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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 3, 1925)
THE DAILY NEBRASKA The Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln. Nebraska. OFFICIAL PUBLICATION f th UNIVERSITY OK NEPRASKA Dndr Direction of ih. Student Publication Board Published TuwUy. Wfdnnday. Thura iT. Friday mnd Sunday morninga during toe academic year. cluss rolls. And the fraternities that pledped in haste and repented at lei sure are ruefully considering the number of hours left standing against the fraternity by depart!. ig pledges. ed as toastmastcr for the occasion. The University Dramatic Club held its first try out before the Thanksgiving recess. There were 'about eighteen people who tried out Sincle Copy. & U EDITORIAL STAFF . Tditor Edward Morrow Victor T. Hackler. J. A. CharTat Julius Frandten. Jr L. L. Pike Ruth Schad rvorv. K. TrMt. llillift Ginn A t. Alexander M-Kie. Jr,.Contributin Editor M.n.imlt Editor Newa E'titor New Editor News Editor News Editor N,) Editor News Editor . Ass t. News Editor . . it .u.toH'the first time, and a majority of Mucn is ine ru.fc "J"""8",- these were girls. This organization pledging. Men are pledged ildl e into a un5ver8ity and indiscriminately, and no oppor- . tunity is offered to look into their jmt- .scholarship records. So they linger me engineering un, Ba , - half a semester and depart leaving , smur iu ... at tne rni ieua uujc. The commissioned officers of the cadet battalion met of ter drill and perfected an organization. Major Crites was elected president anl Lieutenant Jackson, secretary. All football men who had first team signals reported at the gymna sium to have their pictures taken. ity to the fraternity, or would be j This was in keeping of the custom passed up by those organizations j that all "X" men have their picture that had some respect for scnoiar-1 taken in a group each year. ship. Editorial Office University Hall 10. Office Hours Afternoons with the ex ception of Kridsy and Sunday. Telephones Day. !-! 1. . - Editorial. 1 nn; Business, t rinfs). Junt Entered as second-clans matter at the yostoffir in Lincoln. Nebraska, under act of Conrress. March 3. 1S7. and t special rate of postage provided for it. jec ion ,,,;., ,nr,rt. or until 1103. act of tictooer a. "'"" i"v uw.i..i.j , January io. I9it. : after the mid-semester, the freshman subscription rate whose work was not done would ft year '" " either not be in school to DC a iiaoii- bchind them a collection of c's and fs. And the fraternity is responsi ble for those delinquent hours at the next scholarship report. If pledging were delayed until the Notices Volta W. Torrey Paris K Trott V. Kotm West ..Contributing Editor Contributing Editor Contributing Editor Ten Years Ago Calendar BUSINESS STAFF Otto Skold Business Manager Kieland Van ArsdaleCircoUtion Maraser en Richard F. Vette Circulation Manager , j Thursday, December 3 "Holiday Fete" is the name giv- Xi Delta tea to all University wo- to the all-L niversity Ltinstmas men. Dramatic Club Meeting of the Dramatic Club members and pledges at 7 o'clock on Thursday evening in the Dramatic Club rooms. Daily Nebraskan Reporters More reporters are needed for The Daily Nebraskan office. Report to the Managing Editor any afternoon after 2 o'clock, at the office in the west side of the stadium. Xi Delta Xi Delta picture for the Cornhus ker will be taken Thursday at 12 o'clock at the Campus studio. Advertising Club Advertising Club meeting at Grand i Hotel at 6 o clock Thursday. Christian Science Society Chirstian Science Society meeting Thursday at 7:30 in Faculty Hall. Delta Omicron Delta Omicron meets tonight at rntinirif LECTURES ON WORLD COURT PROBLEM (Continued from Page One.) MODERN EDUCATION The University of Nebraska, over the Nebraska Buick radio station, KFAB, has inaugurated an interest ing experiment in education by radio. Its educational program is more com plete and of broader scope than of anv other station in tne cuunuj. party, finally planned ty ine social committee of the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. The first and sec ond floors of the Temple' building were procured for the several amusement. Vnnv frpshmen. sophomores and upperciassmen were invited into the Kite Temple. Pal'.adian Literary Society. By pref- erence of the members a great part a serious ; Friday, December 4 Military Ball, Auditorium. Methodist Students Party, Armory Saturday, December 5 Alpha Chi Omega Formal Lin- 'coln Hotel. i Farm House Formal Scottish T : ,i -i;.wHii- of the ceremony was of sZl CAjiriiiacuifti - cation it has been a pioneer, its inno- nature, but much amusement was oc vations in many cases gaining nation- crooned by a generous amount of wide prominence. Yale University mock initiation. is now preparing to emulate Nebras- Five hundred women celebrated the ka's program, and will soon be in the close of the third all-victorious foot field as the only important rival, ball season, with a costume party in Other schools have been slower to "the Armory. Dancing was the main erasp the truly tremendous possi- amusement during the intermission Phi Gamma Delta house dance. Lutheran Students Club. Sigma Lambda taffy pull. Mortar Board Conference. Sunday, December 6 Mortar Board Conference. attempts to establish the World Court in 1809 and 1907, American states men strongly endorsed the idea. In 1914 it was too late. Then in 1922 an International Court of Justice was formed, to sit at The Hague. Eleven judges should decide case(s of internntionnl law in the same way as our Supreme Court is operated. "War does not spring from spec tacular and gigantic causes. It does come from juts such friction that this court could settle peaceably." Yet there are objections which the speak er explained clearly. Means No Entanglements "People say that it will involve us in international entanglements. We are already part of that vast ma chanism that constitutes modern civil ization. We must find markets abroad to take care of our vast re sources. We cannot escape what is coming, it is what modern science baa done." Another faction wants minor changes. It would be ridiculous to ask forty-eight nations to re-vote on some trivial maters, which the ori cinntor has introduced. If we were -.1 ii- ; tv.n o..i,i f Music to look upon another nation from room 39, instead of the Art Gallery, j that light, we would consider it ab as formcrlv. All members are ex- surd. pected to be present. Impractical-that is what some I conservative citizens say. The Lutheran Club ! point is, that, faced with the challenge Lutheran Club party. Faculty hall,!0f modern science, we can not af- s.iriiniav t S:30 o'clock. ' f.ir.I to lot practical men stand in Eccle Club j the way." "The Court of International Justice Ecclesia Club will hold a luncheon J js necessary f0r progress, that is why Friday noon at the Grand Hotel. W ill j working earnestly and zealously those who attend please sign up Dr. Fey's office. at to ma ake the United States favor this 'institution," concluded Mr. Fosdick. "SUMMERLESS YEAR" fTl 11 I J U U TTTl aran TTV nv DUf 1 (Continued from Page One.) no warmth. Three winters shall come to gether and no summer come be tween. When two such winters come together there will be famines and pestilence and wars throughout the world." According to Professor Rutger Sernander who holds the Chair of Botany in the Swedish Na tional University, the passage in the Edda refers possibly to the climatic upheaval which occurred in the Scan dinavian North between the bronze and the iron ages, beginning prob ably about 1700 B. C. and extending down to about 500 B. C. In showing the effect this change would have on the coming years, Ser nander reviews a brief climatic catastrophe which occurred about 1300 and with crop failures reached its crisis and the world failure in 1315. The sequent plague, charac terized as the Black Death brought on an unprecedented decline of pop ulation. In considering this topic, it should be kept in mind that while it is in corporated in a Babson Report, it is presented "without prejudice and without endorsement" Doyle Harmon, of Mitchell, S. D., tonight was elected 1926 captain of the University of Wisconsin football team. He is a quarterback. DELICIOUS SANDWICHES. SOUPS HOT DRINKS Ledwich's Tastie Shoppe srner 12th and P. We Deliver Phone B 2189 On The Air in the program. Twenty Years Ago "'SSCafilalEngnrajCo. B-1I78 SX 12? ST. :CIX.KE3. bilities of radio. The Nebraska station broadcasts at 9:30 each day a road report, a weather report (obtained from the U. S. bureau in connection with the University) and University news taken from The Dailr Nebraskan. At 10:30 o'clock on Monday, Wednes-' ; day and. Friday lectures are broad- j The annual Comhusker banquet cast on home economics by members ". was held at the Lindell HoteL About of the home economics department one hundred students, professors and faculty. Cooking, sewing, and other business men, besides the football matters regarding housekeeping are 'men, were present. Dr. Pound act-discussed- At 10:30 'clock Tues- . day a lecture on poultry is given. At 8:05 o'clock on Monday and Wed nesday general lectures are given j on agriculture are given by members J of the agricultural college faculty.' AH of these lectures are given from the remote control station at the Ag ricultural coEege. General educational lectures are" given at 3 o'clock each day, Thurs day and Saturday excepted, from the city campus station by faculty mem bers. On Monday literature is dis cussed ; Tuesday, political science and government; Wednesday, sociology; Friday, the fine arts, such as music, paintings and the drama. At 1:15 each day a high school convocation program is broadcast of which five micates is mnsie and ten minutes lecture. The musical program con sists of high class music exclusively, and are given from 8:05 to 10:30 o'clock Tuesday. Other programs are arranged from time to time for special occasions. A combitation of the radio with a correspondence coarse for credit was begun last year by the University, the first of its kind to be attempted. The cours? wa. in business English, : tinder Professor Weseen, with week-, j lectures by radio. The coarse is EtHl an experiment. If, after a thorough triaL it succeeds, other courses will be given in this manner. ' Kansas State Agricultural College and the University of Wisconsin have followed cuit in this. The University is peculiarly situated to offer the best in radio programs. No others station has the facilities to broadcast programs of of am educational nature so welL If the growth of the radio continues at its present rste, it is by no means impossible that the rudio will to some extent supplant the claaBsrooms as a means to a college education. L'niversity studio broadcasting over KFAB (340.8) Thursday, December 3 9:30 to 9:55 a. m. Weather re port, road reports and announcements. LOU HILL College Clothes High Class but not High Priced 1309 O St. Up a few steps and turn to the left. I- m on, MS THE AFTERMATH V id-semesters are now past, and ' the dust of those students who were ; "unexpectedly called home is just ' settling. The ranks of the freshmen are shattered and bere and there someone is musirg from the tipper fTre been working on the railroad" i iUT aU. The Hauck Studio Skogland , Photographer 121GO Hotel n . ? i iiamuurgei Cay 'era fcy the sack 1H1 Q It fhoa- D1SI2 COLLEGE CLOTHES in iiffiZiBlh college life The picture ought to suggest a good idea to the initiation com mittee. Here's some more good dope to give to the pledges tell them to come and get one of our new "U" Suits. They pro vide a ready entree to the frater nity of well-dressed college men. MAGE3&S Jr th.ii mrif Mift I I IP? fcl MlaaaaManaaMaliil Your Complete Tuxedo Outfit Formats are at hand and L'niversity men are up against their yearly tuxedo problem. Let us solve it at once and for all for you! Knowing that many men are in need of formal dress clothes, we have arranged for the selling of a complete, high-grade wardrobe for formal wear and at a most reasonable price. We have refused to offer a cheap outfit in which price alone would appeal we have rather assembled really fine merchan dise of known Magee quality and then priced it as low as possible. We offer for your approval the following complete equipment: Suit $30.00 Vest 6.00 Shirt 3.00 Tie 75 Collar 20 ' Shoes 8.50 The entire outfit listed above is priced to j'ou at $43.50 Come in today and let us show you this really fine proposition. ir a mi&Ti? Jp1 tlfhouMeof 'Xippemhrimer ikkxJ 'chlhex Vni I ( lw i s co out sj3 : Barnett's Christ mas Photos do you justice! in fact so clever a photo grapher is Mr. Barnctt, that they more than do you justice; they GLORIFY your pulchri tude! It's so easy to be pic tured it this studio, for there are no studied poses to be as sumed; no Pollyanna expres sions to be attempted. It's all over before you know it, and of course, that's the way to get the most successful picture. You may choose any size or style at Barnett's, from ?1 a dozen upwards, but you may be sure of QUALITY SL' PKEME at any price! Gift Kodaks await you at the Lincoln Photo Supply Co. here is the gift of gifts to promote from Egmont! Think of the fun you can have with a Kodak snapping each other innumerable times; making a record of all your school acti vities. You'll both enjoy these pictures immeasureably in years to come perhaps to gether, perhaps not! There are genuine Kodaks from $5 up at the Lincoln Photo Supply Co., and Brownie box camera? for as little as S2. Remember too, when Christmas-card-shopping, that you'll find the ones you'll like best at the Lincoln Photo Supply Co., 1217 O. Frivolous Frocks Galore, at the Famous! there's a reason why so many co-ed are choosing Military Ball attire here two reasons in fact. Try on one of them, and pay the other! Gay litt'.e wresses with swirl:r.g tkrits, fairly yearning to take the cen ter of the floor. Frocks in every bright and pastel color in so diverse an assortment that every, campus butterfly may find the mode that will help swell the ranks of her dance partners! Priced from $19.75 to $69.50 with a particularly large and well-varied selection at $29.50. Let the Apex Clean ers and Dyers change the Color! you're probably tired of the old pink party frock; likely your friends are too! In that case, dixpatch it with all it accessories to the Apex Clean ers and Dyers. In a few day time you may appear in what apparently is a stunning new outfit, and only YOU will know the why and wherefore, how little it cost. Patronize this reliable firm too, for every other sort of clothe-cleanir.g service, at reasonable price. Located at 123 S. 23rd, w.tn I. M. Flamondon as its presi dent and William John as its manager. Phone B 3331. Gifts that say '7 go to Nebraska" at tie College Book Store! ju.t the sort of items here, that the home-folks love to get; and the sort that one stodent gives to another as a matter of course ! At Long's is the college jewelry your friends are yea-i.-ng for a fine as sortment of rings and pins, in cluding Comhusker and Sen ior pins. Waiting here too are the pennanU, pillows, blank ets and banners that will make some recipient's room the la't word in Nit-ask- strse-phere. Ready also for ur selection are memory books, line-a-day books, fraternity and sorority crests, Uniersity shields and seals, brief cases, leather note books, stationery. Pen pencils. 09