THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL PUULICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Under direction of tha Student Publication Board TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR Published Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday, Friday, and Sunday tnorninKs during the academic year. Editorial Office University Hall . Business Office University Hall 4A. Office Hours Editorial Staff. 8:00 to 8:00 except Friday and Sunday. Business Staff: afternoons except rriday and Sunday. Telephones Editorial : B-e891, No. 142; Business: B-6881, No. 77: NIKht U-bPBZ. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in LincoLi. Nebraska, under act of Congress. March S. 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for in section 1103, act of October , 1917, authorized January 20. 1922. $2 a year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy 6 cents $1.25 a semester Oscar Norling Munro Kezer . Gerald Griffin , Dorothy Nott Pauline Bilon Dean Hammond W. Joyce Ayres NEWS EDITORS ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Clifford Sandahl .. Editor-in-Chief " Managing Editor ..Asst. ManairinK Editor ..Asst. Managing Editor Maurice W. Konkel Paul Nelson Lyman Cast students may become informed, some means by which the1 college man may become a stimulant to the poli tical mind of the nation, rather than a drag upon it. The university man, especially the member of state supported institutions, can, if he wants to, play a lead ing role in the effort to rid the country of its inertia and utter indifference. He can make himself the leader that the community is preparing him to be. The efforts of The Daily Nebraskan to inform and interest the students in the men who are candidates for the Presidency are to be highly commended. It is a step in the right direction. I hope it will not stop here. Let it take a vigorous and active part in interesting students in the great questions that interest thinking men throughout the country. We have been campus provincials long enough. Provincialism of any sort is to be condemned. The campus comprises a very small part of the world, after all. While it may be our most immediate interest, it is not, and should not be our only one. Sincerely DAVID FELLMAN. J Notices Tuesday, March 20 P.rihinff Rifles The Pershing Killos will drill Tuesday at 5 o'clock on the drill field in uniform. There will be a dinner at the Hotel Grand at b o'clock and formHl initiation at 7 :!10 o'clock at Nebraska Hall. Tassels There will bo a meet in it of the Tassels Tuesday at 7 o'clock at Kllcn Smith Hull. Corncob Meeting There will be a Corncob meeting Tucsiiay evening at 7:15 o'clock in Social Sciences room US. All men who expect to bo in itiated please be at the moctinR. Wednesday, March 21 Gamma Alpha Chi Gamma Alpha Chi will meet at 5 o'clock Wednesday in the advertising office. Richard F. Vetta ... Milton McGrew William H. Kearna J. Marshall Pitier .... ...Business Manager ..Asst. Business Manager Circulation Manager Circulation Manager PREJUDICE VERSUS REASON "I'm sold on the rules we now have-" Commission er E. M. Blair announced yesterday afternoon as he verified the statement recently published which stated that the City Council would not be in favor of changing back to diagonal parking on R and Sixteenth streets. He added, however, that the Council would meet and allow student representatives to explain the reasons for the numerous complaints against the present rules. He doubted whether a personal investigation would be necessary. Thus it seems that as far as the Council is con cerned, the question of what regulations shall govern parking near the University is just about settled. As a matter of form and policy, students will be called into and the Council will politely listen to their arguments. The resolution asking that parking be prohibited along R street within a distance of fifty feet from the inter section at Twelfth will probably be accepted. In order that city traffic may be discouraged from R street, a few stop battons may be placed at various intersec tions and perhaps a stop signal might even be installed at the intersection at Fourteenth. The Council will heartily endorse the action of the Student Council in requesting students to walk to the campus whenever possible, and then call it a day. They will return to their homes well-satisfied. For didn't they allow the students to state their opinions and -weren't most of the proposed rules accepted? Of course nothing was done about parallel parking but the Council believes that the students are a little1 rabid on that subject anyway. We may be entirely wrong in our prediction of what measures may be taken. We hope so. But the fact that the Council has already stated that they would probably not consider a change back to diagonal park ing indicates that student opinion will be considered only when it is also Council opinion. Perhaps the students who have been irritated by the disturbance created by the recent rulings will be pacified by such evasion by the city authorities. We doubt it. Tka Cynic Says: Perhaps the University parking problem would be a more serious one if the students were voting at the next city election. BOSS tffip Daily Nebraskan readers are cordially invited to contri bute articles to this column. This paper, however, assumes no responsibility for the sentiment expressed herein, and re serves the right to exclude any libelous or undesirable matter. A limit of six hundred words has been placed on all contributions. To the Editor: I wish to comment upon the series of articles ap-. pearing in The Daily Nebraskan dealing with the presi dential possibilities in the coming national conven tions. It seems to me that this group of articles is one of the most worth-while of any that have appeared in our publication in recent years. It is a relief to see some interest taken on this campus in something besides petty campus politics. It is of vastly more importance that the students of our state university should bo interested in who will be the next chief execptive of the United States than in the candidates for the all important position of chief executive of the junior class. Campus politics certainly have their place, and deserve, the attention of the student body. But they don't merit all of their attention. It is frequently pointed out that the people of the United States are totally indifferent to the poli tical vicissitudes of the country. Indeed, so great is the apathy of the American public,' that the greatest scandals in the administration fail to ruffle the calm surface of public opinion. It is no wonder that such a situation exists when one stops to consider that the most educated and intelligent man in the land, the college man, is himself totally immune from any sort of political germ. What happens in the world at large, what is going on in his rational government, what local issues are the concern of public-spirited men, do not concern him at all. Who shall preside as queen of some social function will set the campus agog with ex citement and" activity. But who will control the des tinies of the nation is about as interesting to the stu dent as an Ordinary lecture on a hot afternoon in May. The American college student does not occupy the place in the affairs of the state, and in the estima tion of the people that the student of the European college does. In Europe, the student thinks in terms that transcend the limits of his campus. The questions that interest the legislatures and administrators of Europe interest him as well. As a result of his appli cation of his knowledge- and intelligence to the vital issues of the day, he occupies a place of respect and dignity among the people. But the situation is radi cally different in the United States. The people receive their notions of the college man from the front pages of the tabloMu, vher otj occasion".! "snkenosa or an inter-fraternity battle for some traditional bauble are featured. The scandals of the university, not its con structive thought and work, give it its stamp. I don't Lmean to say, for one moment, that the American college student does not think; nor do I S".y that our universities are not great constructive in stitCbiunti, B'it it seem to mo that there exists no d.Mrtii luiough which the critical and public-minded individuals in our colleges may become informed and find opportunities to express themselves. There should I n some medium, some organization, in which the is f s of t; e day are threshed out, and by which the In Other Columns CIVILIZATION? Of all sad tales of tongue or pen, just try to find one much more sad than this little paragraph quoted from the outline of needs and prospects for Nebraska university, published recently by Chancellor Burnett: "Today there are 28 active professors and in structors who have given 25 or more years to ser vice in the university, one who has served faith fully and with distinction for 46 years, and many who have served more than 30 years. Practically none of these have accumulated sufficient property t oprotect themselves against want in their old age." If what is called (with much chestiness) 'civiliza tion had time to think about it there would be a world of food for very, very sober reflection in that an nouncement, an announcement which, fortunately for our own reputation before the world, depicts a situa tion which it not only true with us, but undoubtedly quite as much, on the average, at every other institu tion of learning in the United States. It is a state of affairs that passes understanding. Certainly there is no slackening of the popularity of education. Year after year the doors of the rapidly growing number of our universities are embattled every September by an increasing flood of young men and young women apparently thirsting for the waters of wisdom and learning. In such crowds, and so much with the force of a tidal wave have they , come than the poor universities are literally swamped beneath the weight of them. Trobably the greatest problem of these institutions today is what to do, what to do with all these thousands and thousands of youngsters who are demanding academic degrees and Greek letter so ciety memberships. At Nebraska university, Chancellor Burnett points out in this same statement, there are classes with more than a hundred students registered for them, and it takes little imagination to comprehend something of the futility of an instructor trying to do very much with a class of a hundred students. What he would need would be an auditorium, not a classroom. Educa tion, under such conditions, becomes'not academic, but forensic. Most of the other things that the civilization of the present day wants so enthusiastically it is willing to pay for. It wants its motion pictures, and Croesus himself would be flabbergasted at the list of figures and dollar signs on the salary reports that the press agents send us from Hollywood. It wants its automo biles and in Wall street the stock of General Motors rears and rears until all precedents of fabulous bon anzas are smashed to smithereens. Make an automobile, or some entertaining shadow pantomime and the cornucopia is emptied into your lap in this age of crowded halls of learning, but make a mind or mould a character or spill out the treasures of the lore of the world's learning and its wisdom, treasures wrung, perhaps, from the agony of years of labor in the stench of midnight oils, and you cannot accumulate enough during a lifetime to provide against the needs and wants of old age. Here is a real consideration for students of civili zation and boasters about it. It seems to us that it is a consideration which might profitably be made the sub ject of several hours discussion in any one of those classes at the university that have-more than a hundred students in them. In all of the rest of the history of the world there will be found no more promising ma terial for examination. Omaha World-Herald. PRESIDENTIAL POSSIBILITIES BETTER HOMES FOR NEBRASKA A work carried on by the University of Nebraska that deserves more notice than it receives has to do with the homes. It is the home economics course in con nection with the College of Agriculture. It is not a mere cooking school, as some derisively refer to it. It deals with the serious business of homcmaking in all its branches. Cooking is taught, as a matter of course, but along with that teaching goes instruction in many other things that are vitally important to the home. And the girl who completes the course is qualified to go into a home and manage it successfully in all its departments. Out of this school has gone into the homes of the state a continued flow of instruction concerning house hold management and operation. Not the fussy sort that merely upsets and leaves nothing of the good be hind, but help that really is helpful. Women who have not had an opportunity to get personal contact with the school have been reached in other ways. They have been taught about foods, how to select and pre pare them, what makes a proper diet, and other points of value. Information concerning things that go into the home, its arrangement and management have been Eivn. Dressmaking, care of children in fact, the en tire range of household economics is presented, and to great advantage. At the school they relate with much gusto the tale of the observer sent by an eastern firm to find out what country women- were wearing. He attended a number of county fairs, and then reported he could not tell the difference, for all the women were well dre id and in fashion. The household economic school had something to do with this. It really is making better homes in Nebraska through its course, its radio and other lectures, and through the p rsonal influence of its graduates. Omaha Bee-News. THE SIGNS OF THE TIMES One of the marks of a mental attitude which is healthy is the wave of discussion which is sweeping the country. uverytniiig is being discussed, nothing is taboo all of which is a good sign. Discussion may be likened to cultivation; it kteps the ground fresh and vigorous, not allowing weeds to grow up corrupting a field where a valuable growth might feet started. Discussion is an indication that peo ple are thinking. Indeed, many ctaeges and universities ere now offering courses in discussion leadership, and we should be duly grateful to such men as Lindsey and Darrow for their part in stirring up thought. Out of all this fermentation must surely come something new and valuable; a new attitude suited to the present day.. Oberlin Review. (Continued from Page 1) ALBERT C. RITCHIE second term assumed all the author ity of unwritten law. So much so that no Democratic Governor before Ritchie was ever nominated to suc ceed himself and the only Republi can Governor to be renominated went down to defeat. The rule . seemed inviolate. Neither a constitutional amendment nor a statutory prohibi tion was deemed to be necessary to raise a barrier against a Maryland Governor perpetuating himself in of fice. Smashes Tradition But the rule did not hold aerainst Ritchie. Not only did he smash it once but if he serves his full time the smasher will have been chief magistrate of his state eleven years. almost, if not quite a new record, in these United States. He mierht have served twelve years except for a few er-election reorganization which re duced the second Ritchie term to three instead of four years. He proposes to go back to States rights and to local self-government for the remedies which he believes conditions of today demand. The first of these to his thinking is pro hibition and its effects upon the Nation. He is catalogued as a wet and is a wet in the popular meaning of the term. He is opposed both to constitutional prohibition and to Vol- steadism. He would return the liquor issue to the states, and he believes it can be done. Here is his prohibit tion proposal, briefly put: Prohibition Question "Either the Volstead law must be changed or it must be enforced, 'and I am convinced that it cannot be en forced. We have spent nearly $150,- 000,000 trying to enforce it and have sacrificed nearly $4,000,000,000 in taxes, while the effort has been made and our last state is worse than the first. "I believe in the right of. each state to settle in its own way ques tions which intimately concern its people. Many states prefer absolute prohibition; others do not. There is no use of ignoring the fact that the population in many states is pre ponderantly against Volsteadism. The same doctrine of state deter mination, Governor Ritchie insists, can be made to apply in other impor tant directions. He warns earnestly against centralization of power in Washington, federal dictation to the states and federal interference with legitimate business. This Marylander does not pretend to have an answer to all pressing public questions. He has never mih- licly elaborated his views upon for eign affairs, for example, nor upon the farm problem. Not long ago he went on a speaking tour which took him into the grain belt. He had no inspired message for the farmers ar.j frankly told them so. He said he did not know the true answer to thpir question, but he added, "I know the farm problem is here and that the answer must be found." i ' OSCAR W. UNDERWOOD the Constitution of the ITnitnd States. No man should be president of the United Stai.es who would nul lify any part of the Constitution; no man should be Dresidonr. vuhn would be half-way for the Consti-I tution and half-way against it." There is a voice that rings clear. (2) League of Nations. The sen ator is earnestly in favor of the League of Nations as a means for world betterment. He believes our old time-worn doctrine of isolation has been outlived and that an as sisting part should be played by the United States in both the League of Nations and the World Court. (3) Liberalism of spirit. The sen ator's record of thirty years of sane progressive' voting for progressive measures within the Constitution is the best possible answer to the in terrogations naturally forthcoming on this point. (4) The matter of taxation. Sen ator Underwood's chief battle has been for the placing of the burden of taxation on those best able to carry it, the battering down of tariff rate?, and extension of markets for the farmer and the reduction of taxes. (5) Aid for the farmer. Senator Underwood is constructively inter ested in the best interests of the farm group and believes the regu lating of the foreign policy is the beat means of fostering the farmer's interests. ' (6) Muscle Shoals. The senator's attitude is one of entire sympathy with the people of the south and es pecially with the firming element. In the support of this measure the people may refy implicitly on a faith ful and proficient safeguarding of their interests. CHARLES E. BORAH of the people, the possibilities of that great office must inevitably have a vast attraction for him. To him the Presidency would mean the opportunity for positive action, the pressing of his ideas and ideals of democracy. The insurgency, the opposition, of which he is so com monly accused, would, undoubtedly in that office give way to an affir mative leadership, a characteristical ly independent championship. Conscious of these possibilities, he would like to be President. But he has no illusions about his chances. "It would take a revolution to nominate me," he said recently. And thf group of newspapermen he was addressing smiled with him at his candor. Index of Individuality His unswerving faith in democracy and the people goes hand in hand with his aggressive devotion to the Constitution. To grasp an under standing of Mr. Borah, and his public career and acts, these two factors must always be kept in mind, and be used as bases for evaluation; these tenets and the personality of the man, his broad humanity, his kind liness, his indomitable courage and unvarying mental indepednence. Mr. Borah has served as a United States Senator during the terms of five Presidents. .He freely dissented from and opposed the policies and leadership of all, and yet, with all has he been on the most cordial per sonal terms. It has well been said, "Borah is the severest critic and the personal friend of Presidents." "Republican party leaders must realize that the country extends be- yond the Mississippi River. The agri cultural West demands the same con sideration that has so long been given the industrial and financial East. The American farmer must be given the same full privilege to the Amer ican market that American industry has. "I voted against the McNary Haugen bill because I considered im portant provisions of the measure unconstitutional. But relief and pro tection must be given the farmer. Freight rate discriminations must be abolished; waterways must be devel oped, and natural resources and water-power conserved. Would Cut National Debt "I am for giving prohibition a fair trial. It has not had that yet. I am opposed to its repeal, until it has been given a fair trial; until men in high places have honestly endeavored to enforce it. The plan of party leaders to side-step this great nation al issue is a menace to Nie continu ance of law and order in America. It cannot and will not be silenced or dodged. Mr. Borah has often been called a "one-man party." There is much in that. Mr. Borah has never been sec ond in command. He cannot do otherwise than lead; and for the 20 years of his public career he has been the leader of a party a one-man party of his own. Of the issues now facing the Na tion, Mr. Borah is not only frank, but active. One of the issues he de clares is the silence and reticence of leaders and candidates of all parties. He is determined that there shall be public discussions and avowals of po sition by candidates. If the people on the earth could stand side by side, they would en circle the globe about fifteen times. LUNCHEONETTES AT THE OWL DRUG 14 and P Sts. Fine Engraving We can give you prompt service on any thing you with engraved Gold. Silver. Copper, Bronze, etc. Names removed from Fraternity pins and Reen graved. Loving Cups Gifts HALLETTS University Jeweler Estab. 1871 117-119 So. 12 Today at Rector's TUESDAY MARCH 20 Pimento Cheese Tostette Cake and Whipped Cream Any 5c Drink 25c Also 5 Other Specials xwy imii'ii'M-nfij tufv rv ' 1 a If DO" arMa' N 9 aV ",. BVrrl-T BARBECUE AN IDEAL PLACE To Dine Any Old Time A RARE TREAT IN BARBECUED MEAT 230 So. 14th University Orchestra Gives Vesper Concert Professor Steckclberg a.nj Wa, Wheatley Head L.t Program " Of Sunday Series The University of Nebraska or chestra, under the direction of pro" fessor Carl P, Steekelborg and WaU ter Wheatley, tenor, presented the last concert of the sixth annual Sun day afternoon vesper series, in the Lincoln high school auditorium Sun day afternoon. It was announced by Charles B Righter, who has had charge of the programs, that the same plan would be carried out next year, but with the use of more instrumental music Indiana '99 Rule Bars Co-ed Rides Out of City Bloomington, Ind. (I P) The Indiana Daily Student, searching among the university archives, has discovered that in '90 there was a rule at the University of Indiana saying that "No co-ed shall ride by means of horse and buggy beyond the city limits." 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