: 'IS J ISi 41 T Si 1 11 1 V ' r '1X70 THE DAILY NLBRAaKAN IK I DAY. NOVW.IKKR 7, 19.H). The Daily Nhbraskan Italian A, UMtln, Nebraake ericiAL rryoiNT sui.ication UNIV1ITV OP NSBHASKA Fuslle TtMiday, Wednesday, Thureday, Prlday nt ertday mernlhge during the acadamie year. THIHTISTH VtAB tar ae eatend-elsee matter at the Bartafliee in LlfteelM, NraM. under set ef eeneraaa. Jireh I, W.t. ad T9Ml' rM provided far ' " "M Ml 7T(MMf 8, t17. MlKiMd January to. IMS. Tinder lreele H Me Stydanl wkiiee'en laard SUSC.IPTION RAT 10 yaar trntla Ctaf I MMe S1.1S a eemeater UVrSVf "H Mwaatar mallad dltarlal pmse . University Hall 4. lyalaeee etfle Unlveralty Mali 4A. Asa far eSMeer eeiwr. tDITOAIAk STArP with T. Moiwy,; Manaeme H'lara eert Kaily.t... ,..Sdlter.lf-M ...ElmeM Walta Nawa Id Hare PiUfleee Heryehe i Arthur Mitenaij William M6affin.. .. Butane MtKim Re Wagner Buy oral....... VJ'litES! !!!?.' fSiiyh ipn Werner. J"; frenle Haftman Seeiety tditor susiniss TAr Cksrfea Cswler Aelr0 iuiinaaa Menigar ... AaalaUnt utln Manafera NWmnJllltrar - ThemOao So tfebra&kans ' Are Moral Weaklings. Min an women will not be allowed to oceupy the same, cars on the Kahaa? special, returning from Laurence Saturday evening. ' N matter hw marly alibis and justifications the administration fabrieatea in the next few daya, thia mve ia beinf made because the uni versity doesn't trust ita students. N. In Morning Mail, presents the opinion f moat ptudenta in rerd to this vice-eradicat-ing regulation. Hia views are quite sound and rational. Immorality does .not abound on spe cial traini and it jfl ft provokingly foolish step 16 prmnt n evil which does not exist. poe the administration realize what such unreasonable eoereive measures will cause 7 Open violation of wleg which are compara tively deiriMe. Thi lrinff blunder on the part of the .tutatii harks back to a subject on which The Nebraskan haa commented time and again. Inactivity on the part of students, and lack of eommen aenae on the part of admin istrative ffieiak , . In the first place, auch matters of student conduct should be handled by students them flves. TaeuHy pUeemn e superfluous baggage en PPcfal tr tnoy? we do "ot discount the vIue of aponiors. mec the stu dent Wy Ja not sufficiently dependable to )mtt the eecasion, however, the faculty must tak some action, Tutting iron ban between men and women tudnts en the Kansas special, though, a dumb move. f Lest the student body frown too' darkly on itd organisations, we call attention to the fact that the Innoeents society and student council n'ere interested in sponsoring the special train to Lawrence. Thft senior, honorary expressed its opinion that a group of'well. known and re spected itudent would.be able1 to keep order iv the train and discourage , effectively the thing'whjch are considered undesirable. This proposition was presented to the fac ulty inogujs. The Innocents' plan involved the paymnt Of Urtt for twelve, atudents to main fain order. "It would cheapen the Innocents and the dtudent-body i the university paid these aresl". ehirped the adminiatration. So . the attempt at student control was toised into the ravage incinerator. - Could, the student .body be made to appear any eheiper than it; doe s under this men. v. oftten deeree! "We believe that the admin istration JKa f coekeyed idea of cheapness. The football" team, the bnJ. the, coaches, the cheer Jeaderf, am eertein faculty representatives are sent o Lawrence at the university's ex pense. Tt it would have cheapened the Innocents loeiety if its farta were paid on this trip-'v Jwt another eximple of administrative near-itbtednesf. ' . 0 If it is not too late, we implore the majesties 1 Nebraska t reeonaider their compulsory diflcipline regulation. AHbie may be flaunted reasons adertiaed but the facts remain : Nebraaka'men and women, being morally deerepit, must be segregated on the good old Ktnsat apeeial. What an idea! of MORNING MAIL jorm sditok: Suffer. Jittle girla to, eome unto me and forbid them not because ueb i the Kansas Speelei aieema to be favorite scripture. "When I first came to this college I thought it was a oedueatonal institution but evidently I wa mistaken. When the administrative authorities take it upon themselves to segregate young men and young ladies (it is the consensus of opinion among the men on the campus that the coeds, for the most part, are ladies) on a football trip, then it is time that the said administra tion had Hi ryes opened. During the past fire years I have made seven such trips and in no case have I seen anything which might be questioned from n moral standpoint. To try and keep younir men and young women apart on a football trip of such short duration is unjust, unfair, ridiculous and asinine. - When, may J ask, is jt Improper for men a&if mR to meet on common ground such ai "will te found on the trip to Lawrence f Itees tke administration thin that Nebraska sea 4 women re unable to mingle with earn ether in the height of football enthusiasm with out degrading themselves and those around tkemf If the administration still clings to the petition that men and women ahpuld be sepa rated I Kiigkrcst that a -few hundred of the following cards be printed) Universitt cf Nebraska. Aboard the Kansas Special: I (John Jones) request permission to escort Mis3 Maxy .Smith to the platform at the next station and indulge in ooffee and doughnuts. Be it understood that at no time will X converse with Miss Smith on any other subject than one which might perUin to higher learning. Signed, JOHN JONES. (This card should be validated by the daan of student affairs.) yhould the request, be grunted it would bt advisable thnt three members of the admin istrative titaff and fivo members of the univer sity senate accompany the two happy peop mid hoc thnt rules and regulations are carried out to the letter. With the' sufrgcNt ions mentioned Above it h undoubtedly true that everyone "Bve big time on the Kansas special and. will swear never, never to go again. N. G. Athletic Hypocrisy. TO THE KIDTORi "Subsidizing and recruiting players'' How often have we hoard the phrase! Kamn is out of the Big Six. Iowa hna just craw, fished back into, the Big Ten. Stir and fiir, stew and scandal! Every year somebody must hold an investigation, while every conference school easts a suspicious eye over the roster of its neighbor s football men. It is not just thtc year, or last year, or the year before that ; every year it happens, in every conference. The truth of the matter is, there is some thing vitally aim radically wrong with our present system of athletif administration in the American colleges. "Subsidizing and recruit ing of athletes" goes on apace in every loop, keeps going on, getting bigger and plainer and more expensive until, finally, things get so bad (and good players so high-priced) tht somebody in the conference cannot keep up the pace and begins to grumble. The clouds get thicker, and blacker, and at last they break. Then newspapers carry juicy bits of athletic scandal about the Iowa. U 'a and the Kansas U's of the disgruntled conference j and the Mt?- La in "a and the Jim Bauseh a sooner or later have to drop out of collegiate fdotball; whil some perfectly good coach gets it in tho neck for something he could not help he is mado the goat because he is t;ie victim of a vicious system. After while, wsen certain uneasy fiualms of conscience are satisfied, and the-lwtm- ble examples are sufficiently chastened, they may, like Iowa, make their due apologies and get back into their conference; 'where they start to blackslide before the games are sched uled . Remember the Carnegie JReportV it was made fun of, and has been conveniently for gotten by now. If it had boen a report on anything else, or if it had read the other way, wc would still be hearing about it. There wi.a just one thing wrong with the Carnegie Report on the ''hiring" of athletes it was too un comfortably' near the truth when it said thnt practically every school was guilty. We are face to face with the problem; it is too big to be overlooked; too apparent to be ignored; too glaringly unfair to be forgot ten. And that problem is this: Shall we or shall we not recognise the principle as well as the fact of subsidizing athletes; shall we make it fair and aboveboard to paj' them, letting every sohool bid for the services of the players, and the devil take the hindmost! Or shall we come to ome sort of gentle man's agreement, since it has been all too plainly demonstrated that no amount of con ference rulings to the contrary will put a stop to the practice? Shall we, I repeat, come to a solemn gentleman's agreement to cease the hiring of, players! That the situation cannot go on much longer as it is is but too clearly apparent; as Bill Ropes, Princeton coach, has said, it means the quick death of intercollegiate football if we do. Football has become too much "big business" to tolerate underhanded methods any longer. It gets us nowhere to kick out the Kansas and Iowa U's from every loop; we must clean up all down the line, or else legalize the practice of paying players for their abilities. T am not advocating any wild-eyed nv forms, nor attempting to vindicate the blaek Bheep of any conference; Iowa deserved what she got, Kansas deserves what she is getting. There is but little doubt that the charges are true enough, but where do the other schools get their right to assume a "holicr-than thou" attitude and kick these schools out, when they are little, if any, worse than the others of the conference? It seems there is a rather elass ical remark about situation of this kind "Let he who is without sin east the first stone," Intercollegiate "profesaionalism" ia one place where even the most discerning cannot sepn. rate the sheep from the goats maybe because we re all goats. How can you pick the schools that hire athletes? They all do. Take the stsndinga of any conference, and you esn jyt about bet your bottom dime that nine times out of ten the order in which the schools hire athletes reads from top to bottom the less arty school pays Hs players, the less games it wins. c Xow all these are not the mere assump tions of an over-wrought ignoramus. While not an ath.'ete myself, I have been mistakenly thought to have talent in other lines, and was offered some rather savory inducements to at tend certain schools (Nebraska not included). And I have o very close personal friend who is captain of his college football team, and draws a good salary for doing exactly nothing, and has received some good offers from other schools. Another friend, who is an excellent basket-ball player, found a position waiting for him at a large mid-western university when he entered college. Such inptances are neither rare nor isolated. They are common- I could name over a dosen ethers of my knowledge. Every spring, when high sehooJs are closed, the tthletes re proselyted. We here at Nebraska have a right to feel proud of our school, for it is my honest belief that N. U. is as free from the taint of professionalism as tny school in the United States. But is sueh a hypoerisy for the s nools to drag out Kansas for the blaek sheep, when she is nothing but a teo-sealous advocate of this "system" that has grown tp. The better athletes are "hired to play, these days. It is true. We have aide stepped the issue and closed our eyes to iU-but haven't stopped it! In every conference they go on recruiting new players. With Kansns and Iowa, of course, for the horrible examples. And for Big Jim Hansen and Indian Mayes Me Lain, unkindly critics reserve the term ''pro fessional." 0. H. A. Dutch Dattt. TO THE EDITOR i . Dtiteli dates are the popular voirue at the University of Wisconsin. Ohio predicts, while, they don't advocate such a practice, that if sucli a system was established that it would have' the support of two-thirds of the student body, and thnt would' be the men. It is different, this idea of the girls paying their share of the evening's entertainment, and yet there is a; lot to it, ffo the couples who go "steady" it is a boon to the fellows. The two naturally desire to be together and the price of evenings' entertainments drain heavily upon" the boy's purse. few students in university have a large enough surplus to accommodate this drain, and since the situation is us such, it is no more than fair for a girl 1 he willing lo share the cost:-. When a single date' occurs between a boy and a girl it is m different matter. The date usually is made upon the iniliiilive of the lei low and he nat tii-;i M.v is responsible for the -evening's entertainment. Since this responsibility for entertainment, according m custom. IV.I upon the one who makes the date, girls tluu would have to have some part in establish ing a date indrdett to be expected to go "dutch treat." This is u gainst the social theory of the place of women. Of course womui have a !"l to do with the making of dates, but the opera tion is not obvious effort on their parts, they merely start the idea and wait for events. "Fiitch date;" could be made a working practice. Sever; I theories concerning the pbi-v of women would have to be changed, and girls would have to assume more initiative in mak ing dates. It would be a great help to those boys who desire feminine company, and yet A'husc financial' status can not accommodate the price of an evening's entertainment. .M. II SELLERS MIES STUDY OF POPULIST LEADER Interested in Career of Pioneer Senator, Yan Wyck. J. L. Sailers, associat profasaor ef history and hlatortaa of th State Historical society, returned Wednesday from a trip to Wy oming, Neb., where he has been doing some research work for the State Historical, society. The society ia wtereaUd in col lectin material on C H. Van Wyck, a Nebraaka pioneer, and one of the moat outstanding politi cal flgurea that Nebraska has ever produced. Van Wyck served four terms in the state senate in New York state before the Civil war, - and Was colonel of the Fiftyalxth volunteer regiment of New York during the war. In 1$71 he came to Nebraska, served three terma in the-, state acnate, and was then elected to the United States senate where he was a leader of the antimonopolla tic faction. He ran. for the United States senate a second time, but, due largely to the monopoly vote, was defeated. Huns for Governor. Ha then became a leader of the populist party, ran for state gov ernor on that platform, and was narrowly defeated. ' His estate Is administered by John W. gteinhart, and belonga to his grandson, Van Wyck Bonner, who lives in Ohio. Professor Sellers brought back with him a plaque, which had been presented to Colonel Van Wyck by the New York state volunteers. Fifty-sixth regiment, and which had boon made to bo worn on the martingale, or bridle straps of his horse. This plaque was presented to Professor Sailors by Mrs. James ePterson, who now lives on the Van Wyck estate. It is now in tho possession- of K. K. Black man, curator of tho muaeuaa of the Historical aociety. ROWLEY WILL HEAD HUSKER LETTERMEN Prucka Is Yice President; Maclay Secretary of 'NVCIul). Claude Rowley, Clyde, Kas., a halfback en the University of Ne braska, football ' squad, has been elected president of the ' N" club, organisation of lettermea. Other officer are Frank Prucka, Omaha football and. vice president; Dm Maclay, Auburn, basketball cen ter, secretary, and Hugh Rhoa, Arlington, varsity - tackle, ser geant at arms. It was decided at the nesting of the club that an executive com mittee should bo appointed In the near future la order to fermulat Blans for a more active partlclpa on In university activities. Initia tion of new members, mostly the track, swimming and base ball men will be held at the neat meeting. CLASSIFIED WANT ADS, iut;cr STUDIO. 1SU atretl A ITER ALL It's Towasend photograph that you want RENT A CAR ffJJ. SUai. aiiriaU Aiatln. Vewf ftveineee la Aeer4it4 MCTOI OUT C021TAXY Itm P St. Alwsys . .t-SStf. special announcements round table iliscuaslon. and 35C Shot 133 Ho. 14th CRESTED RINGS CRESTED BRACELETS CRESTED DORA1NES CRESTED LEATHER GOODS Literary Croup to Meet Sunday Mialit Special guests are to be en tertained by Sigma Upsilon, honorary literary fraternity, Sunday evening at the apart ment of Prof. Orln Stepanek, 1712 E atreet, third floor. The meeting will begin at 8 o'clock, and all members are requested to bo preaent. thoUKh cdui'dtion Im RuppoKcil to l ilng pence, four timca im iniu li i :')iiey Ih sjicnt on tlii; war tlopnrt i.iont na Is spent for schooling. The meeting wsi:i closed with ETT t........ HAL! I'niveirily Jeweler ,f!i. 17 1 H7 So. CHEMIST, GIVES TALK Speaks on Recent Advances In Chemistry of Nutrition. Dr. H. C. Sherman, Columbia university chemist and writer on aubjocta pertaining to public health, spoka last evening on "Some Recent Advances in the Chemistry of Nutrition" at an open meeting of tht local chap ter of the American Chemical so ciety la tho Chemistry 'building lecture room at the university. Thursday noon Dr. Sherman waa a guest of the department of chemistry staff at a luncheon at tho University club. He will have dinner Thursday evening with the graduate atudents of the depart ment a,t the Alpha Chi Sigma fra ternity house. Dr. Sherman, an internationally known acholar In nutrition chem istry, is stopping in Lincoln on his way back to New York from the national meetinar of the American Public Health association wnicn ' held Its annual convention in Fort Worth the first of the week. He haa doss considerable original re Sarch work and has written sev eral textbooks on the nutrition of chemistry. University Students You lire invited" lo iittciid Hie MTvii-es of Jhe Unitarcon !Siurch 1-3 '1 i .It Tnelfth and 11 Scn icc at I Arthur L Wvutlwrh: lh inr. Th is is a cliiirrli -which interprets re!i';i'!i in harmony Mitll I'niversit y ;;!. The Search for Truth It has no ereeil or tloni. It Hie welcomes fill t 1 l'iiiiilaniciit!il lie lkrlit modern problems of life ;clrl!v-e can lii row on I Sermon Su'iiei V Nov. "Keeping Faith" WAR DEPARTMENT IS DISCUSSED BY EFFICIENCY GROUP The "War Department" was the subject of the discussion at the ef ficiency and government group meeting of the League of Women Voters Thursday, in Ellen Smith kali. Mrs. f orris H. Merrill, who was introduced by Leone Ketterei, loader of the group, explained the various divisions of the war de partment of the United States and the duties of different officials in that department. Mrs. Merrill quoted figures to show the tremendous number of people who are in the war depart ment of the country, and the great amount ef money which is used yearly for war preparedness. Al- your picnic! will be a greater success with food from the delicatessen tasty pastry shop hotel cornhusker COME IN! Ws'rt Always Glad to See You I Mogul Barber Shop 1tr No. Twtlfth ,i FiiUl RetulU Rudtfe & Guenzel Co.'s "ON - TO . LAWRENCE" CONTEST . ... Averaaa Ne. Tnttrnitisf yta Per Member 1, Lam4a cm Aisha..H,S4 S. Htta Cl ,.,'. ; S.IK . Ails The ;"MSf- Cvt-oritiM Avrraq No. of Vottj Par Mtmbtr Slfme Kaaea ..10,701 kWlif 'elts OalU..... 8.I1S iNa fat s.ew 3m yv en & 5?ck) SatarcUy morning, gang Anti utl thm, Csritulatiew! i ih&$2zGmzel Co. DINNER DRESSES in sin ni l. ytmlhfiil stylvs! -'IT B $1 5 creaks, c MnuJlH th chiffons and Canton laces. long sltiits. which fir-hion il n.i toward evi.'ni:i - - arid b r i e t sleeves or cocktail jnckrla .so ti'it thrir flppropriutfiiCMM is not confined to formal occa sions. Now in r-nnlion pleated effects, "all-over" eyelets, bs;id c yokes, nnd velvet !enf up pliqurs are noleM of modi."lii)!'.sH. See the assortment-you will be sin prised that so much smartness can be i hown so low-priced! V,"' A v- '1 v- . V ,t', J 1 ' ' I 'r al 1 1 ' Hi f If!.' -' 5 t T n CHINCHILLA COATS ilctil ruiuiLiml models! $10 Mavy blue clvn;hil!a coats In j p-rts moce-vlih b'lts, notch ed collars, and novelty cuffs. You will like 1! m.i f.,r ninabout we ir Ivrnniio tin y are hmsrt locitintr, Ktivm i'lr : nd warm. Shoulder 1 1 n i i p :i ef rayon; tin. e qunrJ-TH l; a 11 to l"i. of flannel W omen s SWU Hcskrv) Irregulars and first quality hose niv 1V;, m-ed hi our Tlirii't Buseiiu'iit at 1.00 a jiuir. Somi service weight and chiffons. Smurt shndeR of the season. New shipments arriving eon stanlly give you a choiee of manv Releetiona. 1 'air I 'J u I I