THE HESPERIAN. If there is a spot within her borders where loyalty to the The Mends of the university need harbor no fears for the State should be supreme, that place is within these walls, liberal support of the institution in coming years. The cru The recipients of the privileges here offered are asked to aal " has passed. It occurred in the seventies, when to make no other return than that or good citU enship. Govern- c financial panic of the country was added the scourge of rocnis are said to be entirely selfish and no expenditure jusli- J tne grasshopper, when every dollar for its support came from Sable except it promises an ample and complete return to the I direct taxation from a people already heavily burdened, Slate. Ilosrtitals for the insane and other unfortunates are I when less than half a hundred students answered to the maintained to fulfil! the duty the State owes to itsunfor tunalewards, Penitenlaries and reformatory institutions are supported that violalois of the law may be punished, crime reduced, criminals reclaimed, life and property protected and the state rewarded in securing a. law abiding community. Schools and universities are maintained upon a different theory. It is no more the inherent duty of a stale to provide for the educa tion of the children within its borders than to provide them food and raiment. States support schools and universatics and prober education to its people in the hope and belief that for all expenditures it will be amply rewarded in the belter citizenship of those who partake of its proffered ad vantages. All those who receive these benefits are under es pecial obligation to the stale . They owe to her more than coniinwB "wralty. Upon them, whether they will it so or not, resls the responsibility of justifying the slate in her outlay for their behalf. The stale makes no demand thai every one who may have sought knowledge at our free schools should be a statesman, or attempt to be one, but that the strength and vigor acquired at her mental gymnasiums should be employed in her behalf, guarding her good name, protecting her inter ests in limes of need her strength. roll call and not more than one third of these were in the col lege classes, when every student in attendance was costing the state a thousand dollars a year for his schooling. I fat such times and under snch circumstances the state never fal tered we can certainly indulge in hope now, with general fi nances beautiful, with the school prospering, attendance in creasing, with at the next meeting of the legislature $100,000 cash on hand in the temporary fund available for the wants of the university, and with the prospect that thereafter the income from the endowment fund and lands will make the school self sustaining. The outlook is certainly flattering for the University of Nebraska. At the conclusion of this address Prof. Edgrenread the Charter Day poem, which will be found at the head of these columns. It was most thoroughly enjoyed, and deserves a permanent place in the literature of the University. Dr. Merriam of the Medical College followed with an earnest plea for the sustenance of that important department of the University. At the conclusian of his remarks the Rev. A. F. Sherrill, of Omaha, was called upon to speak in behalf of the other colleges of the slate He began by saying that there euld be no rivalry between the University and the denomi national schools, and closed with a tribute to the work done Imreadiagiuiei the charter the adoptiwou of which we arc by Prof. Aughey in the early daysol the University. This celebrating this evening I discovered the cause fir a condi tion of things that existed in this institution in the years gone by. ScctiwH iS of the charter provides that "Provisions shall I e made for the education of females apart from male stu dents on separate apartments or buildings: Provided that per sons of different sexes, of like proficiency of study, may attend the regular college lectures together. This provision of the statutes was religiously observed by the students. I recall distinctly the gravity with which the females and the males entered this room for chapel exercises. How the females oc cupied the apartments on the left. No case is recorded of a male having the Temerity to venture into the sacred pre cincts set apart for the females, or vice versa. The cause for this separation of sexes Toad always bees at tributed to the natural modesty of the students of those days, Brat the cause seeps to have been hidden deeper and lies in the wisdom of the governor and his friends who originated this charter. We axe under lasting obligations to the charter makers far the proviso: without it the condition of the student I would be very deplorable. It reads: "Provided that persoasj fdificaeal sexes of the same proficiency of staidy may atlead 1 the regolar college ledaues together." By universal coaseat all exercises coaaccted with the University outside of chapel exercises are termed college lectures asd .all stadcals Cor the purfiMes of the provision are of the same proficieacy of study. If memory serves sac rightly the origin of the obsorwaiiosi of this dav dales back to the jear 1S77. The programme for the exercises was oI announced until the asseiablisg of the students in rb Tf, when ihecbaaaeellor kindly renaarked thai in 'view of the day besag the aaahersary of the day upon which the law establishing the anniversary was approved we should be granted a holiday. Extemporary flights of oiralory were Indulged in by the orators of the different classes and the school dismissed for the day. Charter Day has been in great Mivar wiu nac sisjuciiia t tj xnrL-r, a was the last regular speech of the evening, but before announc ing the last exercise, the college song, the Chancellor occu pied some minutes with closing words that were most fitting. The song, ''Hesperus," composed by Prof. Sherman, was given by Messrs. Eddy, Frankforter, Fulmer and Wheeler. It is really a University song, and not specially designed for Charter Dav-, though no better time could have been chosen for giving it to the public The society halls and the art room were ihrown open and the audience occupied them and engaged in social converse, until eleven o'clock put an end to the most successful observance af Charter Day ever held at the University. HEARD IX THE HALLS. Supe! Did 5'oa get a valentine? Our Nondescript has been killed. The laboratory roof is being slowly covered with slate. Miss Amaa Keys oF Roca, spent a few days in town last week. Hiss Kate cothono has abandoned her University work for the meamaioder of the year. Htruanl IL Beecherof Kearney made his brother a short vtstt dunag the last month. Remaili of Dave Forsyth as he entered for a history exam inatioa: "Ixwsk at me for the last time." We are pleased to mention the return to I Jncoln o! Mits Alma Benedict, who has been spending some months in Si. fuouis. If you wish to make some startling discoveries, just ask the librarian why he goes to the laboratory so many times during the day.