i in 1 TWO THE DAILY NEBRASKA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 19.31 The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, NeOraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Associated gotlfptatf ffircc Entered as second-doss matter M the P" L.ncoln, Nebraska, under act of eonflr"- M1 Jf.7' and at .pedal rate ot postaage provided for In section 1103. act of October 3. 117. authorized Januarv K. 1922- THIRTV. THIRD YEAR Published Tueaday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday morhlnoa during the academic vr- SUBSCRIPTION RATE $1 50 a year Singla Copy 6 cents $1.00 a semistei $2 50 a year mailed (LSD a semester mailed ' Under direction ot the Student Publication Board. Editorial Off Ice University Hall Business Off ice University Hall A. Telephones Day t B-681s Nighti B-6882. B-3333 (Journal) Ask for Nebraskan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Laurence Hall Editor-in-chief Managing Editors Biuce Nlcoll Vlo' Cross News Editors Burton Marvin jack Fischer Margaret Thieie Virginia Selleck Society Editor Sparta Editor lrln V" BUSINESS STAFF Bernard Jennings Business Managai Assistant Business Managers Georga Holyoka Dick Schmidt Wilbur Erlckson ,4 Thought About Christmas. With the advent of the Christmas holidays, and the thought of the mid-year vacation occupy ing the student mind, the campus, perforce, as sumes an artificial attitude as student organiza tions and societies observe the colorful yuletide season with the usual number of parties and social functions, forgetting for the moment the dull routine of finishing up lessons and assignments be fore vacation period begins. A mingling joy and cheer pervades the scene as the university popula tion anticipates the coming of the year's most sparkling interlude. For many, perhaps, the vacation period will be taken up largely with the endeavor to catch up with delinquent work. To others vacation will mea a full two weeks of social festivities, while for a few, vacation will mean a total discard of the cares of school work and social activity. To all, regardless of intention, we wish success. But heard above the din of the holiday season, the profuse accompaniment of sincere and vain well-wishing, and the elaborate even extravagant preparations which the occasion demands, is a note to which a great deal of sentimentality has been attached, but which deserves, at least, more than a passing glance. This year, as in the past, a very few campus organizations have foregone the spectacular Christ mas parties for the benefit of poor children. In past years too, fraternities and sororities have re ceived some publicity and no doubt some consider able degree of satisfaction from the parties they sponsored for needy children. At these parties a group of children, selected indiscriminately, were given an evening's entertainment, provided with gifts of various kinds, and sent home. Their enjoyment may have been great, but it was temporary; their gifts may have been fine, but they were usually Impractical; th entertainment provided for them may have been food, but it wag unsuitable for children. Last but not least, their Christmas celebration had no connection with their parents to whom they naturally look for enjoyment and with whom they naturally associate the idea of Christmas. " Less particular, but infinitely less wasteful and more productive of lasting benefit is the scheme being adhered to by the civic welfare agencies, with which the Dally Nebraskan is cooperating. Sub stituting the expenditure of money for parties, which merely gives poor children a briet fleeting glimpse of Christmas away from home, the Nebras kan attempted to secure old clothes and the money which would ordinarily be spent In this manner. Turned over to the welfare agencies of Lincoln, it would reach families whose needs are legitimate. Lamenting the lack of response to the Nebras kan's drive, B. K. in this morning's student pulse, rather blandly criticizes the disinterest of the or ganized houses in the project. With the campaign nearly a week old, figures indicate that a very small per cent of the organised houses on the campus had contributed anything to the project. The pathetic results, as B. K. points out, carry with them a none too savory flavor. We admit that B. K.'s criticism has a well di rected intention, but the story is not a new one, however, for the blase indifference of the college tudent in general has often been the subject of criticism. While it is too late for many campus organ izations to cooperate in this project, perhaps next Christmas, when some member of your organiza tion suggests a gala affair for needy children, then will occur the opportunity to change your contribu tion. Looking above the selfish satisfaction of seeing the pleasure that your gifts Will bring, the objective of such a change is well worth the sacrifice. Somebody is complaining about the number of queens elected around here Maybe that is the only way that we can have queens elect them. Counting the week before and the week after, we have four weeks of Christmas vacation. We don't mind the bad odors, the sultry heat, or cold, and the falling plaster so much, but the roaches in University hall are rather annoying. If at first you don't succeed sit down and howl about it. People who live in glass houses are worth a stone's throw. If at first you don't succeed sit down and howl about it. People who live in glass houses are worth a stone's throw. Somebody is complaining about the number of queens elected on the campus. Maybe that is the only way that we can have queens elect them. Counting the week before and the week alter, we have four weeks of Christmas vacation. Ag College By Carlyle llodgkin MIXER. The mixer Saturday night is noteworthy because of its motive. The Ag Executive Board, big co ordinator of Ag activities, does not itself usually sponsor mixers. But thjs week-end it broke a long pre cedent because of special circum stances. " No Ag organization had asked to sponsor a mixer. Except for the Mortar Board party, to which many an Ag man had not the slightest hope of going, the week end was empty. Ag students want ed somewhere to go, something to do. So the executive board spon sored the mixer. Whereas the motive for campus organization's mixers is chiefly I profit, the motive for the mixer ! Saturday night was simply to pro j vide entertainment for Ag stu dents. That is why the admission was reduced. The measure of suc cess of the mixer, therefore, is not the returns it paid but the extent to which it furnished entertain ment for Ag students. DAIRYMEN. Marty, program committee chair man, presided at the meeting. After the ice cream party and the pictures came the club's monthly business meeting. Joe Huffer, junior, is president ot the club. CHRISTMAS PARTY. Last, and perhaps best, of the nre-varntion activities on Ac cam- Fifty students and faculty mem-1 plla is tne Christmas party at 7:30 bers attended the Varsity Dairy club's meeting last week. Two rea sons made the meeting particular ly attractive: ice cream was serv ed to all the guests, and they saw Tuesday night in the activities building. Last year at the Christ mas party Albert Ebers, then a senior, and his Salem male chorus sang several numbers. This year a series of pictures of the Chicago j thev will sing again. v orirj s fair. Last year th program included Tne pictures, most of them in color, were shown by K. H. Kretch mer, Omaha. He had taken them himself. Prof. H. P. Davis. L. K. Crowe, P. A. Downs and other dairy faculty members present pronounced the pictures an excel lent piece of work. Raymond Mc- a sermon. This year it win in clude a reading. Mrs. Bess Gear hart Morrison, Lincoln, widely known reader, will present "The Hem of Her Garment." Gerald Mott, Ag college senior, will sing "I Come to The Garden Alone." There will be additional 4 Contemporary Comment A Change For the Better. . The era of "flaming youth" ' Is definitely gone. A radical and wel come change has taken place, dur ing the last three or four years, in. the men and women of college age in America. Whereas recently the collegian who knew where he was going and what he wanted was the exception, today nearly all have a driving purpose and a recognised air. Only yesterday the man who could make the most bril liant "wise cracks," who spent money most readily and lavishly, who was, in short, the typical "Joe College," was the ideal of college men. Today achievement is the ideal, and he who excels in schol arship and in leadership is the character for emulation. It is not unreasonable to lay this to what has received so much adverse publicity and assorted blame the depression. The de pression has been crammed down the throat of everyone able to read a newspaper or understand a pres ent day conversation. Everyone, ir respective of age, has had it borne in upon him Chat life isn't alto gether one grand bowl of cherries. All of which is a good thing, an excellent thing, perhaps not for the peace of mind of the individual, but for the welfare of the nation as a whole. This depression, through its gruelling process, has collected and concentrated the scattered brains of yesterday's youth, and, though incapable of peopling the world with Utopian young men and women, it has cre ated a generation which can think as straight as any other and can see as clearly. The Daily North western. PWA Helps Texas University. Announcement Wednesday of the federal public works adminis tration's allotment of $1,663,000 for the completion of the new li brary budding is , probably of greater importance then the an nouncement several years ago by the regents to the effect that a $3,290,000 building program would be undertaken, despite the fact that the money to be used in the latest construction program is nearly one-half less than that used to finance the program preceding. Foolish, as ... it .may seem, the changes which will be brought about by this program will prob ably be more drastic than the one which ended in the dedication of nine new structures. It is the be ginning of the end of the old build inj era. Main building, long a cen ter of attraction to forgotten exes, will not live to see another winter. B. Hall and Women's building will be forgotten by the next genera tion of undergraduates for they too will likely be razed when the new administration-library build ing is completed. The current pro gram will no doubt end with the tearing down of the law building a1 1 journalism building. Whether this new construction age will fiir-pass its predecessor can not be t.scertained. Legal dif ficulties have arisen over the con struction of tho two new dormi tories which may hold up the allot ment of tunr'' for several months. The breadth of the entire project can sureiv net be guessed at such an early dt.te. The method of financing the two programs is quite different. The Greater University program was financed tl rough the issuance of bonds by the university available fund to Le paid for before 1944 from .hj incrme and the interest of the university permanent fund. The first project of the new pro gram will be constructed by money loaned and given to the university by the federal public works ad ministration. Thirty percent of the allotment is an outright grant. Seventy percent is a loan to be paid back from income received from grazing and other surface leases. Bonds were used in the transaction. Probably the most interesting feature of this future structure will be the thirty-one story tower extending 288 feet in the air, some seventy feet less than the state capitol's heighth. Work on the project will probably be done in two parts. The tower will be built on to the central portion of the building which was completed re cently. The main, front addition will be constructed to the south of the present uncompleted build ing. The Daily Texan. singing singing for the entire group with Albert Ebers and his chorus leading. Scarcely an Ag student, except freshmen, who does not remember Al Ebers, big, broad shouldered, good natured man-about-the-cam-pus for four years. While in col lege he sang regularly in the Creat Cathedral choir at Westminster church. The Salem male chorus, which he had first helped to or ganize In his home community south of Seward needed his serv ices. So during those busy college years Al went home every Friday night to practice with the chorus. At home now getitng his farming operations started. Al and his chorus are in closer contact, plan nine bigger thiners. That they are will be on Wed iesday a discussion of "Federal AM to Rural Credit," by F. N. Peck, Co-operative bank commissioner. There will be on Tuesday a discussion of "The Ag ricultural Adjustment Program," by George N. Peek, formerly chief administrator of that program, now head of a cr mmission !igging up new foreign markets for farm products And there will be on Monday an address by Louis J. Taber, National Grange Master, who Ag students heard at a con vocation early in the semester. Beside these general discussions of the profo inder problems of ag riculture (some of them so pro found they give one a headache I, there will be meetings for all the specific interests crops, hogs. sheep, erardens. foods, babies, what moV nor nrne-rAiB m'lll riniihtless be . I. .... . , " i not. Many Ag students nave gone apparent Tuesday night. ,n f reticular interest will Af itn vi i ium. When Ag students get back to the campus for classes Wednesday noon, Jan. 3, they will find them selves in the midst of one of the bigger activities that occur on Ag campus Organized Agriculture. The days when farmers from nearly all parts of this state as semble on the campus for meet ings, business and social, general and particula are Jan. 1, 2. 3, 4. On the general programs are the speakers whom Ag students will find it worth wMle to hear; doubt less some students will come back a day or two early to hear them. There will be on Thursday at the general session a discussion of the "Present Economic Flight of Agri culture," bv B. H. Hibbard. There want to be back for some particu Iar series of meetings. And there are two matters of service:' Organized Agriculture means gobs of work to be done. The faculty does the bi? end of it, but there are many places where students can and should, by reason of long established precedence give some help. The fun feed is one of the biggest of these. Assistance with other meetings, passing out information, and preparing dem onstrations are other ways. The other chance for service is at home during vacation. Have the Organized Agriculture program in mind. Tf some one in the home community wants to know who will speak, or about what, or when, or why, be table to tell them. OFFICIAL BULLETIN 4n vltidruln iirguiiiHlioiis ur family Krmi rtrairlna to publish nutlet's t inrrtlngs othei information 'or nirniht-re nm have ntrrn printed by villus the llally ISehraskan office. Dramatic Club. Members of the Dramatic club nr reauea d to renort Tuesday evening at the campus studio at 7:15 for a group picture. Formal dreas is required. keu rUKTKK, i'restaeni. Pershing Rifles. Pershing Rifle initiation will be hold in Nebraska hall, Tuesday afternoon at 5 o'clock. All those being Initiated must be In uniform. Lutheran Party. The Lutheran club Christmas party will be held at the downtown Y. W. C. A. Tuesday, Dec. 19, at 8:30. It was incorrectly stated In the Daily Nebraskan that the party would be at Ellen Smith hall. 4T THE ALPHA PHI house Monday night was held the annual Christmas party for the alums and their children. DEBATE ACTIVITY ENDS UNTIL NEXT SEMESTER TRIALS (Continued from Page 1.1 the possible exception of the Delta Sigma Rho tournament which will be held in Iowa City about the first of March. However the teams did make a trip into Kansas arguing against Kansas State college and Kansas university before the high schools at Marysville, Washington and Concordia, Kansas. The team also went to Omaha and met the Creighton arguers in two contests one before the Omaha Central high school and the other was broadcast over station KOIL. The squad also had other engagements with these schools here. New Proposition Named. The proposition for debate the first semester was Resolved: That the United States should adopt the British system of radio control and operation. The team members who worked on this topic were Eugene Pester, Harvey H. Hill man, A. Elmer Anderson, Walter Wick, and Edmund W. Hollstein. The argument of the second se mester will center around the question Resolved: That the Uni ted States should enlarge the pow ers of the president as a matter of permanent policy. The squad for the second semester who will de bate this proposition will be chos en at a tryout on January 11. As the same question will be used in the tryouts, bibliographies on the subject are available from Profes sor White and the books are on reserve at the main library. Tentative Schedules. Tentative schedules for the last half of the year indicate that Ne braska speakers will engage in wordy combat with representa tives from Morningside, Grinnell, and Iowa State college when these schools will send teams through Kansas and Nebraska. There is a possibility that Ne braska will also have arguments during the second semester on the question of federal control of radio though the arrangements are not definite. Minnesota's Big Ten conference champion hockey team will play a schedule of fourteen intercollegiate games this winter, and is nerotiat- ine for mora. The federal public works board last Friday granted $86,100 for the building of a new physical ed ucation building unit at the Uni versity of Minnesota in Minneapo lis. The building will house an in door swimming pool, new gym nasium, and a number of other rooms for class and administrative occupation. MARSHAL L RECEIVING West Virginia School Asking Several Improvements With Money. MUCH REPAIRING NEEDED nnl.i Thl TIbIIV K UlirAII k Hit W reprlntlnc the following artlcl from tin Parthenon, Marshall college paper. It H Interesting to students on this campus In view of the fact that on Monday of thlj week work to Improve the local atadlum and practice field was started. Since Monday's approval of the Marshall $110,000 appropriation hv the state civil works adminis tration, an improvement program comprising various new features and repairs about the college will begin at once, rresiaem. onawitey said yesterday. The lornr needed reoiacement with cement of board walks at the rear of the Morrow library, and the narrow wooden steps leading nn to thp terrace toward the main building, is included in the project ed schedule, ne saia. Redecorate Auditorium. Other plans revealed take in tin construction of a gate entrance to the college drive from Fourth avenue, with a low brick wall ex tending along Sixteenth street and Third avenue to wnere me cycione fence now protecting a part of the north campus begins. Redecoration of the auditorium and the employment of landscape gardeners and engineers to direct and assist in the work at hand are permitted under the allotment as signed, the presiaenc runner ai firmed. He added that the bricks In the campus drive will be taken up to be laid again, ana mac necessary work on the curbing bordering it mav result in the drive's beinj widened. Flagging Walk From Union. Although not more than 15 per cent of the fund may be invested in materials, according to stipula tions of the CWA. he expressed himself ax confident that the Droi- ects cited may be readily achieved. An eight foot walk or iiagsiones from the Shawkey Union will join a cement oath to be made from the east doors of Science hall to the gymnasium, he said, explaining that the flagging will carry out the colonial architecture of the new building. Minor repair jobs listed ny me president entail repairs on the roof nf Main. Science and the gymna sium, and a general renewal of paint with particular auenuon io the inside of Main. J. L. Mullen, superintendent of buildings and grounds, said that the entire plumbing system and wire circuits will be inspected for necessary remedial work. The county CWA approved the Marshall project Friday. WAA WILMJIVE PARTY Annual Affair at White Hall Orphanage in Charge of Evelyn Diamond. A Christmas party, to be giveu by the W. A. A. for the home for dependent children, is beinj planned by Evelyn Diamond. The party, which i3 an annual affair, will be held at the White hall Orphanage. A short program of musical numbers and readings will be presented and gifts and candy will be distributed to the children. Miss Diamond will be assisted by Vera Oxenford and Hallene Haxthausen. All are members of the W. A. A. Council. Wrestling prospects at the Uni versity of Oklahoma are the best ever. Seventy-five grapplers turned out for the school tournc ment recently. i,jii.ij,a,ijiaii,iiii,iiii.ijij,iilltuiiiiiwUlUiti Vaetfr jt Vaan VJ V41a YC4je ViUlV44!VUVl TA tit fcf- Jflerrp Cfjrtetmag anb $esrt iltstfjeg to SU! 'al A r rCS Mra O -arV jjj BOOKS BOOKS Read a Qood Book During Vacation or Give One for f)tt.tmas A Few Suggestions Complete Line of $1 .00 Books Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Cloth $3.50 i s rt n 1 o) A' Ln M 1 geu&5t3 Ufa- ffratsn I F AC I NGCAMPUS 2 V- 8 Cell Hanta pott toant a subscription to tfje Batlp ebrasfean for Christmas. St'g onlp $1-00 for tfje rest of tfje scljool pear. (ED FITS AT THE IMDIDAEft SHAD DUE In addition to their complete stock of Kodaks and Brownie Cameras ranging from $1.50 up. You will find a large section of reasonably priced gifts of every every description. Christmas Greeting Cards I a SWEETHEART For FAMILY FKIEMDS Eastman Kodak Stores, Inc. 1217 O 8T. 5 (COWS ,r C0flBge StttwaDoiralls Four.'n Pens Pennants and Pillows Stationery Brief Cases Portfolios Leather Notebooks Seal Jewelry S7Z FSH (rL " (7 a- a i at r. f- A tA (3 I I Shop Early But Be Sure And Q 1 on up In Lincoln