TWO THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1935. Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska. OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Thlt paper It represented for general advertising by the Nebraska Preia Association. 194 'Jt'"7!1"3"'"0 m entered at aecond-olate matter at the Poi0",0 .'Bn Lincoln. Nebraska, under act of congress. March 3. leVi. and at special rate of postage provided for n 1103, act of October 3. 117. aulhorlied January 80. 128- THIRTV. FOURTH YEAR. Publlahed Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings during tht academlo year. EDITORIAL STAFF Jack Fischer Editor-in-chief MANAGING EDITORS Irwin Ryan Virginia Selleck NEWS EDITORS George Plpai Marylu Petereen Arnold Ltvln Johnston Snipet Dorothy BenU SOCIEtV EDITORS Dorothea Fulton Jane Walcott Dick Kunaman Sporte Editor BUSINESS STAFF Truman Cbtrndorf Butlnttt Manager ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Bob Funk Bob SheNenberg Bob Wadhamt SUBSCRIPTION RATE 1.M a year Single Copy B centt 11.00 a '"tar 2.b0 a year mailed H-5 "mssttr mailed Under direction of the Student Publication Board. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Buslnest Off Ice Unlvenlty Hall 4A. Telephonet Dayi B689H Night! B8M2. B33S3 (Journal). Another Lost Legion? NEBRASKA students must wonder as they read in the papers from time to time re ports of bequests and gifts to colleges and universities throughout the state aand nation, just why this university does not share a like fate at the hands of its alumni and friends. A perusal of other college papers shows that many schools regularly receive donations and gifts ranging from financial endowments to buildings, an event almost unknown at Ne- At the University of California at Los Angeles, for instance, a state school, Kerck. hoff Hall, one of the tinest union uuuuuijjs m the nation, built at a cost of $1,250,000, was an outright gift by Mrs. Alezander Kerck hoff. Willard Straight Hall, located at Cor nell, another of the finest union buildings in America, is another example of beneficient activities on the part of alumni and patrons of universities. Similar loyalty and beneficent acts for the universities of their state or community have been evidenced by citizens who have do nated buildings, trust funds, scholarships, re search awards, and various other types of en owments to the many schools thruout the na tion. It hurts to say that Nebraska is not "in cluded among these schools. Look at the pitiful list of gifts and en dowments to which Nebraska has fallen heir. Look about the campus and discover, if you can, where, excepting perhaps Morrill Hall and the library, the university boasts a gift which symbolizes love of and fidelity to Ne braska. It just can't be done, for somehow alumni ties with the university have been woven very, very thin when they have been woven at all. The sentiment which has brought fortune and prestige to other schools has been almost non-existent here, and under present conditions it bids fair to become not better but worse. THAT is a shameful state of affairs for the -A university of a state that holds its head high among those of the nation. Nebraska should bo one of the richest universities; here it is, one of the poorest, not alone in a ma. treial sense, but in prestige and in the esteem of its sons and daughters. And perhaps more of this than the university is willing to admit, is due to internal failings. War should be declared on this hapless state of affairs at , once. The university should be made to mean something to each of its students who feel at present that the university considers them little more than an other customer who can take care of his own life beyond the lecture hall. The battle must go forward on several fronts and without delay. The Nebraskan has suggested that class orgaanization beginning with the freshmen be encouraged aand developed to the fullest extent to bring about unity among students. It has urged bringing about a closer union between faculty and students, by creating op portunity for informal and friendly meet ings and formation of friendships beyond the confines of the classroom. Publicizing the students side of univer sity life and removal of foolish and stupid administrative restrictions on student enter prise has been advocated. "Wide publicity of university affairs and persons, especially of the neglected student panorama, has been advocated. Ye have sought the removal of foolish and stupid ad ministrative restrictions on student enter prise which cannot but engender enmity on the part of students. The need for bringing all students close to the campus and estab lishment of adequate housing facilities to centralize students has also been pointed out. All these things, we feel, will help to create that necessary feeling of love and loyalty so vital to the success of a school. UT an opportunity to accomplish more per 1 liana than in all these other lUfrtrestions combined, however, faces the university to day the union building movement. Here is an element, a force that would bind the in terests of students closely together, coordin ate their activities, solidify their organisa tion, and give to each student an opportunity to-. ' become an integral part of the student populace. Recreation center, it might be called, but it would be more than that it would be the one haven on the campus to which any and every student could repair for rest aand relaxation, for quiet, for associ ation, for ectertaainment. It would be the focal point of every student activity, of every student enterprise, of every student function. University affairs would be kept ea the campus and the student populace could begin to assume that organization, co hesion, aand spirit of loyalty that character ises every strong: undergraduate group. ' As we have previously pointed out, tke union building is not a panacea for all stu dent troubles but it is undoubtedly the great est single force which could be brought to bear against the present spirit of indifference and apathy jvbich reigns, almost supreme B in the student mind. The future welfare of me uiiiversiiy, me vising uecu xvi a on vug alumni organization, the unorganized and un wieldy character of the student population . - . . . . a 1 , demand that this issue be given me aueu tion it deserves, that the machinery to in sure its creation be set in motion without further delay. THE time for action is now. The adminis tration owes it to the students as well as to itself to promote in every way possible ims important project wmcn wouia lmmeai ately upon its completion begin paying in valuable dividends of faith and confidence in university ideals. Alumni and student en ergies await only the regents' sanction to go to work. Another generation of graduates will soon be sent from this university. There is still time to cement its interests in the uni versity by striving to work with students in promoting matters of mutual benefit. If this is not done, we will see another class con signed to the legions of alumni who are that m name alone. STUDENT PULSE Brief, concise contributions pertinent to matters of ttudent life and the university are welcomed by this department, under the usual restrictions of sound newspaper practice, which exoludet all libelous matter and personal attacke. Letters must be signed, but names will ba withheld from publication If to desired. Not a Bad Idea. TO THE EDITOR: The University of Nebraska has recently received great honors in the photographic world through the work of one of its em ployees. The gentleman is Richard "V. Iluf nagle, campus photographer. Hufnagle ap plies his knowledge of photography in the little campus studio near the greenhoue be tween University Hall and Nebraska Hall. Pictures taken by Hufnagle have re ceived honors abroad and in the United States during the past summer. His pictures of President Roosevelt, An Old Timer, and the Nebraska Capitol in the evening have at tained honor in a field of notable work of many photographic artists. Let it not be said that he has done no more than 'click' the camera. You should hear him discuss the technical aaspects of such pictures then it will be realized that photography is really a great deal more than 'picture taking'. Such notable work should be displayed to the students and faculty of the Univer sity. Why not have them exhibited through the channels of the Daily Nebraskan? They could be run in the Nebraskan. Even though some of the finer details would be lost, their photographic excellence would be easily dis tinguishable. M. W. NYA Again. TO THE EDITOR: The NYA is helping many students finan cially to obtain an education at the University of Nebraska. The major portion of them would be unable to continue their school work if it were not for the money derived from this source. The NYA does help students financially, but it also helps to send many students home after their first semester or first year. The statistics show that more freshmen than upper classmen receive jobs. This is, of course, a very fine way of getting the student started to the university. It accounts, in part, for the 11 percent increase' in student enrollment over previous years. - The idea 6eems to be to get them started in school. If, after the first semester or first year, their grades are not the highest, they no longer receive federal funds. If circumstances make it impossible for them to receive other help, they are forced to drop out of school. It is quite discouraging for them. This dis couragement offsets the benefits they have received while iri school for such a short pe riod of time. By giving aid to new students, the num ber of upperclassraen to receive federal funds automatically decreases. These upperclassmen are as badly in need of help as the new stu dent. It does not seem fair to the older stu dents. They have proved themselves in earnest about getting an education. They have proven this by attending school one, two, or three years. Why shouldn't they receive the benefit of federal aid rather than the new student? It is true that a small number of upper classmen do receive aid, but the choice is made primarily upon scholastic average. The new student's average is checked by going over his high school work. There can be no compari son between these two averages. College work is so much more complicated that it is hardly possible to compare the grades of the college student with those of the high school graduate. It seems reasonable to conclude that stu dents who have spent two or three years at the university should be given more consideration and preference over the high school graduate when federal funds are handed out. The high school graduate has a chance to earn the amount he receives in a semester from the fed eral allotment by staying home and working for that length of time. The student who is diligently trying to acquire his degree is too near the end of a long struggle to stop for the purpose of earning money by staying out of school. Why not give him the freshman's al lotment and have a requirement that students to receive NYA jobs must have a sophomore standing! .W. M. TIME AND TIDE ABROAD by BOB ZIMMERMAN While the Duce rushes further into Ethiopia the League powers push further in to the realm of sanctions, aggregate to the extent of some 29 nstions, including Britain and France, whose embargoes and boycotts ss yet but tantalize II Duce in his single handed race for glory, or might we better say Addis Ababa. All in all, it is but a race be tween mind and matter, if the League can be so illustrated, and the only difficulty seems to lie in the fact that Mussolini claims both attributes by feigning to possess a mind of his own. Instead of balking at the. League's sug gestion of boycotts II Duce has, according to rumors, chalked up a Score on his own slate by issuinsr bread-cards, limiting bread pur chases; declared merchant's holidays for the occupations of butchers and grocers; and has even ordered the bluebloods to eat less, in hotels and restaursmts. But to further strengthen Italy's position is the govern ment's assertion that the spaghetti crop this year will supersede expectations and allevi ate all doubts of self-sufficiency. Which all means more or less that Italy, regardless of financial or economic sanctions, will dogmat ically suffice; her nationals will have satis faction dictated to them in the form of a bread and spaghetti diet until the League's philosophy changes from right to 'might makes right' and then the United States will do something, but that remains to be seen as does the League's philosophy. Although the League of Nations is un doubtedly trekking through the least discom forting snowbank its route is not such by choice. Italy has refused to conciliate, and it is doubted she will do so before military sanctions are applied. However, the League is steadily uniting the several nations in its cause, and if II Duce continues persistent in his 'ideals' he will do so along a much more discomforting path than pervails to date. But we may rest assured that Mussolini will reciprocate before he'll let Rome burn. Intellectual Laziness. Men in various positions of life have looked toward the American university as the source of a new and vital development in the cultural life of the nation, but they have turned away in disgust. "Why," they ask, "does the university man seem to be afraid to appear cultured?" The pose of the average undergraduate is that of the man on the street. The university man is meticulous in his manners and use of the English language at certain times; in the main, however, he has become intellectually lazy and has sunk to moronic classifications ot "some fun," "oh boy," and "wotcher know." Evidently there seems to be something sediti ous in attempting to speaK grammatically. This jargon, employed by the supposedly best educated group does not possess the virtue or pioturesqueness of the dialects employed in the fastnesses of the Ozarks and in the swamp lands of Arkansas and Mississippi. Words used by the uneducated group of America are spoken naturally and are part of their daily life, while the words used by the undergradu ate sing to appalling coarseness. By some peculiar method of inverted evolution, the modern vocabulary h as retro graded to a point where affirmatives and nega tives, as well as more complicated explanations,' are expressed by a series of guttural sounds interspersed with a few sighs. The greatest evidence of the university man's cultural slovenliness lies in his use of language. He may argue that the slang he employs was born when nothing else could be found to express adequately what was occurring. That is true, but it is also true that a great proportion of the slang in use is cheap and slovenly. The habitual use ;of thjs common; jargon that'.', is composed of a few words of profanation, of slang, and of grunts impairs the keenness of the mind much as the constant lolling in the sun hampers the body. Undoubtedly, this common jargon lends 'to an intellectual lazi ness thnt finally blurs the sense of discrimi nation. It is not easy to turn from n path of comfort and attempt the hard road of Thought, for that way is difficult for most, people. Without keen minds, our culture may fall into a serious doldrums. -S. C. TROJAN. 1 Off the Campus Lynn Leonard Pari-Mutuel Tax Bills were defeated by both houses of the Nebras Ka legislature. The senate .voted down a 2 per cent tax bill 18 to 6, when it appeared for third reading, and the house rejected, 43 to 34, a motion to take a 3 per cent tax bill from standing committee to general file. Debate on two other tax measures, the cigaret tax and the chain store tax, is expected soon, the bills having been placed on general file. Chain Store Tax introduced by Lester Dunn of Lancaster, would levy $3. on the first retail store, $10. nn osrh in a chain of more than two but less than five stores, $25. on each unit in a chain of five or more but less than iu stores, $ov. on each unit in a chain of 11 to 15 stores, $150. rn nrh unit in a 16 to 20 unit chain and $250. on each unit of groups of mora than 20. In the original draft the bill ex empts filling stations, coal and lumber yards, and stores that deal principally in agricultural and dairy products. Two Major Positions - in the state penal system were left vacant by death' and removal. Gus Miller, superin tendent of the state reformatory since 1921. died Thursday. N. T. Harmon, warden of the state penitentiary, was removed by the state board of control, and Joseph U Urady appointed to replace him. The reason given by the board for its action, which was by un animous vote, was that it was for the best in terests of the state aand the institution. A member declared that an outbreak at the prison was feared. Completely Successful was the stratosphere balloon flight Monday. The two army officers went up to a distance of between 74 and 75 thousand feet, a new record. The balloon landed safely and gent ly, thus permitting salvage of all the instru ments, although some were thrown over board attached to parachutes. The instru ments have not yet been checked by the in stitutions from which they came, but they are expected to reveal valuable information. There were several to measure cosmic rays, the mysterious energy which seems to fill this universe. Some scientists think that dis covering its origin might solve the riddle of creation .also. Other instruments the fliers took with them were such that would de termine the quality of the sunlight, analyze the air. aand tind plant spores. SPIRITS SOAR AS HUSKERS DEPART FOR PITT TUSSLE (Continued from Page 1.) journey, John William-, stellar guard and captain for Saturday fray, declared, "It's going to be Nebraska's day Saturday." Coach Browne, the only member of the coaching staff to address the student body declared that the team was going- out and show our neighbors of the east what the champions of the leading confer ence of he midwest have got, and that no matter what the outcome might be they would come home singing- "There la no place like Nebraska." And as the train pulled out amid the shouts of the ralliers and the Warring of the band, a few of the invaders of the Panther den ex pressed their sentiments by a de termined and emphatic "We're go ing to give 'em HELL." ''Pulverize the Panthert!" YEARBOOK SETS SEPARATE PHOTO DEADLINE DATES (Continued from Page 1) Tau heads the list with a perfect rating of 100. Delta Gamma and Phi Mu rank next in the list ing with 88 and 97, respec tively. The remainder of the list includes Alpha Omlcron Pi, 94; Kappa Alpha Theta, 90; Alpha Chi Omega, 89; Alpha Delta SMARTNESS PlllMEli M is for Modes Militaire and such A is for arm holes deepened a touch N is for new blouses and skirts G is for gowns that are simply the "nertV E is for elegance, rule of the day L is for lavishness, the smartness cue S is for seeing our clothes, so new I 1215 "O" Street Theta, 87; Kappa Kappa Gam ma, 87; Tri-Delts, 86; Gamma Phi Beta, 82; Chi Omega, 81; Alpha Xi Delta, 81; Sigma Al pha Iota, 63; Alpha Phi. 48; Kappa Delta 30; Pi Beta Phi, 26; Sigma Kappa, 22; Delta Zeta, 15; and Zeta Tau Alpha, 10. Zeta Beta Tau Ahead. Zeta Beta Tau leads the frater nity ranking with 75. The re maining fraternities and their per centages are: Sigma Nu, 71 ; Delta Upsilon, 66,; Sigma Chi, 50; Tau Kappa Epsllon, 50; Beta Theta Pi, 45.; Alpha Tau Omega, 40; Sipma Alpha Ep silon, 33; Phi Kappa Psl, 30; Sigma Alpha Mu, 25; Lambda Chi Alpha, 20; Acacia 16; and Farm House, 6 . Chi Phi, 1; Phi Pal i. Fraternities which are not In cluded in this list have had no pictures taken at the present time. "Beat Pitt!" Best Freshman Scholar to Receive' Phi Lambda Upsilon Cup. Annual fall banquet of Phi Lambda Upsilon, h6norary chem istry fraternity, will be held Tues day evening, Nov. 19, at the Grand hotel, according to an announce ment by Dan Sarbach, president of the society. Announcement of the winner of the Phi Lambda Upsilon freshman scholarship cup will be made at the banquet. The award is pre sented each year to the freshman chemistry Btudent who earns the highest scholastic rating. Speakers for the banquet and other program arrangements will be announced soon, Sarbach said. A.E.A.E. GROUP HEARS DISEL TRACTOR TALK Describing the caterpillar diesel three, four and six cylinder en gines, Lawrence Vry, testing en gineer for the Caterpillar Tractor company, addressed members of the American Society of Agricul tural Engineers, Tuesday evening. Next metting or tne siucicm a. S. A. E. branch is to be Tuesday evening, Nov. 26. Let Us Lower Your Eating Bill We ran make your food bill take sky-high parachute Jump. The economical student eaves money by purchasing a J5.60 meal ticket for $5.00. You will enjoy the friendly atmosphere of the Y. M. C. A. Cafeteria Fountain 13th and P Sts. Student Special 25c Student Special 25c Mil, There's "Down Right" Loveliness in 3 9 Shimmering styles in silver kid, white or black faille ...with the low heels you love to dance in. ..the kind youv'e been planning on having. ..and why not? When they're only jp AAA to C width. (j i ww iwiinMiwiiMi-ra-iF m "'- "