THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan IuMm A, Lieaala, Nehraaka OFFICIAL PUBLICATION f the UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Uaear Irnr5rlei ef tke Studant ruallaatlaa Bar MEMBCRr . 9S5 -ILL-- Pualltaad Tuaadajr. Wadnaidar. Thursday, Friday and Sunday meralnfa during lb aa- aM year. vjiiuI Offlcaa Unlvaraltr Hall 10. OMIae Haurs Afleraaana with tha aacan tUa at Friday aad Sdr. TaUehaaaa Day. B-M91, No. 141 (I riaf.) Nla, B-4MI. Bualnaaa Ofllca Unlvaralty Hall 10 B. One fa Haera Aftaraoana with tha excap tloa al Friday and Sunday. Talaphanaa Day. B-6S1, Na. 141 (S rlaaa.) Night. B-68S2. Entarad a sacond-elnaa mattar at tha aaataffica In Llncaln, Nabraaka, undar act I Caaaraaa, Marck S. 1870, and at apactal ..i. i tr aravldad for la Saction 1103. act af Octobar 4. 1017. autheriaad January M, 1S2. Twenty Years Ago Captain Borg issued a call for spring football practice. C. A. Tuc ker offered a loving cup aa a prize to the best punter, which caused more interest to be aroused than usual. Practice was begun early in order that it would not conflict with track and baseball. The plan was to put in a few weeks drilling at fundamen tals such as punting, falling on the ball, and catching punts. By doing this in the spring the men' were able to line up for skirmishes much ear lier the next fall. Captain Borg, As sistant Coach Westover, and Ex-Cap tain Benedict had charge of the men. Nebraska played almost errorless ball to defeat Colorado 9-1. The lina frtlnrailrt run waa Aim tn thp single error chalked up against Ne- school. But some day the Jolt will come. Maybe the prowess displayed by those who can get grades without work isn't so admirable after all. University Daily Kansan. PERCY MARKS ON COLLEGE Percy Marks, author of "The Plas tic Age," offers some rather unusual comment in regard to college stu dents. He declares that fifty per Ing good hours and good thoughts on Immaterial Jobs. So bofore we can be convinced of the value of going into activities, we shall wait for the men engaged in them to make the thing sound more attractive by proving to us advan tages we cannot possibly gain by loafing around. Ohio State Lan tern. SUBSCRIPTION RATE an, a yaar IIJI aaaaaatar Stasia Cap?, 8 canta .Editor EDITORIAL STAFF u...k n r pkili. O'H.nlnn Managing Editor John Charvat Nawa Editor Juliua Frandaan, Jr Nawa Editor Victor Hacklar .......... Nawa Editor Edward Morrow ...Nawa Editor Dorla Trott ..Nawa Editor Lawtanca Plka At. Nawa Editor Ruth Schad Aiat. Nawa Editor BUSINESS STAFF Claranea Elckhall Bualnaaa Managar Otto Skold ...Aaat. Bua. Managar Simpaon Morton Circulation Managar Oscar Kaahn Circulation Managar braska at an unopportune time. The 'Marks thinks that going to college A "padded cell" sound-proof broadcasting studio was recently in- cent of all college students snouia do Btailed ln the radio station WIiA put out, both for their own good and .University of Wisconsin for the trood of their college. He maintains some go to college because it is the "usual thing" and others be cause they wish to join the Univer sity club in their home towns. Perhaps the most interesting thing in Marks' criticism of modern college methods is his statement that "First- class mechanics go to college and come out lourtn-rate engineers, GREEK LETTER ROBOTS "The college fraternities seem to exist to force their members into a mould. The pressure on the individ ual is tremendous. Every tangent and every angle that would make him stand out as an individual is re moved." This is an observation made by J. D. Woodruff, leader of the Oxford Debate Team which visited many of the colleges of this country, last au tumn and winter. It is more than a passing and casual comment on the present tendencies and a significance which is rarely given adequate recog nition. Mr. Woodruff has hit upon a very unpleasant truth. The moulding pro cess, for which he accuses the fra ternity of being responsible, is a pro cess which is usually unconscious but, nevertheless, highly effective. It be gins, when the freshman first enters the fraternity, with things which are apparently trivial and innocuous. He begins to cut his hair as his fraterni ty brothers do, he begins to wear the same kind of clothes they wear, and he begins to go in for the same kind of diversions they enjoy. He does these things, not because the fratern ity consciously forces him to do so, but because he is subjected to an un conscious but powerful social pres sure. He must do them or be con sidered queer. This unconscious con formity does not end with the mat ter of clothes; it ultimately extends to the more important aspects of life If the fraternity begins, in the fresh man year, by regulating the hair cuts and the cut of the trousers of its members, it ends, in the senior year, by regulating their thought. The senior classes of many fraternities are composed of politely complacent Robots whose clothes are made by the same clothing companies, whose entertainment is furnished by the same dance orchestras and the same sport sheets, and whose thinking is done by the same five-cent weeklies uonlormity, under - any - circum stances, is hardly wholesome, for, its intolerance and blindness obstruct progress. It reaches the very heights of deadliness, however, when the standards and the ideas, for which it demands reverence, have few quali ties of excellence. Unfortunately it is too often true that the ideas and standards of the fraternity are of this kind. The standards which are spoken of here, it should be remem bered, are not those found in the motto and the ritual of the fraterni ties nor in the impressive utterances of their national officials. They are those highly practical ones found to be the actual basis for the activities of the organization. Of these ideas and standards it is possible to say, without being either hostile or unfair to the fraternity, that they are often the result of those misconceptions and fallacies which are, at present, playing havoc with the work of American colleges. It is in the fraternity that the wor shippers of athletic success are to be found in the greatest numbers. It is in the fraternities that the doctrine that activities and social life are, af ter all, more important than educa tion, makes its last stand. It is in fraternities wherA tnd-?nt lire given to understand that if they successful ly acquire four points of Spanish, four of chemistry, two of istory, etc., they have an education. It is in the fraternities where the tendency is to' commend anything which is suc cessful. It is to such a standard as this that the fraternities, unconsciously or , otherwwise, make their members conform. Whether their members will ever be willing: to break away from this conformity, is uncertain. But they should be wiling to change the standard ' to which they conform. Until they, at least, attempt both of these reforms, they stand faced by a charge go serious that the usual, and unfounded ones, of immorality and snobbery, sink into insignific ance. It is an indictment whose force and validity the fraternities cannot st present, truthfully deny. game was played on a muddy field and in a high wind. Morse, the Ne braska pitcher, hurled a faultless game and kept his hits well scattered with the exception of the ninth inn ing, when he allowed two hits. The glee club was accorded a warm reception on its Bpring vaca tion trip which included seven con certs, at Crete, Beatrice, Fairbury, Grand Island, Aurora, York, and Seward. The club encountered much rainy weather on the trip but a crowd greeted the members at ac' stop. Ten Years Ago The annual government inspec tion of the cadet regiment was one of the most successful ever experi enced. The inspection was made by Major Andrew Muses of the College Inspection board of the general staff. After a thorough inspection, the work was divided into several parts. Company G performed guard duty. Companies E and F performed bayo net exercises. The first battalion executed a variety of movements in battalion close order drill. The Third battalion executed Butt's Manual to band music, which was one of the most pleasing exhibitions of the afternoon. The Husker track squad, in its first appearance of the year, took a prac tice meet from the Wesleyan squad at University Place. The Methodist team showed up strong in the field events and took two firsts on the track. The heavy wind handicapped the athletes greatly and made fast time impossible. A marked decrease in the frater nity scholarship record compared to that of a year ago was shown in the report for the first semester issued from the office of the executive dean. The bulk of the blame for the lowering of the record was due, ac cording to Dean Engberg, to the de sire for amusement which he says is on the increase. .should teach a person how to live. There is much food for thought in Marks comment. It is rather doubt ful however that fifty per cent of all college students should be sent hoirx. At any rate ,a first-class mechanic who is a fourth-rate engineer can al ways rely on his mechanical skill and has the opportunity of advancing to a better position in the professional field. The average student, on reading Marks' opinions, is inclined to believe that the eminent author has been too much influenced in his views on col lege by a group of cynics. But this is as big a question as the college youth, himself. The Oklahoma Daily. ACTIVITIES The first thing the activity men al lege, wwhen they are put on the de fensive about their activities, is that the friendships which are made through work are invaluable. They say, the activity men, tnattney learn to know more persons by being en gaged in haf a dozen movements dur ing their college career than the average fellow learns to know, and that the friendships so formed are the best part of college ife. Now no one will deny that college is improved in proportion to the num ber of persons one meets, and the number of friendships one makes. So far the activity men are right. But they fail to take into consideration the fact that one does not have to engage in activities in order to meet people. We can name half a dozen loafers around the campus, for example, who we are certain, know as many people as any run-of-mine activity man. These loafers are getting out of col lege the chief thing the activity man says is there, namely, friendships, and these loafers are not exerting themselves in petty causes and wast Gelogical trips to Baraboo, Blue Mounds, Waterloo, Devils Lake are a regular feature of the University of Wisconsin Summer Session. The College Press WHO LOSES? Who are the intellectual giants on the campus? To hear students talk, one might easily gain the impression that they are those students who are clever enough to "get by" without studying; to skim throusrh a course and draw a fairly good grade, without even get ting a smattering of the subject mat ter. Recently a man well established in his profession was speaking of a graduate of this University whom he had taken into buisiness with him. "He's a fine fellow well meaning too," he said, with considerable re gret in his voice, "but he simply does not know his stuff. I am going to have to let him go, much as it hurts me." The school this man was graduated from has a reputation for turning out proficient men. Its courses are thor ough, and offer the student plenty of opportunity to get a good back ground. This man, when a student, had "gone over big" on the campus. He loaded up on activities, and "got by" in his courses, using his personality as far as he could to pull down grades. Other men from his class, some of them hardly heard of while on the campus, are working into big posi tions. Yet he is losing his chance. If e are alert at the right time we may slide along quite comfortably without studying much while in 20 lb Guards New Arrow Collar Jhe largest selling quality pencil 17 black Jegrees 3 opyingl Superlative in quality,, the world-famous V'ENUS PENCILS give best service ami Buy a dozen longest wear. Plain end, per doc Rubber cmU, per dot. aAt all dtaltrt American lead Pencil Co. 220 fifth Ave., N.Y. $1.00 1.20 gajsMsisjsiasjEiaiHSjaHsisiaiajsiaiHasra I saxs - - I 1 Have you selected 1 your box of Candy to send Mother, May 10th? If not, you had better leave your order at Rudge & Guenzel's today be cause you'll be able to se lect a touch more pleasing box now while assort ments are complete. Last minute selections very seldom prove satisfactory and your Candy to Moth er on her own day should answer completely all de sires. You'll be pleased with Rudge & Guenzel's Moth er's Day assortment of Candies. Leave your or der TODAY. Delivery will be made later if you so desire. Notices All notices for this column must be written out and banded In at tho editorial office, U Hall 10, by 4:00 tha afternoon previous to their publication I liter fret Baseball Fraternity baseball teams should turn in a score by innings and bat teries of each first round game at the office of The Daily Nebraskan. Lutherans The Lutheran Bible league will meet for Bible Study Wednesday at 7 o'clock. Union There will be a business meeting of Union Tuesday at 7 o'clock. Math Club The Math Club will hold its last indoor meeting Thursday at 7:30 in tho Dhvsica lecturi room. Professor S. D. Swesey will give an illustrated lecture on "Mathematics for Astron omers." Creen Goblins There will be a meeting of Green Goblins at the S. A. E. house, 229 North 17 at 7 o'clock tonight. It is very important that all members be present that plans for next year will be discussed and tho settlement for the party will be made. Sigma Tau Meeting of the Sigma Tau in the Mechanical Engineering building Thursday at 7:30. Sigma Tau banquet in the Chinese room of the Lincoln Hotel Saturday at 6 o'clock. Silver Serpents Important meeting of Silver Ser pents tonight at Ellen Smith Hall. Tassels ' Tassels will meet Tuesday at 7:10 in Ellen Smith Hall. Iota Sigma Pi Iota Sigma PI meeting Wednesday at Chemistry Hall at 7 o'clock. Faculty and Seniors Caps and gowns are now beingr or dered at the College Book Store. Everyone who is going to wear the cap and gown in June should order this week. If any member of the faculty de sires a hood it is very necessary that the order be placed at once, because due to the scarcity a late order makes it almost impossible to get the hoods. Hotel D' Hamburger 5c Buy 'em by the sack 1141 Q St. STUDY at HOME for EXTRA CREDITS More than 450 courses in History. English, Mathematics. Chemistry. Zoology, Modern Languages, Economics, Philosophy, Sociology, etc., are given by correspondence. Learn how the credit they yield may be applied on your college program. Catalog describing courses fully will be furnished on request. Write today. PI .08 ELLIS HALL &fre ftlntocrsiitp of Cfctcaffo CHICAGO, ILLINOIS " vl mwii mmn? It's Sanitary! You can use as much or as little powder as the occasion demands. 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