THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Under direction of the Student Publication Board TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR Published Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday. Friday, and Sunday mornings during the academic year. Editorial Office University Hall . Business Office University Hall 4A. Office Hours Editorial Staff. 8:00 to 8:00 except Friday and Sunday. Business Staff: afternoons except Friday and Sunday. . Tilephoiie-77 -Eiiitorial: B-CHM1, No. 141!; Ni(tht B-6882. Business: B-6891, No. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in Lincoln. Nebraska, under act of Connress, March S, 1879, and at speclnl rate of postaire provided for in section 1103, act of October S, 1917. authorised January 20. 1922. 12 a year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy 6 cents $1.25 a semester Oscar Norllng Munro Ker.er .... Gerald Griffin .. Dorothy Nott Pauline Bilon Dean Hammond W. Joyce Ayres 1 Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor ..Asst. Managing Editor ..Asst. Managing Editor NEWS EDITORS in ideas, bizarre and otherwise, are expressed in the most astonishing ways, all in the noble but some times desperate effort to be original and interesting. Real originality is a pure joy, but we would like to make a plea for the "hackneyed" but sometimes very useful word or phrase. Often times a word that has proved itself by its very popularity to be useful and appropriate, must be regretfully rejected when it comes to mind, because its bloom has been rubbed off it is literally worn out, and a synonym, or near syno nym has to be substituted. One must not new use the word "interesting" in writing a news story, reporters are told. Everybody uses it? loosely, and it has become colorless. And of course the word "marvellous" now describes anything from a new dress to Mary Pickford in her latest picture. A word artist turns away from the word with a shudder when he meets it The latest play is "intriguing." The street car service is invariably "terrible" and freshmen are inevitably "verdant." It seems to be the fate of any good descriptive Notices Tuesday, March 13 Pershing Rides There will be regular drill at 5 o'clock. Newly elected members are to be present. Rough initiation will be held in judging pavillion at College of Agriculture at 7:80 o'clock. The fee of $6.00 will be paid at this time. Bring ten paddles. Wednesday, March 14 Green Goblins Green Goblins will meet Wednesday at 7 o'clock at the Beta Theta Pi house. Farmers' Fair All chairmen and members of executive committees for Farmers' Fair will hold a meeting in the Home Economics building, Room 2 IS, at 6 o'clock Wednesday evening. ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Maurice W. Konkel Paul Nelson pm.aS6 to run the risk of being banned altogether by Richard F. Vette . Milton McGrew William H. Kearns J. Marshall Fitter -Lyman Cass Business Manager ..Asst. Business Manager .. ..circulation Manager ulation Manager MORE DISAPPR si Sororities and fraternities along Sixteenth and R streets voiced their approval last evening of the resolu tion passed by the Student Council regarding the park ing situation. The general opinion stated by the or ganizations was that the present regulations are defeat ing the efforts made by the University in keeping as much traffic as possible from the streets adjoining the campus. Such an action would indicate that the movement to restore diagonal parking and to discourage city traffic on Sixteenth and R streets is not the propa ganda of a few radical car owners. For the state ments made last evening represent the opinions of ap proximately six hundred students. A suggestion that meets the almost unanimous approval of such a number of persons must certainly contain a solution that at least merits the attention of city authorities. That the City Council will be urged to consider this matter is now inevitable. The action taken last night proved that there is sufficient interest in the problem to take such steps. The more studetit and faculty disapproval voiced the best writers -in time not so much because of over use as because they have become loosely used. There is a certain delicacy felt about describing a sunset with the same word that is in common use to express appre ciation of the cut of an actor's nose or the lines of the new Ford. If words were always used correctly, probably no word would ever become what we call hackneyed. We would not like to advocate a nations of precisians of speech. The inference is analagous to that of a "prig". Rather what is wanted is an understanding of the mean ing of words, a feeling regarding the right use of a word that comes from an adequate acquaintance with the English language and its better writers. At the present time some of the best words in the English language are being destroyed by the careless and the ignorant, and writers find that they must con tinually be changing their only tools, the words of the English language in order to preserve the freshness of their edge. McGill Daily. We were just wondering if it wouldn't be profit able for the government to put more gum on the pos tage stamps and less in the machinery. The Midland. THE SCHOLAR The Ohio State Lantern has heard criticisms of students who spend their time doing other things than against the present regulations, the greater will be the studying, and concludes, after some discussion of the chance for a revision of the rules. Those who are in- situation that: terested in this controversy are urged to voice their opinions now. Apparently some papers have yet to learn to dis criminate between the uncommon and the common place. Here is a headline from a New York news paper, "Screen Star Sues Husband." Michigan Daily. EDUCATION PAYS Government statistics bring out the fact that the uneducated man has only one chance in eight hundred to attain distinction. Not all men and women, of course, need to go through college in order to become educated. Through out history great leaders have risen from the ranks of the uneducated. Some few persons are born with a capacity for great intellectual powers. They de velop their minds themselves. But many others lose this ability through failure to use and develop it. The ordinary person needs a college education to train and develop his mind. But merely going through cojlege, taking -the prescribed courses and getting grades will not prepare the mind for the real test of intelligence. The peTson, as he studies, should have the conscious thought ever before him that is if he is to succeed, he must be better than his competitor. With the great spread of education today, the uneducated person is left behind and the educated man comes to the front. Education today is cheap. It may cost a con- "When we hear the monotonous plea for more scholars and the singing of praises for students who manage somehow to get high grades, we are inclined to demand that the standards of intelligence be changed and other criteria than mere grades be used in decid ing who is intelligent. "Perhaps the ideal type is the one who can get his Latin, apply the Platonic theories, and still attend the Junior Prom." Ohio State Lantern. The man who lives from hand to mouth has a son who lives from gas station to gas station. Wis consin Cardinal. DR. LITTLE'S CONCLUSIONS Take half a dozen sane but disturbing ideas, di lute them well in printer's ink and sprinkle them out on the avid general public and the result is a mixture whose explosive properties have not as yet been probed by even the most erudite of our scientists. It was this combination, apparently, which in a varying degree of saturation broadcast President Little's speech at the Princeton religious conference into the far corners of the land as a radical attack on the church, the clergy, and the general public. To be frank is generally to be unpopular, and it is the frankness of the opinions which President Little expressed which doubtless accounts for their unpoular ity. His depricatory expressions toward present day attitudes toward marriage, birth control, toward law siderable sum of money at the time, but the person, if and politics, toward international responsibilities, and he studies, will be more than repaid for the time and toward materialism, are inevitably distasteful to those money spent. When buying something in a store, the individual endeavors to secure all and the best he can for his money. He should do the same when buying an education. The instructors and the text books offer the chance. It is up to the student to make the best of the opportunity. "Do you folks live in Chicago?" "Don't know. I haven't seen the paper today." Intercollegiate Press. who hold these views. Still they are not necessarily radical or revolutionary, but are plain statements of his conclusions. His bold statements, if sensational in a sense, are no more than those at which the person of average intelligence would inevitably arrive were he given the facts and scientific data upon which to base them. Michigan Daily. Well, prohibition is better than no liquor at all. Wisconsin Cardinal. Th Cynic Says: I am planning on including a synopsis of the day's news for those who read only the editorial page. In Other Columns HACKNEYED WORDS One of the major crimes of today is to be hack neyed to express oneself or to behave in ways that are called worn-out or old fashioned. It is a consequence that the columns of our newspapers and magazines are frequently filled with the most elaborate blurbs, where- COLLEGIATE HONESTY Aware of the fact that Yale has considered the abolishment of the Honor system, the Brown Daily Herald comments: The great majority of students are not dishonest and the presence or absence of watchful professors will not affect in the least their behavior during ex aminations. There is a small group who will always cheat and the Honor System, plus the indifference of personally honest students only guarantee absolute suc cess to their activities. There will never be a change so long as student opinion permits a man to be at once a good fellow and a cheat in examinations. Brown Daily Herald. Hicks Gives Speech On Nebraskans (Continued from Page 1) Adams, in Jefferson county of that state, and the date, April 22, 1832. His family was of English 6tock on one side, and Scotch-Irish on the other. His father Julius D. Morton, soon after the birth of Sterling, fol lowed the tide of westward immigra tion and embarked upon a business career at Monroe, Michigan, later moving to Detroit He first moved to Bellvue when he came to Nebraska, but after a shoit time he decided to locate at Nebraska City, where he made his home there after. Morton early interested himself in territorial politics, which was at first mainly concerned with the rivalry between the North Platte and the South Flatte regions for the . state eap'tcL Representing the country south sf ths Plattt, hi, W the lead ia & sight against acting Governor Thumas B. Cuming, a partisan, of Oii.'ta ad the North Platte. As a member of the territorial I: jjniature, Morton even advocated t 'it congress oepaxate the South v:.fte region from Nebraska and add to Kansas. Ultimately the hold i Cmuh had on the capitol was , Int w!:ca the removal was 1 i" !fi7 it. ma to Untoln, a - " cut ;a pv'ul&, and not .:: " 1 c::y- -'''.,!' s !oi;-,ted by Pres ident Buchanan to be secretary of the territory, an office which he held until 1861. For six months of that time, owing to the resignation of the governor, Morton served as acting governor. Morton was a democrat when he came to Nebraska and he remained a democrat to the time of his death. As such, he ran for territorial dele gate in 18C0, and on the face of the returns defeated Daily, his republi can opponent, but Daily contested Morton's right to the seat, and the House, being republican, seated Daily. During the Civil War Morton did not change his political alleg iance, in spite of the general unpop ularity of the democratic party in Nebraska, and in 1866 he was again an unsuccessful democratic candi date for territorial delegate. This same year a statehood move ment was launched, an impromptu constitution was adopted by the leg islature, and state elections were or dered, pending action by congress on admission. Morton protested the whole procedure as a "scheme of office-aspiring politicians" but he was nevertheless nominated as demo cratic candidate for governor, con ducted a hot campaign for th of fice, and lost by a few hundred votes to his far less able opponent. His highest political honor came in 1S53, whri fce yHt made Secrfi-i.u:-y of A.tfriouHui'1 by President Cleveland, an honor wholly unanti cipated, inasmuch as Morton had pre- viously expressed a strong dislike for Cleveland. He was not out of place in the Cleveland cabinet, however, for he was an earnest low tariff advo cate and, in spite of an early ten dency towards greenbackism, he was now a thorough-going hard money man. As Secretary of Agriculture he distinguishod himself for the econ omical administration of his depart ment, and especially for the aboli tion temporarily of seed-distribution by congressmen. Morton's political and agricultural activities made him a well known figure in Nebraska. His aggressive personality, so well reflected in his sturdy physique, his keen blue-gray eyes, and his prominent features, won admiration even from his ene mies. His emergence into national prominence gratified the pride of his fellow-citizens, who, before the ad vent of William Jennings Bryan, were not accustomed to such honors. Tli r. .... i r. - . . . Kiwab uuuiiLim success 01 his four sons, Joy, Paul, Mark, and Carl, also attracted attention to him. Up to the time of his death, April 27, 1 902, he was generally regarded, by friend and foe alike as Nebraska's first citizen. Years later Morton's heirs gave his Nebraska City home, Arbor Lodge, together with the sur rounding groves, to the state as a memorial and park. IVom th very year of John Cro-jmse's arrival in Nebraska, he wa active In politics. He was chosen to the legislature as a republican in 1864, and two years later served as one of a self-appointed committee to draw up a constitution, under which the territory might be admit ted as a state. On the adoption of the constitu tion and the admission of Nebraska in 1867, Crounse was chosen asso ciate justice of the state supreme court, an office he held for six years. His opinions were well-written and well-reasoned, and owing to the fact that many precedents had to be set for the guidance of the new state, they were ot great local importance. Later Crounse became governor of the new state of Nebraska, and its representative in the House. He was also at one time a candidate for the United States senate but was defeat ed by the railroad interests which he bitterly opposed. "John A. Creighton was born in Licking County, Ohio, October 15, 1831, the youngest of a family of nine. He derived his formal educa tion from attendance upon the local district school, and from two years work at St. Joseph's, a Dominican college at Somerset, Ihio. "He had hoped to fit himself for the profession of engineer, but in 1854, after only two years of col lege, he entered the employ of his elder brother, Edward, whi built telegraph ilnes and took grading con tracts. "In 1856 his brother Edward met with some reverses in business in Missouri and Iowa, after which the two brothers and several other of their relatives settled in Omaha. Here John secured employment in a store. "When on the fourth of July, 1861, the actual construction of the eastern half of the projected tele graph line to the Pacific was begun, Edward was the contractor and John A. was in charge of the work. There after the interests of the two men centered in the far west for many years. "After falling heir to seven hun dred thousand dollars, Mr. Creighton invested in numerous enterprises both in Omaha and in tne west and has given liberally to church insti tutions, especially to the Catholic faith. "In politics he was an ardent dem ocrat. He was distinctively a west erner, always fully alive to the in terests of the west, and always sym pathetic with its point of view., Give you&elf a rrear Q(D2 on mni eitd d 50 fakes IV E yourself a price 1cm fund of new thought. Cive yourself a trip abroad . . . and the pep to do a double Job when you get back. $184.50 for two supetb ocean trips tnkes you over, brings you back. Speaking of bargains . . . just compare this price with the cost of an averaee"hotel" vacation. In addition to specially reserved quarters for TOURIST Third Cabin passengers on such famous liners as Majestic, world's largest ship, Olympic, Homeric, BeU genland, and others J l-t us send you KUruturs dt. scriMnf our unusual valua in canonical tratwt. WHITE .flAS IB ME RXB STAR LIKi tVI.A.fclLJ list UMK lOAaiMaU UNt Address No. I Broadway, New York City. r soy authorized steamship agent. Covering Games Is Harassing for Co-Eds (Continued from Page 1) ly renew her acquaintance and re peat her tale of maiden helpless ness, i Information is with difficulty wormed from the shy and reticent country lad, probably suffering un der his first feminine assault, but toward the end of the second quarter he is put in the game to replace the star, who has rolled up enough points to put his team safely in the lead for a time at least. The new boy is very obliging and sees that every thing is carefully explained. Friend; Deserts Reporter After tho half, during which the co-ed has munched a couple of sacks of salty pop-corn to soothe her fraz zled nerves, the red-head is again out of the game and he has settled in a place as far away as possible from his friend the reporter but after frantic and ver yobvious gestures she at last lures him back to the care fully reserved space beside her. He has warmed several degrees and volunteers the information that Reiniccius spells his name with two c's instead of with an "sh" and that the forward's name is really Brock enecky and that they call him the Prince of Wales for short. The last of the game drags along very slowly with no spectacular play ing and the co-ed heaves a thankful sigh when she knows she can escape from the ringside seat where sweaty players bump against you and make you drop your pencil, and where the ball occasionally comes smacking against your face. "Thank goodness I didn't have to cover 'a game on one of the big floors. But how much fun it would b to describe those nice little innocent-faced boys with their cute little knobby legs, their tense expressions; those proud fathers and mothers and other relatives who stood up and shouted encouragement to the illus trious son, or cousin who was playing such a perfect game; and last but not least those tittering sweethearts who chewed gum violently." Huskers Point To Relay Meet (Continued from Page 1) for these feats and Coach Schulte is concerned with Cornhusker perform ances. Trumble, Husker sophomore, stepped the 50-yard high hurdles in the winning time of 6.5 seconds for Nebraska's best performance in the meet. The Cambridge runner also scored second honors in the low hur dles, Carmen of Oklahoma setting a new record of 5.9 seconds to beat him out. Much can be expected of Trumble in the Illinois Relays as shown by these performances. Thompson also placed for the Hus kers in the low barriers running fourth in the event. The Nebraska mile relay team took fourth in the event which was won by Oklahoma. It seemed to be an off night for the Husker quartet and Coach Schulte hopes to polish them off for Saturday's event Fleming Scores for Huskers Fleming placed the IITiskers in the scoring column when he placed fourth in the broad jump event Easter placed fourth in the finals of the fifty yard dash when Lud Grady Kansas flash, broke the tape in the record time of 5.2 seconds. Parks of Drake ran second in thd event and with Easter pushed the winner hard all th eway down the boards. The other Husker runners did not fare so well. Captain Wvatt n,,n fied for the finals of the 440-yard dash but did not place. Coach Schulte has ordered the men to work out only three times this week so that they will be full of strength for the Illinois games. 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