The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 23, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
The Daily Nebraskan
Statioa A. Lincoln, Nebraska.
OFTTCJAL PtTBLTCATTOJ
TTNrVKRSITT Or NEBRASKA
Daeer Direction of the Student PubHcatiea
Board
Published Tuesday. Wednesday, Tnure
gay, Friday and Sunday aneroinge durtnc
the aeademie rear.
Editorial Offieee rtntverslty Rail 4.
IiiIshi OlfltH Writ atand of Stadium.
Offlra Hoora Aftornoona with tea excep
Mo'.of Friday and Sondav.
lelenhonee Editorial: BR891, No. 141:
Buainaaa: B68l. No. 77; Night; Bo882.
Entered aa eeoond-clasa anatter at the
nostofflce In Lincoln, Nebraska, ondar art
ml Congress, March S. 187. and at special
rata of poatare provided for In Section
11 OS. act of October t, 1117. authoriaed
January Z. mi.
SUBSCRIPTION RATS
year IMS a matter
8lngle Copy, I eenta
It a
EDITORIAL STAFF
olta W. Torrey. .. .
Victor T. Hackler
Fdltor
.Managing Editor
NEWS EDITORS
I. A. Oiarvat Ellra Holortehlner
Jnliua Frandeen, Jr. Arthur Sweet
aUllicent Cinn Lea Vanca
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS
Herbert D. Kelly Neola Skala
Fred R. Simmer
CONTRIBDTINQ EDITORS
William Ojnar Victor T. Haekler
Kenneth W. Cook Edward Morrow
BUSINESS STAFF
Otto SkoM Bn.lneaa Manager
Shnseoa Morton seat. Buainaaa Manager
Niaasna Vaa Aradala Circulation Manager
Kiahard F. VettaCireulation Manager
TOMORROW NIGHT
The child labor amendment will be
discussed tomorrow evening by a
gToup of Nebraska and South Dakota
students who have spent several
weeks studying its many phases and
preparing themselves to discuss it in
telligently. Although the proposal
to amend the constitution to enable
congress to regulate child labor did
not meet with the nation's approval
last year, the question is still very
much alive, and of considerable im
mediate importance.
There is more reason to believe
that University students will be call
ed upon as citizens to settle this
problem within the next few years
than they will be required to shoulder
a musket for their country's sake;
and there is some reason to believe
that the settlement of such questions
as this is fully as important as the
outcome of the war. The health and
pursuits of practical things. It is
teaching its students the technique
of making a living and forgetting the
cultural side almost entirely. Before
entering upon work that is purely
technical, the student need have only
a smattering of the cultural subjects
English, languages, history, etc.
Though he may be trained thorough
ly in his chosen field, he cannot be
called an educated man.
This practical education, moreover,
lacks that actual training by con
tract with life that Thoreau desired.
He would have a university where
the students worked to support them
selves by manual labor, where they
built the buildings and saw to their
maintenance. The present training,
in engineering methods, bookkeeping,
and other similar subjects, often lacks
that reality that might compensate
for the loss of cultural instruction.
The tendency toward more practi
cal education is not to be condemned.
if it will better fit the student for
his struggle in life. But if j is e
pseudo-practical training that will bf
of little value later, and given at the
expense of education that is of genu
ine cultural value, the student is
wasting his time in pursuing it. Much
of our so-called practical training
today is of slight value, and the stu
dent should discriminate carefully
before he enters upon it.
THE FAIR QUIZ
Did you ever stop after class and
complain that a quiz was not quite
fair? If you have, the following bit
of dialogue, printed in the Chicago
Daily Maroon may interest you:
Young Man I don't think your
quiz yesterday was quite fair, sir.
, Professor Why not, Mr.
(prompted) Mr. Boggs.
Y. M. Because it didn't teft what
a man know about the subject. One
fellow could pass it with very little
real knowledge another fellow with
real ideas might have missed half the
questions.
Prof. I'm afraid I don't under
stand you. I tried to make the test
very easy. Don't you think that any
body who has read the text could pass
it? Take Question 1: "To what four
causes does Watson attribute the
War of 1812?" Could any intelli-
miss that?
Y. M. That's just the trouble, it
seems to me. What about the man
who hasn't read the text?
Prof. Well, I'm sorry for him.
That's about all I can say. I consid
er it a very easy test.
Y. M. But can't a man know the
causes of the War of 1812 pretty
well, and do a great deal of reading
about it, and even have his own ideas
of his own without memorizing
Watson's four causes.
Prof. All right, Mr. Boggs, I shall
give you another chance; I shall give
you a test even easier than this. But
but I considered it remarkably
easy.
1 - - f .1 J J 4k..o
, , ... , . , j gent student who has read the text
ands of children are involved, anei6 .
the adoption of a wrong policy in
dealing with child labor would be fa
tal to both the lives of these indi
viduals and the nation. It is the pa
triotic and moral duty of every Uni
versity student to prepare himself tc
help settle such problems.
Unfortunately, questions of this
kind often serve as political footballs,
the real issues get lost in a maze of
blah, and the actual facts are for
gotten. The young men who will
discuss child labor tomorrow even
ing will have nothing to gain by mis
representing facts or resorting to
false logic. They will present the
arguments for each side in the best
manner which weeks of preparation
have made possible. If the debate it
self does not bring forth sufficient in
formation and reasoning, the open
forum discussion which is to follow
will afford every interested person
an ample opportunity to learn the
merits of each side.
In return for the hundreds of hours
work in preparation wl'h thtf parti
cipants have cheerfully given, no re
ward is asked except an interested
and appreciative audience. Too Of
ten TTnivereirv etiirlpnt.. Hpimite their
lrtS; $7rk Tourist
"li" "DO J P. IlakVAX a a a
better, show no interest in problems II ijJJKu9 Ulllu. CZUDlti
like that of child labor. ViiiiifJ. w.m.
With college parties on
famous "O" steamers of
The Royal Mail Lire
Wiitmlat flluttrmtud BookM.
cbool of
Foreign Travel, Inc.
Cswags St, Htm Haras, Co. y
WE SECOND
THE MOTION!
The following sensible com
ment concerning professional
football, coming from one of
the greatest of Cornhusker grid
iron stars, should interest Daily
Nebraskan readers. For this
contribution, we are indebted to
"The Sportolog" edited by Fred
erick Ware, which appears in
The Omaha World-Herald:
After two seasons of participa
tion in professional football as a
member of one of the leading elev
ens, Dave Noble, well remembered
in these parts as the Cornhuskr who
made the 1923 Notre Dame wonder
team wonder, says the college game
never will be forced to regard the
salaried amusement as a competitor
"The two games are enticr.y dif
ferent," says Dave, "and are played
for almost entirely different pur
poses."
"The collegians go onto the field
to fight for the glory of their schools
and that intangible urge produces a
fury and ardor that all the money
in the world cannot equal.
"Then, too, the crowd at the col
lege game it is imbued with that
same spirit, A college game is the
personal business, not only of every
player and the coaches, but also of
almost every one of the thousands
who swarm the stands.
"On the other hand, professional
football can only bring before that
portion of the public which doesnt
see colleee contests, some of the
star players which that public wish'
es to look upon. It's largely an ex
ploitation of individuals as Red
Grange's case demonstrated.
Dave Noble says that professional
football has no desire to became the
competitor of the college game, or
to lessen in any way its tremendous
popularity.
Some think it was sentiment and
?woet consideration for the other
fellow and the much discussed but
seldom practiced principle of abso
lutely square dealing that Icaused
the bosses of the newly organized
American football league to pass a
rule forbidding the signing of high
school and college players before
their graduation.
It was nothing of the kind. It was
only good business.
The promoters of professional
football, realizing that the success
of their project is based upon their
ability to sign boys who become
widely famous as stars in colleges,
do not want to do anything that
will tend to dim the brilliancy of
those stars. The larger per cent of
the great college players attain their
greatest fame during their senior
year. A football player without a
reputation is worthless to a pro boss.
He has no way of building reputa
tions. If college and high school football,
college football especially, were abol
ished, professional football would im
mediately topple.
Ten Years Ago
New Rifle Shot Record.
A new world's record of 300 con
secutive bulls eyes was made recently
by L. Samuel Moore captain of the
Newton high school rifle team of
Newton, Massachusetts.
THE PRACTICAL AGE
Twenty or thirty years ago, when
students wore whiskers, the aim of
every student in college, was a "clas
sical education." Greek and Latin
were studies in which all students
were expected to be interested; prizes
for essays and proficiency in oratory
were numerous and of great import
ance; athletics was on a rather casual
basis and debating societies flourish
ed. The students, if we are correct
ly informed, read Tennyson and Rob
ert Ingersoll and took great interest
in Bryan's activitites. Some few re
lics of this age are left in the houses
of fraternities that existed at that
time. In the library are massive and
dusty volumes of the Idylls of the
King, of Ingersoll's lectures, of the
correspondence of Henry Ward
Beecher, of the Illiad and Odyssey.
That age is now past This is t
practical, go-getter era and the stu
dents are likewise practical. They
are now taking courses to train them
selves for particular professions, with
little regard for the classics. Spanish
(because we may develop more trade
with South America) has supplanted
Latin and Greek. Prizes for es
says and oratory are almost unknown
today the prizes are to be found in
the pursuits of college Tionors."
The newspapers have largely taken
the places of the thinkers of the past
for reading, and interest In politics
and social problems has turned to an
interest in commerce. Elinor Glyn
and E. Phillips Oppenheim have as
sumed the places of Tennyson and
Curiyle.
Such a revolution is h? no means
to be condemned. The students of
the past, no doubt, indulged too much
in theory and too little in practice.
Thoreau left Harvard without receiv
ing his degree because of his dislike
fur the Impractical methods there,
j:!vl V.o rrcommended that all . stu
,1. riU L given a more rounded ex
l r: r.e l.y doing manual labor along
'i V i-lr t ! j Vf. ,
; - rt u; '-riy, however,
- , ' ( ' . f..r in it?
'Qhe largest selling
aualitv venal
17
black
degrees!
3
topyingl
Buy
a
dozen
Superlative in quality,
the world-famous
VENUS
VPENOLS
give best service and
longest wear.
Plain en J., per dot. S1.00
Rubber anus, per doc. 1.20
vtt all italm
American Lead Pencil Co. .
220 fifth Ave., NY.
JLJiJLJUUt tHIUIH f it . Xt.t Jt.t tttttltm ,,,JLA--t-V
,frA
JAUEn style is combined
y r with quality' and long
life, as it is in a Stetson, there
can be no question as to the
hat you should wear.
STETSON HATS
Styled for young men
iiiruiiin r wt '" - 1 1 tth
For 51 by
Frf;u!iar', Leon's Inc., Mayer Eros Co., V,m Elmon & Sons.
?;".": Cueniel Co., f pelers.
The active chapter of the inter
fratemitv belonging to the inter-
fraternity council voted to refuse the
initiation or pledge any members of
high school fraternities after 1919
They were illegal in Nebraska, but
the law was unable to be enforced.
College men investigated and found
that as a rule the freshmen who
came from high school frats made
weak men.
The unqualified success of the Ak-
Sar-Ben given under the joint aus
pices of the Y. M. C A. and the Y.
W. C A. made it desirable that the
affairs be oade an annual success.
Almost 500 students joined in making
the evening a success. Credit was
due to the many individuals who con
tributed to the evenings entertainment.
In order to collect in permanent
form a record of the traditions of the
Nebraska University, Professor A.
E. Sheldon and H. W. Caldwell offer
ed to give a special course in Ne-
The University of Nebraska
Official Daily Bulletin
I Ull
r
VOL I.
TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1926.
NO. 19.
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Fraternity Pictare
Fraternities wanting group pic
tures taken at the Campus Studio
will have to make appointments with
in the next ten days to get the price
of four dollars. After April 1, the
price will be six dollars.
Taaaele.
There will be no Tassel meeting
this week as the meeting is post
poned until next Tuesday.
Aa Aa
Balloting for the officers will be
Tuesday, March 23, 1926, at Social
Science 101.
Green Goblins.
Green Goblins will meet at the
Alpha Sigma Phi House 600 North
16 Street, Tuesday at 7 o'clock. Im
portant Business.
Junior Prom.
The Junior Prom Committee will
meet Tuesday at 7 o'clock in S. S.
102.
MISCELLANEOUS NOTICES
Political Science Department
Mid-semester examinations in Poli
tical Science 2 and Comparative Eu
ropean Government will be givt..
Wednesday, March 24.
First Semester gTades have been
mailed out to the individual stu
dents. All organizations are asked
to secure the grades from their
members for any future reporting to
their National Officers.
braska traditions and accepted either
as an under-graduate theme or a
graduate thesis; history of the tradi
tions of the Cornhusker school.
A dignified business
Any retail business that has grown to a volume
of more than $100,000,000 a year must be
founded upon sound business principles.
Kresge's is a dignified business. It meets the
everyday human needs of folks everywhere.
The S. S. Kresge Company has developed the
art of retail store-keeping to the point where
it may well be termed a science. Merchandise
of standard grade is sold in Kresge stores but
in such quantities that prices are consistently
lower than in stores that lack the organization
and resources of a great national institution.
There are already more than three hundred
stores in the Kresge chain and new ones are
being added constandy. For these new stores
we shall need managers competent men,
thoroughly experienced and Kresge-trained.
A limited number of young men college men
of good character and promise will be given
the opportunity to train for these positions.
Write at once and arrangements will be made
for you to meet a rr an from your own college
who is now a Kresge representative. He will
give you complete information.
Personnel Dept
S S KRESGE CO
J tO 13' STORES
XS1 5TOIVU
t
Kresge Building
Detroit CHicn
HARRY W. REPPERT
from newsboy to
Kresge Store Manager
When a bar, Mr. Rrppert attended
eckool in Reading. Pa., where he
aold the Saturday Evenins Poet to
earn apcnding money.
Later he attended Wharton School
of Accounting and Finance. Unreer
etrv of Penneylvania. Mr. Reopen
hai thla to aay of hit buaineat career:
"I became acquainted with a Kreeae
erore manager and heard the etorr
of the Krcage plan of intcmive
training on a practical acale. After
a weeka' deliberation, 1 etancd in
training.
T ku. I t-U
poetaon In a ateel mill (with my own
Inter heada, dealt, atenogtapher.
etc) and m reputed to be the fut
ure auperintendent of the depart
ment in which I waa working.
"My friendi and buiineej aaaodarea
couldn't are the future of the chain
etorc buaineaa. Thev actually
laughed at my change from a com
fortable poairioa to etockman in
eaeraUa. But today .thanka to my own
Judgment and the Kreeat Company,
I have reached the point where I
am managing a at ore of my own
(Dunkirk. .New York), have in
creased my earning power consider
ably and beat of all. I have a future
that at worth while ahead of me."
Lifetime
Write it don't sin&
,The chanpes are that you'll do a better job with
a "Lifetime" pen. And youll have the satisfac
tion of knowing, when you write to her, that
you are working with the "niftiest" instrument
procurable. Of fcreen, jade-fcreen radite, a hand
some and indestructible material, is the pen
Jrou'll love to hbldr Its "nib is guaranteed for a
ifetime. But what is more important, it is an in
fallible performer. At better stores everywhere.
Price, $8.75 Student' ipedaJ, $7.50 Other lower .
"Lifetime" Titan ovtrtize pencil to match, $4.25 .
Shiafftr SknjruiCMtor to Ink mataa ofl pang writs better
QHRAFFRD'C
r-urj - r-t,riwiL.a 3 l Kl r ass
V. A. SHEAFFEU PEN OOMPANY
rUVT sVAMSUN, I
FOR SALE BY
Latsch r.ros., Tucker & Shcan, Ccllcg-e Took Store, C. E&'-on Miller Co., Uni Dru Co.
WMF
H
rra
"A Strange
Co-Incidence!"
ED WEIR
apealtinf git the Grid
Banquet giyei by the Ath
letic Board the other night,
said ha waa gure that the
HusVera who will wear Ne
braska colors will keep up
the fighting spirit the Ne
braska spirit that has al-
ways been feared by rival
teams.
EEI2E13EIEJ3I
almost identical i the
though:, tho different'" ap
plied, of
l ($afem-2i
"SNAP" BRIM
Snap, as you may have
heard, is busy organizing the
Kelly society, lmapine his
surprise in reading what Ed
says, for the following ap
pears in the speech he had
prepared for the or-oning
meeting of the male bonne
tiers !
"The Huskers who will wear
Mayer Bros.' hats will keep
up the fighting spirit the
spirit that your rival? al
ways fear." So call on "her"
in a Mayer Bros.' "Barbisio
(the newest snap brim felt
imported directly from
Italy). You'll be doing this:
while the opposition
is doing- this:
D
R
E
A
M
I
-N
G
N. B. No matter what kind
of a spring hat
want, choose it from Mayer
Bros. Co', infinitely varied
stock. You owe it U both
i..ikA anH your
your poiciwv
face!
Important!
Thore'll be a ,fu' TT
nr. in Wedoeaday" Cba'-
t.r" column. ..Watch for it!