The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 19, 1926, Page 3, Image 3

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    tSIB DAILY lIBnRADEAlJ
Rialto Theat re
ALL THIS WEEK
ELINOR GLYN'S ,
"Soul Mates"
With Aln Prinfle Edmund Lowe
w Metro-CoMvya Picture
"DIZZY DAISY"
Hal Roach Comedy
NEWS TOPICS SPORTLICHT
SHOWS AT 1, S, B, . J. .
MAT 2So NITE 3Sc CHILD. 10c
Lincoln Theatre
THIS WEEK
BEAUTY! FASHION I
ROMANCE
And your fill of Gasps and
Thrills
THE STORY OF A SMALL TOWN
CIRL who entered tha big Atlantic
City Bathing Beauty Coateet.
LYRIC
ALL
THIS WEEK
ft.
Finest and FunnWst Story
thm Yar
Other Entertaining- Picturea
ON THE STAGE
Dallas Walker Trio
In tha Muatcal Novelty
"WEST of tha GREAT DIVIDE
SHOWS AT 1. 8, S, 7, 9.
COLONIAL SP
A Story of Hair Raialaa Adventure
ZANE GREY'S
"WILD HORSE
MESA"
with
JACK HOLT. NOAH BEERY
AND BILLIE POVE
Alio Newa and Comedy Picturea
SHOWS AT 1, S, 5, 7, .
ORPHEUM
THUR, FRI- SAT.
"TrTREi: T5AVJ -brtcr
Tha Faaclnatinf Production
"SLAVE OF
FASHION"
with
Norma Shearer and
Lew Cody
Other EnlertaTnUiV Teaturea
shCws XT V. s, t,
MAT. ISc NITE 2Sc.
An International Sensation
Prince:
Wahletka
Aaaarican Indian Seerees
ASK HER ANY QUESTION
SHE KNOWS
Ray Wynna'a Carffoave
"Cycle of Color"
Beautiful MadeU in an Aathetk
Blend of
JjHARMONY and SYMMETRY"
The Volunteers
A Sbif lag Novelty
Murphy & Bradley
"Arti.tlt Novelty Stepper."
Maxine & DoLby
. "One Man oad 3 una Do"
"The wTiTkllfdTl"
AjNWe and Comr.if
JABICH ANt Thif GkCHLs7kA
.THE Jn I
American S
venus- 1 1
THUR TRl. SAT. I
SS I
Other Opinions
The Daily Nebraskan assumes
no responsibility for the senti
ments expressed by correspon
dents and reserves the right to
exclude any communications
whose publication may for any
reason seem undesirable. In ell
cases the editor must know the
identity of the contributor. No
communications will be publish
ed anonymously, but by special
arrangement initials only may be
signed.
Preparedness
To the Editor:
I note with surprise and regret
the agitation whub is making itself
felt concerning the n ilitary training
in the University. It is arousing. I
feel, a great deal more attention
than it deserves, being, as it is, fos
tered and so obviously by red
propagandists. You will recall that
Paul Blanchard, who spoke heve last
year for the League of Industrial
Democracy, was responsible for the
agitation, originally.
The idea of world peace at this
moment is not only impossible but
insane. How can we have world
peace when all the other nations of
the world are in arms, and ready to
attack any armless nation at any
moment? We know for a fact that
France and England have no special
liking for America, and have large
armies and air forces. Also Japan.
I do not jingoistically point toward
the fact that attacks by these nations
are inevitable, as do some alarmists
but I do say that, considering the
circumstances, it would not be at
all a bad idea to be prepared.
It is our moral obligation to sup
port the Morrill Land Grant Act,
which has, to a large extent, made
possible the growth of the Univer
sity to its present size. I got more
moral and physical good, and more
mental discipline, out of my mill
tary training than out of any other
of my subjects.
The idea that United States should
set the example for world peace is
absurd. We can, of coarse, main
tain a peaceful policy, but there is
no need absolutely to disarm until
the other nations show some defi
nite intention.
My counsel to the winners would
be to go to Wisconsin, where train
ing is optional, or to Russia, where
they can give vent to all the com
munists, destructive yowlings that
they choose.
WILBUR G. GAFFNEY,
On The Air
University Studio,
over KFAB (340.7)
broadcasting
Friday, March 19 .
9:30 to 9:55 a. m. Weather re
port by Prof. T. A. Blair. Road re
port and announcements.
10:30 to 11:00 a. m. "Making a
House a Home," by Miss Margaret
Margaret Fedde, chairman of the
Department of Home Economics.
1:15 to 1:30 p. m. Musical con
vocation. ' The entire program will
be given by Miss Martha Harder,
soprano.
3:00 to 3:30 p. m. Engineering
talk "The Engineer in Agricult
ure," by Prof. O. W.Sjogren, chair
man of the Department of Agricult
ural Engineering.
Popular Science talk "Gardening
with Wild Flowers," by Dr. Elda
Walker, associate profesor of Bo-
ftany.
8:05 to 8:30 p. m. Prof. Robert
H. Wolcott, chairman of the De
partment of Zoology, will talk on
"Home Life of Birds,' as the sev
enth of his series of lectures on
Bird Life.
Saturday, March 20
9:30 to 9:55 a. m. Weather re
port by Prof. T. A. Blair. Road re
port and announcements.
8:05 to 8:30 p. m. "Getting
Ready for State Fairs," by L. I. Fris-
bie, State Extension Agent in Boys'
and Girls Clubs.
"Increasing the Farm Income,"
by IL C. Filley, professor of Rural
Economics.
Astronomy Textbook
Is Near Completion
Prof. G. D. Sweizcy, chairman
of the Department of Astronomy,
is working on a textbook of astro
nomy which will be submitted to the
publishers at a later date. The
name sof the text is, "Elementary
Astronomy."
j Co,
319 60. 12T ST.
LINCOLN. NEB.
C. Edison Miller's
Special History Paper
High Quality, Low Price
213 No. 12th Phone D223S
Ten Years Ago
"Tim" Corey, captain of the foot
ball team, issued the first call for
spring practice, to begin after the
spring vacation.
The Delta Tau Delta five won the
interfraternity basketball champion
ship for 1918 by winning from the
Sig Alph's by a score of 12 to 8.
The first half was slow, then 6 to
2 in favor of the Delta. The tour
nament was one of the best under
taken and the games showed remark
able speed.
ine eieventn annual gymnasium
exhibition showed that the University
was doing a great work for physical
education. Following the nroeram
I the evening was given over to danc
ing and over a hundred couples were
on the floor.
The Iowa State Agricultural Col
lege at Ames sprang a surprise on
Nebraska by winning all but one of
the matches in wrestling. The Ames
team lost its first match to Iowa, a
team that Nebraska defeated, and
this made the Nebraska downfall all
the more surprising.
Pool Is In Favor
Of Late Pledging
(Continued From Page One)
much more able to select better men
men who had made good in school
and proved their worth.
"It would eradicate the mis-fits
every fraternity gets now and then,"
he stated. "Sometimes a fraternity
takes a man on snap judgement, dur
ing the first few days of rush week,
and is afterwards! disappointed to
find that he is the wrong man. This
makes trouble in the fraternity and
the school. These differences would
tend to be reduced, to a considerable
degree, if men had a longer time in
which to become acquainted with the
freshmen."
Become Center of Power
Dr. Pool also feels that under this
system the fraternity would have a
better chance of becoming what it is
supposed to be a center of tremen-
Where h My
Wandering Boy
Tonight?
WERE YOU EVER
A
WANDERER?
t'HAA S$
SUITING
YOU
Get Inaida an Adler suit and you'll
ault tha world outaida. The luatroua
Iran and rich tana combined with
the ikfll of Adler. Collegian design
era and tailoring- makes thirty-five
dollars look like sixty.
$35 and $40
SPECIAL
MEN'S CAPS
Friday and Saturday
$1.85
All new sprinostyles.
Snap brlma are It right now
an inviting ae lection to
$5.00
Peterson
Ryan
CLOTHING CO.
1212 O.
3
HATS
dous power for the furtherance of
the better class of activities in the
school. Fraternities would run more
smoothly because the men would be
picked with more care, and accord
ingly they would be mutually inter
ested in each other's plans and wel
fare, and would really strive to de
velop an all-around scholarship.
He further pointed out that men
coming to get pins would not be
able to do so under this system. A
good many men of this type ordi
narily drop out at the end of their
first semester or year. The men
coming back the second year would
be those who came because they bad
a definite notion of what they were
going to do, not because they wanted
to join a fraternity. The quality of
show
Published in
the interest of Elec
trical Development by
an Institution that will
be helped by what-
ever help, the
Industry.
men taken in under these circumstan
ces would be improved.
Easier for New Stndenta
Students themselves, Dr. Pool
showed, would have a better chance
to acquaint bemselves with what the
fraternities were like and what the
stood for. Now, freshmen are whirl
ed around from one place to anoth
er, each fraternity trying to ring a
decision from the man before the
others can get get at him.
In concluding, Dr. Pool said em
phatically, "The greatest argument in
favor of mid-semester pledging is the
fact that it would give the fraterni
ties a chance to pick their men with
greater care and so enable them to
get a really select group of men."
Reflections of
FASHION
spring hats chic and becoming.
Beautiful springlike colors, smart shapes, fresh crisp
materials, combine to make the new models most attrac
tive. Fine straws such as Ballibuntl, Bangkok, Visca, and silks
such as taffeta, Faille, and belting ribbon are most popu
lar materials.
The Gigolo, the off-the-face style, the soft crush shape,
the beret and the tam are equally popular.
SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAYS OF
HATS FOR ALL TYPES OF WEAR
Priced 2.95 to IS. 00
Fourth Floor
A fulcrum for every
modern Archimedes
"al I VE me a fulcrum and I will move the earth"
Vjef said Archimedes. Too bad that he lived
twenty-two hundred years too soon.
For you modern followers of Archimedes, you
, . men who apply his well known principles in the
study of mechanical engineering, the fulcrum is
ready. If a part in helping the earth to move
appeals to you, look for your fulcrum in the
communication art "
A world of possibilities opens up here for the
man whose bent is mechanical. Distances shrink
lecftuse mechanical engineers have found how to
draw well-nigh every bit of air out of a repeater
tul. A million telephones are made and the
millionth is like the first because mechanical inge
nuity has shown the way. Quantity production
in a great telephone plant calls for constant im
provement in meclianical technique.
Ever day is a day of new facts, new things,
new achievements by mechanical and electrical
engineers. Nothing stands still. Here the world
doct move.
Published for the Communication Industry by
Western Electric
i iukn vf tte truitun t i etcpnonex
Course For Police Chiefs
A month's course for police chiefs
is offered by Northwestern univer
sity. The main study is the psycho
logy behind crime.
Students Plan Cruise
Princeton University is planning to
send more than twenty of her en
gineering students- on a two-day
cruise on a United States destroyer
during the Easter vacation.
SPOTLESS CLEANERS
(Harry Uerllnf. Prop.)
Top Coata, plain wool tf f(
dreaaea, 2-nlece auita pl.W
Wa Call For and Deliver.
Wa Guarantee Our Work.
B4459 2401 J St.
P
Company
n n ttti
s
- -OiAX. $k.o4)
Men! Dress Up
for Spring at
Peterson & Ryan's!
especially in the accessories
of dress are they prepared to
serve you with all that style
ful and snappy 1 You'll find
at Peterson & Ryan's, 1212 O,
complete selections of new
shirts, tics, underwear, hosiery,
and belts from which to choose.
And, as a special inducement to
come into their store Saturday
and see these new things, they
offer you: new spring caps
collegiate and attractive to the
Nth degree, for only $1.85.
Caps that are regular $2.50
and ?3 values Caps that will
improve your face!
The Modern Cleaners
Make Dressier
Vacations Possible!
it's not a bit too early to
think of your going home cos
tume, and what you'll wear for
all the Easter-week festivities!
Your new spring clothes prob
ably have the edge off by now,
so bundle them off to Soukup
& Westover for a freshening
up. They'll clean your scarfs,
gloves, hats and sweaters too,
so they'll look like new. All
in all, just patronize this reli
able cleaning establishment and
the home folks will have an
added good empression of the
benefits of higher education.
Even the band at the station
will play more enthusiastically!
Dresses at $11.75
a Bargain at Ben
Simon & Sons!
please oh please, bargain
seeking co-eds, do NOT confuse
these delightful springtime
frocks with those you would
ordinarily be able to buy at
this inconsequential price!
Look at them, and you'll think
they're value-marvels; examine
them closely and you'll KNOW
it! The quality of fabric is
excellent, the workmanship is
fine, while styles and colors
are utterly captivating. There
are clever little two pice frocks
for campus wear in flannel and
knitted fabrics; dresses of
Georgette, crepe Roma, flat
crepe and printed silks too
fashioned in every conceivable
style. $25 values for $11.75
at Ben Simon & Sons!
Give Dick Stryker
your Easter Flow
er Orders Now!
-in the last before-vacation
rush of mid-semesters, initia
tions, and preparations for
boarding the choo-choo, it's go
ing to be pretty difficult to
remember all those thoughtful
things you should remember!
So why not make a list now, of
the people on your Easter plant
and posy list (both local and
out-of-town). Then bring or
phone it to the Stryker Floral
Co., and Dick will do the rest
of the "saying it" Remember
also that there will be a Spe
cial in spring flowers Saturday
that will create quite a flurry
among the Scotchy. Stop in
Saturday and see what it is!
The Globe Laun
dry is up to its
Neck in Suds!
seems as though there are
plenty of fore-minded students
at Nebraska, judging by -the
amount of pre-Easter laundry
work that arrive daily at the
Globe 1 It IS a satisfying feel
ing to put your waKhable ward
robe in order before iing
borne for spring vacation. Clean
clothes certainly save many a
last-minute purchase, especially
when they are sudsed the
Globe way. Lee Ager himself
sees to it that every garment
sent to his laundry is sent home
plus perfectly immaculate, so
call B 6755. And when your
bundle comes bark, you'!! he
as av!i!y surprised at its
r'i''', i l thj Mate cf yovr
(iuthva!
v
V -MP.