The Daily Nebraskan PublUhad Sunln'l Tuesday, Wednesday, Thur.dny and Friday morning! o( each week by the University of Nebraska. Accepted for mniling at special rato of postage provided for in Section 1103, Act of October 3, 1017, authorised January 20, 1922. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY PUBLICATION Under the Direction of the Student Publi cation Bond. Entered aa second-class matter at the Po.toliice in Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress, tuch 3. 1879. Subscription rate $2 00 a year $1.25 a semester. Single Cipy Five Address all communications to THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Station A. Lincoln, Nebraska Editorial and Business Offices, University Hall, 10. EDITORIAL STAFF Emmet t V. M.iun Ed,!!or Howard Buffett Acting Managing Editor William Beitwcll News Ld.lor Hugh Cox News fcditor Marion Stanley News Editor BUSINESS STAFF Clifford M. Hicks Business Manager Clarence Eickoff Asst. Business Manager Otto Skold Circulation Manager OFFICE HOURS Every afternoon with the exception of Friday and Sunday. BENEFITS NOT DERIVED. The Daily Nebraskan is now being printed in a University-owned print shop. Good work is being done but that is not all oC it. Even though the University owns the shop and even though the paper is an official paper of the University, the stall is paying more to have the paper print ed than when the publication was in the hands of a private firm. Anyone reviewing this case may be certain that there is little jus tice in it. It was not from choice that the paper was printed there, al though there would be no objection on the part of the staff, other than that the boost in price with no bet ter workmanship is not good busi ness and is not approved by the man agement of this paper. , Students heading this paper arc supposed to possess ability enough to edit and publish a paper without outside censorship or influence. Such is welcome, very welcome, for the gain in knowledge but violation of business principles is not good news paper ethics. THIS IS FALL. Those lazy, barely elusive, flies buzz around your head. Freshmen are learning to say din ner instead of supper. Summer grasshoppers who; gave the ants the laugh are beginning to look worried. WHY DID THEY JUMP? Thousands of students received a severe jolt this summer when notices for fees came through the mail. And the jolt was warranted, coming as it did to cut the closely planned bud gets made by hard-hit students. Although the statement has been made that fees are still lower than in most other schools, that is cer tainly a feeble argument for rolling stones in the way of educational ad vantages in the state. Other states may have higher fees, but the state of Nebraska has shown many times that it does not follow precedents without benefit for persons, con cerned. Following examples makes a monkey out of the world. Students coming away from home to attend school find too many dif ficulties that could well be borne by state taxpayers, or could better be borne by them. There are plenty of temptations for students to stay away from college without pushing more obstacles in their way. Although there is argument for the higher fees, that was a very grave step and warrants careful re consideration at the first possible moment. COUNCIL HALTS DRIVES. The Student Council deserves to be commended for its attempt to regulate the number of drives staged on the campus. In past years cam paigns and solicitors have followed one upon the other in such a bewild ering succession that the students lost either all their money or their desire to speak the truth. There can be no question that some of these drives were unnecessary. The drive as a form of organized begging has become so prevalent since the war that it is a problem everywhere. Cities are solving the problem by using the Community Chest plan. Some Universities have reverted to the single tax. Until one of these ideas is adopted the next best thing to do is to regulate the campaigns so that the students will not be annoyed by undeserving and unnecessary ones. If the Student Council can succeed in limiting these drives its prestige on the campus will Increase immensely. Even if the first efforts of the council are not immediately successful it is working in the right direction and probably will in the end find a solution for this perplexing problem. Merely Opinion It may bo that the world la con sidering very seriously the offer made recently by Edward V. Bok, whereby some person offering a feas ible, plan for world peace will be given $1 00,000. The only manner in which anyone will ba able to win or earn such a prize will be by sub mitting a plan that will keep men from disagreeing. As long as men live, men will disagree. As long as men disagree, men will fight. Civili zation is powerful, but civilization will have attained a great level when it is able to prevent war. Men in business devote a great share of their time to advertising themselves and incidentally their business. Mr. Bok has a business that profits greatly from advertising. His idea is worthy of support but it seems so hopeless that their is room for suspicion. Freshmen are getting their first touch of college life this week. What man cannot review, hour for hour, the first week that he spent in col lege? Their impression this week is going to be a lasting impression. The first issue of The Daily Ne braskan has been published and now the second has appeared. There can not be a very radical change in any thing but policy, and that does not appear often. There are still position open on the staff. Many applications are being received daily. The staff" hopes that every person applying will work the entire semester. There arc times when there will not be many assign ments, but there will be need of reporters every day. People who will show up at the same hour for every issue are the ones that are valuable. The Student Council is a young organization on the University of Nebraska campus. It is making it self felt and therein lies its value. Supervision of the drives on the campus has been the greatest accom plishment of this organization. Tlans have been made to publish The Daily Nebraskan earlier in the evening than has been the custom. To do this, students must turn in their material earlier in the day. Stories can just as well be written early in the day as late in the day. Ordinary stories will not be accepted 340 No. 11th Only student supply only 11th street next to University DIETZGEN ENGINEERING INSTRUMENTS AND SUPPLIES FOR FIRST YEAR This Complete Dietzgen Set All Dietzgen Equipment Approved by Instructors. I i i ! i ! j i 1 Set Instruments Dietzgen. 1 60-30 degree, 10-inch Triangle. 1 45-45 degree, 8 inch Triangle. 1 Irregular Curve. 1 Architect' Scale. 1 Combination Eraser. 1 Erasing Shield. 1 Pencil Pad. 1 Penholder. $ Slides, Rules and Supplies THE DAILY Into in tho evening for publication the next morning. As yet the staff of this paper has not been as highly organized as the appointed staff should like to see it. A few more days and tho paper will bo appealing in the form which has been tho ambition of tho manage ment. Support is needed in the cir culation campaign. The University Y. M. C. A. is do ing a good work in staging get-togethers for the freshmen boys this week. Left alone the freshmen, who is by nature shy, will not meet and become acquainted with his fel low classmates. It cheers him won derfully to be set down in the midst of two or three hundred of his fel lows, to talk a while with them, and to form some friendships. These mixers will do much to relieve the feeling of loneliness and isolation that assaults a freshman in the week elapsing between registration and the time when the new-comer settles down into the school routine. ASSEMBLE CUT MORGUE IN SUMMER MONTHS Student Publications to Use Cuts Cataloged and Filed by Professor M. M. Fogg. A complete cut morgue, including more than a half thousand individual portraits, was completed in the summer by Professor M. M. Fogg and assistants. The morgue is to be used by the School of Journalism and the various university publica tions. The cuts are all cataloged and card indexed, and filed in two large cabinets, where they arc readily ac cessible. Included are a considerable num ber of eroun cuts, others showing scenes on the campus and cuts which . have been used previously. I Material from the three publica-! tions, The Daily Nebraskan, Awg-j wan and the Cornhusker has been j collected. I Father I see by the paper that j a woman threw an iron across the : street and hit her husband in the! head. ! Son She must'a sold apples at j football games. look Store 6 Lettering Pens 404 Gillotts 1066 Gillotts 6 Sheets Napoleon Draw ing Paper, 19x12 in. 1 Bottle Higgins Drawing Ink. 1 Box 2 dozen Thumb Tacks. 2 Venus Drawing Pencils 1 Trans. Protractor. 1 Drawing Board 1 Ebony Edge T-Square 1 Lettering Triangle for all Engineering Classes. 9 NEBRASKAN Notices Catholic Student. Catholic students desiring rooms may inquire at tho Rectory, 14th and K streets. Open Melting. Delian open meeting Friday, Sep tember 21, 8 o'clock, Faculty Hall, Temple building. Everybody wel come. New students como and get acquainted. A good time is assured. Delian Business Meeting. All members are urged to be pres ent at the business meeting Monday, September 24, Faculty Hall, 7 o'clock sharp. There are some very import ant matters to be taken up. COLLEGE PUBLICATIONS (From the Ohio State Sun Dial) Some months ago, the Dearborn Independent, published by Henry Foid, printed an article something over a column in length in which the editor used very large words and long sentences to explain that he did not think that college pub lications were as pure and clean as they might be. Now that we have a chance to work out on an editorial page we have a row things to say to the man who wrote that article. In closing his story, that writer in sinuated that he might be mistaken, and stated that he would like to hear from the other side of the question. We thought that he was wrong, and secured copies of the leading college publications and scanned them to sec whether our opinion coincided with his. After reading thesema gazines, we wrote a very nice respectful letter to the Independent offering to air our views in their publication, accord Any Sort We should have said, "Any Sort of Good Suit." For all of them are quality suits that will uphold the real test of depend able clothing good appearance after months of service. In materials, patterns and colors the va riety is very broad, embracing every good style for the college man. and up Exceptional Values $35 to $50 Wear a Society Brand MAYER BROS. ing to their offer. Tho editor did not deem this communication oi an t'fi ient imnortance to require an nnswer from them, ho at that time the matter was dropped. We do not now say that tho writer was wrong. Wo would not even state that ho was mistaken. But wo do say that his opinion does' not rrl...... J. come very close to ours, invm i. no particular way of proving a X d vvcmfr' 355 N. 12 th. LaundicY& Cleaning For the Fortieth Year this institution welcomes the students of the university. . During these years the Evans Laundry has served thousands of students. It has kept pace with the growth of the university until now it offers a complete Cleaning and Laundry Service. Let Us Call for Your Work Phone B3355 of a Suit For Fall Plenty of go to the new fall Shirts but not a "Traffic Stop per" in the jot. Sure to appeal to the college man who appreciates good Shirts. Wearing and wash ing will prove they have many other features of goodness. $2.00 to $6.00 Isn't It Remarkable How chesty a new Tie will make a man feel, and how the feeling of spruceness repeats itself each time you wear it. You'll find that kind of a Tie here. New ones for fall at $1.00 to $4.00 question of this kind, ns tho whole matter is one of personal opinion. Leaving out all discussion of what is right and wrong, wo wish to re spectfully call tho attentiorn of tho editors of the Independent to theso facts The peoplo who read college mag azine8 are twentieth century men and women, and not sixteenth cen tury Puritans. 3 O.J.FEE B-3555 S m Like 1 OU to n CO. iff1