(Continued from Page 1! fruit of this policy. If we permit our selves to Indulge In It? May we not have to chalk up to the deficit column a heavier loss than any of us will be willing to take? May tt not mean that this generation of keen minds, shut off from any chance to function now. may never fulfill their promise? Let me il lustrate: A well-known personnel director of one of the most important electric componies in the United States, in an address before the engineering stu dents of the University of Nebraska, made a statement something like this "When a young man has been chosen by our careful sifting process from the . ream of the engineering students of the country, we place him at once in one of the most critical positions in our industry—on the testing floor. There he must pass upon the perfec tion of the various types of equipment which this company manufactures and sells The good name of the company rests in the hands of these inexper ienced young graduates. If we put them at routine work which carries no re sponsibility. they lose their enthusiasm, and we lose their power." A Dismaying Prospect Can anyone picture a more dismay ing prospect than a world in which youth has no outlet for its hope, its visions, its potentialities? A man vrho frequently sells me gro ceries has a look of weariness in his eyes which is not belied by the tone ©i his voice as he counta out my change. One day he asked me what I thought would be the outcome of ail these hard times and unemployment. When 1 made the oovious reply that 1 thought every man and woman was entitled to a chance to earn his living, he made this startling reply, "Look at me. I work fourteen hours a day. It'a to much; my Job ought to be divided In two. There's work enough," and I agreed with him. Isn't this one phase, at least, of the solution of our unemployment prob lem? Those who are now employed are working too hard. Overwork on the one nand and complete unemployment on the other makes a puzzling combina tion, the key to which it is hard to lay hands upon just at this minute, but surely there is a key. Let us take one concrete example of the progress of this insidious malady which has swept our country. The fa ther of a family works in a store. Hard times come. His pay is decreased a fourth and his work is increased a fourth or more. What happens? His wife, In order to make the decreased income cover their modest needs, tells the laundress and the seamstress that she cannot employ them, and they go home, their already meagre income cut b- -his act of retrenchment. Net re alt; Husband is working longer hours for less pay, wife is working long in to the night to do the washing, ironing, mending, sewing. Meanwhile, in the other homes, the same icy breath has blown away all employment Suppose In a family every member Is willing and eager to help and yet two of them are working fourteen hours a day, and two of them are working only an hour or so occasion ally The logical arrangement would be for Uie family to call a council and re distribute the laboring hours. Will not the larger family, (society)—have to call such a conference? If every man and woman makes a living on a reasonable, wholesome number of working hours, there will be a chance for all these seasoned labor ers who are now Jobless to fall into em ployment. and there will be a place for our new eager band of educated men and women. Tor such a solution as this, a dozen objections will no doubt be raised. A Sian In an extremely Important exec utive position in this city, when asked how many hours a day he worked, re plied "Twenty-four". In a second he qualified this by saying, “It is true I don't actually put In twenty-four hours of work every day, but I never know at what hours I shall have a chance to sleep." My stock reply that the work ought to be cut In half and some unemployed men be called In to share it. met with this prompt rejoinder, "Where can you find him? The men that aren't work ing are not qualified to do this type of thing at all. If I set out today to find a man to help me. I couldn't lay hands on one. Those who arc unem ployed aren’t fitted for such work," Another man In the same office who comes to work In the morning at 7:30 and leaves In the evening at 8 o’clcok or later, Joined the conversation at this point and made tills contribution to the conference: "If two men did my work, It would cost the establish ment over twice as much, for we two should have to be In conference often, so that I could check on his work.” Answer to Objections Let us see if there is not an answer to both objections. Perhaps we might examine the second one first. What is happening every time an employee is dropped from the pay-roll of an es tablishment? That man’s earning pow er Immediately ceases. He curtails ev ery possible expenditure and minimizes his outgo almost to the vanishing point. The result of this has been comment ed upon in speeches, in the press, and In every conceivable type of literature that paints the picture of these later years since the crash came. Practical ly the same thing happens when one man does the work which ought to give employment to two. Some of the very causes, in other words, that have made more and more stringent econ omy necessary In the centres of trade and Industry, are to be found In the les sened earning power of men and wo men who have been cast out of em ployment because the business Is not sufficiently prosperous to warrant keeping them on. We find ourselves running around in the circle until we arc diaty The laundress, wham we mentioned, stops her subscription to the newspaper because she cannot longer afford It, having been deprived of her weekly work day at the home of Mr. A. who has lost his job at the very newspaper plant which now loses the laundress' subscription. Now the other case. Let us look at the statement that only unskilled, un fit men and women are idle This can not be proved from any standpoint, and least of all can it be Justified In its bearing on this army of young col lege men and women with whose for tunes this discussion is mainly con cerned. How can any profession or business, or industry know what possibilities He within these enthusiastic young grad uates. fresh from the research labora tories, the classrooms, the libraries, un til It gives them a trial? If we who are seasoned In our tasks look with con tempt. skepticism, or ridicule on this mine of new thought and new inspira tion, are we not admitting either that our own minds are solidifying or else that our civilisation has failed? And has the world reached the sat uration point in the satisfaction of all Its needs? A recent writer on the subject of unemployment comments on the often-repeated statement that the market for luxuries has been exhaust ed, that everyone lias more now than he can or should use. Scientific in genuity has made It possible for mod em homes of tire wealthy to be fur nished with splendor beyond the dreams of our frugal forefathers, with a bathtub for every bedroom as a symbol of luxury. Although this is true, still there are thousands of homes where there is not even one bathtub. This, the writer explains, indicates the field which may need the attention of industry now that the up-swing is evident. In other words, manufacture does not need to depend for its market upon supplying luxu ries to those already surfeited, but can look to satisfying the humbler needs of those who, even In the period of fabulous spending that marked the years just pasi, have been untouched by even bare comforts. The limits of this article preclude our examining all aspects of this In volved situation, but we must pursue the investigation further. What will happen when Jobs are shared and every working man and woman Is employed only five, six or seven hours? What will they do to employ the sud den wealth of leisure hours? Use For Leisure. Almost immediately the conserve tists have a disturbing vision of a world gone mad, a world in which every salesman, bricklayer, school teacher, lawyer, end plumber turns tile key to his plaice of business and takes to the highway in his motor car and ends the day by adding one more to the packed motion picture theatre audiences. What the en forced leisure of the last two years actually ha* had a hand in doj'g in Uncoln. if one reads the sign* aright, has been in a word this. Men and women have turned to beautifying and tidying their own homes Oo up one street and down the other. Hero a man has pulled off a decaying porch and little by little has been repairing it with odd boards and bits ol timber that he finds at small cost. A coat of pahit is going over the graying boards of the bungalow up the street. A new cement foundation outlines the modest room that Is being built on to the three room cottage that never has been large enough to house the flock of red haired children whom we pass every day as we walk home. When the press of long, grinding hours is relieved, workers will be en couraged to use their own hands in making gardens, raising provisions, cultivating the plot of ground they own, to make their frugal means go farther. Isnt It about time that we Americans, as a nation, had our attention turned to the beauties of thrifty home-work ing and home living? To return to our graduates. When this contingent begins to march Into places which It only can fill If civil zation is to go forward, can we trust It to take care of Its leisures? That is where the scholars are even now play ing their part Just as truly as In the preparation for this generation to make its own living. Long ago lead ers in education sew this possibility and began to prepare for it. Go to the schools of the country. See the boys and girls singing as they never sang before; see them learning to draw, and paint, and carve, and make airplanes, furniture, and clothing. They now have in their own hands ways to fill their leisure hours. The conclusion of the whole matter is, that from selfish motives if from no other we must find a place for the young men and women whom the colleges and universities of the coun try are preparing for their life work. Those who are now employed will not be crowded out of their own places by this flood of new workers, but their hours will be shortened, so that they can more nearly fulfill their destinies. If all the college men and women step Into their rightful fields In the world next June, there will be some rearranging of the figures on the chess board, but no men or women now em ployed need to be cast into idleness by the move. A few of these graduates will find lofty posts that few ever dreamed ex isted; others will cast their energy into tasks where fagged and weary employ ees are now trying to do the work of two. There is work enough lor all. When the new workers are drawing pay checks, business can afford to expand. They will be buying groceries, filling apartment houses, purchasing clothes, paying gas bills, and after a while, buying motor cars again. Let us take thought of the work that is not being attempted now be cause we are playing the cautions game, and let us stretch out our hands in welcome to those light-hearted, vigorous, trained young pilgrims who are eager to begin the Journey. _n_ ROCKEFELLER . city within city What seems to me perhaps the most valuable contribution to unemployment that has been made in these past three difficult years is the enormous building project carried out by John D. Rockefeller, Jr„ which is known as Radio City, In New York. Imagine nearly seven acres of land solidly built up with brick and steel buildings from five to ten stories high, as closely as they can be built. Then imagine one man getting pos session of this entire tract in the middle of the city of New York, tear ing down all of the buildings and starting to cover the seven acres' with new buildings, some of which will run to seventy or eighty stories high. That Is what John D. Rockefeller, Jr.. Is doing. In a time when almost all other building activity in the coun try had stopped, he has given work to thousands and thousands of men in the building trades and is creat ing something of permanent value. I don’t imagine Mr. Rockefeller will personally ever make a cent out of Radio City. But I don’t think he cares. COOLIDGE who knew him I knew Mr. Coolidge less well than I have known every other President of the past forty years. That was not strange, since few people can really claim to have known him well. I asked the late Nicholas Long worth, when he was Speaker of the House and Mr. Coolidge was Presi dent, who knew Mr. Coolidge best. “I suppose I know him as well as anybody,” Nick repiled. “I cam paigned for him for Governor, al most lived and siept with him when he ran for President, and as Speaker I have to consult him frequently But I haven’t the slightest idea, never have, of what is going on in Cool idge's mind!” I was a long way from home on election day, 1924, so could not vote. To make conversation, I remarked to him one day in the White House: “ I didn’t vote for you, Mr. Presi dent.” “Some did,” he responded, with out cracking a smile TECHNOCRACY an aftermath A new word is sweeping the Coun try — "Technocracy " Literally, U means government by technicians.' The word was coined by a group ol research men at Columbia University who calculate that the time is at hanfi when everything human beings want can be produced with so much lees labor than before, that nobody ought to have to work more than 600 hours a year. Coupled with this idea that every thing can or will be done by ma chines they h»ve a nebulous plan foi discarding our present system of mon ey, banking and credits and creat ing money based on electric energy instead of metal. After every period of depression ha* got along about so far, new scheme!* to reorganize the world begin to be taken seriously by people who imag ine that human nature can be changed over night Technocracy is merely another theory which can only be put into practice after a few hundred generations, if at all. We are far from being ready, in America, to turn the control of oui lives over to a dictator under any name, even that erf Technocracy. AUTOMOBILES ..„ .. how many? Only four or five years ago there were nearly five million automobile* sold In America in a single year This year the manufacturers are fig uring on a total production of abou* a million and a half. They are hop ing that times will get enough bet ter so that they will sell two mil lion cars. Automobiles are cheaper .than they have ever been before. All the way up and down the line prices have been cut, engine power increased, all sorts of new gadgets introduced, until it is difficult to see how anyone can get much more for his money—if he has it—than in buying a 1933 car. I have a feeling that the makei* are going to be surprised at the vol ume of their sales. I think the scared money that has been hiding in the stockings and savings banks Lv going to begin to come out of hid ing this spring, and that people will begin to buy more automobiles ana fishlines and other commodities than they have been doing the last couple of vears. _A_ About Women Miss Adeline Knight claims th< title of Ohio’s only womah cobbler. One of the few women masters oi surgery in the world is Mrs. Phillipp-n Parry Martin of London, England, A nine-year-old farm gin, Vesta O’Dell, living near Amarilllo, Texas is gifted with the sense of absolute pitch, according to qualified musicians The title of Florida’s Queen of Palms" has been bestowed upon Mar guerite Sweet at Miami on the occa sion of the "Festival of Palms. The Weekly Review « Big Circulation Contest I IS OISJ ITS WAY! 1 Circulation Manager Wiley fired the starting gun at 12 o’clock noon Friday, January 20th, with seven entries and each one declaring that they will win first prize. Time 'Will Tell! One of the SIX Prizes to be given away will be a beautiful $25 Ladies’ Wrist Watch. An oppor tunity to make good money every week. In addition to the Prizes a commission of 10c on each one year subscription and 4c on each six months, will be paid to all contestants. RULES of CONTEST—Starting January 20th and ending April 1, 1933, there will be a subscription contest among the colored ladies of Nebr. of 10 years of age or older. By securing paid subscriptions to The Weekly Review, at the regular subscription price, votes will be alloted contestants as follows: One Year lOOO Votes Six Ivlointtis 400 Votes No amount in excess of $5.00 from any one subscriber will apply on contest. Where amounts in excess of this are received 10,000 votes will be credited to the girl receiving it and the excess will be prorated among all the other contestants. No one connected with this paper or their families are Eligible in this Contest. Contest Entries NAME No. VOTES NAME No. VOTES NAME No. VOTES NAME No. VOTES NAME No. VOTES Cordelia Kinney Hazel Smith Oma Smith Mrs. J. H. Jackson Imogene Johnson 648 So. 19 St. - Q 2334 No. 12 St. - 400 940 No. 15 St. - - 400 5416 So. 29, 0rala 2000 1951 T St. - - 1400 All Girls Wishing to Enter This Contest Communicate With Circulation Manager GUY WILEY. Phone B1308.