THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Under direction of the Student Publication Board TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR Published Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, Friday, and Sunday mornings during the academic year. Editorial Office UnWergity Hall 4. Business Office U Hall, Room No. 4. Office Hours Editorial Staff, 2:00 to f :00 except Friday and Sunday. Business Staff: afternoons except Friday and Sunday. Telephones Editorial and Business: B6891. No. 142. Night BC882 Entered aa second-class matter at the postoffice in Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of Congress, March 8, 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for in section 1108, act of October a, 1917, authorised January 20, 1922. 12 a year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy 5 cents S1.2S a semester WILLIAM CEJNAR ' Lee Vance Arthur Sweet Horace W. Gomon Ruth Palmer EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Managing Editor Asst. Managing Editor Asst. Managing Editor Isabel O'Hallaran Gerald Griffin James Rosse NEWS EDITORS Dwight McCormack CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Evert Hunt Oscar Norllng Lincoln Frost Dwight McCormack Robert Lasch students real body-building athletics which will better fit students for their long strenuous lives as leaders in their communities. But The Nebraskan is not blind to the fact that there are accelerating tendencies in the present system of top-heavy, gate-receipt athletics which merit the earnest consideration of all true lovers of higher education from the college president down to the newest freshman. In Other Columns Tale of A Kiss Notices l J Florence Swihart ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Mary Louise Freeman Gerald Griffin T. SIMPSON MORTON Richard F. Vette Milton McGrew William Kearns . .... BUSINESS MANAGER Asst. Business Manager Circulation Manager .. Circulation Manager TUESDAY, MARCH 22. 1927 "INCIDENTALLY STUDENT" "To guarantee that participation in college sport would be more completely restricted to college stu dents incidentally playing football, than to perpetuate a condition wherein at every college there are at least a few men who are in spirit simply athletes incidentally attending college," President Ernest Martin Hopkins of Dartmouth college, according to an Associated Press dispatch, has proposed a plan of reform in intercol legiate football which would limit varsity teams to sophomores and juniors, and would put all coaching in the hands of undergraduates. The wire report states further "He (President Hopkins) said that although ho did not feel the worst that had been alleged against college football was neces sarily true, tendencies toward such conditions are more rapid than,' commonly recognized, and I believe that in tercollegiate football is in a more hazardous position than is generally supposed among its friends." Realizing that it is impossible for any single college to transform of itself existing evils, President Hopkins proposes a formal organization, of a limited number of eastern colleges and universities where the plan might be tried out. . President Hopkins, the report explains, was at one time a graduate manager of Dartmouth athletics. He is a man who is richly in sympathy with college ath letics .and not a dreamy purist who would abolish the whole works. His proposal as a result should have added weight in university councils. (To My Ray of Sunshine) Those lovely lips in Nature's hue, That smile so sweet, so tempting too, Poor fluttering youth, -what could I do? My heart called out with passion true.: With brutal force" I clasped her tight; She was so frail, so wondrous light, Yet she began a fearless fight, And lo, my eyes turn brownish bright! In stalked a husky boorish lad: "Leggo my wife, you collar ad ! Get out" he cursed, "or I'll run mad." And so I left, more wise than sad. 6. W. S. McGill Daily Athletes incidentally attending1 college, instead of collega students incidentally playing football. That's the big trouble with college athletics today, and it's the situation President Hopkins hopes to eliminate. It doesn't take much thought and reflection on the part of a student who is not altogether asleep to the world about him, to see that a great many athletes come to university (to Nebraska among all the others) for no other reason than to be on the teams, to make a letter, and to bask in the gladiatorial glory of sta dium and coliseum. What is even worse, there are many athletes in American universities who came not entirely of their uwu free vouuuii, but weie aula on the idea of a uni versity career by alumni, and coaches in particular, who were out to get "material" for the varsity teams. Ne braska's record in this respect has been fairly clean, but it is not without blemish either. It is this prostitution of college education for the sake of athletics which is slowly but surely arousing a public reaction which in the end will probably lead to some sane reform such as the Dartmouth president is advocating. All true friends of colleges and universities should lend an attentive ear to the proposal, and watch with concern the progress of the experiment if it is ever tried out. American colleges and universities are in a well nigh ridiculous predicament. Posing as institutions of higher learnng, they have in part degenerated and become a mere background for the highly organized business of college athletics. This degeneration may not be so marked among the average students who are here to really get an education, but it is quite marked among those whose interests seem primarily athletic, and among those whose BUSINESS it is to turn out the athletes. If there is a reform it will probably be started in the East by the same schools which were leaders in creating this frankenstein intercollegiate monster. Here in the West we are still in the stadium-building stage or rather to put it more truly, we are still in the sta dium and coliseum-paying stages. We've got to keep on in order to meet the payments. Our athletics have virtually ceased to be amateur in nature. They can't any longer be considered purely amateur athletics when the gate receipts are mortgaged many years ahead to pay for expensive structures. The universities have simply got to put oat good teams, winners if you please, in order to attract enough spec tators to fill the empty seats, and the empty coffers. Competition is becoming keener. I.'s an economic competition in large part too. That's why we have everywhere more and more all-year-round coaching and practice. That's the only way to compete with other schools which are doing the same thing in order to win more games,, attract more crowds, and pay for their piers and tiers of concrete. In this competition and the exaggerated glory jpven to the participants we find the root of most of the excesses of "athletes incidentally attending college" a condition which the head of one of the country's most famous private schools is proposing to remedy. Courtesy to Dance Chaperones Some persons say a dance can not be held without chaperons. Others say a dance is a failure if you do have chaperons. Officially the first conclusion is right. The second one depends on the individual, or perhaps two individuals. Recognizing the fact that chaperons are a requisite of each social function, it is expected of students to pay some respect to those who make pos sible these affairs. Sitting in an out-of-the-way place three hours is no pleasure to these persons. Playing bridge all eve ning becomes irksome. Occasional chats with dancers at least would adl variety to the evening. Seldom do students make it a rule to greet the chaperons. They apparently are not aware of the governing body's pres ence. Frequent visits and dance trades snould become the rule, not the exception. Making chaperons enjoy the evening contributes to the success of any dance. It eliminates the last- minute worry of telephone calls to assure the dance Indiana Daily Student The College Bred Cop Something seems to have happened to the college bred cop. According to a laconic dispatch from Evans- ton, 111., where he was on trial, he has been fired for incompetence. Thus an interesting experiment in col lege vocational training is subjected to the handicap of an alumni failure at its very inception. Just what were the shortcomings of Evanston's young chief of police one is left to surmise. The dis patch doesn't tell anything except that he failed to make good. It would be interesting to know whether it was the young man who failed or his method.,' So far as practical results are concerned, of course, the two are inseparable. Still it is possible that the scienti fic method in the hands of a more skillful director might have worked out, or the young man with a prac tical instead of a theoretical training might have de livered the goods. At any rate Evanston apparently will have to go back to a chief who knows nothing about police prob lems except what he has gained through directing traf fic, pinching drunks, catching thieves and locating cleverly concealed stills. World-Herald A Dead SuMicr, or a Healthy Husband 'Way back at the beginning of time, so far as the university is concerned, an Iowa State Legislature provided for higher education at public expense with the proviso that military training and home economics would ever be a part of the curriculum. True to the visions of its forefathers, the univer sity continues to offer military training not only of fers it. but insists that the freshmen and sophomores accept it. it is a tribute to the men that they take the uncomfortable dress and long walks without a murmur. They see it, apparently, to be their duty. Home economics, also, is offered by the university. It is optional, however, with the result that the aver age co-ed takes the time for make-up and dancing prac tice rather than for instruction in home-making. She finds it to be more, practical in procuring a husband she thinks she does, that is, because she gets more dates. The truth of the matter is that college men still dust off the same measuring sticks grar.dfsthcr used when it comes to selecting a wife. While they may date the make-up and the active feet, when it comes to tak ing a mate they do not select a dancing partner. The standards set up long ago still exist; good" look ing, good natured, and a good cook. In these days of the can-opener the accent has come to be placed on the "cook", especially a week or so after the knot has been tied. Men of Iowa do not object to military train ing; most of them had rather become a healthy well nourished husband than any kind of soldier, living or dead. Daily Iowan It is a condition which has risen up so slowly, and has been so much the product of exaggerated and, may we say, misijiterpretejl and misled school loyalty, that a great many people are not fully alive A.6 it. In fact thr nua sriwri belief in SC2! tjtisrtsrs that everything can be criticised and talked about except the sacred boll of. college athletics. Why this should be the one most touchy question on the campuses of scor es of universities, it is dif f ficult to explain. Probst y it oas become so because its defenders have been i ut), aler in rushing to arms whenever a word of criticism has been uttered. And yet, there are few people who wilj refuse to admit that there have been, and that there are gross abuses to the college athletic system. At a neighboring j wmern. college, tor instance, it is common knowledge that the football team for several yean has been noth ing but r hired group of athletes incidentally attending college. Another university jucfc recently has embarked on a campaign of "getting the men". All university trams tti-fi not composed that way entirely, biit too big X!Tv:t? "t of then ore, Tve Pally Nebraskan does not condemn college i". ..' s .is such. Nay The Nebraskan is heartily in f vf r t,t more e?d mere thirties for more and more Exchange Studentships The idea of "exchange studentshipg," conducted on the principle of "exchange professorships," has been advocated somewhat, as a means of broadening the vision of the usual provincial college student The plan in practice would consist of having certain stu dents transfer their campus affiliation for two or three months of the year for the purpose of absorbing the outlook and organization beyond the borders of their own particular little field. The cosmopolitan education which would rpm1t might belikened to that broadening influence which is supposed to result from traveling. It is questionable as io wnetner such a system could be worked out ef fectively in any great number of cases, without consid erable detriment to the -student's progress in an organ ized university course. Any exchange period of less than a year would necessitate an abrupt re-adjustment naraiy comparable to the situation in an exchange of . . .... jiu:biuiiii)i. jxa instructor taxes tus lectures and . A 1 1 . .... meinoas reauy-maae to the new environment, is on the receiving end of the experiment and must conform to the new situation. ' The advantages of such diverse points of view, and such broadening contacts, are well worked out in graduate schools, where students are allowed to pur sue ineir particular study under he best instruction available. Unfortunately the present connotation with the campus "wanderer" is not such as would encourage the average student to change schools frequently. The difficulties of transferring credits and meeting gradua tion requirements, added to the scholastic illfame which may "attach to constant transfers, rather deters such experiments. It seems doubtful whether sr.y organized attempt to foster exchange studentships will be successful with out some special provisions for caring for such technical difficulties and for faculty recommendation ef stndent.a suited for the experiment. For the thoughtful student who desires to broaden his own educational vision, the plan offers n idea for voluntary and individual ap plication. The Daily DHnl TUESDAY, MARCH 22 Tassels Meeting; Tuesday at 7 o'clock at Ellen Smith Hall. , Alpha Kappa Psl Meeting Tuenda March 22 at the Com mercial Club Room at 7 p. m. Theta Si (ma Phi -Theta Sitrma Phi will meet in S3 218 at 6 o'clock, Tuesday, March 22. Taasels Rehearsal Tueeday at soven o'clock at the Temple building; in room 204. Bring- paper and pencil. - WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23 Tassel i Rehearsal Wednesday from 5 to 6 at the lempie Dulldinir room 204. THURSDAY, MARCH 24 Taaaal Rehearsal Thursday from 5 to 6 at the lempie buildir.it room 204. FRIDAY, MARCH 25 " Union Union will hold its Annus! Girl's meet ing, Friday, March 26, at 8:30, at which time the Union girls will be hostesses to the Union ' boys and to guests. Everyone is cordially invited. MONDAY, MARCH 28 Mechanical Engineers Meet in Monday, March 28. GILLIAN SPEAKS AT CONVOCATION (Continued from Page One.) chagrin. But the harm that he had done1 could not be killed. 'He threw China into chaos and into the hands of these various armies. There is no- one who knows how absurd it is to call China a re public than China herself and this is why they are disturbed and this is what they are fighting about. So China is still waiting for her Wash ington." "China has a remarkable school system but all the money has been stolen and so this school system is not working now. There is a re markable railway system but this too is not working because the bandits have taken all the money from them. But there is just one brilliant ex ception to these military leaders. In the papers you hear about the "so called" christian leader. There is no reason for the term "so-called" because he will allow no looting or thieving in his groups of soldiers which is unusual for a Chinese gen eral to do. Sun Yat Sen Movements "Sun Yat Sen felt that China should become a republic and brought about a revolution in 1905, but he was betrayed by his friends who went into the revolution hoping to get something for themselves. Then the people of China stretched out their hands to America and Great Britian, but what could we do for such a small number of a revolu tionary partv. Whatever America would do would be on the wrong side because she has grown to be such a big and important nation." Some sort of birth control meas ures are also needed in China but they will not listen U this Wau&e they would say that you are trying to (decrease their population that much quicker and that America might come over there twenty-five or fifty years quicker. The Chinese custom service is a wonderful thing because it is con trolled by foreigners. The postal ser vice is also remarkable for this name reason, and it would be very unfor tunate for China to disrupt this ser vice. China is. bound by the great family system and so would do any thing for the family. But with a foreigner ar "boss," the family can not interfere with business. Sun Yat Sen in his third great book says that the great need of China today is for n large amount of foreign capital and foreigners to take care of this. Most of the students of China oly read the first book and then stop but the third book is a very important one and should have as important a place as any of the others. "I believe that Sun Yat Sen and this southern government will do a great' good and creat? a new day for China." Professor Taylor, an old friend of Rev, Oilman, introduced the speak er of the morning. Just before the address Professor Taylor announced that next Sunday at the Temple there would be a dis cussion group on "China". This has grown out of the Pan-Pacific con ference held here recently. PRINTERS UiJIdrWB bU. 1 1 IV 0U OUl ItiT o 1, I TMrnr w wm MOT PLAYERS CLOSE 1927 SEASONTHIS WEEK (Continued from Page One.) plots ever written, and centers around the narrow Jew, Shylock, who demands that Antonio forfeit a pound of flesh in payment of a bond he is unable to meet The cruelty and hate of Shylock, the brilliance of Portia in defending Antonio in the great court scene, is probably the most famous single episode in dramatic literature. The remaining cast follows: Duke of Venice Ernie Lundgren Prince of Morocco Cecil Schmitt Salanio . Thad Cone Salario Werner Mall Gratiano Jack Rank Lorenzo Paul Pence TubfJ Carol Dubry Launcelot Gobbo Paul Miller Old Cobbo Elwood Eamay Leonardo .-...Alfred Poska Balthasar Howard Cottle Stephano.....:... Ruth Barton Nerissa .....Helen Aach Jessica Eloise McAhan Matinees will be given Friday and Saturday at 2:30 as usual, and tick ets may be purchased at the Ross P. Curtice store. This will be the last chance to see the Players this season, and "The Merchant of Venice"'- is well worth attending, not only from the point of the play itself, but also to have the opportunity to contrast this last and greatest of performan ces with the preceding ones, in stage arrangements and lighting. One Nebraska Co-Ed is Learning How to Repair Farm Machinerv When any repairs are needed on automobile motors or on other mot ors on her farm home near Cozad, Nebr., Miss Isabel Lawless, junior in Teachers College of the University of Nebraska, is going to know how to make them. She is the only woman registered for the course in farm motors at the College of Agriculture this semester. Mis3 Lawless goes into the labora tory determined to get all possible information out of her work. Putting on a pair of coveralls she experiments with the motors side by side with the men i.i the class. Because the man with whoin she was working in the laboratory ist week wanted to. do all the work for her she asked the instructor that some one else be al lowed to work with her on the ex periment. Her request was granted. She is not afraid of oil or grease on the motors and takes them apart and puts them together skillfully. Besides the course in motors Miss Lawless is taking a course in wood work at the College of Agriculture. With sixteen other young women she makes useful pieces of furniture for the home. Cedar chests, kitchen uten sils, sewing cabinets, end tables, and pedestals are among the articles they are making in the laboratory. According to A. A. Baer, wood work instructor, .the young women are just as proficient in mechanical work as men if they are given the same opportunities. 5 "We are not trying to make mech anics, of the young women," Mr. Baer said, "but rather to make them efficient in the homes they will have in the future. To be able to use a hammer, saw, or chisel effertiw.i one thing that a housekeeper IS" be able to do. We want pend on themselves." as In a course in household phyBic, the young women are taueht of household appliances, which are the electric washing J, chine, mangle, refrigerator, L number, of kinds of lighting gJz. 8 Here again . emphasis is pVced? makinc the, i.. . ea n uomA one to handle the machines. and also to n,l v, "pers the non thefarmisnotthL! Waukesha, Wis., March 21 When -dynamite caps to be used""i clearing a golf course exploded, Mil Loden, seventeen, captain of tfc Menominee Falls basketball team W his right hand. lost Diamonds YOU MAY NEED ONE. GIVE US A LOOK. WE WILL EXTEND YOU CREDIT. Fenton B. Fleming Jewelry Shop B3421 1143 O St. niuimiuiiiiui iininiHiuiiiirniiiumiiiiiiitiiiuiiinimniiiimnniiiiaiiiiiuiiiiiiMiuniuiuininiiiiiiiuuuutuHiiniuiiiMi tiiimiiciiiitiiiimiiiuiusmiMiHsi 1 VISIT OUR 17 MODEL. ROOMS i I STOCK YOUR PANTRY SATURDAY WITH OUR GROCERIES I I STORE NEWS I Today at Rector's 25c Minced Ham Tostetta Banana Shortcake Any 5c drink What shall I do with that Spot? ctdi BS86Z WaWW CLEANERS AND DYERS For That Empty Feeling HOTEL D'HAMBURGER Buy 'em by the sack Shot Gun-Service B-1512 114 12 St. Spring Is Here Time to snap out of it and take advantage of that liberal trade-in offer on Lifetime Pen C. Edison Miller Co 218 No. 12th Where hamburgers are the best FRAT LUNCH Vz block No. of Buick Bid . Curb Srvica Home Made Pies P. D. Q. Service Talks of eating at the Buckwheat Cakes A native of Pennsylvania, who for many years has lived in Nebraska, eats breakfast (and most of his other meals, too) at the Central Cafe. Notwithstanding hiB mafiy years in Nebraska, he has not forgotten the delicious flavor of Buckwheat Cakes, properly baked and with plenty of Mead ow Gold Butter and swimming in a sea of yrup. So regular is this man in his breakfasting, that upon seeing him seated at the first counter, the waiter in charge gives an order to the chef: "Buckwheat Cakes must be well."' This translated into the language of laymen, means that the cakes must be baked to a beautiful brown and must not be too thick. The starch of buckwheat flour is firmer than that of wheat and requires a longer time for the action of yeast to make a batter from which pala table Buckwheat Cakes can be baked. And the Central Cafe chef, knowing this, stirs up his batter long enough in advance of breakfast so that the cakes baked from it are fully the equal of those baked by Pennsy vania housewives. No need to look your age Those famous aids to facial youth, prepared and used by Dorothy Gray, New York's most famous beauty expert, are now at our Toilet Goods Department. Also directions for home treatment. Ways to end a double chin, to round out sharp contours on face, to erase lines around eyes and mouth. You can look years younger. Call for free Dorothy Gray Book of Home Treatments. At our Toilet Goods Department OS IT f (T aw caatinuad) 132S P Valuables that fraternity or sorority pin. Purses books or money The only chance for their recovery is by advertising for them in our Want Ad column. ' It is put in the paper for your convenience. So make use of it. The Daily Nebraskan BUSINESS OFFICE New location Casement cf U HeII