' S THURSDAY. OCTOBER 27. 1932. nutti imii I! VI.'DDKl'tN' I III. IJMI-l Mil.'ummi , ,, ' The Daily Nebraskan St-tion A. Lincoln, Nebi-Mh OFFIC.AL STUDENT BL'CAT.ON UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Entered seeend-e.... J,, m".'' Lincoln. NebrK, under of "5' for , ttln THIRTY-SECOND VE Pub.h.d i..y. Z"?XfX Sunday mornino" dur'nB SUBSCRIPTION RATE 2 yrr Single Copy centa emMler maitad 3 yenr mulled publictlon Board. Ask for Nbrkn editor. EDITORIAL STAFF , Editor-in-chief Hovurd O. AHwy Atnociete Editor Jnrk ErlckSOII Managing Editor. Phillip Brownell New td()orl Richard Moran Katherlne Howard1 Joe Miller r.i-AKI BUSINESS STAFF . . ,. Biitlneni Manager H. Norman Oallaher A.Jlitant Builnei Manager! Frank Mugrv Bernard Jennings Laurence Hall hma Randall Women't Editor , Sports Editor . Society Editor Barn Into Ballroom. First definite action toward providing a decent ballroom where major student parties may b held on the campus was taken Tuesday when the Innocents society, after consultation with university administrative officers, announced that proceeds from the annual homecoming party Saturday night will be used to start a fund to buy permanent dec orations for the coliseum. The decorations will consist of a wall hanging of dark blue vclour which will surround the walls from the balcony railing to the floor, leaving the stage open. These walls may be drawn closer toward the center to enclose only a portion of the floor on four sides for smaller function . Tn- entire ceiling will be slmt out by a canopy oi . blue velour which will join the wall hangings arcui.l the edges of the balcony. This canopy may be ruined, leaving the balcony open when so desired. A mol ile orchestra shell, indirect lighting system and floor furniture complete the equipment. ALTHOUGH the field house has been used for several years for major parties and university events, it is decidedly unadapted to such use to which it has been put simply because there was no other place where such parties could be accommo dated. Decorations cost for these parties have been high when there was an attempt to convert the barn-like hangar into a .ballroom. In any cane the acoustics were poor, both for speaking and music. When, in the future, the new equipment is in stalled, all this inconvenience will be eliminated, furnishing Lincoln's largest ballroom for all major events with the added advantage of keeping them on the campus. A few years ago a movement was started on this campus to erect a student union building. Such a- building remains today the geratest needed addi tion to the university physical plant. It would be, however, utterly foolhardy to attempt to create a demand for it just now. The advent of ole man depression just about the time the movement was getting a good start set up a barrier impassable for the present. One of the greatest advantages of a union build ing would be a student ballroom large enough to accommodate all student social functions. These in the past have been held in the coliseum when on such occasions as the Homecoming party, Military ball, Interfraternity ball, Junior-Senior prom and Ivy day party that floor was the only one in the city large enough to contain the crowd. S'malelr parties, such as the regular fraternity and sorority downtown parties, went to the hotels. In the future these major parties can continue 2j be held in the coliseum with the decoration night marc, which has haunted every student party com mittee in the past, removed. The Betting for such fventa as theatrical performances, freshman convo cations, honors convocation, public speeches and graduation exercises will be much improved. . ryHERE is one catch in the entire glossy picture " 1 the decorations cannot be provided this year. The coat will be about $3,000. It is estimated that nearly $1,000 may be railed this year from student organizations using the coliseum as a ball room. The university, through Chancellor Burnett, has promised some support. But since there is no available fund from which the money may be bor rowed, to be later paid back in installments, pur chase must await the time when the total is on hand. " This is unfortunate. The present year, of all years, is the one when students need to cut social expenses. Could the coliseum decorations be pro vided this year, the plan advanced by the Dally Nebraskan for oo-operattvt fraternity ands sorority paitles to be held, in that building would be adopted much more roadily. With the coliseum presenting its present uninviting appearance it will be difficult to excite fraternities and sororities to any great extent about the idea of holding parties there. This difficuly is, however, but for a single year. The new coliseum decorations will probably be available for next year when for the first time con venient facilities on the campus for holding major student parties and other university affairs will be provided. It is hoped other organizations u;iing the coliseum this year will follow tho example of the Innocents society in adding to the fund a large part of the proceeds from their respective parties. The ball has been started rolling. Who will give it the next shove ? Ambitious Sophomores. TiE group of sophomores who recently proposed to gain a place in the sun by organizing to enforce the freshman cap rule has finally, tho re luctantly, In the face of adverse advice from the Innocents society and student council committee decided to abandon their noble project and sink once more into the ranks of ordinary sophomores. "Tis well. When this group of sophomores first conceived the idea, they were to form a sort of unorganized group of interested sophomores to visit erring freshmen who refused to wear their rod caps and "persuade" the latter to do no. Fair enough. Hut then ambition entered. They drew up a formal petition outlining duties, powers, member ship, etc., and presented it to the student council. They were not only to persuade the freshmen to wear red caps, they were to choose the Dad's day tug-of-war team- an insignificant task, really-they were to form a central sophomore class organization and do various and sundry other high-Hounding things. What the scheme amounted to was this: Re vival of the Iron Sphinx, sophomore organization which was abolished a few years ago because it served no useful purpose in the university. This campus already has too many organiza tions serving no useful purpose. And too many who might, but do not, serve any particularly useful purpose. One of these latter is Corn Cobs, alleged men's pep organization which has previously this year come in for editorial chastizement. This club as it now functions serves chiefly to introduce into the campus extracurricular world those "comers" from the several fraternities who take Cob membership as the first step to fame. The way the Nebraska cheering section functioned at the last home football game is elegant evidence of the way Corn Cobs performs its supposed duties. The proposed sophomoie vigilance committee would have had approximately the same basis of represntation as Corn Cobs each fraternity con tributing and the barbs allowed a certain number. Every function which this committee proposed to appropriate to itself could be performed by Corn Cobs, which contains both sophomores and juniors, fraternity men and barbs. Rather than form a new organization to get the future hot shots into the limelight, let Corn Cobs be "reformed" so as to justify their existence as something more than an agency for this. Welcome Teachers. TEACHERS of the state convene this week for the twelfth annual meeting of the Nebraska State Teachers association. Many of the sessions will be held on the campus, and the Daily Nebraskan joins with the university in extending to the visitors a hearty welcome. Within the next few days a full program is planned for the delegates, but they will have some spare time, and then it is hoped they will take advantage of it to renew old associations and make new ones here on the campus. It is by going back to their work with new enthusiasm and new plans that they will profit from the meeting. That, of course, is the reason for the conven tion, but this year more than ever do the visiting teachers have a duty to perform on their return to classes. It is not fair to say that the whole educational structure is threatened, but it is certain that In many localities grave danger of retrogression ex ists. Educators everywhere have a watch to keep over the principles of enlightenment for which they stand, and this Is more true in Nebraska this year than ever before. Reduced means prevail in every district. In some districts conditions are worse than in others, but nowhere must the fight be allowed to slacken. There is, too, the corollary. Although educa tion must not be allowed to lose any of the ground which has been gained at such cost, neither must there be an extravagance now. The individual teacher has another duty to prevent any needless expenditure. Lost motion must be eliminated, and the school system should emerge better, more effi cient, than ever. The Student Pulse Brief, mnrtar ranfrlliulkina pertinent to matter. f adnt llfr and inr nlvrmltjr en, wrlmmnl by thl. eprtmil, anar ha maul rmlrlrtlnn. t Bound nrw.imnrr arartlrr, which rirhia .11 llnrlom matter n4 penanal at tack. I.rllr inikat he aimed, lut Mines will withheld from ptihllralisa II m atnirra.' "More on Temple Prices. TO THE EDITOR: . Ail student I asked for a rea on why the Temple cafeteria prices should be so unreasonably iiigh, and as yet I have seen no re ally. Not only I but the student body generally as well wpks lace to eat where food is assur jedly clean, well-prepared, and priced to meet the demands of a none too well filled purse. Par ticularly In view of the fact that 'the cafeteria is a university man aged and established place in tended to be just such a place as I mention do I think it seemly for an undclayed change in the Tem ple practice to be instituted. I asked whether the reason for the existing high prices was in competent management. I shall an swer myself. It is. I say it is Incompetent manage ment because of the obvious fact that the cafeteria Is equipped and maintained dally to serve from -four to five hundred persons, a reasonably good day! and any good business man knows that he can not have four or five times the necessary overhead expense and till run on a competent basts. Either overhead must be reduce a. or more customers must be found. In the case of the Temple cafe teria, run by the state thru the university, for the state thru IU children, the logical step is to find more customers (who. by the way, should be easy to find, as they'r all trying to be found by a suit able eating-house.') But one of the essentials of the place they'll pa tronize is reasonably lowered prices. Look at it this way: There are nearly 5,000 students and nearly 1.000 members of the administra tive and instructional staff at the university, ail of whom eat on the average three meals a day, and most of whom eat at least part of these meals away from their resi dences. Where but at the Temple do they want to eat. If the Tem ple is reasonable? It is certainly most conveniently located. I am sure that careful manage ment can reduce the cafeteria prices and actually make money, not lose continually as it is now doing. By lowering prices and ad vertising extensively to introduce the new policy, the problem is solved. It sounds easy, and it is just as easy as It sounds. Offhand I think of a dozen examples of price reduction and nearly as many means of advertising. Any one wno is paid to think up good management principles could just as quickly figure out twice as many more and practice them. A few posslbilltes are: Matt Haf: Sir. 10: raduoad. !tc. rWkad (Maun: Pnr. e , raduea. 4c. FMa: Mnw. to; radueaa, S fvirk chap: rtll, 14c lb.) I"o, lie ah: radwad. . aalad: Now. 10) 13c: radvead .. On. half pint al Bilk: I quart, c, (; raauead 4 ir le. aandvwti: New IBle: radoead, B ft. Sweat mix: ( 16 to 20c doaan Now, c each; 1 or 4a. The list could extend thru the ! entire menu (none too varied, either), with from 10 to 50 percent reductions. A little thought will show that, properly n'anaged, money could bo made at my sug gested prices. Hamburger retails for 3 lbs., 25c; beans, 3 lbs., 17c; milk, 6c a quart; pork chops, 1 lb. 1 3 to 4 chops i 14c, the best grade to be had, while other prices are equally low. I quote no wholesale prices, nor bargains straight re tail prices. Advertising could consist of campus posters, possibly mimeo graphed bills $1.50 per thousand), and notices thru the university mail to those persons it reaches. The prices can be reduced, and 1 think the university owes it to the people who FUpport it to recipro cate by doing for them what it. Doesn't everybody know how things are? SAME STUDENT i Contemporary Comment 1' The Day of Youth. "Editors are always eager for new viewpoints and the outlook held by the rising generation." So Kllery Sedgwick, editor of the Atlantic Monthly expressed him self regarding the future of youth in the Hold ot literature. But this statement does not stop here. It mip,ht just as well have been made concerning the rising generation's future in any field of endeavor. It is as though the entire think ing public had expressed its feel ings towards the possibilities of youth. For since the youth of to day will be the ciders of tomorrow, it is only natural that the present ciders are pleased when members of the younger generation show signs of promise. Certainly these ciders "are always eager for new viewpoints and the outlook held by the rising geutiatlon"; they are in terested to see who shall take their places. And like all human beings they are happy to give up their responsibilities as noon as the "viewpoints and the outlook" of the youths show that they are able to "carry on." Oftimes it has been said that this is the day of youth. Feople with this idea point out numerous young men who are taking posi tions formerly held by old men. They use that as conclusive proof lhqt toriRv Is the dav of vouth. But they forget that the old men who are retiring were inemseives vouths when they went into the loos. And the ones whose places thev took were also youths when they were rirsi cmpioyeo. vy th?n should anyone call this a day of youth any more than any other time? In the correct sense every day is the day of youth. Some youth, however, have their day before others do, since it is the youtns themselves who determine when ihnir Hbv shall come. Thev are tne ones who are responsible for their a J aV-.. .avaf own development. Ana mey i their own accord determine soci ety's demand for them. The youths or loaay can not uvc hoping that their day will soon come. Instead they must through their own thought and achievement prove that their day has come and that they are fully prepared to take charge. Daily Tarkeel. Abolishing Grades. If I were suddenly and by some mistake elected chancellor of this university, the first thing I would proceed to do would be to abolish the grade system. The argument as to whether or not It should be done away with has points on both sides, but I believe tnai tnose in favor of It far outweigh those against it. I believe the idea as taken up by one of the large universities in the east with respect to the jour nalism college Is profitable. There a student may get one of two grades a passing or a flunk. In structors found out that students worked much harder when they did not know what kind of a grade they were getting- They put forth all the effort that was in them In order that they might be classed in the higher of the two grades. Coeds and Marriage. "College 'loos to girls what brandy does .o hard sauce, it spoils the taste without adding a kick," writes Nina Wilcox Putnam in an article on college f..r women. And she goes on to mourn the demise of the old grande dame type of woman with which history splashes its pages. College, she says, gives girls too great an in dependence and sense of humor to be anvthing but democratic and how can we agree with her? drab. "College interferes with mar riage, at least with successful mar riage. . . . Let's keep our college for the grinds" she suggests, "and lot our mariaeeable girls strut their stuff at home." Charming girls don't last long in college, sne thinks, because they don't get credit for their appearance. Mrs. Putnam can always spot a college girl, because her hair isn't just right, her clothes never abso iniv rhif ptr "Last of all their smart-aleek air and self-conscious That is only logical, as we may see. The grade svstem as adopted ny most colleges" and universities is entirely unfair. Each instructor has his own standard set as to how high a grade a student may de serve. Therefore, an "A" student to one professor ioay be merely a "C" student to the professor in the same nubject across the hall. The conclusion is that the grade you get depends upon the instruc tor you register for. For proof of this we have only to visit the classrooms themselves. We may go into an English class on the second floor and find it so large that we cannot even find an extra chair to sit on. We go across the hal! to another class in the same subject. Here we are amazed to find a mere handful of stu dents H is plain to see what the reason for this is. The students hiivc all flocked to the instructor who has the reputation for being a "snap." Information like that spreads quickly, and it Is only hu man nature to want to get the most vou can for the least work. This is not fair to cither the stu dent or the instructor. A number of students coming in from the smaller high schools in the state depend too much upon the grades they get. Having been used to receiving comparatively high grades in high school, they expect the same in university. They are more concerned with the grade they get than they are with the practical value they have re ceived from the course. A number of professors tell the freshman student the first day not to worry about grades, as that is not what counts. And yet the stu dent is so filled with the fear that he might not get a good grade that be becomes panic-stricken and cannot do his best work. Down with the grade system! Let the flag of equality and fair ness wave over this great institu tion! V. M. Ready for Pall HATS made new ! Well . . . almost new . . . they look spic and span ! CASH I CARRY PRICES Men's felts 68c Women's felta 45c Warcaty V CLEANERS toy Wythara, Jsa Tuelrar 221 No, 14th 83367 artificiality give them away. Her son should never come to a co-ed-ucatlonal colege, she says, piling Insult upon Injury, and become in different to the fair sex so early in lire. It is too bad that Mrs. Tutnam should have tried her psychological touch at something with which she doesn't seem to have been familiar. Let her come to Washington Stale and see some of the charming girls enroled here. Ask some of the boys whether they like co-cds with a grand sense of humor and hair that perhaps isn't "Just right." Ask them seriously if they don't think that girls with mental train ing and an understanding of the problems involved should make the best possible partners in successful mariages. Close mutual interests, common ideals, a closed-in environment, and the me Intellectual temper have made college mariages the most successful in the world, au thorities declare. And a round yel low moon for good measure, and what value Mrs. Putnam's ideas? S. Mc. In support of the above view on co-eds and marriage as given by a Washington State co-ed, are cer tain statistics gathered by the In titule of FAnrily Relations. Divorce ends one of every six mariages. But only one in 75 sown in college ends with divorce. Thus does the institute evaluate college romances. It comes out strongly in favor of college activities, pointing out that the campus is replacing the church societies as a popular mat ing ground. College, said the re port; 1. Gets young people accus tomed to each other. 2. Aerlimates them to trials and .in.'lrma ooonmtlnn hlu'n Hla. appointments of life and sexes in shouldering these problems: 3. And makes them generally bet ter fitted for marriage at grad uation. Washington Evergreen. NEBRASKA MORTAR HOARDS PLANNING HOMECOMING FETE Twenty-five reservations have been made for the Mortar Board homecoming luncheon to be held Saturday, Oct. 29 at 12 o'clock at the Lincoln hotel. Mortar Board is reviving the traditions of having a homecoming luncheon instead of a round-up week banquet, ti-.h Kansas Mortar Board chapter hn i been Invited to tho luncheon. HOME ECONOMICS GROUP CONDUCTS FRUIT CAKE SALE The annual sale of fruit cakeu by Phi Upsllon Oniicron, honm economics sorority, will begin next week, and all orders must be in by Nov. 15. Those in charge f tho sale are Teresa Llbershal, Marlon Lynn and Muriel M of fit. DANCING TILL 12:00 AT THE I HOMECOMING PARTY Thamon Hayes AND HIS ORCHESTRA SEE A COB SEE A COB Announcing Our TWENTY SEVENTH ANNIVERSARY SALE and arc we celebrating! Take a peek or three at these listed items then look over our windows and you'll agree! Ladies Coats -Suits -Dresses $19.75 and $25.00 Values Fashion's Finest FURRED COATS, Valuesto $35 Lovely McCallum, Ingrain HOSIERY, Regular $1,95 Values Beautiful New Fall and Winter Millinery Men's Good Looking Fall Suits, Values to $25 Hart Schaffner & Marx $35 Suits The Season's New Overcoats, Values to $29.50 Regular $1.00 Neckwear Men's Cossack Model Leather Jackets $1390 $2375 98c $1.59 $145 $240 It-" y 750 55c S2.95 and Pigskin and Capeskin Gloves $4-95 and $95 $1.85 "Just a Few of Scores!" And FREE FOOTBALL TICKETS Nebraska vs Kansas Aggies With Every Purchase of $15 or More e e t i 0 I v x