Hie Daily Nebraskan 8taMa A. Ltneola. Nebraaka. OrTICJAL PtTBLWATION tmrviilaiTT or Nebraska Vmit DirMtiM ef th Itudan PobHeatloa Boar4 "blimiei TbMdur, Wetineariae, Thur iT, Fritter and Sunday marnlnia durtnc th aoademle r. Edltartal Offl Unlreralty Ball 4. Bailaeat Offiiai Will Und of Stadium. Office Hour Afternoon with tha titip Wea f Friday and Bandar. Telephone Kditorialt BSStl. No. 141; Buttn: B8l. No. TT; Nllhtl BSS. Entered a ond-lai matter at th atefflr la Unrein, Nebraeka, ander act c Conir, March I. 187. and at apeeial rat of poetae preeiaea ror in pr:iiii 11CS. act of October I, January It. 1SI1. 1917, authorised SUBSCRIPTION RATE tl a year fl.tl ematr Stasia Copy, I eente EDITORIAL STAFF V Ml tat W TjV-a.f Victor T. BaekW Editor jil'anaclnc Editor NEWS EDITORS t. A. Charrat Ellc Holortchlner Jntiu Frandaen. Jr. Arthur Sweet BlUieent Glna L Vane ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Herbert D. Kelly Neola Ekala Fred R. Eimmer CONTRIBUTING EDITORS William Cejnar Victor T. Heckler Kenneth W. Cock Edward Morrow BUSINESS STAFF (Hta BkeU "'" Manayer ftatm Marton at. Bnalnea Manager rnelaad Tea A re da U Circulation Manager Baaaardl T. Tette Circulation Manager AN INDIAN THEATRE Dr. Hartley Burr Alexander of the University of Nebraska has contri buted an article entitled "For an American Indian Theatre'' to the Theatre Arts Monthly in which lie points out the beauty of American Indian art and advocates the es tablishment of a theatre for its per petuation. Despite the fact that pro ducers say "Indian stuff doesn t go, he believes that such a theatre "holds nromise of being th truest agent for the promotion of our appreciation of what the Red Man has to bequeath unto all the arts. He advances three reasons in sup port of his proposal. "The first has to do with the philosophy ," he writes. "When ever may have been his coming:, the Indian has lived long enough under his own skies to have developed into mnturity modes of artistic expression that ought not to be lost and can not be aeain developed. Life's J chances are too few not to be all precious, and piety and curiosity alone should justify every effort to make whnt we can of them We spenk of this art as symbolic, but the quality which is meant by this distorting term is just that which I have in mind when I speak of art as a language of creative life. Vastly more than for us, art istic expression has for the Indian the character of living, and in col- US i .1 !M nAnfw in jlannA Dtlil 1 11 ll V O - UI ItllU HI DUIlfc, ill UOIllc in 14 matic rite, he speaks as richly as we with our machines and, I some times think, with truer meditation. "My second reason is second only in order. It is (with bold challenge) that Indian themes are beautiful, and susceptible of being WTOUght to forms of beauty. Among our own ancients we accord with perfect unanimity pre-eminence in art to the Greeks; the goods show it; the j Greek tradition is the near-creator of art in Europe; all other sources combined Semitic, Celtic, German ic are its far followers. But here in the New World is a source which, CLASSES DISMISSED Ten o'clocks will be dismissed at 10:40 instead of 10:50 morning, and 11 o'clock classes will not be required to meet. Practically every student will thus be given an opportunity to hear Dr. Gerald Bir ney Smith, of the University of Chi cago, speak on "Religion and Modern Life" at St Paul church. The University Y. M. C. A., which is sponsoring the convocation, as sures students that Doctor Smith is a man worth hearing. His subject is one of almost universal interest, and University students should not neg lect the opportunity to hear him which the dismissal of classes af- TVa o -! qta vlipn Sliprwnnd I . . . , i -1. ..vc.c ....... tor variety 01 material anu i-uauu ui Eddy visited the campus, St. Paul motivei is quite comparable to the church was packed for nearly every sources from which the Greek artists one of a series of lectures. He I drew This is true ; mythic poetry, made bold and interesting assertions, . jn decorative motive, and in melodic conducted lively open forum meet- j thenle. and tne material exists not ,in one style but in several, each de- acclimated to our new homo. We live in America, but we still think European v thoughts. Even nature shows herself to us in Old World col ors, and the soil which supports our feet and will hold our bones Is as yet In no sense our Holy and An cient Earth. For the Indian this is not so. His race had dwelt during it, formation in this, to him, old world, and all his thoughts, when it came to artistic expression, took on the character end Bubstance of the forest-land and prairie-land and mesa-land, of fur and feather, of huaca and birch, and of every native image. It is his land spiritually, as is must become ours ere we may bo truly naturalized, and in some such manner as it has been his. To think, then, that we shall not profit by what he has done for us is to reject long centuries of human ex perience, during which the soil of our land has been lovingly reclaimed unto the living substance cf humanity." TUB DAILY NIBSiVBEAB Serenade (Methistopheles), from "La Damnation de Faust"....Berlioi Sad Moon of Falling Leaf Roos-Lleurance Midsummer Lullaby MacDowell Every Time I Feel the Spirit-.FiBher Fuzzy Wuzzy Kipling-Speaks Berge and Torrey Are Judges in Debate Sales Positions Offered By Bureau. The University of Nebraska Y. M. C. A. Employment Bureau has sever al sales propositions, with guaran tees attached, offering employment to students for the summer months. BOOMERS TEACHERS AGENCY. TEACHERS needed now. PBHGD APPEARS IN UDSICAL PROGDAM Barittfn. StucUnt Gives Juni6r Per formance; With Edith LucilU Robins Paul Pence, baritone, student with Edith Lucille Robins of the Robbins Studio, presented his Junior recital in the Temple' Theatre Monday eve ning, April 12, at 8:15. He was accompanied by Eudora Mallory at the piano. Mr. Pence is a junior at the uni versity and a member of the Univer sity Players. He .has appeared in a number of their productions this season. The program was as follows: Prolog, from "I Pagliacci" Leoncavallo When Love is Kind Old Irish Phillis Has Such Chnrming Graces Old English Freudvoll und leidvoll Beethoven Du bist eine Blume Liszi Erstcs Gruen Schumann The Clod Austrian Folk Song Chanson a boire Moliere-Chnrpentier (1672) Roses d'Hiver de Fontenailles II Neige ..Bemberg But Lately in Dance Arensky Intrc nnrl sr imnlarprl considerable . jn one style out n several, rain uc- talk and thought Many person3 . vel0ped to a form splendidly express- Aiv mnaA Vl ll ' TY1 Kllf t M1TS A. VklC t . . 1 In our own country mere are disagreed with him, but found his meeting; interesting and profitable nevertheless. Do not go to St. Paul church this no less than four great styles, each distinctive and beautiful: the tor est style, the Plains, that of the morning prepared to swallow either j Northwest, that of the Southwest, a pill or a lump of sugar, oo mere while beyond our boundaries soum determined t othink about the sub-jWard Aztec and Maya, Chibcha and ject which the lecturer Is to discuss, determined to think about the sub is unreasonable or contrary to com mon sense, but willing to believe all that wins the approval of an active mind. If anyone attempts to force a pill down, get up and leave. If the weather is nice, as it prob ably will be, the time may be pleas antly spent sitting on a rail in the sunshine. But regardless of how the weather may be, if Doctor Smith gives the kind of an address which Inca. afford as many more. There is here weajth not to be bought by gold, and probably never to be real ized unless in our own day it be made productive. "Finally, my third. We Ameri cans, with our transplanted culture, have achieved as yet little more than a colonial echo of the ancestral arts, and so long as we lean heavily upon our European sources we are un likely to more than faintly echo their forms. It is commonplace in v f f. A nfficinln nssnr us I Europe today to observe that in mat he customarily delivers, the time may -ters of the mind we move just about be much more profitably and far more pleasantly spent thinking about the subject announced for his address. generation behind the parent world. Now this, it appears to me, is mainly due to the fact that we have not as yet become spiritually I 115 i (University News Service.) Wendell Berge, '25, Law '27, inter collegiate debater against South Da kota in 1922 and against Iowa, 1924, and Volta Torrey, 26, Aurora, in tercollegiate debater against South Dakota, 1924 and Iowa, 1925 were judges in the western district state high school debating league tourna ment at Cozad, April 9 and 10. MA-?? WHAT IS IT? Elmer Fleck, '26 Is Awarded Scholarship (University News Service.) Elmer Fleck, '25, Lincoln, former graduate student specializing in chemistry, has. been awarded a schol arship at Princeton University ac cording to word received by friends in Lincoln. There were seventy ap plicants in the competitive examina tions. The scholarship is one of the highest awarded at Princeton, and la the same as the one given last year to Randolph Major, '22, Lincoln. ARE YOU DISGUSTED WITH YOUR WATCH We can put it in order so it will keep time Boyd Jewelry Co. Club Plan Jewelers 1042 0 Acros from Gold' New York University School of Retailing Experience in New York's, Newark's and Brooklyn's largest depart ment stores. Store service linked with classroom instruction. M. S. in Retailing granted on completion of one year of graduate work. Summer School July 6 to August 13, 1926. Fall term opens September 16, 1926. Illustrated booklet on application. For further information write Dr. Norris A. Brisco, Director, Washington Square East, New York City. Th Coca-Cola Compear. Atlanta. Ga. When Three Are Not a Crowd Coca-Cola is enjoyed by more people, of more ages, at more places than any other drink IT HAD TO BE GOOD TO GET WHERE IT IS - 7 MILLION A DAY QraM tinafv iaom :SBDES0M HOLLAND CO. SMART WEAR FOR WOMEN i 1222-122-4- O STREET III!!II!!!!l!II!Il!!II!ll!!l!!!II!!ill!!i!llI!!!!II!li!l!lll!i!Ili!il!!III!lll!!!ll!lil!IIH SEN ORS ; Order Your Caps & Gowns For Commencement NOW! College Book Store E. H. Long, Prop. Facing Campus oixnrniin "Sandy" with Madge Bellamy at the Lyric this week! Sandy, a feminine last edi tion of pep and folly, out-flaps 'em all in this entertaining pic turel Her conduct shocks wom en and fascinates men. As sorted husbands, trairodios, dis illusionment, and the (treat romance all combine to make "Sandy", a celluloid attraction without a slow moment. You'll enjoy Madge Bellamy as mad cap Sandy, Harrison Ford as the heavy lover, and a support ing cast that does some clever bits of acting. By all means see this picture if you want to get the low-down on people who have taken down the "Home Sweet Home" motto, and re placed it with "Today is here, tomorrow never comes." All Hats, Half Price at Ben Simon & So nsl remember that good looking French pattern that you longed for and couldn't afford? Go and buy it now at exactly half price. Remember the clever $5 hats at Ben Simon & Sons? They're $2.50 now! Here at last is the chance of a semester to indulge your love of head gear. Just come to Ben Simon & Sons Tuesday or Wednesday," spend wisely, and you'll have enough millinery to make your face a success for the rest of the school year. Every hat in their entire stock goes at this drastic reduction, but for these two days only, so hurry down! Be Permanently Waved at Champe's For Only $7.50! isn't this a small price, tho, to pay for months and months of freedom from stringy bob worries? Mr. Champe's attrac tive little Beauty Shop in the Lincoln Theater Building has the latest Nestle equipment for giving a permanent wave; add to this the experience and skill of his operators and the Hnswer is: a permanent you'll be mighty proud to flaunt before your straight-haired sister! He'll give you a tight or a loose wave that can't be detected from a natural curl. BUT make your appointments well in advance, for Champe's Beau ty Shop is a busy place' George Brothers' Sta tionery Reflects the Lat est Trend of Fashion! recently a great number of smart feminine followers of the t'.rf at Deschamps, France, ap peared in a certain shade of green. Instanter, Eaton, Crane & Pike's representative sent cables with the result that stationery of this same hue was on the market the following week, and on its way to George Brothers. Just an example ff the alertness of George Broth ers' buying connections! Not only in stationery, but in party favors and all gift merchan dise does this progressive firm follow out the idea of being first in the display of the latest. Send your Tailored Accessories to the Globe Laundry! look around you on campus! The smartest co-eds are not necessarily the ones with the best looking suits, or the dizzi est suspenders. It's the girl who appreciates the value of well-laundered blouses, imma culate white collars, cuffs, and vestees, that gets herself up with the most deadly effect No doub t most of these well groomed degree-pursuers pat ronize the Globe Laundry, if that's the place for cleansing de luxe. Try them out with your nest weekly bundle, and you u be tinging "I never knew what suds could do". nnnnnnnai , , , , f I , Mf f f'M ? !!? f fftfr !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!".!!!.!!!!!!!!.!!!!!.,.....:.:.... .,M.iH.iuaM,.,mi,;Miiuu,uHmi,.,.ii.u.a...,