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About The Nebraskan. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1892-1899 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1893)
u - 32 THE NEBRASKAN 1 r f 1 . LA W SCHOOL. Thc University of Minnesota has been par ticularly favored of late. The annual con- ventions of the Phi Gamma Delta and the yQ were gj,u l0 meet IUU grcct Ambrose Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternities were both Epp0rson, '92, on a recent visit to the Law held at Minneapolis this month. The ma- School. Mr. Epperson was one of the pio jority of the D. K. E. delegates were present nQQY aml h;s reminjScences of old days at the Minnesota-Kansas foot-b. 11 game on show m how much wc julv0 g,.own, October 14. Mn D B IIaywani was cane(i home for a The University Courier of the K. U., like fow days last week on account of the sick some other college papers we know of but ,less 0f his wife. refrain from mentioning has contracted the Thc country mllst be saved even at the barbarous habit so exasperating to a man cost of somo inconvenience so the joint de- wkh a god combination of wheels in his bate between the Union Boys' Club and the head, of throwing short ads promiscously in Maxwell Club was postponed a week, to en all parts of the paper. "Jay ism" is the only ablo 0U. poijlicians l0 ,f0 out and instruct th. term which can efleclually characterize that masses the sort of thing. We were deeply touched at seeing that antique jest " non paratus dixit soph," etc., reproduced in the Courier. At last it has reached the College on the Hill ! We recall with tears the last time we heard it, in the long, long ago. We were young then, and we respected the joke, feeble and decrepit with age, and so we laughed. It was a good joke in its day, and it had a long day, too. Well, well, well ! It makes us feel young to see venerable, hoary, old " non paratus" again. It has been hinted that the reason so many The question of joining a literary society or fraternity is agitating the minds of some of our members. Some have graduated from University societies, and a few are new fra ternity men. The value of these organiza tions both as a means of intellectual and of social culture wc think is not fully recognized by our members, the number of those who have joined societies and fraternities being the criterion by which we judge. We think there is benefit to be derived from contact with the student body in its various organi zations ; and who knows but what a member colleges are throwing open their doors to 0f the law department might so far rise in the women is that, in this day of foot-ball and scaie as to be permitted to "deface the general athletics, some one is needed for the slate." faculty to teach.-ZT.v. The oM notions and theories Solomon was estimated a wise man in his pcaring one by one, in the legal profession day ; but then in Solomon's day no one had as well as elsewhere ; and one of these no- ever seen a Harvard Sophomore. Texas tions is the idea that women cannot practice Sitiugs. law successfully. It has not been very long England has 94 universities and employs since sucn Jl llng as a woman practicing in 2.721 more nrofessors than the 00 colleges the courts was unheard of. Now women in the United States. Prof, in mineralogy) Mr. Stone, give us tlie name of the largest diamond. lawyers are becoming quite numerous, and as far as we can judge they are as successful as lawyers as the opposite sex. Eleven wo men luivn boon nr1mittd In nrnctiro 1n(Vrr Mr. Stone The ace. Purdue Exponent. ,i, a.,.,-, , c . tt . 1 o. .1 the Supreme eouat of the United States the last being a citizen of Nebraska. Thc law These cold, nipping frosts arc knocking schools of the country generally are open to out the landscape gardener. His beautiful women, and the number of female students posies are beginning to droop. is increauing. Our own law department has 1