TWO THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA entered as aecond-claaa matter at the poatofflct In Lincoln, Nebraika. under act of congress, March 3, 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for In section 1103, act of October 3, 1917, authorized January 80, 1922. Under direction of tho Student Publication Board. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall JA. Telephones Day: B-6891; Nights B-6882. 6-3333 (Journal) Ask for Nebraakan editor, EDITORIAL STAFF Howard 0. Allaway . Editor-in-chief Jack Erlckson Associate Editor Managing Editors Pnllllp Brownell Laurence Hall News Editors Richard Moran A rm Randall Lynn Leonard Katharine Howard Women's Editor Joe Miller iSp?r.u 12 !or Violet Cross.... Society Editor BUSINESS STAFF H. Norman Oallaher Business Manager Assistant Business Managers Bernard Jennings Frank Muegrave George Holyoke This Prohibition Question. jyjOUNTING conviction that something: is wrong with the li.quor control laws in the United States, which found expression in a profound shift in the American public's attitude toward prohibition sometime between last April and the time the na tional conventions met in June, has opened up this question to dispassionate consideration on its own merits, divorced from the prejudices which had be clouded the issue in the past, for the first time since the temperance societies of the 19th century began their evangelism which culminated in the passage of the eighteenth amendment in 1918. The prominence given to the effect, beneficial or detrimental, of prohibition on "the youth of our nation" justifies such a frank discussion in the college press. The Nebraskan will attempt to hand out no ready-made opinions on the prohibition issue. It will seek only to establish certain well-grounded premises from which the intelligent reader can come to his own conclusions. To question the present prohibiten Vws no longer brands one as ipso facto destined tn r nna tion, but to extract the truth from the pile oi' j.n paganda and mass of misconceived notions, rerau'ns a difficult undertaking. For the present student population the matter is doubly complicated be cause, though we may know what conditions are now, we have no first hand knowledge of what they were before prohibition s era. The real truth must lie somewhere between the extremes claimed by the rabid enthusiasts on each side. . Honest recognition of certain fundamental facts will clear the question of a number of now vigorously debated elements. ' 1. Let us first recognize that insertion of the eighteenth amendment into the constitution is an attempt to enforce conformity to a moral code through the agency of the law. Whether or not this is a proper function of government is open to ques tion. In this particular case, the record shows, the attempt has not been very successful 2. Liquor, itself, has been overemphasized as a moral issue by those honest zealots who have seen the evils of over indulgence. Let those proponents of legally enforced total abstinance who revere the Bible recall that on a certain occasion Christ, having been invited to a wedding by a hostess so careless as to have forgotten to order beverage for the event, took a jar of water and demonstrated His divine propensities by manufacturing some on the spot. 3. America has never been a people to scruple too much at disregarding those laws which tbey found not to their liking. A long time ago Eng land made some shipping laws which forbade her American colonials trading with certain islands. By pursuing this trade contrary to the law the America ncolonies grew strong enough to success fully defy the mother country when at last a deter mined effort to enforce these laws was made. In the same way the United States hi-jacked Texas from the Mexicans. That Mexico bad forbidden American migration into the territory made little difference to those who decided they wanted to live there. With prohibition the case has been much the same. Those who dou't like the law have disre garded it until, for them, it has been practically nullified. 4. Prohibition is a bigger question than merely outlawing liquor. The result of the law, because it has not or cannot be enforced, has been to breed contempt for all law. The man who makes and drinks beer in his home and with his family does not feel himself a criminal. Yet he is asked to forego this indulgence on the same grounds that forbid him to rob and murder his fellows. It is this weakening of all law by prohibition that hfc brought the American public to tolerate real crime on an unprecedented scale during the last lecade. Because people who want to drink will drink anyway, gangdom with its racketeering meth ods has been able to organize and spread into other fields without effective public protest until today it defies the forces of law. 6. Much of the drinking done by young people at present Is done in the spirit with which a little boy goes out behind the barn and makes himseV deathly sick smoking a forbidden cigar. That young people drink because it is an "adventure" nay not be much of a recommendation for them, but that this is a fact has been our observation. "yHESE are but a few observations. But their ex istence, whether we like it or not, must be acknowledged before we can reach a solution to the problem. The evil of drink lies not in the drinking, but in the results of over-indulgence. -To prevent this, then, should be the aim of whatever measures are adopted. This is what the prohibitionists seem to have forgotten. Until the passage of the eight eenth amendment, the fight was for temperance. Since that time it has been for. the, preservation of prohibition. A favorite retort to every suggestion has been that no acceptable substitute for prohibition has been offered. To those who answer thus, we com mond the plan submitted last week by Dr. Butler of Columbia. In any case, prohibition having failed, the only course now open is to try something else. Before this is undertaken there must be a definite concep tion of the purpose and a recognition of the ob stacles which have appeared under prohibition. The object is temperance. Whether by law, or by education, or by some other means, this legiti mate end can best be attained is now the question to be answered. Contemporary Comment Rvtinrd For Sen-ire. fyESLEYAN university, Nebraska's suburban neighbor, announces adoption of a pension plan for instructors who have passed their period of usefullness to the school. Teachers, on reaching the age of seventy, may retire with an annual sti pend which varies according to the number of years they nave taught in the university, A fund for the purpose will be created by deducting 2 percent of each teacher's annual salary, adding to that amount whatever is necessary from university resources. Any instructor leaving the university . before he reaches 'the retirement age will receive back the amount deducted from his salary with 4 percent interest. In thus providing for the material needs in later years of those who have given the active period of their lives to the service of the school, Wealeyan is ahead of Nebraska. Adoption of such a plan here would go far In reducing the great loss Nebraska has taken regu larly in the past by its better teachers leaving to accept Jobs elsewhere at higher pay. To mention but a few prominent American educators who were once members of the Nebraska faculty: Dean Ros coe Pound of Harvard law school, Dr. Hartley Burr Alexander of Scripps college in California, Dean James of South Dakota and Dr. J. D. Hicks, now- of Wisconsin. The list could be extended. Under the present dependence for funds on state appropriations, it is impossible for Nebraska to raise salaries to meet the competition of more prosperous institutions. I Wesleyan, which has been unusually hard-hit by "the times,'' can afford to institute a pension plan at this time, surely Nebraska can do no less for those who are turning down better jobs some where else to give their life service for Nebraska. A policy of providing old age security for those who stay here despite the allurements of more money elsewhere would be not only a humanitarian acknowledgement by the state of its debt to them. but would serve to keep at Nebraska many of those fine faculty men It can expect if the past be any guide will be leaving some of these days for other schools. On Broadcasting. Dr. R. N. Blackwell, former Southern Methodist University athletic director, recently told pressmen that the Southwest Conference Is making a grave error in banning the broadcast of football games. Blackwall will be remembered as the man who started Southern Methodist on the road to national recognition. Blackwell pointed out in the statement that big newspapers who own most of the broadcast ing stations, will not a bit be pleased with the action of the con ference, and naturally they are not going to feel the same toward football publicity given to them thru the athletic departments. He predicted that the ban would be lifted within a- year. It seems that the conference and the newspapers could come to an agreement on the broadcast lng of games whereas the stations would be allowed to give an ac count of the games on the air. If the officials think that attendance at games is decreased, could not new field of fans be opened by navmg me stations broadcast pun licity twice or three times a week for fifteen minute periods? We are certain that such a plan was suggested at the last meetinjr, Such a plan would benefit both the conference and the broadcasting siaiion. ine uany Texan. Views on Cooperation. Visions of a 20 percent reduc tion in fraternity house bills have brought widespread support to the proposal that a Co-operative Man ager's association be instituted on this rumpus. House managers have expressed BEFORE OUR TIME from The 0lly Nebraiban Flies fur l02 and IBM. An Old Custom. LELLO-ftAX is growing up it has become Hello v Week how, and the first day of the festivity of friendliness begins Monday morning. Sponsored by MorU Board aud endorsed by nearly all organized groups the campus should ring this week with cheery greeting. Administrative officials have announced their hearty approval of the plan, and a Dally Nebraskan survey of student leaders found them also favoring this new step in the continuation of an old and worthwhile tradition. In past years, the fete lat1 but a day and was under the direction of the two freshmen or ganizations of that time, the Mystic Fish and the Green Goblin. Last fall the custom was revived as a single day of amiable welcome. But this year "Hello" will be the official catchword for a whole week, and the sponsors want it understood that the greeting is for everyone. At the freshman convocation last Friday, fresh men girls were given their class buttons, and this year the buttons will be worn only in conjunction with Hello Week, it is, naturally enough, the frosn who find the most difficulty in feeling at home on the campus. But men of the class wilf be identified by their red caps, and women by their buttons, so U s up to the icil of the studrut body to make them feel at eaxe during this week of exchanging greet ings. Ami besides the obligation involved, the cus tom provides no end of amusing Incidents. Try It Monday morning with a constant string of "hello's." Perhaps you'll be surprised. Educational Psychology Professor Indicates Study's Practical Value Miter's nolri OvUiif ip llnilla Mw.a. Ih wen pari of Ik mritrtm hlc mvwurrm la 1 lixrtUr'a Dally ,Nrbrakaa nnd-r tills headllur wul not mr rea W Friday's aaarr. Ta rantlaaalMHi U4w) marfca th cwaHudliif Installment af Mr. MmhaMrl'l lulrn lew wllk Cnfrml fnrtfyea aa lb valar ana arattoal apvll rattans er th mlmat of aayrhntasy. Or. fnrayra give fcanilr tn tkr artlrlr ml aaratloas whtra fcr nn ha tts i Mlramni and as'jrr.ra fa art mm sadlra ttea ! ihrlr ability. " A young man Invites a young lady to go to a show with him. On approaching the theater he dis covers he has left his pocketbook at home." What should the young man do? The instructions read that Just one of the four following answers are to be checked, the one that appears the most nearly cor rect. Pick one for yourself. (1) Try to get the tickets on credit by offering to leave his watch sw, security. (2) Try to find some friend from whom he can borrow money. (3) Decide with her on a courses of action. Mi Find some plausible excuse and go home and get some money. Simple! Ask the Girl. The correct answer, of course, is to decide with the girl on a course of action. Yet one individual de clared the man should run the chJL-ce of seeing a friend and bor rowing the money, failing to state however. Just what excuse might be given the young lady for keep ing toex on the street corner. Still another suggested the man should make some excu.se and go home and get his money. According to the author of the tests, these are problems of a so cial nature, all of which a good sales person should be capable of deciding. To show the diversity of subjects, here is another one. You are supposed to be living in a suburb ten miles from the city, and you promise to take a neigh bor home in your automobile at 4 p. m. After he has waited for you from 3 to 4, you find that you will be detained in the city until 5:30. Would It be best to ask him to wait until 5:30, offer to let him drive your car home or get some one else to drive it, offer to get a taxicab for your neighbor or tell him the circumstances and let him decide what to do? To some of the people taking the test the neighbor should be asked to re main until 5:30 o'clock. Evidently the person who suggested the car owner hire a taxi for his friend was extremely courteous. The more buslness-Uke problem also is listed among the questions. Here's an example: How To Get Along. "You have been appointed to a position with a large firm. TUe best way to establish friendly and pleasant relations with your busi ness auociatss would ba to avoid. noticing and correcting the errors thev make: always speak well of them to the boas; he interested and co-operative in your work, or ask to be allowed to do those tasks which you can do better than they can. , The prohibition law fails to escape publicity. Women no doubt have found themselves faced with such a situation as the following: "Two friends are being entertained at a dinner, one of whom is very conservative and the other radical in point of view. A very heated discussion arises concerning the enforcement of the prohibition law. It would be best to (1) Take a definite stand with the one you think is right. (2) Try to change the subject of the discussion. (3) Enter into the argument and give your point of view, showing where both are too extreme In their views. (4 1 Ask them to change the subject so as to avoid further argument. "Would you try to interest the boss by reading aloud an Impor tant headline, or appear that you are making news clippings relative to you rework if the chief of your force ha"ppen' to walk into your room where) you were supposed to be at work? Maybe you would think it best to continue to read the paper and show no embarrass ment, or would you fold It up and return to your duties ? According to the Upsala Gazette, students in the University of Ber lin are allowed a period of six weeks during which to analyze and select thsir professors, . . Thirty Years Ago Today. The varsity football team per formed an annual cleanup on the Doane squad, when the two teams met Saturday. The final score was 51 to 0 nine touchdowns and six goals totaling for Nebraska. At the time the Dally Nebraskan was published, in 1902, only twelve other universities and colleges had daily papers. An electric class bell system was used for the first time in Nebraska history. The S. A. E.'s also con ceived a bright Idea and a supple mentary gong was placed in their chapter house. Advertising: "History covers. . . the new 'Clip' cover invented by Professor Barbour does away with shoestrings. See the shoe-string-less cover." Ten Years Ago Today. A fashion war nearly resulted this week because senior women persisted in wearing short skirts, and freshmen women were still wearing long skirts. A new tradition was started at Nebraska as students prepared to elect an honorary colonel. For the first time in Nebraska history, cadet officers were to wear uni forms at the military ball, and the honorary colonel was to be presented. Among the girl's social rules newly inaugurated: "No girl may have week day dates after 10:30 o'clock; freshmen may have no week day dates; sophomores are permitted one; there shall be no loitering on porches; girls must come to breakfast fully dressed; there shall be no eating downtown after 10:30, and houses shall be quiet at 8:00. Football: "It is unlikely that the new custom of kicking a goal after a down will remain,' says the Dally Nebraskan. The Daily Nebraskan advocated a campaign for side walks, since the tearing down of the "old iron fence'" left great bare spaces. Men's Glee Club. The first rehearsal of the men's glee club is to be held Tuesday opening at 8 p. m. In room 219 of Morrill hail. Tiyouta, in charge of Professor Wltte, will be given Monday at 3 p. m. for those who are interested in Joining the group. SCHOOL OF MUSIC The radio program this week will be broadcast over KFAB at 2 30 Tuesday afternoon. Parvin Wltte of the voice faculty will give a Joint recital with Earnest Harrison of the piano faculty. Mr. Harrison will play a request pro gram. Tryouts for the Presser founda tion scholarship, a cahh award offered to students in the School of Music, will be held Monday aft ernoon, Sept. 2tt, in the School of Music building. All students who are majoring in applied music and are taking a School of Music degree are eligible to compete. Full Information will be given upon request. Mrs. Will Owen Jones played a group of piano numbers for the opening reception and tea of the First Plymouth church last Wed nesday. Pauline Holtorf. student with Vera Upton, won first place In the Atwater Kent radio contest In Saunders county last week. Roland Clark, student with Homer Compton, and Feme Mis ner, student with Lenore Burket Van Kirk, won first place in the district Atwater Kent radio con test held Thursday evening over KFOR, Sally Scott, dramatic student with Regtna Holcomb, gave a group of southern readings in negro dialect for a tea at the gov ernor's mansion Thursday after noon. Mary Kinney, B. F. A., graduate with Mrs. Will Owen Jones in piano, was married Sept. 14 at her home in Woodbine. Ia., to Wilbur B. leasttxmtt of Chicago, their willingness to consider co operative plans such as are in op eration at the Oregon State collego at Corvallis, Stanford University, and the University of Wisconsin. Moat plans, however, are bRsed on the successful Manager's assocla tion at Corvallis which has been reducing fraternities' and sorori ties' budgets since 1920. The association at Oregon is owned by the fraternities and so rorities, run by a graduate man ager responsible to a board of house managers. All fifty-one or ganizations at that campus have joined the association, and it is estimated in its annual report that the houses are saved over $22,000 a year. Dr. U. G. Duback, dean of men at the Oregon State College, in backing the association has stated: "It not only saves monev and time for fraternities and sororities it serves, but it stabilizes their fi nances. The association manager, handling almost all business of these organizations, is in constant touch with the financial situation of each one, advising continually and exercising the strict business methods agreed upon lv the mem bers. As a result the college ad ministration is relieved almost en tirely of this responsibility." Deau of Men S. H. Goodnight of the University of Wisconsin re plied to The Californian in a simi lar vein, explaining that "Our fra ternity co-operative is an adaption to our own needs and situation of the plan pursued by the co-operative at Corvallis." Such a co-operative managers' association for the purchase of supplies at wholesale costs is needed for California fraternities and sororities as financial cond tions are acute and a move to save money should meet with general acclaim. The organization of this proposed association demands the attention of every organization house manager. The Daily Cali- lornian. Editor's note: A half-hearted at tempt at co-operative buying among the fraternities at Ne braska was made during the past two years, with at least some sav- ng to those houses in the associ ation. Failure of a majority of houses to join the association re sulted in abandonment of the plan. n view of the stringency in Greek finances this year, revival of the system might provide substantial savings. Having recently discovered oil on school owned lands, the Uni versity of Texas Is nw making tests for potash deposits. "Undergraduates at Yale are the most pampered individuals in the whole world," says a student wh" edits tho "Harkncss Hoot." YOUR DRUG STORE Remember Those Noon Lunches' at Our Fountain call Us tor Rush iaq r, i-tm mil f- d. D-lft-,. UO.I Call Us for Rush Orders ie Ow! Pharmacy No. 14th & P St. B10C1 s? a VfttH TC.'sT .laaf V1 W II I I Ladies Invited More co-eds than ever this year nre enjoying 'the deli cious food ' served in Lin coln's cleanest dining room. And then, tot, the ladies can save on their eating expense y by purchasing a $5.50 meal ticket for $5.00 Auk about the for your ear free reel window "N" stickers or notebook. Y. M. C. A. Cafeteria 13th and P Sts. Near Campus LINCOLN'S FASHION CKNTKR" ML Bp tali inasml! newi mx til SMART WEAR FOR WOMEN 122212240 STREET No more pressing I,ot$ more looks! No more hunting Up on hooks! Bradley's Knitted "CAMPUS" FROCKS For What Occasion? 1 hat .New JMiit ol. Unllit's, Topcoat or O'Coat you nre planning on liuying What ever tin' Occasion We have just what, you want and we'll innk-e it up the way you want it. See our splemliJ assortment of New Woolens Today! Suiting Topcoat inus and O 'Coatings, beautiful fab rics that sold last season at .tG.'i.OO up. Now $25 up Tut In your supply of Good Clothes now! LEBSOCK TAILORS 209 No. 12th St. Orpheum Theater Bldg. Maker of r'otmiil, llutiiiftt and Spurt t'.htthe "ff'hfrn (.futility It Alirnvi Amuri-d' C3 -.7 .i If T I ' ' ' '. x' I w Wc don't want lo break iIomii your "neatness i-om-plrx,'' but honestly, tlic rinklc do sluike riclil out these knitted clothes. And isn't thill u liiu h'.'Ip hen IryiiiK to nuike an t oYloi k ? Nothing to soil or crush! They're eiiial lo iiny ori-ii-sion. from rhiss to tea dance or foothull Kit in r! And snuirt for every one. "Oinipiis" comes in Ciin yon Itcd, Mascara llrown, Titian liromi, Dartmouth Open. Admiralty, Beetroot and Uhick. Sitrs 12 to 22 We e s p eci.iMy recommend Can yon Red. You'll have to tear yourself I o o se from $17.50, but It will be easy. once you ve seen this dress! MIRIAM GROSS Knits Frocks Too And can she knit! These frocks and ensembles look as if thoy were tne tar more expen-ive hand-made onesl And how they do slrnderizel They clinq . and still "give." which colliie elbows especially desire. Another outfit that won't need the iron. We'll make Uzy girls of you yet. Come try them on, and you'll want to walk ou! in one. These will t.ilk you out of rnly $19.50. rni a big aid in your col- ege career. $19.50 Of course you know both Bradley and Miriam Gro: Knitted Clothes are sold exclusively jn Lincoln at Hovland Swanson Co. r. The Parker Pen Company Announces: ff A r t Lm mm. S"-Vi0 Jit- tO ta... MBsk:d Look at these liberal allowances : $5 Duoold or Lady Duofold Pen, only $37-5.d an old pan $3.75 Pencil to match, only and an old pencil $3.25 Lady Duofold Pencil, only and an old pencil $7 Parker Duofold Sr. Pen, only and an old pen $4.25 Pencil to match, only and an old pencil $10 Duofold Da Luxe Pen, only $7 and an old pen $5 De Luxe Pencil to match, only and an old pencil A Timely Trade-in Sale for the New Term of School and the New Business Upturn To reduce retailors' stocks for latn fall nnd Christmas shipments, Parker offers you a $1.25 to $2.50 cash allowance for your old pen on the new streamlined Parker Duofold Pen, or 75c to $1.00 for an old mechani cal pencil on a fine new streamlined Duofold Pencil. The Duofolds offered are NOT discontinued models, but Parker's finest and latest exclusive jewel-like colors in non-breakabie Permanite Sea Green and Black, Black and Pearl, Black, Jade, and others all gold mounted, and all with Parker's super-smooth, "special-order" Duofold point, extra ink capacity, and quick-starting, i.on-clogging feed. The Pens and Pencils you trade in do not have to be Parkers. We only require that the old pen have a 14k gold point. So ransack the home and office for old pens and pencils. Take them to the nearest pen counter, trade them in, like cash, and valk out with a brand now Parker Duofold Pen or Pencil, or both. But hurry Parker reserves the right to withdraw this offer at any time. The Parker Pen Co., Janesville, Wisconsin. " PARKER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO DISCONTINUE THIS SALE AT ANY TIME-SO DON'T DELAY