THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Ntbnuki OFFICIAL PtlHMCATION 1TNIVKRSITY OF NMIRAKKA Under Iireclloa of tha Student Publication Board Published Tueadar. Wadnaaday. Thura day, r'rlday and Sunday Biorniiuca durinc tha acadaama yaar. Editorial Offloaa Unlwalty Hall 4. rlitainaaa OMcva Waat aland of Stadium, (intra Hour Aftarnootia with tha aicep lion of Friday and Sunday. TaUphowa Kdltorlal: Bfil. No. 141; Hualnaaai Vflnvl, No. 77: Mailt, KS2. Entrrad as aaoond-clan mattar at tha poatuftica In Lincoln. Nebraaka. under art of Congraaa, March S. 1879, and at apaeial art of October I. 117, authnriaed January rata of ooatave provided for in Section 1108, to, 1H28. 'SUBSCRIPTION KATK 12 a year 1.24 a Single Copy, I ernta. emeiter EDITORIAL STAFF Victor T. Hackler Editor William Cejnar.... .. Managing Kdltor Arthur Sweat ......Aaa't Manag-ina; Kditor Lea Vance. Aaa't Managing Kditor NEWS KDIT0K3 Horace W. Gomon Neola Skala Fred R. Zimmer , ASSISTANT Nk'WS EDITORS Georre A. Hralcy Ruth Palmer Kenneth R. Randall BUSINESS STAFF T. Slmpaon Morton .Huainaa Manager Richard F. Vetta Aaa't Buainea Manager Milton McCrew Circulation Manager VARSITY DANCES The first general University danc ing party in the new Coliseum will be held Saturday night, according to a recent announcement of the party committee. The parties this year are to be called "Varsity Dances." One dance seems a relatively un important matter in the minds of most of us but this party Saturday night does hold a real significance and will be watched anxiously and hopefully by those who have studied the social conditions at this Univer sity. The dance Saturday night will un doubtedly be the crisis. It will then be seen whether or not Nebraska is forever to be cursed with the social of the rut it has got into in the li'St few years. We cannot urge too much that in dividuals and organizations take ad vantage of this opportunity to break the old system. Every student who possibly can should go. Evrey organi zation should refrain from having parties that night so that iU mem bers may attend. There is no reason why Varsity dances should not be a success here. We now have facilities to accomo date the student body. The commit tee has been working hard and the arrangements are complete. It is now up to the student body whether or not the dances will be a success. THESE TERRIBLE STUDENTS. Some student of theology in a small eastern college has published an attack on co-edueation as respon sible for the bad bad morals of col lege students and become famous over night. This young gentleman has receiv ed as much front page publicity in the last few days as "Red" Grange ever did even at the height of his highly press-agented career. Our young theology student has certainly gone about it in the right way, that is if he is looking for pub licity and there seems to be little doubt that he is. If there is anything the public loves to read it is an article about someone else s bad morals. That in itself is something to be cherished with many nods of the head and "OhY and "Ah's." But if the pos sessors of the morals in question are university students, the interest grows amazingly and the "Oh's" and "Ah's" become "I told you so" and 'Just as I thought." We'll put in a newspaper with a The University of Nebraska Official Daily Bulletin VOL. n. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 11)26. NO. 3 Xi D.lta. Xi Delta meeting, Tuesday even ing at 7 o'clock in Ellen Smith Hall. Clatiict Department. The classics department which had offices and class rooms at 825 North Fourteenth street, will occupy a tem porary classroom structure in the rear or the uerman department building. Student Council. The first meeting this year of the Student Council will be held Wed nesday at five o'clock in Temple 204. Iron Sphins. The Iron Sphinx will meet Tues day evening at 7:15 nt the Sigma Nu house. Lost. Awgwan subscription books num bers 2, 5, C, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11. Also books numbers 14, 29, CO, 164. Awgwan Application!. Applications for positions on the editorial staff of the Awgwan will be received in the basement of U Hall all week, from four-thirty to five o'clock. Contributors are requested to begin turning in copy for the "Kickoff Number" to be distributed October 9. Copy cannot be received later than September 28. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet will meet Wednesday, September 22, at 6:00 o'clock, in the Y. M. C. A. office. General plans of the year will be taken up. Especially detailed plans for group discussion groups. Commercial Club Meeting. Commercial Club meeting, Sep tember 21, in the Commercial Club rooms in Social Science building. Plans for the coming initiation will be laid definitely. Sandhill Pictures Are Taken During Summer The conservation and survey di vision took 600 large still pictures and 3,000 feet of motion pictures of the sandhills region this summer. The pictures show all topographical details, resources, and agricultural and general development. The pur pose of the picture is to place en larged Nebraska Views in schools, churches, banks, railway stations and publications throughout the state in place of views from other states and forpign countries. The pictures are also expected to become of some historical interest as time goes on and the sandhill region changes its character with the in creased and better cultivation going on all the time. The region is now much different from what it was fifty years ago. The pictures include set of illustrations of an orchard near Ainsworth where every kind of fruit from strawberries to cherries and apples has been raised success full;. Y. W. C. A in Group Bible Study Courses The Y. W. C. A. plans to offer a number of Bible study discussion groups this year. One of these is to be a special group of soDhomore and junior girls, who are willing to study the synoptic gospels throughout the year in preparation for the leader ship of groups next year. The hours ror these groups will be arranged to suit the convenience of those desir ing to enter them. Girls who are in terested in these groups are urged to come into Miss Apnelbv's office and talk the mutter over. j Young: People Study Prohibition Problem More than ten thousand young people in the Methodist Episcopal church will study the alcohol prob lem this year. The Board of Educa tion of the church, in cooperation with thn Board of Temperance, has issued a text-book of elective lessons to be used in the Sunday schools of Methodism and classes are being or ganized for study. A large collection of documents concerning the lubor movement in America has been made by the Uni versity of Wisconsin. system which has prevailed here in jblaring headline about a college stu 4-1 a- A, ll aVl A. A i A. 1 1 1 1 iAnfo' A I a-i 1-1 m fm nainwtn T- f t rs nii the past. At that time it will be de cided whether or not a good healthy democratic social condition can exist here. A more undemocratic social insti tution than the Nebraska of the past could hardly be imagined. We have had no large dances attended by the entire student body. The University mixers have been generally recog nized as failures. Comparatively few students have attended (partly due to the lack of room, of course) and the proper spirit has been sorely lacking. Members of Greek letter organiza tions have ordinarily kept to them selves, inviting each other to their parties and usually having few out siders. In the past, it has been the custom for the gentlemen and their companions to dance the entire eve ning together. There has been very little mixing around, meeting and dancing with other students at the parties. These, then, are the social condi tions at Nebraska as they have ex isted in the past few years. It is these conditions which we hope will be changed with the inauguration of the Varsity dances Saturday night If the Varsity dances can be oper ated as they are in many other uni versities so that everyone attends on an equal with everyone else, then it will be time to Hip Hip Hurray for Nebraska will have pulled itself out dents' drinking pajama party to one featuring a boxing match or a double murder or an oil scandal any day It just can't be beat. so we congratulate our young theology friend. He has made the front page of nearly every large daily newspaper in the country and that is more than 99 percent of us ever do. Yes, his future is assured. He wjll now probably get to write ior Mr. Aiencicen and other maga zines of the "Mercury" type and he might even get to go into the mov ies. Red Grange did. Morrill Hall Will Serve Many Uses (Continued from Page 1.) hibit has been in the process of as semblage since 1893 and is acceded to be the largest and most varied col lection of probascideans in America but previously there has been no building on the Nebraska campus adequate for its display. Each ele phant skeleton will be displayed with a mural painting background a life size portrait of the creature in bas- relief. The corridor of the first floor. twenty feet wide, running the length of the building and across both ends will be lined with deej wall cases of attractive material from the museum. Artificial light will be used in the exhibition rooms of the Museum to that the intensity, color and direction of light may be controlled. The main lecture room, with a seating capacity of 300, will be used for classes and Sunday afternoon lec tures. There will also be several ample class rooms and laboratories with modern equipment. The permanent art display will line the corridor of the second floor, 200 feet long, and the third floor corridor will be occupied by statues and paintings. Two ort galleries open off the second floor corridor and will be used by the orchestras, band and chorus. The remainder of the second floor is given over to class, music, and reception rooms. The third floor will be used for art classes. Pictures which are taken of every stage in the construction of Morrill Hall, are sent to Mr. Morrill who plans to come to Lincoln early in October to inspect the building, and. to view the additions to the Morrill collection purchased with a part of the $40,000 donated by him for that purpose. Swenk Fights Againit Hettian Fly. Myron H. Swenk, state entomolo gist, has announced a schedule for seeding winter wheat this fall in the various counties by groups to avoid infestation by the Hessian fly. Mitt Waite to Iowa School. Miss Alice Waite, assistant in the department of romance languages, has accepted a position next year in the department of romance lan guages of Junior College, Webster City, la. She has been an assistant in the University two years. CLASSICS DEPARTMENT MOVES TO 1228 R ST. The classics department, which had offices and classrooms at 325 North 14 St. after being forced out of University Hall last year, will oc cupy a temporary class-room struc ture to the rear of the building at 1228 R street which houses the de partment of Germanic languages arn u n ii ljt- WW Mi pfcourse but use the Remington Portable too I SMART WE AS) U WOMEN V 1121-12240 STPCET STUDENT SUPPLIES C. Edison Miller BEFORE BUYING 218 No. 12th YOU can't get through college without U9ing your head, but you can lighten the drudgery of writing long reports and theses by using a Remington Portable, This handy typewriter is "made to order" for students. It is the lightest, most compact, simplest to operate, and GDOSt dependable of portables. Has four-row standard keyboard. Weighs only &tt pound3, net. You can tack It away in drawer when not needed tha carrying case is only 4 Inches high. Can be bought for $10 down and $S monthly. Well be glad to tell you more about it if you 11 let us. The Recognized header in Sale and Popularity Collefe Book Store, 1135 R St. Lincoln. Nebr. Retninrton Typew4iter Com. rany. Room 101, Bankera Life na. Bld., Cor N aV 41b Sta. Lincoln, Nebr. Royal Note Book One Piece Leather Large Pocket in Cover Cover opens on metal hinge Nebraska Seal on Cover $3.95 Co-Op Book Store 1229 R St. East of Temple Building Save your Co-op Coupons $5.00 worth good for 25c in trade iff'?!'!!!! !'!!!!HH!H!H'!f'!!!!!l!!nHHllM!l!IH!llllll!ll!!!!ll!lHlinilllllll!l!lllllliii!iiiiiiMiiiav.f.iiiiiiiiiiiii. i7 7 A at a n aa. University ox Nebraska Stude Where the Football Tickets are Sold nts 1118 O Street Supplies Otaiiy and Zoology Engineers-Architects Sets of Finest Quality Students Leather Brief Cases Laundry Cases Art Students Supplies Latsch Brothers filr This Store is the logical place to buy your drawing intsruments. Our busi ness is largely supplies for pro fessional men and we under stand their requirements The Richter-Dietzgen Posts sets which we sell will serve both school and professional life AND THE PRICE IS RIGHT Latsch Bros. 1118 O Street Large Assortment of Shaffer's and Waterman's School Pens from $1.00 and Up TT LAW STUDENTS We have a special "Nebraska Law Book" Be sure to see this new book 1118 O Street Greenback CREENEDGE Greenedge History Paper NOTE THESE POINTS High Plate Finish It's Boxed. Round Corners-Writing does not show througt Green Edges Drilled Holes. TT History Covers S 1TEEL CONSTRUCTION t! OF STEEL Will last an entire College Course Heavy Canvas three colors Flexible Imitation leather cover Genuine Brown and Black leather $1.00 and Up Lacsch Brothers CREENBACK 1118 0. St. W4t"Ua il-iiVUiUil'CJi Lincoln. Largest Supply Store I ! '""" . .ttm,,.,.m, : :