THE DAILY NEBRASKAN . The Daily Nebraskan Station A. Llneoln. Nebra alia . DFriCIAL PlIPLICATION UNIVEKSITY OR NKHRAPKA Under direction of the Btudent Publication Board TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR Published Tueadar. Wedneidar. Thurdr. Friday, nd Sundar mornlnie during- the acad.mla year. Editorial Office UnNeralty Hall 4. Huaineee Offlea Wt aland of Stadium. . Oltlc. Houri Editorial Staff. 1:00 to f:00 except Friday and Sunday. Uueineee Stalfi afternoone axc.pt Friday and Sunday. T.l.phon. Kdttori.h B68l. No. Ml Buelneeai B6M1. No. 77! Mmni odkoi. Ent.r.d aa aecond-cla.e matter at the P?" .L' n Nebraska, und.r act of Congw.e. March .', V '!' rat. of potae proylded for In eectlon UOJ, act of October I. 1917. authoriaad January lO. 12. ft yaar. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Slniila Copy 6 eanta S1.25 Mmnttr WILLIAM CEJNAR - Laa Vanca Arthur Sweet Moraea W. Gomon Ruth Palmar NKWS EDITORS Dwlsht McCormack ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Managing Editor Aaat. Managing Editor Aaat. Managing Oacar Norllnf Florence S.lb.rt Gerald Griffin T. SIMPSON MORTON Richard F. Vatta Milton McGrew William Kearna .. .. BUSINESS MANAGER Aaat. Buaineae Manager Circulation Manager Circulation Manager SUNDAY. FEBRUARY to. 9t TEN CENTS EACH Two years ago the state legislature appropriated money for a new hospital building for the medical college at Omaha. University authorities had plned to equip this building with modern hospital fixtures, beds, and other items out of current maintenance fund's. The governor slashed this part of the budget so low that it will be impossible to equip the nearly i,i k,,iMino nnf. nf these funds. CUIIIflCLCU ' - - Faced with the prospect of allowing a brand-new building to lie idle for two years for lac or money to equip it, the University is backing a bin wnicn wouia appropriate $125,000 for the needed equipment. The proposition comes down to a question of good business judgment. The state of Nebraska has several hundred thousand dollars invested in a splendid medical college. It 1ms probably more than that invested in a high class stu dent body and a superior faculty. The new hospital addition was intended to provide these students and faculty members with badly needed hospital facilities : f mBk rmfwible still better and more varied medical training. $250,000 has been invested in the new building. Some more money is now needed to mane that building usable. The health of the state is in great measure in the hands of competent medical men trained at the state medical college. Any investment by the people in that plant yields a never-ending return, not only in good doctors and physicians but in the mere presence of an organized scientific plant where unsolved diseases may be studied and cures perhaps discovered. Probably no other college of the University has a faculty and stu dent body so dead in earnest and so devoted to the ideals of the profession it represents. So much for the intangible returns from the med ical college and the hospital which is run in connection with it. While the hospital is primarily for use as a lab oratory under the ever-present direction of the best men in the profession, the fact must not be disregarded that it is also in large measure a state institution serv ing in a field for which there are no facilities in many parts of the state. As Dean J. Jay Keegan has described it, the hos pital "is in reality a State Hospital of the highest type, rendering a service to the entire state worth over three quarters of a million dollars annually. It is operated day and night, Sundays, holidays and through the sum mer months when the college is not in session." Patients treated in the hospital come from prac tically all parts of the state. Many have to be refused at present because there is not enough room. The pres ent facilities are overloaded to such an extent that often there is not room enough for emergency cases. The people served are in great part those who could not afford to pay the regular private fees, and who would become public charges. Dean Keegan is par ticularly insistent, however, that the hospital is not a charity institution. Every patient is asked to pay a reasonable sum, as his means permit both for the sake of the state which should not be forced to donate everything, and for the sake of the self-respect of the patients themselves. The fees charged are for main tenance of the hospital alone, for food and laundry. The medical service is given free by the physicians and surgeons who make up the faculty of the college. In a total proposed appropriation of nearly 12 million for all departments of the state, the sum of $125,000 for this invaluable service is almost a neg ligible proportion of the whole. It amounts in fact to less than 10 cents each for every man and woman in the state. It will be thrifty judgment on the part of the legislature if this bill is passed. cessive worry over one thing or other, with plenty of time'in which to do that worrying. The college student is ordinarily so busy with his echool work, his activities, his athletics, his dating, and his general love of life that he doesn't have much time for morbid thoughts of self-destruction. All in all, college is probably the safest place in the world for the one with any tendencies at all toward self-murder. The flood of Farmers' Fair committees has at last subsided. They must have worn out the directory. NO GRAVEYARD HERE These are the days when the columns of The Daily Nebraskan contain frequent mention of elections honorary fraternities and societies of all manner and decree. The justification for existence of groups which set themselves up as superior to all who have not been elected to smell of the secret candelabrum, is probably debatable. Yet, a group, once organized, has a will to live which beats in tenacity that of any nine-lived cat that ever prowled this earth. Especially does an honorary tenaciously cling to life if there is an inherited deficit in the treasury of the bond. Most of them have a deficit. Since they have a harder time dying than a turtle and arc harder to kill than a two-horned rhinoceros, they will probably be with us forever. So we have the honoraries. More are born every year. None ever die. Notices All "Fewer and simpler" is "more and better." wiser party slogan than In Other Columns Professor Schramm of the geology department has had a lot of experience with fossils. Perhaps he can put tome life into the Interfraternity Council. TOO BUSY AND TOO HAPPY Nine college students within recent weeks have committed suicide. That this is an unusually large number of college suicides cramped into a short time is indicated by the wide-spread publicity in the press, and in the large number of editorial comments. The wave of svlf-destruction has prompted quite a number of sage editorials. Some of these editorials have been quite alarming in nature. Others have passed out philosophic advice plentifully mixed with heroic poetic feeling. A few have soberly reflected that the suicide rate amorg students in spite of this apparent increase may be about the same as in the population in general. None of the editors (as is often the wont of the editorial page) have bothered, it seems, to look up any actual statistics as basis for their judgment. The latest available figures given in the world almanac arc for 1923. At that .'me there were approx imately 725,000 students. The suicide rate per 100,000 population was 11.6. This would mean that among the 725,000 students there might be expected about 84 suicides. There are no figures to show actually how many there were. The figures for 1926 probably show a larger stu dent enrollment than in 1923. If the suicide rate at large remained about the same, it might be .afe to hazard an expectation of 100 student suicides, or about 8 a month. The record of 9 in four or five weeks, is evidently several times the normal number or so much attention would not be given the matter. It is safe to assume, then, that the average student sui ide rate is well un der the average rate of the general population. This assumption is probably all the more true when St is recollected that college life is in the great majority if esse the happiest, most thrilling, most wonderful, curio:ity-)atir.?j-irigr period of a person's life. The average suicide in probably the result of ex- Honor Sjratem One reads frequently now that the honor system has failed at another college or university. It seems that, as fine as the plan is in theory, it is not practical, Ohio State tried it several years ago and finally scrapped it. There seems to be something in the human make up that makes students want to get a good grade on examinations whether they do it honestly or not. This may or may not be a sad commentary on human nature, but is coming to be recognized as truth. Ohio Stata Lantern The Way of All Fle.h Somebody said that women would be better oc cupied if they would cease constructing traps and build a few cages. While this is undoubtedly a very pretty axiom, an empty cage was never worth much. Every woman is justified in setting traps. Her success in life usually hinges upon her catch. The funny part about it is that men usually like to get caught. A few see how many traps they can snap with out getting hurt, but most, when they feel the bite of the steel about their heart, sink down in blissful stolid ity. No one objects to a woman abbreviating her dress, both in length and in thickness, providing she does it to catch a husband. No one objects to marcels and make-up when it makes the woman easier to look at. The big kick comes in when co-eds commercialize their art in order to get better grades. Perhaps, to be fair to all, the university should employ only farsighted professors so that those in the back seats would stand an equal chance with those in the front row! Tha Daily Iowan 4 a. m. Dances For those who like to do things differently and delight in finding loopholes in rules and laws, we have a new suggestion. - It had its origin in Iowa at Drake University, did this plan. Rules there stipulate just how dances may be held and when they must end. All went well and the rules were obeyed strictly though perhaps some of the students did not like them. All went well until some student found a loop hole the rules for social functions prescribed very clearly just when these functions should end, but not one word was said about when they should begin. Accordingly one fraternity upset all traditions and gave a 4 a. m. breakfast dance. More than two hundred students and a few faculty members turned out for this event. And now Drake University is wondering just when the next morning dance will be held. It is possible that the same thing might be done on this campus, but the rules of the Council on Student Affairs, while prescribing no definite time at which social functions shall start, state that they must be held on Friday or Saturday night and the word "night" probably would stop any dance such as was put on at Drake University. Nevertheless, the scheme has its advantages. A morning dance would get students up early when no thing else would. They would be much fresher and peppier at a 4 a. m. dance than at one at 8 or 9 p. m. It would enable the dance orchestras to work two shifts and double their income, too. And, since part of the dance would be by daylight, it would save on electric bills. Notwithstanding all these advantages, we hardly expect to have a 4 a. m. dance announced in this ter ritory for some time. Ohio State Lantern MISCELLANEOUS . ..i!n Aun nhotot thou la make raaarvatlona at Campua Studio by nag; week to gat ratea of 14.00. Altar marcn ratea will ba 16.00 per group. P. K. O. ill P K n .i, .H.nia are reaueated to met Tueada. Feb. 22. at 4 P. m. in Social Science Hall. . , ,..ll...vt.ii Club R.nnn.t Grand Hotel. Monday, Feb. tl 1027, :S0 p. m. J,inlM .nj e.antm MlllU Junior and aenior managera of all aporta meet at cammin atudlo Monday ai itno for picture for Cornhuaker. Weekly Radio Talks Will Be Given (Continued from Page One.) an average, eifht or nine different kinds of work before he finally set ties down to his life occupation or profession. That young people may profit by the experience of men and women who have risen to prominence in their especial lines of activity and avoid as far as possible the necessity of trying bo many different kinds of work is the purpose of the series of talks, according to the committee s announcement. This series is frankly an innova tion in educational work, the an nouncement continues. "In no other states, so far as can be determined, has any agency undertaken to furnish for high school girls and boys such obviously necessary information. This adoption of radio for a slightly different phase of education al work is distinctly a forward step. It becomes possible for big business men, successful rarmers, eminent professional men, and leaders in all other lines of business and profes sional activity to speak directly and personally to this energetic, unseen audience of young people who will be the leaders of Nebraska in future years. This series of talks was arranged with the definite hope that the speak ers may bring facts and suggestions of the greatest possible value to the young people of the state, so that each one may choose a life work with the highest prospects for success and happiness. "It is the hope that this method of j education by example will enable our young people to think straight and to choose wisely the lines of work upon which they may enter happily and effectively. Then the great state of Nebraska can boast of a new citi zenship well prepared to assume the duties and responsibilities and to en joy the privileges that accrue to uccessful citizenship in a great com monwealth. It is with this larger dream that this project is most con fidently dedicated." Gayle C. Walker, acting director of the school of journalism of the University, is chairman of the group which arranged the series of talks, the committee on education of the junior division of the Lincoln cham ber of commerce. SENIOR LEADER TO BE ELEGTFD NEXT TUESDAY (Continued from Page One.) ures of this kind must be taken," declared Glenn Buck, chairman of the Student Council when interview ed by the Nebraskan reporter late Saturday evening, "but we feel, as a body, that in justice to students and to the student candidates in the race, every possible measure must be taken to do away with dishonesty. "A great deal of time will be spent on the formulation of rules for the spring election," he continued. "We hope to get in touch with other uni versities of the size of this institu tion and perhaps can obtain useful election methods from them. We sincerely hope that it will never be necessary for us to have to take such action as this again." Robert Stephens of University Place and Richard Brown of Hold- rege are the two candidates iinng for the position of senior class presi dent. Council members in charge of the election Tuesday will be: Eloise Mac Ahan. Sylvia Lewis, Ernestine Mc Neil, Emmerson Mead, Richard Vette Simpson Morton, Jim Jensen and Esther Zinnecker. of the Y. M. C. A., told of the sit uation aa It exista today in Chinu and of the interests of the Y. M. C A. there. Mr. Brockman has headed the association work in China for eighteen years. His address consisted of relating experiences in the or ient, telling of the present ruction in the country and of the work that the Y. M. C. A. had done there. Wade Reeves, of Omaha, was also on Fri day's program, giving a report of the World Conference at Helsingfors, Finland, last year. The convention was well attended by representatives from all over the state in evcy branch of Y. M. C. A work. The meeting place for next year ha not been decided upon. This matter i 'eft to the decision of ttlate council. J. Dean Rinyer, of Omaha a . k .tl a. was elecrei prcsiceni ox mis rieei ine. Mr Ringer is Postmaster at Omaha and a graduate of the Uni versity of Nebraska. Staemehip University The steamship university, whose campus is the entire globe, is proving successful. The university has formed an unrestricted honor system and complete student government which has proven quite successful. Study is graphically illustrated in travel. At all the tropical stops there are rich opportunities for plant study. The study of navigation goes on at all times, while the classes in astronomy are to be found at night peering into the tropical heavens. When the Ryn dam, the name given to this steam ship university, visits a port near which a university is located athletic contests are held between the land and the sea scholars. The Eteraal Feminine Girls seem bent en demonstrating that they can make good at robbing banks. Possibly it is true, as the protagonists of feminism insist, that a girl can do any thing that a boy can do. Still the experience of that South Dakota girl tends to confirm the impression that there is something in the feminine temperament which is a serious handicap to success in a bank robbing career. The South Dakota girl went at the job in a meth odical. business-like, bank-robbing manner. She first made an estimate of the situation and then adopted a plan of action, based on that estimate. She found that tools would be necessary and decided to get them in a way that would not only produce the tools but give her a little preliminary experience. So she robbed garage first. Arriving at the bank, she cut the tele phone wires as all good burglars do. Everything seemed to work out according to plan until she approached the final objective, that is the money. The enemy in the form of the vault put up a stubborn resistance. And she hadn't the ingenuity to cope with this unexpected emergency. Never having robbed a bank we don't know precisely what a man -vould have done under the same circumstances. In general we think he would have called up reserves or beat an orderly retreat. Not so this girl. She just went over and sat down on the stairs and cried. And there the night watchman found her. It wasn't the impregnability of the vault which proved her undoing. And it wasn't the vigilance of the night watchman. It was the eternal feminine. To this girl and to all others of a like mind we would suggest gold digging as much safer and much more suited to the feminine style. Tears are an asset in a divorce or breach of promise suit. In bank robbing they are a total loss. The World-Herald. Omaha Y.H.C.A. WORKERS REPORT ON MEETING the spring of the year. There were several other speakers of the evening who emphasized the fact that the Y. M. C. A. was a promoter of clean sports and athletics. Nicholle Main Speaker Friday morning Mr. Nicholls spoke again on the interrelation or the Boys', Young Men's, and Student De partments of the Y. M, C. A. He pointed out the fact that the work was not to help young men and boys, but so they could help themselves. Friday afternoon was well taken up with business matters and there were special conferences by groups. John Allison presided at these conferences and discussed the possibilities of stu dents doing community work with boys. A thorough plan was presented for doing work in cities in which there are associations and those in which there are not. At the closing banquet Friday night, Flecher S. Brockman, who is one of the international secretaries YOUNG MEN and YOUNG WOMEN Business is as old as the human race itself. Business training is nearly sixty years old. Busi ness training in the VAN SANT WAY is thirty-six years old. Education is a Partnership of Maturity and Youth, Exper ience and Inexperience. We have two of these. You have the other two. Invest those two, together with a small amount of money and a few weeks' time in a Van Sant Partnership and secure a return highly satisfactory to your parents and yourself. VAN SANT SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 205 So. 19th St. Omaha, Nebraska WEAK FLOR.SHEIMS AT ALL TfMES. The Walton You meet style in FLORSHEIMS You meet style when you get an introduc tion to Florsheim Shoes. They're miles above the commonplace. Whether it's for day or evening wear, Florsheim Shoes wiil dress your feet in attractive good taste. IO MAGEE'S The Home of Kuppenhelmer Good Cirri haa Courses Announced For Summer School (Continued from Page One.) pert in Rural Education in the South. His work in Montgomery County, Alabama, has attracted the attention of educators in every state of the country. Mr. Harman will conduct two classes dealing with rural educa tion for a period of two weeks, and, in addition give some general lec tures. Dr. Reginald Charles McGrane, Professor of History and head of the Department of History at the Uni versity of Cincinnati, has taught three summers at Nebraska and it well known. He is prominent in his tory circles as editor of The Biddle Papers and author of two other books, "The Panic of 1837" and "The Life of William Allen." Dr. Louis Martin Sears, Professor of American History at Purdue Uni versity, has specialized in diplomatic history, and has in manuscript "A His tory of American Diplomacy," which will soon be published. He is well known in Indiana as an effective teacher and an able public speaker. Dr. W. M. Gewehr, Professor of History and head of the Department of History at Denison University, Granville, Ohio, served as exchange professor of history in the Boxer In demnity University (Tsing Hua), al Peking, China, in 1924-25 H m japan ivurea. and Pauline B. Camp, who has done e, tensive work in the field of sPMfn correction, is now Director of ChiM Guidance and Special Education of the Madison Public Schools, wi. consin. w"' Complete information regardin the summer sessions can be obtalw by writing the Director of the Sum mer Session, University of Nebraska" Lincoln, Nebraska. Neihardt Consents To Aid "Schooner" Staff John G. Neihardt, Nebraska'. ... laureate and noted writer, has con sented to serve as one of the advi ory editors of the Prairie Schooner newly established quarterly literary magazine at the University. Mr Ne hardt is now literary and dram..;" critic for a St Louis news.,on. Freshmen Laws To Study In Research All freshmen in the college of W are required to take a course in Wi bibliography this year. The xva under the direction of G. E. Pri law librarian, consists of instruction and practice in the correct methodi of legal research. Contents Of Museum Being Moved Slowly The museum staff is gradually pro-ceeding-wiih the task of moving the thousands of specimens from the old building to the recently-completed Morrill hall. F. E. Collins, assistant curator, is already established in his new office. FORMER INSTRUCTORS TO MAKE TRIP ABROAD Miss Ruth McDill, formerly an as sistant in the department of geog raphy, and now an instructor in geog raphy in thu University of Oklahoma, and Miss Vera Rigdon, instructor in geography in the state teachers col lege at Cedar Falls, la., are planning to make a trip to Europe next sum mer. DON'T FORGET OUR SUNDAY DINNERS The Idyl Hour nniniiiiitniiiiuiKiiiinniniii!iiHnMiuiiHiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiritiMitniiiiiiuiiMm!iMuminiuiimmMiwuHHUumiut;iMiitiiiawiiiiintiiiiiiiiiii uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnai I Food (or thoufht. Tha laal 127,500 meal aervad al Rudga Ic Cuenzela Cafeteria avarajed only 36.7 centa. Ask ua about Rofera Bruahinf Lacquer for old Furniture I B-3214 Store Newt B-3214 N New Spring eedlework A treasure chest of new, beautiful art- needlework pieces just unpacked and placed l on display. The most attractive stamped i assortment we have ever shown. Come in and see them. All easily completed with j embroidery. j 1 A complete line of stamped quilts, bed- i spreads, quilted pillows, pillow slips, linen j luncheon sets in all sizes including the ob- j long luncheon sets, scarfs. Ready for selec- tion! on Floor Three. Featuring Bucilla Packages iMummiinBii""1""1" tanaWii MtimmwiiiMMmmwtMmniMinmrauuiiMHi!