The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 26, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
of th
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Under Direction of th Studanl Publication
Board
irl 1925
Published Tuesday, Wadnasday. Thursday,
Friday and Sunday morninsa during tha aca
demic yar.
VdTtorialOIIIa University Hall 10.
Offlca Hours Afternoon with tha ecep
tlon of Friday and Sunday.
Telephones Day, B-6891, No. 142 (1
Hng.) Nifht, B-6M2.
Business Oftice Unlveralty Hall 10 B.
Office Hours Afternoons with tha excep
tion of Friday and Sunday.
Telephones Day. B-6891, No. 142 (2
rlnrs.) Night, B-6182.
Entered as second-class matter at th
BostoHice In Lincoln, Nebraska, under act
of Congress. March S. 179, and at special
rata of postafs provided for in Section 1103.
act of October S, 1917, authorised January
20, 1922.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
ft year $1.2S semester
Single Copy, B cents
EDITORIAL STAFF
Hh B. Cox Editor
Philip O'lUnlon - Managing tailor
Win. Card News Editor
Julius Frandsen. Jr Newa Editor
Victor Hackler News Editor
Edward Morrow News Editor
Alice Thuman News Editor
Dorin Trott News Editor
Ruth Schad Asst. News Editor
John Charvat Asst. News Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
Clarenr Eickhoff Business Manager
Otto Skold Asst. Btia. Manager
Simpaon Morton Circulation Manager
Oscar Keehn Circulation Manager
A STUDY IN ATMOSPHERE.
A study of the contrast between
the editorial page of a student daily
published in a nationally known co
educational colle(re located in the
Middle West and the correspondinc
pape of a paper from an equally well
known men's college in New Hamp
shire throws a rather penetrating
lidht on one of the interesting aspects
of coeducation.
The editorials in the publication of
the men's school deal with a wide
range in which social life is rarely,
if ever, included. A new curriculum,
the relation between the curriculum
and extra curriculum activities, the
athletic fortunes of the school, the
literary and artistic activity on the
campus these are the problems the
editorial writer selects for , subjects.
In the newspaper of the coeducation
al college we find that problems of
this nature seem to be overshadowed,
at least a part of the time, by ques
tions which arise from the social life
which results when men and women
attend the same institution. Chaper
ones for parties, how late should par
ties continue, the number of "dates"
a girl should be permitted to have in
a week these are the things on
'which the editor tries his intellectual
teeth.
General conclusions drawn from
specific instances of this kind are
dangerous and should be handled
with extreme caution. It is possible,
nevertheless, to draw from this com
parison a conclusion which would be
extemely distasteful to those who
believe in the efficacy of coeduca
tion. This conclusion would be more
than merely the recognition that the
presence of both men and women cre
ates certain perplexing problems of
student discipline. If the editorial
columns may be taken as an index
of the interests of the students of
the two schools, the obvious con
elusion is that the atmosphere at the
coeducational college is too much
like the atmosphere of the tea-dance
and the country club to be commend
able in an educational institution.
The College Press
THE DESIRE OF THE MOTH.
These days it is the thing to be
perturbed over Columbia. From re
cent expression of' doubt as to Col
umbia's soulfulncss it is to bo con
cluded that there exisits a certain
dissatisfaction with things as they are
on our Campus. The basis of the
wail appears to be that Columbia is
no Oxford.
The fact is that Oxford and Col
umbia are two' widely variant types,
between which the unsentimental Mr.
Max Becrbohm makes a distinction.
Says Mr. Beerbohn: . "Oxford, that
lotus-land, saps the will-power, the
power of action. But in doing so,
it gives that playful and caressing
suavity of manner which comes of a
conviction that nothing matters, ex
cept ideas, and that not even ideas
are worth dying for. If Oxford could
be transferred to the dry and brac
ing top of some hill, doubtless it
would be more evidently useful to
the nation." Columbia occupies the
summit of this hill.
Our difficulty appears to be that
we desire to he Oxford and yet re
main Columbia; to embrace at once
the hilltop and the suave atmosphere
of the Oxonian valley. While assert
ing our hairy American virility, we
feel we ought to sentimentalize over
romantic traditions. We are an in
teresting union of sensitivity to the
keen shrill urge of exigent reality on
the hilltop, and a craving to be cud
dled in the sentimental vapours of a
valley that is foreign to us. The dis
parity between this cleavage to
worldliness and desire of romantic
antiquity is a comic-tragic situation.
In beautiful unconsciousness of its
surroundings Oxford accepts itself as
a matter of course. Columbia's fault
in our eyes is that it is emphatically
not Oxford. Columbia has, however,
that virility and vibrancy which Mr.
Beerbohn thinks Oxfords lacks. It
would be nice if we could accept
the idea that we are Columbia.
The tradition we have been crying
for is not our own. Oxford cannot
be engrafted on Columbia. If we
need romance why not let it evolve
healthily and of itself? It cannot be
imported. Even yellow slickers are
apt to be pathetic.
Voltaire's advice in Candide is
strictly applicable to us: "Let us
cultivate our own garden." And it
will prosper mightily. The Colum
bia Spectator.
their worn-out condition, and their
identity with puerility.
Just to take a few phases from a
short speech of one of these Burkes
is to give the essence, of their disabil
ities. This speaker urges his audi
ence to watch closely the mechanics
of their "moral railway system," to
pull up the "slack rope" of their life,
to look to the "slackor's sins" within
themselves, to cast out the "poor
tools which they -work with," "to
shoulder ho job." These improve
ments must be made or man will go
to ruin "as surely as the sun shines."
Man must find delight in work even
"as an athlete delights in a hard
game," so that he may "handle big
ger and bigger jobs of work."
Herein we have the modern road
to Utopia as mapped out by the pres
ent day weak orator. If only those
speakers, who have some degree of
light, would take more intelligence
for granted in their audiences, and
would then, attempt to raise their
audiences to their own level rather
than make a silly attempt to get
down to the supposed level of their
hearers, there would result positive
strides toward the reign of "sweet
ness and light." The Dartmouth.
practice Thursday at 5
Ellen Smith Hall.
o'clock in
SMOKING ON THE CAMPUS.
The habit many students have of
congregating around the entrances to
buildings and smoking between
classes is one which has frequently
brought down censure on the offen
ders' heads. Aside from the fact that
it is a positive breach of good man
ners to block the way for those who
are attempting to enter or leave the
building, this practice involves a
point of political ethics.
There is a rule against smoking on
the campus. Irrespective of the in
dividual's convictions on the matter
of smoking, he is bound by the stand
ards of good citizenship to obey this
rule. A discussion of the merits of
the rule will not serve as an excuse
for breaking it The student may
criticize it and condemn it but as
long as the rule exists it should be
obeyed.
Announcement has been made of
the establishment of another founda
tion fund to create scholarships for
advanced study in Europe. Simon
Guggenheim has contributed three
million dollars to a purpose to which
an increasing number of educational
institutions and associations are de
voting funds. Aside from the aca
demic excellence of the European
universities, which is of immeasur
able value to students who are
awarded scholarships, ' the greatest
possibility in this exchange of stu
dents lies in the hope that it will, in'
the future, further friendly relations
and understanding between nations.
Men who have studied together, even
though they be citizens of different
countries, are, not inclined to be
turned against each other by the pro
fessional jingoists and the sensational
newspapers.
THE WHIRLIGIG OF TIME.
Day and night, summer and win
ter, months, years, centuries the
striking of the clock, the running of
the sand, the shadow on the dial all
mark the passage of elusive time
the most important thing in human
life. No one has enough time but a
prudent man can seize as much as he
wants. Prevalent on the campus of
today, however, is the constant ex
cuse for work undone I didn't have
time.
At Mt. Holyoke College recently,
the class in statistics was curious as
to just how college students spend
their time. To one-half of the stu
dent body, selected at random, sched
ules containing all possible activities
were distributed.
The ordinary student, it was dis
covered, gives about five and a half
hours a day to academic work, sched
uled appointments and preparation
for classes. She spends forty min
utes in chapel or other religious serv
ices, exercises for an hour and twen
ty minutes, spends an hour and a
half at meals and sleeps a little more
than eight hours a day and has the
rest of the day, six and a half hours
to use as she likes. Syracuse Daily
Orange.
Calendar
Thursday, February 26.
Kappa Thi Meeting Ellen Smith
Hall.
Art Club Dinner Art Gallery.
Friday, February 27.
Mu Sigma house dance.
Thi Alpha Delta house dance.
Sigma Phi Epsilon house dance.
Scabbard and Blade Formal
University Club.
Alpha Phi house dance.
Iota Sigma Pi Chemistry Hall.
Mystic Fish Tea-Ellen Smith Hall.
Saturday, February 28.
University Night Orpheum.
Kappa Kappa Gamma Formal
Lincoln.
Xi Psi Phi house dance.
Notices
Ecleaia Club.
Eclesia Club will have a luncheon
at the Grand hotel, Friday noon.
Cosmopolitan Club.
An important business meeting of
the Cosmopolitan club will be held in
the Temple, Sunday at 2:30 o'clock.
Awgwan Staff.
The Awgwan Staff, composed of
the following people, will meet at the
campus studio Friday at 12:15 to
have their picture taken for the
Cornhuskcr: William Card, Robert
Moore, Charles Warren, Wilber Gaff
ney, Irma Ellis, lone Gardner, Cor
ine Anderson, Arline Rosenberry, D.
K. Bryant, Peter Coniglio, M. L. An
doson, John Larrick, Leonard Thier-
son, Marcclyn Lichty, Harold Wertz, ;
George Herron, Paul Larson, Merle
Jones, Lawrence Pike, Floyd Stryker, j
Clarence Reed, Earl Adams and Max i
Newman.
Freshman Class.
There will be a Freshman Class
meeting Thursday at 11 o'clock in
Social Science Auditorium.
Union.
There will be an open meeting of j
the Union Friday at 8:30.
DOWN TO PRACTICALITIES.
The rage of the scholar to show
the practicalities of his learning to
those of lesser education has sadly
influenced the once efective art of
oratory. No longer do we have our
finest speeches in Latin, or, indeed,
even in good English. Our circuit
lecturers, our chautauqua speakers
and our chapel pulpit frequenters,
have taken on the weak loquacious
ness of the Boy Scout troopmaster.
This movement on the surface of
oratory is marked by an attempt to
be graphic, to put present advertis
ing methods into speech making. And
it fails utterly. The most didactic of
talks takes on the air of kindergarten
warning, and the most objective of
addresses assumes the visage of prop
aganda. Triteness reigns throughout
the vocabulary of these orators, and
stupid metaphors are disseminated as
a cloak for truth. It is of no purpose
to show that the metaphores and sim
iles of these speakers constitute vi
cious circles, as the logicians would
state. It is sufficient to .point out
their complete lack of imagination,
Silver Serpents.
Silver Serpents will meet Thursday
at 7:15 in Ellen Smith Hall.
Vesper Choir.
There will be a special vesper choir
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN
Forty-six per cent of the income of
the University conies from fees, fed
eral appropriations, income through
dormitories, cafeterias, .farm pro
ducts and football games.
he lamest sellinA
quality pencil
. in th YfCTld.
17
black
degrees
3
copying
Buy
a
dozen
Superlative in quality
the world-famous
VENUS
VPEN0LS
give best service and
longest wear.
Plain cade, per dos. $1-00
RabbaraaxKpasaVa. 120
ArfaWfcts
AaMikm LaadPcncflCo.
220FittkAwN.Y.
Outwears
Your Best
Expectations
ENDURING quality as
sures you that your Dun
lap hat will hold its shape
and style. From the first
day you wear it until you re
luctantly discard it in defer
ence to new fashions, it will
give you justifiable pride.
The Dunlap
"MetropolitsJi"
$7
MAGEE'S
P. E. O.
The campus P. E. 0. club will meet
Saturday at 3 o'clock in Ellen Smith
Hall. All P. E. O members are in
vited.
Bureau for Recommendation of
Teachers,
Students who have registered with
the Bureau for Recommendation of
Teachers for 'a September position
kindly call at Teachers College 305
before Friday noon of this week.
Typists Needed.
, It will be (rreathr ipreciated if
any typists who can nelp on the Corn
husker will report any afternoon this
week.
Kappa Phi.
Kappa Phi meeting Thursday at
7 o'clock in Ellen Smith Hall. Elec
tions of officers will be held.
Delian.
There will be a meeting of the
Delian Friday at 8:15 in Temple 202.
The program will be given by the
girls of the society.
Junior League of Women Voters.
Monte Munn will speak on his ex
periences in the Nebraska State Leg
islature before a meeting of the Jun
ior League of Women Voters, Thurs,
day evening at 5:00 at the Temple.
Organisations.
All organizations, groups, and
clubs having space reserved in the
1925 Cornhusker must pay for it by
April 1. The money may be paid
at the Cornhuskcr office in the U
Hall 10 on any afternoon.
Catholic Student Club.
The second group picture of the
Catholic Student club, will be taken
Thursday at the campus studio at
12:15. AH members who did not get
in the first picture be sure to get
in this one.
Pershing Rifles.
Pershing Rifle drill Thursday at 5
o'clock.
Xi Delta.
There will be a Xi Delta meeting
Thursday.
UNION COLLEGE Women at
tending this University have been
told either to lengthen their skirts,
put collars around their necks, and
throw away all cosmetics or leave.
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
Students spent approximately $34,-
000 last year following their football
team to out-of-town games. About
1,000 persons accompanied the team
on each of its trips.
WE DELIVER
CALL B-4420
D IDLERS'
A i m RESORPTION
I HARMACY
16th at O St.
Every week some people worry and won
der because their laundry is not back on
time and others use Evans Service and have
it when they want it.
S-S1M
Famous
Yells
camera!!
Things weren't going so well. The
handsome college devil didn't look the
part something was lacking. They
tried everything but it remained for
a college man to give them the inside
information.
Th next day the hero appeared in a
Kuppenheimer suit That's why the
fellow's yelling camera he just can't
wait to start taking the real thing!
ft ft A077T
S
Lincoln's Bust Store
11 th o
"The Rest for Las."
vmm & QBE
iiiiilni i n mil mini n iiiii ii -f I
Great Final Close-Out
All Women's & Misses'
Winter Coats
A CHOICE
of the house
SALE offering you
our entire remaining:
stock of winter Coats
at three low prices
representing but a
tiny fraction of their
original selling figures.
fOATS for
immediate
wear Coats for next
winter's wear at
less than the cost of
their materials alone!
QIZES and
color ranges are
broken but there arc
misses' sizes, wom
en's sizes and a few
extra sizes.
JUST 138
J Coats in all to
go at $5, $10 and $15
each Coats that
were formerly priced
as high as $69.50.
RE HERE
U early Thursday
to get your choice
they can't last long at
these sale prices!
(SEE WINDOW
DISPLAY)
No refund, exchanges or ap
provals Each Sale Must be
Final.
Lot 1 83 Coats
originally priced at
10.00 to 15.00 now re
duced for final close
out Thursday to only
Lot 218 Coats
formerly priced at
25.00 and 29.50 for
final close-out Thurs
day at your choice only
Lot 3 37 Coats
most of them originally
priced at 69.50 none
formerly priced lower
than 39.50 sensation
ally reduced Thursday
to, your choice only
GOLD'S Third Floor
roATew 4Lr
corning
yorlc!wote Felix--
"to see whether you're kidding me or not." "Come
on, you old Catastrophe," we wrote, " it's a bet. Bring
some fellow cats along we'll show 'em a thing or two."
" You win I mean we both win," meowed Felix, after
we had showed him over the BERENGARIA. "I'd
like my deck chair right over there in the sun. And
6ay, d'ye think you can get me that big stateroom for
two. I think Kid McKat is going
to come with me. Here's my 25
catwheels you can put down right
row for a deposit. I felixactly like
leaving right away."
Thus did our furry friend of the
films fashion his future.
TOKTRDPE
Cr RETURN
'155.
$.tI for the Thrtt Prize
W mnntff Sturm wrirtrr. bj
cfiegums who cnned the
favu; via CwnaTtj last
DON FAIRCHILD
1566 So. 25th St.,
LINCOLN, NEB.
CUNARD & ANCHOR LINES
140 NO. DEARBORN ST.. CHICAGO
OR LOCAL. AGENT
STUDY at HOME for EXTRA CREDITS
More than 450 courses in History, Enclish. Mathematics. CTanist.
Zoology, Modern Languages, Economics, Philosophy. J'
are given by corrupondent. Learn how the credit they yw"
be applied on your college propram. Catalog describing "
will be furnished on request. Write today. .
" IUJI HALL
1
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