The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nfbnmka OFFICIAL PUBLICATION TTNlVKRiilTY or NEBRASKA Under Diraotioa of the Student Publication Bord Pubtiahad Tuaadar, Wcdnaaday. Thurs day, .Friday and Sunday morninsa during th academic year. Editorial OffloM Uniwalty Hall 4. Kuaintaa Offieea Wait atand of Stadium. Otnra Hoars Afternoons wit tha axcap tion of Friday and Sunday. Telephone. Editorial: B6K11, No. 14t; Buaineas: B8891. No. 77; Night, B688. Entarad aa accond-claaa matter at tha poatoHiea in Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of Conrma, March I. 187 . and at special act of October S, 117, authoriied January rata of pottage provided for in Section 11 OS, 20. li. SUBSCRIPTION RATB ft a year 1" Sing-la Copy, i centa. aamnter EDITORIAL STAFF Hackler- ..Editor Editor Victor T, William Celnar Manatinff Arthur Sweet Aaa't Managing: Editor Le Vanoa Aaa't Managing Editor NEWS EDITORS Home W. Gomon Neola Skala Fred R. Zimmer ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Geortr A. Healey Ruth Palmer Kenneth ft. Randall BUSINESS STAFF T. Siainaou Morton Buine Manager Richard F. Vetta A't Buaineaa Manager Milton McGrew Circulation Manager THE CURTAIN RISES Another year has started and with it many changes have come to the campus. There are new laces seen everywhere among- the students and faculty . members. New buildings have been erected and old ones re moved. The very physical appear ance of the campus is constantly changing. The most complete changes, of coarse, are found in the student body since one whole class has gone and another one started. All student affairs are being managed by diffcr-.-ejnfc-.psuat who. are trying to make lS"yt3urftijdni than any pre .vio'us one" in their" particular field of j naear::.-: I .V- mL- ijjl.'! : Hie Dair; .Nebraskan which is pub YljsTjiii fci" fessi fcjsue of the year to day. AlthougH those in charge of this publication plan no radical changes, they will put into effect from time to time certain plans and minor alterations which they feel will make the Nebraskan better able to serve the University public We have already been questioned several times as to the editorial policy of The Daily Nebraskan for the coming semester. - Well, what's The Daily Nebras kan going to attack this year " seems to be the most popular way of asking the question. It is because of that atmosphere, that feeling on the campus concern ing The Daily Nebraskan and par ticularly the editorial column, that we feel justified in talking about our selves just this once to try to make elear our position. j The present editors are starting out the year with as clean a slate as 4-j. V n TTA XUm fiOVA VIA axes to grind, no campaigns to put over, no plans for attack on anyone It will be our honest and sincere purpose during the coming semester to interpret the news of the Univer sity in such a way that it will pro voke thought parti cularily among the students. If we are able, even in a small de gree, to start students thinking about the problems around them we mill feel well repaid for out Forts. If we can get them interested and working on these problems we will have done a great good for this in stitution. We do not expect to please every one, in fact we would be sorely dis appointed if the subjects we pick and the stands we take on them should mrovoke no criticism. We will wel- criticism at all times and es- neciatlv urtpe students to contribute to the ''Other Opinions' column. The editorials found in this colunn are merely opinions of undergrad uates and should be treated as such. They are personal opinions and their worth can be measured only by the reaction, if any, upon the readers. We do not promise to please. We do not promise to offend. The only thing we can promise is absolute sin cerity and we hope that that cannot be questioned at any time. With these few words about our selves, and we hope they may be the last, let us proceed with the big show for the actors are all set, the audi ence is waiting, and the lights ere all M.S. Kansas State Agricultural Col lege, who has been a fellow there, Is to be an instructor. History and Principles of Education Miss Anna McMahon, A.B. Nebras ka, is to be assistant Prof. C. C. Weidemann, A.B. and M.A. California, Ph.D. Columbia, is to be associate professor in tho de partment. Elementary and Rural Education Miss Iola Garrison, A.B. Nebraska, will be instructor in elementary edu cation. She has been head of the department of normal training at Summer-field, Kans. Secondary Education Mr. Herbert C. Koch, A.B. and Ph.D. Ohio State, where he has been Prof. L. S. Eaton, M.E. Cornell University, on leave of absence from the University of the Philippines, is to be associate professor, taking the place of Prof. DeBaufre who is on leave of absence for one year to do research work in New York. Military Department. Capt. Russell Skinner, infantry, takes the place of Capt. Ira Hunt who has been transferred to Fort Benning. Captain Skinner comes from the Canal Zone. lie was at the Fort Snelling R. 0. T. C. and C. M. T. C. camps. Col Ufa of Medicine (Omaha) Miss Ina Townsend has been ap pointed instructor in surgical nurs ing and supervisor of the surgical Hi, Lads WAIXY'S a research assistant, will be associate floor. professor. Economics and Commerce Mr. Vernon G. Morrison, B.A. and M.A. Nebraska, is to be an instructor and secretary to Dean LeRossignol. He takes the position formerly held by Mr. R. J. W. Ely who has gone to Nebraska Wesleyan. Electrical Engineering Mr. George S. Lieback, B.b. in Miss Genevieve Johnson is to be medical social worker. She has fin-1 ished the nurses training course at I the Nebraska college of medicine. Miss Mary Potts has been appoin ted instructor in physic-therapy. Prof. T. J. Thompson, Ph.D., mem ber of the department of chemistry faculty on the Lincoln campus, has been appointed pre-medical adviser li. 1.-1.. it- -1 - T"k T-i Electrical Engineering. Worcejter w lae lne P,ace 01 sroiessor oar Polytechnic, who has done graduate ker . JH1SS study at the University of Minnesota, will be an instructor. Enf liah Prof. Henry Adelbert White, A.B Connecticut Wesleyan. three times M.A. from Wesleyan, Harvard, and Yale, Ph.D. Yale, will take the courses in argumentation and litera ture formerly under the late Prof, M. M. Fogg. Professor White comes from Washington and Jefferson. He has been professor also at Perdue and Lombard. School of Fine Arta Prof. Henry Cox, one of the fore most violinists in Omaha, who sev- Beatrice P. Hedge, is to be director of social work, succeeding Miss Merle Draper. Mr. C. F. Kent has been appointed fellow in physiology and pharmacol ogy. Mr. R .L. Schroeder and Helgel Borre have also been appointed fel-l lows in physiology and Pharmacol-1 ogy. School of Agriculture (Curtis) Mr. Arthur A. Wearner, A.B. Ne-I braska, is to be instructor in sciences I and director of orchestra and band. Miss Fern Hubbard, A.B. Nebras-I ka, is to be instructor in English and eral years ago directed the Lincoln h of dramatics. She was formerly ci, -n v. I at Lincoln in the School of Fine sor of instrumental ensemble and di rector of the School of Fine Arts orchestra. Professor Cox studied at Grinnell and Berlin. He was for some time an instructor in violin at the University of Iowa, and for the past several years has been teacher and conductor of music at Omaha. He is famous there for the school and college orchestras he has di rected. Mr. Ben Benson, A.B. Nebraska, has been appointed assistant in draw ing and painting. jniss MaDie langdon is tbe new assistant curator of the art gallery. Germanic Languages Miss Martha Ada Klett, who studied at the Teachers Training Seminar at Berlin, and has done Arts. Miss Edith Gramlich, A.B. Ne braska, to be instructor of mathema-1 tics and director of girls' athletics. Mr. Butler A. Isaman, B.S. Hast- ings, will be instructor in science and assistant coach of athletics. Miss Beatrice Long, B.F.A. Ne braska, is to be instructor in social! work and director of vocal music College of Pharmacy. Prof. Charles Leslie Wible, B.S. Nebraska, is to be assistant profes-l sor of pharmacognosy. He has done research work at Rutgers and New! York Universities. Philosophy. Miss Sylva Ann Kune, A.B. Ne braska, is to be scholar. Mr. William Martin Card. A.P. Just saw the old kid over at the Eversharp counter. Had a great summer. Looks like a million. More new style than the Prince of Wales. And sharp! Well, Eversharp! Whole book of lecture notes, dance dates, phone numbers all up his little write sleeve. Scamper on 'over and give him the grip! Seniors, juniors, sophomores, freshmen Eversharp is the pencil in your class. Always sharp, but never sharpened. No whittle, no smudge, no clog, no jam; just an even trail of high-grade marks from the point of that rifled tip. Any size you like from the shy little "Tux," for the weskit pocket, to the ex treme "Oxford bag." Any color you like red, mottled, or black in hard rubber barrels, silver or gold, solid cr filled. Any lead you like hard, medium, soft regu lar, checking or heavy duty thickness and also in all colors. Any price you like see the new Utility Unit,$1.50 worth of everything for $1.00. From 50 cents to a month's allowance WmSHABP The Name is on the Pencil vV BACK A I TV Gels, Too ) ( I Right here, too, is your fountain pen. The popu lar pen on every campus, and we might say the best one in the world. Wahl Pen. Tell you why youll like a Wahl Pen better than any other. It's durable. Built to last. You won't be break ing it every other day or running in to replace it every now and then. All the Wahl barrel, cap and point is durable. It's capable. A good point and a steady flow. The Wahl Pen nib is made ol iridium-tipped solid gold. The ink sac in a Wahl Pen holds more ink than you can get in any pen ol equal size more even than the bulky pens that carry all their bigness in their looks. It's individual You make your own choice ol a Wahl Pen from a complete line of sizes, points and styles. You can get a super-humdinger, thick as a wrestler, or a neat little cylinder, slim as a girL You can get a Wahl in solid gold or sterling silver, gold-filled or silver-filled, red, black, or mottled rubber. You can get exactly the point you want stiff or flexible, fine, me dium, stub, or oblique, or Wahl Standard Signature. And any Wahl you buy is the finest writing instrument you ever used, at any price. $3 to $7 for the silver or rubber $6 upward for the gold WAHL PEN Eversharp' Write Hand Pal on. Boy, raise that curtain! 101 New Faculty r.lemTbers Appointed (Continued from Page One.) Ck bus try Mr. Eoietech Chestmir Bren, Ph. D. Ifcwa University, B.S. Chicago, be an instructor. Eilsrsrd E. Washburn. PhJD. Micb- . vn, mUl te an instructor. C!nl Esiiacriaf Tr. WLIiani S. LaLonde, Jr., B.S. l.'assikchuBetta Institute of Technol r rr. is to be an instructor. Ee comes fitm a j option in tbe city engineer- Z tfT-srtnwiit of Los Angeles. Tin Classics :'r, G. II Duckworth, A.B. and lYinceton, 'where lie has beea a iV.!c. w, IH be an instructor. I' -t Josephine Cn-hi, A.B. Ke " a, i i to te assistant instructor. . - 1 ? t-tvt th fast year ituiyinf a Z'.'.-Jh Ecyn'dda, A.B. : ; t.A, l-u' .-i..La, is to ht asr.kt- -e J. r'.PTil :tt, A.B. Ke- .it-'l a fo!low. I f ' ' tars. 1m 1' .'...way, B.S. sr.d graduate work at the University of Nebraska, is to be scholar. Nebraska, is to be an instructor. Miss Elsie Pokrantz. A.B. Coe College, M.A. Nebraska, who taught a year and a half at Nebraska be fore going to McPherson College, Kans., will be assistant instructor. Mr. Carl L Kilander, A.B. Gus- tavus Adolphus, with graduate work at the University of Missouri, has been appointed scholar. Histofy Mr. Glenn W. Gray, A.B. Bowdoin College, Ph.D. Cornell University, will be instructor in English history. Prof. C H. Oldfather, A.B. Han over, Ph-D. Wisconsin, D.D. Mc- Cormick Seminary, is to be professor of ancient history. He comes to Ne braska from Wabash University. Hoot Economics Prof. Bebekah Gibbons, B.S. Cor nell, Ph.D. Chicago, comes from Pennsylvania College, where she was assistant director' of nutrition. Prof. Ruth Staples, B.S. Minne sota, M.A. Columbia, where she was on leave of absence from Nebraska, returns to be assistant professor of home economics. Mr. Kingsley Kwei Chen, A.B. Ne- brask, is to be scholar. Miss Leata MarkwelL A.B. Ne braska, is to be graduate assistant in psychology. Miss Ruth Flanders, A.B. Nebras ka, is also to be a graduate assist ant. Physical Edacatioau Mr. Rudolph Vogelar comes from Cornell University and the Ithaca School of Physical Education to be an assistant instructor. Miss Teresa Hubs man, A.B. Uni versity of Minnesota, who has taken work at Wellesley and the New York City Central School of Physical Edu cation, is to be an instructor in phy sical education for women. She hes been director of physical education in the Memorial Schools, Passaic. N. J. Miss Bermce Ballance, A.B. Ne braska, is to be an assistant instruc tor. Miss Clara Rausch, who has taken work at Bowling Green State Nor mal, Columbia, and Syracuse Uni- MttilK MY WORDS Here y'are, classmates. I've brought you all a souvenir. The Wally Bookmark. Handy. Good-looking. Free. Ask for it at the Eversharp and Wahl Pen counter. WALLY, the Eversharp Kid IfM. Tt WaM C, Chlesajs FOR SALE BY Latsch Broa.. Tucker & Shean, College Book Store, C Edison Miller Co., Meier Drug Co. Miss Bernice Elwell, B.S. Nebras- versitT. " 1m to be an assistant. ka, comes back to her alma mater from Wyoming University. She will be an instructor in institutional man agement and cafeteria director. Miss Florence Faust, B.F.A. Mon tana State University, comes from Iowa State College to be an instruc tor in textiles and clothing. j Miss Marjorie Ruth Clark, B.S. Purdue, M.S. Purdue, who has been chemistry assistant at Purdue, will be instructor in home economics. Miss Mary Bailey, B.S. Nebraska, has been appointed fellow. Horticaltara. Rufns H. Moore has been appoin ted student assistant. CoIIer ( Law. Prof. Maurice M. Merrill, A.B. and L.L.B Oklahoma, SJ.D. Harvard, comes from the University of Idaho. He took bis graduate work in law at Harvard under Dean Roscoe Pound. He will take the courses formerly given by Dean Seavcy. Mr. G. E. Price, A.B. St Joseph College, LL.B. Kent Law School, San Francisco, is to be lecturer in legal bibliography. Mr. Price is connected with the Lawyer's Co-operative Pub lishing company of Denver. Mathematics. Mr. Howard P. Dode, A.B. Park College, A.li. Missouri, is to be in structor. He has been instructor the past year at the University o? Wis consin. Mr. Lawrence Hampton, A.B. Bel- oit, bo baa done graduate work at Pittsburgh University, and has been at the Colorado School of Mines the patt year, has been appointed fel low. Mr. Edward W. Bayer, A.B. Doane Colkgs, is to be scholar. Mr. Kenneth a Fuller, A.B. Ia dlasa, graduate student at Nebras ka, Las been reappointed scholar. Mr. Geovge E. HappeH, A.B. Alle 5iaEy College, also graduate student at Nibrsika, has been resppoirrted S'. hOltS. Physical EJacatioa (College of Agricnltare.) Mr. N. W. Knight, a graduate of the Ithaca School of Physical Edu cation, will be assistant professor. He has previously been on the city1 campus. Physics. Mr. Henry Morgenau, A.B. Mid land, M.A. Nebraska, is to be an in structor. (Continued in next Sunday's paper.) INCREASE IS SHOWN IH UILITARY CORPS laitial Chock-Up Shows Almost 1500 ia Khalo; New Me. Oa Faculty List. Hail! HaU! !The Gang's all here! Howdy Gang! Glad to see you Say if you're looking for something with a real "kick" It isn't bottled either Go over to 1213 N Street, Dont Rap! You're welcome Just walk right in an make yourself to home. Here's the "low-down" on the place; It's just plenty keen Almost a a fairyland Youll wr th Treasures from the far corners of the World ; remnants of the days when people talked with pictures and colors. ! olorso But that isn't half of it They'll show you decorative things for your room Lamps, Pictures, Tables and Book Ends, Racks and Shelves Pretty Vanities for your Dressing tables and do you know that you can also get your &cnooi bupplies at the same olace Ask to see the University of Ne braska Belts and Compacts Remember, you'll find all this and more too, at GEORGE'S, 1213 N Street" Adv. Miss Dorah L. BurneU, who re ceived her master's degree in chem istry in 1925, and during the past year has been assistant instructor in the department of chemistry, has been appointed, professor of chemis try at Houghton College, Houghton, N. Y. Sww tfcat rvaa wack over ana scaool te wIJ starte U ia an and ancsaias. I I It is 1 I laaH it aaadlaas to I ! X aaeatian taat w W J myiaatf. ?.JU... l"'Ji.JW:" F ..BHinqa" Although registration figures for tbe Military Department are not com plete, a brief check shows that con siderably more than the fifteen hun dred students of last year are sched uled to don the khaki uniforms of tbe University R. O. T. C. Only two changes in the personnel of the department have taken place over the summer. Capt Russell Skin ner will take the place of Captain Ira Hunt DeVaajika Her. Serg. Earl De Vaughn will replace Serg. Stanley Grzegorzewski. who has been transferred to Fort Crook. Serg. De Vaughn comes from Council Bluffs, Iowa, high school. He will assist in the class work and will also work in the office of the department 1 When the usual number of regis trants have been dropped from the! rod thru physical disabilities an similar reasons, it is expected that the number of men actually takinr the training will exceed the number who drilled during the past school year. If you want to Get to School on Time get one of Hallett Strap Watches Good looking and accurate $10 to $50 HALLETT University Jeweler Estab. 1871 117-119 So. 12. An enlarged photograph of Dean W. A. Seavey has been presented to the College of Law and will be placed in the law library. The pic ture, tinted and framed, was pur chased by the student of the colleg when Dean Seavey left for the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, where be teaches this fall, Welcome Students We are frank to say, business is better when you are here. It is our ambition to make your purchase of Student Suppliess less of a burden at'our store. Remember C. Edison Miller before bsyiag 21S N. 12th oyal Note Book One Piece Leather Large Pocket in Cover Cover opens on metal hinge Nebraska Seal on Cover $3.93 Co-Op Book Store 1229 R St. East of Temple Building Save tout Co-op Coupon $5.09 worth good for 25c in trade THE Serenades Playing Antelope Park 8:30 to 11:20 Every Nit c until October Fifteenth