TWO THE DAILY NEBRASKAN SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 2t. 19.13 The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Entered nt tecond-clntt matter at tha postofflce In Lincoln, Nebraska, under act o congress. March S, 1879, and at special rata of postaaas provided for In section 1103, act of October 3, 1417. authorized January 80, 1922. THIRTY.THIRD YEAR Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings during the academic year, SUBSCRIPTION RATE $1.50 a year Single Copy 6 cents S1.00 a semester 12.50 a year mailed $1.50 a semester mailed Under direction of the Student Publication Board. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Off Ice University Hall 4A. Telephones Day i B-6891; Night: B-6882. B-3333 (Journal) Ask for Nebraskan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Laurence Hall Editor-in-chief Managing Editors Bruce Nicoll Burton Marvin Newa Editors Violet Cross cariylt Hodgkin BUSINESS STAFF Bernard Jennings Business Manager Assistant Business Manager George Holyoka Dick Schmidt Wilbur Erlckson Why the Pictures? IN Friday's Daile Nebraskan there appeared an article devoted to an Investigation of freshman registration photos and the uses to which they are put. An effort was made to get definite informa tion ftbout the alleged values of the system, with A View to later editorial comparison of the usues Vb pictures are supposed to have with the uses they actually have. To understand the reason for this devious and rather extensive activity, it is necessary to know Jwo things; one, the very apparent disregard in Which the pictures are invariably held by students, and two, the complete lack of any visible advan tage connected with the system. ji freshman, himself strongly disapproving of Jjh process, first brought the matter to our at tention by his strenuous grieving. He wanted to know, finally. Just why the system had been insti tuted and what purpose was being served. None Of his immediate audience could answer that question, and it soon developed that almost no one paid any attention to the pictures, or took the trouble to be skeptical of their value. Further questioning revealed that outside the registrar office the number of people who did know r care anything about the photos except foj indignant freshmen was very small. la the registrar's office, however, a statement of the system's alleged purpose was obtained. The photos are taken as a matter of record "to provide the Office and the local merchants with some more definite and exact means of identifying university Students. This, then, is the broad purpose of the whole system, and it will not escape attention that this purpose is both indefinable and inexplicable. Even more puzzling does the whole question become when it is remembered that no one has been known, at least in recent years, to make use of the pictures. Quoting the Nebraskan article again, we discover: "Heads of the credit depart ments of Lincoln's leading stores all replied, when asked, that they had never at any time taken ad vantage of the existence of a freshman's identifica tion picture.'' On the campus itself there is no question of the indifference with which the pictures are re garded. As has been pointed out, "the photos may be easily detached from identification cards, and upperclassmen have no pictures on their cards." It follows then, that for the purpose of indentifica tion on the campus even assuming that such an attempt should be made the photos are equally without valug. There is, then, a complicated system involved in taking the pictures of freshmen, pasting them on identification cards and personal records to be added to at graduation by pasting a "comparative" Cornhusker photo alongside the freshmen pictures and generally keeping people busy with pictorial records. And all this, "to provide some more defi nite ami exact means of Identifying university students!" The conclusion is inescapable that the system Is not working, and serious questions as to its value if It did work could probably be sustained. Even in spite of the extreme vagueness ot the purpose, the system cannot be adequately justified. It is complex, expensive, inoperative; these alone are enough to damn the procedure as highly un necessary. Because of budget reductions, the library can not have new books, but because it exists as a system, an unnecessary and costly procedure can be maintained solely that freshmen may experience the distaste of looking at bad pictures of them selves. Anomalous conditions are not difficult to find, but this surpasses them all in mystery. 'Let's Cvt A Tax.' A LETTER in this morning's Student Pulse col- umn looks into the merits of the student ac tivity tax and concludes that the alleged disad vantages are far outweighed. Stressing the value of having all students really participating in extra curricular affairs, J. H. B. concludes that even the malcontents will find themselves enjoying the new arrangement after their interests have been broad ned thru the operation of the tax. It is an effective review our contributor makes, and the spirit of enthusiasm in which it is written should be a bolstering influence for Student coun cil workers whose concern it will be to secure ad ministrative approval for a "blanket tax." J. H. B. is already doing good work by merely voicing his attitude and spreading the gospel, pre sumably, to the ranks of hii friends and associates. But he goes even further; he offers his assistance to the council committee working on the tax. With students like this at hand, that committee should have small difficulty in seeing its work thru to a successful conclusion. To organize students whose purpose might very well be the dissemina tion of additional information about the tax among students is as much a part of the council's work as the actual compilation of data. "THE tax plan does have enthusiastic backers. Men and women who realize the merits of the proposal very clearly may be found in nearly every organization, and their energy should be put to work in the serious business of seeing the tax successfully thru its last concentrated stages. Officially the student body has registered its opinion on the matter and the results are available in the figures of the vote taken last spring. But there remains a surprising number of students who are either indifferent or misinformed about the tax. in spite of the unusual size of the spring poll. To inform these students, to make them "tax con scious," if you please is one of the major remain ing problems. Hand in hand with this project, of course, goes the actual planning of methods to be used in presenting arguments for the tax to the regents. This, however, is largely a matter of executive work, involving detailed discussion and considera tion, so it is perhaps best left to the council com mittee itself. Summarizing, then, the work facing the coun cil might be roughly divided into two classifica tions: Organization of forces for making the cam pus thoroly 'tax conscious," and actual formula tion of the method to be used in presenting the case for which most of the data has already been collected. It is a big task, but the objectives toward which it aims is even bigger. No other single thing could so vitalize and rebuild student activi ties. No other thing could so help the individual students. Like J. H. B., we raise the banners and shout "Let's get a tax!" The Student Pulse Brief, conrln contributions perti nent So nutters ef tndrol Ufa and tna smJrenity mr welcomed bj this department, under the nnutl restric tions ef sound newspaper pytlce, whtek excludes all libelous matter and pmonal attacks. Letters mint be signed, hnt names will be itn lieat troia pubUcattoa If se desired. ' rA Zook at the Tax, 9 THE EDITOR: The student council has pledged Itself to the adoption of a blanket activities tax. The Daily Nebras kan last year devoted consider able editorial space to acquainting students with the tax. There is no question as to the merits of the tax either from a financial or an educational standpoint The issue, as X see it, is to justify- any action Which thrusts upon the student body something which they may or ftjay Dot want and something in jfbicn the majority may or may BOt be Interested. Is participation io remain elective or to be made Cpmpclsory?. Obviously, this raises the ques tion as to whether a university is more th"n a place where book learning is made available, where students may study and supposed ly learn under professional guid ance. We must therefore ask our selves whether or not extra-curricular activities are an aside to the business of education or a vital part of it. No one doubts but that many students take book-learning too lightly and student activities too seriously. There are many in the reverse situation practising the opposite extreme. We are here primarily for study. That is one way of learning. But our associa tions, our contacts, and the expe rience gained by participation in student activities are another way. No one enrolled at the university who cannot appreciate her tradi tions, who cannot show an inter est in them and be a part of them has a right to proclaim himself or herself a student of the university. It appears to me to be an extreme ly selfish conception of college. The Greeks have much to gain by a blanket tax. But so have the non-Greeks. And by the tax stu dents who formerly had no inter est in the school outside of class room experiences will be com pelled to become interested. It will break down their indifferent atti tude of long standing. And most important of all they may resent the compulsion but they WILL like to participate and enjoy it once they become an integral part of it Compulsion has frequently been the best thing for us. If students will take the long-run view they will agree with me that in this instance it will be to our ad vantage and good. I hereby pledge my assistance to the adoption of the blanket tax and in addition to my approval I am ready to engage in any work which I can do to help the council to get recognition from the board of regents. To the Student CouncU the best of luck. Let s get a tax. J. H. B. Smoke and Fire. TO THE EDITOR: Nebraska received a self-inflicted "blackeye" last Mayday when thirteen so-called "bigshots" were tumbled to the turf. Whether the body-politic on our campus realizes it now or not is still a matter of question but the truth will out, no matter. The Innocents of the University of Nebraska have a glorious past, one that any senior honorary so ciety should be proud to possess. But the last two years have so spotted that enviable reputation that only two courses can be pur sued with dignity: revolution or destruction. The original purpose of the or ganization was to choose those men each year that had in them selves those innate characteristics of leadership and accomplish ment. Ho wfine the honor is if a student can gain, by hard work and dogged perseverance, the dis tinction of being Innocent mate rial! Ah but that is a thing of history. Corrupt politics now has the Innocent Society under its mailed fist with the aim in view of manufacturing Innocents out of bird seed. Nebraskans should feel sorry for themselves for allowing their name to be dragged to the muck with a society that should repre sent the best of our university. An honorary society should in it self imply impartiality and fair play. But in this instance such is not the case. At the present time it is just another political group using under-handed methods to rob Nebraska university of one more glorious tradition. Bold. lt Oti'ljle I lotlttk in FARMERS BEWARE. A farnur in Illinois, pestered by chicken thieves, rigged up a device to got i id of them. He put a gun in i he hen house and tied a string to the trigger so that the thief would be lively to run into the string. Unhappily, at a time when the farmer was directly in front of the gun. an old hen flew into the string and pulled the trigger. The farmer was taken to the hospital. SPIRIT GROWS BY ACTION. Last week at Ag club's first meeting a resolution was passed to work wlln the Daily Nebraskan in putting on a subscription drive on the Ag campus. The idea was suggested by the Ncbraskan's bus iness staff, and the club members liked it. Monday morning the campaign begins. In the course of the drive every Ag student and every facul ty member will be offered an op portunity to subscribe to the stu dent dailv. The campaign, if suc cessful, will be profitable to the club, and the prizes offered by the Nebraskan staff for high individ uals in the campus-wide subscrip tion drive also hold good for stu dents working on Ag Campus. To facilitate the most complete coverage of the campus, the club, according to John Loewenstein, president, has set up special ma chinery for the job. Three teams were organized with Arthur Peter son, Willard Waldo, and William Donahue as the team captains. Certain of the buildings on the campus have been allotted to each team to contact both the faculty members there and the students having classes in those buildings. The campaign bids fair to be thor ough. This sales campaign, an entirely new activity for Ag club, cames at a most opportune time. Clubs, or ganizations and the like exist for one purpose: to carry out some function or activity. Without ac tivities to perform, any sort of an organization soon atrophies and dies. Whatever spark of spirit and enthusiasm an organization may have grows and develops by U3e, by activity. That is why this new undertaking comes at an oppor tune time. Right now at the beginning of the year Ag club has, if it ever will "have, an element of pep, a certain restlessness to be up and doing something. The subscrip tion drive gives it something to do. In addition to being a profitable undertaking in a year when profit able undertakings promise to be rare, the subscription campaign should be very valuable to the club as a means to bring it to life, get ting it into action, getting it go ing. JOBS TO GO ROUND. The Committee on Regulation of Student Labor, an organization of Ag faculty members that has op erated for several years but is not commonly known on the campus, met last week. Prof. H. J. Gram- Uch is chairman of the committee. The result of their conference is that all students who do unskilled labor in any of the campus de partments will be paid not to ex ceed twenty cents an hour, and that students doing department work that requires some technical training will be paid not more than twenty-five cents an hour. They ruled, however, that twenty dol lars a month is the upper limit for students In the unskilled labor class, and that students at other work would bo limited to twenty five dollars. To those students on the campus who can remember back to the days when part-time jobs paid twice as much as thnt, or even more, the new ruling is hard to take. But it Is necessary that jobs for students be made to go as far round as possible. The money students earn at part-time jobs In coliege Is Intended to be used to defray school expenses, not to pay for dates or week-end trips home. Heretofore there has been a lack of uniformity among departments as to the number of hours students were allowed to work and the wages they were permitted to earn. It will be a just and fair proposition all the way round ii the committee's new resolution has corrected that situation. Criticisms from outside that stu dents should not be permitted to work at unskilled labor when men with families are out of work are frequent. But the college faculty is justified in its student-employment program, I believe, for two reasons one in practice and one in principle. In p ractice, most of the work students do is part-time work, it is a few hours here and a few hours there. It is work that would not lend itself to full-time men. and is therefor more effectively handled by part-time workers. The other reason is that in prin ciple the college is a kind of a fac tory. It uses the young men and women of the state as its raw ma terial, and turns out a finished product a product that is sup posed to be of worth to the stat. Now a factory has to see that it gets raw material. It has to mn as nearly as possible at maximum opertion in order to work effi ciently. The raw material of the college is students, and this policy of mak ing it possible for students to enter by granting part-time jobs is sim ply a part of the necessary process . e : i 1 . . . . oi securing raw iimii'i mi lu tr-, the factory operating at full tilt, and hence, the most efficiently. Wible is Master of Arts. Prof. C. L. Wible, assistant pro fessor of pharmacognosy, was granted his master of art's degree from the University of Arizona at the close o fthe summer session. YWCA STAFF SCHEDULE FOR YEAR ANNOUNCED (Continued from Page l.i Boos as chairman plans to meet Tuesday at 4 o'clock. Donna Davis and her Church Relations group are to hold their meetings Wed nesday at 5 o'clock. The finance staff. Bash Perkins, chairman, will meet Wednesday at 5 o'clock. Vio let Cross is to have charge of the publicity staff which meets on Wednesday at 5 o'clock. Helen Lutz will conduct the social staff at 5 o'clock on Monday. Elaine Fontein and her group will make plans for vespers on Tuesday at 4 o'clock. Genevieve Jeffries will conduct the Ag staff on Thursday at 5 o'clock while Dorothy Cathers has Sophomore commission Friday at 4 o'clock. The Upperclass com mission under the guidance of Vir ginia McBride will meet Thursday at 5 o'clock. At 5 o'clock, the pro gram and office group under Lou ise Hossack will meet. Roberta Coffee and Breta Peterson have charge of the international staff meeting 5 o'clock on Thursday. On Friday from 7 to 8:30 Helen Lutz plans to conduct the social dancing class. Denice Green, chairman of the postor committee, has not yet scheduled her staff meetings. Hiith Cherney will have the freshmen rahinpt Philosophy Instructor Attend Chicugo Hireling Dr. E. L. Hinman and Dt. o. K. Bouwsma, of the philolophy de partment of the university at tended the triennial meeting ot tl-.a American Philosophy association, which was held in Chicago. Sept 7 to 9. MEALS That Really Surprise for Only 15c We feature a lante variety of foout and each customer Is given individual sen Ice. ORPHEUM GRILL Orpheum Bids- 223 No. 12th Don't Borrow a Carl Good rental cars are available for all occasions, flat rate on eveningt with inaured cars and special rates for long trips. NRA Motor Out Company 1120 P St. Alwaya Open BS8U Learn to Dance Correctly SPECIAL RATES BALLROOM DANCING PRIVATE INSTRUCTION Borner Sisters 1536 P St. Phone B4819 H O T C H A" - - a Hybrid the Zoologists Missed! It's the slickest thing since Burbank's grapefruit this cross between a lounge robe and a huge, soft, thirsty towel! Your closest com panion, next to your room mate! Fine to relax in grand to snuggle into, after your bath swanky enough to wear in a pullman sleeper! It's a product of the Cannon Towel Mills in a choice oi White. White with colored triir, or soft pastels in bathroom colors 1.25, 1.95, 3.95 and 4.50 Flour Two QjdgeA.Gienzel Co AG STUDENTSJNTERTHINED Faculty Reception Officially Opens Social Season On Campus. Nearly five hundred people were present Saturday night at the re ception given students by the Ag college faculty, according to a re port given by members of the com mittee in charge. The faculty re ception, which occurred at the stu dent activities building on the Ag campus, officially opens the social season for agricultural college stu dents. University officials in the re ceiving line, according to the re port, were Chancellor and Mrs. E. A. Burnett, Dean and Mrs. W. W. Burr, Dean T. J. Thompson. Dean Amanda -Heppner, Miss Florence McGabey, Coach Dana Bible, and Coach Henry Schulte. According to D. B. Whelan, re ception committee member, the major part of the program con sisted of games and dancing. Spe cial entertainment was provided for those who did not care to dance. A grand march led by Dean and Mrs. Burr was the big event of the evening. Lunch was served at the close of the entertainment. I M.EARN k TO DANCEj tes JLThcrnberry r- B J am t r. a- for the price of 1 STAGE SETTINGS at the GREATER ORPHEUM THIS WEEK BY ERNIE LINDEMAN ART STUDIOS INC. See l'$ for Your Decoration, Signs or Dinplayg STAGE SHOW AT 3 7 910 Radio's Dream Girl! ( F& . " i 'i V I ft" i . -t. , . . , v., , ; . y : ALBCE in PERSON! Nat'l Bro.Tdcastlno Star. You've heard her over WENR Chicago on the Real Silk Hosiery Hour. Here i,t h.t, for you to SEE (.s well as hear, the girl of "the voice iih a soui." PARKER Wyilil & Cs. Three mirth-makins montebanks in a hilarious quarter hour ot songs, dances and nonsense. srtriDy mm ng "A PkatinB Classic" trie! with the Emeralds Sisten The FIVE COLLEGIANS fering a mlnature revue of revues, clev ncing, iiiigaifc. Boy, What a Show! Presorting "A Pkating Classic" trick and fancy skating, with the Emeralds Sisters and Paid Lee. tfifc Prices Mat. 25C 40c f - , "- ,..Y ' J I a irlV . rf4SSS SWART i VS 5- EFFECTIVE I fS MONDAY J At th:c? Low Prices you will it: f I S'-xh cu'r.rd:r!g attractions as . . . I ' S- V Tco Muc:' Harmony, I'm No Angel - f ...The Power And The Glory... Lr I Night Flight. ..Ann Vicken. . . Foot- I fr" f ''9ht Parade. . .Pi!grimags . . . a"d NSsr JL dozens of others... all hi'.s. fr t-h. y ky;A gm J . v-s . ; 'j Give a Man a breah At. - - - end he'll break ' If 1 - 1 "Give them everythtoff bjt ! A , V love, baby and make that I Vr V hard to get" that's the I t J creed of the worst woman jf - on B'way! ff? COLBERT 11 Ricardo Corlez K-v k 4a. 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