THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TWO Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Entered as second-class matter et nnKtoffica In Lincoln. Nebraska. - under act of congress. March 3. 1879 I and at special rate ot postage provided or in section 1103. act ot October 3. 1917. authorized January 20. 1922 Published Tuesday. Wednesday, Thure. day. Friday and Sunday mornings Single Copy 5 cents durlnq the academic year. THIRTY -SECOND V EAR 12 a year $1.25 a semester S3 a year mailed $1.75 semester mailed SUBSCRIPTION RATE Under dnection of the Student Pub lication Board Editorial Ot rice University Hall 4. Business Of fice University Hall 4. Telephones Day. B6891 ; Night, Bt88! or B3333 (Journal) ask for Nebras kan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Phil Brownell MANAGING EDITORS Dick Moran Lmn Leonard NEWS EDITORS Oeorge Murphy Lamoine Bible Violet Cross Sports Editor Burton Marvin Society Editor. Carolyn Van Anda Woman's Editor Margaret Thieie BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager.. Chalmers Grahm ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Bernard Jennings George Holyoke Frank Musgrave you will narrow the fifteen cent tax lor starting this fund. You are enjoying the benefits of several things on this campus that were paid for by your predecessors. Surely you can afford fifteen cents a year to provide a lasting im provement on this campus for your own successors, which will be of almost incalculable benefit to them. (.tnmeil Filings Close This oon. A MONO all the student organi- za tion.s on the campus which have potentialities for development the Student council stands pre eminent. Its record in the past as an agency for expression and formulation of student opinion, and for the accomplishment of projects in the interests of stu dents, has been none too impres sive. But its possibilities for the future are unlimited. For a long time, the council has been just another organization. It has been hedged in by all sorts of organ of student expression to ac complish the objects desired by the student body. Yotilh and Senator Morris. AM getting lots of letters these days from college stu dents. I think young men are be coming more and more interested in politics." Coming from as farsightcd a man as Nebraska's Senator George W. Morris, these words are distinctly encouraging. If they indicate that American youth is at least about to awaken from its twentieth century slumber, they should be heralded in every college newspaper of the land as intro ducing a new act in the political pageant. It is fitting, too, that Morris j should be among the first to give official cognizance of the new j awakening. For thirty years in j congress, often almost alone, he has been the precursor of a new. youthful regime, and it is only in recent years that the full signifi- Norria. They look well together. If owt of the ranks of youth a spirit of political liberalism glows up emulating the spirit that has animated Morris, collegians will have indeed found r Mrh)d around which to rally. Drys at Oklahoma A. & Xj cently won a one vote victoiy ovm the wets in a straw vote oil w conducted by the student pfipc restrictions, and more important still, it has not been supported to . cance of his liberal policy has been . t i.n Ki-niio'Vit hiinii tn tin noonlc of the i' J ; any great cxivin uv n i-niuvm. w..,.. - , - - t Startup a r und Ag a maUcr of fact many ' n8tion. for a Student I mon. of jts own membcrs have always j NK of the items to be incluucu Wu ir,,uff.nt flhml, ! a S the American magazine o been more or less indifferent about on the ballot for the activity .hat it hns ..ori,, nr tried to do. ' points out in its May article. tax plan has as yet received no j Bjjt 1.adua)lv in the last few he is "The Man We Forgot to I years, especially since the adop- Hate": ! tion of its new constitution two "Thiee of his 'lost causes', ridi j years ago. the council has been j culed just a few years ago. are reaching- out into new fields and ' turning into personal inumpns. fxplanation. This item will be listed on the ballot as a fifteen cent annual fee for a student union j building fund. I Two years ago. before the full effects of the economic landslide were being felt very much, there was a great deal of talk among slmlents on this campus about ! starting a campaign for a student union building. Much enthusiasm was engendered, and the student body in general was quite well in formed as to what a student union building was, and what its advan tages would be. The Nebraskan feels that nearly eiy student knows what a stu Oent union building is. There are few universities or colleges in the country that do not have such a building with facilities for all sorts of student gatherings, organiza tions, and social events. At Nc Viaska, on the other hand, there is no common meeting place for students. There is no place where students may go for recreation of various kinds. There isn't even any place where students may loaf comfortably when they have the time and inclination. F Nebraska university ever has such a building, the students will have to pay for it themselves, and they should. Despite the fact that this seems an inauspicious time to launch such a project, the Student council felt that if the ac tivity tax plan gains the support of the students, that a very ?mall fee might well be included to give the student union building fund a small start. It would be unjust to ask stu dents now in school who have attempting to make for itself the place on the campus that it should have, namely the supreme student organization. But as yet it has I meici iuiimcu mir mhiuv ui no things it can accomplish in really adding to the student life on the campus. As yet it has only begun to stand out as the organization to which students will turn for lead ership in the done. things they want the His views on water power and the government development of Mus cle Shoals are essentially those of the new administration. His fight to prevent the use of federal in junctions to break up stiikes was won with legislation passed by congress last year. "And his ten year stiuggle to abolih the futile lame duck ses sions of congress, of which this year saw the last, ended victori ously with the recent passage of the twentieth amendment to the T7RIDAY afternoon v hen deadline closed for filing for j constitution." positions on next yeai's council. n-.anv positions had onlv one an- ! TVTORKIS' crusades on I-licant. and some had none. Per- N' thtse is sues alone would insure him a haps the pi ess of other functions j place of importance on the na- had obliterated from the memories of students the fact that an elec tion was in the offing. At any rate the filing deadline has been extended until today at 12 o'clock. If the absence of filings betok ens an absence of interest in the council, the students may expect that the few individuals who are interested enough to seek and se cure office in this organization will never accomplish much. Coun cil members will never feel them selves under any particular obli gation to do anytihng unless the students want them to do some thing. And the students, of course, will never be interested in the council if the council doesn't do anything that really is of sig nificance to the student body. This seems like a vicious circle of indifference. One way to break ., . , it is for the student body in gen- small prospects for realizing the 1 J , , .. , v. v i i . eral to manifest interest in the benefits of such a building to par ; . . ... '. ... election. Further than this, there very much toward its cost. But i must be a good selection of can- ; didates to choose from. If these tional roll of honor, but they do not begin to include all the many libeial projects he has sponsored. At the outbreak of war in 1917, he and five other senators were alone brave enough and intelligent enough to cast their ballots against the declaration of war. Mow, see ing the havoc war has caused. Morris must feel completely justi fied in that action and he con tinues the fight against militarism, arms lobbies, nationalistic propa ganda, and all the other parapher nalia of war. Youth, and white haired Senator as the years pass, and the fund trows, the annual fee should be i raised so that the students who ! lwo factor,i are sPPd. it may will enjoy the benefits of the i " building will be paying more for it. When the stadium was built a number of years ago, students and hiiitnni paid for it. But that proj- t was not financed in an equita- j Ue manner. Those who were in ; s h'-ol when the campaign w as ' launched were literally sucked in tr laige subscriptions that many j could not afford. A recurrence of ( that method of financing sho'dd be j avoided in planning for a student ; union building. The student activ- j ity tax plan will afford an admir- ! able vehicle for financing a stu- j dent union building, without bur- j dening &ny student, by distributing the cost over a considerable length j of time. PVK.N thougn you as students would have no hope of realiz ing any benefits from a student union building while you are In school, the Nebraskan hopes that rnembr rs of the council will carry on toward the gcal of making the Student council more and more nn Miss Seymour Public Stenographer Typing of thesis, letters, report, etc. Reasonable rates to Students. all The LirvdeM Hotel Phone B6565 Honrs. 9 00 am. to 5 :30 p. m. t rt ninpn and Sumltiy Appitintmt-nl M0ff i V'll be V t-S-V fceody en yo view hl chic CONNIf cot4 . . . ch white buck . . . new prforotio ond liny cpplique el kid, ere cnty e few ( iti moil diiermtng (efuret) 3 IkftSifmt&SczS it 4 ADD THESE BEAUTY COURSES TO YOUR CURRICULUM . . . Beauty Classes Given by HELENA RUBINSTEIN Dean of Beauty Scientists TIME: A. M. AND 5 P. M. DAILY; PLACE: YOUR OWN ROOM Clear and animate your complexion with Beautifying Skinfood, (i.oo; 2.50). Rclinc skin texture with Skin Toning Lotion (1.25). TIME: 10 P. M. 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First Ithe coal is ground into fine granular form - next it is carefully sifted and washed. Then, after being roasted in special ovens, it k put into the transmitter button. Approxi mately SO, 000 tiny grains must go into each button too few or too many would impair transmission. Such infinite care with "little things" is one rea son why Bell System apparatus serves so faithfully. BELL SYSTEM TELEPHONE HOME ONE NIGHT EACH WRBK I . . . LOWER RATES AFTER EIGHT-THIRTY i 7