THE DAILY NEBR ASK AN The Daily Nebraskan A, Lincoln, Nakraaka Station OPriCIAL PUBLICATION tmiVKKHHV OP NKURA8KA Caaar Dlraatlon of tha Studanl PnbllMtUi Board P.,r,n.K.d Tuai.lay. Wadnaadar. Thuradaa avM., and Sunday mornlnia durll tkt aaadamla jraar. Editorial Orrteaa Unlvoralty Hall . H.ln... OWiH-Wiat aland of Stadium. Oltloo lloura Aftarnoona with tha aetp Ma of Frldar and Sunday. T.l.nhon.. Kdllorlal I Dtl. No. 141 1 Buanlaaai H8l, No. TT Night, BeBM. KnUHi aa aaeond-e laaa mattar at tha aaatnffloa In Mneoln. Nahraaka, ondar act af Conar.aa. March I. 1H7, and at ap.clal n.t.a nrnvlriad for in Baotlon 1101 aat of Ootob.r I, KIT, authorlaad January t. till. SUBSCRIPTION RATB It yaar Rlnvla Copy, eantt. EDITORIAL BTAFF Tutor T. Ifaoklar . , Wllllaa CaJnar ........Manag n Editor Arthur Bwaat Aaa't Manau n Ed tor Laa Vanoa ....Aa.'t Managing Editor NEW8 EDITORS loraaa W. Gomon Naola Bkala Fred R. flmmar ASSISTANT NKW8 EDITORS aorga A. Il.al.y J Ruth P"'"" lf.nn,(h R. Randall xnuTtiinllTIMn k'.nlTORS i ...i.. r.-.i, Darlaht MeCormark Elica Holovtchlner Robert I.aach r.-r.M r.rlffln Laa Vanee Arthur Bwaat faculty committee completes Its re port. A committee, appointed by Will Hays for the producer and by Dr. Butler for the University, will moke a final report on the subject It in posslblo, then, that some time In the future our movie announce ments will read something like this: "The Trice of Love, starring Richard Ricks, A. 13., E. E., D. D. S and Dol ly Dimples, R. N., B. F. A., B. L. I., and directed by Augustus Angleby, A. B., D. V. S., A. M., B. S., M. S., LL. D., Ph. D." Outside of the congestion it will cause in the movlo ads we would be very glnd to see this new school start ed. From what we have observed of the motion picture Industry little more intellectual influence will certainly not be amiss. Notices College Pre6S BUSINESS BTAFF T. Blmpaon Morton Hulnaril Manager Richard F. Vatta....An't Buainaaa Manager Vliton McOrew ..-.Circulation Manager William Kearna Circulation Manager A STUDENT LABOR UNION The Daily Kansan brings forth the suggestion that students on the cam pus of the University of Kansas or ganize against the low wages paid to the students of that institution. The situation at Kansas seems to be a great deal similar to that of our own campus. The Y. M. C. A. employment bureau of the Jayhowk state university has twice as many applicants as there are available jobs. Local employers take advantage of the situation and pay wages so low as to be scarcely worth-while in drawing. Students who must work if they wish to stay in school are not in a high enough position in campus affairs to make any noticeable pro test. It is the belief of The Daily Kan san that a student organization com posed of the ones who are working their way through college would help a great deal to obtain a higher scale of wages and also less hours 01 worK. It is only through concerted effort that much results may be obtained. It seems that studente are as slow to assert their rights as were the or dinary classes of labor in the first place, before they were the highly organized bodies that they are of the present day. A student labor union would doubtless be a great benefit to the working students of the campus. The conditions pictured in The Daily Kansan are as true in the University o Nebraska as well as the University of Kansas. It may be assumed that the same conditions exist in the ma jority of the large colleges of the country. The process of getting the students organized into an effective working body will be a long and dif ficult one, however, and no one but a real leader working with a concert ed student body will be able to bring the change about. conducted wren some sense COMING SOON The announcement of the Inter fraternity Council meeting this eve ning contains the statement that pro bation weeks will be discussed, which reminds us that the good old custom of raising hell with the freshmpn is not to be forgotten. Last year the council passed a rule limiting probation to fifty-four hours and requiring each fraternity to sub mit to, the . executive committee of the council an outline of all proba tion stunts. It is probably to remind the members of this rule and to ex plain its operation that the meeting was called When of moderation, probation need not be looked upon as a great evil. It. may even do some good to a few fresh men with an exaggerated sense of their own importance. It is when it falls into brutality and an attempt to humiliate the freshman unduly that it becomes bad. In many cases in the past this condition has existed. The limiting of probation to fifty four hours will no doubt be enforced, for it is difficult for a fraternity to conduct such a proceeding without some hint leaking out. The effects on the freshmen are usually quite no ticeable. But the othtr matter that of following the approved schedule will, be harder to enforce. Much will depend upon the honor of the frater nity men themselves and the dili gence with which their officers at tend to their duty. -la case the temptation to break ' over becomes great the fraternity men may remember some of the un fortunate incidents of the past, when freshmen were injured. They may remember also that the rule was pissed by their own representatives to lessen criticism of fraternities and that its enforcement will do much to raise the fraternities in the esti reation of their critics. A FILM SCHOOL Something new in the L- if Uni versity education may be offered in the near future at Columbia Univer sity, according to a recent issue of The New SUidert. President Nicho las Murray Butler has announced that a faculty committee at Colum bia is considering the matter of start ing a film school. At a 1'jnchoon. of the Motion Pic t :- iributors of America, Presi r.t t'ljtJer broached the subject. ' ; - .-?-.' f-st he would make al - ".:r'fpment as soon as thej PEDAGOGICAL FLUNKS (Daily Kansan.) A flunk is a flunk and Robert Burns might add "for a' that". But the flunk is a singular thing that comes to the student alone while the instructor, even though he be in competent to fill tho position which he occupies, is immune. Sitting upon a high throne, heaped up by student advance in desire of "good will", the University peda gogue gloriously prescribes long as signments and administers periodic doses of ability tests. At the end of the course this instructor searches through his book of grades, shuffles out the superior and failing marks and through use of a weak imagina tion decides the status of other stu dents. No, this is not a picture of every instructor. Nor is it a description of the majority. But that minority, suf fering under the strain of a super iority complex, makes itself felt in every corner that is penetrated by student thought. This instructor is incapable of properly filling his posi tion. Generally, he is not a teacher for any reason except his liking for remuneration and authority. The student is in a position where he is even better fitted to judge the instructor than the instructor is to judge the student. The student knows the short-comings of the incapablel instructor who cannot benefit the student even by wisely assigned text readings. In order to secure a better system of education the instructor should be subject to a "flunk". As long as the incompetent pedagogue is given final authority he should be subject to failure in a class in which he may wreck the life career and ambitions of students through his own failure. Regardless of the side of the fence where it may be applied, a flunk is a flunk "for a' that." CONSERVATIVES GASPED (The Michigan Daily.) Conservatives gasped at the meet ing of the Association of American Colleges in Chicago Friday when President Clarence Cook Little pro posed that following a comprehe.is-ive examination at the end of their soph omore year, loafers and mediocre students be given a certificate and released from further work so as to provide greater advantages for cap able students during the remainder of their fovr years. President Littb'o proposal, in ac cord with t.hf policies announced in his inaugural addresi, is designed to recognize ability when it is shown, to provide fciicwageniant for aca demic intact, and to prevent that interest from being discouraged by association with mediocrity. It is only too evident in the University that the capable and intelligent have to pur sue their studies at a pace slow enough for the mediocre minds under the traditional ''bugaboo" of being democratic and tolerant. Any plan designed to reduce this handicap, at least for the last two years in col lege, should meet with the approval of thinking students. That all men may be equal before the law but not in intelligence is trite but nevertheless true. A policy with such manifest merits as that of Professor Little's would result, if carried out, in making our collegiate educational machinery vastly more efficient, effective, and useful to so ciety. There would be, of course, many practical difficulties to be worked out, but it is just a question of how soon such a change. will take place, or how quickly the unfit will be weeded out, of how soon we will recognize thing? as they actually are and not what we would like them to be. KIRBY PAGE (The Minnesota Daily.) Acting under the impulse to re strain and direct the course of stu dent thought, the administrative of fice of the University has at times found it necessary to hamper the appearance of speakers on the cam pus. At times there have been valid GET YOUR DRUGS, STATIONERY, BOX CANDY AND SODAS AT tillers' rescriphon harmacy 16 B4423 Thursday, January 20 Physical Education Club Luncheon Thursday noon, January 20, at Grand Hotel. Sign on Bulletin board for reservations. Joint Fraternity Dinner Delta Sigma Pi-Alpha Kappa Psl dinner at tho Grand 0:00, Thursday, January 20. Theta Sigma Phi Theta Sigma Phi will meet at El len Smith Hall at 5 Thursday. Co-Ed Follies Dress rehearsal for Co-Ed Follies will be held Thursday evening, Jan. 20, at 7 o'clock in Temple 805. Dramatic. Club Dramatic Club will meet in the Club Room. Thursday. Jan. 20, at 7 p. m. Girls Commercial Club Girls Commercial Club meeting at Ellen Smith Hall at 5 o'clock Thurs day, Pre-Meds Banquet Thursday evening 6 o'clock at Grand Hotel. Election of officers and tapping of Theta Nu. Dr. Bartholomew will give the ad dress of the evening. Co-Ed Follies Dress rehearsal for Co-Ed Follies will be held Thursday evening, Jan uary 20, at 7 o'clock in Temple 305. Silver Serpent Silver Serpent meeting Thursday at 7. Important. Will not last long. Friday, January 21 Gamma Alpha Chi Gamma Alpha Chi has been invited to a Lincoln Ad Club luncheon for Henry W. Stanley at Chamber of Commerce Friday noon. Komensky Klub A program of entertainment will be given Friday Janp-ry 21, in Tem ple 204, at 8:15. All Czech students cordially invited. the stand which he takes on war. To vast numbers of the citizens of this nation the word pacifist, in view of recent world happenings, has become intolerable. Mr. Page has added a reputation for being a progressive thinker along lines of social prob lems, and the combination of the two classifications might lead one to ex pect an extremely radical address. But Kirby Page enjoys the distinc tion of being able to live his beliefs without attempting to exert undue pressure on his auditors and readers. For the last few years Mr. Page has been one of the speakers at the Student's Conference, at Lake Gen eva and each year he hns left an im pression in the minds of those who have heard him which has been last ing. The strength of his logic and oratory are great enough in combin ation to evoke an admission for the man in spite of tho advanced beliefs for which he stands. in Chicago the coming Christmas with the Modern Language Associa tion, of which Professor Pound was elected vice-president at the meet ing in New York. MANY NEW STUDENTS EXPECTED AT DAKOTA Several Required Freshman Courses Will be Repeated For Those Starting at Mid-Year Vermillion, S. D., Jan. 19.A con siderable enrollment of new students is expected at the opening of the socond semester, January 31, at the University of South Dakota, E. S. Sparks, dean of the college of arts and sciences, announced today. For the benefit of those who were unable to begin college work last The fact that such a man is to ap- fall but now find it possible, a num- Saturday, January 22 Arts College Discussion Group The Arts college discussion group will meet Saturday morning at 10 o'clock at the Temple theater. All students interested in criticism and discussion of the Arts college are invited to attend. Palladian Literary Society Open meeting, Saturday, January 22, at 8:30 p. m. A cordial invita tion is extended to the public. Miscellaneous Nebraska Engineering Society The date for the Cornhusker pic ture is postponed until Thursday, Feb. 1 at 12 o'clock. "N Girls" Cornhusker pictures wearing N's must be taken within two weeks. Townsend studio. W. A. A. Board Make appointment immediately for Cornhusker picture if necessary 1 pear on the campus does not mean that his address is to be radical in nature. Many students will recall the incident of last year when a speaker was denied the privilege of appear ing before the students on the cam pus. When he appeared in anoiner part of the city it was found that his message was far from a radical fal lacy, but Instead, an instructive and interesting discussion of problems of the day. It is commendable that the admin istration extends the privilege to Mr. Page instead of barring him because he is more advanced in his ideas than the present world of experience would completely justify. Two Years Ago objections to the man or to his mes sage, and the Tesult of an official edict denying to him the privileges generally granted to an orator has usually resulted in the creation of another martyr. On the twentieth day of the pre sent month, Kirby Page, author, or ator, and student, is to appear at the convocation hour in the Young Men's Christian Association building. His topic for the hour has not been an nounced but it will lie in the line of his work among the churches which he will vinit during his brief stay in Minneapolis. Mr. Page is prominent because of Little stories about the Introductory In our series of advertise ments, "Little Stories about the Central Cafe", just completed, we have told something regard ing the policy of Manager Har ris, his insistence on cleanliness in all things, high quality of the food, courteous Bervice, and moderate prices. That his policy is good, is best evidenced by the success which he has achieved. For a good many months the Cafe, although not of very large seat ing capacity, has served, night and day, rather more than one person every minute of time during the period.. Last Octo ber the figures were one person served every 59 seconds. Something over four years ago ur and a third years the building housingsthe Central Hotel and Cafe was remodeled and a terrazzo floor laid. Dur ing the period from the comple tion of the remodelling to the end of December, 1926, two and a half million persons have been served. Or rather, that many services have been render ed in the period. His aim to secure quantity pro iuction and keep his plant and enuinmpnt onprntinir an nearly full capacity as possible, has enabled Manager-Harris to' make his prices moderate in fact, very much lower than similar service could be secured if the Cafe were running at less than 50 per cent of its capacity. This is a commonplace in other lines of business, but few have considered it in connection with hotel and crfe service. 1325 P (Ta t caatlutaad) . Phi Delta Kappa, honorary educa tional fraternity, met at a dinner at the Grand Hotel. The following week was said to mark the distribution of the third issue of the Phi Delta Kap pa news letter, by Mr. R, W. Rosen lof, instructor in history and princi ples of education. Mr. Rosenlof was the historian and editor of the news letter. Prof. Louise Pound of the depart ment of Engish was notified of her election to the presidency of the American Folk-Lore Society at its annual meeting in Washington. The society was to hold a double meeting ber of the required freshman courses of the first semester will be repeated, Dean Sparks stated. The beginning work in general chemistry and fresh man English will be available under tho special arrangements Just made. The student may complete the second half of these courses in the summer session or by correspondence, mak ing it possible for him to come to the university next fall with all of his freshman requirements filled ex cept that of foreign language. There are many other courses open to freshmen at the beginning of the second semester with which to fill out his schedule. Beginning courses in trigonometry and algebra will be given as well as courses in hygiene, fine arts, journalism, history, home economics, and Bible. For students who have had some college training, courses will be found open in nearly every department Get Your Corona NOW! Have You Noticed That unsightly complexion and uncut hair never accompany a man on the road to success in the good old U. S. A. Liberty Barber Shop E. A. Ward, Lib. Th. Bldg. Don't try to go through college without a type writer. Themes, notes and theses should al ways be typed. Get yourself a Corona now. Pay for it while you are using it. 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