TWO. THE NEBRASKAN, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1933. ' The Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska. OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION AND BULLETIN OF THE 1933 SUMMER SCHOOL SESSION, UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA. Bubllihed Friday morningt during the summer session and circulated free to summer school students and faculty members from boxes in campus build ings and book stores. Directed by Student Publications Board. Telephones for News and Advertising: Day B-6891 Night L-8563 B-333J Thursday. HOWARD G. ALLAWAY, Editor and Business Manager. "A Letter To the Times.'' THE Nebraskan hopes in the near future just how near, dear readers, depends wholly on you to inaugurate in connec tion with its editorial columns a department for publication of student opinion. The purpose thus served would be to provide a saftey valve thru which steam gene rated by the pent up urge which must sooner or later come upon a certain number of you to ex press yourselves publicly on ome matter, be it weighty question or trivial incident, in your lives as summer students may be let off. Against such a development the Nebraskan herewith offers the use of its columns to any student so seized for publication of any reasonable communica tion of general student interest sent to this office for that purpose. Execution of this plan, en tirely honorable in purpose, awaits only aforementioned necessary communications. De spite all efforts, certainly things cannot be perfect around here. So let us hear your complaints, your praises or your sugges tions. important part in the kaleidoscopic political scene of their countries, American college students have long been pointed out as a self-centered lot, little concerned with current events effecting national or international welfare. Recent happening have forced a revision of this estimate. For with in the past few years American collegians have suddenly become interested in the happenings which make daily headlines and in the social, political nad economic questions which lie back of the situations giving ri.se to these headlines. Particularly in the matters of opposing organization for war and in supporting candidates for public office whose political programs were tinged with pink have under graduates made their activities noticed. Ocassionally this liberalism has led to excesses, as it seems from the news dispatches concerning the episode to have done at Amherst recently where the American flag was burned at a Communist demonstration. On the whole, however, the awakening has been highly grati fying to those who see it the por tion of educated men and women to provide leadership in a social order so complicated that near breakdown is periodical. But desirable as this develop ment must seem to many, it has not gone forward without opposi tion. The form this opposition in one case has taken is the subject for comment in an editorial re printed in our "Current Comment'1 column from the New York Na tion, a journal of known liberal views. BOOK REVIEW For The Week. Collegiate Awakening. AS a species, the American Col legian has probably been pro trayed as as great a variety of con tradictory things as any subject that has come up for public in spection. Popular fiction and the motion pictures usually depict gogl-eyed, pipe-smoking youngsters in cords and tri-colored skull caps, at the one extreme, and blonde Appoline 3'ouths, on the other, romping madly thru a world of football games and parties with an ocas fcional class period thrown in pure ly incidentally. Magazine car toonists lean towards picturing over-sexed young drunkards as the typical college man. Educators, speaking for public consumption, tend to stress embryo truth-seekers living on crusts in attics and church basements in order to con tinue their pursuit of knowledge. While individuals might be found to fit almost any of these pictures, that none is an accurate description of the run-of-the-mill college student bears witness to the dangers of generalization. rNE characteristic, however, has long been held reasonably typical of the inmates of institu tions of higher learning in this country. That was a disinterested ness in affairs outside the little circle of events immediately touch ing their lives. As against Eu ropean, Far Eastern and South American students who are ready at any moment to discard the pen for the parade torch and play an CURRENT COMMENT Umbrella Instruction. Confidence in the educational system of New York is not in creased by the spectacle of the president of its city college be laboring students with an umbrella like an irate old beldame charging a group of plaguing boys, nor by the action of the board of educa tion in calling policemen to pro tect it from its own teachers. The city college is busy meting out discipline because a crowd of paci fist students blocked the patch of the president and of course the inevitable "distinguished visitors on the way to review a drill by the reserve officers' training corps. Certainly some of the city college students were guilty of rowdyism, but the cure for that scarcely lies in chastisement with a presidential umbrella. The board of education was equally unhappy in its stra tegy. Its fairness in dismissing a teacher had been questioned by a large number of bis fellows. He had been dismissed allegedly for incompetence and falsifying his attendance record. As to the truth of the charges we have no knowl edge, but the fact that the victim is chairman of the Teachers' Com mittee to Protect Salaries raises at least some unfortunate suspicions. Many teachers asked for a public trial for the victim a reasonable request and when this was re fused by the board, began a dem onstration. Here again the limits of decorum may have been passed, but surely it was stupid for the board to call policemen with clubs to cope with an outburst of indig nant emotion, and still less wise to suspend two of the protesting teachers. To grant the public trial asked for would do more to restore morale among teachers and stu dents than stubbornness and pun ishment Policemen's clubs and presidential umbrellas are no longer believed to have much edu cative value. The Nation THE AMERICAN PUBLIC MIND, Peter Odegard: Columbia University Press (1930) It is always a little startling to meet a man who knows a great deal about one's motives, but the shock of meeting such a man in the person of Mr. Odegard, as he appears in "The American Public Mind" is lessened by the complete ness with which he makes it known that his indictments and investiga tions extend to a whole nation of Americans. A tremendous task has been un dertaken in this book, and at first glance it might seem that only a frenzied emotional outburst could succeed in conveying anything of me cnaos that is America. Far from finding such emotional frenzy, however, the reader who dips into the volume at any point will discover a reasoned analysis iounaea on a wealth or keen ob servation. From first to last Mr. Odeeard who is professor of political sci ence at Ohio State university, is bent on making clear the forces objected in modern American life. and even while rooting these force out, ne reveals the sources from which they have sprung in the course of the nation's develop ment. "The American Public Mind" is not a book for those who dedicate their efforts to rationalizations about the existing order of thing's. nor will it felicitate the consciences of those devoted to perpetuation of the vague "stereotypes" whose true nature Mr. Odegard discloses. But to the tolerent and the curious minded reader, the book is real value. In substance and content the au thor has done a thoro and compre hensive job. Beginning with more or less fundamental investigations into "The Foundations of Person ality" and "Social Behavior." he considers successively all the more important influences Involved in daily American life. Included among these forces are the fam Uy, the church, the school, the press, political parties, pressure groups, propaganda, movies, books and the radio. A final chapter on ensorsnip ana uemocracv ' is packed with ironic material suita ble -for development of a second Mr. Dooley for those with a sense of humor. Nebraska summer session stu dents, for whom this review is pre sumably written, will be especially uueresiea in tfte chapter devoted to the schools, altho, of course, Special Ladies' Heel Caps Leather or Composition 10c The singing shoemaker at LINCOLN SHOE SHOP Business College Bldg. 207 N. 14 Friday's Menu Just a Sample 25e DINNER Choice of Baked Green Peppers with Shrimp Stuffing Boiled Beef with Fresh Vegetables Boast I-oln of Pork Cold Plate Lunch with Steamed Corn and Mashed Potatoes Roll and butter Coffee Tea Milk and Dessert Cinnamon Toast, Fruit aajU Salad and Beverage Toasted Peanut Butter Sandwich and Milk Shake H am Sandwich and Bowl of Soup. tm Barbecue Sandwich. Bowl of Soup and Beverage. njj Ham Sandwich, Potato 3Vy Salad and Milk Shake Philadelphia Cream Cheese Sand wich and Malted Milk. IBGWIDIEN'S PHARMACY H. A. I'.red. MtT. fboae B-7M1 IS P other educational factors are, not by any means neglected. After surveying the public school system, Mr. Odegard is inclined to be brutal: "....It is obvious that education in America is regarded, not as a means for stimulating in the children the desire to know the truth, but as a means for incoulat ing them with the stereotypes and superstitions of the dominant groups in control." That there is hope, however, the author recognizes. "There are voices in the land," he points out, "demanding a new approach to ed ucation. Emphasis is to be laid on individuality, discussion, learning by doing, student participation in school control, and psychological rather than formalistic learning. Education in internationalism and social responsibility is making some headway. Already, says Charles Beard, there is a large body of teachers and school admin istrators who are convinced that the love of truth and the desire to be intelligent are more precious possessions than any segments of bigotry." Norman Stephens, Loup City, Ruth Stephens, Loup City. Robert Storer, Lincoln. Richard Turner, Du Bols. Robert Walden, Sidney. Neva Webster, Lincoln. Robert Westfall, Lincoln. Verna Wlllbee, Creston, la, Charles Webster, Lincoln. Registration for the chorus class is as follows: Charles Alexander, Lincoln. Dorothy Barton, Wilder. UlHdys Chittenden. Cintonla. Ritchie Clarke, Lincoln. Krilth Goodban, York. Vertinn Hanneman, Lincoln, Alvlra Johnson, Taylor. Vance LeintiiRer, Fullerton. Lucille McCormnck, Caltonia. Kunice McCormii'k, Kxeler. Vee Louise Marshall, ArlinKton. Maxine Meyers, Fremont. Arthur NewbeiK, Lincoln, Irene Replug". Taylor. Thnniaa Shelf rey, Oxford. Walter Stroud, Lincoln. Jean Thompson, Loup City. Anna Tllibels, Lincoln. Vera Wekesser, Lincoln. Ixiuixe Wenxloff, Lincoln. Donald Dnvlit, Lincoln. SIXTY ENROLLED FOR JUNIOR MUSIC CLASS (Continued from Page 1). Stanley Rabe, Sidney. Mary Roberts, York. Frances Rossiter, DeWitt. Mildred Satterfield, Taylor. Ormond Schroeder, Lincoln. Marjorle Sellers, Sidney. 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