SUNDAY, NOVEMBER IS, 9:i(t TWO THE DAILY NEBR ASKAN Daily Nebraskan 6tation A. Lincoln. Nebraika. THIRTY. FIFTH YEAR Published every Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday. Frl. day and Sunday mornings of the academic year by stu. dents o the University of Nebraska, under supervision of tne Board ot Publications. 1056 Member I9J7 Flssocicded CbUecfcfe Press Distributors of CbHe6iaieDi6cst witnessed two powerful teams in action, ami it is not the Tuskers' fault that they weren't on the long; end of the count. And the Ne braska fans can look forward to some day conquering the big bad Panther from Pitts burgh. They're human ; they can't win all the time. It migrht take 10 years, or f0 years, or even 100 years, but some day a Nebraska team, by the law of averages, has to come out on top. What a great deal the Nebraska 1'an has to look forward to! Perhaps it's a good thing the Scarlet lost yesterday a victory would sjtoil the pleasure of anticipation. Hut. poor fan, sumo day Nebraska will win. Did we hear soincbodv snicker? )CrNEbCNTCO rOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING V National Advertising Service, Inc Collrgr PKhliihrrt Rrpmrmtativl 420 Madison Ave. New York. N.Y. ciicuo - Eoiion . San franckco LOS AN6LLL9 PORTUANO - StATTkC ARNOLD LEVIN BOB FUNK Editor F.usmess Manage' EDITORIAL STAFF Managing Editors GEORGE PIPAL DON WAGNER News Editor Eleanor Oiibe Willard Burney Ed Muna Helen Pascoe Bob Reddish BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Business Managers Bob Wadhams Webb Mills Frank Johnson This papei is represented for general advertising by the Nebraska Press Association. Entered as fecond-class matter at the postoffiee 'n Lincoln. Nebraska, under act of congress. March 3. 1879. and at special rate of postaqe provided for in section 1'03. act of October 3. 1917. authorised January 20. 1822 SUBSCRIPTION RATE vi0 a year Single Copy 5 cents $100 a semester S?.5C a year mailed $1.50 a semester mailed Under direction of the Student Publication Board. Ed torlal Office University Hall 4. Rnci'nce ("If f ir I I niv rcil Hall 4A. Telephones Day: B6851; Night: B63S2. B3333 (Journal) wllieh requires ail IHISWer because most of the on this issue ! statements ;ir: untrue. Jt would receive no STUDENT PULSE Brief, concis contributions oertlnent to matters ot student life and tha university are welcomed by this newspaper practice, wnich excludes all libelous matter and personal attacks Letter musr be signed, but names will be withheld from publication It so deired. Dean Lyman Orars the Issue. TO THE EDITOR: The Nov. 12 issue of the Nebraskan car ries ;t criticism of the student health service Dr;k Editor Burney Night Editor Murray atlenlion from the department if it were not fur the fact that it is misleading to the student wlio may read it. House calls were formerly made 1o stu dents' rooms for one purpose only; namely, to locate eases of contagious dise.-isc. The de- Sinltci-lMid's bricht. little boys in p.irtinent had to p;iy ll.e doctor makintr Ihe , tv.. i i . . i ; call $" Kverv studenl insisted he was entitled the smokv citv of I Jllsliurgli passed , i.-.i- n j r to one call each semester. 1 this were allowed. uvid examin.'itioii w 'nh a j jf v.ould be impossible to opei-nte because each ; student paid a fee of .f'J per semester Mid house J calls would eat up 1he enlire fund available for of il,,s morning s papers jslU(t,lt lu..lllh. Furthei-more, students abused the privi lege. Students iusisled they could not leave their rooms because of sickness and must have a doctor at once. Last year a boy de manded a doctor before 8 o'clock in the morning-. A doctor was sent. In a few min utes he made a second demand for a doctor. A second doctor was sent. Both of the doc tors arrived at the patient's room before 8 o'clock only to find the student had left to I make an 8 o'clock. Such cases of unneces sary calls are on our records by the hundred This seemed a wilful abuse of other students' money. Furthermore, we found that very few eases of contagious diseases were picked up at the students' rooms. We find nearly all of iheiii at the health service offices in the Phar- puT a slop to all that willi another six points, jinacy building. J-'rom bore they are sent to ' t - i 1 1 f i r i . i i-i' Student health doctors are available at the health offices at ihe city campus from S to 11! Pitt Bonis ' I ra sk a- A ja i n . .k.'-k Miic iron ll.'-ir Satnrdav's trade of A plus. Tin- headline l.'iiyht just as ueJl bear an "again" alter ihe blaring "" Pittsburgh l'.cats Nebraska." ll is 1 !:.!' in spirit, if not in fact. The same old t-'ni-y of some 1eji years slaiiilini: now. This as supposed to have been Ncbras la's rear. Jl miuht have been, if Ihe breaks !' 1 lio contest had gone the other way. and if it i'ew of Sutherland's choicest hands bad sat oil the bench instead of on 1he ( 'ornhuskers. Nebraskn drew first blood, and for a lime it .-eeihed would 1wis1 the Panther's 1 ail a notch or 1uo more in Ihe last. half. Put Pittsburgh 1 here is no loulit as to Hie superiority oi i ihe Siiihei-land eleven. They outj)layed Ne 1 Task a in abnosl every jil-jise of ihe prune, cer i a inly offensively. The Pittsburgh outfit was a combination of panther, rhinocermis, giraffe, aiid runaway bull veslerday. 'J'hey liuffcd and they iuffed. Mid they certainly blew Nebras ka's iine iii iii ihe erilieal moments. Nebraska, willi Sam Francis and Lloyd I'ardwell Ji ailing ihe way. ut uj one of its lnost ei'l'eetual inl'eiises ill the Pitlsburgh Miles. Init ihe 1'aiither was just too fero eii.ns Ih-m ailike backs stepped off behind .'l.aHing. Inefy ilitcrferel'S. 'll.e breaks of ihe game, n. one will deny. A. ere willi Piitsbiirgh. Seems as tho Nebraska I and 1 to .") daily except Sunday. Certainly a student should be able to find an hour in the week when he could meet this schedule. The hour at the college of agriculture campus is S io 9 except Saturday and Sunday. The infirmary at P! If is open 124 hours a day and 7 days a week. Help may always be found 1here. Students at the infirmary can have free medical service there from university doctors when they are on duty from 8 to 5 daily except Sunday. The statement that the health department makes a rule that only university doctors can attend students in the infirmary is not true. On tha contrary it has been our rule that any type of practitioner registered by the state of Nebraska may take care of students there. This includes everv- can't male ihe dice fall her way in ihe, one from chiropractor to the scientifically nui.'i taut gam, , ji" someone fumbles, it is j trained physician. If a sick student wants ihe ..I,-,.,, ,ent. not .Wbraska. M ),., recovers. If i a LDnstian science practitioner, be may a kick is blocked, the opponent is ihe blocker ll a pass )ian ly mis.s s, il is N bra.ska 's. nol lie opponent's. Victory or ! f at hinged on so Jinle yesterday, as a nionlh before at Miimc M,ta. Two fumbles paved the way for the winning Panther touchdowns, boih being re covered by a fast charging- iine deep in Ne braska terriloiy. The first Pitt score was the indirect result of a long pass, which riii'dit just as well have been broken up as completed. loth teams olayed hard, and rough. The frequent times out. with some J.efiy gridstcr pronely adorning the greensward, attest to that. Probably if the referee had counted 13 yards for every fist thai flashed out of the line of scrimmage, l,e would have been the winner, i Pittsburgh. When all is said ;.nl done. Nebraska fatis have him. What could be more liberal than this? The university, however, employs only the best scientifically trained physicians. The university infirmary is an infirmary for the care of emergency caws among stu dents. Jt is not a general hospital. No opera live work is attempted there. Ft seems the sensible thing to do to use the local general hospiials for this class of work. The University of Wisconsin operates a general hospital. The medical fee charged the student is $13 per semester. Anyone who knows about the cost of medical care must ap preciate Die statement that a general hospital could not be operated on a $1 a semester fee. The health department invites construc tive criticism. Anyone who hits an urge for breaking' into print, if they will come to the director of the health department, will be re ceived graciously and will be given material J T . I ior a goo. i story. It. A. LYMAN, Din-dor Dept. Student Health. NEBRASKA PROFESSOR FORESAW UNION IN '19 (Continued from Page 6.) the virgin sod turned to their piling. Rather, they embodied an idea and a faith, each so lumi nous that the halo of them still lingers about and redeems the physical ugliness. For the uni versity was founded and the building was built out of a con ception of learning and a faith in its value for the youthful state and for the youth of the state which were its true bap tismal spirit and which gave and give to the university its prime character. With a propriety for which all Nebraska's children must be thankful, the institution saw the light as a College of Liberal Arts, and it developed as suen a coucge for a neriod of sufficient lentrth to stamp indelibly upon her that reverence for liberal learning which is the inscrutable essence of all better culture. Nebraska pos sessed such a reverence from the first; it was avowed in the fresh curiosity of the first generations nf students, outwardly a bit un couth as memory pictures them. but all eager-eyed io me woriu oi knowledge; and it was the actua tion of the lives of the early pro fessors, men of books and of tradi tions, but willing to devote their rlavs to the untaught west that they might there show the way to readers of noons ami matters oi tradition. With such a core of light Nebraska's star was kindled. Afterwards came the techni cal schools. Civilization is never of simple design; and the grow ing needs of a growing state farmstead after farmstead tak ing form on rolling plains, and town and city rising yearly to made firm the social structure steadily complexified the de mands for training made upon the state's great central institu tion. There must be physicians, lawyers, teachers, engineers, scientists, agriculturists, econo mists, artists til these and others with special preparation for the specialized needs of a civilized state; and year by year the University has been called upon to build housings and create colleges to meet the needs of an expanding social life. Today the old college hall is but one unit in a maze of structures, and the old curriculum but a trac ing in the rich variety announced hv the annual catalog. To not a few, who r?call the fresher days. the change brings with it a pang of regret; for there was something ptprnallv ehnrminrr in that simnlc- o faith in learning, untempered by tnougnt ot vocation, jvevertneiess, Rfpn frnm 1hi p-rpnt vantatre of a whole society, we all know that any institution of learning whirn serves the varied life of a civilized commonwealth must do so by building for all its arts and all its professions; no trivium, no quad rivium. can olot the university course of the future; rather there must be a mulu-vium, a branch ing into the manifold paths along which men's activities move. Yet this, be it not forgotten, cannot be without some general orientation, there must be the initial course which gives the true direction fol lowed by all the branches and leads to the one end of all which we call human progress. That initial course and true orientation Ne braska fortunately received from her first college, devoted to the liberal gxiide of her institutional life, as it is the soul of her final mission. DRAMATIC ARTIST, PAUL DIETZ, WILL SHOW AT TEMPLE i Continued from Page 1.) pose the development of cultural relations but ween this country and Germany. The Jerman films which Dr. Alexis has succeeded in bringing to Lincoln are: "A Vacation from Myself," "The Gypsy liaron," and "Abel of the Mouthorgan." These will appear in the order named at the Varsity on the following dates: Nov. 21, Keb. 20, and April 17. MISS JEAN SWIFT NAMED QUEEN OF C0RNHUSKER HOP (Continued from Page 3.) place during the intermission was broadcast over KFAB. According to the committee in charge of the balloting by which Miss Swift was elected, the num- Regular Grade BRONZE Gasoline ha ,t w HOLM'S 15-9 ber of students voting was much larger than expected and the race for the new honor on the campus was exceedingly close, several competitors receiving nearly as many votes as the winner. All students who purchased their tickets before Thursday afternoon, were allowed to vote for whomevvr they wished. Because of the popularity of the colored band, featuring amone other eccentricities, three trom bones, four saxes, and character istic Negro vocalizing, Austin Moritz, member of the committee in charge, stated that the orchestra was excellent. Rod Perkins filled one engagement on the campus last spring. The Interclub Council plans 1 1 make this party, along with the election of a Miss Cornhusker an annual event on the campus. UNION SITE DECISION LEFT TO COMMITTEE (Continued from Page 1.1 ficials and approved. The regents approved the on. year leave of absence for Dr. T. Bruce Hobb, chairman of the de partment of business research, ef fective Keb. 1, 1937, in order that he may accept a temporary posi tion as statistician of the federal reserve bank of Kansas City. The regents also changed the ti tle of Dr. Walter B. Johns from instructor and supervisor of math ematics to assistant professor and supervisor. Dr. Karl S. Quisen berry end Dr. H. M. Tysdal who are research assistants in the Uni versity of Nebraska in the United States department of agriculture were given the title of professor in agronomy. LEVINE TO RELATE ARCTIC JOURNEYS AT P.B.K. BANQUET (Continued from Tage 1.) study of their diseases. A brilliant speaker, he knows how to present the wealth of material he gained in his experiences to his audience." Following Dr. Levine's talk, musical entertainment will be pro vided by Hermann Decker. The meetine will adjourn at 8 o'clock to allow members to attend a con cert by the Lincoln Symphony or chestra. MAJORITY OF HUSKER IMMORTALS PLAYING, COACHING IN 1936 (Continued from Page 1.1 head line coach of the varsity squad. The best ends of football his tory at Nebraska were chosen to be Guy Chamberlain and Clarence Swanson. Chamberlain is keep ing in condition by farming out in Elue Springs, Neb. Swanson, who gave that last minute in spiration to the team yesterday, is manager of the Hovland-Swan-son company here in Lincoln. Max Tow'le, undoubtedly the outstanding Nebraska quarter back of all time, is county at torney of Lancaster county. John R. Bender, one of the most bril liant all-American halfbacks com ing from the Nebraska institu tion, died n 1928. At one time Bender was a coach under Dana X. Bible at Texas A. & M. The other halfback. Glen Pres nell. was assistant coach at the University of West Virginia in 1934 is now playing pro football. George Sauer. all Nebraska fullback, is playing professional football for the Green Bay Pack ers in Wisconsin. And Lawrence Kly, outstanding center, is still at the university pursuing a degree in the Law college. And so, Nebraska's all time foctball team marches on. Still working, st ill remembering, and always hoping, they stand as bea cons in lootball history. Their successes have been established and tneir names will forever be remembered. TYPEWRITERS For Sale or Rental Cited machinn on eay paymenu. The Royal portable lypew iter, "deal machine for (tudents. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 110 Ho. 12th St. B2157 No time like the present to build for the future. O O DRINK ROBERTS MILK