TIIE DAILY NEBItASKAN Thursday, January 11, 1923. The Daily Nebraskan " " "Z "iilviTltf f N,.i)riikii An.ti.(l for nmlllrf at mocliil r t.- ..I 1B22. u",orl Junuury 20 lodrr U.. dirM-tlu. f ,h, ,., ,.. Ilratlun Hnuiv. Entcri'il na niTotid-rlm. maltiT i the pooffi In I.Ieol, Nobrr VunuVr !to Acti.f tmigrem. March 3, 1871). Solixrlixlun riilv 9-ioo ftmf Hlnl. .-op, yvt (U Aililrt-an nil . cuiuiuimicntluiiii to TIIK DAILY NKllllAHKAN HtiiHnn A, Lincoln. Selt. Tr.i.Kriio.iiv,ny iu Kvrnlng. Ilium j Killluiinl unil himliieiis office, in B,.ulh west J-urin-r of Im.Hin.nt of A.tiiilntHtru Hrlln Knruuin Killlol office Hniim 10-11 ami 4.3 dally herbrrt llrutvnrll, Jr. ... Muaailnc h.lKor Office bourn, 3 to 6, Muncluy, Tu"duy. WiMliivadiiy. Tburailny, Kuturcliiy. Mnrjorl yinun ..... A,.iclat KilUor Kclnurd Illicit .. Mght Ktlltor Kiilirrt Iruls Night Killtor C linrl A. MiU'lirll Mnhl F.illtnr Clmiimt-.v liluxry Ilimlnrna Maiiuvrr (ifflip lloura 4 to 8 Dally. Cliffurii M. HlrkH, Am't. Iluxlnrna MniiiiRrr I juiik K. f ry Clriulallon Muiiuicrr Howard Buftett, Acting Night Editor M'llllain C'uril AU(iint Xixht tTilhor This city is, without doubt, the cen ter of cnMuie ,n this Mute. Thre is unlimited opportunity for the stu dent who liiiB tilt1 inclination to bone fit himself by observing or even at tending the various public affairs that are here during the school year. At the present time the legislature is in session and it is a very impor tant session for the men are trying to relieve the abnormal conditions that exist In this state and supplant them by smaller taxes, better prices, and a more prosperous state of busi ness affairs. Voters have elected what they thought the most capable men in the state and it is without doubt as fair of a representation of the best men in Nebraska as one could expect to find at any one meet ing. There are big issues that must be brought up and settled before this session is over and it will be very interesting to note the manner in which the men will dispose of greater questions. The affairs of the t'niver sity are vitally concerned and its fu ture activities may rest upon the ac tions of the legislature. The ques tion of University appropriations will be raised In a short time and then we may know the attitude that iw taken by the state toward this insii tution. The former governor recom mended reduced appropriations, but the bill has not come up yet. When It does, the men in session will come out with their criticism either ad verse or favorable and the state's opinion of it University will be shown at that time. VARIED READING. Tnctriiftni-a frennentlv attempt to Interest the under-graduates in cul tural reading not directly pertinent to the subject of instruction. They do this not in order to benefit them selves or their courses, but merely to suggest to the students reading which they will find profitable. Different means are adopted to arouse interest in a varied amount of reading. One instructor frequently quotes Interesting passages from a volume on a given topic, and then casually gives the name and author with the suggestion that the book will he found interesting. Another Instructor is fond of sugesting books which one should be sure to buy when he begins to collect library of his own. He does not limit him self to books in his own particular field. Many are remote from the sub ject but he manages skilfully to bring them into his lecture. Another pro fessor asks the students to read ar ticles In magazines which deal with the whole field of instruction. Oral reports are sometimes called for on articles read but no limitation is put on the choice of an article and fre quently these articles have no con nection with the specific course. The instructor feels however that some thing will be accomplished if the stu dents can be interested in reading magazines which deal with the snl. ject as a whole. Since the students are not required to do the reading suggested, many overlook these suggestions. But thost who do note the books spoken of an 1 try at leisure to become acquaintr.l with them are developing and broad ening their Interests. They seek worthwhile books in the library vol uutarily and not because the boo are assigned reading. They derive perhaps greater benefit from thh. reading because It does not have tc be done. The college student and almost all humanity somehow seems to feel an antagonism to the work that must be done. Even though the undergraduate has very little time to devote to the perusal of voluntary reading he will find that a wealth of new ideas can be gained in this little time if those bOoka and magazines which the pro fessors so often mention are looked into. Contemporary Opinion Over-Righteousness. Be not over-righteous is an ancient and a wise Injunction. Like (hose puffe"d up with pride tho over-rlght-eoiiB are marked to suffer a disillu sionment. Illghteousiiesg is to be striven for unceasingly but over righteousness Is hardly less obnox ious than downright unrighteousness. In the creed of the over-righteous there is little allowance made for the weaknesses of tho flesh and Its pron eness to lead into error. There are seldom any "extenuating circumstanc es" for the violators of the too right eous man's code of morals. He Is characterized by an Inflexible ndher ence to his code and an uncompro mising attitude toward the violators of It. Forgiveness Is ono weakness seldom indulged in by the over-right eons, yet in reality a charitable spin, is surely one of the requisites ot true righteousness. There Is a play by the well-know French playwright Hervieu, dealing with this old theme. "Know Thyself" is the title. The conclusion of the play is, ot course, that no one know himself. To sit in Judgment of one's fellow is always a dangerous and serious undertaking. For given the same circumstances would we have done otherwise than ho did? in de livering our Judgments would wo de liver them In the same way if we knew they wer to be visited on us? Smug complacency over our own lack of fault may be cruelly shattered. The righteous are always to he re spected and admired but the over righteous are an abomination. Co lumbia Evening Missourian. U-NOTICE (Notleea of (rencrnl Interest will hp , . l-1 1 1 M - I In thl column for twit oonsi'cu- iv. 1hh. Copy nhonlil bp In tbe Ne. lirnskiin office by flv oi'loek.i Home Economics Club. Home Ec club meeting Thursday at 7:H0, Social Science 113. Christian Science Society. Regular meeting Thursday 7:30 Faculty hall. Y. W. C. A. Staff dinner scheduled for tonight will be postponed for two weeks on account ot examination. Wayne Club. Cotner-Wayne Teachers College basketball game will be played in the Cotner gymnasium Thursday, Janu 11, at 8 p. m. Twenty-five seats will be reserved for members of the Wayne club. Co. I. Rifle match with York National Guard January 15-20. Practice on N. A. A. targets for rifle team. Theta Sigma Phi. Meeting Thursday evening, 7, Ellen Smith hall. Phytical Education Normals. All physical education normal stu dents should consult Dr. Clapp as ad visor. Make appointments at G-20G. Debate (English 104). Students wishing to register for debate (English 104, membership lim ited to twelve) should confer with thu Instructor. M. M. FOGG. Lutheran Club. Business meeting of the Lutheran club Thursday, January 11, S. S. 107, 7:00. Election of officers. Inter-Frat Basketball. Entries for the inter-frat basket ball tournament must he handed in to Robert Russell or to the Athletic office in the Armory by Friday, Jan. 12. An entry fee of $1.00 will be charged. Iron Sphinx. Please check In tickets for Sopho more Spree at Student Activities Of fice at once. Calendar. Thursday, January 11. Theta Sigma Phi meeting, 7, Ellen Smith hall. Friday, January 12. Closed-night beforo examination. Saturday, January 13. All-University Carnival, Armory and Social Science. Fortieth anual banquet of Sigma Chi, Lincoln hotel, 6:30. - "Mis Barnes has gathered together well chosen representative materlul from all the tribes, illustrating tho style, preferred material, and variety og verse form. It Is now In a shape confenlont for study. "Mis Barnes' work may be taken as a convenient compendium of all that has been recorded by non-literary research in the field of aboriginal verse." Uni. Dally Kansan. Five Rule Changes Made in Basketball Five changes have been made In the rules and through these changes tho game is altered in no small way. The court has been marked off In zones, extending from seventeen feet from each end of the court to the end of the play space and a personal foul committed within onh of these zones where the man fouled has tho ball in his possession at his own end of the court, gives the fouled man's team two free throws at the hoop. A personal foul committed In any other part of the court nets the side foHled but one free throw, as in for mer years. A technical foul committed does no give the opposing team n free throv at the basket hut gives it the pos session of the ball at the nearest place out of bounds along the slds of the court but never at the end of the playing space. As is specified in football rules, this year on the court no Bubstitu may speak to any person other than th escorers or referee until after play has resumed following his substitu tion. No player will be permitted to call time out while the ball is in the pos session of the opposing tram either on the court or while the sphere is out of bounds. The new regulations, while they may seem cumbersome at first, have all of the earmarks of being good ones and will tend to speed up the tame to a greater extent, it is believed. Speech on Press Is Broadcast at K. U. Reviewer Praises Book of Teacher In Kansas School "American Indian Verse," by Nellie Barnes, instructor in English and graduate of tho University of Kansas has been recognized as an Important piece of work by Mary Anstin, prom-:-.ent American author, whose review appears In the Literary Review ot tie New York Evening Tost for December 9. 1922. "Somewhat tardily," says Miss Aus tin. "American Universities are real lzlng that the literature of our own aboriginals is deserving of a frac tion, at least, of the study that has been lavished on the .literary origins of Europe. "In her brochure, which may be obtained from the University at Law rence, Kansas," says Miss Austin, T1il reserve officers' training corps Las made many new and interesting plans for the winter and spring quarters for all the students regl.s tiriag for this work. Polo, cross country riding and jumping, practice in firing the three-inch guns, the machine guns, anil a competitive pis (o! shoot will be included. Work is under way to organize some polo teams. At least two teams will be organized and games will be flayed with Fort Douglas and any others with whom games can be ar langed. Before the holidays the horses for this game under the in struction of Major Gay, who is one of the foremost polo players in the I'nited States. The success of the players depends very much on his horse so it essential that he obey his rider and also be accustomed to the swinging of the polo stick and the striking of the ball. The Utah. That the charges brought against the American press susceptibility to bribery, false ownership, and so forth by tho critics of the press, are fu tile and baseless, was the theme of a speech on tho subject, "Who Owns tho Press?" delivered by W. A. Dill, assistant professor of Journalism at the University of Kansas, from the Kansas City Star's station, WDAF. The variation in the charges is suf ficient evidence that they are un founded, said the K. U. professor. One critic will claim that the rail roads "own" tho press. Another will assert blandly that it Is Wall Stret which dictates tho policies of most ot tho newspapers throughout the country. x Size Is Proof Itself. "The very magnitude of the pub lishing business," said hfi speaker, "is almost an answer in itself. There are in the United Slates about 23,000 publications, of nil classes. Of these, about 3,000 are daily papers, ranging In size from such metropolitan news papers ns the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, and the Kansas City Star, with circulations In the hundreds of thousands, down to some little four pago sheets of a few hun dred circulation. "To try to buy up a predominating influence in the American newspapers would require a sum ot money too vast to be worth the cost." The criticism that the newspapers are bribed, continued the K. XT. pro fessor (who. incidentally, is a prac tical newspaper man), if futile by its nature. Newspapermen are ns hon est as are the members of any other profession, in fact, they are a little more honest they have to be, for their every statement is spread out in cold print where all the world, in cluding the competitor, may read it. Federal aws Stringent. An orator may qualify his state meats if he finds his audience un sympathetic, but the editor's opinion and news items stand as they are written. Far from being considered the possible recipient of bribes, the local editor is usually looked upon as one of tin; most influential citizens. .'Another way of checking out on the ownership of a paper," went on the speaker, "has been provided by Congress, which requires by law that all papers using second-class rate? publish twice a year a statement of ownership. And a long paragraph makes the newspaperman swear there are no evasicms or mental reserva tions in the statement. "Another class of critics intimate that the newspapers say only what the advertisers want them to say. There is a measure of truth in the criticism, in that the Influence of the advertiser may be used to cause some news Horn to bo given too littlo at tention. But, for tho most part, the business office never obtrudes Into the policies of tho news room." Truth Must Be, Printed. A newspaper cannot distort tho truth, Professor Dill asserted, for If it does Bomo champion of the people will get a hatful of type and a press ot some sort, and print tho facts. A few of factors which open the way for criticism are: human frailty the Individual sometimes does not see the facts of the case as another sees them: tho rush nnd hurry of modern dally newspapers, and the distances from which tho stories are brought; and the magnitude of tho news supply. Those cause errors to creep in unavoidably. The American editor, said the K. IT. speaker in conclusion, whether he is editing the class publication, tho met ropolitan dally, or the country week ly. Is striving to ndvance the cause of his clients. He is honest in his ef forts, for he knows the American people are not simple they will soon discern dishonesty nnd ho must be honest with his clients if ho is to retain their support. Dally Kansan. A set of $15,000 chimes will "sing to tho world" the completion of Min nesota's stadium and auditorium if plans being considered by the band director are carried out. The hand plans to give a number of concert dances to raise money for the bells. Princeton introduced hockey as a college sport, December 1, at Baker Memorial rink. A feature of the opening of the new rink was an ex hibition of speed skating by "Joe' Moore and "Bobby" Harris. The University of Michigan is to have new deans for the School of Mu sic nnd the School of Pharmacy, If President M. L. Burton's trip to the east to look for men is successful, according to the Michigan Dally. Tin- sophomores of Utah Agricul tural College drew a win from the frosh in the annual rope pull, con ducted through the spray from a fire hydrant. Mr. Moth "Where shall we dine toniffht, my dear?" ' Mrs. Moth Oh! I don't care, any place where we can get a nice Kuppcnheimer it's sure to be all wool!" 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What chance have you got against hfrn? IT was a cynic who said: "Some men go to college. Other men study."' A slander! liut yet there probably are college men whose bills for midnight oil are not large. And there are men who left school in the lmver grades who, along with a hard day's work, put in long hours of study spurred on by a dream and n longing. Look out for them. The achievements of non-college men in busi ness suggest an important fact. Success seems to depend, not so much on the place where a man studies, as on the earnestness of the student. Ilut, granting equal earnestness and ability, it is still true that the college man has the advantage. Uegular hours for study nnd lecture, the use of library and laboratory, the guidance of professors, contact with men of the same age nnd aspirations all these will count in his favor, if he makes the most of them. A big "if." The new year is a good time to start making it a reality. 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