THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL PUBLICATION of tha UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Under DiroctloB el tha Studant Publication Board a jHEMBERl II Thii paper la represented for general adver tisil I by Tha Nebraska Press Association. Published Tuesday, Wadnaaday. Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings during tha aca damic yaar. Editorial Ofilcea Univaraity Hall 10. Of Ilea Houv. -Afternoons with tha exnep tion of Friday and Sunday. Talephonaa Day. B-S891, . No. 142 (1 ring.) Night, B-882. . Buainaaa Offica Univaraity Hall 10 B. Office Houra Afternoona with tha excep tion of Friday and Sunday. Talephonaa Day. B-6881, No. 142 (2 rings.) Wight, t-oan - . I l . . . mmttir at tha .-in i- i inrnln Nebraska, under act of Contreaa, March 3. 1879. and at special rate of ! provided for in Section 1103. "t of October 3. 1917. authorised January 20, 1922. SUBSCRIPTION RATE 22 a year U5i aemeater Single Copy, S centa EDITORIAL Hugh B. Cox - Philip O'Hanlon - William Card Juliua Frandsen Victor Hackler ..... Edward Morrow Alice Thuman Doria Trott Ruth Schad John Charvat - STAFF Editor Managing Editor Newe Editor Newa Editor Newa Editor Newa Editor Newa Editor Newe Editor . Ant. Newa Editor ..Ant. News Editor limitations have been accepted in ad vance bv the instructor. It declares that professors should be allowed pomDlete freedom of discussion In their own fields of study but that statements made on subjects outside of these fields should be made on the personal responsibility of the in structor. While no college or uni versity should place any restraint uDon a teacher's freedom in investi ration, or upon his exposition of his own subject in his classroom, in pub lic lectures, or in published articles the teacher should not assert as his riE-ht the report declares, the privi lege of discussing in his classroom controversial subjects outside of his own field of study. The ultimate meaning of this policy will denend. of course, on the char acter of its application which may be either liberal or narrow. This ap plication will be made by the govern ine bodies of the colleges and the future of academic freedom will de pend on whether there are boards of trustees liberal and courageous enoueh to interpret in its broadest sense the policy that has been stated. It was perhaps fortunate that the Association of Governing Boards was represented at the meeting, for it indicates an endorsement of at least the letter of the policy. Whether this endorsement extends to the spirit will be determined by the fu ture actions of the Boards. BUSINESS STAFF Clarence Eickhoff Builneaa Manager Otto Skold Asst. Bus. Manager Simpaon Morton Circulation Manager Oscar Keehn ..Circulation Manager A DEFENSE OF THE USELESS ORGANIZATION A list of student organizations in the University reaches an astounding length. There are twenty-seven so cial fraternities, nineteen sororities, fifty-three honorary and profession al organizations, and an even larger number of clubs and societies of every conceivable kind and purpose. There is a general feeling on the part of undergraduates that this over-organization is an evil thing. That this feeling is indefinite and vague is indicated by the nature of the solution, which is usually advanc ed as offering a complete cure for the situation. This panacea is the elimination of those organizations which are described as "useless." It is the useless organization which exists for no discernible purpose. It has a name, a pin, officers, and a picture in the Cornhusker. It may meet once a month, once a semester, or once a year. It has no 'worthy" activity and does not do "big" things. It is a refuge for those per sons who have an ardent desire to belong to something and who wish to be assured of a club membership to add to their personal sketches in the class section of the annual. In the logic with which its foes assail this kind of organization there lies a curious contradiction which might be interesting to examine. The soundest basis for criticism of organ izations is that they divert the en ergy and attention of students from fields of intellectual endeavor to the field of activities. They demand so much time and thought that they ultimately supersede academic work and not only seriously interfere with, but almost make impossible, the acquisition of an education. This is a valid charge which can be made against student organizations and one which they must meet. But it is the "useless" organiza tions which are the least serious of fenders in this respect. They demand little time and little energy from their members. Membership entails no obligations more serious than at tending an infrequent meeting, pay ing dues, and being present when the picture is taken for the Cornhusker. It is the useful, worthy organiza tion, on the other hand, which makes demands on the time nnd attention of its members. It requires that they serve on committees, that they assist in its activities, and that they devote to its interests a relatively large amount of their thought. Such societies frequently succeed in giving students an interest which oversha dows the purpose for which they came to college. These are the clubs against which a valid charge may be made. The very uselessness of the "use less" clubs is their best defense, for it furnishes them with a quality of innocuousness which is almost im pregnable. It is the fact that the useful clubs have purposes and defi nite activities which makes them per nicious. . ACADEMIC FREEDOM. Representatives of nine educa tional associations met at Northamp ton, Mass., last week and drew up a statement of policy on the question of academic freedom in American colleges. Among the organizations represented at the meeting were the; American Association of University Professors, the American Associa tion of University Women, the As sociation of American Colleges, the Association ofi Governing Boards, the Association of Land Grant Col leges, the Association of State Uni versities, and the American Council of Education. The policy stated is recommended for all American colleges and uni versities, with the exception of those of a denominational character whersj The College Press WHAT AILS OUR YOUTH. The men and women who are en quiring with something more rational than pique, impatience or anger, "What Ails Our Youth?" are seeing suddenly that the same thing ails our middle age and our senility. All ages are affected by the condi tions of our life. These conditions work upon the elders and make them thus and so; the elders prescribe an education and a training for the youth, and make them thus and so. The young grow old; it is a vicious circle. Dr. George A. Coe's new book, "What Ails Our Youth?" sets forth the charges that the elders bring against youth as follows: Craze for excitement; immersion in the exter nal and the superficial; lack of rev erence and of respect; disregard for reasonable restraints in conduct and for reasonable reticence in speech; conformity to mass sentiment "go ing with the crowd," lack of individ uality; living merely in the present, and general purposelessness. Now all these charges in the grand sum total sound to us part of the mammoth mass called Youth like an accusation of being young; in other words an arr u:'nment for be ing otherwise than old at twenty years. The olaer ones are an ioo prone to judge us on the pattern of their age. But suppose we grant that the youth of the present is worse in the respects which Dr. Coe has cited than the generation that preceded it. Certainly there is no youth can dispute it since there is no youth who has seen more than his own generation in its youth; so we concede the point. Then Dr. Coe proceeds to take the blame in behalf of the elders. But the final responsibility he does not lay upon the youth nor upon his father, nor oup his father's father, but rather upon the march of time and progress that has brought man upward year by year. Specific features of the world that have wrought this awful ailment which youth and elders share alike. .Professor Coe sees as follows: The enormous increase in man's control of the forces of nature; the changed status of the female in society; the increase of human contacts, partic ularly of those of youth, and the loss of their domesticity; the ailments of our industrial civilization itself; the lack of appropriate education to fit youth for these changed conditions. It is simply a matter of adjustment then, it would seem, adjustment not nlone of youth but of middle age and old age too. All ages must work to gether. Dr. Coe's line of reasoning and his solution will be given in suc ceeding editorials New York Uni versity Daily News. LAW STUDENTS HEAR LINCOLN PHYSICIAN "The Expert Witness" Is Sub ject of Address by Dr. J. M. May hew. "The Expert Witness" was the sub ject of a lecture, the first of ser ies on "Medical Jurisprudence," giv en by Dr. J. M. Mayhew, local phy sician and surgeon, to the first and and second year law students at 11 o'clock Friday in Law 101. In this lecture Dr. Mayhew traced the development of the use of the expert witness and of medical juris prudence from the time of the an cient Egyptians, whose chief contri bution to this work was the law com pelling a post-mortem examination be held over every body. After the body had been disected the doctors compared notes and all these notes were filed away. The famous library of Alexandria was filled with these contributions to medicine and scl ence. The Greeks made little or no con- tribution to Ihe advancement of the science of medicine, but Rome al lowed doctors to appear in court and make their statements, although there was no law covering the sub ject. In Europe today, and especially in Germany and France, certain doc tors are given a regular position among the court officials, thus pro curing impartial expert testimony on cases requiring medical information. Dr. Mayhew pointed to this system as the best now in use. Dr. Mayhew went on to tell of the practice in the United States, and particularly in Nebraska, whereby anyone may pass himself off as a doctor and have his testimony enter ed into the court records as expert testimony, regardless of whether he is a college graduate or noi, or whether he is or has been a practic- ng physician. He also said that the doctor is in the nature of a judge himself and talks of technical mat ters about which the layman is not informed and so he should be im partially selected. Notices Law Must Be Obeyed A committee of the first Plymouth Congregational Church bas looked up the city ordinance and found that it la forbidden to place chairs or to al low people to stand in the aisles dur ing services. As a law abiding or ganixation and one whicb seeks to promote respect for law, this church has no choice but to conform to tha ordinance. Hereafter, therefore, none will be admitted beyond the 'Seating capacity of tha building. The attend ance at our list film service was be tween 60 and 100 per cent mora than we can accommodate on thia new basis, and we trust those who may be disappointed will realise that it is not lack of welcome but lack of accom modations which preventa our receiv ing them In our present building. Dr. Holmes will preach Sunday at 1 1 :00 on "Count Tolstoi" tba Junior Church at tha same hour and "Smil-in'- Through" will be the auhject of the film service at 7:10. There Is practically alwaya room at the morn ing aervice, though the church ia ap proximately full at every such serv ice, and those who coma early enough will find eeats at night. First Plymouth Church Cornhusker. Will the following students kindly see Mr. Larrivee at the Campus Stu dio at their earliest convenience: R. C. Shellenberger, B. A. Lilien- borg, J. W. Ross, A. E. MaUon, E T. Gustafson, Roy Pjtzer, Louise Aus tin, Betty Sheppard, Mildred Nelson, Elsie Furich, Orie Iledden, D. Krot ter, F. J. Murphy, J. W. Hepperly, Kathryn Warner, Eldred Larson, Richard Smith, Lucy E. Weir, C. L. Denton, Neva Jones, Eloise McAhan, Karen K. Jensen, Margaret Camp bell, M. C. Volz, K. Lawson, F. J. Scrivner, Fern Hayden, Delia Gar rett, Alfred Engle, Virgil Michael, A. L. Stanley, Noel Rorby, Carl Ger ber, Helen Watkins, B. L. Anderson, W. L. Jacobs. Football Men. Mr. Bearg, our new football coach, has requested that all football men, rwho are not regularly engaged in any other sport, report daily at the Gym at 4 o'clock for work. FRED T. DAWSON, TMrector of Athletics. Cosmopolitan Club. Cosmopolitan club picture will be taken Tuesday at 12:20 at the cam I us studio. Menorah Society. Meeting of the Menorah Society will be held Sunday in Faculty Hall, Temple. , A C .E a s r v. niptnrA will be taken Monday afternoon at 12 o'clock at the campus studio. Corncobi. . Corncob meeting Tuesday at 7:15 in the Temple. If You Never Danced a Step Harvey Carroll J and bis staff of jK" experts can teach 4Wf I you tha vary lat est dances In cluding tha new est variations in the Walts, Fox trot, and One step la Just a few lessons. Advanced Dancers Learn tha Tango and New Fox trot combina tions. FOR APPOINT MENT, CALL L-02S. Carroll's Nebraska State Bank Bldg, ISth and O. IIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIII;1IIIIW Lincoln'. Busy Store "The Best For Less" gg EE Cor. 11th and O lllllllll!llllllllll!llllll!ll!llill!llllllll!lllll!!llillllllilllllllllllllllllillll"l"!i EE Do not miss seeing the EE Promenade de la Mode Reproductions of EE EE original designs by EE H Patou, Jenny, Lanvin, Drecoll, Chanel g All models are available in Ej H " McCall Printed Patterns jj EE U"J'r the direction oj EE Mrs. F. Janet Phillips j EE Vie McCall Company, New York o'clock Vicce Qoods Section COLO'SSecond Floor When One Dances r A it is smart to wear a frock of chiffon. Many beautiful col' ors are popular this spring, but it seems that red in Pompcian shades is predomi nating; with some cardinal; purple; orchidee turning to wards the deeper shades of lilac; green in apple and jade tones; hyacinth, tur quoise and sapphire blue, following close behind. Ostrich trimming adornsmany dresses and many ruffles adorn some of the pretty frocks Rudge & GuenzeVs have on display nowon Floor Two. Desirable Monthly Charge Accounts Solicited 3-t ixx tO Froia "Paris Radiant New Dance Frocks Embody all the Beauty of Spring. Spring's brightest flowers have lent their lovliest colors to these gay dance frocks. Of shimmering satin. Flaming chiffon. Change able taffeta. Rich crepe. Some of them beaded. Some embroidered. Some depending on the sheer beauty of their fabric for decoration. With a flower on the shoulder. At the waistline. Or, newest of all, at the knee. A bit of lace. Gold. Silver. All very new. Very lovely. At prices that will not detract from their beauty. Special this week, $35.00 at Sardeson-IIoveland's The Ensemble Is a Brilliant Ex ponent of Smartness and Utility. The ensemble suit is indeed Fash ion's favorite for Spring. And small wonder for it combines beauty and smartness with a real economy. A dress and coat for little more than the price of a single garment! Twill, rep, silk, kasha, flannel and combinations of fabric fashion them. And you may choose anything from a high color sports ensemble to the most elaborate affair of satin and twill. At Sardeson-Hovlands' prices range from $39.50 to $125.00. Delightful Appearing Substan tial Wearing. To wear is to appreciate Hole proof Hosiery that are full-fashioned with the "EX-TOE style. A delight to women who dote 'on pretty Silk Hose. They give more wear than the ordinary kind. Amaz ing durability united with exquisite sheerness and brilliance. The qual ity in every pair reflects experience in the making. Beautiful in every way. This - fact becomes more ap parent when you wear these elegant hose and see how they retain their lustrous newness with snug grace ful fit-long after they are laundered. $1.50, $1.95, $2.50, $3.00. SPEIER'S Tenth & O Streets. Quality Corner. Spring Styles for Bobbed Heads. say: Hair will be shorter by Easter and very short this summer. The very latest style coming from New York and Chicago is cut fairly long over the ears, and full in the back, giv ing a rounded shape to the back of the hei.d, and Feather Edge at the hair li:io tnpering up, making an in visible hair line. Manish clothes as well as manish haircuts will be worn by a great many this year. If you are having hair trouble or are unde cided as to the proper way to liuve your hair cut, come up and talk it over. -"As an inducement we are of fering with each Marcel and Curl at $1.00 your hair cut free. Manage ment of G. F. Champe, Terminal Hairdressing Parlor, 2nd floor Ter minal Bldg. L-8443. The Avenue's forecast back is prominent in handkerchiefs for spring along with printed cotton ma terials and colored voiles. Refreshments? Dainty Lunch? Try a delicious malted milk or a lainty lunch. "Always the best." Drop into Meier's, 1230 O St. "Cleverest Menu I've Seen." You surely want this said about the menu for your next banquet It should be original, unique ,and dis tinctive with your crest to set off its beauty. Order them soon. Do not wait until the usual rush. Original menus are kept as keepsakes of won derful banquets. See samples made by GRAVES, three doors south of the Temple, and convince yourself of the fact that you should come here before your next banquet. Intend to Get in the Movies? Merton says "Don't." In between time and in the mean time of your shopping make it a point to save two hours to see "Mer ton of the' Movies." Love and ambi tion, trials and romances are woven into this corking comedy drama of a movie-struck youth and his adven tures in Hollywood. Here's the orig inal of "behind-the-scenes." If you want to see a live picture see this at the Lyric this week. Take your friends, take your best choice, but by all means, sec Merton. The Avenue's forecast the low suspender strapped jumper with a rounded necked blouse is to be worn all summer. Fashion Experts Living Models to show us how to make clothes. A feature of Sewing Week is a Promen ade de la Mode showing reproduc tions of original Paris designs, Pa tau, Jenny, Drecoll, Landin, Chanel, and other foremost designers. Fash ion experts of McCall Co. will dem onstrate how easily garments are made and cut in your own home. Really, girls, this is a chance of a lifetime. 'Tis said that "Opportunity knocks but once," so do not fail to be on the second floor of GOLD'S this week at 3 o'clock. ' Styles will be shown daily. 'Member Saturday's Valen tine's Day. so be sure to send some remem brance to Mother, Dad, .Sister, and Friends, whether it be a darling val entine or a framed picture by Wal lace Nutting, Maxfield Parish, or oth er artists, Seeman prints or plaques. A most suitable gift and remem brance that can be purchased for on ly $3.00. A gift like this will be ap preciated. Get your Valentines, your favors for your party, and your jewelry for your new frock at a place where you get service and a large variety, at GEORGE'S. Spring Millinery. We wish to say that our Spring hats are coming in every day, mod els in pretty bright colors, pastels, or chids, and blacks. Prices that please. We ask you to come in and see them. M. & E. DODDS, 201 Terminal Bldg., Take the elevator. A dandy place to use the telephone wait for your car or get the cor rect time. We are at your service. FENTON B. FLEMING, 1143 6, cor ner 12th an O. Valentine Party Announce ments. with yonr own photo. TINYGRAPH size. The very newest sort of an in vitation. They make the print snap py. You make t!ie appointment snap py at BARNETT'S ART STUDIO, 1241 N SU. Comfortable Hiking. It's actually possible! Nothing is more comfortable than a soft flexible leathered boot. The National Park Hiking, Boots have fifteen inch tops, and are as good looking f's they are pure comfort. The active life of a college girl makes a perfectly fitting hiking boot an essential. Boots are dependable in quality, workmanship, comfort, and price when purchased at WELLS & FROST, 123 No. 10th, opposite the post-office entrance. "Can I Wear This to the Party?" Sure, you can! Transform it into a new frock by having it dyed. Your friends will never recognize it, or if you prefer to keep the same color, just have it cleaned. They are able to transform old ones into new ones and plain ones into cute ones. Bring them down or phone Roy Wythcrs at B-3677. VARSITY CLEANERS, 316 No. 12th right on the campus. The Avenue's forecast very wide striped flannel makes a straight coat dress that is very popular with the college girl. Reds, greens and, yel lows are prominent. Need a Scarf ? Lovely chiffon scarfs are the vogue this Spring. Match your hat or your dress. You buy the mate rial, and we then will transfoim it into a perfectly "ducky" scarf. Have it hemstitched at the SEWING MA CHINE EXCHANGE, 134 So. 12th. The Avenue's forecast two large bunches of white violets are worn on a black dress in an efective manner, being worn at the low waistline over each hip. Valentine Candies a Delight. Isn't it great to be remembered with a box of candy on St. Valen tine's day? Boxes from one to five pounds attractive enough to suit the most particular, whether you want a heart or asquare or an oblong and the candy DELICIOUS at RECTORS 13th & P. GIRLS! A word to the wise is sufficient. Have him rent his car from the MOTOR OUT CO., the old reliable rent-a-Ford. B-6819, H20 P St. "New Shoes?" "No, Old Ones Made New." The grand and glorious feelin when they're new and yet you do not have to break them in all over again. They specialize in rebuilding ladies shoes at CITY REBUILDING CO.. F. K. Herrmann, 231 No. 12th. The Avenue's forecast chokers, combination pearl and bead, as we as long chain pearls and earring" rt here. The Avenue's forecast aid f" to wear the latest and "be up to minute." Drop into these firm are offering to assist you in this sim. with the newest and the cleverest. (Advertisement)