THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1928 The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Under direction of the Student Publication Board TWENTY-EIGHTH YEAR Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday mornings during the academic year. . Editorial Office University Hall 4, Business Office University Hall A. Office Hours Editorial Staff, 1:00 to 6:00 excspt Friday and Sunday. Business Staff: afternoons except ' Friday and Sunday. Telephones Editorial: B-68J1, No. 142; Buslnsss: B-MI1, No. 77; Night B-MS2. Entered as ascond-claas matter at the postofflce In Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of Congress, March S, 1179, and at special rate of postags provided for In ssctlon 1103, act of Octobsr 3, 117, authorized January SO, 1t22. SUBSCRIPTION RATE 12 year Single Copy 5 cents 11. IS a semestsr MUNRO KEZER EDITOR-IN-CHIEF MANAGING EDITORS Dean Hammond Maurice W. Konkel NEWS EDITORS W. Joyce Ayres Lyman Cass Jack Elliott Paul Nelson Cliff F. Sandahl Douglas Tlmmerman AS8ISTANT NEWS EDITORS Yemen Kstrlng William T. McCleery Betty Thornton CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Cliff F. Sandahl Joe Hunt William McCleery Robert Lalng Eugene Robb MILTON McQREW BUSINESS MANAGER ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER8 William Kearna Marshall "itaer Richard Rlcketts L 1 ' - COLLEGE AND MONET. "Go to college If you want to make more money." The urge for economic betterment coupled with unbending confidence In that statement have un doubtedly driven thousands of students to continue school work for a college degree. Whatever other causes there may be for the astonishing growth In college and university en rollments In recent years, the belief In such educa tions as a means of Insuring a higher financial standing has been a most significant factor. Under its influence, thousands of students have been drawn into America's plants of higher education who would otherwise never have come. A considerable proportion of these have gone back to the life of the world, better citizens per se as well as better qualified to do useful work, to perform worthwhile services. Yet this "golden aim" has not been all advan tageous. It" has tended to create a materialistic attitude In the midst of the old idealistic university atmosphere. It has tended to make students more self-seeking, less willing to fit themselves into schemes for the common good. Hearing the pound ing of the claims of financial advantages of college through the grades and the high schools, It is not surprising that students come back to look on col lege as a place where they may gain special advan tages for themselves. In a state-supported institution of nearly free education, such an attitude Is open to serious ques tion. The state has the right to ask the question. Is education for the benefit of the individual at the expense of society? Or is education for the benefit of society through the efforts of the indi vidual If education is to be merely for the benefit of the individual, if his effort! after graduation are to be devoted entirely to his own ends, if society Is to cover most of the expenses of college educa tion, state support of higher education can hardly be Justified. Students have more and more tended to that rlew under the influence of the college-fox-money doctrine. e The educational world needs to cler its eyes. Students need to awaken to the consciousness of the obligations state-provided education details on the recipients. If a student comes to the University with such a conception, the institution cannot be blamed. But if he leaves with such a view, the Institution must share the blame. Education In college or university, to Justify continued state expense, must bring a consciousness of the civic responsibilities which such education demands. Education Is not an end, bat a means to an end. That end is better ability to do valuable work. The first mission of the University is to train its students In ability for new and broader fields of endeavor. Its second duty Is to develop la their consciousness their duty to make return to the state for that training In more significant ef forts for the benefit of society. If the University fails in the latter. Us failure In its duty to the state which supports It may be as catastrophic as If it filled to train its students adequately In their chosen fields. SOPHISTICATION. College students often long to be sophisticated. They carefully cultivate this form of glorified bore dom. When unsuccessfully Imitated It becomes merely deliberate rudeness and indifference. The attitude, aloof and beautifully assurant, of the one who does achieve It, conveys the subtle impression that here is one who knows all that the world has to offer and falls to find It exciting. Although he may hail from Twin Oaks, Nebraska, he creates the illusion of knowing all about night life in Paris, e Anyone who consistently maintains an attitude of sophistication deserves pity rather than blame. Although he undoubtedly enjoys the pinnacle of superiority on which he has placed himself, he Is still a rather lonely figure because he has put him self so far above mere friendships and the interests of the proletariat. To relax for a moment and dis play a sign of enthusiasm would be an unpardonable weakness. World-weary and self-sufficient this Individual politely conceals his contempt for thos about him. He very often tries to be democratic and to conde scend to the level of others, but the effort Is more obvious than any Impression of democracy. Unfor tunately, his attitude of boredom eventually proves to be contagious and he is obliged to assume a still loftier superiority. In becoming more and more bored he must finally either admit defeat or enter into a comatose condition. Pity the sophisticated person because be ha no future. He has exhausted the pleasures of the world and hasn't a1 single thrill awaiting him. CHOOSINO ELECTIVE "What shall I take next semester?" Announcement has been made that registration ."or resident students for the second semester of this year will be held January 14 to 19. At tha liiije student must map out their couses of study for the remainder of th school year. For some few sludeirts, such a task Is compara tively simple. Their courses are outlined for them In advance, with practically all of their school work planned. The requirements take up most of the time. Others do not have so many required subjects, and must decide what elective will be best for them The requlreemnts for a college degree are lin portant But just as Important are the right kind of electlves. Some courses do the student little good for his eventual life work. Others will, help him as much as the required courses. For most of the students, electlves make up the majority of school work during the last two years at college. Students should pay particular attention to the selection of elective courses. And most stu dents will do well to give the question of what to take next semester some thought over the Christmas holidays, Instead of taking a course because It fits In with the schedule or because it is supposed to be a "pipe" course. ' , THE RAOGER: The student who stayed up late this week may not have been waiting for Santa Claus. He may have been working on that term paper that Is due before the holidays. Fraternity pledge buttons will be polished up for the home folks to see during the Christmas holidays. New ties after Christmas the wearer spent a night in will not mean that a fraternity house, Not al fraternities and sororities have held their Christmas parties yet. rue ten cent stores were crowded with university students agfcln yesterday. Some instructors will make assignments over the Christmas holidays, and will expect students to work on them. OTHER STUDENTS SAY COACHES AND SALARY To the editor: Inasmuch as I am a student at the University, I am keenly Interested In the selection of a coach for Nebraska's football squad next year. The dis cuaslon that has been carried on In The Dally Ne braskan and papers of the state has been followed, and I gather that from all of It that some persons are In favor of paying from 10,000 to 112.000 a year for a coach. Such an enormous sum is entirely out of pro portion to the other salaries that are paid by the university. I understand that the chancellor of this institution rPCfTves about $12,000', and that the pay for professors ranges about 15,000 or $5,500. To pay $12,000 for a coach would put the others far In the rear, showing that Nebraska probably does put foot ball above' educational studies. - It is my understanding that the large sum Is to be offered to a coach with a reputation. But will a reputation do the Job Condltfbna here, both athletic and political, are different than those where coaches with reputations come from. No new man could accustom himself to these conditions the first year. Even if a man with a reputation as a football coach were secured, surely he could not be expected to do much his first year. It takes time to drill a football team Into a system of play. And at the end of the first year, when the coach with the reputation had lost a game, what would the wolves say? The coach with the reputation cannot guarantee a win ning team, any more than can a good coach who is not so well-known. Would it be possible for Nebraska to secure a good coach, with an ace-high reputation, for $10,000 or $12,000? I don't believe that Rockne, Wamer, Wade, Zuppke, Yost, Jones, or any of the other rec ognized coaches would even consider Nebraska for that price. They are receiving that much or more where they are, and they are satisfied. 'They would surely think twice before coming to Nebraska, wb,lch is commonly called "the coach's graveyard." The great coaches, like Rockne, Zuppke, Yost, and many others, did not start at any school for such a salary as $12,000. They started the same as other men, reasonably paid and were picked for higher salaries because they showed exceptional promise. Why should Nebraska pay such a sum when even the greatest coach in the country could not guarantee as much success here as he has had elsewhere? If a roach with a reputation is brought to Ne braska and given a salary of $12,000 a year, and at the end of two years, or whenever his contract is fulfilled, and he has had very successful teams, what will the school be forced to pay to get him to stay here? A good coach can demand his own salary, and if he were good, and started at $12,000, he could easily Insist on much more for a renewal of the contract. It Is true that the University does not want any experiments, but I believe that the committee appointed by the athletic board, or the board mem bers themselves are capable of picking a roan with ability and who has shown ability, rather than pay $10,000 or $12,000 for a reputation that may not turn out the winning team that the supporters of Ne braska seem to want. Ahletlcs are a good thing for the university, and a good boost, but let's keep them secondary to the real purpose of the institution, that of education. N. S. G. BETWEEN THE LINES By LaSelle Gilman Those who are supposed to know say that the academic atmosphere is not conducive to creative writ ing. That is, in the case of profes sors and instructors and such. Stu dents themselves do not enter into this atmosphere with enough seri ousness to be affected by it. Peo ple are always saytnthat the pro fessor buries himself in his worn to such an extent that he can't dig out long enough to write anything eood. and when he does, it is gen erally weighed down with techni calities and results in dry reading, His youthful urge to write is lost, they say. However true that may De, it doesn't seem to work out in prac tice: at least here. Dr. LeRosslg- nol. dean of the College of Business Administration, has recently pub lished his "Beaunort Road," and for amusing, readable material, it has few eauals. It is sub-titled "Tales of Old Quebec," and centers about the quaint French people of that re gion; their life, legends, and be Her. Dr. T.eRnmilirnnl has a Pic turesque power of description, and the stories are marked by their simple beauty of legendary form. How crude to say that a professor, and a professor of business admin istration, cannot write creatively and artistically. If the feeling and the urge and the material and the expression are there, a hod-carrier or a Lord Chanrellor will write and write well. O'Brien's Yearbook of 1928, which Is out now, contains several good short stories, among which "The Gardeen Angel," "John of God," The Water Carrier," "The First of Mr. Blue," "Lady Wipers of Ypres," "A Telephone Call" and "The Jew" are the best. Some are rather long, such as "John of God," Water Carrier," and others are ex tremely short. "The Jew," for In stance, only covers two pages, yet the plot and the story and the char acteristics of the Jew are woven in brilliantly with swift, vivid lines. The anthology of the book lists the Prairie Schooner as one of the Big Four," standing with Harper's, Dial and Bookman, with 100 per cent. This result Is derived from the fact that during 1927 the Schooner published thirteen stories and all were given asterisks of es pecial merit. Thus, the Schooner is rising in the world. see More than once has an author found himself in the bewildering position of possessing fame without the means thereof. Not the pecu- lary means; but the driving force that caused him or her to write the best seller. Some people, driven by desperation, have suddenly and surprisingly written something good; it is published and repub lished and lauded and praised and great things are expected of the author. But the writer has lost all fervor and can't go on. He or she still may sell the stories, but they Townitnd portrait photographer-Ad are Jar below par and only sell on the author's name. Any day In the week you hifey open some popular magazine and read a story that Is utter drivel but the name Is fa miliar. Edna Ferber is a beautiful example. Oh, it must be an easy life, to be famous. There Is a man called Joseph Moncure March who wrote a book of "poetry" called "The Set-Up." It is selling In the fourth edition. Well, perhaps it Is poetry. Who knows? March has a power of de scription that is to be envied, strong, clear-cut, vascular phrases but poetry? Consider this: Behind the bar, Herman: Pompous, German. Huge: An ox: Six foot four in his socks. Square head: Face red, Pitted with small-pox. Lumpy nose. Under it curled A black moustache with the ends twirled, And down on his damp forehead sat One black curl Pasted flat. Why not attempt to plagiarize, In conclusion? A student stared at what he saw: Words, phrases. Stared In awe; The lines kissed A Journalist And made him Sick To his Stummick. (That's ray Weakness now. And how.) day rate for roast chicken was s quarter, chicken a la king beingia dime. , In the line of. wearing apparel, the well dressed man could pur chase a good suit for $10. An over coat was $7. The freshman paid but 35 cents for his green lid. The tonsorial rates were also much cheaper than at present. A shave and a haircut cost two bits; and a shampoo only 15 cents additional. the best marcels are at Thompson Beauty Parlor B-2796 219 No. 12th A Little Money Brought Luxury In Days of 1910 Syracuse. N. Y. (IP) With $1.75 a week, the Syracuse student of fifteen years ago could live In luxury, according to statistics com piled in those days before the war. Those were the days when Hill students could swagger into a lunch wagon near the campus and par take of a small steak for five cents and finish his meal with a dish of ice cream for three cents a throw. At that time if a student was flush, he could order a porterhouse steak for 20 cents. A special Sun- SJOGREN GETS YEAR LEAVE FROM REGENTS Continued from Paare 1. him into various parts of the United States and Canada. Professor SJogifln came to the University of Nebraska as profes sor of Agricultural Engineering In 1909. He has been the chairman of that department sin o 1920. COMMITTEE FOR JUNIOR SENIOR PROM NAMED Continued from Pae 1. mlttee, consisting of six men and six women from the Junior class, one fourth student council members of the Junior class being eligible There shall not be more than one person from any one sorority or fraternity, , and non-fraternity people are eligible and desirable The committee of twelve Bh'aii determine the Joint chairmanships -"""'"-"- ""j miu one girl of at least five major committees' sub-committees being appointed if necessary. It was also recommended that the general chairmanship, consist ing of one boy and one girl from the commute- of' twelve, be sd pointed by the general Prom com. mlttee itself. n The president of the Junior clan, shall have the privilege of taking an active part Jn all ger-eral com. mlttee meetings with power to vote. Worth While Gifts V PERFUME TOILET WATER SETS CIGARS CANDY RECTOR'S 1STH ft P Gordon 1 f LZJ Y Gordon Hosiery Playt a High Holiday Rol! It's exactly Um gift far aae faetid. ioas person to give another. Far tale hoeWy has bees dcaife4 with the atanoet faelilea knowledge, la Coraoai V-Uaa Hosiery, the V shaped shadow fall slaaoWl aaa predaely oa either aMa at the aakle . . . eowntaaiing the ekadarwi which Natare always peris there. Ia Cordon PC arrow Heel Haatery . . . yon flad tha a ansa aha heel af fashion reflected aabtJy la aQk, The aew forsaal snelaiae talis planned far tha i if tha a sea en dyne". . ."Hama "Ore" (the a areaing). Oar Cardan Uft JTaalny i. i for yenr saaertan. A Urn if The Temple Cafeteria I Operated By the University FOR YOU ( shall 1 do u5D with M an frSl v A R3367 VADS1TY &thzss. C1ANERSANDIW1IRS SIDEWALKS The sidewalks of the University of Nebraska are a disgrace to the school and state. Few of us have stopped to notice it, but the sidewalks on this campus are far below those of other schools and are even worse than most of the walks in Lincoln. In warm weather or cold weather, so long as the campus is dry, we need little or no sidewalk Toom. Students can trek across the drill field and still keep their shoes in a fairly presentable con dition. But when wet weather comes there is a differ ent story. The sidewalks. In the first place, are not large enough to carry the full quota of students who must walk from class to class and back again. The sidewalks that we have seem to hold more water than the gutters. "Splash, splash," and so on, we hear students coming down Twelfth street to Social Sciences. Trivial, perhaps, this question of good sidewalks, but Just notice on some rainy day the dlUicultles that students have in getting from one part of the campus to aoother. The drill field which, In dry weather, Is traversed by thousands of students, be comes a sea of mud and water in wet weather. Students resort to the sidewalks. This great university, which has one of the greatest football teams in the country, has sidewalks that are of little practical value in wi-t veather. Too bad, isn't It? Yet, with all the plans for a greater campus, little is said about rebuilding or adding new sidewalks to the campus. While the discussion of greater athletics, new buildings, etc., goes on, stu dents are forced to wade through the mud and slush when going from one cla-n to another. 0. L. 0 e !0 Luxurious Silk Tie New Imported Wonderful Bargain 0 tva,t -me owe Test Ncvec Guarantee Every Purchase. Your Money's Worth or Your Money Back. ' PAIRS' To "She Likes Magee'8 Stockings, so that's my weakness now!'' is a paraphase many a man could truthfully sing. See Corner Window. Cash Selling Saves. a Men's Fancy Hose, 23c 33c, 45c, 89c, D5c. Plain Color Hose, 25c, 35c, 45c, 75c. Flannel Oowns, 95c, $1-45, $1.85, $2.45. - Lumberjacks, V? off, now $2, $2.50, $3. Sweaters, V2 off, now $1.50, $2 up to $6. Other Sweaters, $4.45 to $8.50. Suede Leather Jackets, $13.45, $14.05. Black Leather Coats, $11.95. Men's Buckskin Coats, $4.95. " Men's Mackinaw Lum berjacks, $5.95. , Men's Robes, $3.95, $4.45, $6.45, $9.95. Lounging Robes, $9.95, $12.95. Wool Hose, 45c, 75c, $1, $1.50. Flannel Pajamas, $1.45, $1.85, $2.45. Men's Muslin Oowns, 95c, $1.25. aTja . iMlMl 1 1 See Corner Window. vW&PvM 1 1 Cash Selling Saves. WHY OenTSX ;'TV 'L. -j 2adras Pajamas, $1.45, $1.85. Broadoloth Pajamas, $1.85, $2.45. Union Suits, 95c to $6.50. Dress Gloves, $1 to $$5. Men's Belts, 45o and 95c. 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