THE DAILY NBBRASKAN i v i I- 'fl J it I THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Ownud nud published by I o University of Nebraska througt) THE STUDENT PUBLICATION BOARD OlIlccH IJusumotU tlio Administration Building. I'oHtolllco Station A, Campus, Lincoln, Nebraska. TELEPHONES Day Auto 1888. Night Auto 314G, Ed. 1035, Bus. Mgr. 420C 8AM R. BUCK, EdItor-ln-Chlef EDITORIAL A. H. Dlnsmore, Managing Editor I. C. MuConticll, AhhocIiUm Kriltor H carlo F. Iloltnes, Assoclalu Editor Htuart Gould. City Kdltor K. Loo UpdcKrnff, Sporting Kdltor REPORTORIAL Merrill Itcud Homer G. Hewitt C. 1'. AmlrowH Wallaco 13. Troup It. S. nii(l(lonl)iii'K I- A. Dcchtcr William O. Cooloy WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT Mildred UuvIiih Huth Mungcr Winifred Klchar Ituth Sheldon Hugh Agor Kenneth M. Enydcr .1. Lovejoy Linn Ollvo 13. Mann Allco Chambers BU8INESS VINCENT C. HASCALL, BUSINESS MANAGER C. C. Buchanan, Asat. Bus. Mgr. J. V. Morrison, Circulation Mgr. Subscription $2.00 por year. Single copies Sc Faculty notleoH and University bulletins published free. Entered at the PoHtolllce, Lincoln, NVbr., as second class matter under act of Congress March 3, 1879. PROFESSIONALISM IN COLLEGE ATHLETICS By Sam. R. Buck. Tlio rceent altercation between the athletic associations of Minnesota and "Wisconsin universities regarding charges of profes sional baseball playing which were brought by the latter school against Captain Pickering of the Gopher football team is but an other example of the rank injustice and unfairness of the profes sional rule as applied to college athletics. Not) that Wisconsin's motivo in preferring such charges is questionable for the rule is on the books, and being there, must be regarded, but there is absolutely no reason why such a rule should ever have been on the books, and it is high time it were erased in view of the progress of collegiate athletics which are admittedly becoming cleaner and more free from professional influences each year. During the early days of football, some of the more unsports iiHin like coaches of'teams persisted in "fine-combing" the country for big husky men who were placed on the teams to play football. Some of them were provided with "scholarships"; some with "government jobs," and some with out and out salaries. Conse qucntly the question of football supremacy in o certain section be came one of; money, and the teams of the various colleges did not develop from such material as was bona fide a part of the legiti mate student body. In an effort to stamp out these practices, therefor, the "pro fessional rule" disqualifying any person who had participated in any form of athletic competition for money, was adopted That there is much infringment of the rule as it now stands is well known and that authorities generally are reluctant to enforce it, quite patent; but when protest is made to them, and convincing proof offered, there is but one course open the rule must be cn forcd. University life should be the most broad-minded, liberal and charitable of all periods of existence. In the university wisdom and foresight are supposed to live and have their being, and that so short-sighted and futile a rule should be published abroad as having emanated from university men is little short of the ridiculous. Year after year, in certifying the list of men eligible to par ticipate in athletic contests, the governing board of every universi ty in the land is forced to perjure itself, knowingly or unknow ingly. So keen is the competition in this day and age, for positions on the various teams of a great university, that none but he who cxcells in a marked degree can win a place. In order to excell in any form of athletics it is absolutely necessary that one must have both natural ability and a vast amount of experience. Is it reason able to suppose that the young man of twenty or twenty-one years of age who turns out in a given fall for the first time in a univer sity suit is wearing n suit for the first time, under the supposition that ho possess the excelling qualities named above? Cortainly not. The chances are ton to one that that young fel low has been playing football or baseball or sprinting or what not, ever since he was old enough to run. He has probably played with, against and for men who under the rules arc professionals, and al though he may never have received anything for it, other than a few dollars from the bleacher fans for a home run in the ninth at some high or prep school game, or on a back lot in a country town have run a race with some professional runner, and been beaten fifty yards in a hundred, that young fellow is a professional and cannot represent his college in athletics, no matter if he be a bona fide student of Phi Beta Kappa ranking for ton years. Such a rule is patently not only unfair to both school and in dividual, but is absolutely ridiculous on its face. That it has existed until Nebraska can no longer put a base ball team in the field that is a credit to the college and not a blot on the conscience of the athletic board, is little short of a disgrace to the intelligence of'those who draft, or are content to live by the regulations now in force -in this conference and elsewhere. The writer of this article has been a college man and a fol lower of college athletics in almost every phase for more than eight years, as undergraduate, graduate and official. He has attended three colleges and universities of as many different types and sizes in as many different sections of the west, and he has visited -and is fairly familiar with a great many schools that he has not at tended. Tn all his -acquaintance with athletes and athletics in colleges he has never seen or known of a single team of any sort that could not have been decimated by enforcement of the profs Sional rule. This applies to the University of Nebraska also, as per example last spring. Yet with the single exception of the case just mentioned, he has never known of a single instance of the enforcement of the rule by those in control of athletics against a member of their own teams. The motive in its adoption was perfectly good,ut a rule j in nlI tho othor cnses the 1)oard ,mg been conten(. tQ oither reading m such language could not but affect a great Tnany things liberately ignore sucli hints 'as they have overheard ' from timo to which it was not designated nor intended to cover. time, or have deliberately closed eye and ear to what is going on It would scorn perfectly proper to prevent men who played aroun" "lorn. it would seem that the time for that sort of thing has passed. That tlio day should now be near when college athletics could be run under rules that were not unfair or oppressive, but neverthe less efficacious in. preventing real professionalism which in tho last analysis as applied to collego athletics, should moan, not what recompense others moy have offered for the athletic ability of any man, but what he can be proved as having received from tho col lege at which he is playing. ItHs timu tlratr-irll bona ficle regisColnuRliiuTti'icllltttrdRtTF" baseball for money from participating in collegiate baseball; it would seem right to prevent those who rccoivod pay for playing football from playing the 'latter game in colleges, but no reason able person can see any reason why tho playing of professional baseball should interfero with tho playing of football, a game as different from baseball as d-ay from night. A more sane and reasonable rule could bo drafted quite easily, providing that professionalism in any particular branch of ath letics should bar participation in that particular line, and it is ;time that athletic associations over the country awoke to this solu tion, of, one phase of the troublesome problem. Such a rule would not have robbed Nebraska of the services of McKibben, a marvel ous' drop kicker; Minnesota would not have lost George Capron or jjPickwing, and njny number of collegiate football men who a.re $ good enough to draw salaries of $150 to $200 monthly playin" baso- 4 ball in the summer would not be forced to try to elude recognition 4 in order- to play, or to work as forty-five-dollar-a-month clerks in some-department storo.- - . -.-!,. ;i.. .i. ..ii -l i ... . ucmh, who uueiui classes with regularity, and maintain a good standard of scholarship without favor and upon their own merits, shoulfl bo permitted to have an equal chance on gridiron, track dia mond, or floor. It is time that college athletics should begin to be run, really on the "square." It is time that the "professional" bugbear should be done away with, and replaced by a saner, plainer regula tion that would put all athletics at the ordinary university, above suspicion for all time to pome. Bowling; 5 cents a" game, at. tho Y, The Hyde Prlntery, 1331 P St, tip ,CVA,.BowllnB Alleys. to-date proline of all ktng 7 7 XX w 4- -',