The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 19, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
THE DAILY NEBRASKA M
The Daily Nebrasjcan
Station A, Lincoln. Nabraaka
OKKICIAI, rilHI.H'ATION
UNIVEILSHY OK NKI1RASKA
Under Ulrtctlun or lha Rtudent l'ubllcatlon
Hoard
1'ubllihxl Tuaailay, Weilnaaitay, Thurtday
Friday and Sunday mornmid during tha
aradwmio yaar.
Killtorlal Ofllran 1 1niveralty Hall 4.
Ilualnaxa 0..lrt Wt atanrf of Hladlum.
tltflre Mourn AfUrnimna with tha axcep.
tlon of Friday and Hunday.
Trlai'honoa Kdltorlal: HA91, No. 142:
Uuanlaaat W1H91, No. 77; Nmht, Hem.
Entered aa aacond-rlaaa ntaltar at tha
pORtofflra In Lincoln, Nchraaka, undar art
of Conicraaa, March H, 117U, and at apodal
rat of pnataita provlilnl for (n Hcctlon 1101,
act of October S, 1V17, author. il January
20, 122.
numbori in dcntlned, through the
numerous and obvious opportunltlor
it offers, to nter this form of
union."
BUIISCHII'TIUN KATK
12 a year 1 25 a lemcater
fllnirle Copy, t ccnta.
F.OI'I'OKIAL 8TAKK
Victor T. Haiklor .....Editor
William Ccjnar...... Munaulnir Filllor
Arthur fiwect Aaa't Manaulnir Kdltor
Lea Vane Aa't Mumming Editor
NEWS EDITOUH
Horace W. Umon Ncola Skala
Krrrt R. 7.imnipr
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS
Grarva A. Ilcalcy Huth J'almer
Kenneth R. Ramlnll
CONTKIIIUTINO EDITORS
Kllaworth DuTeaii Robert Laach
Mary I.nulne Freeman Dwluht Mct'ormank
Oerald (iriffin Arthur Mwect
Ellce llolovtchlner I.re Vance
IH'SINKSS STAFF
T. flimpann Morton Iluainraa Manairer
Richard F. Vetta....Aaa't lliisinraa Manauer
Milton Mi't.n-w Circulation Manauer
William Kearna Circulation Manauer
ON CITIZENSHIP
With but Ave moro dnys left In
which voters mny rcKinter, an npponl
to students to mnke tho preparations
noecHsary to votlnp; is timely. Tho
lust day of reifiBtrntion will bo Sat
urdny. University students are destined In
time to becomo the loaders of their
communities. They will be, or should
bo, loaders In governmental alTairs.
In order to fulfill these, duties pro
perly they should begin now to take
part In civic affairs, to keep poHted
on the candidates and tho issues be
fore tho public, and to vote every
time they get a chance.
University students and "jnduates,
above nil people, should always take
advantarre of every opportunity tc
The University of Nebraska
Official Daily Bulletin
VOL. II.
TUKSDAY, OCTOUKR 10, 1920.
NO. 2.1
Awf wan Contributions
Contributions to the Aw(rwan are
now being received at tho office In
tho basement of U Hall. Tho next
issue will bo called the "War Num
ber", to bo distributed Armistice
Dny. Copy will bo received until Oct
ober 29. Contributors are invited to
look over tho exchango magazines In
the office for idem.
Rummage Sal
Fleaso bring all contributions to
tho Y. W. C. A rumriua'j sr.le to
Ellen Smith Hall before Thursday
evening, October 21.
Iron Sphinx
There will be on Iron Sphinx meet
have a voice in the government ofjing tonight, Oct. 19, at 7:15 at tho
the community. It will be jwHsililo for phi Delta Thetn house. Complete ar
thone students who nro of ngo to use i rnngoments ft) rtho Barbecue will bt
their vote In the coming November announced. It will bo very imnortan'
Sophomore Track Managers
More sophomore track managers
are needed. All Interested in .trying
out for sophomore track managers
should report any afternoon to the
Junior managers, Justin Somerville
and Robert DuDols at tho Stadium.
Homo Eo Club
Homo Economics club will meet
Tuesday, October 19, at 7 o'clock at
Ellen Smith Hall.
Green Goblin Meeting
Green Goblin meeting at 7:00
tho way. And in those It Is not always
an essential Ingredient, but in this
respect is it an Aladdin's lamp that
may help to light tho way.
One Year Ago
Chl Delta Phi, national literary or
ganization, wontho annual efficiency
award, a loving cup to tho chapter
having tho best record for tho year
of 1924-25.
Tho department of geology re
ceivod on exchange collection of min
erals from Toledo, Ohio, which in
cludes specimens of blue celcstltc,
gray lepidolite, pink beryl and dark
fluorite with celestite. Samples of
o'clock Tuesday evening October 19 gem sapphire mined In Montana was
at tho Thi Gamma Delta house, 1339 i80 received from tho New Mine
South 19th Street. It is important
that each Green Goblin bo present.
Annual Barbecue
Tho annual barbecue of tho A. I.
Snpphiro Syndicate of Montana.
A.. L. Bracer sent a largo number
of fossils to the department of goo-
lrtn u It in It ti'nrA nrnntnA f rnrrt 4-Via
E. E. will bo held nt tho Agricultural v,n,v n --.,.--.
elections if they will but register
now.
Those Btudents who nr of nge,
who hove not regis! erod in any other
city, and who consider Lincoln their
college campus Friday, October 22
A. I. E. E. Meeting
There will bo an A. I. E. E. mcet-
a a meeting of Corn Thursday, October 21, at 7:30
ill field nt 5 T. M. nt E- E- 10-- Talks on summer jobs.
for every Sphinx to be there
Corn Coba
There v '
Cobs on
iana.
Iu1..iw,i T in inort ht .
iKiiiu ' ut...i. iiiuut'r i f. i.'.u. iana miter iiHaia
COLLEGE AND BUSINESS permanent residence arc permitted jVcry importnnt that nil members Important meeting of the Tassels
The college man's place in busi-jto vote. Since the students live herelhoull, ,)0 thprp Nl0(, m)t wpnr 0()8. : TucS(ny at 7:15 at Ellen Smith Hall.
ness has been the subject oi much J m Jounns oi uie untf, im-y in.iy tunics. All members wishing to go to
discussion recently. Tho writers ; establish their permanent residence
usually give very Impressing figures hl'ro h ""''V 8tnt'-r ,M'' W,H
telling how much tho high school I to 1 f0- , , , . t
i. .u ,, i, : on I Students should take an interest
I (111 U.I l u villus t'jr HIO 111. iv iiv m
Kansas must bo there on time.
Military Carnival
Math Club
The first meeting of the Mathe
matics Club will be held Thursday,
Two Years Ago .
Lift Ban on Curling Irons
Curly hair will again be seen on
the campus at Ohio Weslcyan Uni
versity since curling; irons are now
allowed in tho halls. The curling
have been condemned by the dean of
unngerous weapon (nc(
women as
1853.
or 40 or 50 and how much more he
wntil.l hni'n nnrmii t lift rtml crnnn '
n - . j - ..:f;est to them. They should follow the
W V VllVV (4 II KM a7-V7 XVI1VI I'llH'l
in every election and vote. This time I
especially, the issues will be of inter-
urge college students to choose their
life work before leaving college, ex
plaining that if this is not done the
first five years are wasted in settling
down.
All of this is more or less true, at'0p(,n every dav
least we have been told that same nrid in the even
thing so much that we accept it as!0'clock
true. Quite different from the usual
treatment is an article by A. W.
Armstrong entitled "Are College
Men Wanted?" in the Atlantic
Monthly. In his article, Mr. Arm
strong tells what Big Business finds yae
discussions closely and assert their
right to vote when the time comes.
An executive meeting or nil com- October 21 at 7:30 in SS311. Offl
mutee eiiairmen for the .Military Car- cers for tho first semester will be
nival will be held this afternoon at Iclocted. All members are urged to
5 o'clock in Nebraska Hall 205. 'attend.
greater nr.ifieioncv in nnmn snoeinl- tlm .il,:t v.. i r n.
This can only be done, however, by ize(1 flehl nnd thc 8omowhnt visionary lions of others. Then there was the
those who have taken the tune to i(,(ns of the inc,.c,s0(j enrnin(? cnpa. L npprcciation of IoisurfLpisure
register this week. citv nttendant upon such a traininir. 'in trhirh i. i
Tl,. .... l 1, r;i.. ITo 1 ...... . . ... .. . " ! i'""c it ii mill
1 liu tiniiu.1 in vn linn
, n J "in I P"'Phntically college education 'self or with the thoughts of authors,
this yek until 4 .30 p0me:hinK to even the mostW in which he mnv seek n closer re-
ings from , until 9 pil!!sivoy.m,ri,t.(1 ftent. oftcn it,,ationshi with thoso
nas been sai.l that the sun rarely sets -he is daily associated with only in the
WALTFR PAMP MFMORIAL T " . 1 n"S " , SCen ?ome mmon lecture room. An npprecia-
WALTER CAMP MEMORIAL chnnfre ln n pcrs0n-nnd of whom tion of leisure is In -v. mnrlr
A half century ago, Walter Camp .should that be more true than o' the j of culturc-it affords you an oppor
then a youth of seventeen years, young mind being exposed to a mo-jtunity to climb to the "Belvedere
played his first game of football ardicum of culture and learning? windows" of your tower and see, as
Yale University, and incidentally I Some thrcn thonsnrwl
l.ntin,, in nnn- onotoo ,i L , ..... . . " .... V u"' otl venson , mat oencain nil 1110
V" ""-jtooK pan m tne nrst game ot KugDy;navo now compleu d ihn.r fu st two j "pother" of life there was "much
what college graduates find lacking football played in the United States, weeks at this university and we Won-'green and peaceful landscine- mnnv
in Big Business. since thcn, through the flfty yPnrs dor whnt clmnfres hnve ta);on , jfire,it , p people bughing
The main fau t which . Bxg Bus,- 0f intercollegiate football, there has f in their.minds. in that period of time drinking and taking love as they dk
ness has to find with the college heen no greater supporter of the with regard to the ouestion of whatknfw vns . . L I
e.ouuotc, oii.ui uuiK w ' "i-( sport in America tnan alter iomp. mey expected o their college There
strong, is his overweening desire toHe supported the game from thcon be no doubt t'.at many have ex
be advanced faster than his own time it was .beginning to take root !perienced some iaJicr.l change In
iiotrflmnmanr Onn tha ovirrnnnoa Af in JX morijio of a timo iViiin ml aa k. n.V.4. V.. . 1 i 1
. " T"" " , " . . vu.ic n.uuKov now, unu i..r-rnr.ps some sensitiveness to the beauty there i
. ....v. -& vv niiv:i.ciiiMj5 iu ic i ) cAis .nave come 10 realize, n tfey naa not
ate often feels that his years of study jtence by debating whether to take it 'already done so before r atriculation,
should advance him rapidly; he is out of colleges or not until it grew i that it is not what the c llcgo does to
Revolution, and the old shepherd tell
mg his tale under the hawthorn."
And growing out of this latter is a
Grace Abbott, chief of tho Child
ren's Bureau of the United States Do
pnrtment of Labor, who attended tho
University in 1902-1903, addressed
tho Nebraska Conference on Social
Work.
Grace Scermahorn, former super-
mitendent of tho Home Economics de
portment of the New York City pub
lie schools and a member of the
Child Health Association, of Wash
ington, D. C, spoke before an au
dience of over 800 girls in the Social
Science Auditorium on, "Health of
tho College Girls."
Wendell Berge, '25, spoko at the
Democratic meeting at which William
Jennings Bryan was the principal
speaker. Mr. Berge was president of
tho Innocents and represented the
University in inter-collegiate debate
for three years.
Winter
Coats
For Dress
and
Sportwear
6950
HoTlandSwanson.
X L1r,l.HsTErvEM
often in debt or engaged or both
and is anxious to get "in the big
money."
In speaking of this desire to get
to be a permanent institution.
a person that counts so n uch as what
ahead,- Mr. Armstrong says, "How-:pearance until his death.
Walter Camp was a member of the the individual does to tho college and
National Football Rules committee 'the things it has to oiTer him.
from the time the group made its ap- We have often f eit thai; too waiy
in small things and the development
ot personal sense and standard of
values.
As one rushes through life unthink
ing, from one "assignment," to an
other, taking no time to himself, he
loses much of what he has set out to
; people maintain a passive attitude to- gain. When one pauses to consider
ever brutal the college man regards; Football lovers have not failed tolward their educafion, that the ex-Changing tree all vellow nH o-nlHon
ric me passing oi one oi America s ( pect to be able to s.t back in their I in the sun, against an autumn skv or
it, I believe the best bit of counsel mark
a i a m 1 1 ..- J 1.1 11 L rr1 !.! 1 a , a
tnat can De given mm is to iorget ior must, luveu juuiuuu supporters, i nr jciassroom cnairs ana ti'nt Dy some
his first five years in business that i Vale-Harvard classic will be a Walter, mystical process the professor will
there is such a word in his vocabu-iCamp Day game, and a part of the 'mutter words of incantation and in
" lary as "executive". His failure to proceeds of the game will go to r i the course of four years they will be
use the ternf will not defeat any'und to create a memorial for himcome what the world chooses lo call
secret hopes; and certainly in no jTne Missouri Valley Conference, The educated and cultured. Knowledge is
other one way does he so prejudice jil? Ten, The Southern Conference not an Aladdin's lamp to burn for
his case as when he talks, and often jand hundreds of small colleges ir .ever without replenishment nor does
with the utmost ssng-foid, of an ex- nearly every state in the union are : it have at its command any genii Tho.
ecutive position for himself, talks J'nea m tne project. ,Dy a dint oi rubbing, will appear and
of it as a certainty, and to business! Nebraska Join n the Memoria'
superiors who may not yet have de-;on November 6, the day of the Kan
tminflri wWhr tfenv wi-.h tn retain S8S AP&e f reshman-Husker freshman
him even in a minor capacity." jme in Nebraska Memorial Stadium, i that ancient mathematician, but it is
Big Business also finds fault with Accord'n to P,ans now' a Pt the truth which is easily lost sight of
tfc mannpra nt collet c-raduatps. Lrroceeds of the ame wi to the in our modern system. There are too
.pIvp. nnrl of their! " flmP memorial tUTld. Th
sun, against an autumn sky or
stops to look upon the face of a
lighted city reflected in the shifting
surface of a river ly night and
feels the beauty in these, then he is
approaching an attitude of mind
which would go far in making pos
sible some of those thing3 to which
a college education can only point
do whatever the owner may demand. !
All this may seem but a roundabout '
way of saying what was obvious to '
ja fitting and proper tribute to the
"Grand Old Man" of football.
College Press
"WHAT IS ALL THE POTHER
ABOUT?"
(Minnesota Daily)
We were taikiiig to a freshman the
Being sure of themselves and of their
abilities, they often take little note
of the feelings of others and of the
customs which prevail in the office.
College graduates, on the other
hand, find much fault with Big Busi
ness. "The first jolt the college man
receives is when he finds he is no
longer in college. During his college
career he has considered himself a
rather free individual, standing on
his own feet. The truth is, he has
been tied to strong leading strings.
Cut loose from them, he flounders
. , .. ,, . . . that is not, tj say the least, a subject
great chaotic world of business, as- ,, J . . J.
m- .. 4.x. t i j- ivery new nor very interesting, but
" . ." 8 :. ,, I in it can be found expressed a defi
J . .... n)te attitu(Jc whioh. exists toward
ine college man must, unu, auuncr . i-f
t w .:... !.',1i.,1.iJ,ll?,ie! f JtK.n. r.veryone going to
Vl ,:B school expects an education to "do"
nessiiKe accoroing to Mr. a,..,, f .h,m ugua.
He has been led to believe that great that expeta(;0. ,akeg the fom of
DUSiness organizations proceeu al
most invariably by well-thought out
policies, by virtually error-proof
methods, from triumph to triumph,
instead of, as in fact, muddling along
with one flash of insight and then
another to carry them through their
welter of waste-and costly, if well-
covered-up, mistakes. '
The college graduate usually finds
his work too easy for him. The start
ing business schedule is so light in
comparison with the work previously
expected of him that the college man
often becomes restive. Another thing
which often disturbs him is the dis
loyalty which he finds in business
The talk of how little chance for ad
vancement there is in that particular
concern and in that business is us
ually contrary to the ideals which he
has had.
So Big Business tir..i fault with
the college graduate just as the grad
uate finds fault with Big Business.
It is Mr. Armstrong's hope that the
two will see the need of each other
and will come in time to a more
happy union. He says:
"To cry for bright high-school boys
to meet the needs of Big Business for
future leaders is to cry for the moon.
Whether it wants him or not, there
is no alternative, Big Business must
content itself with the college man;
a-'J, whether half-heartedly or no,
the college man in ever-increasing
many whose ideas of reading is an
assignment, whose limit of thought if
as sketchy as an outline and whosr
concept of beauty is more narrow
than either of these.
As we hazarded our life in cross
ing the rush of automotive traffic
that roars along our University ave
nue we were turning . over in our
mind the things which a college would
never do for a person unless he re
alized what he was about himself
j other diy who had been assigned to CnleI amng these we felt was intel
i write a theme on tiwf subject "What lectual independence, to learn to
I Expect CoHerre to Do for Me " Now I Ior one 8 sen tempered all
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Pay on our
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LINCOLN. NEB.
New
Nebraska Uni
Stationery
See it at
Graves
3 doors south of Temple
Helen Wills Ii Honor Student
Helen Wills, former national ten
nis champion, is among the 358 jun
ior honor students nt the University
of California. This is the second time
that she has been in the honor roll.
She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
That formal gown is just the thing
to wear for a nice large Townsend
Portrait. Could there be anything
finer for the home folks Christmas?
Sit now and have it delivered in
December. Adv.
FREE
Introductory Offer
While They Last v
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143 North 12th.
Formerly Ledwich's
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Why not
a vaudeville manager
for "faculty adviser"?
VTOBODY understands the principle of a bal
anced program better than the manager of a
vaudeville house. , ,
That's a thought to you men now making out
your study programs. Balance the chemistry
wiin ji,ngnsn literature; balance your calculus
with economics.
It all gets down to the fact that in industry
today, electrical communication included, you
will find men well grounded in their specialty but
broad in human sympathies men of the "all
around' 'Jype'who can shoulder big responsibility
in a b'g organization.
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