The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 07, 1928, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA ,
Under direction of the Student Publication Board
TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday
morning during the academic year.
Editorial Office University Hall 4.
Purines Office University H' II 4A.
Offir. Hour. Editorial Staff. 8:00 to 8:00 except Friday and
Sunday. Business .Staff: afternoons except Friday
Sunday.
and
Telephones Editorial: B-e891, No. 142; Business: B-6891,
77; Night B-6882.
No.
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice In Lincoln,
Nebraska, under act of Confess. March 8, 1879. and at special
rate of postage provided for in section 1108, act of October S.
1917, authorired January 20. 1922.
by the unanimous, or nearly unanimous, vote that each
one received.
The first duty is checking up to see that the class
officers are given their usual place in The Cornhusker.
After that each officer should arrange his affairs so
that he could attend any class meeting at any time.
As for other duties maybe the classes at Ne
braska may some day awake from their apathy and
give their officers something to do.
The Cynic Says:
My activity friend is sad today. The new scholar
ship ruling declares him ineligible for the mandolin
club.
82 a year.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
Single Copy 6 cents
81.25 a semester
In Other Columns
Oscar Norllng .
Munro Keter
Gerald Griffin
Dorothy Nott
Pauline Bilon
Dean Hammond
W. Joyce Ayres
NEWS EDITORS
..Asst.
..Asst.
Editor-in-Chief
..Managing Editor
Managing Editor
Managing Editor
Maurice W. Konkel
Paul Nelson
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS
Richard F. Vette
Milton McGrew
William H. Kearns
J. Marshall Pltier
Lyman Cass
..Business Manager
NOT SO ALARMING
am from failimr to recognize the ' university
point of view in not being able to reach a satisfactory
agreement with Dr. Hartley Burr Alexander, the
Omaha World-Herald has discussed one of our prob
lems in a manner which deserves the attention of the
student body. The article is reprinted in "In Other
Columns". ,
The other side of the question was stated in the
Daily Nebraskan last spring when the discussion con-,
cerning the departure of faculty members for other
institutions was at its' heighth. Certain portions of the
editorial were so suitable to the current comment that
they also deserve mention. They follow:
"The University of Nebraska in common with
practically all of the newer western colleges and
universities has always been subject to los3 of good
professors by more attractive offers at the older
and more established universities of the East.
"These more attractive offers have not always
been the mere additional monetary returns of the
new positions. This is a feature probably all too
much over-stressed by people. Probably most of
these professors who have left us did so because
they were called to greater fields of service. Many
of the larger universities and colleges of the East
have an established tradition of drawing the best
minds of the country. It is a distinct honor to a
man in the educational field to be called to those
institutions, and they will often go there regardless,
of the monetary considerations. Western universi
ties and colleges just haven't arrived at the stage
where they can keep and draw professors at the
expense of these older and more recognized seats
of learning.
"We are a good training ground for profes
sors is the way it is often put. This is an exaggera
tion, of course, but it neatly summarizes the sit
uation. "And this situation in itself is nothing to be
alarmed about If Nebraska is coming to be recog
nized as a university which regularly draws good
recruit material for its chairs, and just as regu
larly has them promoted to still greater fields of
service, there will be a great advantage in that
more and more promising instructors will look
with favor on a post at our school. Looked at in
this regard instead of this withdrawal of professors
being a downright calamity, it is partially a
blessing.
"Nebraska has survid Tiany previous treks
of professors. Not only survjjed them, but con
stantly improved the faculty in place of those that
left."
Of course one of the greatest reasons why faculty
members leave Nebraska is on account of low salaries
and lack of equipment as compared with other schools.
And it will remain such until the state of Nebraska
is able to spend more money on high education.
Can the University of Nebraska, then, justly be
accused of sacrificing scholarship, idealism, when it at
tempts to remedy the present situation?
Pershing Rifles notice in yesterday's Nebraskan
says that "all members are expected to come." They
have higher expectations than most campus organizations.
A LOSS TO NEBRASKA
Announcement was made Saturday by the board
of regents of the University of Nebraska that the res
ignation of Dr. Hartley Burr Alexander, head of the
department of philosophy, now on leave of absence, haa
been tendered and accepted.
This is news distressing and depressing. Dr. Alex-
..Asst. Business Mn ander, a Nebraskan born and bred, is the most distin-
.Circulation Manager . ... j jitv j
. ...circulation Manager guished scholar our state has produced. He has served
as president of the American Philosophical association.
He has been accorded the high honor of an invitation
to deliver a course of lectures before the Paris Sor
bonne. He is a student and writer of recognized stand
ing not alone in philosophy but in metaphysics, aesthe
tics, anthropology, philology, education, mythology and
other fields. His poetry and masques have won interna
tional recognition. His idealism is as fine and pure as
his learning is profound and extensive. A3 an educator
for 20 years in the University of Nebraska, from which
he won his first degree, he has been an inspiration to
its students, as exampler of all that is cleanest and
best in university and civic life. He has served the state
courageously and unselfishly outside as well as inside
the university walls. He has striven for the making of
a better university, a better state, at the same time
that, by his presence as one of us, he has earned us
honor and renown abroad. He is the sort of man it
hurts to lose; the sort the university could least afford
to lose.
And, as his friends know, Hartley Alexander was
reluctant to leave Nebraska. His heart and hopes and
loyalty were with 11s. Neither higher place nor richer
emolument could have torn him away from his post.
He went, at long last, in deep discouragement over the
future of the school and the opportunity to be of real
service in it and to it. His ambition, his dream, was for
a University of Nebraska that would be a seat of
scholarship, a font of inspiration, a great and true and
free university, self-governing, liberal, courageous, that
would invite and stimulate and reward the open minds
and cultural ambitions of eager students.
It came, finally, to appear a futile and hopeless
ambition, and so Hartley Alexander, with poignant
regret, surrendered it. His resignation followed. It is
not the only one, though it is the most notable, that
has been somewhat similarly compelled. Others of the
ablest members of the faculty, in alarming numbers,
have done in recent years what he now has done
sought freer and more promising fields for scholarly
and educational service.
If Nebraska people, and university students and
alumni, wonder why such a condition exists, let them
ponder another announcement made by the university
board of regents. It fs that Dean Burnett, of the agri
cultural college, acting chancellor, has been elected
chancellor to serve until June 30, 1929. Why? Because
a legislative session is but a short distance away, and
there might be danger in swapping horses until the
next biennial appropriation is determined!
Scholarship? Leadership? Idealism? Inspiration?
No. "Appropriations" is the magic word.
In the light of this announcement and what it
suggests it is not so difficult to understand the Alex
ander loss. It is a loss for which neither larger appro
priations nor a victory over Army next fall can begin
to compensate. Omaha World-Herald.
Notices
is a member of the Student Council
and Phi Lambda Upsilon. Joel Sim
ons, secretary-elect of the sophomore
class, is an Iron Sphinx. Morton
Janulewicz is a member of the band,
Gamma Lambda, and takes part in
cross country and other track events.
Donald Erion works on the business
staff of the Cornhusker.
1st co-ed Why, your blouse is wrinkled!
2nd Gold Digger Yes, I just had it pressed.
Wisconsin Cardinal.
THE CHEAT
After discoursing at length on the merits of honor
systems, and other contrivances for manufacturing
honesty, the Oregon Daily Emerald concludes:
Some day, perhaps, a genius will come forward
with a plan that will put a stop to all cribbing. For the
present, or at least as long as grades are what the av
erage student strives to . attain, it seems that such a
plan will have to be a scheme which will guarantee
the student's learning enough that he will no longer
feel the necessity to cheat. Intercollegiate Press.
THE CAMPUS FARCE. ACT II.
The presidents of the junior, sophomore, and fresh
men classes today experience that feeling of self-satisfaction
that comes when one completes the arduous
duties of a difficult task. For yesterday they demon
strated their fitness to hold their executive positions ONE-SIDED SCIENCE
by summoning their respective classes to gather and This is certainly the age of scientists, says the
choose from their midst those capable to assist the California Daily Bruin, commenting on the many
executive as vice-president, secretary, and treasurer, achievements in the field of the physical sciences, and
The large number of spacious rooms in Social then adding
Sciences hall enabled all three presidents to hold their Is it not strange that with such activity in one
meetings in the one building. The classes had been phase of our existence, there should be such lethargy
given a day's notice in order that they might have time in others? The papers publish stories of the Havana
to weiirh carefully the merits of possible candidates, conference, of Geneva conference, of disarmament
Tbo" who decry the fact that university classes are conference, of pacts, treaties, and agreements of every
too large for any unity of thought should have been description imaginable. And what is the inevitable re
riresent for the thirteen juniors, the thirty sopho- suit of every such effort? What do we ever find at the
end 01 every diplomatic train
Why is it that we cannot achieve the honesty in
research in social fields that we do in other lines?
Then perhaps we might find new means for happiness
mores, and the twenty-five freshmen selected their vice
presidents by a unanimous vote.
As for the secretary, whose duties include the re
cording of the minutes of all of the class meetings, and
the treasurer, who must be responsible for all of the much greater even than that afforded by the scientific
class funds, there were varying opinions as to whom
might be able to spare the time that the positions de
serve. Personal prejudices, however, were cleared away
and the final ballots alweys showed an overwhelming
majority for the winners,
discoveries. Intercollegiate Press.
"What the country needs is a megaphone for
every farmer and an ear trumpet for every member
of congress," said a member of the house of Eepresen-
Those selected as the minor class officers are to tatives the other day. A last a practical solution has
be congratulated. The fact that they were really elected been found to the farm problem. University Daily
because of their fitness to hold office is substantiated Kansan.
Wednesday, March 7
W. A. A.
A general meeting of the Woman's Ath
letlo Association will be held Wednesday
evening, March 7, 1928-in S101 at 7:15
o'clock. All members are required to be
present. Nominations from the floor for the
four executive offices may be made at this
time.
Camma Alpha Chi
Gamma Alpha Chi will meet at S o'clock
Wednesday afternoon in the advertising of
fice. Phi Tau Theta
There will be an open, meeting of Phi
Tau Theta. Methodist Men's Religious frat
ernity, fallowing the Vocational address
in SS. Auditorium, at the Wesley Founda
tion, 1417 R at 8 o'clock, Wednesday,
March 7.
All men are cordially Invited to attend.
Peppy music and eats will make the social
hour well worth while.
Band Picture
All members of the R. O. T. C. band are
requested to meet at the campus studio
at 12 o'clock Wednesday for the Corn
husker photo. Wear uniforms and stream
ers.
Student Council
Student Council will meet in Temple 204
st 5 o'clock this afternoon.
Countrvman Staff
The Cornhusker Countryman staff will
hold a meeting in Room 213 Home Econom
ics Hall at 6 o'clock Wednesday evening.
Thursday, March 8
Math Club
The regular meeting of the Math Club
will be held Thursday evening In SS101 at
7:30 o'clock. A program consisting of short
talks by students will given.
Mystic Fish
Mystic Fish meeting in Ellen Smith Hall
Thursday evening at 7:15 o'clock.
Religious Round-Table
The first meeting of the religious round
table will be held Thursday noon, March 8,
at the Grand Hotel. Dr. I. II. Schreckingast,
Chancellor of Wesleyan University, will be
the speaker. Tickets can be secured from
Rev. If. W. Leavitt at the Temple or from
any other University pastor.
Mth Club
The Mathematics Club will hold Its reg
ular monthly meeting in 101 S.S. at 7:30
o'clock on Thursday,' March 8.
There will be an important business
meeting at which all members are urged
to be present. a
Friday, March 9
Baptist Students
The University Class of the First Baptist
church is having a St. Patricks party Fri
day, at 8 o'clock in the church parlors at
14th and K Street. Everyone is welcome.
Sunday, March 11
Cosmopolitan Club
Business meeting, Sunday, March 11,
4 o'clock at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Hyde, 444 So. 29. Election of new members.
athletes through' the building.
That basketball fans are scheduled
to view some interesting games is
connoted when a study of the en
trants is made. Winners of every
sectional tournament in the state are
coming to Lincoln in search of new
laurels. Competition has been so
keen the past season, that many un
defeated district tourney winners
have been crowded into Class B, and
followers of this division are due for
some fast contests.
A. W. S. Holds
Election Soon
(Continued from Page 1)
man, Maiirine Drayton, Frances Lat
erer and Irene Davies.
Nominations for junior member
ship on the Board are: Lois Hanning,
Vivian Fleetwood, Peggy Howser,
Ada Litchner, Dorothy McCoy,
Gretchen Standeven, Harriett Hor-
totn and Harriett Wills.
Sophomore women nominated in
clude: Lucille Boomer, Esther Gay
lord, Gretchen Goulding, Anne Ma
rie Peterson, Betty Walquist, Miriam
Wigginhorn, Gertrude Ray, and Sar
ah Pickard.
Social Calendar
Wednesday, March 7
Y. W. C. A., Grace Coppock din
ner, 6-8, City Y. W. C. A.
Sigma Eta Chi, St. Pat's party,
Pilgrim House,' 5-8:30.
Thursday, March 8
Mystic Fish tea, Ellen Smith
Hall, 4-6.
Track Team Will
Go To Des Moines
(Continued from Page 1)
But only last year Moody defeated
the Husker star in the 880-run in a
pre-season meet.
Janulewicz, Dexter, Mousel, and
Sprague are all promising 880-yard
men but have not been under fire of
an all-Valley field as yet so little
is known of their ability.
In Captain Wyatt, Campbell, Dav
enport, and E. Wyatt, Coach Schulte
has a strong quarter-mile relay team.
The Husker 440-yeard quartet will
run up against some strong competi
tion at Des Moines, however. Ok
lahoma made better time in the event
at the K. C. A. C. meet than the Hus
ker team. The Missouri and Kansas
teams are also of fast calibre.
Snyder and Easter are working
hard on the dashes. As this duo can
not be judged by their performances
in the K. C. A. C. meet because
they were not given a real opportun
ity, little can be forecast for them in
the Valley indoor games.
The members of the Cornhusker
team that will go to Des Moines will
be announced Wednesday or Thurs
day, Coach Schulte announced.
Co-Eds Take Part
In Class Elections
(Continued from Page 1)
governor of Nebraska before long.
No casualties have been reported
as yet as results of the political
fracas (see Webster we had to.)
We understand that all of thirty
sophomores attended their election.
Twenty-five freshmen turned out,
but only thirteen juniors. They
knew there wouldn't be any refresh
ments served. i
It's good old mixers like this that
keeps the democratic spirit of Ne
braska up. If politics don't explain
themselves the student body will be
gin to think that the South Side is
colored and they really aren't.
Miss Hurlburt Is
Vespers Speaker
(Continued from Page 1)
There are very few graiFiates 6f jun
ior high schools who aren't Christians."
Miss Hurlburt described a very
charming and gracious Chinese girl
who had very great influence in her
community, and who finally through
the efforts of the teachers in the
school was given an opportunity to
come to school in America. The
thing which more than any other
impressed her during her year and a
half of worn in San Franciso was
the wonderful home life which she
found in the home where she stayed.
assigned but an announcement is ex
pected on them in' the near future.
In picking the men characters Her
man T. Decker, casting director as
well as conductor and tutor of the
two organizations, will have a large
field from which to choose as almost
the entire Club has assented that
they would try-out for parts.
It should be remembered that this
is not a cantata but an opera set with
"local color" and costumed accord
ingly. ,
Prejudices Should Be
Left Behind in Gallery
(Continued from Page 1)
not limited to any one period of
time.
Thn riresent exhibition offers a
wide variety of works Of both periods
and it provides proof that both per
iods contain beauty.
"Reflections," by Macena is mod
ern, but with reserve. It possesses
a wonderful portrayal of velvet and
has the charm of simplicity. The
reflection of the woman in the mir
ror seems to detract from the picture
rather than add to its attractive
ness.
"Old Ravensburg" shows a master
ful handling of sunshine. There is a
gay, happy lightness about the pic
ture but it is substantial.
"Spring Flowers," by Clara Walsh
Leland, a Lincoln artjist, contains
some of the most beautiful coloring
of any of the paintings.
"The Spirit of the Ozarks," by
Oscar E. Thalinger, is one of the
most restful pictures of the exhibit.
'Cloud Frolic' It Good
Modern dexterity and skill in the
use of light and sunshine are shown
to a good advantage in a .number of
the painttings. "Looking Through,"
by Rudolph F. Ingerle, "Melting
Show," by James Scott, and "Cloud
Frolic," by James Toppiing are out
standing examples in this respect.
These three pictures are among the
favorites of gallery visitors, and Mr.
Topping seems to have attained per
fection in the clouds in his picture.
"Shadowed Aspens," by John Cot
ton is considered a marvel in all re
spects, it has beautiful coloring
there is a masterful handling of light,
the workmanship is perfect, and the
subjected depicted has an appeal for
everyone.
"The Wreck," by John Nobel is
not a strikiing picture, many people
scarcely notice it, but in Mr. Nobel's
painting of a sun shining through the
fog he has done a piece of work as
great as any of the other paintings.
This picture must be real art for it
grows in beauty every times you view
it, which is said to be the real test
of real art.
A horrible title and a still more
horrible frame are quite a handicap
to the portrait "Amelia Chiarina
Castaldo", by Paul Trebilcock, but
this picture is one of the most care
fully worked and one of the most de
tailed paintings in the exhibit. One
rioes not have to ftand a block away
to make something out of this pic
ture, it is a picture so well done that
one can stand within a few i-nohes
of it and still marvel .as its beauty,
ore almost expects 'the beautiful lady
to brepihel
The exhibition will be open until
March 17, and as it is open every day
there has been a continual stream of
visitors viewing the paintings since
it opened Feb. 15. University stu
dents are admitted to the galleries
free of charge.
Survey conclusions show that the
performance of a person in college
can be accurately predicted from his
high school grades.
Eat
Waffles & Honey
AT
Hotel Cornhusker
Coffee Shop
After The Show
Lincoln's Busy Store Cor. II & O St.
WtriliUlnlMIhllffliulli
'The Best for Less"
Glee Club Will
Present Opera
(Continued from Page 1)
Edith) are Bernice Giesler, Margaret
Moore, Katherine Lyman, and Nellie
Lee Brecht.
The male parts have not yet been
Still the Sam
Delicious Lunches
And Service Unsurpassed
To
NEBRASKA STUDENTS
AT
Owl Pharmacy
Ccppock Workers
Will Hold Banquet
(Continued from Page 1)
comes from Chinese supporters, with
a very few exceptions. In a few
cities, a few foreign frwnds help")
ptrhnps eleven per cent of the local
budget. Much of the burden of the
iistionsl weak is also borne by Chin
ese. The money from abroad goes
to special needs, and trained secre
taries to carry on in especially diffi
cult places.
Twenty some years ago, one of Ne
1 rt. '.La University's gifted girls,
i i' u" f.V'pnork went to China to help
" t Y. V'. C. A. work. Through
'l -X ;:' - -i:rr,a:;ized the devclop
: .r C' "mcj leadership.
f National Y. W.
C. A. is a legally organized national
movement, a unit in the World's or
ganization. It maintains, directs,
and is composed of the work grouped
in thirtn city associations, ninety
student organizations and has nine
thousand members. ',
Miss Senning Is
Forum Speaker
(Continued from Page 1)
things that will take her time and
keep her interested in her work.
It has been the custom at World
Forum for the committee to 'obtain
speakers for luncheons who speak on
a level with student ides and iucer
est Tickets for these luncheons may
be procured at the Grand hotel for
thii-cy-nve cents.
Minor Officers Are
Elected by Classes
(Continued from Page 1)
Janulewicz, Loup City; sophomore,
Geoffrey King, Arapahoe; and fresh
man, Donald Erion, Omaha.
Officers Ara Activa
The newly-elected junior class
vice-president, Charles Bruce, is bus
iness manager of the Cornhusker and
a member of the Kcsmet Klub. Gor
don Larson, vice-president of the
sophomore class, is acting as assist
ant managing editor of the Cornhus
ker, and is a member of the Iron
Sphinx. Don Carlson, freshman vice
president, belongs to the Nebraska
glee club and is a reporter on The
Daily Nebraskan.
Karl Schminke, junior secretary,
Tourney Teams Will
Arrive in Lincoln
(Continued from Page 1)
several games in the lower classes
will be staged on the Y. M. C. A
court.
entertainment for the visiting
teams has been outlined by various
organizations in Lincoln, which as
sures that there will be something
doing every minut during the three
tournament days. The Lincoln Hi-Y
Club has planned the first program,
for tonight at 7:45 o'clock in the
Coliseum. The DeMolay band, talks
by tli-X officers and the introduction
of the Nebraska basketball team will
round out the program.
Track Squad Will Exhibit
Coach Henry F. Schulte, Nebraska
track mentor, has charge of the en
tertainment on Thursday afternoon.
when the track squad will give a
series of exhibitions. Friday after
noon at 3:30, the annual meeting of
the State Coaches Association will be
held in "N" Club trophy room.
The annual Cornhusker tourna
ment stunt at the Lincoln theatre
will be staged Saturday morning at
10:30. Talks by Presnell, Howell,
Holm, Rhodes, Oakes, Bearg and
Black; the University band, singing,
motion pictures of the games, and
a pep rully will feature this 'event.
The State Capitaal building and the
museum in Morrill Hall will also be
open for the inspection by the visi
tors. Guides will be on duty at the
Capital throughout the day, to show
W What ;
Y shall I
7 V1 that
to spot?
Call V)
33367
7AnOITV
VZ-VlCaJJL i A WYTHE2S
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rot
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