TUESDAY, FEDHUARY 11, 1936. TWO THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska. OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA This p.iper I represented tor general advertising by the Nebr&eka Preea Aaaoclatlon. 1935 Member 1936' Associated Gollediate Press Entered eecond-claee matter at the P",cf Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congress, March S.Jf'i, and at special rate o postage provided tor In section 1103, act of October S, 1917. authorlied January 20, 1922. THIRTY-FOURTH YEAR Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings during the academie year. EDITORIAL STAFF Vwln Ryan Editor-in-Chief MANAGING EDITORS George Plpal Arnold Levin 8 P NEWS EDITORS Johnston Snipes Dorothy BenU Jane Waleott Don Wagner Eleanor Clizbe BUSINESS 8TAFF Truman Oberndorf Business Manager ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Bob Funk Bob Shellenberc Bob Wadhams SUBSCRIPTION RATE 1.50 a year Single Copy 5 cents $1.00 a semester V50 a year mailed $1.50 a aemester mailed Under direction of the Student Publication Board. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4A. Blephones Dayi B6891j Night: B6882. B3333 (Journal). Girls Jnjustices? ANOTHER example of the arbitrary tactics iome to the attention of the Nebrnsknn. Si onltaneously, wonderment is expressed by per ions believing the function of a university to leach liberal thought and action lies not only in Is preaching but also in its practice. It seems hat much to the annoyance of dictatorial per lonalities the human being by nature is rather Ysentful to obeying the whims of "czars." Opening second semester the department )f physical education for women promulgated t list of regulations for its inmates, many of ivhom consider themselves such in the term's most literal sense. Publishing the most dis heartening rules for girls to obey, the depart ment creates an undesirable attitude of resent ment among those who are not supposed to be merely puppets fulfilling a necessary require ment for graduation but on the contrary are intelligent persons capable of doing the right thing if treated in a manner befitting them. Guidance is the thing wanted from our educational staff. This guidancs must take form by means of providing a tlimulus for ac tion within the individual and directing his re actions into the proper channels by careful steering upon the part of the faculty. Unfortunately, in the opinion of the Ne braskan, the department of physical educa tion for women has deemed it necessary to fall back upon the wrong methods of pilot ing their ship. Using the rope and halter they are dragging the girls through these courses without considering the adage, "You may lead a horse to water but you can't force him to drink." It is only natural that such ac tions become unpopular. Formerly girls were allowed three cuts and three excused absences. But under the provision of the new program no unexcused absences are permitted. Infliction of a penalty making it necessary for them to make up two hours work for every hour of unexcused ab sence is a return to the medieval philosophy of "double punishment for the offender that he might realize the magnitude of his sins." Even the elementary school system plays its share when one learns that three tardy marks constitutes a cut. At the end of each six weeks' period re ports are turned in with the provision that one cut, not yet made up will be reported incom plete, two such cuts a condition and three such cuts a failure. The irony of the farce might be discovered in the fact that no makeup classes will be held until after the six weeks' period is completed and the student is reported as down. Culminating all this is the provision that "if one or more cuts beyond the three limit are taken, the student will automatically receive failure for a final mark in the course even though previous cuts have been cleared. Thus might arise the paradoxical situation of a per son having an hour more work to her credit than her neighbor yet flunking while her friend serenely captures a high mark in the course. The real injustice, however, arises in the application of these rules to those persons re ceiving excused absences. Sickness or extenu ating circumstances may make it entirely nec essary for a girl to miss many of her classes. Instructors in other subjects usually allow one the opportunity of making up the work or tak ing an exam to establish an estimate of the stu dent's worth. But in the case of the physical education department for women no such con sideration is granted. No matter what the cause or how justifiable the reason, if a stu dent is absent from nine classes she automati cally receives an incomplete and must register, within the department, for a full season of work the following semester. Just when co-operation from every source is needed to make the university a desirable institution, just at the time students base hope in the future, just at the time faculty members envision a change in the stagnation of present policies, just at that critical moment comes word that a decidedly rccidivistic step is taken. Only history's timeworn pages give us hope. It is through them we lenrn that for every three steps forward two steps backward are taken. How wonderful would be the elimina tion of those latter strides. Off the Campus Lynn Leonard Election Approaching makes political news of supreme importance. Roosevelt will no doubt be the democratic can didate, standing on his record and the new deal policies in general. These policies will evidently furnish the primary issues for the election. As a result of this they are being attacked from all sides, by nearly all the re publican leaders and by some democratic lead ers. "With the exception of his recent attack on Postmaster General Farley and a demand for his removal by Roosevelt, one republican leader, who is exceptionally powerful in this section of the country, is a strong supporter of the present administration. That is Senator Norris, who declined to run for re-election to the Renate in order to campuign for the demo cratic leader. Alfred Mossman London of Kunsas, is one leader in the middle west who is not supporting Roosevelt, however, but is devoting all his time to getting himself nomi nal! for the president's opponent in the full election. Termed the "Coolidge of the West," Landon, who will speuH in Lincoln Feb. 29, re cently used the celebration at Topeka in honor of 75 years of Kansas statehood, to deliver his most pretentious address on national issues, the theme of which was safety and sanity. Fa mous for his commonplace utterances which have been called "Landonisms," he has been described by Ogden Mills as "an important contribution to American history." In the words of William Randolph Hearst, who is using his many journalistic mediums to help him receive the republican nomination, "he be longs to the American people." Managers of London's campaign claim that he will go to the republican national convention in Cleve land next June with at least 182 pledged votes. William Franklin Knox who is publisher of the Chicago Daily News, is another possibility available for the republi can nomination, but the enthusiasm over Lan don has put him in the background for the moment. His method of attack has been to ap pear before many small groups in endeavor to get their support and help in the Hearing pri maries. He told those attending the annual McKinley day banquet in Cleveland recently that a "cataclysmic division was rending the democracy which will be fatal to the democrat ic success in November." Two days later he told an audience in Dayton that "business will have to get into politics or get out of busi ness." Governor Gene Talmadge is launching the most bitter attack on t he new deal and President Roosevelt. "Put the com munist out of the white house and never let him return!" was the keynote of his speech at Macon called by what was self termed the southern committee to uphold the constitution. The meeting ended in ballyhoo of his method of campaign. Discussing his own political aspirations, the governor declared that any man was insane who would refuse a chance at the white house job. CONTEMPORARY COMMENT We Have the Tools; How to Use Them? One of the purposes of a higher education is to stimulate the creative ability of the stu dent. This abstract quality varies in individ uals, some are heavily endowed with it while others have little if any. Hard as it is to char acterize this rare quality, its vital importance cannot be overlooked. Without creative effort there would be no progress. The modern university in stimulating the student's creative power, however, has placed the emphasis on scientific and technological research. The output of these university trained scientists and engineers has been enor mous but with disastrous results to a society that is not prepared for a high geared, scien tific technology. Society is beginning to find out that scientific processes and methods are displacing human labor at an appalling rate. Education has largely ignored the econom ic and sociological aspects of modern society while at the same time overstimulating scien tific activity to the point where it works to the detriment of man. In order to build for a sane, well balanced society the modern univer sity will inevitably have to licnd the creative genius of its youth to building an economic structure that will utilize modern technology for the benefit instead of the detriment of the whole of society. This will mean something more than sending the graduate out to accu mulate ns much of the earthly goods as he can in the short space of his lifetime. As long as the modern university turns out creative giants in the fields of science, and chooses to ignore the development of a well ordered economic and social order, there is go ing to be serious maladjustment in human af fairs. Daily Northwestern. OFFICIAL BULLETIN 4-H club will meet at tho Stu dent Activities building on the Ag ricultural college campus tonight at 7 o'clock. Phi Lambda Upsilon. A special business meeting of Phi Lambda Upsllon will be held Tuesday night, Feb. 11, at 7:30 p. m. in room 102 of Chemistry hall. Professor Frankfurter urges all members to be present. Social Chairman'. Club. Social chairman'a club will meet Tuesday evening at 7:15 o'clock at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. 'wKiiiKikfiswngB mmmmx j i rrr r x?nv 1 COLLEGE WORLD j fli::,: . n ,, i .iBiJ.'B A heaven for southpaws is the University of Minnesota. Resulting from experiments in the speech department, officials have become increasingly firm advocates of "natural handedness." The uni versity has installed left-handed classroom chairs, left-handed pen cil sharpeners, and left-handed scissors. Now all they need is a good port-sider for their baseball team. At the University of Manitoba they used co-eds to separate re luctant collegians from their nlckles and dimes, In soliciting community chest funds. A group of "beautiful freshettes" went around the campus giving any and all men the well known shakedown. Quoth a scribe on the Manttoban, "These gals may know little about baking bread, but they do know plenty about getting dough." Postmaster Farley can settle back in his easy chair. Just when It anneared he would have to sup port a republican, Senator George Norris for re-election because Rrw-spvplt was pivinp his support, the Nebraskan announced he would not run. xnow everyone is happy. Women hold the editorships of all the publications for the first time in the history of San Jose State college. The men com plain that they are having a hard time keeping lace curtains and pink bows off the windows of the journalism department. Krnm the. Tulane "Hullabaloo" comes the touching tale of a rascal who stole some undergarments from the clothes line of the Gamma Pi sorority house. He was arrested but released soon after when he nleaded to the judge that it was his first slip. Barnard college alumnae aver age $1,962 yearly earnings, accord ing to a late survey. The averages run from $1,115 for the class 01 1933 to $4,125 for '93 to '98. Law and medicine, although showing the greatest decline since 1929, are. still most lucrative rieius, credited with maximum earnings of $16,000 and $10,350 respective ly, with the average at 3A70U. Eight women a lawyer, a doc tor, a secretary, a writer, a public ity executive and a research bv the survey to be drawing worker in economics were shown $10,000 or more. Beginning in June. Yale eng ineering graduates will receive bachelor of engineering instead of bachelor of science degrees. A new course in manias c at Syracuse university will enroll 130 students this semester, with 415 on the waiting list. Stanford university regulations keep the nearest bar five miles from student beer-drinkers. "Schimmel," star of the Ber lin police department's dog sec tion, is credited with the indi vidual solution of eight murders. Shakespeare in Hollywood Needs No Defender, Says Noted Educator By WILLIAM STRUNK, JR. Profuior at English, Conwll University Since last July I have been at the Metro-Ooldwyn-Mayer Studios, hav ing been Invited by Mr. Irving O. Thalberg to serve as literary and technical adviser on his forthcoming production of "Romeo and Juliet". The instructions I received from the New York office before starting amounted to this that I was to make myself useful In any way I should be asked and that I was to defend the interests of Shakespeare. The first task I have performed as best I could. The second hu taken care of Itself, for X have seen from the first day that Shakespeare's Interests are in no need of a de fender. The object of Mr Thalberg and his co-workers Is to make a screen version of the play that will hold its own with the best stage pro ductions the play has ever had. They have resolved that it must not only be Shakespeare as Shakespeare lovers want to see him, but an enter tainment to be enjoyed by millions who never In their lives opened a volume of Shakespeare, by audiences not only In the English-speaking countries but throughout the world. Admires Fine Interpretations 1 have seen the preparations prac tically from the beginning, and have seen, the production gradually take shape. 1 have attended rehearsals Bnd for several weeks past have seen the picture actually being made. I have had opportunities of admiring the fine interpretations which Miss Shearer as Juliet and Leslie Howard as-Romeo are giving of their roles, and the spirited performances Of John Barrymore as Mercutio. Edna May Oliver as the Nurse. Basil Rathbone as Tybalt, and Reginald Denny as Benvolio. All these players are enthusiastic over the choice of the play, and the way it is shaping under the direction of George Cukor. to whom we owe the screen version of "David Copperfield" Now as to the question. "Are the producers making changes in the play?" Everybody knows that in adapting an ordinary novel or play to the screen, the studios make whatever rhnnees thev find necessary in story. characters, and dialogue. What may please a special audience or a nwie of serious thinkers", may not be acceptable to the vast audience of the motion picture. All Dlalorne from Play But everybody must likewise have observed that, in general, tne Deiwr the original .novel or play, the fewer are the changes. In "Romeo and Juliet" all the dialogue used is from th text of the Play. The picture begins with Shakespeare's beginning and ends with his ending. But some a ' - t,r. . t i- - .'It 0m Jh T ' NORMA SHEARER m "JULIET" incidents which in the play are merely narrated or Implied, such as Romeo's leaving Verona In disguise, will be shown In action, without any non -Shakespearean dialogue As the story of "Romeo and Juliet" is fiction, and not history, even if the Veronese insist on believing that it Is true, the producer has a certain range in choosing his period In this production the fifteenth-century has been selected. Writers of the period and modern historians have been consulted for the details of costume and life and manners. The great masters of Italian painting: Car pacclo. Botticelli. Benossio Oozzoll. and others of the general period have been an inexhaustible source of information on these subjects The actors and actresses, by the way. are enthusiastic about the costumes which Mr. Adrian and Mr. Oliver Messel have provided. From the property department have come such inquiries as, "What sort of dogs did they have in Italy in the fifteenth century? What vegetables would be on sale In the marketplace? Did they have wheelbarrows, and if so, what did tb?y look like? What dishes and what fruits would be served at Capulet's banquet?" Simi lar questions arise about set-dressing "What furniture would be In Friar Laurence's cell?" All Settings Authentic The sets, designed by Mr Cedrlc Gibbons, are based on actual build ings in Verona and elsewhere in Northern Italy His public square In Verona, in which the play opens, is not a copy of any single square, but is an ideal square such as Shakes peare might have Imagined from the accounts of returned travelers, with San Zeno. finest of Veronese churches, as Its leading feature The production, then, aims at pre senting the drama with an authentic background of life and manners and all the outward show of the Italian Renaissance. But beyond this it alms at being faithful to Shakes peare's conception of the story and at revealing the poetry and beauty of a great drama, while preserving everything else that, makes it gcod entertainment. The results so far attained give promise that these alms will be fulfilled. Vassar will double its present li brary capacity of 200,000 books. The number of unemployed in the lrt-24 age group has doubled since 1930. Arizona State gridHters will play rugby during the 1936 spring prac tice, Hearst inspired charges that communism was being taught in District of Columbia schools have been quashed by a special com mittee. Twenty out of fifty-seven uni versities and colleges recently questioned report that they main tain riotion picture services for about S.Oi J other schools. Mantel- of fifty-three tongues. Prof. Watson Kirk Connel of Wes ley college. Winnipeg, says Bas que is the most different language In the world. So This Is Patriotism! American Leirionnaires get this week's red, white, and blue button for "patriotic" gestures. The act of merit which lias won them this distinction is their request that the president of Marshall college, L)r. James E. Allen, be dismissed. What was the act of treason which caused the gentlemen who iiiijtht have died for de mocracy to view with such vociferous alarm ? Dr. Allen predicted that the constitution would he changed within ten years! Such treason! What a traitor! For a lony time we have rsisied the temptation to write about some of the legion's antics within recent years. Others have al ready told how they have been used to break up strikes. Newspapers have carried storie8 about how they organized "vigilante" organi zations to hunt down those who are struggling for a more equitable social order. But this latest activity is too much. "What precisely is the trouble with these men? Can it be that they are unaware of the fact that their very acts are paving the way for exactly the same type of "thing that now exists in Germany and Italy? That constitution which they have bo often taken in vain guarantees a "free speech, a free press, freedom of thought and action" to all within the borders of our country. If those who call themselves "patriotic" are really sincere we ask them to announce public ly that they uphold the first ten amendments of the constitution without any qualifications. It's up to you, gentlemen. The amoeba is a peculiar animal. Take its process of reproduction for example: It multi plies by dividing. Oregon State Barometer. Di. Jose Antonio Lopez, former Ohio university student, may be the next governor of Puerto Rico. Frostbite sent 112 University of Wisconsin students to the infirm- j ary during a recent cold wave. June 22, ten days before the I AIIIL'f tlHIl VIty IWI- t.. ...... has been set us the date tor mis year's. Poughkeepsie regatta. i Kach first down would count for one point under h new football scoring system proposed to the national collegiate rules committee. "When he comes home now days I just wave at him and go out the back door," laughs Mrs. Lawrence "Jap" Haskell, wife of th Oklahoma busehall coach, With tho start of the Sooner baseball practice just a few weeks away, Haskell has lost all his pitchers, j Latest to go was Mayo Parks, sophomore left-hander who won i six of seven games last year. Parks has joined the Oklahoma City In dians, Texas league champions. A blanket will be passed be tween halves of the Oklahoma Kansas basketball game at Nor man Saturday night and all con tributions given to the fund to send Dr. and Mis. James Nai.imitli to the Olympic basketball com petition at Berlin. The late Dr. Walter Williams, former president of the University of Missouri, wac known as the only colli -rp ore- ' never grad- ated from college. . TS Flowers Say It Best Don't Forget the Date Jo Lanielsan Floral Co. 1303 N B2234 No-risk offer wons college ssncEiers to o better pipe tobacco! Graduate courses in automobile traffic control will be offered by Harvard next year. Seventy-three nationalities are represented among the 8,800 stu dents at Boston university. Beginning next year. M. 1. T. will limit its freshman class to 600. Wealth is mote equitably dis tributed among married men than among bachelors, says a recent survey. Only once In 30 years has the Princeton co-operative store failed to pay a 10 percent dividend. Three meals a day can't pro duce maximum physical and men tal efficiency, say Yale physiolo gists. They recommend more fre quent and more moderate feed ings. An "overwhelming majority" of college professors are in opposi tion to new deal policies, accord ing to the American Liberty league. An expert in neuro-psychiatry has been added to the Williams college health department. Amateur hockey and college basketball ar increasing In popu larity at Msdison Square Garden, New Jersey is one of the few states in the union which has neither a medical nor a dental school. Alexis Carrell, Nobel prize win ner, will teach at the University Lof California during the spring se mester. Prince albert "..' : : g J3i V " Si tor "tr DON'T MSS THE P. A. TRIAL OFFER "You ran't beat Prince Albert for rool, mild, alow-burning smoke," Norman Tillon, '38, declares. 0 - - V i-"- S i'u A U A U 1 I'M A P. A. BOOSTER TOO ! - "If you've never tried Prince Albert, don't miss the special trial offer they're making on the big 2-oz. tin. P. A. is swell," says Dick Meigs. P. A. la America's fa vorite because it deserves to be! Richard Durham, '37, aya: "P. A. is mild and slow burning and around 50 pipefuls la the big red tin." TRIAL OFFER FOR COLLEGE SMOKERS Smoke 20 fragrant pipeful., of Prince Albert. If yea doa't find it the mellowest, tattiest pipe tobacco yeu ever smoked, return the pocket tin with the ret of the tobacco in it to ua at any time within a month from thia date, and we will refund full purchase price, plua postage. (Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Winston-Saem, North Carolina Winston-Saem, Prime Alqer? 11M. ft. J, aUtMUfe To. O. simnin((TiitiiMisniW'fj THI NATIONAL JOT IMOKI 59 pipaful t fra grant tobacco In rvary 2-unct tin at Prince Albert