SUNDAY. OCTOHKU 2. vm. THE DAILY NEBRASKA N TWO The Daily Nebraskan Utln A, Llnealn, NraWa OFFICIAL rrUDINT PUBLICATION UNIV"ITY OF NIIMIKA entered MCona-sim mmnmrm.y. w-.-....-. ... Uncln, N.bra.Ka, unr et f j-re vUnd.r lr.clon th. lu.ullMH to.rd. CdlUrKI Off lea-Unlvarilty Hi I Alk fer Nibriikin tdlUr. In EDITORIAL. iTAFF Hiward a. AlUwiy.. Fftllll Brtwntll ftlrhar Mirtn Miftiflnt KlUr Nwl Idlttr Lynn LMrf ...Kdltar-ln.chUf Ahmmm tdlfif Lurn Hall Irm rUnlt .WiffMA't fedliif .. .. Sdiur ...a(ty Mltar KtlhirlM Miwifd Ja Miller VlilM CfM BUSINESS ITAPr H. Narmas ilWMr BuilMdi Miftar Aatlrtaftt ul Mr mar Jiftnlntt Frank MiMfrav. Qar. Hilyik Three Million , New Voters. BETWEEN two and three million younf American 10 to 1 percent of tem college studanta frill vote for the first time thi fell. Two facte (out cf many) announced lot week by a group of eml ent engineer after a mirvey of American lndue trial equipment and power ehould fit them Mm thing to think about when ty aak thenuelvee stoat they are voting for; 1. Total eenaelty f u- ",lrtl msnt la one WIHri Kr Mw' work of ten Millar) men. TMe mean that If pertuntty were oqually dlrtrlfcuted, ovary man, woman and eMM In this country wou1 nave working for him In the equivalent of a tout ? kuman olavee. 1. So offlolent he Amerlea heoomo that if tnduttry returned today to Hs 1M proo)uoton peak, haK of the tt to 14 mlllton unemployed would aiiil fes out wt wrk. Let the new young voter consider tke flnt pad then oeek the caute for preawat condition in this country wnar porsrty at atalklng the doori of & million bona. Let them consider th aecond $nA then Judge the proportion of to usstapVoy , meat pr oblom today and for the future. Wny all thia porerty when ovary person's pro fncUv ability kaa been murttplied aeventy tinea ky machine? Simply becauee tke benefit of ma rWne bar been appropriated by a few, wkUo the grout majority In thi country where "all men are torn free and equal" are denied eves the pririVege Of working for a living. One solution ia heard: Junk the labor-aving machinery and go back to the time when men col lectively bad to work all the time to get enough to ee,t. There would then be work for all. But why throw away the benefit of mechani cal alavea which can do our work? There is an etber aolution: let th benefit of nwchtnes accrue to society as a whole, lightening the burden of labor rm all men, giving then leisure to live and know those) thinga which ak Wo aaor thai existence. THOMAS Paine, famed revolutionary phleteer who stirred lingtond'a American cokmiatst to throw off U oppression of foreign control in 177, drew a fitve distinction between society ad gov ernment. Society, ho said, exist by reason of the oo-operatlv tendencies ia the human race which estsbl anea to accompUeh more by working to- w WmnMtt ma tHe other band. 1 made necessary by inherent evil tendenciea which must be suppressed in the interest of the community. Today that distinction, no longer hotti. A grad ual expansion of the philosophy of the functions of government is merging society and government, government is becoming socialised. XJO movement m modern times has bsea more mis understood ad prejudies-rldden, yet surer in ft inevttaMeness as the only alternative to fall for a greed-ruled order, than sooiallam. The very term baa been propaganda! wd by it opponents to con jure up bloody images of long-bearded Russian gleefully clipping bead from paunck capitalists. Every advocate of thia doctrine i pooh-poohed aside ejrtth vague references to the Declaration of lade tsndence, the Constitution and the American flag. Socialism, according to Webster, i "a political Mm economic theory of social reorganisation, the essentia! feature of which 1 government control of economic act'ritlea, to the end that competition hball givt way to co-operation and the opportunities fif life and the rewards of labor shall be equitably apportioned." TO accompiiah Just thi ia the platform of the socialist party which again present a candidate for the presidency who will bear comparison with fiiose of the two regular jerHt. Jerwn Tx"os hold no illusions a to hi chance for victor' he baa not a chance and knows it. But, as be aees it, a vote for the socialist ticket is a vote in protest against the policies of the two established parties. And auch it will be. The present state of affair will, moreover, re ault in a larger vote for him than any socialist has ever polled. Thi protest vote will, in addition, be strengthened by the dearth of ability offered in the presidential candidate of the republican and demo cratic parties: a discredited public official and a demagogue who seek vote with promises bs can not fulfill (more government service and reduces government expenditure). Part of thi increased protest vote will be the case by these two to three million new voters, not yet atped ia traditional party !otlty. Tot low!y American young, thinking Amencaua-re awak ening to th fact that the principle1 sf lndtviduUlm ha proved Incapable of directing the complex or ganisation of modern life; that In collective action lie tH way out. Battball W'snli Bark In. OCCASIONALLY the observer who ea the x- w travagant pralde leapeq upon rooioau si, coaches, and the sport in general, or who see the large amounts of money not only paid out for thia port but Immediately expended by it, cannot neip but agree with one commentator who declared that football bear about the same cloae connection to education that bull-flghttng bear e agriculture. A a matter of fact, however, tnat l a very extreme statement but nevertheless one to which football lay itself open by reason of the large amount of money It uses, and the overemphasis placed upon drawing crowde. There i a definite Justification for in money o-huti football make, however, and that justifica tion Is th faet that the surplus la used to support other student sports wnicn oo not enusi suca tmivral interest These sport conatitut a very definite and essential part of a university' extra curricular athletic program, Just as football doe, and If they are curtailed, the Justification for large football receipts falls. Tt has come to be recognised practically uni varaailv that it ia a desirable thins; for an educa tional institution to provide extra-curricular inter ests for as many students a it can. Football is nnlv oB of these Interests, and those ho are not Interested in football should most certainly not be forced to suffer if football did not pay. Baseball ia another one of those interest, and Its sppeal I very likely to be an appeal to stu dents who have few if any other outside Interests. It ia a defialtely established port at other instl tutioae, and it Is obviously a Mack-eye to the ath letic management of this school if it cannot be sup plied to the student on account of th fact that football is eating up too much of its om-n profits, or because for some reasoa the available money cannot be made to go around. Apparently there ia student interest in baseball, aad if th petition for it reinstatement which are now being circulated are indicative of a large enough interest, K is to be hoped that the athletic department will reinstate baseball in its budget Perhaps the time will eventually come when van state supported institution can depend upon the funds granted by the slate legislature for the support of varioue activities which are worthwhile. Perhaps, too, by then, athletic and other student activities wtll be recognised as having a definite place in the educational scheme and will not have to depend on the fickle financial support of the pub lic of the gam of football for the wherewithal to carry on. But until that probably remote era. we believe that all tudent interests should be given upport, even if the king of all interests, football, ha to de prive itelf of some of tie luxuries with which it has been wont to adorn itself. we based upon a survey of sum mer selling Job, recently com pleted by a committee appointed in October, l3i, Dy me juaniern Collage Personnel Officers' asso ciation. All atudenta placed with sale companies through the em ployment bureau of thirty eastern college during the summer of 1931 were asked to give a detailed report of the amounts which they earned, the length of time they worked, the number of working hour required per week, and the degree of supervision they re ceived. They were alio requested to give frank opinion of their Jobs. "Rarninr and nroflta are com paratively low. The average gross amount earned by the individual students who reported was only $211, and the net amount cleared wa $94. The average amount earned per hour wa only 61 cents and the average Individual profit per hour over expense 21 cent. Thoae facts seriously challenge the claims made by certain of these companies that canvassing of this nature yields a higher return than other kinds of summer employ ment. "A Dr. Crawford's statement pointed out, the association be lieve that no salesmen or com pany ha a right to use the name of any college to make sales." Harvard Crimson. The Student Pulse Rrlrf, mnrlM rMlrHrattoat pr"' tl to inattrn f (tatM! M th MwnllF mn wl mttwi tT tMa dnrmnl, 4rr th anal rMtri im af mm awaaaarr taM. nktrk airtaSea aM llktlaaa bmIU a4 amMial attarhi. Ittrn rwt ha ltee. w WKV hrM leom aabimttM If a Stalrae. Lincoln's Only Legitimate Theater. THE University Players are starting their annual drive for sale of seaaon ticketa to their pro duction. They will present six play this season Student tickets sell at only $2.00 for the season. It is anticipated that ticket sales will be fewer this year than usual because cf the general financial condition of students and the public. Thi is in deed regrettable. However, there are aome stu dents who could easily afford ticketa who have never before patronised the University Players. It is for those student to help put thi drive acros. Does thia undertaking merit the aupport we now wlh it to have ? The answer ia emphatically, "Tea!" The Univerity Player consistently present the finest possible production plays which are recognised the world over aa the best. Shakespeare, Wilde, Drinkwater and many other play-wrlgbta contribute their talent for the classical, unusual, or modern productions of the Flayers. These plays are not dry, solemn or boring. They are decidedly the opposite. The staff in charge f the productions repeatedly pick lively, humorous, thrilling, and fascinating play, which are sure to strike th fancy of everyone. When you go to aee the University Player, you may expect an evening of superb entertainment. iB thia age of abundance of movies, we are inclined to doubt the pooelbility of the stage retain ing its prominence. We hear, "The day of the spoken, living drama is past." A glance at the situation in Lincoln would seem to bear out this statement. Ten yesrs sgo more than one dowiitown theater had a stage show. Then about five years ago we notice en advertieement of the TTTilvrity Plays which read. "Do you know that the Player are presenting the only living drama in Lincoln thi season?" Thi w indeed a good advertising point, for at that time that situation wag an unusual one here. Not so today. i Nevertheless, in apite of the talking movies, we cannot believe iving drama has aeen its last day. ! Tt seems to u that people will soon tire of seeing and bearing nothing but talking movies. If for no other reason than to provide variety of entertain ment, the legitimate Stage ia bound to survive. j The Univemlty Player afford not only the stu dents, but all Lincoln, the opportunity to see legiti- ( mate theatre productions. They merit a greater degree of student support than has been given in th past. 01 H- Subidlation at North' western. TO THE EDITOR: The evening paper have broken the news of the year to the inter collegiate athletic world. The foot ball player of Koruiwetrn uni versity who have not sufficient funds to nav their own way through school have been"adop- ted by business men oi .vansion. These godfathers will be respon sible for seeing that that man has an education as long as he con tinues to perform capably upon the teams of their alma mater. Last year several other eastern schools did the same thing. But two years ago "Jarring Tim" Bausrh of Kansas was forced by the voice of protest of the followers or iooidsii in me midwest to give up his post on tbe Kansas university football team, because of his acceptance of a like proposition. The Carnegie foundation investigated the aitua firtn in schools all over the nation. Yet Northwestern because of her place at the peak of intercollegiate enntnaii ran nuhliclv announce her subsidisation of player and get by with it. Thi manner of hiring athlete ia unfair to other schools who can not afford to do so. to those schools that could afford to but don't because they do not wish to besmirch the character of their schools, and to non-athlete at tending college every where. Wnv should men who have not the brawn for football, be forced to forego a college education be cause of the lack of funds, "while a muscular bodv. much better equipped to make his own way in the world than a man oi non-am-letie build, and not so deirou of a college education be tossed the life of luxury, as long as ne con tinues to hold his place on the 'varsity. This unfairness of Northwestern should be squarely met by each and every campus, and a decided hsrrier of nublic Drotest lodged apainst the school involved. Other schools can not do una manner i thing, whv should Northwestern? Wholehearted protest from every colleg-e newspaper will form a gauntlet that, when assisted by the storm of fire from national pa pers, not even Northwestern could dare to run. B. A. F. EDITOR'S NOTE: . A. F. so accurately state the Ne braakan'a opinion on the Northweetem situation that an expression of our attitude in the editorial column ia made unnecessary. Picnic on Ag Campu Honors New Students TUr Hotue Economic associa tion held its annual picnic honoring new studenta Friday evening at the Student Activities building on the Ap campus. YOUR DRUG STORE Remember Those Neon Lunche at Our Fountain Call U for Rush Order The Owl Pharmacy 14 No. 14th 1 P It 10S Contemporary Comment What Benefit College? At thia aeaaon of the year the 7at brain mills, known as col leges, open their doors, sweep out, and begin to grind. At thia time, too, there is a revival of u old controversy. A large group of young men and womea serioualy questions whether a college edu cation is really that open sesame, that sure door to wealth and fame, that sine qua aoa to leadership ia American institutions which seem to be the popular conception of It Perhaps t&is problem has been gtvea mora serious consideration tbia year than at any time wltnla the memory of the present genera tion. Certain tt la tbat coOega suf fer decreased earffllir.rr.t ia tima of economic or buataaea depreseloa suck as now confront vs. Cm cvary hand the cry I raised that college do net fit young men aad women for aay gainful eccu--pattaa nor for a definite place ta the aconoeme or commercial eheaat of things. Tb accusation is also mad that college turn out a particularly choice and bigoted brand of young fool, self centered and Impressed with bis importance and convinced that the generation of hi futher and mother ia pro vincial and out ! date. Colleges have not contended that they fit men for commerce or in dustry. Dr. Nicholas Murray But ler, writiag la Cosmopolite for October, points out ia clear and etrong terms what the college doe not profess to do. Bald he: "The true mission of the col lege is in no wise related to vo cational instruction and baa nothing whatever to do with, preparation for earning osea living." In our educational system exist oUr InsUtuUoaa designed to serve these purpoaaa Among tke branches wfeick aadaavor to fit men for vocation may be mea tier d polytechnic Institutes, in dustrial school and lastly, large universities where the leading pro fessions are taught However, many of tbc trades, particularly handicraft wont, are U11 bet taught by an apprenticeship as un der the old guild system. After all is said and done per haps thoee who hurl the severest rritiriimi at our eolleses have a misconception as to the avowed functions or vb wsnnnwn, me hitter critics who point to rradu- atee as particularly horrible exam ples of what colleges do to men and women, do not so much make a case against the college aa it A,m aa-ainat cross section of hu manity. Perhaps they really adver tise defectc in nereenxy in mc home. Dally Trajan. An Explanation. cvrniainidr r decision to curb the use of the so-called "sympathy appeal ' in summer seiung, n. i. Sharp director of the Student irmniavment bureau, commented ea the announcement made by A. B. Crawford, president oT tae East ern College Personnel Officers' as sociation, tnat tweaty-sevaa east ern colleges would take steps to prevent students from trading upon their eoUeg eoaaecUoa while telling gooda during tke summer vacation. Hla statement ia aa fclowa: "The decision to curb the us of the so-called -sympathy sppeal' PERSONAL- SERVICE TO UNI STUDENTS SPECIAL CLUB STEAK with FRENCH FRIES You 11 Enjoy Inviting Your Friends to SHERBURNE'S INI1 118 N. 14 Sunday Book Review PHIL STONG'S "8TATE FAIR." Authors have often thrown a number of varied personalities into a common environment and then recorded the drama as they came In contact. Ono of the most not able of recent examples of this technique is Vlckl Baum's "Grand Hotel," although there are ninny others of lesser prominence. In his novel, "Slate. Fair," Dill Stong selects a family of Iowa farmers, a daughter of a stock show manager, a newspaper re porter and a prize-winning hog for his assortment of characters. A state fair provides the mixing bowl and, like most other novels of this type, after the thing is over th characters go their separate way with nothing but memories left of their experiences. The story will not startle the reader at any point and he will be able to predict each happening so closely that the reader soon feels that he ha conceived the plot himself but it is entertaining throughout. The writer's purpose, undoubtedly, wa to depict a state fair from the standpoint of those who had some real interest in It. We must admit that he does do thi admirably. The plot, itself, ia quite ordinary, but it serves as a vehicle for some effective description and adroit characterization. A family of Iowa farmers the parents and a young boy and girl go to the state fait with their hog, "Blue Boy." The farmer's interest lies solely in the hog, while the farmer's wife di vides her interest between the ling and her prie pickles. However, the two young people don't turn out to be star 4-H clubbers but 1o have some experiences that are rather broadening. The girl meets a young re porter, who has a decided penchant for roller coasters. Their acquain tance progresses and he proposes, but she is of the opinion that their lives can never blend in marital harmony. The farmer's son also has an affair of heart an1. like wise, the girl in the case decides that their Uvea are too different to be conducive to domestic happi ness. We are of the opinion that the SCHOOL 01' musk: NOILS The radio program at 2:30 Tuesday afternoon over KFAB will consist of a miscellaneous re cital by members of Slnfonia frat ernity. Director Howard Kirkpatrlck and Theodore Dlers assisted with tho performance of the rural school chorus at the Saunders county fair at Wahoo on Friday afternoon. Kmma Strangman played a piano solo at the district meeting of tho Woman's club at Syracuse, Ncuraska, Tuesday afternoon. Mabel Van Burg, student with Vera Upton, has taken charge of the Methodist church choir at Hickman. Audrey Keed, student with Lil lian Helms Policy, sang at tho all activity tea at Ellen Smith hall. Miss Reed recently sang at the Tassels' tea. She was accompanied by Mary Eby. Blanche Childers, student with Carl Steckelbcrg, accompanied by Miriam Leigh, and Loretta Pries ner, student with Marguerite Klin ker, presented the program Friday evening for the Palladian Literary society. author was stretching the point a little, when he tried to make it appear that these young couples were so incompatible. After all, haven't there been many success ful marriages between people with backgrounds were even more var ied than these in the story? The character of the village storekeeper seems to stand out prominently in the reader's mind after he has finished the book, al though this rustic prune peddler merely expounds homely philoso phy during the first and last chap ters of the book. Here is a per sonality that would have added great deal to the tale if lie had been carried throughout. If you have ever attended a state or county fair, read the book. Incidentally, the novel is being made into a moving picture with .lames Dunn as the reporter; Sallv Filers as the farm-girl; and Philip Holmes as the farm-boy. C. C. B. Mr Season W Ticket fl October 3, 4 and 5 - $2.00 t2. "' ll"llr - THE UNIVERSITY CF NEBRASKA PRESENTS TOW SEASON TICKET CAMPAIGN October 3, 4 on4 5 SIX BIG PLAYS . . . $2.00 UNI PLAYKKS TO KFI URN LOST HAT WHLN IDLMIl A man's hat, nearly new, was found a short time n' by mem bers of tho University l'layiis. Ac cording to custom all lost nrtli-leH found bv tlin players are held for two weeks and if unclaimed nt that time are placed in the group wanl rol. However, the players will re turn the hot to Its owner, on iden tification, in this case. How About Your Overcoat? DOES IT NEED Clean iwg HAVE IT DONE NOW Modern Cleaners SOUKUP & WESTOVEE Call F2377 For Service LUNCH TICKETS $5.00 $5.50 Worth . IIOWERTER'S LUNCH My poy ! i taitevp i . GT TO BE" 7 I -v a ME? I AT. WHEAT (W, - rr YES, iodeeJ. Shredded Wheat has been drowned in cream by some of the biggest business shots in this broad land! It has uhat they need : ; ; . hat you need! It's nature's own energy food, 100 whole wheat. Nothing is added ; ; : nothing taken away. Nature's full quota of energr-building elements is packed away in every golden brown Shredded Wheat Biscuit, i ; ; yours for the eating! Hop into the Shredded Wheat cheering section! Eat two bis cuits a day for the next week! You'll feel bigger and better than ever. Wbca roo ate Niagara Fall on the ; arkace, yoa KNOW you have Shredded Wheal- Jill 17EM ; M4TIOKAL BISCUIT COMPANY ! as THE TASSELS MASTERS OF CEREMONIES j UrtCCUa BakCTS Reservations in Temple Theatre Lobby .