The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 12, 1924, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE DAILY ftflBRASKAN .
The Daily Nebraskax.
rublish4 Sunday, Tuaadsjr. Wadnaadajr,
Thursday and Friday morning ol Mca
k by IM university mi ragnuk
Acoaptad far mailinf at anaclal rata of
Milin twavidad for in Sactloa 1103, Act
f Oatabar 9, 1IT, autharisad January so,
ivas.
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY
PUBLICATION
Undtr tha Dlractlon of tha Studaat Publl
cation Board
Entered at aacond-clai mattar at tha
Postottica in Lincoln, neoraiaa, unaer iki
. . . t m i Bin
al congress, marvu ,
ubacrlption rata - $2.00 a roar
$1.25 a samastar
aula Cany .........FIva Canta
Addrass all communications to
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
Station A. Lincoln, Nabraaka
Editorial and Buslnass Offlcaa, Univaraity
HaU 10.
Phnnil
Day .....142 Univaraity Exchanga
Night " - B9882
OFFICE HOURS
Evary afternoon with tha exception at
Friday and Sunday.
FDITORIAI. STAFF.
Paul C. Richardson -..Editor
William Bertwall Managing Editor
Mrrritt Benton
Wm. Card
Hugh Cox
Caorf W. Hylton
Ralph J. Kelly
Alice Thuman
Doris Trott
.New Editor
New Editor
New Editor
Newa Editor
Newa Editor
. Assistant News Editor
Assistant New Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
Clifford M. Hicks Business Manager
Clarence EickhofT Asst. Businasa Manager
Otto Skold Circulation Manager
LOWER PRICE OF CORNHUSKERS
A reduction of the price of the
1924 Cornhusker has been announced
by the business staff. This was made
possible by the larger number of sub
scriptions sold this year, and also by
lower rates that were secured for the
contract work of the annual.
Very few businesses ever reduce
the price of a commodity after sales
have been made, and then make this
reduction effective by a rebate. This
is indeed a step forward and makes
"The Cornhusker of Progress" a real
ity as well as a name, and the busi
ness management of the annual de
serves a great deal of credit for mak
ing this reduction possible.
This reduction is all the more re
markable in view of the fact that the
original price of 4.50 is a great deal
lower than that of other yearbooks
of large universities. The price of
the Wisconsin Badger is $6.00, the
Annapolis Lucky Bag, $7.00, the Min
nesota Gopher, 5.00.
The Cornhusker will be a much
larger book than that of last year.
The pages are larger and the book
will have 50 more pages this year,
with larger departments and a more
extensive art program.
This is not the first indications of
the benefits to be derived from the
University's new p51icy towards stu
dent publications that of giving the
students publications of the highest
qualities for the lowest price. The
1924 Cornhusker will b. as good as
any in the country and at a much
lower price.
The time when individuals were al
lowed to take University publications
and exploit them for their own gain
is past, with publications now assum
ing an attitude of service to the Uni
versity and the student body and
working towards our ultimate goal,
a greater University of Nebraska.
RAG CARPET
Help I
Help I
Tourist: My good man, why are
you cutting: down this tree?
Lanky woodsman: Run out of
toothpicks.
Teacher to class: Will you please
consider art?
Small voice: But I told him last
night I'd never see him again.
First maid: How did you like
working for that college professor?
Second maid: Aw, he was all the
time quarreling with his wife and
they kept me busy running between
the keyhole and the dictionary.
Punch Bowl.
The Rag Doll says that if lunch
were Berved at the campus studio,
perhaps the present noon hour pat
ranage wouldn't register such a half
starved expression.
"Are you Incomplete?"
"Goodness, did I forget my tie?"
A little bee sat on a tree
And then he sat on me, o. g.
low Jacket.
-Yel
Frenzied roommate: Why ari
you hopping around the room for so?
Dum thing: The prof told us to
skip the first chapter.-
CADET OFFICERS CONTRIBUTE.
One hundred dollars has been given
to the Nebraska Memorial association
s-tadium fund by the Cadet Officers
club. This is a most worthy act,
and all campus organizations having
a surplus of funds could well follow
the example of the military organiza
tion and contribute towards the sta
dium. Now that the s-tadium is completed
and we are using this splendid struc
ture, many are too prone to forget
that it is not yet paid for and that
the pledges must be met promptly in
rder that the memorial association
make good its obligations.
Organizations that have a surplus
of fundt could not find a better place
to contribute than to the stadium
fund. Students who do not meet
their pledges promptly are holding
up th work of those charged with
the responsibility of meeting pay
ments on the stadium.
it offers, and keep even with the
pace being set by other colleges and
universities." Arguments advanced
in an other editorial are reprinted
herewith in the " Other Editors Say "
column. Many of the same facts
apply here.
Indiana University, though, does
not need to start at the bottom to
give its students the proper journal
ism training. Already it has the be
ginnings of a great School of Jour
nalism: it is proving the worth of its
training by the records of its gradu
ates and Sts increasing enrollment.
Yet, the University does not give its
students the greater prestige of a
degree in the journalism profession,
nor does it give them the opportunity
of the all-round training that would
be theirs were a School of Journalism
i reality instead of the hope of every
ampus journalist and newspaper
man of Indiana.
wood Eddy will speak at St. Paul's
church.
Notices
V t : . . w;ll k. mm fiu nnlv twtt daVS.
Organization should not hand them in until
three days before tha event, as it is im
possible to run them for long periods.
Pictures and Proof.
The following students please
call at the campus studio at their
earliest convenience: Pauline Bar
ber, Helen Guthrie, J. A. Cam
eron, Charles E. Burke, Russell F.
Richmond, Robert Bushnell, Roland
H. Loder, A. J. Leisey, Frances
Weintz, Paul Wellman, Margaret
E. Wattles, Iva Murphy, Ida Prime,
Jean Kellenbarger, Hugo F. Srb,
Welch Pogue, Paul Cheyney, Jose
phine Shramek, Merle Loder, J. Earl
Smith, Wilbur Shainholtz, Richard F.
Krage, E. W. Morris, Raymond Eller,
Rolland Sturm, Lucile Livingston, M.
E. Dilley, T. L. Koontz, George Bur
leigh, A. R. Congdon, E. Grant Lantz,
Gertrude Tomson, Cora Johnson,
Lloyd P. Shildneck, Marian E. Madi-
gan, Marion Yoder, Barbara Wiggen
horn, Carrol Diller, Philip Lewis, Mrs.
Aileen Acton, Hester Chatterton,
Lois Jackman, Amy Martin.
Student Election.
Filing for the four class presiden
cies, three publication board mem
bers, and the Ivy Day orator must be
made by Friday noon, February 15.
File the nomination at Student Ac
tivities office.
Freshman Commission.
Meeting Tuesday at 7:10 in Ellen
Smith hall.
BizacU.
All Bizads having banquet tickets
check in to Philip Lewis as soon as
possible.
Tassels.
The Y. W. C. A. Tassels will have
a party at Ellen Smith hall Saturday
at 2:30 p. m.
League of Women Voter.
The League of Women Voters will
meet at 7:00 Thursday evening in
Social Science auditorium. All girls
who are members of tho league are
urged to attend the meeting and to
bring their dues.
Alpha Kappa Pi.
Alpha Kappa Psi will, hold an im
portant business meeting Wednesday
at 5 o'clock in the University Com
mercial club room.
Square and Cora pas.
Because of several conflicting
meetings our regular monthly meet
ing will be postponed until Wednes
day, February 20.
Xi Delta.
Xi Delta meeting will be held in
Ellen Smith hall Thursday at 7:15
p. m.
Special Chemistry Examination.
Drs. H. B. Hamilton and B. C.
Hendricks will hold a special exam
ination for all Chemistry I and II
students who wish to remove condi
tions from 1 to 3 o'clock Saturday,
February 16,' in Chemistry hall 208.
It will be open only to students bear
ing special examination fee receipts.
Campus Life Section.
There will be an important meet
ing of the departmental heads of the
campus life section of the Cornhusker
staff in the Cornhusker off Thursday
evening at 7 o'clock. The following
persons are asked to be present:
Frank Scriven, Keith Tyler, Judd
Crocker, Bennett Martin, Ruth Mil
ler and Arthur Bryer.
Engineers Society
Will Make Awards
Mystic Fish.
Mystic Fish meeting will be held
at Ellen Smith hall Wednesday at
7:15 p. m.
Through the generosity of a mem
ber of the American Society of Me
chanical Engineers, two funds of one
thousand dollars each have been
established, the income from which
will be awarded annually for the best
paper by a junior member of the
Society and to the two enrolled stu
dent branch members who contribute
the best papers. Papers must be
submitted by June 30 for awards to
be made at the annual meeting of
the Society in December.
Competition is restricted to junior
members and enrolled members of
student branches in good standing.
In the junior division the prize will
consist of a cash amount, with an
engraved certificate signed by the
president and secretary of the Soci
ety; in the student division two prizes
with similar engraved certificates will
be given. Papers in both classes to
be eligible for competition must have
been produced by their authors with
out assistance, and must not have
been previously contributed to nor
published by any other society or
Kornhusker Katies.
The Kornhusker Kadet staff will
meet at Nebraska hall 204 Tuesday
at 5:00 for reorganization and assignments.
The College Press.
THE DEMAND FOR SCHOOLS
OF.. JOURNALISM
(Indiana Daily Student)
Out of the University of Minnesota
comes a plea such as was raised by
journalism students of our own in
stitution last spring, in an urgent
request that the Gopher school estab
lish a school of journalism. The same
conditions prevail there as does here,
that the journalism student can not
obtain a degree in his chosen pro
fession, although Indiana differs with
Minnesota in the fact that it offers
moe of the opportunities of a school
of journalism than does the Minne
sota state school.
" The time has come when Min
nesota will either fall into a Class
C rating as a school offering journal
ism" an editorial in the Minnesota
Daily declares, "or it will increase
its staff and the number of courses
Viking.
The Viking picture will not be
taken Tuesday. Former notices to
that effect were a mistake.
Corncob.
The Corncobs will meet at 7 o'clock
tonight in the Temple.
Omaha Club.
The Omaha club picture will be
taken at the campus studio Wednes
day noon.
To do justice to their
studies Students must
have good eyesight SEE
HALLETT
Optometrist
Eatab. 1871
117-119 So. 12th
Kappa Phi.
Kapp.. Phi will hold an open meet
ing Thursday at 7 . o'clock at Ellen
Smith hall.
Ag College Vespers.
Y.W.C.A. vesper services will be
held at Ag College at 12:20 Tuesday.
Sherwood Eddy Speaks.
Friday night, April 11, has been
set aside as a closed date by the com
mittee on student activities. Rher-
hlifntinn
iecnim.ni yw-
Presentation before or publication
by any of the student branches off
the society, however, does not affect
the eligibility of any student paper.
Further information may be got from
Prof. William L. DeBaufre, chairman
of the department of mechanical
engineering.
r .;,nnintn Advances in the me-
XV iw
chanical engineering field the Society
offers other prizes ana awarus, m--i..
k.nnrv membershii). life
C1UUIHK -
membership, medals for notable in
ventions, and diplomas of honorable
mention for inventions or improvements.
Louise W. Mears, A. M. 12, of the
department of geography of the
Miiwnukee State Normal school, has
compiled and published "Studies in
Local Geography," describing me
Milwaukee lake shore region. She
Ima also Dublished a pamphlet en
titled a "Review Questions in Math
ematical Geography."
1 THE 8
! MOGUL
1 BARBER SHOP I
1 127 No. 12th. I
Townsend Portrait photographer.
Jaquelinet "I'm cold, Jack; take me
inside your coat.
Jack t "Pay before you enter; this is a
Finchley one man coat."
(JpoloyUi to Tht Wasp)
Liberty Barber Shop
Successor to
Vall's
Barber Shop
131 No. 13th St.
Facts
about the
EVANS
LAUNDRY
45 years of service.
21 delivery trucks.
150,000 gallons of
rain soft water
used daily.
Every modern laun
dry improvement.
r cxj.rtx
us n. n taT"-""
Laundry Gleaning
STANFORD'S
FOUNTAIN PEN INK
Will Improve the Action
of Any
Fountain
Pen
!Sr ALL
1
at
AlX
SIZES
'The Ink That Made
The Fountain Pen Possible"
Announcement
The Idyll Hour
Formerly McDowell's Tea Room, has . been purchased
by Mr. H. F. Austin.
Faster Service and Better Quality
made possible by added facilities will be given to our
student clientele.
The Idyll Hour
136 North 12th St.
B1694
.
What could
be nicer for
Valentines
than to "Say It
with Flowers'
on Febr. 14.
Chapin Bros.
?
THE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC
ADRIAN M. NEWENS, Director.
Offers thorough training in Music, Dramatic Art. A
large faculty of specialists in all departments. Anyone
may enter. Full information on request. Opposite the
Campus.
Phone B1392
11th & R Sts.
aqJunuurVaf'
$ M
T TT? Tl a. iVi9A
ror noir inai
For wiry, fractious hair-
fluffy hair for any kind of hair A'-
that won't behave use Stacomb.
Your hair will stay combed all 4. 17
If . .... C. .V. Trl..! V4 ,.l I I
aaj a a j ja ua, viawiuii auvait aiui wiv
washing your hair. Restores nat
ural oils washed out.
Adds life and luster.
Ask your barber for a Stacomb
Rub.
At all druggists.
Sdacomlr
. . rT. antes
Utkti tht Hair Stay Combti
ffYl
'SUi rr j'ria rv t;i!?r
rn
asjLM-sqgr
LOOK FOR THIS NAME ON THE NECKBAND
Every feature
about these ties
appeals to college men
Easiest tying neckwear
you can buy I
Economical
No seams to rip
No lining to wrinkle
Beautiful designs
many of them
Made by the makers of
the famous Cheney Silks
r Jy j
L- t
r :
t : ; '
IS " ,
C . ' v- -
K" ' I
C , 1 C
Ftrulthj!
Farquhar Clothing Co., Ben Simon & Son Sha
piro'. Men'a Shop, Mayer Bros., Magee's,
& Paine, Speier & Simon, Fred Schmidt &
7S"