THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln, Nebraska npprri l PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OP NEBRATKA Under direction of the Student Publication Board TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR Published Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday, Friday, and Sunday Mornings during the academic year. Editorial Office Unlrerstty Hall 4. Business Office U Hall, Room No. 4. Office Hours-Editorial Staff. 8 :00 to 6:00 except Friday ard Sunday. Business Staff i afternoons except Friday and Telephoned Editorial and Business! B68I.1. K 142. Night B6882 Entered as second-class matter at the postotfice In Lincoln. Nebraska under act of Congress. March 8. 1870. and at special rat. of stage Provided fo? in section 110$, act of October 8, 1117, authorised January 20, 1922. , I a year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy ( cents S1-Z5 a semester WILLIAM CEJNAR Lee Vance Arthur Sweet Horace W. Gomon (nth Palme- NEWS EDITORS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Managing Editor Asst. Managing Editor Asst. Managing Editor Isabel O'Hallaran Gerald Grirtin James Rosse Dwleht McCormack CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Evert Hunt Oscar Norling T.lnpnln TYost. Jr. Dwight McCormack Robert Laach ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Florence Swihart Tnmaa Gerald Griffin T SIMPSON MORTON Richard F. Vette Milton McGrew William Kearns BUSINESS MANAGER Asst. Business Manager Circulation Manager Circulation Manager SUNDAY, APRIL SO.j 1927. A FACULTY COMPLEX A book-writing complex that's what most faculty members the country over are suffering with. In this great age of achievement, tangible and dollar-realizing achievement, even college professors have become obsessed with a great ambition to achieve and to "get ahead." The accepted way to do this is "to write a book." So we find practically every faculty member from the oldest with his unfinished manuscript at death to the youngest chirp of a neyphte, fresh from graduate seminary, treasuring notes and storing ideas for "the great book." It is only natural that it should be so. All their lives these men and women have been studying from books, they have been reading books. Books arc their Bibles. What more fitting then, than that they should themselves some day write a book to stack up on the same shelves with other books of the great? An even greater reason, though, exists for this book-writing mania among professors and instructors. It is the plain, hard, practical fact that writing of a fair book, good and thick, is the best way of gaining recognition. The ranks of the profession have become so crowded with the growth in popularity of higher education, that some such method must be resorted to to attract attention among the many. It is a recog nized fact that writing of a successful book almost invar iably results sooner or later in promotion of some kind or other by the governing board of the institution or in a call to other fields where "real" ability is recog nized. So we have the book-writing mania or complex among faculty members. , And in this book-writing activity, among other rea sons, may be found some of the causes for the decline of the professors, and for many of the defects of mass education. Instead of becoming good protessors and great teachers, many instructors as a result of book-writing activity become poor teachers and poor book-writers as well. The great mass of books published, without mention of the equally great or greater mass of un published manuscript, are mediocre to say the least. They will hardly live out the student generation during which they were written. The hours of effort devoted to mulling over notes, writing and rewriting, which might more profitably have been spent reading and storing up greater wisdom for the benefit of future classes, are in great part wasted. A professor writing a book is only about 60 to 75 percent efficient as a professor. He rushes from class to class, thinks about his great effort, has little if any time outside of classes for his students, and above all, loses for the time being that interest in the student which should be the paramount concern of a real pro fessor. As a result of this book-writing mania the man who is a great teacher and inspirer of youth in his classes is unrecognized as such. The teaching and in spiring functions of the professorial office have been subordinated to worship of gold embossed designations on library volumes. What is needed is a reawakening among educators of a realization of the importance of the teaching func. tions of the profession. A realization that mere per functory delivery of lectures goes only a short way to the development of well-educated men and women; that personal contacts and interest in the progress of each and every student are a priceless contribution to their development and growth into men and women. What is needed even more is increased recognition for those men and women in faculty chairs who are consciously devoting themselves to this teaching and in spiring office, and who are embued with a genuine ar.d sincere interest n the progress of the students whose plastic minds are entrusted to their care. There will always be plenty of opportunity for writing of real books great books inspired by genuine genius of mind and accomplishment. Great minds which really have something to give to the world can do to without serious loss to their other duties. The gains in their case will far outweigh the losses. But in the case of less endowed minds, students as well as printing presses would be better off for less typewriter activity, and more concentration on teaching. Pathetic figures students who had dates last Fri day night and forgot about the midnight show for flood sufferers, and didn't take advantage of the opportunity of staying out till 2:30. COED POLITICS VERSUS THE CHANCELLORSHIP At a neighboring western university last week oc curred two major news events. The chancellor of the University resigned, and the annual student election was to be held, featured by the aroused political action of the women students. In the student paper the poli tical story about the uprising of the co-eds was given a big headline across seven columns at the top of the front page. The story about the resignation of tne Chancellor was given a subordinated four-column headline. , ' The relative significance of the two events for the future of the university can be predicted without any great effort at thinking. The student election will corr.e and go, and will be forgotten in the whirl of oth' r student activities. The resignation of the Chancellor 'sfia ' election (, a new one after a period of uncer tainty, and possible new university policies under s. tivx administration. It i3 quite surprising then to find the student paper featuring just about twice as prominently a story of a :' '' election as that of the resignation of the head 1 f tie institution. 1 yet it is not so very surprising after nil. ' i i of stuJe-nU are interested like most people ? which, concern them Kt . aircctlv. Classroom work, studies, dates, activities those are the things which occupy the attention of most students most of the time. A student election happens to be one of these things. The government of the university managed as it is without any student voice, goes on affecting only indirectly the students for whose sake it exists. To most students the work of the university executive is mighty hazy. They are not concerned. Therefore, when he resigns, the importance of the event hardly looms as prominent as the exciting election of the moment. Explained on this basis the news judgment of the paper seems quite proper. But in another way the edi tors of that paper were sadly lacking. As stewards of the news columns of their university paper, their re sponsibilities are greater than mere reflection of cam pus sentiment as it is. In a sense the college paper should not only reflect student sentiment, but it should gtoide it in the right channels as well. If light-headed students, sophomores, freshmen, and immature juniors are flighty enough to regard a student election as of more importance than the resignation of the executive head of their university, it is the duty of the editors of the college paper, as the only medium by which all may be reached, to jolt them out of their puerility, and lead a bit at least to a more serious-minded evaluation of the events of the day. Notices THURSDAY, MAY 5 Pi Lambda Theta Meeting Is postponed until Thursday, May 6, in T. C. S10 at 7 p. m. It takes a billion dollar flood to relax the 12:30 "back home" rule. FOR THE FOLKS BACK HOME Following the lead of Wisconsin and Illinois, the University of Michigan is beginning next fall publica tion of a four-page, four-column weekly paper for par ents of students attending the University, The aim of the paper will be to keep the parents informed as fully as possible about the affairs of the University, in the belief that newspaper accounts and letters from stu dents themselves are often exaggerated and incomplete. Establishment of a Michigan Parents' association will also be shortly undertaken, it is believed, following the examples of parents' associations at Illinois and Cornell. This movement to bring college back to the family home, and somehow keep up a personal contact be tween the University and the parents of the young men and women who are attending, is part of the effort country-wide to combat the coldness of gigantic insti- sutions of learning. NINTH ANNUAL FAIR HELD SATURDAY (Continued from Page One.) Mia Brinton it Goddess Florence Brinton of Lincoln, was chosen goddess of agriculture. Her attendants in the order of their rank were: Alice Klein, Gladys Martin, Krissie Kingsley, Hazel Banning, El ler.dean Wynkoop, and Helen Hilde-hr-and. These girls were chosen by ballot from amor-c the seniors of the home tooromics department. "The Quest" written by Edna Ben son, assistant professor of home ec onomics, was presented to large crowds both afternoon and evening. It was an allegorical dramatization depicting the enrichment of life that a home economics course offers to those who choose to take this course. Viola Hall of Bethany played the leading part in the role of Life as symbolic of every homemoker. Following the pageant, a parade of seventy-five cattle and horses from the animal husbandry and dairy de partments of the college was held on the main quadrangle of the campus. Follies Has Clever Program The Follies girls presented their program several times. They showed the old and new in follies in dancing old fashioned and modern dances. The Snorpheum boys gave their pro gram in the form of an old time Fri day afternoon country school pro gram fifteen or twenty minutes length and will deal with the relation of the state to the university. He is known as a very forceful speaker. CLaiburn Seave Dean G. R. Chatburn will speak for five minutes explaining the schol arship awarded, after which the plaques will be given out by Prof. E. F. Schramm, chairman of the Interfratprnity Council, Mr. Schramm will preside. There will be no other speakers. The Revelers orchestra will play during the dinner, and special enter tainment in a two-piano act by Har old Turner and Wilbur Chenoweth, pianist and organist, respectively, for the Lincoln theater, has been obtained. It brings back to mind the days twelve or more I Preceding each presentation of the c iiO-A U'lifln i-iiiv sna DAnM A 7if. : 1 1 l 1 i l i . ... t1 J J tliA years ago when our own Dean of Men was still able in part to keep up personal contact with the parents by means of letters. Since that time the student body has grown so large in numbers that it is almost impossible at times for the deans and other officials to answer per sonal letters sent by the parents themselves. The movement is a refreshing reminder that edu cators realize more than ever their obligations to the parents of the boys and girls who are sent to theii care for the last four great formative years of their lives. So long as educators are alive to their responsi bilities in this respect there need be very little alarm about the future of higher education. In Other Columns Winsome Wisdom College students and college life have been greatly misinterpreted and misrepresented to the general pub lic through the well-meaning efforts of novelists and dramatists who have seized upon the sensational and caused it to assume the character of the casual and or dinary. Oh, that we had a Boswell to properly under stand and interpret us! George Jean Nathan, the congenial dramatic critic, has delivered his opinion as to the advantage of a col lege education in a recent publication. He says: "If the American university doesn't teach a man wisdom, it at least teaches him how to loiter through life grace fully, and how to make other men do his work for him, j and how to laugh and sing, and how to make love, and how to remember just a little more romantically than any other man, and how to smile tolerantly and pleas antly at his critics." This is far from a discouraging picture. That the much-aligned life of a college student, with its over emphasized temptations, its mythical pits for the un wary, and its too-sudden freedom for men and women at an age when freedom is' apt to whirl the brain, can, by Borne strange associations, whether with other stu dents or members of faculties, foster a sense of the joy of living is, indeed, a fulfilment of a greater purpose than we could expect. Our living has become too com mercial; we have begun to aspire to too-great ends in industry as well as life. We have come to think that nothing is impossible. That college teaches a man or woman to turn back and recapture some of the old joys and simplicities of life is not to be decried. Nor is it to become condemned that a person can enjoy life while he is in college. To loiter through life! What does it depend upon? It is not always a matter of financial independence; rather it is a condition of the mind which makes it pos sible for a man or woman to accept the finalities of life and never lose the sense of spectatorship. From the sidelines of their own minds, they can watch others, less wise than they, hurrying, fighting and scrambling blindly toward climaxes they do not understand. To be able to plunge into life and still maintain a psychical distance is an accomplishment worthy of study. Since earliest ages, the strong have dominated the weak. Physical ptrength Y been supplemented by men tal strength, and men with superior ability to think and plot have been able to use to their advantage, in dividuals not so gifted. That the time should come when men generally and college men in particular should have acquired in their short term of study, the ability to think and remember the energies of others is also an accomplishment for which colleges can justly be proud. Is it a sin to laugh and sing and make love? Tha greatest enjoyment of life comes to those who have learned to make life enjoyable. When, in the disap pointments of the day, men can turn their faces, calm and unperturbed, to public view, hiding their personal dissatisfactions, and laugh and sing and make love, it is a sure sign they have learned a fundamental lesson the ability to manipulate themselves in relation to their environment for the best Interests of themselves. . And, a splash of romantic recollection for what has been pleasant in the past is always a welcome attitude. Men who can remember better days and look forward to better days to come, have conquered an enemy of life. Abov all, the ability to smile tolerantly upon critics is 1 1 be desired. The man or woman who can stand unmoved by unjust criticism and not blinded to constructive ideas has attached to himself a graceful ness a "sang froid" in living. It is almost a sense of humor which makes this toleration possible. Lincoln had it; Burns found solace in it. Both of th?se men, because of their generous and tolerant acceptance of ciitic.siia, vi auie h cuiuinue n none loo pleasant task in the face of popular disapproval. To invite and understand the processes of others' thought which com ments upon their lives, is a cirtue to be encouraged. This justification is a seal of approval and the new race of men, bred of this spirit and fashioned in this mould, can but be a credit to the system which gave them inspiration for being, srtnieoU Dail. pageant, a style show was held in the grotto in front of Davisson's foun tain, the eccne of the pageant. Several hundred people were shown interesting points on the cam pus in the sightseeing busses which left every fifteen minutes from the main depot. These busses were ac companied by guides which explained the important points about the places which were visited. WEAVER NAMED BANQUET SPEAKER (Continued from Page One.) ted from Wyoming Seminary at Kingston, Pa., with the degree of A. B. Mr. Weaver is known as "Richard son county's leading citizen" and has received numerous honors in his home country. The new Hotel Wea ver at Falls City was named for him. Mr. Weaver's address will be of 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 BIG SISTERS TO INITIATE Large Group Expected at Affair At Ag College Thursday Big Sisters will hold their annual picnic and intiation on the College of Agriculture campus on Thursday aft ernoon, May 6, according to plans an nounced Saturday. More than 500 Big Sisters will gather on the campus at 5 p. m. Initiation will follow the picnic, and will be in charge of the advisory council. Tickets may be secured at Mrs. Lantz's desk at Ellen Smith hall. Talks of eating at the A fl An A La Carte Dinner Perhaps you do not care for the vegetables included with the three-division plate dinners served at the Central Caf and would prefer to order every thing a la carte. That is probably the better way for those who know exactly what they want, "and want what they want when they want it." Nevertheless, the plate din ners, "ready to serve", are pre pared under the Chef's direc tions with care and contain us ually very harmonious combina tions. But we will assume that you are a steady-eater. Let us order a T-Bone Steak with Onions, French Fried or Shoestring Potatoes, Cold Slaw, App! Pie a Ja xods (r witn cheese if you prefer) and Coffee or Milk. That $1.40. will "set you bak" (Te he Mtbiud) 1325 P HISTORIAN TELLS OF WAR CONDITIONS (Continued from Page One.) won the war, it was not the United States. "The Americans exerted a great influence on that last battle. They stood for a single line in France, a single line at home, a single idea, and a single and intact army of the United States," he pointed out. The war might have been lost here or there, but no one can say who won the war. The person who can say which blade of the sheas does the cutting may have the answer to the question of 'Who won the war?' Nation Fight Own War "Each major nation was fighting its own war. England had a war, concerned with her own problems, those of the English Channel. France waS concerned with the road to Paris. Italy was concerned with the safety of her people and the country. When the United States entered the war the other nations each had their own armies and their own war, Dr. Pax son declared. "From the first the Americans wanted a single line in France, they wanted the fighting bodies under on head. The Allies would not even let the Americans fight under their own leaders, they shoved them in under English and French officers. They said the Americans couldn't fight, and they couldn't be taught to fight. But Pershing would not give in, and the Allied forces gave the Americans a section that neither the French nor the Germans had pushed very hard. "The single line at home was a matter of great importance in win ning the war, the speaker declared. The United States was organized from top to bottom on the fact that organization at home would win the war. Single Idea Necessary "In the spring of 1918 it was fin ally decided by the allied n the only thing that could make t?. war anything but a total loss was I single idea. Up to this time each country wna fichtir.a- ifa v ,7. - . , - "u wattle, but the Americans fought for a uni fied purpose among the Allies Dr Paxson continued. ' The fourth point was the idea of . single army of the United Rf. . miracle took place m the change from mo nanuiui oi soiaiers when we ne tered the war to those in service on" that Armistice Day. The men did better than they knew how. They were thinking in millions instead of tens and twentys and they did well The determination of the United Sta'tes for a coordinate unit finally worked out. tox 0 IOE30 D Davis Coffee Shop 108 N. 13 Doubled Decked wiches, Home made pastry, Unexcelled Coffee Day & Night Sand- 5 e 0 o 301 DO YOU LIKE STRAWBERRIES? This is FRESH STRAWBERRY WEEK at RECTOR'S. Every day our special luncheon will feature a delicious dessert made from strawberries. As usual, we will have Strawberry Shortcake at 15c; Club House Shortcake at 25c. Monday May 2 25c Minced Ham Tostette Strawberry Shortcake Any 5c Drink -&n a &VV.0Oe.l3AND RST? TajaiaJSfiiMSM The Upper Classmen Know The Under Classmen Think It a Tradition i That to be in Style They Should Wear CLOTHES From 4i A. fsm