The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 17, 1928, Page TWO, Image 3

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    TWO
w'EDNKSSUA, uCTOBER 17, i!5.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN.
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Under direction of the Student Publication Board
TWENTY-EIGHTH YEAR
Published Tueeday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and
Sunday mornings during the academic year.
Editorial Office University Hall 4. "
Business Office University Hall 4A.
Offics Hours Editorial Staff, 3:00 to 6:00 except Friday
and Sunday, Business Staff: afternoons except
Friday and Sunday.
Telephones Editorial: B-6891, No. 142; Business: B-6891,
No. 77; Night B-SSS2.
Entered as second-class mstter at the postoffice In
Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of Congress, March 3, 1179,
and at special rate of postage provided for In section
1103, act of October 3, 1917, authorized January 20, 1922.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
12 a year Single Copy S cents 11.25 a semeeter
MUNRO KEZER EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
MANAGING EDITORS
Dean Hammond Maurice W. Konkel
NEWS EDITORS
W. Joyce Ayres Lyman Cass
Jack Elliott Paul Nelson
Cliff F. Sandahl Douglas Tlmmermafi
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS
Vernon Ketrlng Leon Larimer
Betty Thornton
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Catherine Hanson Joe Hunt
William McCleery Robert Lalng
Eugene Robb
MILTON McGRKW..... ......... .BUSINESS MANAGER
ASSISTANT BU8INESS MANAGERS
William Kearns Marshall Pltier
Richard Rlcketts
HOT AND HEAVY
Comment of the Nebraska Alumnus in its lead
ing editorial this month on rush week is reprinted
under the heading, "Other Editors Say." The Daily
Nebraska", iraa distinctly surprised at the nature of
the editorial. Granting that delayed pledging is a
contforeraial subject with arguments on both sides,
The Daily Nebraskan could Bcarcely expect such a
wholesale hurling of adjectives as appear in the
first paragraph.
The Daily; Nebraskan is in hearty accord wiih
the Alumnus in favoring the establishment of a
dormitory system. All students should have the
opportunities now presented by fraternities. A com
plete dormitory system would be the nearest possible
aprroach to Such an ideal. But until dormitories
are conatrtKiied any program for delayed pledging
must be looked on with, disfavor. Fraternities today
offer the only satisfactory means of contatt with the
student body by any organization, whether campus,
acuity or aiumnL granting that they may not su'j
ordinate fraternity to the University, until a dormi
tory system is developed, they must remain the most
effective center through which a university con
sciousness may be Instilled.
As for the dormitory program, much as it may
be desired, there are other more pressing needs of
;he University. New engineering buildings and
equipment would be more effective in promoting de
velopment of engineering students than Improved
housing facilities. An adequate library, suitable to
a university of the size and caliber of the University
of Nebraska, would offer far more opportunities to
a Nebraska student body, than a mere improvement
in rooming facilities. If the state of Nebraska can
supply dormitory facilities along with campus im
provements. The Iaily Nebraskan will rejoice with
t he Alumnus. But adequate professional staffs and
satisfactory equipment are a first requisite to the
pieuter university which The Dally Nebraskan is as
anxious to see built as is the Nebraska Alumnus
WAITING FOR ACTION
Action of the athletic board concerning the re
turn of the programs to the Corn Cobs has been
help up pending the return of Herb Qlsh, director
of intercollegiate athletics, from his trip to the East.
Mr. Gish is scheduled to be back at his desk today.
During Mr, Oish's absence from Lincoln, several
significant changes have taken place in the program
situation, Student organizations have shown an un
usual interest in the matter. The Daily Nebraskan
has received more voluntary contributions discussing
the matter than on any campus subject that has
arisen in the last three years. Students of all
classes nave put in their word for the return of the
program aoncession to the Corn Cobs.
Hand In band with student objections to the
change has come a frank recognition of some of the
difficulties of former years by the Corn Cobs. Al
ready the pep dub has provided for a reorganization
which would remove the principal objections ad
vanced against the Corn Cobs by Mr. Gish before
his departure, By Thursday the reorganisation will
be complete,
MaawtrQe Oie Cobs have not been waiting for
toe reorganization in order to put their organization
to work la school service. The pep display at so
rbrlties last Friday was one of the best in ynsors.
This week the Corn Cobs addressed folders to some
3,000 Nebraska dads in which the "Dad's Day" edi
tion of the Dally Nebraskan was mailed. Tbey are
handling the gale of tickets to the "Dad's Day"
luncheon Baturday,
It was a most commendable spirit of justice
which kept the athletic board from taking action in
Mr. Oish's absence. The Dally Nebraskan holds
high three hopes: (1) That Mr. Gish will give the
changed situation as serious consideration as he
gave the original conditions and that the desires and
interests of students will not be overlooked in his
analysis; (2) That the athletic board will recognize
the advantages of the Corn Cobs as program dis
tributors, as bearers of the color that makes col-h-giate
football most enjoyable, as representative
of university spirit who need some source of revenue
if they are to function adequately in the interests
of the University, and (3) That quick action will
he taken to restore the Corn Cobs to the stands
with the program concession.
OH. OH, OH, OH!
"I had only an hour to study and I couldn't get
the book because I didn't have my identification
card."
"I had to present my card half a dozen times
in two hours, having to show it for every book I
took out.. They surely knew me some of those
times." ' ,
These criticisms of the library and the identi
fication card system are typical of some half dozen
such written comments which have been submitted
to The Dally Nebraskan.
Confusion has undoubtedly been caused this fall
due to the demand for the Identification card before
loaning books at the library. Until students become
habituated to carrying their cards, confusion will
continue. That is no Indictment of vhe system.
The Identification card system is a Joint-protective
system alike tor. student and library. No
student can charge a book out against anothe.- tlu
ucnt as bus been done in other years. Neither can
a student use an assuaged name and remove the
book from the library, handicapping fellow students
who want the- use of the book, and the library In
its efforts to supply student needs. These latter
causes account for the request that the card be pre
sented each time a book Is chocked out. Library
assistants may remember that students have gotten
books before but they can hardly be expected to
remember the names of the hundreds that use the
library daily.
THE KAGGER: If the editor agrees, he is cour
ageous. If he disagrees, he is a radical.
Now that class societies and other pests have
been .abolished, a serious law student asks, "How
about the collegiate wrecks?"
Scholarship will acquire a new significance now
that military sponsors have to be checked for eligi
bility in the dean's office.
A STUDENT LOOKS
AT PUBLIC AFFAIRS
By David Fellman
Dwight F. Davis, Secretary of
War, speaking before the Anieri-;
can Legion convention in Pan An
tonio, on October in, presented
some Interesting tiformailon re
garding the military strength of
the United States. Our regular
army, comprising 118,750 men, is
much smaller than the active
armies of either Great lirltain,
Fiance, Ifaly, Spain, Japan, Kusxia,
China, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Ru
mania, or Jugoslavia. The average
strength of the armies of fifty-one
nalions of the world is four to
every 1.000 population. The pro
portion of the American army to
our population is one to every
Intimate Picture of Life
In Laurentian Country
Is Portrayed
"Ci k-;("iac! Sabot I'uillor a
pot ! Quebec! -- Marclie aver!''
And we go with the raconteur into
the picturesque- life of old Quelve.
Dr. J. V.. I.eKosslKnol. in his latest
book, "The HoHiiport Head," re
cently published by McClelland A:
Stewart. Toronto, presents an inti-
Students wonder Just which trucks are beins;
kept off from K street following the city council's
announcement that H street, 10th to 16th, would be
closed to trucking.
Mud walking is the latest campus traffic prob
lem. Sidewalks could be built across the drill field.
'IN MY OPINION
We're Overworked"
mate picture of the lives of the peo-
1,000. These tlfty-one powers have P'e or tne ijuirenuau couuuj,
a military reserve of eighteen per j Joys sua sorrows, uie.r ma. Me.-.
1,000 population, seven times as'"'''r iuuiKe, men -u- ........
large as our proportion. These jduty.
facts indicate that we are mam- There is a certain ( harm and
talnlng a milltarv force which is at ! freshness about these nine stories
the minimum consistent with na-of the French Canadian people ol
tionnl safety l'si generation which is most
"No nation has ever claimed." j pleasing to the reader. One seems
said Secretary Davis, "no nation to breathe the pure, bracing air ol
could claim, that our small army 1 the Canadian w nods n:ul larins and,
U nnvihiup hut n i.iirelv defensive ! in the midst of his daily hurry, in
force. While there Is a most sin-j linter in the quiet
cei-o desire to nmmnm world peace. Hiese simple lives.
and a very detinlte renunciation of
agcressjve war as an instrument
It has been said that "you can lead a horre to
ater, but you cant' make him drink," but this iitate
ment could best be modified to fit university stu
dents by letting It read, "you can heap assignments
upon the heads of pupils, but can't do it and keep
them above sod."
When freshmen girls had their medical exami
nations last week, they were warned against over
working themselves and rather to flunk a course
than to ruin their constitutions studying into the
"wee sma hours." Consistency among its members ! ?fV?JPn' J'TS B' N'
, j . that the South Amerirafl powers
IS one or me trans to do most auinireii m au
of national pollry. there is no in
tention whatsoever on the part of
our government to jeopardize the
security of our sehes or of our
property."
Self preservation is, indeed, the
first law of nature.
Chile and Peru have finally re
sumed diplomatic relations. Thy
have been quarrelling for years
over the boundary to be drawn be
tween the tw o count t ies. The set
tlement of this problem, known as
the Tacna-Arica dispute, was en
trusted to the United States for
organization, and if the instructors of the University
of Nebraska would be consistent with the opinions
of the medical heads of their Institution there would
be many freshmen who would not be wishing them
selves any place but on the campus as they are
doing now.
Some professors seem to forget, in their zeal
to share the Joys of their subject, that every other
professor on the campus has the same Idea, and
that a long assignment is no added task It has
been said that two hours should be spent la pre
paring a subject, but when a person of at least
average Intelligence who has made a good high
school record spends four hours covering his assign
ment, to say nothing of mastering it, something
should be done. And what can a freshman do? Grin
and bear it, they say. but looking at the grinning
countenance of said freshman, the teacheis think
tbey are not worked hard enough, and whoops!
"another theme for tomorrow."
"Don't be a grind; learn what life has to offer
that doesn't come from books" say the learned ones.
"Get into activities." How- can one attend classes
from 8 to 5, spend several hours making himself
known on campus as an enterprising young man,
study from 7 to 2 and keep from causing a death in
tle family!
"Dear old Nebraska U" spirit could be aroused
much more profoundly In the freshmen if the
teachers would use discretion and show their school
have got together. Secretary Kel
logg has suspended the Tacna
Arica Boundary Commission for
four months, to give them a chance
to negotiate themselves. Hoth na
tions accepted the proposal. Sec
retary Kellogg commends them for.ocists
their "broadminded and liberal gifted
and peace of
I "Tin. Itemm.ll l Koail " .1 lie title
I story, takes us with Michel 'I'll i
bault alone the oad which lured
him into aduiitui' and roniam e.
We catch a glimpse o: bold pira.-.
flaunting its-ell" on the shores of tin'
quiet habitant.
; Dissension Arises
! In "Pax Vohiscum" the pious zeal
of the new cijye of th" newly cie
ated parish of Ste. Hrlsiite de I. aval
causes' no end of misunilc fViandinc
among the inhabitants of I.inal.
The christening of .lean P.nptiste
O'Prieti and Prltitte I.ntoiuauie.
which was intended by the good
father to e:ei ; a reconciliation
among the Irish and From h in the
parish, results in disscn.-ion and di-
iMon.
Mr. I.t-Kosficnol's inimitable
sense of humor is directed 'oward
the K'-nealofisi in the words ot
Abbe Horan. "main foolish iliins;s
have been said and done by ceneal
w ho. to say the least, are
with a strolls; imaeinaiimi."
love of pretty Pliilomene Duhamel.
The weird and unusual tale ol
the "loup-garou" lends a note of
the mysterious to the stories of
Pierre Thlbault, who is, Indeed, a
"bon raconteur.' Underlying the
depiction of the lives of these
French Canadian people there is a
spirit of understanding sympathy,
bred of the close association of the
author with the country described.
Mr. Leitossignol is a native of
Quebec and has spent many years
in the very region about the Peau
port Iload. The slyle is simple and
direct, taking sonielhing of the
spirit of the characters, and there
is a quaintness and humor which
add a piquancy and zest to the
whole. The Peauport Koad pre
sents a title and charming picture
of French Canadian life and this fi
delity of portraiture will win it
wide recognition.
DESIGN WILL BE
DISLAYED SOOiY
j First of a series of exhibitions
I of architectural renderings is ex
pected to arrive the latter part of
Jtllis week, according to word re
ceived by Prof. .1. K. Sniay of the
(Division of Architectural Kncineer-
tng. Department of Applied Me
chanics. The flrsi ol the -leiies will be
sent by Iowa State colleg,. a,
Ames. Later (jn, work from the
licaux-Arls Institute of Denim, 0(
New York will be on display n
well as work from other iiistlj'u.
tions.
As Hoon a." further won s
celved relative to these cxhibiiloiu"
further notice will be given.
( tl shall I do
sL with
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MAY DEBATE ON
In "Abbe (it andi'iaison" we are
hown faithful and suiii-elnsh
sen Ice of the parish priest of St.
Snven- de Quebec, and ir. "The
SMITH, HOOYER "I'ehl." the simple honesty and de-
lo.iuu uf riiiiirl'e rtll'i IW-iwile
Tentative plans are being formed i.epine, so characteristic of the
by the members of the Al Smith people.
ror President club and the mem
bers of the Hoover aud Curtis
club for a debate between these
two organizations on the presiden
tial candidates.
No definite pluns have been
given out up to date, but if the
debate is held it will probably be
given between acts of the Kosmet
Klub show, "'The Match Makers"
Friday night.
Customs, Traditions Strange
The tendency of the habitant to
cling to old customs and iraditions
Ms very strong. Theophile l'.eatue
! paire. a young lai nu-r of L'Ange
Gardien. is the one w ho has the
courage to break away from the
bondage of tmie-honoi ed usages by
'bringing modern medio Is into the
parish al the risk of losing the
friendship of his neighbors and the
W. S. Send Call for
Freshman GirN To Work
Freshman girls seeking activity
points may apply at the A. V. s.
office in F.llen Smith hall, any
Wednesday or Thursday afternoon
from now on, between three and
five o'clock, to do filing work.
Those girls who signed up at ihe
A. W. S. lea, for the particular
3Vii
spirit In wanting freshmen to know all the sides of i campus activities in which they
the life of this grand old Cornhusker school ratherj were most interested will be noti-
i ki. .wii., h,.h f n.ik..i.. I fled in the near future about the
French.
S. S.
ABOLISH OLYMPICS?
To the Editor:
The Olympics are a tradition in this university
of ours. Their need in the beginning was unques
tionably great, but whether or not that need has
disappeared Is a question. The Olympics began as
time when they should particlpaie.
Football Man Buys Cafe
To Iay College Expense
Charles Dnshee entered the I'ni-
versitv of Nebraska in the fall of
ia witn practically no cash as
sets. With the aid of his sister, and
by borrowing the remainder of the
rash needed, he nnrchnsert f'fllfot'x !
a substltutt for the annual class fight. In this thelfafpnn smith rwenth treot
Olympics rved a resl purpose, it served to turn
rough, dlsorganited horse-play and often sheer ruf
fianism, Into an organized competition between the
freshmen and sophomore classes. It also served a
good purpose In developing class spirit among the
freBhmen, which is but a stepping stone to school
spirit.
But the last few Olympics have been farces and
Olympics in name only. The freshmen turn out j Townten4 putaM photogmphrr-A,!
in run lorce, naving tne incentive or getting na oi ;
tneir green caps, nut tne sophomores, naving no, I f
. . . . .: 5 Tha I
sucn incentive, make at tne best Put a miserable ;
showing.
seems to be
Since then he has paid all of the
indebtedness incurred thru the pur
chase of the cafe and has also
found time for many outside ac
tivities. He has attended school
regularly since Hi25 an at present
time is one of Coach Bearg's best
prospects for the end or guard po
sltions on the Nebraska football
squad.
F The"
The general opinion in this university j ( Tfflpfft CflfCtPrla I
e that the freshmen will win In any esse, 13 1
where In other colleges this Is not an accepted fact,
the reverse often being true. This stagnation of
opinion is surely killing the Olympics. If Interest j 1..........................
Optrated By th University
FOR YOU
was shown by the sophomore class, this prevailing
idea could be changed. Perhaps if some incentive
were Infused Into the contest, more Interest would
be shown by the sophomore class.
One suggestion might be that some penalty
(to be worked out by the Student Council) be im
posed on the sophomore class. That they give a
party or dinner for the freshmen, If they were
beaten by more than a reasonable margin.
If the sophomores are afraid of the freshmen,
abolish the Olympics. If not, then let us see more
Interest, let us prune the tree of s$udent. activities
of all deadwood, following the example of the Stu
dent Council. Let every organlr.ation and tradition
Justify its existence. '
A Modern I'ublius
(also a sophomore)
We Cater to
Student's Appetites
TASTV SANDWICHES
POTKkTO FLAKES
RICH MALTED MILKS
FOUNTAIN DSLICACIES
Or BVIRY KIND.
M. W. DeWITT
SUCCESSORS TO
ILLER'S
rescnption
harmacv
B4423 1645 "O"
P
Coll egiate Pyjamas
'I
reflect new ideas
"CLEVER" iil.lv describes tli.se new ? fy'
pvjanui Hints, ami "CUMFY" 1 ho wav 'vi'"'
liii-.V III. "I nay prints in lime styles: "vi 'x.
u-itli IVl.T Pun f.il In i of white i.i a t 1 iVj5.rt.-J
Taw
-.i . . . . , . &. a'.a
wiin i)n;ii-sii;iii (i iiccK ; or slip-over siyie ryfi.
jacket villi Y-nrck. All are sleovc-les.
1 wo-piece, mid trousers have filled yoke.
1 IV '
Priced, I..95
1 'lldeweiir - Second Finn-.
OTHER EDITORS SAY-
RUSH WEEK.
Rush week Is often spoken of as a huge joke
and. a farce. As a matter of fact, it is anything but
a Joke it is nothing short of a tragedy. The whole
system is vicious and not only tends to, but usually
does, overshadow the fundamental things in college
life.
It seems to us that a dormitory' system for all
freshmen, with sophomore pledging by the fraterni
ties, would nationalize the presetu situation. Yes.
it would be opposed by many fraternity members.
Why? Because it might subordinate fraternity to
the University, as it should be. But such s move
would have the whole hearted endorsement of vast
numbers of alumni, both fraternity and non-fraternity
members, and the approval of students' parents.
We believe the regents could take such a pro
gram to the legislature with every assurance of its
successful passage, it is a move in the right direc
tion for a grea.er I'nlve'Mt- and 4 progrpm worth
fighting for.
Srbratka Alumnus
"JVWWWWCRO
if I f trU?
i
j 200 j c(Fr
I Hats il Jmfmim
, . iL
. t i by "w a i i h jbj. m Ji m m m m m mm m m m m mm m m m a
) Metallics M , -r V r
II Felts Velvets" 1SA TtS.
l' AH favored colon In n full t I " T. l(S CV
f ranee cf htiid nzn ', V t yJJ 1 '
M FLOOR TWO ",
JL JL ICLULV
i :
en you use the
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