The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 21, 1922, Image 3

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    Thursday, September 21, 1922
THE DAILY NEBRASK AN
-losker Gridsters Get Stiff Work-Out
!3idgc,c(jieivzel Co
Professionalism
Must Be Barred if
Sports Succeed
In view of the fact that the Ne
braska baseball team for the coming
year will suffer from the loss of at
least two men who are Ineligible on
account of parttclnatlng In profes
sional games, the following story re
printed from the student publication
at Denver University is especially in
teresting to Nebraska students:
The government of college sports
has been a great question since ath
letics have become so popular. Col
lege athletes, It is generally con
ceded, should come under the head
of amateurs, but it is now becoming
known that most college athletes
must be classed under the profes
sional head, which is a great detri
ment to, fjports, and also athletes
themselves.
In the last issue of the "Strength"
magazine, Walter Camp, who picks
ail-American teams and makes rules
which govern sports in every lino,
has written an Interestfhg article on
the government of college sports.
There is a season every year when,
Coupon
SODA TICKET
$1.25 Value for $1.00
PAY CASH
TAKE YOUR DISCOUNT
Capp's Fountain
with
BUTLER DRUG CO.
1321 O Street
- Butler Drug Co. -
1321 0 St. B1183
We welcome ail U,
of N. Students.
Make our store your
down town head
quarters. We ap
preciate your business.
Guy Butler, Ph. 0. Prop.
states Walter Camp, from the time
anow files until the ground gets soft
In the spring, college athletics re
ceive their annual overhauling. The
National Collegiate association hold
its annual meeting, and the grcal
conferenco leaders west and south
have their conventions. Some of tha
good effects continue some, unfor
tunately, are lost sight of when ac
tual play begins. The new Southern
Intercollegiate conference, at its
meeting here this year, put this para
graph in its proposed constitution:
Tries to Better Sports
"It is the purpose and function of
this conference to promote interco.
legible athletics in every form, t?
keep them in proper bounds by mak
ing them incidental and not the prin
cipal feature of the intercollegiate
and university lifo, and to regulate
them by wise and prudent measures
in order that they may Improve the
physical condition, strengthen the
moral fiber of the students and form
a constituent part of that education
for which universities and colleges
were established and are main
tained." This is the new attitude. The as
sociation that can make a boy of
eighteen love study better than sport
has yet to come into existence. We
must face things as they are.
Just after the war, "Daniel," in
the New York Sun, December 13,
1918, wrote as follows:
"It looks very much as if the col
leges will have to follow the advice
of Dr. Angell of Chicago, and resume
sport slowly, in the meantime cut
ting out the bad features. This means
that every college will have to be the
m.ister o its own athletic destinies.
Training tables will go, and the sea
sonal professional coach will go,
too. The temporary coach truly is a
serious evil and must be displaced
by the year-round man who combines
the proper moral, technical and other
qualities to make him a fit teacher
for young men. The colleges - will
make this versatile coach a member
of the teaching rtaff, paid out of the
college funds. In this respect Co
lumbia must be given credit for hav
ing shown the way to other big insti
tutions." Rules Not Enforced
It appears we are to have a revival
oi the so-called "Summer Ball" ques
tion which has perennially stirred
the athletic committees of the col
leges for over a decade. Until the
mo tfer "takes on more definite shape
it is futile to discuss what rules
could be i.ucpted that would permit
of an amateur ploying for money and
k ill lenminirc an amateur. But
(hero is one point brought out quite
clearly, and that is that the athletic
nnmmiitpes will have to answer
charges that are being so freely made
to the effect that they are making
no effort to enforce their present
rules.
Hugh S. Fullerton, the baseball
scribe, says: "Every college man
knows, or should know, that four
fifths of the college baseball players
aro professionals under any strict in
terpretation of the amateur rules.
The director who desires this fact
either is innocent to the point of im
becility or worse than the players.
In fact, It forms by all odds the
strongest argument in the case
against the college ball player for
permitting him to augment his ex
chequer openly by playing for money.
In other words ,the charge Is that
THE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC
ADRIAN M. NEWENS, Director
Offers thorough training in Music, Dramatic Art. A
large faculty of specialists in all departments. Anyone may
enter. Full information on request. Opposite the Campus.
Phone B1392
11th & R Sts.
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
(One block south of the Llndell Hotel on 13th St
WELCOMES STUDENTS
Sunday, September 24, 1922
10:00 Large University Classes led by Miss Erma Appleby, Secretary.
Y. W. C. A. and Walter It Riley, University Pastor.
11:00 Sermon by John Andrew Holmes on "The Inspiration of the
Bible."
6:45 Young People's Social Hour and Lunch.
6:30 Christian Endeavor.
7:45 Opening church service. Topic, "The Right Kind of a Young
Man," from letters received from Uni. girls.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Thirteenth and M Streets
Friday, September 22, 1922, at 8:00 p. m.
DONT YOU "WANT TO COME
It will be a
GOOD TIME FOR EVERYBODY
A ROYAL "WELCOME AWAITS YOU
Cf-T
those who make the rules and in
whom rests the duty of protecting
the name of the university are ask
ing no questions, but winking at this
playing for money.
Athletic Board Blamed
It seems Impossible that men of
the standing of the chairmen of our
nthletlo committees at our institu
tions of learning are guilty of such
luxlty as is described. There have
been and always will be cases that
may escape any ordinary inquiry and
hence lay open to suspicion the good
faith of the best men; but when the
charge Is that men are not even
asked by the athletic committee to
sign the usual papers or to make a
statement that they have not played
for money, that charge grows very
grave and reflects upon the bona
fides of the entire body of alumni
of the university, and should be
promptly and squarely met before
any consideration of future rules or
regulations. If the existing rules arc
Ignored or allowed to stand as dead
letters, v'th no effort nt all to even
ask their enforcement, what mn?t be
them as to the Integrity of their pro
fessors? Moreover, If present rules
are not even put before the students,
what assurance is there that any new
rules would share a better fate; and
why should there be any more hypo
critical placing of them upon the
statute books of a university?
Many college athletes enter ama
teur athletic union contests, and the
opening wide of the money- taking
Nebraska's Grid Candidates for 1922
The roster of candidates for the Cornhusker football team it as
follows:
CENTERS Gordon House (N), Bryan Nixon (N), Ross McGlasson
(N), Carl Peterson (N), Bert Spiece.
GUARDS AND TACKLES Raymond Weller (N), Joy Berquist (N),
Adolph Wenke (N), Henry Bassett (N), D. L. Halberslaben, Noel Rorby,
Earle Frasier, Herbert Green, Sturm, Henrickson, Skold, Reed, Trout
man, Packer, Splckler.
ENDS Leo Sherer (N), Dewey Klemke, "Terrible" Thomsen, An
drew Schoeppel (N), Dean Higgins, Melvln Collins, Eugene McAllister,
"Mutt" Volz, Cameron, Hubka, Addison, Robertson, Hodgson, Raun,
Lundin and Steinheimer.
BACKS Captain Harold "Chick" Hartley (N), Glen Pdeston (N),
Dave Noble (N), Dewey Hoy (N), "Herb" Dewitz (N), "Red" Layton
(N), Verne Lewellen (N), Sed Hartmann (N), R. C. Russell (N), Rufus
(Dewitz, "Bud" Randolph, Springer and Junior Hinman.
end would run up against snags of a
decided nature in this quarter.
No such "amateur" is defined in
tii of the various associations, atli
lelic, tennis, golf, rowing in fact, all
amateur organizations have as their
keynote that a man may net roccivo
moi.ey for the exorcise of his athletic
ability and still remain an amateur.
Only a few years ago, just before the
(Continued on Page 4)
The Original
RAG-A-JAZZ
BAND
Returning to Europe
Take advantage of
the last dances.
Conac Club
Friday & Saturday
Nights
Sept. 22 and 23
LINCOLN
HOTEL
BALLROOM
Store News For Girls
GIRLS!
Here's the Place to buy Your New Fall
retticoats and
Bloomers
Such un nrray of colors
Such a choice of materials
Such a range of sizes
Just come in and look over our stock of bloomers and petti
coats which we bought especially with the idea of giving the
Girls of the University the sort of Petticoats and bloomers
they want and the sort of prices Mother or Father neither
one would object to.
Surely here among our collection of rose, blue, green, pur
ple, gray and black petticoats and bloomers you'll find just
the garment for that new Fall Suit that new Dance Frock
and for that Campus Outfit. Come in and see them in the
Petticoat Shop
Floor Two
YOU ARE INVITED
TO ATTEND THE
Annual Fall
Style
Show
of
ratford
Clot
lies
TODAY AND TOMORROW IN THE STORE
Mr. Tom Shepard of Chicago a mem
ber of the Stratford organization will
be here to demonstrate the clothes
which will be worn this fall by well
dressed young men.
Make it a point to stop in you'll see
here everything new and correct in
college men's clothes.
1325 O
Clothiers to College Men