TWO TOE j DAILY NEBRASKAN TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 1932. The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Ntbratka OFFICIAL. 8TUDKNT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NE1RA8KA Publlihed Tuesday, W-dntid.y, Thursday, Friday and ounaay morningi nu "i r' THIRTY. FIRST YEAR Entared aa second-claaa matter at the poatofflea Ir t... i iu.ki.aaLa iinrii, a-t fiflnorfit. March 1. 1870 and at apaclal rata of poataoa provided for In action 1103. act of October 3, 1417, authorlicd January SO, 1(22. Unoer airecvon or in- oiuu,,i r.miv,iii v,w SUBSCRIPTION RATE aA - - Clnala paau Mlltl tl.M a aamaalar J ynar " ' " M ' - r S3 a year mailed aamaatar mailed Editorial Office University Mall . Business Off ice University Hall 4A. Telephones Day I B-68(1 Nlghti BMW, B-S33S (Journal) Ask for Nebraskan editor. jMCMBERp 1 nnPM A . .. ' if JZ Thle paper I represented far (eneraJ livertiiioi by the Nebraska Freae Assoeiatioa. EDITORIAL STAFF Arthur Wolf Edltor.ln-chlat MANAGING EDITORS Howard Allaway Jack Erlckson NEWS EDITORS Phillip Brownell ..Oliver Da Wolf Laurence Hall Virginia Pollard Joa Miller (ports Editor Evelyn Simpson Associate Editor Ruth Schllt Women's Editor Katharine Howard Society Editor CONTRIBUTING EDITORS. Gerald Bardo George Dunn La Von Linn Edwin Faulkner Boyd Krewson William Holmes George Round Art Kozelka BUSINESS STAFF Jack Thompson riuslness Manager ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Norman Galleher Frank Muegrave, Bernard Jennings This War on Depression. Legislative reductions ami decreased revenco from students have necessitated a budget cut of $300,000.1)0 for the present bienniuiu. This reduction of the budget will necessitate low ered salaries, smaller departments, and reduc tions in position The C8l.se for the whole af fair iM he-general nation wide depression. N' brJfsEa has beeii especially hard hit by depres sion and drouth and the losses incurred must be made up from somewhere. The budget of the state university is always a good thing to slash when reductions are needed. The cost of such slashes is seldom counted. At the present time the University of .Nebraska is in such need as almost any other institution in the state. Its needs are large. Equipment is scarce, buildings are not large enough, there are too few buildings, sal aries arc too low, and the general financial plan of the institution has always had to be one of penny pinching. Cuts in salaries will be necessitated. Thee cuts will bo made in salaries already too low. The building program will continue to be held up. Poor equipment will have to suffice and it will continue to degenerate. There is even a "danger that we will lose some of the men whose salaries are to be cut. These things will cost much. Material needs Kible that the material always wins. The re trenchment program is absolutely necessary .!. m 4 Vi cint.rlr.r.ii.4 r P nil V-.j-.-Mai miivi V. A 'iviii tilt; oiaiiu Jrm v vj. nil, 1 van J v- doubt of that. But people of the state Rhould i,lra anaa.a. .ff,.f 4 i va,, 4 Iw. i a a imivaisiiil' uacijx' tiw j liivil, n pub luvia Sicily uuniioiit' back on its feet as soon as it is humanly pos sible and it should be among the first of the institutions aided. Depressions and panics to 4lie contrary not withstanding, students should not drop out of school if it is within the range of human capa bilities to remain. Students who drop out now are doing a harm not only to themselves but to their institution. They, most of them, will be unable to find work and should be willing to sacrifice a little in order to improve their time. Not only that, those who drop out are depriv ing the university of a source of revenue, one they do not deserve, some think, but never theless a source of revenue, much Deeded. That the University of Nebraska will suffer from this budget slash will not be denied. That it is necessary, is as obvious. Extraordinary times require extraordinary measures to right them. Every effort should be made to put the University of Nebraska back on its feet again at the earliest opportunity. We Have Debate, Delta Sigma Rho has succeeded hi placing debating on the intramural program. Seven teen fraternities have signified their intention of entering 4hc competition and Rudolf Vog- tier, luiramurai uirector, is pairing tnese groups for meets in the very near future. Of sample questions submitted by Delta Sigma Rho last week the one on the abolition of com pulsory military training aroused the most in terest and it will be upon this problem that the fraternities will debate. This may be looked upon as a forward step. The interest in all forensic activities has long been on the wane. Debate contests no longer draw the crowd of interested listeners they once did. The collegiate debater was soon to become a thing of the past. The interest shown by the fraternities in this new project is en couraging. Jt maj- be interpreted as an indi cation that students are becoming more serious minded. At any rate the new program of intramural debate should interest as many students as do the various intramural athletic contests. The attendance at these affairs is very slim for the most part and the whole purpose of the pro gram : that of giving exercise to all, is not fol lowed out to any jrreat extent. The real goal of intramurals has come to be to win. 'The intramural debating will provide another con test for some group to win and at the same time it will interest and entertain an altogether different group than the ones who participate in the athletic program. Delta Sigu;a liho must not cease its activities now. It is necessary for that group to aid Mr. Vogeler in getting the project under way. The pairings have been made and the times have been set for the meetings. Unbiased judges will have to be selected for nothing can do more harm to the program advanced than poor decisions. Mr. Vogcler has worked out en effective plan for the furthering of these debates and has stated that he believed it would develop into a good activity and that h thought it mighty good training. Everything possible has beeivdone to further the plan. The intramural authorities have adopted into their program, a plan has been; worked out, and the stage is set. Now all tha.t is required is the work of the fraternities. They have signified that they want it. Now it is up to them to work arid keep it going. The question before the group is one a.f na tional as well as local interest and significance. The problem has been thrashed out in the columns of almost every college newspaper in the United States within the last two years. The Daily Nebraskan last year took a definite stand against compulsory military training and the arguments both ft and con were; printed in its columns. This is a fertile field and the question should prove interesting to debaters and listeners alike. Professor G. D. Swezey. With the promotion of Prof. Jj. D. Swezey to the status of emeritus and the combination of his loved astronomy department with the de partment of mathematics, Nebraskr 1 st - one. of its noblest men. Professor S .. who came to the university thirty-cigb' . . . ago in 1894, has devoted the, best part of his life to service on the faculty. Next fall his resig- WHAT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED IN CHOOSING A PROFESSION? x BY MARIE MAOUMBER Second Prize Essay in the Chancellor Contest Anv consideration of a career or a profession is of necessity condi tioned by the attitude of the indi vidual. Does he, for instance, want to practice medicine or want to be a doctor? Does he wish to teach in h teacher? In other words, is doing or being the important thing? Tn Ami-rlm rh ouestion is set dom "What are you?" but rather "What do you do?" This stress upon doing was perhaps inevitable in our history. Only men and women of action, could conquer a continent, subduo a virile red race, and tame a wilderness whose drouth and pest-infected reaches are still not entirely friendly to white Inhabitants. People of ac tion excelled here. They and their families became Influential, im portant. They were the success ful ones. And then suddenly the man whose ancestors staked out land nation takes effect, and his department as an j . chmSST W PE ably a pioneer one, found nimseu with no geographic frontier to try his mettle and to offer him laur els. But the restless urge to push on was undiminished. For want of a better outlet he turned his tre mendous radal energies Into in dustry and business and accumu lated the more tangible evidences of achievement wealth, property. If he failed here he failed entirely, individual depart incut perishes. Cooped in a small building out of. the spot light, Professor "Swezey has worked quietly and unheralded. Hampered by inadequate equipment, his dream of expansion someday has been the more bitter by the realization of a fine telescope owned by the university and stowed away in a steam tunnel. Hw work has been careful and his eyes have grown weakened by search of the heaven's depth. And now his very department is sac rificed in an attempt to balance a heartless budget. College editors are supposed to be cynical and cruel, but the spectacle of Profes sor Swezey s exit from Nebraska annals leaves an empty spot. MORNING MAIL Full House. TO Till-: EDITOR :' 1 wonder why, where e'er you go, You see the queen of so and so. You walk across the campus greens. And meet a half a dozen queens. The sweetheart of the hoipolloi, The H. C. of the soldier boy. The honey of Ye Aggie Camp, The Mortar Boards own Pansy Vamp. Now just go ba-k with me. my dears (Jo back for several thousand years. We see the eyes, the cheeks, the lips Of her who launched ten thousand ships. In her day it was quite the thing For every thing to have a king Or queen, they had a different name, But, Uod and Goddess, it's the same. The (iod who watched o'er winter's hoard. The God of Kire, the God of Sword. Minerva Goddess, wondrous wise. And Venus with the heaven eyes. But I ju.-t can't quite comprehend Why modern Greeks should cond'-seriid To ancient stuff and every spring To have a queen of everything. With queens and queens on every hand We get the Baby of the Band. Now, if they'll pardon my advice, I don't think one queen will suffice. Why not present a Queen of Flute, A Saxophone and Trombone Beaut, A Queen the drummers call their own, An Empress of the Sousaphone. If queens we want, why queens there'll be. Let's have a Queen ofT. N. E. The .Moon should have a queenly throne, The Dear (ld Rag one all its own. If torn apart by female claws, I'll die a martyr to the cause. But none exist who do not sin. They know not what thej're doing LINN. College Editors Say These Idiots. During the year we have heard at least half of our instructors dubbed as being "off" by students. It would seem that a whispering campaign to undermine the faculty mentality is Under M ay. One begirts to think we are be ing instructed by a bunch of nincompoops, gibbering idiots, as it were. It is no new thing, this derision of intellec tual superiors. More than one genius has been regarded as crazy by his contemporaries. "Mad" Shelley they used to call that great Euglish poet at school, and mad his school mates believed him. Those men who first ex pounded the theory of a round earth likewise were regarded as cracked. WThenever any person rises above the plane of mediocrity, soars into the heights which the common man cannot per ceive or understand, then those he leaves be hind explain the difference by terming him loouey . What a dismal world this M ould be if all of us were patterned from the same moulds, if we all acted alike, thought alike, did alike. What a monotonous existence it would be if none thought thoughts which others could not comprehend, had no theories which others could not understand, had no beliefs which others could not accept. What retrogression (that which does not progress eventually must lose ground) if there were no generals to lead our armies, no composers -to write new songs, no writers to indite new ideas, conceive new plots. How different a world we would live in if there had been no ambitious warrors, shrewd diplo mats, persuasive orators. : How horrible to think of a world in which there lived no su periors no nuts, no idiots, if you please. Daily O 'Collegian. completely. Drift Into Jobs. There was, of course, no train ing school for the pioneer. He went out and was one or wasn't In either case he seldom embar rassed his friends and relatives further. Perhaps our impatience with careful planning and long preparation for a profession grew out of the immediacy of pioneer ing. Instead of taking up an oc cupation or a profession as a cul mination of early parental prep aration or the gradual develop ment of a particular bent as in other countries, most Americans get Jobs or go to college as they yo to movies drift in, with only a hazy notion of where they're go ing or what it's all about. We seldom, it seems to me, stop to consider the advantages and disadvantages of the various pro fessions, to weigh what each offers-economic security, perhaps even affluence; fame, power; or the opportunity for service and the joy of congenial work well done. We may take up fine arts because someone about the campus tells us that dancing and china painting are "pipes," or that engineering pays big, or that law offers spe cial social and political advant ages, on and off the campus. Later we find we do not like a lab instructor or we develop a crush for this or that" student or professor, or hear where we can get a "hot" history note book for tha copying. We clamour at the registrar's window, change courses, perhaps colleges. And when we are finally graduated we drift into this or that through pull, through accident, or through necessity, and if we accumulate a good living, a big house, a car that overawes the traffic cop, and memberships In certain clubs of -standing we are pleased, and pointed out. Young people and reporters for the popu lar magazines interview us and let I us tell them what was the secret of I our success. ' Picture Is Changed. Out just recently the pretty pic ture has been a little blurred. Thousands of college graduates, some even from the upper quartile and with connections lately influ ential, are Jobless, in a few cases very near actual hunger. Angered at first, then bitter and finally dull and confused, they can't un derstand what has happened to the world and to them. Theoretically at least they are fitted to do some job well. The world owes them an opportunity to do it. The world always delivered before. But did it? Until recently, when the American found his world dis integrating under his feet and op portunity unreasonably reticent, he piled his belongings "into a cov ered wagon and pushed westward, where homes were comparatively free, where litigation, disease and violence provided work for the ftoctor, the lawyer and the grave digger. The pioneer endured hardships but they were leavened by adven ture and apparently everyone made good in a big way. At least all we ever hear about did. At the worst the migration relieved the charity organizations and unem ployment in the older communities, built up new consuming areas! later producing ones. Hard times were followed by waves of popula tion Into the most convenient wild erness. Westerners Wander. Out here In the middle west we are selected and re-selected wan derers. At the slightest provoca tion we pick up and go, whether it be from a class, a school, a politi cal party, or a profession. This unique ability to cast off all ties and depart is an asset If we use It to desert what has so often failed us and search for greater perma nence. It is a liability if we be come professional wanderers. The man or woman choosm a career will c o well, it seems to me to consider this business of per manent value.; something outside of money, soci.J position, and power, all of which may be and sometimes has been swept away between suns. The young person choosing a profession may well do a little advice-seeking and self searching to discover his handi caps, his special abilities, his phy slcal, mental -and spiritual equip- "Your Drug Store" Our RiVfa EVnintafn a ..af r w j OaUlf IaUUUla wiicn- servile, Digger, oetter than ever. Remember your Drug Store. THE OWL PHARMACY WE DELIVER 148 No. 14 . P. . Pnont B1068 ment. But most Important, it seems to me, is to discover where in he finds most joy and self-ap- proDauon. men, u vicissnuaes come, as come they will In a society whose oconomic structures are alwavs re built upon tho old crumbling foun dations, and his profession become less remunerative, he will still have the Joy and the approbation These things arc at least of com parative permanence. And If he should find his great est sausracuon in tne manlnula tion of things, if his choice seems to be the ax or the monkey wrench ramer man ineories and abstrac tions, should he hesitate? Not for a moment if he have the shoulders and tho zest for the ax or the wrench. Not even If It were son nets or the palette should he hesi tate. Those who have no wealth and property to lose are strangely unaisiuroea Dy me swing of the economic pendulum. ' Although there is no frontier to speak of outside of the individual himself today, no retreat from the vagaries of nature and the unwis dom of man other than the regions of the intellect, let the young man not be appalled. Let him choose his profession with caution; weigh it carefully, make his decision ju diciously and with what allegiance he can muster. Let him insist upon the thing he wants to be. And when the spade, the scalpel, or the brief is laid away for the day, let him, if he likes, push out into the one fron tier that is left to him. the broad est, the most mysterious the land of things men are and have been. It is not entirely uncharted. A great drama here, a symphony there, a paintmtr. a noem snow capped peaks to guide him. And between them are deep canyons and foaming rivers and waterfalls, waiting for the eye and the ear. Let those who are choosing a profession consider carefully what they are to do but even more care-' fully what they are to be. Go to Hauck's studio for nhoto- graphs that satisfy. 1216 O. Adv. DR. GINSBURG LISTED ON OMAHA PROGRAM Dr. Michael Ginsburg, depart ment of the classics, has been in vited to take part in the cere monies sponsored by the Omaha German society commemorating: the anniversary of Goethe. All frosh at the University of Maryland are required to work on the school paper one day out of each week. IOWA JOURNALISTS MEET Sigma Delta Chi Members In State Convene for Founderi Day. AMES, la., April 4. Iowa State students who belong to Sigma Vti ta Chi, national journalistic so ciety, ' are co-operating with branches of the society In Des Moines and Drake university, State University of Iowa and Grinnell college in arranging the first an nual Iowa Founder's day banquet of the society, to be held in Des Moines April 10. Jav N. "Dine" Darling, car toonist of national repute, will be the chief speaker at the banquet More than 250 newspaper and marazlne men of hte state, to pettier with journalism students from four colleges, are expected to attend. The society was founded in 1909 at DePauw university, Greencastle, Ind. Its annual convention is to be held in Ames next fall. STUDENTS ASSIGNED TO REPORTING JOBS (Continued from Page 1.) tv News; Marjorle Peterson, Wis consin State Journal; Roseline Plzer, Stanton Register; Virginia Pollard, Albion Argus; George Round, Wahoo Wasp; Ruth Schlll, Custer County Chief; Evelyn Simpson, Omaha World-Herald; George Thomas, Leigh World; Ignatius Walsh, Howard County Herald; Edgar Wescott, Pawnee Republican; Meredith Williams, Curtis Enterprise; Arthur Wolf, Nebraska Dally News-Press; Les ter Vaughan, St. Paul Phonograph; Kenneth Keller. Lincoln Star; Wil liam McGaffin State Journal; Bereneice Hoffman, State Journal. NEBRASKA CITY MAY BOOK KOSMET SHOW (Continued from Page 1.) Kosmet Klub has been able to bring their play to that city through the efforts of Frederick Daly, Nebraska alumnus. Will Show At Brandeis. The Brandeis theater will be the house for the Omaha performance. Joy Sutphen is responsible for the appearance of "Jingle Belles" in the metropolis city. The setting- for "Jlnsie Belles" is a summer home on the banks of the Missouri river a few miles north of Nebraska City. The cast is snowbound in the cabin during Christmas vacation. Rehearsals for the cast and the choruses will be held this week as they were last week. The Coliseum was the scene of the practices last week and the Temple stage has been secured for the rehearsals RENT - A - CARS WITH HEATERS Always Open MOTOR OUT COMPANY 1120 "P" 6U Tryouts Scheduled For Dramatic Club Any aspirants to membership in the University of Nebraska Dramatic club may try out this evening at 7:30 in the Dramatic club rooms- on the third floor of the Temple build ing, Ralph Spencer, chairman of the tryout committee an nounced yesterday. Information regarding previous dramatic experience must be filed with Reginald Porter in the Corn husker office by 5 o'clock this afternoon. this week. Director Herbert Yenne and Assistant Director Ralph Ire land are well satisfied with the work that has been done on the musical comedy, they say, ine orcnestra has been rchears- inp under the direction of Jim Douglass and will make the road trip along with tte cast. The snow flake costumes and Uie costumes for the chorus are nearing comple tion, tne scenery under the suner- vision of Norman Hoff and Frank Musgrave is about ready to be set up. ONLY 26 MILES TO KIND'S CAFE CRETE Sandwiches 59 varieties J-KED H. E. KIND TUCKER -SHEAN Fraternity Jewelers "We are prepared to give prompt service on Frater nity rings and pins. They are made in our owii shops and can be supplied from stock or made from your special design. .( L's Submit Designs and Estimates TUCKER -SHEAN Jewelers STATIONERS 1123 "O" St. V v.. the ci W ear.) s r mtts. -.rrt.ii s i - , e6 onb a 1 . .Aool aud ff vOUt 6et 011 NO V