TWO THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1933. Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln. Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Entered a second-class matter at the postoffice in Lincoln. Nebraska, under act of congress. March 3. 1879 and at special rate of postage provided for in section 1103, act of October 3. 1917, authorized January 20, 1922. THIRTY. SECOND YEAR Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs day, Friday and Sunday mornings during the academic year. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy 5 cents f2 a year $1.25 a semester 3 a year mailed $1.75 semester Mailed Under direction of the Student Pub lication Board Editorial Orrice University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4. .Telephones Day; B6891; Night, B6882 or B3333 (Journal) ask for Nebras kan editor. Stopping the Bung-Hole While the Spigot Huns. "yHILE the state supported agencies are busy figuring ways and means of carrying on un der severely reduced resources, and while the legislature is busy figur ing more places to pare state ex penditures, taxpayers may take consolation in the fact that their state taxes will be reduced. But their satisfaction may be considerably checked when it dawns on them that no matter how much state and federal taxes are reduced their total yearly tax pay ments will be only relatively smaller. The bulk of the support of government for which taxpay ers in this and other states con tribute goes to the county and lo cal governmental districts. Self-government has tradition ally been identified in this demo cratic nation with local govern ment. The work of caring for the poor, for providing public educa tion, and for maintaining law, or der, and protection, within a core' munity have been among the func tions which the rural communities and municipalities have been proud to uphold and carry on. But these functions have in re cent years been tremendously ex panded. And even for these simple functions, the cost of administra tion has grown. Rural populations have thinned. But the services re quired have been increasing expen sive, and the communities with sparse populations have demanded just as much and just as expen sive services as have the thickly settled and wealthy areas. - Special tax levying districts have been set up within other tax levying districts and bonds have been issued to pay for various im provements which the citizen wanted. For each new district and for each new service a set of ad ministrative officials is required. These are some of the reasons why the taxpayer's dollar is being eaten up largely by the local govern ments all over the country. JHE mere fact that many of these officials have outlived their usefulness or that the servi ces provided could be better ad ministered over a wider area at a much less cost has made little dif ference. The shibboleth of local "home-rule" and community con sciousness together with the pow erful influence of the various corps of public officials, some times known as "the courthouse gangs" has effectively blocked any attempts at reorganization of local government. The fact that distances, once an important factor in determining the size of local governing units, have been radically reduced is also a fact which the local government officials, their employees, wives, relatives, and friends prefer to overlook. When the state has gone so far it can go no further. Although there is so much opposition on the part of most local governing dis tricts to any plan hinting of con solidation or elimination of func tions there will come a time when the taxpayers will no longer be Muffed by the courthouse gangs. The state, when it has cleaned its Loue, and cut all it can from its list of services, may well point back to the rural areas, the small school districts, the special tax levying districts of all kinds, the small incorporated villages, the poor counties maintaining expen sive services, the small counties and the township governments and say: "It is high time that the pruning hook be used on the trees which have the most dead limbs." A Boot for Booing Boohs. JT is distasteful to be forced to call attention to things which belong in the province of high school immaturity, but student actions at recent basketball games make such comment necessary, Seldom do Nebraska students lay themselves open to charges of be ing "poor sports" but at basketball games so far this fall they have made such a charge justifiable. The game Saturday night was not occasion for outbursts of boo ing as violent as some this season, but even so several decisions of the referee brought deluges of rude noises from the crowd. That such a display of adolescence is hardly beneficial to the school's reputation ought to be a matter of common knowledge, but evidently it isn't. Emotions are very often height ened, it is true, by the excitement of the game, and sometimes even the best of referee's decisions are inaccurate and unfair, but neithei of thes excuses are sufficient grounds for childish booing. Look in the mirror at yourself, round your lips and boo. See how near idiocy such an expression is, and resolve to practice a little re straint at basketball games. It reauy isn t necessary to make a fool of yourself to enjoy all the sensations of a thrill . . . try it next time and see. ad- Contemporary Comment ECONOMY IS KEYNOTE OF FRATERNITY BALL (Continued from Page 1.) decorations fund, which was start ed by the Innocents society last fall. "All expenses for the Interfra- ternity Ball will be cut as much as possible," was the statement made by Bryon Goulding, chairman of the committee in charge of ar rangements for the event. "The committee is unanimously in favor of cutting expenses especially on decorations in order that the fund for decorating the field house can be completed as soon as possible." A special meeting of the Inter- fraternity council has been called for this evening to check out the tickets for the event. Admission to the ball is $1.50. BLUE PRINT FEATURES ROCKEFELLER CENTER (Continued from Page 1.) now employed by the Westing- house Electric and Manufacturing company. George L. Sullivan, a graduate of 1908 and now a consulting en gineer in Santa Clara, Calif., has contributed an article entitled. 'California Paving A Description of Some of the Good Roads for Which This State is Famous." In addition to these articles the magazine contains the usual page on science and Engineering, edited by A L. Coffin, a page on the alumni of the college, The Dean's Corner, written by Dean O. J. Fer guson Qf the college, and news of the various activities in the college. NEBRASKA ALUMNI CLUBS ASK FILMS FOR ANNIVERSARY Seven more alumni clubs have sent requests to the alumni office for films of the campus to be shown at their meetings celebrat ing the sixty-fourth anniversary of the founding of the university on teo. 15. Five clubs had made previous requests for films. The alumni clubs are located in Washington, New York City, Min neapolis, Colorado Springs, Des Moines, Sioux City, and Portland, Ore. Corey Speaks Before Schoolmen at Columbus S. M. Corey, associate professor of history and principles of educa tion, appeared on the program of the meeting of School Boards and School Executives association and the Nebraska Schoolmasters' club at Columbus Sunday. A number of faculty members of Teachers college also attended the meeting. Love vs. Study. Who has at some time or other not wondered about the tremen dous time allowed for the learning of a typical college course? Walter B. Pitkin, professor in journalism at Columbia university, lays the cause to a chap named Cupid, "who. being the world's greatest dunce, gives complete satisfaction in his high office." In Professor Pitkin's recent book, "The Art of Learning," one finds an Aladin s cave of modern com mon sense. As the teacher sees it," writes Professor Pitkin, "the later years of high school and the entire col lege period are probably the poor est of all for learning. Youth finds it hard to knuckle down to any solid job requiring mental concen tration, detachment and coolness." And now our noted authority will explain why. "Rapid sexual development thwarts the learner, especially be tween the sixteenth and twenty tirst yeras. All the elemental ap petites and passions raise the devil with young learners. The hungry pupil cannot learn well, still less the thirsty. But the erotic adoles cent is hopeless as long as the sex ual unrest persists." Professor Pitkin goes on to say that the four years of college are wasted for many students simply because they cannot keep their minds off sex lures. Naturally, this is at its worst in co-educa tional schools, he says, and is the reason for the low and "even con temptible" scholarship of such in stitutions. The journalist throws out a thought at this point doubting if the social advantages of throwing hot youths in with hot maids out weigh the intellectual stunting. And then he pays the follow ing compliments, which should make many a face burn: . "Many a bright girl giggles her sexy way through college, learning less than a decimal of what she might, but for her flirting and ero tic fidgets. "Many a clever boy receives his sheepskin after four years of futil ity and necking parties during which he has not even learned how to be a wholesome male." Besides the inevitable maturing of sex traits, Professor Pitkin be lieves that changes in endoctrine growth actually arrest mentality more or less in these years, also. Adults learn better, be says, be cause with the passing of adoles cence the mind steadies. Four years at any institution, he charges cover no more intellectual content than a fairly zealous and able per son of 30 or 40 complete in five or six months of sustained study. And now for the good of all students we will quote Mr. Pitkin on the most interesting theology of currently propagandized and vocated by "leading" men. Sound economics holds that, be' cause of the very nature of inter national exchange, a country can not continuously import goods un less it also exports and that, con verselv. neither can it export un less it in turn imports. Acting universally under the "Buy American" idea, the public could create a condition wherein few if any foreign products would be imported. Such a situation would be to America's ultimate disadvantage because, importing nothing, she would be deprived of her world market for wheat, cot ton and other products in the pro duction of which Americans have an economic advantage. Analyzed down to its basic meaning, "Buy American is an irrational campaign which was iniated by profit-seeking leaders of industry and is being sponsored by politicians whose first and last thought is always, "how does it 'sound' to the mass of voters?" Oklahoma Daily. Second Cornhusher Installment Is Due The second dollar installment on the Cornhusker due Jan. 15, is now payable at the Corn husker office. All students not having paid their installment are requested to do so at this time. CHARLES SKADE, Business Manager. Smith hall. Social dacing hour will be held at 7 o'clock in the Armory Friday, Jan. 20. Monday Night COLLEGE WORLD. The student who sold the most subscriptions to the "Arbutus." In diana university yearbook, was of tne cast do creditably in this Laughs in the guise of , pearls strung on a fast-moving plot enter tained the audience of the Liberty Stock Company Monday night when it opened the three-act com edy "Square Crooks" for a week's run. When Elton Hackett as Eddie Ellison, an ex-crook reformed by Gladys Griswold as his loving wife, Kay, becomes involved in the dis posal of a stolen string of pearls. the situations are productive of plenty of laughs. Gavin Harris and Maralyn Fink give fine performances in their character roles, and the remainder awarded a summer trip to Yellow stone. A coed won with seventy- eight subscriptions. The honor system has been ex tended at the University of North Carolina. Under the new plan, eacn classroom group elects a com mittee which has full jurisdiction over breaches of honor, suspension of students for violation of the code and reporting of students to the council. Vice President-elect John N. Garner spent one month getting his collegiate training at Vander- bilt university. Men students at Indiana univer sity became king for a day recent ly when the coeds sent the boy friend floral tributes. Gardenias were the favorites, but in some cases the men merited lilies, poin- setuas and a few carrots. James Judge drama in a New York apartment. The complete cast: Kddlr Klllaon K.ltoo Harkett Kay Klllnon ...Cindy Orlvwokl Jane Brown Juliette Ooodwin Hridirrt O'Rourke .Maralyn Fink 1-arry Srtilt John (iraham. Her cant O'Hara fiavin Harris Harry Welch Clyde Armstrong Mike Rosa Don Parry Keardon Russell Mndsknc lancy Robert Wilson Mr. Cartoon Horn Walnole GOVERSMEST STOPS 'RACKET AT SCHOOL Minnesota Students Are Marketing Pens in Chain Scheme. Uncle Sam took steps to check the "get rich quick" schemes for the marketing of fountain pens by students of the University of Min nesota, and they will have to look for new schemes on which to prac tice their wily "hie-h pressure" If the eighteenth amendment is repealed, Harvard students mav be arts served liquor with their meals, the several students were among superintendent of the college din- the army of salesman who were ing halls has announced. Janitors at the University of Minnesota recently drew lots to de termine who would carry several skeletons across the campus to a new laboratory. flooding the city with fountain pens on an endless chain selling scneme, which, if carried out with out flaw, would net the salesman a profit of $44,286 in ten weeks' time. The endless chain plan which is being marketed to students calls for the distribution of pens at $3 each. The idea is for the salesman to sell a friend, who in turn will A student at Louisiana State university, convicted of criminal libel for his manner of editing: "The n'kn.nj..ji. ,, , , dcii i menu, wuu in turn will g1Llfrl8CaDla he" another friend, who will also KT'JV , I sell someone else. f" BCV-C'"-C. spena- No commission ig th. KBw man for the first three rens sold, ing a few days in jail. sin was told. Only one out of every four of but 51,50 sa,e is Paid on every five graduates of the school of edu- I611 thereafter. Besides the original cation will be able to look forward s8-268"1 receives commissions on to a position next June, the 1933 tne first re I which are sold class at the University of Wiscon- bv salesm?n buying pens from U1U1. If a salesman sells seven pens, and the seven buyers in turn re tain three pens each, the profit amounts to nearly $140 at the end Lutheran League. of the sixth sale. Numerous per- The Lutheran Bible league will sons in Minneapolis who are on the meet for Bible study with Rev. Mr. ground floor of the scheme have Erck at 7 o'clock Wednesdav in been reported "cleaning un" on the " I - w I OFFICIAL BULLETIN. room 203 Temple Bldg. plan. love. -Love is the foe of the art of learning. If you are well versed in theology, you know that the holy trinity is heat, light and power; and that love is heat, while learn ing is light, and action is power. As you also know, there was a ter rible family quarrel in heaven, ages and ages ago, in which love sought to be elected head of the Pershing Rifles. 'mere will be a meeting of Pershing Rifles at 5 o'clock Tues day evening in Nebraska Hall. Team. a meeting: of all Rifle There will be men trying out for the rifle team at the rifle range at 5 o'clock to day. Y. W. C. A. ah members of the Y. W. C. A. are urged to attend Vesper services Tuesday at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith works but was caught stuffing the hal1. 80 tnat thev may vote upon the Penny Carnival Plan Of Big Sister Board A Penny Carnival scheduled for Feb. 11 is the latest scheme of the members of the Big Sister board. On that date they will erect booth in Grant Memorial hall from which will be sold entertainment and a variety of wares. oaiioi Doxes and was ridden on a rail out of town. Ever since then, love has been running an establish ment where everything is so hot that it has been called hell. The law of the place is "Never think! Obey that impulse!" And the mayor of the chief city is a chap named Cupid, who, being the world's greatest dunce, gives com plete satisfaction in his high of fice." Washington Evergreen. revised constitution. The Y. W. C. A. meet Wednesday at cabinet will 7:10 in Ellen 1 'Buy American,' It Costs More. Another economic fad sweeping the country-which "sounds good" is the "Buy American" campaign Duke University SCHOOL OF MEDICINE DURHAM, N. C. Four term of eleven wrrlia are glvea Mu-h imr. These may be taken m serwtlveljr M. I. In three fears) or M. I). In loor immi. The entrance retirement, are intelligence, character and at leant two years of roller work. Including the. subjects specified for rade A Medical Nrhools. Catalorvcs and application forms may be obtained from the Ilean. 1 I TEAKS and CHOPS under. iuSry and delicious steaks and chopa are aervca from our fountain 5 'til 8 p.m. Try them! 5 Course Dinner 35c Try Our Taaty HOT PLATE LUNCHES.. 25C Boyden'e Carry Out Ice Cream Pint 20c. Quart 8c. EBOVIDIEN'S PUbcs intimacy H. A. PEED, Mnr 13 A P Phone B7037 i