The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 10, 1915, Image 4

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    Camp no Long6'" Athletic Adviser
In the retirement of Walter Camp
of Yale frim aitive connection with
collegiate athletics, announced a few
j - - 4. c- nmt a a lnct -a man
who has been a power in the develop-1 which prevents admission with condl-
com In to Harvard in increasing num
hers. This year about halt of all the
students have their homes more than
100 miles away from Cambridge. The
other feature of the new plan that
ment of not only football in Amerl
can colleges, but he has helped to
place other sports on the high plane
which they occupy today.
Mr. Camp has spent the better part
of his life to help a cause in which he
has been interested since he was in
his 'teens. His knowledge of the vari
ous branches of athletic endeavor has
been accumulated as a player and
afterward by close and careful obser
vation. Upon his resignation from active
connection with Yale athletics and the
appointment of Trof. Robert N. Cor
win as his successor, the Yale News
gave Mr. Camp trie roiiowins iriume
in a late issue:
"Walter Camp, who now retires
from active connection with Yale ath
letics, will always be regarded by
Yale men as the central figure around
-whom the university sports, and par
ticularly, of course, football, have
come to be developed to their present
organization since modern college ath
letics began in the eighties.
"Regarded by the public as 'the
father of American football.' Mr.
Camp especially stands among Yale
men as the builder of that remarka
ble football organization which, with
the captains and field coaches in the
foreground and himself in continuous
advisory relations in the back-ground,
became in time the roost efficient and
successful intercollegiate football ma
chine in the country.
its effect. Stu
litno o mow " o -
dents now may devote their entire at
tention to. college work; they are no
longer bothered with "makeup" exam
inations. The gain in total registra
tion this fall is 162, every department
except the graduate school sharing in
the increase. The number of freshmen
this fall is 662; last fall it was C20.
Incidentally it might be mentioned
that all the freshmen are now living
in dormitories devoted to their use
exclusively.
The Nationalization of Harvard
Latest Harvard statistics seem to
confirm the early impression that the
new plan of admisison would serve
to nationalize the university and to
raise the standards of scholarship in
the college itself. It is now apparent
that men from a great distance are
SIMMONS
THE
317 SI2t'i
PRINTER
PHONE B23I9
University Jeweler and
Optician
C. A. TUCKER
JEWELER
S. S. SHEAN
OPTICIAN
1123 O St. Yellow Front
Your Patronage Solicited
THE DAYS THAT ARE NO MORE
Tears, idle tears, 1 know not what they
mean,
Tears from the depth of some divine
despair
Rise in the heart, and gather to the
eyes,
In looking on the happy autumn fields.
And thinking of the days that are no
more.
Fresh as the first beam glittering on a
sail
That brings our friends up from the
underworld,
Sad as the last which reddens over one
That sinks with all we love below the
verge;
So sad, so fresh, the days that are no
more.
Ah. sad and strange aa in dark sum
mer dawns
The earliest pipe of half-awakened
birds
To dying ears, when unto dying eyes
The casement slowly grows a glimmer
ing square;
So sad, so strange, the days that are
no more.
Dear as remembered kisses after
death,
And sweet as those by hopeless fancy
feigned,
On lips that are for others, deep as
love,
Deep as first love, and wild with all
regret ;
O Death in Life, the days that are no
more.
Tennyson.
man or boy playa. I want to see him
ptay hard; but when he works, I don't
want to see him play at all." Phila
delphia North American.
. War Figures.
Some wTlter who delights in statis
tic has found that 915.SO0 or more
men have been killed outright thus far
in the war. The cost of five months
fighting by the European nations is
approximated at seven billions of dol
lars. More than five million men have
been injured, lost or captured.
From this it appears that it costs
about $7,000 to kill a man in modern
warfare. And this does not include
the damage done to property. It sim
ply is the actual cost of powder, can
non, shot And shell, transportation of
troops, feeding of troops and the like.
To kill men, nations will spend thou
sans per capita, but to relieve poverty
and hunger, the budget diminishes re
markably and the per capita sum ex
pended is rather in cents than in thou
sands of dollars.
The figures speak for themselves.
Great Britain estimates her casualties,
officers and men, killed, wounded, lost
or captured, at about 105,000; Prance,
1,110.000; Russia, 1,S00.200; Belgium,
113,000; Servia, 170.000; Germany,
1,500,000, and Austria 1,500,000.
Can't Squeal on "Cribbers"
Kvanston, 511. The most interesting
nf the oleventh-hour developments in
the fight for the installation of the
honor syste mat Northwestern univer
sity was a decision arrived at yester-
day afternoon by the proponents of the
! scheme to leave the clause compelling
! the. reporting of c-ITenders out of the
j plan, with the substitution of optional
' reporting and a signed statement on
each paper certifying that no aid had
been given nor received during the
examination.
POPULAR PRICED MENS 'WEAR
- - - - :
w II M
a.
WATCii
THIS
SPACE
for some startling neck
wear values Friday and
Saturday-
A Roosevelt Tip for Boys
Theodore Roosevelt expresses . his
dislike for the "sissy" type of boy in
a letter to Dr. Charles D. Ilart, chair
man of the Boy Scouts of America.
"The boy is not worth anything If
he is not efficient," Colonel Roosevelt
wrote. "I have no use for molly
coddles. I have no use for timid boys,
for the 'sissy' type of boys.
j "I want to see a boy able to hold
his own and ashamed to flinch. But
as one element of this ability to hold
his own, T- wish to see him contempt
uously indifferent to the mean or bru
tal boy who calls bin 'sissy or a mol
lycoddle because ao Is cleau and de
cent and considerate of others.
j "If a boy is fearless and energetic,
he is & poor creature; but he Is an
even poorer creature if he Is a bully
of smaller boys or girls, if he is guilty
of cruel mischief, and If in his own
home, and especially la his relations
with his mother and sisters, he is sel
fish and unfeeling.
I "1 believe in play with all my heart;
2 but I believe in work even more. Whila
The United States a World Power
The United States occupies one-sixteenth
of the globe, it has one-fifteenth
of the population of the world, and it
produces:
20 per cent ofthe world's wheat ;
20 per cent of the world's gold ;
20 per cent of the world's timber;
20 percent of the world's live stock;
SO per cent of the world's silver;
HO per cent of the world's lead ;
40 per cent of the world's coal ;
42 per cent of the world's iron ore;
61 per cent of the world's cotton ;
63 per cent of the world's petroleum ;
65 per cent of the world's copper;
68 per cent of the world's corn. Ex.
proceeded to draw a line down the
middle of his body. .
"Now shoot away ye spalpeen,"
shouted Pat. "And remember t xu.
Observer.
count."
An Agreement
Pat weighed two hundred and was
in love. So was Mike and he weighed
ninety. Furthermore, in both cases,
she was the same girl. To settle mat
ters they decided to have a duel. Ar
riving at the appointed spot, they
peeled off their coats, stepped off ten
pacrs and
"Hold on, ye spindlin rascal, yelled
Pat. It tain't fair. Ye've got a better
chanst then oi hav. Iet's palavar." i
They counciled and ii was finally de- j
cided that Pat would get twice as
far away from Mike as Mike was from :
Pat. However, in trying to step off ,
the distance they failed to make thi3 ;
problem work out. Finally Pat drew .
a piece of chalk from his pocket and
Sotnelfeing Kew In k
Mr Sweaters ra.
t$Kf Your eollcRe colors deftlr knit in collar and around yf
Pu-f the txittom in a Navajo border effect. Kor instance, if V
your colors are white and purpl a white sweater with Yv
fkV iurpe Navajo border. This Is quite the last word in r4
A, Sweatordom something that will make a real flash on Vsl
Vy the campus.
h"4 Illustrated Man's Bradley Navajo SUaker painstak- f$A
w ttifrly knit of thick, warm yarn. A sweater that will out- iftl
Wf last the college course,. Moderately Triced. jftf J
Woman's Knit Sport Coats, knit to conform with prcs- vjf
V wit styles. Made with belt in contrasting color a very JJ
pretty style for women's wear. A?jf
N3k Bradley Knitting Co. . j$r
NV DELA VAN, WIS. tjlr
FOR SALE AT
MAGEE'S
ii i 'l
University Y. MX. A. Cafeteria
IN THE TEMPLE '
FOR UNIVERSITY FOLKS ONLY
Quality Economy Convenience
Meal Hour. 7:00-8:30 11:001:30 6.S0 7.00.
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