DAILY M'.HKAhKAN ti ksiiw. octobkk 10. vm. I. ....... i ..c..,n.n iJnn TWO The Daily Nebraskan SUt.on A. Lincoln. Nor" M OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Associated ffoilcftitttfJ?V - wren's..1" MrveAB Lincoln. Nebraska. u"' ' " ;,ded for in section tia''o'i. 5 V . THIRTY. THIBO YEAR Thin sdy. &nnri.iv mommas bUBSCRiPTION RAe . . . ..... uu.rtn.KdAv UUl ' t-nclay na ,,.50 . yM, .,.. COPY 6 cent. M-SOoanfly"iSdn c ,u.n.Vuh..C..n Boa.d. Editorial Office university Hall 4. B-3333 ,J.ur. Aik for Nebraskan editor EDITORIAL STAFF Laurence Hall Manaqma Editors Bruce Nicoll Jtirton Marvin Bornard Jenninos Editor-in-chief Violet Cio seen at work. It in certain that they do need con siderable prodding tf they are to do any boi! oi sal iNtartory work, and it is not amiss to disclose lo the oiten too-smug thirteen seniors that theirs is the re.sHin.-1ilility ot guarantee tog the n-cessaiy improvement. There Is little reason to doubt that the effort to seek that Improvement will not he forthcoming, and the Nebraskan is glad that the cheer-leader complexities have been afforded the chance ot being aired. News Editors Jack Fischer Maigaret Thie. BUSINESS STAFF Business Manaqi Assistant Business Managers George Holyoke Dick Schmicn Wilbur Erickson For Thirteen Senior Men. "THOROLY disgusted, nut to say burned up, might very well describe the contributor signing her self "Irritated" in this morning's Student Pulse col umn. The burden of the complaint is a vigorous i the denunciation of the spineless attitude that prevailed among cheer leaders at Saturday's game, and the denunciation is brought to a close with a question that is almost embarrassing in its directness: "Now I ask you, are they cheer leaders ... or merely members of another political body?" It is with a realization ot the gravity ot the charges for the correspondent is very evidently sincere that the Nebraskan is forced to say that to date there has been every indication to substan tiate that conclusion, and only a vast improvement before the next game would serve to justify the re cent selections. In order to understand more thoroly the pro cess by which cheer leaders are chosen, In the hope that some light may thereby be thrown on the conditions of apathy which "Irritated" laments so forcefully, it is necessary to remember that the men's senior honorary, the Innocents society, is in charge of cheer leader selections. Each year some member, or members, of the honorary are delegated as a committee to help with the training ot appli cants and to make the final choice of the men who are to serve for one year as leaders of yells. So far, so good. The svstem operates with a minimum of friction, and altho it is probably not the best way of insuring efficient cheer leaders, it has, at least, worked well enough. Unfortunately certain complications arose this year, as a result ot undeniable political pettiness among certain mem bers of the present Innocents society (who are sup posed, on attaining the position of member in that guiding honorary, to put aside their early training in the skullduggery of "activities" ) and the outcome was, to say the least, somewhat of a mess. YHAT actually occurred was that the aroused society, after seeing the results of its com " mittee's yell leader selections, stepped in and de clared them invalid, withholding publication of the tryout results until a second, less partisan tryout could be held before the whole society. The results of this second trvout were choice C(iHihililifS Of (lolli'iiiims. IN a plea for higher intellectual standards among college graduates, the Miami university presi dent, Dr. Alfred H. Upham, has put forward the suggestion that a degree of Master Citizen e given young ccllege alumni who "make good in public iife." To mv miiiii the travesl reflection on out J Amriican education is the pitiably small number ot I our graduates who continue to lead anything like ! an intellectual lite. " the educator declared in his opening address to Miami students, and thruout his remarks Dt. Oldlmm stressed the need t'oi thoro revision ot univeisity curricula. All this, ot course, Is very fine us reflecting the recognition ot a need tor educational changes, but it is not at all amiss to suggest that Di. Oldham gets no further than the stove-league baseball tan he decries when he proposes a new brand ot col lege degree as a means of raising the low intellec tual levels ot American college graduates. How can a superficiality remedy difficulties that go to very roots ot education .' The words "superficial remedy" aie used ad visedly, tot they reflect the Nebraskan's beliel that Dr. Oldham's suggestion assumes the present method ot mass education tor anyone and everyone is satisfactory, whereas thue is more than a little evidence t. show that it is that very assumption which lies at the heart ot many majot educational troubles in American colleges and universities. The men ot Dr. Oldham's stamp are so fixed in their reverence ot the powei ot education per se that they overlook some rathei fundamental considera tions that only recently have gained enough support to throw off the weight ot the American tradition of "democracy" in education. College lit t m-Me lloditkiii the of the "yell ki: r.tball fans saw in action, or rather, without action last Saturday. The issue, as the Nebraskan sees It, is not whether the present cheer leaders are figureheads, for there is always the possibility that the inexpe rienced new men will improve before they are next COR a lone, lone time hither education in r I'nited States has builded its structures on the theory that every applicant for enrollment is equally fitted to receive education, but it it is within the province of the Nebraskan to point it out- the tacts do not bear cut that assumption with any degree of certainty Individual capabilities vary so greatly that to subject all candidates tor information and learning to the same type of instruction is to handi cap educational purposes from the start. The results, as so painfully evident on every hand, and as Dr. Oldham points out, are to cast grave reflections on American education. There are encouraging signs of change, how ever, with an evident trend in the direction of seg regating students according to their abilities and a general raising of entrance requirement standards. Perhaps the proposal for a Master Citizen degTee should be classed among those encouraging signs, but the Nebraskan does not think so; that particu lar plan seems more in a class with projects like "Hello Day" on our own campus. The problem goes deeper than consideration of the kinds of citizens universities turn out, and cer tainly there can be no sure-fire remedy for increas ing the value of education and raising the intellec tual level of collere graduates. Attempts are be ing made in many places to rub out the noble but mistaken altitude that every student should receive the same kind of instruction, and eventually, per haps, the tnuch-needed American educational changes will be accomplished, but it will only be after a long, gradual development The Student Pulse Brief, eonrlM contributions perti nent l matters of student life and tlie university .re welcomed by this department, under the mual rtttrtc. tloiin of wMind newspaper prarOee, whirn excludes sll libclou martet and personal attacks, l-etters mnt be aiipied, nut names will be with held trotu publication U so desired. Cheers and Goans. TO THE EDITOR: It isn't often that I am moved to openly accuse anyone, but after the disappointing, disheartening, dispirited and certainly unsatis factory attempt, and I don't mean attempts, of the socalled cheer leaders at Saturday's game I can not refrain from saying something. I absolutely do not believe the half hearted cheering was the fauit of the student body and I have heard the same thing from many students, graduates and townspeo ple. There axe a few times wh-?n the students want to yell, really enjoy it, and Saturday was one of those times, especially during tie first half hour of play. The cheer leaders were asked to give yells repeatedly and the answer was a wave at the crowd or something equally unnecessary. It is the duty of the cheer lead ers to keep up the enthusiasm dur ing the whole game, win or lose. Now I ask you are they cheer lea I ers, or rather will they be. or re thry merely members of another poliitcal body? IRRITATED. home had to sell his prize Angus to meet his last allowance. For all we know, or can predict, she may be "getting hers" before many moons. Or maybe there won't be so many of those romantic moons when she has to pay half the gas to witness them at their best Campuseers may enter into the proposed bargain in a spirit of fun and find the idea soon an in stitutionaled part of its social structure. Thv-y might give it a try- ONE OF THE GALS. or afraid to admit, any interests above the gTade of the Saturday Evening Post and musical comedy shows them to bt in much greater need of sympathy than the much harassed but mentally alive Ger man. Lehigh Brown and White. CONTEMPORARY COMMENT 'Dutch" Dates. For a long time we have recog nized the existence of a sort of social plane, at the two extremities of which the gigolo and the gold digger were placed. The gigalo, far frum being revered at first, has gradually become society's Idea of a prideless scoundrel. He was ridi ruled in thought, in speech, and finally in writing. He is now on his way to extinction, and nurses his last wounds in the shadows of the larger cities. The golddigger was launched upon her career with considerable discredit She dug her way up to a height in the social scheme that the gigolo never saw, and the pub lic found itself laughing along with her tn triumph. It excused her mercenary successes saying that men really enjoyed having their purses taken for a ride if the process were a pleasant one. That the coed golddigger doesn't especially Deed a bothersome old conscience la almost settled. The type of pang that makes her won der If her date wore that frazzled looking shirt (which wafct sup pred to show much i in order to treat her table denote, why that would be called mutiny by some. She wouldn't dare stop to think that maybe Johnny's dad back Revolt and The Student. Mr. Thomas S. BaKer, president of the Carnegie Institute of Tech nology, recently returned from a series of lectures at the larger Ger man universities, has reported his finding in a very pussimistic ar ticle. Men are graduating from universities three times as fast as positions are opening for them. It is this surplus of academically trained men, which is increasing every year, to which Hitler directly owes his recent rise to power. Hit ler has appealed to the youth of the nation and it has welcomed the opportunity to show that it is cap able of doing something definite. It is better to be active than to be a useless parasite, even when the activity takes the form of the espousal of the cause of culture, the very mention of which causes the naively sophisticated American student to blush. The recent bar baric treatment of the Jews in Ger many with which the German stu dent has often been directly con nected is of course reprehensible, but it is direct proof that the stu dents do have energy- which only neds the right kind of leadership to be turned into something worth while. Political unrest in Germany has had a very bad effect on the Ger man universities. Calm, studious scholarship is impossible under a continual threat of political inter ference, but what the German stu dent has lost in actual knowledge he has more than compensated for by increased, unashamed interest in national affairs, both political and cultural. Mr. Baker bases his lack of op timism for the future of German youth on the fact that "the present student body is beta trained in an atmosphere of revolt" The German student is Just as indus trious and serious in his efforts as the American student. Though the percentage of students failing to Secure positions after graduation is smaller here than in Germany, the fact that practically all Amet ican students are ettner lacmng The Worship Of Things. Is America turning its back on i materialism ? President Koosevelt believes that this nation is again seeking spiritual values, for in his New York talk before the National Conference of Catholic Charities he said. " . . . . the people of the United States still recognize and. I believe, recognize with firmer faith than ever before, that spirit ual values count in the long run more than material values." But is Roosevelt correct? A sur vey of our entire recovery plan from the RFC to the NRA shows that our entire effort is aimed to bring back the flesh pots of the twenties. Americans are still dreaming of the two-car garage and they are measuring happiness in dollars and cents. The president, to say the least, is a bit optimistic when" he says that Americans are placing more worth on the spiritual values. Ask the man on the char ity rolls whether he would rather have a clearer conception of God or a five-dollar-a-day job. Ask your fellow student if he would rather be a missionary in Tibet at $500 a year or a second lieutenant in Wall street at $5,000. Maybe wt misinterpret the president when he refers to things spiritual; perhaps he means only a rekindling of our pioneering spirit If that is his measure of things spiritual, he has chosen a poor ideal for his purpose, because our recovery program forces the people to forget the individual urge of the pioneer. The rallying word is co operation and every effort is made to curb the selfish individualism of the pioneer. Roosevelt is wrong. America puts its real faith in these material things which in the past decade have brought not happiness, but a gigantic bellyache. Minnesota Daily. DISCOURSE ON AG CLUB. w hen Ueorge Round was editor ot the Cornhusker some three o. four years ago, he edilorialed on the need ot bringing Ag club back to life or having it abolished. The status ot that club seem to be to nay about what it was when Round made that subject a part ot his editorial campaign on the student monthly magaazine. Prob bly the Ag club has been a prob lem longer than tli.it, pronanly be fore my time or befoie Round's. Today the Ag club is as much ot a problem as ever. It is dead. ' he spirit and enthusiasm ol the group is practically nil. Nobody seems interested in Ag club. The students would rather do some thing else than go to Ag club meeting. The membership is small, and the students who do belong don't go regularly In past semesters the club offi cers have sometimes gone to con siderable trouble to secure inter esting speakers tor the meetings. And the officer's pay usually con sisted of being embarrassed at having to introduce the speaker to so small a crowd. And other times the officers have not been so concerned about the programs thry arranged for the meetings, and' there was not much of worth for the students who did attend. So it has been. No particular spirit, no goal to work toward, no major activities that challenged best efforts of the club and made membership in it seem a really worthwhile activity for the stu dents The decline ot Ag club (I as sume that it once flourished i many think can be attributed to the rise 'f the departmental clubs Block and Bridle, the Dairy Club, newly formed Tri K Club, and others. And with that idea in mind Vernon Filley, once an offi cer in Ag club, has brought for ward a plan to bring Ag club back to life. Filley's Plan. The Plan is this: Let a student belong to one department club only. Let membership to a de partment club automatically be come a member of Ag club. Thus all Ag club members would be department club members, and all department club members would ; belong to Ag club. Ag club would be the co-ordination center for the activities of all the other clubs. ; might be assigned to have charge ! of the program at each Ag club ! meeting. Ag club would meet ; monthly: so would the department clubs, but not on the same night. ; Ag club's night would be the big night As a means of revitalizing Ag j club, the plan seems woikable. ' But officers of the department clubs are likely to view it with ap-, prehension. They are likely to ask , why they should merge their own ' club with Ag club' w hen they are very well satisfied with their club as it is. It is likely to seem to them that they are sacrificing their own department club for the ' gord of Ag club, and many will not approve. The problem is up for considera tion at the next meetings of all the clubs involved, and now seems to be an opportune time for a -look at the purposes of the clubs and j their relations to each other. The ; purpose of Ag club as outlined in its constitution is to cultivate ability in agricultural organiza- : tion. to perfect and maintain a, permanent organization ot valuer to the university, and to facilitate ! social contacts not possible in the class room. j The purpose of the department clubs is in general the same. But specifically the department clubs are designed to further the inter ests of students in some particular , department. And the students who join them do so because of that specific interest. Now while a department club is furthering the interests of stu dents in one subject, it is at the same time doing all the thinp. that the Ag club has as its pur pose cultivating ability in agri cultural organization, perfect in" and maintaining an organization of value to the university, and fa cilitating social contacts not pos sible in the class room. It may be then that in a very large mea sure the need that was responsible for the creation of Ag club is now being filled by the departmert clubs, and that, just to that extent. Ag club has come to be without a vital purpose. Without a Purpose. If that is true, then it is an or ganization without a need, and tin only reason for its existence is that It is like all organizations once set in motion they tend to perpetuate themselves without re paid for the needs that first set them in motion. If that is true then all the efforts of students to bring the club to life and get it going again are futile. If that is true, the department clubs stand to gain nothing and lose i everything by merging with Ag club, for they would carry the central club alone, in membership and activity while the central club would have nothing to give in return: Ag club, as a co-ordinat- . ..ii il amnill 1.. I hll HLUlieiUS HUM Itl ICI liu mg center ror - u.'l" ..7 . i .. ut a vi.wk. A muslcale pro- WOUIU lie OIUI1...Y " ... ,ur wi e eu u.v n partment clubs rigUnebeild. . Whether Ag club nas sacrificed ,ts usefulness to the department clubs depends entirely upon the students, rt depends upon how much use they wish to make of th.it "cultivate ability tn organiza tion" clause, in other words, how much practice they want in or ganizing and governing them selves The department clubs of fer that practice, and more. Ag club offers that practice, .at least. One purpose of all college clubs, looking at them In a larger sense, is simply to give students prac tice in organization, and self-government, and leadership. The amount ot that sort of training that sort ot training that students want will determine how many clubs they will want to maintain. The department clubs seem to nave a first lien on the students because ot their interest in that specific subject. There is a place for Ag club If the students want to make use of the what it has to offer The question of merging the two. ultimately to be decided by members of all the clubs, looks now like a far better proposition for the Ag club than for the others. MUSIC NOTES The organ program scheduled last week to be given by Edith iSurlmgim Ross, professor of or gan and piano, was postponed and will be give" this v ek over KFAB at 2-30 Tuesdry. Al.na Wagner ill ' " at ome to o-t-um nf tlir students. Marcella Laux ami Morntt Wells, ass.siei. by Wilgu. E:e:ly with several piano numbers, p-r-nted a program at the tea river I the Woman a de partment of the Baptist church at the home ot Mrs. John P. Wil liams. Merritt Wells sang at a meeting ot the Co-operative club at t' Lincoln hotel, Thursday noon. These are students with Miss Wagner. Mary Hall Thomas will direct the Hartlev P. T. A. Rl club and the Warren M. E. church choir the comlnB year. Mrs. Thomas' students took p rt in the follow ing activities during the past week: Russell C" mnes gave a program Thursday afternoon .t the t. ce M. E. "Mirch: Gerald Mott was aoloi" for the Clatonia church services Sunday. Marian Williamson and Lester Rumbaugh were soloists for the Sunday morn ing service Warren M. E. vhurch. A trio, direc by Ethel Owen, will furnish music during Chan cellor and Mrs Burnett's recep tion to the faculty at Carrie Belle Raymond hall Friday evening Miss Owen has charge og the City Wide Tabernacle orchestra for the coming year. She played a violin solo fcr 'their even'ng- service Sun day. Several st'iden- with Miss Owen -e presenting a progran for the breakfast of the university student of St. Paul's church to day. A Lincoln Shoe Shop Tonv Satino, Prop. Specializes in any kind of Shoe Work. Reasonable Prices. 807 No. 14th. Near Camnus Business Colleae Blda. OFFICIAL BULLETIN All lllilel .iimi!mliiil. limin, ,, deelnns to uulillsh mil m-w h meetlnis "thet infiirmlim , M.ihers m have Mem prlnteo b Economics C'ub. There wt'l he a r ei.ng Weunes day evening at 7 o'clock in Social Science 205 for all students tntf r ested in the formation of a club for discussion economic and pu litical que . Picnic. The Kappa Phi-Phi Tau Theta Dlcnic will be held Friday. 0 tobcr 13 at Kpworth Lake park All Methodist students who wish t0 attend are invited to meet at Wes ley House, HIT R St. at. 5:30. GLOVE! CLEANED! ft Kvctvlxvly gloves. them Prompt notices yont Have us keep iinkiiift e w. service. Modern Cleaners S0UKUP A WESIOVER Cull F2377 For Serv e- Gladys Parker's Beaute Salon 1229 N St. Upstairs Phone B2355 SPECIALS MON., TUES.. WED. Manicure . c Eyelash and Brow Dye 75c Permnnents Complete $100 Henna Pack Complete $1.75 The Christopher Bean First night crows said the play was one of the best ever produced by the University Players. It was a success abroad and it's a success here. And with Ray Ramsey heading the cast, you won't want to miss it. Good seats are available. UNIVERSITY PLAYERS TICKETS 7.V TEMPLE THEATER LORRY What Been for 20 Years Asleep ? Tilings have changed during the 20 year sleep . . . Rubber tires took the place of horses both for transportation and hash . . . Back scratches have been replaced by multi-colored nails . . . Fan dances bid adieux to Floradora girls. And in the "good old days" you paid $4.50 for a year's subscription to the Daily Nebraskan. Yes, things really have changed! For, today you may get the Nebraskan for the entire year for $1.50. Figure it up if you like. Approximately 200 issues for $1.50. Much less than 1 cent per issue! There's a booth in Social Science for your con venience and another in Ag college financial office. Copies distrib uted only to subscribers. Why not subscribe today! FOR THE ENTIRE YEAR 7 (Price or Single Copy 5c) BOOTH IN SOCIAL SCIENCE a l I ' L 1 A A A A i A A A X-lj