. r TWO TIIF. DULY NKIIKASKAN M I DNF.SH V, J M)AUY 22. l'i.tu. The Daily Ncbraskan TWaNTV-NINTM VIA retertd as seconl clui matter at ths roetoffice la Lincoln. Neb under act of cotigraaa, starch J. UTa, and at speOal tele of jtM provided for la evtion U03. ait of tVL S. lU. eulhorlied Jan. CuTr fTt AND A Ht 10IT0R IN CMIir J, M. MTU U 1 1 NIU MAN AG C A tsiteriel Uatf. M4tuin eduore: tUlsar Backus, On Hobb, News editors: IVnald Carlson. Rfbert Ktlly. William McOeery. iene McKim. fclm.nt Wait. h ports editor: Jack CUi.Mt. CVnlnbiitmf editors: Maurl.e Aktn. Ponald Carlson, l.uriU CTrf. David FalimaB. Rotert Kelly. William HoClf ry. Elmer Ske-v. Ivy Day Tantrums. ,T day l hat elorious Jar fi'.'oil with "tnil'rmiu " ce ninoi.lci i to ronie isilier this ye-ar than heretofore. Iuteal of follow, in out the sohr.lnle ai outlined in the univrr ity eaVn.hr. the authorities have il.oiv.il that the evmti will take pine sometitm- ilur- the firt wffk in May. The laily Nebrakan wetvnr the chance. Wa hive always ajrcM ith the fac why in it opposition t r"n h' Vibx e!.vwork nas dinipted jut rrir to final e amintitions in th second semester. .Imt why this nrrai uement should continue has never been fully explained nor ha tlurc rrr been any attempt to rt the unneces sary break. Iut now the p roll em is solved. Ivy day i to be !Njoiti-.l from roundup week, which is eeiiti!ly the alumni's wrrk, an way, ami. h. si n.ii. R this year, is to be placed in the same f -imp with the other outstanding student af f. irs takine place erh spring. The ncM of the ehane of time f.-r Ivy cr, it is sfe to say, was re-eried wilh no p. -eat eor.e. rn by the majority of Nebraska Muenta. To the two or t)iit- l.uiulre.l that n-cmblt on the lann east of Administration h.uldinf. the pur pUn only livans that they h.ive to W present tarlier than usual to wit iv ss wh.vt's pirc to happen. To less than 10 percent of the viudoiit l.!y, however, the alteration mtans that "it won't be l'V.g until it's hfi-e. so we've cot to hurry." Ti e time was hort as it was in the fint'plaee, but now they haw to uiovt alorg a little faster or they'll be disappointed. There Is tardly ary reed to point out to whom we are referrinp. It is obvious and s. appsnnt on this campus at this timo that any student who hns any vision at all -hii what is transpiring. Hut in ease you don't f..llor us -t'a the "hip" ncniors and the "comirg" esmp'.is kinps. known otherwise as jt.i.it'i v Tl.ia is tlnir busy time. The seniors, about to pivc up their coveted position as "representative leaders." are s jirchinp around for equally "representative" successors. All available "responsible" posi tions, auch as party committee memberships, are beinp filled by those who arc expecting to bo "honored" on hy day. This newspaper does not object to having Kludents honored if what tbey receive for their efforts is really and truly consider' d an honor. We do object, though, to passing something off as an honor, when, in the final analysis, there is nothing to feel honored a'.out. In anoiher column in this paper appear two student opinions gleaned from Tie Daily Ncbraskan files of yesteryear. "We are re printing these for two reasons: First, in or der to relieve us from telling the whole story (for O. V. B. seems to have covered it quite completely); and second, in order to prove to our beloved adversaries that the opinions ex pressed now and then during the current sem ester have not been the product of a lonely boy editor. Having read which, yon should have a fiiirly good idea how ibis editorial would have M.ded, so we've decided to drop the matter a is for today. The members of the student oinu,ei will In called upon, late this afternoon, to m;ike .in iinportaiit decision. They will be asked to render a final verdict on a proposal, put before them early in the term, which seeks 10 establish a system of proportional represen tation on the campus. Ihis matter of reorganizing the basis of representation on the student council is of vital importance to the future of student self government on th Nebraska campus. Foi st udent self govern inent will succeed only in sofar as the organs of selfgovernment through which campus opinion is expressed are effec tive. .As a representative body, the student council's first and primary fund ion is to rop-rfs-ont. It must not represent 1 Lis or that par ticular shade of student opinion, hut all shades. If half of tho student body is represented, and half isn't, then the student council is not, in fact, entitled 1o the very name it bears. No single part of the s1 udent body has a right to assume a stewardship for the whole. Axiomatic as this may scein. the fact is that the student cuiieil, since, its very incep tion, his not represented a certain large, sub stantia element of the student body, it is undeniable that this monopoly of the, council by one particular element of 1hc student body, important and influential as it is. has ser iously weakened its prestige and limited its potentialities. Proportional representation seeks to reor ganize Ihe student council to the end that it will, in fact, be a council of the students, rep resenting all forms of opinion. It frankly ad mits that differences in points of view and interests exist among the students, and in stead of blinding itself to such differences, it seeks to recognize and reconcile them by mak ing their mutual co-operation possible. "P. R.," as a part of the technique of stu dent selfgovernment, will be a decided inno vation, clearly an experiment. If it succeeds and there is no reason it shouldn't the dis tinction and satisfaction of having blazed a new trail will be ours. So far, the discussion is in hypothetical language: one single elec tion will test its worth. All it asks is a chance. The members of the student council have a real oppoi-1 unity 1o demonstrate their cour age a.nd foresight, fairness and foresight, this afternoon. Echoes of the Campus I Contemporary Sentiments1! Cutting Calories. 1m the IMitor of The Ncbraxkan: A few months ago, an isue of a magaiiiu' known for its authority on correct style, came forth with lh announcement that the boy Mi fiuuie for women wait n thing of the pat. and that feminine curves would once more prcxail In the world of fashion. With this announcement came great high of relief from those women who have leudciu-b toward plumpurs. Ooctort gar the announcement their hearty approval. a Wing it step toward healthful lixitig. Ton ft'Ctioiurn and restaurant owuu smiled once more, and ordered ucw Mipplicn of chocolate and pastries. The university coed is a loader in fashion, just a she i a leader in practically every other fit Id which she enters. F.spcciall.x In the west is this true, lor her there are no dibu tantes r Mihdeb 10 set the styles. Whether the unixirsity girl sta thin or allows her self to assume a more natural weight is a eiucstion. the answer of which will affect the procedure of niav.y other women in the coun try. The reducing fad. which has ben the rage among the womm of the country for the past few $ ran. is, according to medical authori ty s, of very great danger to the health. For the girl who is still in her formative years to place herself on an unscientific, inadequate diet, and then attempt to continue her usual activities, is perfectly absurd. We hear cirls talkinc of threeday milk diets, orange diets, or even of complete abstinence of food for a certain period of time. What university girls can hope to accom plish by these unsound, and actually dangerous practices is beyond comprehension. If they are seeking physical beauty they arc certainly mistaken in their conception of the quality. To me. wothine is move unattractive than a poorly nourished, underfed irl, whose phy sical deficiencies are reflected in her mental state. She is apt to be morose, irritable, and generally disagreeable. Some girls think that they will have more male admirers if they appear sickly, and dependent, but what man really enjoys tha prospect of pajirg doctor hills all his life, in addition to putting up with an illnatured wife! So snap out. of it, girls; forget your diet, and begin to look like human beings again. Show the other women of the world that you still have some sense, and they rill eventually follow your lead, in giving proper considera tion to the rudiments of health. A COED. tf hnt Abtrnt It? To the Editor of The Ncbraskan: In an article which appeared in The Daily Ncbraskan some time ago, one Dr. Reed "a graduate of the University of Nebraska, now in an eastern university" expressed the opin- ion that if a girl is to get married she should go to a coeducational school. Dr. Reed went on to say that, in attend ing such a school, she would find the type of mate best suited for her; that, as a classmate with a man, she could observe him and find ! out w hat sort of a chap he really was. She I was also of the opinion that a girl might find it advisable to change schools if man's pres ence interforred with her class work. It may be unwise to attack the existing order, or even question the views of someone who has attained to the honor of a doctor's degree, hut isn't it subverting education a wee bit if our universities are to become matrimon ial bureaus from which young females are to select their husbands? And just how is a girl at a university to find out the facts about her chosen one? Where can we find a place of more hypocrisies than the university where some live fnr above the standards they have known at home, and others far below; where the ashman's son from Podunk belongs to the so-called "best fraternity on the campus?" An3 as to the presence of the men inter fering with the class work of the gills, it is quite more probable that the girls will be the more distracting to the male element. Did Dr. JJeed get her degree in the engineering depart rnent? Or did she merely neglect to take biology? E. F. Bright Babier. To the Editor of The Ncbraskan: According to a recent statement of Dean Ilicks which appeared in an edition of The Ncbraskan this week, it was suggested 1hat a simplified process of "e-ducation" be estab lished by giving a Ph.D. degree at birth to each baby weighing 1t-n pounds; A.M.'s to those weighing Dine pounds; A.B.'s to those weighing eight pounds; and plain teachers' certificates to those babies barely tipping the scales at seven pounds or less. Of course the statement was made in jest and purposely exaggerated, but does Dean Hicks wish to give the impression by such an assertion that sludents registered in the teachers' college of our university or any other similar institution may be recognized as infer ior either mentally or physically? Are we to infer that so biiiliaut a. man as Dean Hicks does not support the department which trains the most efficient educators of our state? The progress of the nation is dependent upon the educational sj-stcms which are in turn dependent upon the efficiency of teachers within the systems. The uormal departments of the higher state institutions are today train ing men and women to become skilled in tbtir profession. Standards for the acquisition of certificates have been i-aised to a here-to-fore unknown level resulting in a higher qualified and more specialized teaching body. An A.B. or a B.S. degree in Teachers' col lege is not to be obtained by a moron as other colleges might disparagingly infer. A calendar number preceded by "educa tion" never suggests the slang expression "it's a pipe." The matriculates of Teachers' college arc purposeful sludents, 1heir goal being 1he ad mission into one of Ihe most honorable and most needed professions the instruction of the . outh of Ihe na1 ion. Does the teacher not deserve at least an eight pound start? D. W. 7urn'a Our Svnthnvnti, Too, Illinl. Daily llliiff: When ia a atudent not ktlldcllt? The aiiKWer might well be: "When he U a- fraternity man." That la, aa a member of a fraternity he ctaea to be man with Individ uality amfpcrwonal conviction. With all due credit, this situation must be admitted by one unprejudiced and openminded. An opportunity of witnessing the molding of pusomd conviction Into group conviction was granted Thursday evening. The distr. but Ion of "ln ites" to the ball of the local axe Kiiiohrs brought about aa many different re actions as there were fraternities, MacK.sld. 'a henchmen axed their way into organizations with rating men n their roll. And ih.-rc were laughs, frowns, men in digtmnt, and men excited. Some of them would yU jovially. "Where ya been Ter lvnee, sit down and have a bit ti eat," the en tiro fraternity evincing the same kind of re action. One rgairatiMi proved cold and conde scending, even evincing disgust, emitting aueh exclamations, "Open the door and let'em out." . . . "Oh my gosh" (with lips cnrllng In di tasteV All of the orgauiiation members handed together in the same tone of reception. When fraternities gather after dinner be fore the fire for a short "session" the same phenomenon is exhibited. What one likes, all like what one dislikes, all dislike. Tarted, these same men will evince their own Ideas and beliefs, but together they are rrone to play "follow the leader." Snmr WcMx Reflections ? - EDITOR'S VOTE: Ordinarily tbla feature ap pear on Sunday tnit Je to the fact that cold prohibited prompt mail delivery and the fact most people do no "reflecting" on Sundays, here tit! The Educated Mind, The phenomenal growth in the number of college students in the United States during recent years has raised the question of the general worth of our universitiea to a stage of acute discriminating discussion. With the rapid spread of the leveling ideals of democ racy into the field of higher education, think ing people have begun to measure the nature and functions of that higher education. For school arc not ends in themselves; education ia not an eternal verity; they exist for the de velopment of fine and full personalities. There has been an effore-seence of literary effort dealing with the meaning of a liberal ed ucation. Editors and authors, educators and politicians men in all walks of life have been trying to determine what the educational prwc en should accomplish. . In the earlv daji of our American culture, when universities wero few and small, niu! a college graduate was the rare and ahmlng in tellectual beacon of 1.U community, the iman. Ing of a liberal education was clear to all. in a real physical and tangible way. The eolb-ge graduate of the generation that fought the Civil war stood head and shoulder above his contemporaries, in rultuie. in hi bna.ltli oi view, in the ranae of his Information, in tlie measure of hi dignity. He poke a different language, a language flowered with the wia doni of the ancients, hi dress was dutim-livc, hi aspirations were la a class of their own. He was the leader of his people, the gournor. the minister, the creator of public opinion, the natural center of human attraction. Hut today the honor of holding a A IV j de gree doea not compare with the honor winch the pos.sev.or of a high school diploma enjoyed twenty-rive years ao. In this age of what ... i .1 .n.. ..til.. mtitweT. nean iiicsa apuv eniis iu- - the high aehool graduate who does not attend some university is rapidly becoming rare. For going to college is more than an economic ne cessity or intellectual luxury: it is an Inexor able social custom, with all the compulsion which social usage can muster back of it. do ing to college is "the thing that's done,' and that, in the final analysis, is the greatest stimu lant to colb ge attendance today. Now that college graduates are found in all walks of life on the farm, in business, in the professions. In the manual trade it is well to stop and consider whether there U anj thing distinctive about them which sets them apart from their fellow countrymen. It i highly per tinent to ask whether the college graduate ha acquired any sort of equipment which which makes his four years of higher study worth the trouble. What, In other words, docs a liberal education mean to him? Physically and outwardly the college stu dent appears" no different than those around him. Nor does bis distinctiveness consist in Ins acquisition of a certain mass of facts. The ab sorption of factual Information i no more a unique and subtle process than that which a sponge uses to sop up water. Not even the college student's acquisition of a set of expen sive habits constitutes a characteristic which sets him apart as a college student. The most distinctive thing about the col lege student is his intellectual point of view, his well developed mind. The mind of a stu dent, not his clothes or slang or tangible hab its, is the measure of his education. True, many students have failed to develop their mental faculties even to the extent that they are intellectually distineuishahle from the street cleaners. This makes this inquiry all the more justifiable. It is well to be con cerned with what oucht to be, with the ideal. And wh.it sort of mind should a man with a liberal education havet To indicate briefly, his mind should be open, cultured, scientific, objective and spirited. We hope to discuss these qualities, sepa rately, In this column laler. MLDICAL COLLECt cr ACTIVITY PAUL C PLATT, Editor. Dr. and Mr. PoynUr Enttrtain Ian Chaa. W. Toynter auJ Xlra. ruyuter ertertalue4 the seniors giadualing l lh cliwe o( this meter at dinner PriJay y night at thtlr home. The dinner an elaborate affair. Th present besldea 1 r nud Mr. Poynler were: HerU-rt k. AnUrm.vu. Charles I'. Uk,r, Winfred It illume. Molvin C. lU.lender. Kobert O. UoM. erelt a Unllhait, One U CtlJ. ell. Clarence I. Prumm-ma, Keith O. Kolger. Frank 8. Fur. man, Kenneth Gates. Uoyd K. (i riff la. Thomaa U liriik. niarlea K. Uurnet. Uoyd l llethermcton. Hobert U llo.., Arthur K Jensen. Jerry C. Kll.le beck. lUvmoml U. Lel. Kse ljnman.' Ial O. Uoyd. Kdward M. Mark. Louis Marx. Holier! II. Moore, Uovd H. Mouael. John M. Neelv. W illiam K. Olson. How aid Koyer. Albert C Schmidt, John M. Sheldon. William Wayne Wad dell. Ilorare H. Whillock, Mis AJaline Jooea and Miss Helen Poyntef. . Oe Letts Talks. In the Knday Iatly Nebrasksn was an account of the election of seven new men Into Tbeta Nu, honorary holtic premed fra ternity. Dr. J. S. Lalta. head of the embryology department, gave an address at their initia tion. These men are starting on their medical course with records which are enviable. They are to be congratulated and we take this means of doing so. There ia no higher Meal for a student to try to qualify for than that of . understanding of bis basic sub jects tn the profession be is go ing into. The gradea tt Is true, do not qualify one for a success ful career, but there ta no doubt but that a thorough understand- jk ing of the material taught with-'l an application of sound Judg ment will enable one to go much farther In bis chosen profession. Typewriter For Rent R.-.X Smiths Remtnetoa rrirlorworxlx- Snefiil rats to ilen: fir long tsnn. 41 V V una a J f- srw w-w. . i: O Street. Uncoln. Nebr. B-I14J Publication Board Will Meet Thursday The Student Publication board will meet Thursday, Jan uary 23, at 3:30 p. m, in Uni versity hall room 106. It will consider the applications for the various positions of The Dally Nebrasksn staff for next sem ester. All applicants are asked to be available at that time. ELECTS NEW HEADS Members Choose Alfred A. Hook as President of Bizad Club. Alfred A. Hook, senior tn the collcg-e of business administration, was elected Tuesday night to the presidency of the University Com mercial club, u-hicb is composed of more than 100 men students of Bizad college Sidney Epstein was elected sec retary; H. M. Demel, treasurer, Merrill Johnsen, (lassie Baron, di rectors, and Glen Reichenbach was elected representative to the Bizad Executive board. Election was held in Social Sciences hall Tuesday night, and was presided over by Cassie Baron, because of the absence of the ex president. Glen Reichenbach. Hook announced that commit tees for the ensuing semester would be appointed soon, and that actios would soon be taken to sponsor a traditional pie feed for the men of the college, of business administration. The pie feed la given at the beginning of each semester in order to get acquain ted with new students. RECORD CROWDS SE 'Queen's Husband' Attracts Capacity Patronage Despite Cold. Unusually large crowds have braved the cold weatber to attend "The Queen's Husband" given by the University Players at the Tem ple theater this week. Record crowds have been reported for every performance. The play, a comedy-satire by Robert Sherwood, proves to be highly amusing. It concerns the North sea region, and is believed by manv to be modeled after the private life of the royal bouse of Roumania. do ngs of the royal family of an anonymous kingdom located in tbe Ray Ramsay as tbe king is tip to his usual standard. He amuses tbe audience very much with bs unique characterization of that hen-jecVed individual. His ques tioning look and timid snile soon win the bens of all. Maurine lrayton as tbe queen and Mildred Orr as ber daughter do much to add to the general ex cellence of tbe play. Miss Drayton is very stately and queen-like even though ber attitude toward ber husband is that of a superior. Miss Orr is very charming and gracious on the stage, and she does espe cially well In the sentimental scenes wttb Frederick Granton, ber father's private secretary, played by Walter Vogt. Only two more performances of tbe play will be given. Evening shows start promptly at 7:30 p. m. ; Single play tickets may be ob-; tained at Rosa P. Curtice's. Davis Coffee Shops Day and Niht 108 N. IS Facirg Campus 1151 X Fountain Serrice f 1,111 "' T VT 1 11 IP' f ' IS till JLhirty-five miles from the rail road the editor got his stoiy UP on the Gatioeau River, with the mercury clear out of sight, a huge winter con struction job was going forward! Here was a story the industry wanted to know ... a McGraw-Hill editor covered it. The railroad ended at Maniwaki; thirty-five miles north lay the job. His "paper" was going to press, to the editor mushed through thirty five miles of snow-choked forestlacd. Whether in the frozen north ... in tropic areas laid bare by a hurricane ... or in flooded re gions where army trucks are the only form of transport; if there's a story that industry should . know . . . McGraw-Hill editors get tbe facts first band. Industry and business look to McGraw Hill Publications for news and guiding opinion because they know that these papers are edited from the field. For leaders of industry realize that they must keep contact with progress . -or fall behind. The college man, who now looks forward to tbe day when he too will enter business, can profitably spend an hour a week reading the publication which covers the field in which he is to work. From it he will learn hat busi ness and industry are thinking and doing to day . . . before he leaves the campus. Copies of every McGraw-Hill Publication are or should be in your college library. Butioess men, industrialists sod eo gioeert 600,000 of tbem regularly read ibe McGraw-Hill Publication. More (has 3,000,000 nse McGraw-Hill books and magazines ia tbeir bvsioeas. Tbe Busiacas Veel System Harvard Business Review vistioo Tactory and Industrial Management Power Industrial Engineering American Machinist Product Eegineerina Food Industrie! " ewile V or Id Coal Age Lnipneering and Mining Journal E.A- M.J. Metal and Mineral Market Fng-ineerint- and Mining World Flectrical Yoild Electrical Merchandising Electrical V est Radio Retailing Bus Tranaportatioa Electric Railway ouroaJ Engineering Nemt-Kecord Goastroctioo Methods Chemical 4r Metallurgical Engineering McGR AW-HILL PUBLICATIONS 1 Nrw Yew Philadelphia Saa Fraactaca Vaafcincaaa) natnw OraaaviJU at Vmtu La Aacciia 0 a; i 1