Nile Kinnick letter to his family, January 1941 |
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THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA
IOWA CITY
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR
DEPARTMENT OF ATHLETICS DIVISION OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Sunday Jan 20 '41?
Dear Family:
Without lies a deep blanket of snow freshly fallen last nite. In days gone
by it would beckon successfully for me to come out and build a snow man or go
sledding or skiing etc. but today my mistress the law jealously has held me in-
side. I have bees studying somewhat leisurely for my torts exam on Mon. morning.
I feel rather confident that I know as much as we have had rather well. In fact
generally speaking I feel much better about the whole thing than I did when I
was hom over vacation. Right now I feel as if I had scratched the surface enough
to see what it is all about. Last Sat. we had a test in a one hour course known
as Judicial Systems. I was quite satisfied with the way I handled the test; I
knew everything pretty well and tho I didn't cover the details well enough to
warrant a top grade nonetheless I feel I mastered the material sufficiently well.
However, the tests coming up won't be so easy -- particularly next Sat. I refer
to a course in Remedies which is difficut* in the very nature of it--it is very
technical dealing with the history and growth of pleading -- and on top of that
the instructor mispeaks himself about half of the time and his lecture are
marvelous examplesof discontinutity/
The other day I pulled out the short comments and observations I had made in
the years previous about my outlook etc. It was quite interesting to see how
my views have changed and to see* also how things that I am saying or writing
now had their origin in vaguely expressed ideas of several years ago. Most of
that which I wrote was mere verbiage but here and there was an idea. The motive
of force of the world are **** ideas well expressed--and the latter is about
as difficult as the former but either can be developed markedly if effort is
given. Next Thurs. nite I have as tough a speaking assignment as I have yet had.
Somehow or another I let the Congregational minister here in town talk me into
speaking at a banquet he is giving for the members of the Youth Movement or some-
thing like that. I can't sermonize of course nor do I want to and yet on the other
hand I can't just tell football jokes. At present I have in mind making a few
remarks along the line of the necessity of a "combative spirit". I heard Rev.
Fosdick deliver a sermon in New York last year with that phrase as his theme.
I don't remember what he said but I think I have a couple of good ideas along
that line myself. Then on Mon. Feb. 3rd I am going up to Waterloo to talk to
a convention of mill dealser or something like that and on the 10th down to
Muscatine to inspire the Boy Sprouts. About that time my freshman argument will
be coming up and also sping football will be getting under way. My, my life
is strenuous. I hope I increasingly learn to face it as Teddy Roosevelt did.
Went over to the field house the other day for a little workout--it was the thrid
time since football season --but it will be much oftener from now on--I didn't
realize how much sharper a little exercise makes me feel. Just shot a few baskets
and played a little squash--all very leisurely and much to my liking and much
different than in the years gone by. Well, I was shooting baskets but was get-
ting rather tired because of the regularity with which the sphereoid dropped
thru the net--they should make the ball bigger or the hoop smaller or fix the
hoop so it moved around--much too easy the way it is now--be SURE AND SHOW THIS
TO GEORGE. Well anyhow I glanced over and saw some boys fooling with the
weights and says I to myself son go* over and see if you still have the stulff.
With a great deal of nonchalance i moseyed over and said lads how much do you
have on there--more palaver, etc, etc.-- ask Geo. he'll know what I said. Well,
in brief, Gus, I pressed 175 lbs and cleaned and jerked 205 for a new record
for me. The only other time I tried was over a year ago down at Merritts beach.
Remember?
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Nile Kinnick correspondence, January-December 1941 |
| Creator | Kinnick, Nile C. (Nile Clarke), 1918-1943 |
| Date Original | 1941 |
| Description | Letters to and from Kinnick, a student leader, scholar, athlete, and naval officer from Iowa. This correspondence is chiefly letters from Nile Kinnick to his family during his term in law school at the University of Iowa and his enlistment into the U.S. Naval Air Reserve. |
| Topical Subject (LCTGM) |
Football players Law students Fighter pilots Military training |
| Personal Name Subject |
Kinnick, Nile C. (Nile Clarke), 1918-1943 Kinnick family |
| Corporate Name Subject |
University of Iowa United States. Naval Air Reserve |
| Geographic Subject |
United States -- Iowa United States -- Kansas -- Kansas City |
| Chronological Subject | 1940-1950 |
| Type (DCMIType) | Text |
| Type (AAT) |
Correspondence Postcards |
| Type (IMT) | jpeg |
| Digital Collection | Nile Kinnick Collection |
| Contributing Institution | University of Iowa. Libraries. Special Collections Dept. |
| Archival Collection | Papers of Nile C. Kinnick, 1935-1991 |
| Collection Identifier | MSC0112 |
| Collection Guide | http://lib.uiowa.edu/collguides/?MSC0112 |
| Box Number | 1 |
| Rights Management | Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this digital object. Commercial use or distribution of the object is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder. |
| Contact Information | Contact the Special Collections Department at the University of Iowa Libraries: http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec%2Dcoll/contact/index.html |
| Digitization Specifications | Scanned with Ricoh Aficio 3228C Scanner at 600 ppi, 24-bit color. Master image available in tiff format. |
| Date Digital | 2011-12 |
| File Name | 31858060070962 |
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