wo The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL 8TUDKNT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Entered . eeeond-cl.s. matter it the PJ"'e In M.hnikj undtr ct of congress, March 3, 1879, SC It' .oecla" rat of poetag. prodded for In section 11M, Vet of October 3 117, authoVtoto J.nuary SO, 1922. THIRTY-SECOND YEAR Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and P Sunday morning, during th. academic year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE 9 m vr Slnale Copy S cent. .2i a nemester l I Tear mailed i "r Under direction of th. Student Publication Board. Editorial Off Ice-Unlveralty Hall 4. TVone'BlrrNirh.'; 2. B-3333 (Journ.,) Ak for Nebraskan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Howard G. Allaway Editor-in-chief Jack Erlck.on Associate Editor Managing Editors """ New. Ed,tor. R,chard Moran Lynn Katherln. Howard W'sSSrt! ISItor Joe Miller iPf.7J 12 ! r Violet Cro. Society Editor BUSIME8S STAFF H. Norman Gallaher Builn.i. Manager Asslitant Builness Manager. Bernard Jennlng. Fri'nk MuUrava George Holyok. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN SUNDAY, NOVEMKER 6, 1932. Religion and The Undergraduate. TODAY has been designated All University Church Sunday. The churches of Lincoln invite the etudents to become acquainted with the religious facilities of the city and offer a special temporary student affiliation so that religious life shall not be broken off when the student leaves home to attend school. Today the university and the churches of Lin coln do their bit to combat a charge frequently and perhaps with some measure of Justification hurled at college students in general: That an in creasing number of students are finding no place Jn their hurried daily schedule for religion; that universities, as they now operate, are eliminating religion from the lives of the educated class in America. Writing in the Atlantic Monthly for Septem ber, Bernard Iddings Bell, professor of religion at Columbia university, repeats the charge, declares that fact supports it and delves into an analysis of its cauaes. Professor Bell traces the foundations of this Indifference he points out it is not unbelief but blase indifference to two principle causes, one not at all peculiar to college students. In the first place, he points out that this is an age of pragmatism; that young people, even more than children or those of more mature mind, are followers of the crowd; that a dollars-and-cents world sees little value in religion and therefore is indifferent towards it. But the students and their standards of value, Professor Bell thinks, are not alone responsible. Much of the blame he lays at the door of the educa tional system in general and the present university curriculum in particular. The universities tail in what he sees as their duty to teach the students religion as well as accounting and farming. The misconception that religion and modern science are incompatible, as a factor in the condi tion which he deplores, he dismisses with a citation of eminent scientists, past and present, who were or are profound believers. Professor Bell divides man's sources of truth into three: science, wherein man learns by expe rience and sensory observation; art, wherein he finds truth in beauty; and religion, wherein the truth of things incomprehensible is Intuitively ac quired. Present day thought, he observes, puts its whole faith in the first, tolerates the second and ignores the third. In this, he believes, we are as far off the track as were they of the middle ages who ignored science and put all their faith in religion. PROFESSOR BELL'S analysis of the situation is fundamentally sound. But not content with finding the cause, Professor Bell provides also a remedy. And therein he demonstrates an inadequate knowledge of undergraduate psychology. For he would remedy indifference to religion by adding compulsory courses in religion to the university curriculum. He would, in other words, cram religion down the throat of college students, trusting them to see the truth and believe if they but know what religion really is. Now college students just don't act that way. Requirements, although some few may be neces sary, constitute a challenge. No more prolific source Of student "gripes" could be Invented than a re quired course in Religion 1. More emphasis on courses in religious funda mentals such courses are now provided in the Uni versity of Nebraska would doubtless prove bene ficial. Eut a required dose of religion, academically administered, never! What the university and the churches of Lin coln are doing today will go much further towards Imparting to students the desired interest In re ligion than Professor Bell's required courses. Re ligion, to be sincere, must be voluntary. The Daily Nebraskan joins the university in Urging that every student attend church this morn ing and maintain that connection with some form of organized observance throughout his student life. sundry offices. Whether to mark an x after the name of Oscar Zilch or Hesekiah Hayloft for state land commissioner may sorely vex the conscience of the voter who feels , he should vote for tbe "best man." Walter Llppman claims that democracy in Its present form demands that the average voter be a sort of superman. He is expected to know not only the offices which are elective, but to decide as to the respective merits of a heat of politicians who are socking public jobs. That such a knowledge is impossible is obvious and seems to point to the fact that democracy has "been run into the ground. Just exactly how voters can hold responsible their public officers when they rarely know who they are is a problem which has never been ex plained by even the most ardent supporters of the democratic theory. Such responsibility can be de termined, however, if the major office holders are given the power to appoint the minor office holders. The voter can have a reasonable amount of knowl edge so as to exercise intelligence in picking tbe major officers of the government who can thus be held responsible for the work of the subordinate officers under his control. Sheer logic points to the adoption of the short ballot, and rather than take away any of the voter's prerogatives, it will actually give him a greater degree of direct connection with his government and its policies. T Neglect of Education. HE National Education Association, commonly known as the "N. E. A.," has made a study of the effects of the depression upon the schools of the nation. The association conducted investlga tions in four-fifths of the cities having a population of 100,000 or more. They found that in these cities the amount expended for education during the pres ent school year is 8'i percent less than it was last year. The expenses of these cities were cut 4 per cent last year, so tbe schools will receive 12 percent less this year than they were getting a year ago. A system of economical expenditure and In some cases total reorganization was felt to be necessary. The real practice of economy falls most heavily on the teachers. Some 85 percent of the cities have cut the salaries of their teachers, and in some cities the teachers are having an exceedingly hard time getting what remains of their salaries. Other re ductions have been affected through a reorganiza tion of the system. The rural schools, however, are Buffering more than the city schools. This condition goes back to the condition of the farmer, whose Income in many cases has almost completely disappeared. Farmers cannot pay the taxes upon which the schools depend, so the schools are suffering. In some counties the schools have been closed entirely. The dangers of such a condition are numerous and far reaching in extent. Education Iz forcibly being neglected and the question arises as to what to do. The world has come to recognize that educa tion is an influential factor in gaining material wealth and worldly success. It directs the activities of individuals into these more worthwhile channels. Education also serves the public by being a factor in the checking of crime in that it prevents the maladjustments of individuals, which are so likely to lead to crime. Another disastrous result of such a situation Is the effect on the institutions of higher learning colleges and universities. The effects are perhaps not immediate but several years hence they will become evident. Students who are now being de prived of their basic and fundamental courses will be unable to continue in the fields of higher educa tion and the result will be a falling off of the num ber of college students. This situation is inevitable if the neglect of education continues. A workable solution to this problem has not yet been found. However, educators are doing their best, for they more than anyone else realize the full significance and far reaching effects of such a situation. Contemporary Comment Doun With Blanket Ballots. ADMONITIONS lo vote intelligently may seem a bit foolish to new voters when they are handeJ ballots Tuesday resembling to some extent the city directory of a small town. While the major interest of the campaign has been in the presi dential and the gubernatorial election, voters will find that their franchise also extends to a large number of state officers including such as state land commissioner, district judges and so on and on. If the student has taken seriously the idea of voting intelligently he will be hard put to it to de cide who is best qualified to fill these numerous and Unskilled A. B:? CHARGES against higher educational institutions and their graduates have become so common as to be-worthy of little more than passive amuse ment, but amoncr the latest of these charges is one .n.u i Kir vir-rttn nf the heiehta of rheotorical figure to which the speaker ascends, Having qualified to make his statement by putting four sons through college, Joseph Scott, republican party leader, declared that "the average graduate comes out of college prepared to do ap proximately the work of an unskilled laborer, except that his muscles are usually too soft to do any strenuous work." Mr Scott also commented that taxpayers were not getting their money's worth out of expenditures for colleges and universities. "Taxpayers shovel out money by the barrel full in this country for educa tion," he declared, "and we ought to be able to develop some intelligence and public splritedness among the undergraduates of our college. All of these declarations roll from the tongue fluently, but that fluency is open to question as emanating from one whose very desire for such fluency over rides better judgement. Readers of the Daily Nebraskan are familiar with the statements alleged by Mr. Scott, and it would be trite to delve into their inaccuracies, which would probably have remained unspoken by Mr. Scott in other circum stances. But the fact remains that they were spoken, and it is such thoughtless comments which make connection with a university or college hard to justify in the eyes of those very taxpayers to whom Mr. Scott makes his cry. There Is only one way to combat that feeling of resentment so carefuhy nourished in the hearts of the populace, and that way is almost impossible of achievement. It Is to be so guarded of action as to allow no room at all for censure. Even then, of course, false charges will be flaunted, but if everyone connected with colleges and universities everywhere honestly attempts careful conduct, the biggest battles of the war against Into'erance will have been fought. Look Beneath. A lot of foggy-minded people thrughout the length and breadth of the land today are busy throw ing up their hands in holy horror at the terrible radicalism of the college generation. In heart-rending tones they cry, "Look how many of them would vote for Thomas, or worse, for Foster. It's a good thing they can't vote! But what will the country come to when they are governing it a few years from now?" And off they go oif an indignant but Joyful ti rade, rolling their eyes and "isn't it awfulling" at their descendants who haven't sense enough yet to follow in their seniors' wandering footsteps. It is thoroughly in character with such Individuals that they should consider these evidences of the trend of youth's thought purely as proof that the undergraduate is really, despite his class attend ance, completely in the dark po litically and economically. Few who are awav from constant con tact with these so-called radicals can see that their criticized actions are an indictment of the ways of their parents, which, Inculcated in the defenseless children, nave rail' en down weakly when attacked by the happenings of the past rew years, have been revealed as too flimsy to face the fundamentals of living and earning. It is their despair at losing the very fibers around which they had built what little of tneir life they have lived that has made these young people turn away and run in the opposite direction. They are getting rid as fast as they can of what they were taught was "right" and are embracing the "left." The ruthlessness with which the ugliness of people and the way they do things has stripped them of their beliefs, has left them noth ing to do but turn to something idealistic, albeit something that is founded on fact. Their destruc tive attitude is really a belief that only by getting down to rock bot tom can the future be built se curely, proudly, lastingly. And if their efforts seem to take on a red tinge in some cases, it is only the first flush of bold hope that they can succeed where only too ob viously their denouncers have failed. Only by discarding the scorn with which they usually greet the efforts of the "youne-er trenera- tlon" can the disdainful be includ ed in the scheme which is being sought for the future. Let them recognize the mistakes thev have made, the misconception they have preacned. and forget them, as will their juniors in their zeal to reach the gnnl they seek. Syracuse Daily Orange. Legs and Morals. A member of the school board at Blackwell has indie-nantiv pro tested presentation of athletic stunts by eirls eymnasium classes between halves of a football game. ine school board doesn t sanction such leg show as was put on at the ball game. Friday," he righteously complained to the town paper. "Such shows are a disgrace to the scnool ana to the city, and a poor way to build up the morals of any community." The poor deluded, hypocritical, smug and Puritanical man! Thru what crossed eyes does he view the world! And we had thought the people who burned witches at the stake were no longer with us. We are mean enough to smile fiendishly and wonder what the horrified school board member would think were he to view a burlesque in St. Louis disreput able Garrlck, or a really lowdown leg show In Chicago or New York. Then the austre gentleman might be able to distinguish between lewd exhibition of limbs and clean honorable exercise in sensible, comfortable gym clothing. Immorality is not a condition of dress; it is a condition cf mind. A world traveler reports that in his tour of the continents he finds the morals highest where the clothes are least. A person can be wrapped up in yards of silks and satins and remain the most vulgar being imaginable. Immor ality cannot be created or erased by dressing. The Blackwell board member is of the same family as those righteous but ill-advised guardians of public morality who condemn all who dance to the fires of hell. And we almost expect such shep ards of morality to eternally damn anvone who so much as dares to smile. Their creed seems to be built on the theory that to enjoy life is a sin. And we are just perverse enough to believe exactly the opposite. 11 mere is any virtue in this world it is the Joy of living. We suppose that the board mem ber would have given his approval to the gymnastic exhibition if tne girls had been attired in the old fashioned black bloomers which reached below their knees and in long black stockings which suc cessfully covered any skin, ui course the old costumes were cum bersome, unhealthy and drab, but at least the straight-laced member could heave a sigh of relief and go home content that the girls were highly moral. Dally O'Colleglan. The Student Pulse Brief, aonelM eaotrfbatlons portl rat " tnattrrs .Indent life the anlTernttj are welcomed br '"I. department, nndrr the aeaal rrtirtc tlons of sound urwspaper prmctlee, which exrludr all Ubeloiu niattrr and prraonal attack.. Ittrrs mnat bo slfiied, but namne will be with held front publication If o deslcrd. "Tagging." TO THE EDITOR: A recent conversation that took place between two barb students disclosed some not too favorable opinions of the barb parties that are held in the coliseum, me gist of the students' argument, or rather we should say agreement, for the two students had harmon izing: ideas on the subject, was that these parties are not serving their purpose as well as they might It Is not the general opinion that these parties are sucessfui. As the barb council is not known to have made any definite statement as to the reasons for these parties, it is assumed that they are staged to provide social activity to non-Greeks as well as providing a place, time and occa sion where students may become acquainted with one another. An attempt is made to provide all who attend witn an evenings vuyy mont. If this is the case, it would be supposed that the rules of cus toms governing these events would be such as to realize the purpose. Yet it does not seem to be the gen eral opinion that barb party cus toms are such. If a man doesn't take a woman student, in slang a "date," to the party, ne is In danger of getting few dances and making fewer ac quaintances unless he be the cam pus romeo ana gooa reiiow or un less he be gifted with the ability to meet strangers easily. In the case of women students this is even more tragically true. Thine seems to be an unwarranted air of formality and aloofness at these get-together parties. This may be up to the standard the barb council has set for these af fairs, but in this maner they are not fully serving their purpose and a comparative few who are al ready well-acquainted are usually the only ones who really enjoy them. With this dissatisfaction listed, let us see if there are any reme dies, or at least, aids that nay be readily put into practice. For the present, one remedy will be our concern, ana mat one applies iu dancing. The dancing custom ob served at barb parties has been notably marked as being too for mal. When this trouble occurs, one great aid is always available. That aid which we feel would improve the sociality and also dancing at barb parties is the practice known as "cutting" or "tagging." No doubt, the reason for banning this custom is that it may lower the standard of formality and good taste, that it is somew hat of a ple beian practice. Yet we have at tended numerous strictly formal afairs In the state's metropolis and found that the instant was rare where cutting was not only being practiced but was affording most everyone a most enjoyable eve ning. As far as we can see, there should be no objoctlon to a prac tice such as this. On the contrary, It Is our belief that this should be observed and encouraged. For it is not the customs or the formality that determine the standard of a party; that standard is set by the people who attend Barb council. isn t it possible that students can have the enjoyment from this cus tom and still be responsible to maintain a high level of refine ment? Let us see this custom in troduced and sponsored, or at least, let us see it tried. 1MSIIMAX STUI)ET cnovr has mi:eti- Cow mil tee Will Vronuy9 Activities and Get Aic Members. The freshman student coime.il new organization for the purpo j of furthering the interests ,( freshmen, lw.'M its regular meetli Thursday evening at iho Sigma Lamlxia house. Two commit tees were appnlnti , The one on freshman activities , j the Nrbraska-riltsbiii'Kh fiai 3 being composed of Ining h, Sigma Alpha Mu, chain nan; BmI nnrd McKomy, Sigma :hi, , j Bob Davis; and the one appoint, to submit names fur th Vminr being made up of Notrwn l-'inl Alpha Sigma Phi. chnii n an; Lyi rj Mortin, Beta Theta PI, and .m Bunnell, Alpha Theta Chi. The next meeting will be hf Wednesday, Nov. 9 at tie Sign.t Nu house. Varsity C.ife ; I Q fecial or J: JOllPPER 14 YOU'LL LIKE 1127 R IT! Some Day You Will Want A Garment cieaned in a hurry- For some special occasion. We Can Do Ui Modern Cleaners Soukup & Westover Call F2377 for Servhe J in BALLROOM DANCING UNTIL NOVEMBER 12TH ONLY! o stxm SINGLE LESSON SIX LESSON COURSE S5.00 TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS OFFFR AND LEARN TO DA NCR CORRECTLY! BORNER SISTERS DANCE STUDIO Private Studio 1536 P St. 14819 7? nsnnas f CARDS 1 Onlil Daaembsr tint w will print isfut nasqi on K more cards I6t only SO cent. UUch Erctfesrs 1113 O Strati VOTE FOR ? ?v 7 ' ""V" ' 3 1 . i t . - I faw:ioWMd ...... . iiia 1 m J MUSICAL COMEDY COWING Eevived "Merry Widow" Will Be Presented on . November 14. "The Merry Widow," world fampd musical comedy with Don ald Brian playing the leading role, will be presented to Lincoln theatre-goers Monday evening. Novem ber 14 at the Liberty theatre. The revival or "The Merry Wl ow" was made this season in New York City where it enjoyed long run. The New York en gagement has been extended to a tour of the country, stopping in I v, , , .. t tk nrlncinal Cities. Among the towns where the show was greeted by capacity houses are Cleveland, Indlar.spolis, De troit, St Louis and Toronto. Robert Tucker, dramatic critic for the Indianapolis Star had the following comment to make con cerning the revival: "When the operetta resists the ravage and kaleidoscopic changes of twenty five years and yet retains the sparkle and the delightfully reck less abendon of youth, it must at least be considered good and at the top of the list where the Frans Lehar gem, "The Merry Widow' belongs." Although Lincoln Is not on the main chain of theatre stops, it has been brought here by Florence Gardner, local manager. TALK ON CURRENT EVENTS FEATURES MEETING OF GROUP An innovation in the upperclasi commission will be a talk on cur rent events, everyone attending to rurmsn one for a brier discussion of toptes of the day. Since the next meeting is Thursday, Nov. 10, the outcome of tbe election will also be discussed. If there It any time left, it will be devoted to campus activities. JOHN K. LEBSOCK FOR YOUR TAILOR FOR ALL PARTIES And every occasion. He premltn and give you better clothes and Taxes You Less. Hit Platform: Clothes Satisfaction and Econorry. THE WELL-DRESSED MAN'S CHOICE Orpheum Theatre Bldo. More D DISCOUNT SALE ENDS NOV. 11TH Order Your Com 1 tiusKer ON THE Profit Sharing Plan 25 A CASH A INSTALLMENTS tt Every Order Shares in Any Profits According to Volume Sold MEMORIES PRESERVED FOR rVER Cornhusker Coed Contest Ends Nov 1 1