The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 10, 1924, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
-The Daily Nebraskan
Suite A, Uacola. Neeraaka
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
I the
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Uadar Directiea ef th. SlutU.t PublLetis
Board
MEMBERl I
I 9 2,4
Pubttahed Tueedar, Wedneeday, Thursday,
Friday and Sunday morning during tba aca-
UK raar.
2700 could send 600 to meet a van
quished team, the Nebraska of to
day should send nearly 3,000.
Editorial Offlcaa Unlvarattr Hall 10
Offica Houra Aftarmoana with tba adap
tion al Friday and Sunday
Talaphanaa Day, B-SsOl, Ne. 142 (1
ring). N.ht. B-SM2
Bualnaaa Offica Unlvaraity Hall 10 B
Offica Houra Aftarneona with tba axcap-
tlon af Friday and Sunday
Talapbonaa Day, B-S8S1, No. 142 (2
rings). Niht. B-SS82
Entarad as aacond-claaa mattar at tba
Boatoffica In Lincoln, Nebraska, undar act
f Consre.a, March 3, 1879, and at apecial
rata of postage provided lor in Sac t ion 1103.
act of Octobar 3, lull, auinoriaau j
20, 1022.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
2 a yaar S1.2S tamastor
Single Copy, S canta
EDITORIAL STAFF
William B.rrw.U . .... .-.-..Editor
Hugh B. Cox Managing Editor
Wm. Card New. Editor
Victor Huckler Newe Editor
Philip O Hanlon Newe Editor
Alico Thuman N.wa Editor
Volta W. Torray - Nawa Editor
Margarat Long -Aaat. Nawa Editor
laabel O'Halloraa Aaat. Nawa Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
Claranca Elckhoff Bualnaaa Manager
Otto Skold Ait. But. Manag.r
Simpaon Morton Circulation Manager
Raymond Swallow Circulation Managar
COLLEGE AND THE MOB MIND.
The growing number of organiza
tions on the campuses of our colleges
should be of concern to anyone who
is interested in the purpose and re
sults of education. These groups,
which include everything from pure
ly social organizations to church
clubs, have increased to such an ex
tent that today it is amost impossi
ble to find a student -who does not
belong to at least one of them. For
some time it has been customary to
A "Hello" week has been an
nounced, and tho week is to begin
Monday. Many students will be dis
mayed at the ominous word "week."
Yet, the effort is to be made by a
number of campus organizations
and it should not be the part of the
students to condemn the project
without at least investigating its possibilities.
The growth of the large northern
cities, as they have become manufac
turing centers, has gradually killed
the custom of speakhng to everyone
on the street In the present-day
city there are so many possibilities
of saying "Hello" that a man would
lose his voice after one block of
greetings.
The custom of speaking to every
one on the campus might be a good
. ... . .
one, However, ana it is wen o
least consider the merits along with
the bad points.
otes. South Dakota completed sever
al brilliant forward passes and made
most of its gains by the aerial route.
Chamberlain made a number of
long gains with Rutherford and How
ard running interference. Hawkins,
a new quarterback, showed ability at
returning punts, and in field general
ship. A contest was inaugurated for the
best new yells before the game with
the Michigan Aggies. "Something
that doesn't sound like a high school
yell" was called for.
The deDartment of forestry was
planning its annual Pow-Wow. Tho
freshmen were to be initiated into
the mysteries of the scientific for
ester, and the day closed with a feast
around a campfire.
Calendar
Student Opinion
SAYS NEBRASKA DESERVES
TO LOSE
To the Editor:
As far as the student body is con
cerned Nebraska ought to lose the
game with Oklahoma t.nturoay.
Students who cannot give a fighting
team a better send-off than was giv
en the football team Thursday do
not deserve to have a winning team.
Rumors of a big rally at the
Temple and a parade to the station
were heard about the campus, but
each student must have left it to
his neighbor to be there, for only
a handful of supporters came.
It wouldn't have been much
trouble for those students who did
not have 1 o'clock classes to have
gone to the station and shown the
much. It is in football, however,
more than any place else, that the
unexpected happens.
Let's give them a rousing wel
come when they return and atone
for our actions Thursday.
P. M.
regard their growth as something i team that they were backing them,
that was mildly amusing but rather Perhaps they thought that the Okla
innocuous. It now appears that this j homa game wouldn't amount to
multiplicity of organizations has a
significance which has been over
looked. This new attitude is based on tho
assumption that an organization is
more than a mere group of persons.
It is a group of persons who think
along the same lines and whose atti
tude toward life is much the same.
When such a group is joined by a
man who does not think as the group
does, his mind is either remolded by
the group or he is a cast out. Inde
pendence is not tolerated. When we
regard organizations in this light we
see that their growth has a tremen
dous effect on the life of the Amer
ican people.
From the time that a student en
ters the University and becomes a
member of one of the many organiza
tions he is taught to think, not for
himself, but as that group thinks. He
does not examine questions or weigh
evidence on social and political ques
tions; he accepts the opinion of his
organization. This opinion he may
help form or he may not. Regardless
of that, he acepts it. It must be
right; everyone he knows believes it
and upholds it. The man who dare3
to oppose such an opinion is regard
ed as "queer."
The result is the cultivation of a
group mind that narowly escapes be
ing a mob mind. The college, which
should teach the student to think
as an individual, suceeds merely in
teaching him to think as a unit in
an organization. This type of
thought reaches its acme of cultiva
tion in the senseless "pep" meeting
where each man believes that he is
helping to get "things started right."
He does not know why this yelling
and cheering and self-praise of the
group assembled "starts things
right;" he merely submerges his own
in the group mind and blindly fol
lows a leader who has no clear idea
of what he is trying to do. A di
ploma too often is only a certificate
of excellence in this mob-cheering
and not a certificate of carefully
cultivated habits of thought.
From the college the student goes
into the business or professional
world where he is again confronted
with organizations, professional, civ
ic, and otherwise. They, too, are
composed of men who think in the
same way, believe in the same things,
and refuse to associate with those
who do not subscribe to their opin
ions. Here he is given a post-graduate
course in the work that colleg-5
began. The result is a nation of men
who take their economics from the
popular five-cent weekly, their reli
gion from a newspaper syndicate,
and their patriotism from the profes
sional flag-wavers. H. C.
The letter in the student opinion
column today expresses almost ex
actly the feeling of every student
who attended the "rally" Thursday
noon. Nebraska, so far as the stud
ent body is concerned, deserves to
lose to Oklahoma. The students are
too used to victory hardly one
know what it is to have a consis
tently losing team. On this score,
there is some excuse, but very little.
. Strangely, twenty years ago al
most to a day, the Cornhusker foot
ball squad left for a critical game
at Colorado. A few dozens came
to the station to see them off and
the team lost.
But the sarcasm of one of the
coaches went deeper than he had
thought it would, and more than 600
came to greet the squad on its re
turn, with more spirit than they
would have ordinarily met a winn
ing team.
If the Nebraska of twenty years
fcgo with an enrollment of about
College Press
BURTON FIRES A GUN
For many years the University of
Michigan has been known through
out the nation as a training school
for professors. Men of distinction
have taught here for a period of
years, obtained that early experi
ence which was so essential to their
success, and when they reached that
stage of their development at which
they were a credit to the institution
an offer of more money from some
eastern or far western university
has tempted them away.
Such has been the condition. It
reflects no discredit on the institu
tion for in this time we have attract
ed many scholars of prominence
from other universities and colleges.
The fact remains, however, that in
i this time so many men who in all
probability would have remained in
Ann Arbor had there been sufficient
financial renumeration have gone
elsewhere. Only last year one of
the outstanding figures in the field
of English history was called to
Yale. His acceptance may or may
not have been a matter or a finan
cial offer nevertheless, Michigan
lost a man who added to her repu
tation as a center of learning.
In view of this state of affairs,
the remarks of President Burton be
fore the state convention of Kiwani
ans as he "fired the first gun in a
campaign for the highest type of
educators that money can procure"
are of deep import. If he is as suc
cessful as he has been in obtain
ing money for buildings the Univer
sity of the future can have no ri
val as a center of culture and in
tellectual refinement.
Criticisms have been rampant dur
ing the past five years concerning
administrative policies. It has been
felt that there has been too much
attention paid to buildings, too little
to our intellectual betterment. Whe
ther or not this was just comment,
it will be entirely silenced now if
President Burton is successful in
his attempt to make possible an ade
quate teaching staff.
The increased budget, if obtain
ed, should bring about two things:
an increase in the size and quality
of the staff and a considerably lar
ger salary for the numerous deserv
ing members of the present faculty.
In the movement to better the type
of educators at Michigan, those men
who have given years of service to
the institution under adverse condi
tions must not be forgotten. There
are now professors making a decid
ed contribution to the University life
who are by no meant adequately re
munerated. They mist be consider
ed first, or they will feel that their
services are not apreiiated and de
part to ot'jer fields of activity. The
Michigan Daily.
Ten Years Ago
A 0 to 0 tie was the result of the
game with South Dakota. South Da
kota's end-running abilities had been
widely heralded but the work of
Rutherford and Chamberlain in back
ing up the Nebraska forwards smoth
ered nearly all attempts of the Coy-
Miss Jane Addams, first vice-pres
ident of the National Woman Suff
rage association, was' to address
meeting at the city auditorium
the evening.
Twenty Years Ago
Dr. King, president of Oberlin col
lege, addressed a convocation. His
subject was the true value of a col
lege course and the chapel was filled.
The tendency of college men today
is toward too much specialization,
was his opinion.
An apparently official communica
tion from the freshman class was
published in The Daily Nebraskan. It
derided an article of the preceding
issue which praised the sophomores
and slighted the freshmen as unwor
thy Of the University. The Daily Ne
braskan denied all responsibility lot
the article attacked, relying on a
statement preceding it that the arti
cle was not strictly authentic.
OHIO STAXE Ever since its
completion two years ago, the Ohio
State Stadium has been a jinx to
Ohio State football teams. Not one
game has been, won inside its mam
moth walls.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
An annual tradition day has been es
tablished for the freshmen. The idea
is to help them realize their responsibility.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
Paul Whiteman and his famous or
chestra have been scheduled to ap
pear at a concert for the university
music lovers.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
One of the members of the Oxford
debating team, which is to meet the
Michigan team soon, is Malcolm Mac
Donald, son of the British Premier.
October 10
Tea Riven by Tassels at Ellen
Smith Hall from 4 to 6 o'clock.
Kappa Kappa Gamma house
dance.
October 11
Phi Alpha Delta house dance.
W. A. A. picnic. Auto park.
Sigma Lambda Tea, Art Gallery,
3 to 5.
Sigma Kappa house dance.
Phi Delta Theta house dance.
Iron Sphinx dance at K. C. Hall,
Notices
Lutheran League.
The Walther League of the Trin
ity church invites you to a recep
tion for students at the parish hall,
at the corner of Thirteenth and H
Streets, Friday at 8 o'clock.
Deltan Party.
The Delian Literary Society will
holdl a "Kid Party" Friday at 8 o'
clock in Faculty Hall of the Temple.
Palladian.
The Palladian will hold an open
meeting Friday at 8:15 instead or
7:15 as previously announced.
Union.
An open meeting of the Union will
be held Friday at 8:30.
Y. W. C. A.
Anyone wishing to do poster work
for the Y. W. C. A., pease leave their j
name with Miss Erma Appleby or
call Gladys Lux (M1283).
Palladian.
The Palladian will hold an open
meeting Friday at 7:15.
Journalism Student.
Dr. Oswald Garrison Villard's,
'Some Newspapers and Newspaper
men," (pubished in lUZdj, a discus
sion of fifteen American newspapers
and the policies of their editors, will
be loaned at University Hall 112 to
the School of Journalism students.
Menorah Society.
The Menorah Society will hold its
first meeting Sunday, October 12,
in Faculty Hall, second floor of the
Temple, at 8 o'clock.
P. E. O.
All members of the P. E. O. are to
telephone their names, adresses and
telephone numbers to Dorthy Carr
(B1416), or Nancy Haggard (B3580)
as soon as possible.
Sophomores.
All sophomores who wish to try
out for sophomore track manager
candidate should fill out applications
at the Athletic office immediately.
Physical Education.
Wanted 200 men who are inter
ested in increasing their physical ef-
COLORADO STATE COLLEGE
President Coolidge has red hair, ac
cording to a co-ed who met him this
summer.
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA For the first time in
the history of the University the
sophomores came off victors in the
annual class contest here last Friday.
KANSAS UNIVERSITY Ths
Pachamac and Black Mask will hold
open forum on school politics in or
der to make college politics more
constructive.
SANF0RDS
FOUNTAIN PEN INK
The Ink that Made
The Fountain Pen Possible!
AO All
V (''4 l0mhl I
UnrnlHair
Neatly combed, well-kept hair is a'
business and social suet.
STACOMB make the hair stsr combed
in sot style yon like even after it has
just been wsihed.
i STACOMB lit eririaaJ baa been
Hard for years by stars of stage and
screen- leaders at style, Wrjte today
for free trial tube. ( , (
Tub -i35c" Jar 75c s, ,
ul on STACOMB in the black.
yellow end gold package.
I Far sale at year dragg it or wherever
toilet goods re sold,
Studard Laboratorlae, In.V
1U Weet lath Street, New York Cltr
i for Frae Trial Tub.
StAKDAKD LAIKMUTORM. t.
Ill Waet ltta St., N-w York CK. Dept. I
-the f2
sai
s--
I sure was glad I
bought my new Shet
land Knitted Colored
Plaid Scarf to wear to
the game Saturday. Ev
eryone raved so about
how smart it looked,
and really I felt as if I
looked like a million
dollars. It's astonish
ing how much a gay lit
tle scarf adds to a fall
costume and they only
cost $2,95 at Rudge &
GuenzeTs.
l Y M
rm l
icmc
Trips
On picnic for two, take
a Saunders System Coup.
For Ave, a Sedan or Tour
ing Car coats less than
rail fare. Oo and com
as you pleas, anytime,
anywhere.
SAUNDERS SYSTEM
239 North 11th St.
B1O07
mm
Drive It Yourself )
ficiency to join gymnasium classes
for men. See Dr. Clapp, 206-B, or
Mr. Knight, 803, Grant Memorial
Hall.
Commercial Club.
The next meeting of the Univer
sity Commercial Club will be held
October 14, at 11 o'clock in Social
Science 303.
Cosmopolitan Club.
Cosmopolitan will hold a meeting
at the Temple Sunday at 8 o'clock.
Magee's
Notre Dame
Contest
Fraternity
Standings
1 Acacia
2 Kappa Sigma
3 Sigma Phi Epsilon
4 Nu Alpha
5 Alpha Gamma Rho
6 Pi Kappa Alpha
7 Sigma Alpha Epsilon
8 Alpha Tau Omega
9 Phi Gamma Delta
10 Alpha Sigma Phi
Standings will be correct
ed Daily. Watch this
space for changes.
Do You Puzzle Over New Words?
over exact definitions or pronunciations of words?
over the identity of historic characters
over queitioni of geography? cut. ,
over point of grammar, apclling, punctuation, or English usage?
Look them up in
WEBSTER'S COLLEGIATE
Th Bt Abridged Dictionary Viased Upon
WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL
Mora than 106,000 entries. A special section shows, with
examples, rules of punctuation, um of capitals, abbrevl.
Mont, etc. I fuu Illustrations. u pipi. inumgn
Bible fapcr. A dtsk book rot every student.
So P a raw Calwr Beossfora or wrao
for Information to tko lurre. Froo
epanaw paeys if nmn lAie paper.
O.&C MERRIAMCO., Springfield, Mass.
Nite !
rrp
lo
A Surprise for Everybody
at the Lindell Party House
Original Serenaders
BACK AGAIN
8 Pieces
SPEED FROST, Piano
3 SAXES
COME AND HEAR THE HOTTEST
BAND IN TOWN
CRESTS
Gold or Silver
All Fraternities
and Sororities
Can be applied to
Silver, Gold, Leather,
Wood, etc.
Get our suggestions
HALLETT
University Jeweler
Est. 1871 117-119 So. 12
Capital Auto Livery Co.
BURT A. ANDERSON
REDUCED RATES
NO TIME CHARGE
Except Friday, Saturday and Sunday after 6:00 P. M.
All cars equipped with Balloon Tires
WE DELIVER
N. W. Corner 1 1th &Q
B2696
NEW FA
COATS
The new fall coats have a style, dash
and individuality all their own made
of various materials, delicately pat
terned. Most of these are slim coats to achieve
the effect of a snappy coat-frock, free
from clumsiness.
See Them Now
$on50
$25 d $39!
New Fad
DRESSES
Your visit here is sure to be well re
warded, for not only can you look
exceedingly smart, but the low prices
are quite as attractive as the Fashions
themselves. Materials of Satin, Can
ton, Satin Canton, Chinele and Poiret
Twill, Black and Brown.
$15$21
Flannel Dresses
Values to $25.00 at
$12.95
COLTON'S
Women's Wear
1307 O St.