PAGE THREE Huskers Polish O ears eiibz jut THE DAILY NEBRASKAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 7. 193 10 STiFI 1 V &..m mi-mJ 'Man On His Feet' Finds Ciisors Avowed To Come Out of It' "Oh, so you won't stalk, huh? This we said to ourselves today as we decided we had drawn too many of our own conclusions con cerning the present, none-too-suc cessful, copers. But when we did rot out afoot to canvass the powers Brownemen Set Strenuous Pace In Scrimmages MURAL CAG E PLAY COMMENCES Thomas Remains on First Squad; Ebaugh Better in Basket Play. Coach W. H. Browne drove his In the know, the information we Husker basketball squad through acquired was about as ample as two f the most strenuous scrim- safety razors in George Bernard mages so :ar this year W ednesday Shaw's toilet kit For a couple of hours wc tra versed the coliseum attempting to pet the bucketeers to admit their short comings, but they would not. So we say to them, "Oh, so you won't talk, huh?" Each player Muck with his buddies as a fly to fly paper as we fired the question, "What was wrong with your win ning power on the road trip?" Bob Elliott promised that the "bovs would come out of it all right." Bill Kovonda asserted that the "bovs would come out of It all right." Turning to Frank Tallman we received the opinion that "the boys would come out of it all right." Varying the reply, Grant Thom- es thought the "boys would come out of it all right." All in all, right down the squad roster, the boys had convictions 1hat sounded like campaign prom ises. Thoy didn't seem over-anxious to discuss the past. Perhaps that is best after all. We could let bygones be foo. However there were a few things gained from our "man on his feet" interview: 1. Colleges in the east seemed to specialize more in basketball than Nebraska. While there was no definite proof as to such, the Huskers sensed that many of their opponents had been work ing out far longer than they. 2. The foes were not especially taller or better equipped phys ically, but many of them did have a bit smoother attacks. Some cagers expressed it as Ne braska "a team fighting like the devil to win" and the eastern quints as "teams that manue vered without fighting." 3. The Brownemen have had something lacking in their last minute stands. No one can lay a finger on the exact reason. It isn't stamina lacking, said two of the cagers, for other teams play five men straight through. "I kinda think we lack the fight of the team last year," admitted one. However he was quick on his feats and added that he thought "the boys would come out of it all right." 4. Another bit, that was in the way of confirmation, was that the team has been pointing too much for the conference throne and not enough for the schedule at large. Don't assume that the quint is taking these Big Half Dozen laurels for granted tho for they emphasized the fact that loop games are known for th; Humpty Dumpty aspect, ' " ally in the cast of Ne- i. orrow should tell whether 1 carlets have learned a dear lt;-ton from their whipping cn route, we hope. QonimpDhahif. and Thursday afternoons whipping them into shape for their game with the California Bears tomor row night in the coliseum. The Huskers this week have been smoothing out some of the rough spots which were brought out in the recent eastern strip that netted hem only one win in three starts. They won from Niagara and lost to Bradley Tech and De troit university. Speed has been emphasized in daily drills. The only change in the starting five will be at one forward posi tion. Grant Thomas, rapidly de veloping sophomore, will replace Bill Kovanda, a minor lctterman, at that spot. Thomas started the season at the forward position but was crowded out by Kovanda after the second game. Both have seen a lot of action in the fi-st seven games but Kovanda has the most points to his credit and Is a good performer on defense. Thomas, however, showed up well In the Niagara game, scoring nine points. Improvement In Ebaugh. Nebrnskans are pinning their hopes for a clicking offense on lanky center Floyd Ebaugh who has been having trouble getting under way this season. Ebaugh showed gradual improvement over the holidays and hit his stride against the Niagara quintet, scor ing 11 points. The remaining three positions will be held down by Paul Amen at forward and Al Werner and Bob Parsons, guards. On Monday the Scarlet will tangle with the University of Colo rado Buffaloes in another non-con ference tilt. Reports yesterday were to the effect that Byron "Whizzer" White, all American football back and Rhodes scholar will not be with the team when they meet the Cornhuskors. White is a regular on the Colorado cage team but is taking a rest after the Cotton bowl game before joining his teammates. E Ralph Copenhaver to Lead Activities Discussion for Second Term. First meeting of the newly or ganized Game Leadership Hobby group will be held tomorrow eve ning at 6:50 o'clock in room 210 of Ag hall. Ralph Copenhaver, assistant ex tension recreation specialist, will lead the discussion in planning ac tivities of the group for the second semester. Mr. Copenhaver, uni versity extension sen-Ice repre sentative, travels over the state, lecturing to various clubs, organi zations, and high school assem blies, and has been secured by special arrangements for this meeting. "Much genuine Interest has been shown in the organization and program of this hobby group," said Milton Gustafron, chairman of the Creative Activities board. Mr. Gustafson added that, "all in terested should attend the first meeting, so that all may partici pate in outlining Its activities." TRACK ATTRACTS GRIDDERS Football Mcn . Conditioning Under 'Pa' Schulte. Many of the Nebraska football ers are finding track an ideal way to keep in condition until spring practice begins. Charley Brock keeps in the "pink" by throwing the shot and running the hurdles. Marv Plock, one of the fastest of Coach "Biff" Jones' backs, is going to help Coach Schulte by winning points in the sprints and broad jump. Bob Mills and Bill Pfieff arc turning In the best performances in me weignt events. Ken Shindo, an end. Bob Burruss, a center, and Hugo Hoffman, a junior backfield candidate, all work out for condi tion only. AT TERM OPENING W here Arc the Rhodes Scholars of Yesteryear? Not in Politics, as Donor Hoped, Uul "Getting Along' Fraternities Urged to File by Tonight for League Competition. Intramural basketball leagues will commence tournament play immediately after the start of the office announced last night. Houses are urged to file en tries, if they plan on competing, second semester, the intramural by tonight. Team entries may be made for cither one or both of A and B classes. Seventeen teams had turned in entries up to ft o'clock last night. Those fraternities entering and league classes are: Alpha Slitmii I'hl A lemtiif. Alpha Tnu Omrfcii A mid H it-nicum. Z"tft Hrli Tim A lil!Ui'. M I'Kl I'hl A Ifhkiip. Drlta I pillion A and B iPttRtirtt. Ilolll Niitmil I'nl A krtullf. I'hl Kuppa 1'nl A h'li Kl. Nltima Nu A lind H lt-uKUPii. Bi-1 Thrlti I'l A nnd I InnriH'. I'hl nrltn Thrill A and B leilKUP. Ararla A and K IfHguca. h I'hl A l('iliitl hlRlna (hi liMKllf. lambda I'hl Alpha A b'Rifiir Mnm Alpha bpallon A and H It-nKllffi. I'hi (tumniR IMIii A nnd R iPHKHrn. Ii'lla Tnu Delia A and B h'aiium. Cecil John Rhodes, the great English exploiter of South Africa, left some 60,000 pounds of annual income which was to finance ca reers at Oxford for picked stu dents from the various British col- I all examinations except those for j the Final Honor schools at the end I of his course. "The education is there if he j wants to get it, but Oxford is pro i foundly indifferent to ahis choice. The American student has spent onies, from Germany, and from the United Stales. ! four years under a compulsive ! system. He finds it extremely dif ! ficult to do things on his own in- His purpose was to educate at itiative in a vastly different edu Oxford the men who would be the ' cational set-up." future leaders of their countries and dominions, and thus to create an international understanding that would result ina union of "superior peoples'' to manage the universe. Under the caption, "What Hap pens to our Rhoades Scholars'.'", Milton Mackaye, writing in the current Srribner's magazine, says that tlie one thing most obvious at'let thirty-odd years is that the scholarships in America have failed to produce national political leaders. 900 in United States. Approximately nine hundred former Rhodes scholars live in the United States today. But accord ing to Mackaye, "No member of the cabinet has ever ben a Rhodes scholar. No member of the senate has ever beeen a Rhodes scholar. One member of the present house of representatives, C. R. Clason of Massachusetts, is a Rhodes scholar, hut, having been elected Doing Reasonably Well. Altho few of them are rich and few of them are internationally fa mous, statistics show that the boys sent over to Oxford with their ex penses paid have done reasonably well for themselves. Without doubt they have given ! a better accounting of their talent j than an equa 1 number of men I chosen at random from the alumni ; lists of Harvard or Yale. They pay i their bills, they have substantial reputations in their home cities, and more than a hundred of them are represented in "Who's Who." According to figures compiled by the American Association of Rhodes Scholars as of 1937, of the 870 men who have returned from Oxford, there are 289 teaching in colleges or universities; 28 are en gaged In college or university ad ministrative posts; 178 are in law; 27 are in secondary schools; 124 are in business; 54 in government service; 35 In journalism and writing; 34 in medicine; 26 in the ministry and associated fields; 22 in courses of study; 16 are re search and commercial scientists; 11 are In the army and navy; 7 are engineers; 6 are in miscellane ous activities, and 13 are un known. Mackaye's conclusion: "Purely in an academic sense, Oxford prob ably offers no more than three years spenti n one of the best American colleges. But there are advantages in spending that time abroad; in the opportunity to travel; in the detachment from the American scene for a time. It's fun and it's free." The latest thing in winter night wear for coeds is not sophisticated satin and lace, but pajamas of out ing flannel that have hoods and feet attached. Woolly sunggle puppies give the girls something to snuggle up to on cold winter nights. Pretty cold outside but our beautiful din ing room li warm and cozy. No fooling. Come on out. The White House. i League finals iif volleyball play ; as a Republican (as one of his con- were run off last night. Scores were turned in too late to be pub lished today. Only one team was sure of its league title before play began last night, the Sig Eps in League II. Quarterfinals in the champion ship play will be played next Tues finals scheduled for next Thurs day night, with semi-finals and "Host lYrior ment, "Thou shalt not commit adultery," with 219 votes against it. There were 201 votes cast in opposition to the ninth command ment, "Thou shalt not covet tny neighbor's wife." The fourth commandment, "Thou shalt honor thy father and thy mother," registered the lowest number of negative votes. These totals are more revealing when they are transmuted into percentages. The vote against the first three was 21 percent of the total; against the sixth, 14 per cent; and against the ninth, 14 percent. The results or tnu interesting poll may indicate that the con ception of American colleges as anti-religious centers is more popular than it is valid. The ma jority of students, if the New York university business school is typical to any degree, still hold to Christian tenets of life. The Minnesota Daily T College Plans Work in Rural Field If Congressional Bill Is Passed. Professional to Offer Weekly Instruction to Club Members. Tucked away in a pigeon hole somewhere in his desk, each dean of a college on the campus has a notation of a recommendation from a representative group of the student body asking that a "breathing spell" be included in the program of his school to allow students a review neriod between the last classes of the semester Blood or No? and the beginning of final ex aminations. None of the deans has moved on the proposal as yet. Act ing President Hermany B. Wells, who inaugurated a similar plan two years ago in the business school when he was dean, has said that the matter rests entirely in the hands of the deans of the various schools. It is commendable that the deans have not acted hastily in accepting or rejecting the pro posal, for hasty acts are often bad ones. However, if the problem that is troubling them Is a ques tion of the practicability of the plan, they need only consult the faculty of the business scnooi. There they will hear praise aplenty fot the plan. The Indiana Daily Student. New York Students Vote On Ten Commandments A considerable portion of the American public, if we are to judge from the vigor of their periodic protests, believes that the average college student is a bit gnofv and. or more or less an atheist. Some light on the atheistic be liefs of American college students was revealed recently by a ques tionnaire given to 1,485 business school students at New York uni versity. These students were asked, among other things, what they thought of each of tne ten commandments as a guide to life in this century. They were askeS to cart a vote against those com mandments which they felt were unsulted to modern conditions. Greatest opposition was checked up against the first three com mandments, which, in sum, rcpre sent the basis of faith In a single deity. The average vote against each of these was S14. Next ifl disfavor came the sixth command' There's been a lot of talk about lowering the automobile accident death rate during the last few years, but not so much has been done. The world toll continues to rise. The anti-accident drive at Dartmouth has materialized in a student safety campaign a non drive period following an accident involving a student in which there is a death or injury. Among other purposes it has attempted to perpetuate the rec ord of a year or so in which there has been a minimum of serious student accidents. When compared to the still ris ing world accident rate, we won der if perhaps we s'dents may really attribute our unscathed rcc ord to careful driving. The nasty thought that maybe it was just luck keeps occuring to us per haps it was just that none of us happened to be behind the eight ball when dcam vtsitea couege drivers in the past year. We hope that that's all wrong. But even if it is, no one deserves congratulations unless he thinks he deserves them for having avoided killing himself. And if that's right then we can Just sit tight snd wait until the law of averages picks off a dor.en of us in one year, to pay for a couple of bloodless years. Which is it to be? The Dartmouth. The University College of Engi neering has in mind several far reaching researches in such fields as new ues of electric power, cheaper home wiring with safety, more economical distribution lines and equipment in the rural field as well as the development of special apparatus for farm uses, providing a proposal now before congress, to give engineering col leges of land-grant institutions federal aid in the same proportion that has been given agricultural colleges during the years, is ap proved. Dean O. J. Ferguson and engineering officials in other schools point out that the engi neer does as much for the people as me experimental agriculturist, and with this in mind Nebraska is joining with the other leading en gineering colcges in preparing a report outlining the major con tributions that such engineering experiment stations, government supported, would make possible. "Should we be provided with adequate funds for operating each year, our experiment station would be more able to do work of ines timable valcu to the state," says Dean Ferguson in a letter to Dean A. A. Potter of Purdue university and Dean E. B. Norris of Virgiina Polytechnic Institute, in support of the present congressional pro posal. "While it is true that some work in rural electrification has been undertaken under the direc tion of Prof. E. E. Bracket, chair man of the department of agricul tural engineering, our funds have been dependent entirely upon the state appropriations, which means that Nebraska has been largely without the special sendees that such a station might have been abel to afford." "An engineering experiment sta tion operating the year around could help the people of the state by conducting tests of fuels and lubricants, by doing research In the efficiency of heating opera tions and methods, by studying Internal combustion engines to see which are the most efficient, anfl by carrying on work with centri fugal pumps," states the Dean. "In the matter of heating, we could do much to show our citizens economies in domestic fuel uses. Our department of engineering mechanics is already doing con siderable work for the state high way department in the study and testing of materials for roads and public buildings. Experiment Station Needed. "A, government supported ex periment statioon could enlarge this field of work to include re- temporaries ohserved), he still up- i holds Oxford's reputation as the ! home of lost causes. Fw in Politics. 1 "A sprinkling of men have : served in state legislatures, but on the whole the political careers of the Oxonians have not been ad vanced much since the era when j it was customary at the annual i Rhodes dinner in New York to ' toast wryly the mayor of Hobokus, i New Jersey as their one American statesman.'' j The fiiur qualities whirh Rhodes: j listed in his will as things which should be considered in choosing! students were: (1) literary nnd scholastic attainments. (2 fond-! ness of, and success in manly out-1 door sports, (3i qualities of man hood, truth, and courage, (4) ex-! hihition during school days of moral force of character and of j "instincts to lead. . .for those lat- ter attributes will be likely in after life to guide him to esteem the performance of public duties as his highest aim." Later, Rhodes is supposed to have defined these attributed to a friend as being smugness, bru-1 tality, unctuous rectitude, and tact. Ignorance of Donor. According to Mackeye's in-1 terpretation. "this political ster ility" was caused not so much hv the inability ot the Rhodes schol ars as hy the ignorance of the donor himself. Rhodes was an Englishman and erroneously be lieved that political leaders in America were drawn from the elected yet, although, several W. A. j aristocratic upper stratum of so A. members have been considered cjetv iust as thev were in England Oxford. User., has little in com- Because W. A. A. members are showing interest in the creation of a golf club, the council at its regular weekly meeting yesterday voted to include such a club in its yearly calendar. Although the club will not ac tually be organized until spring, it is planned to give university women interested in golf a chance to learn the fundamentals of the sport before then. The council is planning to secure a professional to give instruction during the j week. In the spring the club mem- j bers will play on a regular golf course. j A head for the club has not been for the positioon. When a golf leader is secured, the club will be organized in the very near future. CORNHUSKERSMNKED 14TH Jonesmen Drop Three Rungs According to Williamson. mon with American universities, ; and is not the most favorable en-1 vironment which mipht be chosen in which to develop the embryonic politico. ; There Is very little of the Anier-! ican "university spirit" for the university is broken down into 22 men's colleges and four women's colleges, each with its own huilfl- Coach Lawrence Birr Jones lnp.Si athletic field, faculties, lec Husker football team was rated in i ture rooms, dormitories and din 14th place among the nation's : ing halls. The student who has outstanding elevens of 1937 by, Men a bis man on the campus of Paul B. Williamson. The California his state university frequently Bears, '38 Rose Bowl kings, wonfjn,s the scope of college activi the No. 1 spot and were followed j ties too narrow to suit his anibi by Pittsburgh and Santa Clara, tio: s. respectively. Williamson has been rating grid ' rout fits for the past six years be-; sides predicting game results. j searches in methods of improving highways and highway materials. We could also go several steps further In our studies of the thermal properties of gases and in the study of the most efficient methods and types of building con struction, design and heat insula tion." Dean Ferguson feels sure that an active engineering experiment station, operating the year around, could jc the means of not only pointing the way to a fuller uti lizing of the state's resources, but would also help to bring Into realization for rural and urban dwellers a standard of living superior to that which thpy hsvo been accustomed to during the years. No Scholastio Discipline. Mr. Mackaye says further: "The scholastic discipline to whirh the American college boy is accus tomed dues not exist at Oxford. There arc certain social regula tionshe must be In his college, on the penalty of dismissal, by midnight hut there is no scholas tic discipline whatever. '.le may attend lectures or ab sent himself as he pleases. He may spend his time at Oxford studying racing charts and bon- i ing up on the llenty books; no one will protest. He is exempt from A doctor in San Francisco has been sued for the cost of his edu cation by his parents who put things on a business basis when he attained manhod, mortgaged the home to keep him in schol, and kept strict account of every cent they spent on him. Free Theater Ticket! Leaded Bronxe Oai 17ljC WliiU Oai 13 Deep Reck Oils HOLMS 14th twit If UNDER i!illlrl SCHIMMEl (fnhufter f1&i 1 a1 ! proud to he tho Alpha I f Omicron Pi 1 y( ' Friday Evening 1 1 January 7th A Alpha lArs Chi Omega B vJ Saturday tvening '1 January 8th . 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