLN BUSINESS COLLEGE Accredited by National Ass'n. of Accredited Commercial Schools m U. B. C. Bldg. P St. and 14th Lincoln, Neb. A PLEASANT REMEMBRANCE at all times YOUR PHOTOGRAPH A Photo by Dole HTucker-Shean 1123 O STREET. Complete Supplies for All Departments of the University.