liifc DAILY JNhUKAMvAN. Hilim, 20. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TH1KTY-SEV ENTH YEAR LD1T0IUAL STAFF Edlloi Hm rain Manas-ins Editors Morris Lip. Howard Itaplaa News tdllon t Hlfiwi, Hariiiri Rosrwalrr, llarjort I hurf hill. Merrill Emlund. Ifred Harm. Ulek dtHrowu. UJS I HIS 1KB L it Desk Editor Upp Nlpht Editor Roitwittr Undej direction ol tin oiudriu rubr.catluo Hoard, tdilorml tittle liulvertlly Hall 4. Husliiesa tllflco Inlveralty Hnll 4-A. Telephone l)ag BUM. Night H71IW, B38HH (Journal). BUSLNESS STAFF ttualnaes Maaaftr ItarUs laaUia assistant easiness Manaisr. .rmak Johnson, Arthur HIU CUealatlaa Uaaaiw , klanley MIehaal subscription rate I.M yaai Hindi opj (1.00 wmeatar 2.M mailed eanU S1.I0 a wmastu mailed k.nttrad a seemd-claas matter at the ponotllM u Lincoln, Nebraska, endet ad at cons-Teas, Hank V, Will, and at special rat ol vuitak provided lor la section 11M. act ol Ottobar I, 1811, anUiorlied Jaanary HO, m. !37 Member 1938 PUsociaiGd Colle6iaie Press Distributor of Colle6iateDi6est fubllihrd even lues day, W d a d ajp, Thursday, Prlda and Sunday momlnse ul tha academic year by students ol th ln. varsity oi Nebraska, nder th supervision of tha Hoard of Pak Mentions. National Advertising Service, Inc Cafi'f Fmilliktrt Ktprtinflh MADiaoN Avi, Niw York. N.Y. micas - oaroN ban Francisco b ANiki PsaTk iattui I i .) : Camp jCL Wf j A- ! By Harold Niemann poorly organized; n student strlk for peace wasn't even thought of this year. C-C We say again that the new traditions which will be founded by the Union have to have direc tion. The students on this cam pus won't tike things into their own hands. You and your asso ciates, Mr. Van Sant, will have to assist them. Prof Improvement Plans for In n recent poll. Princeton seniors indi cated two major faults with their eollepe edu cation: The students themselves did not know how to study find the lectures and lecturers Mere often poor. At the University of Minne sota, the first difficulty has been met by a course in study habits, but there has been no attempt to provide some system whereby the lectures and the lecturers may be improved through student criticism. At Nebraska, both difficulties apparently remain, as pointed out by a student in the Student Pulse column today. ' We must make exceptions in panning the lectures and lecturers on the campus, for we admit that Nebraska does possess a number of faculty members of exceptional caliber, but there still remain those classes of professors who are not outstanding in their fields, who know their subjects well and impart them; those who work for their own laurels rather than the good of the students; and finally and here is the larg est proportion the many who are medioc rities, men whose only claim to being able teachers lies in thoir master's or Ph. D.'s. If the university is sincere in wishinpr to establish an academic reputation, the first place to start is in its faculty. Only with an exceptional teachinir staff can Nebraska ex pect exceptional students. It has neither at the present time. Just what would be the best procedure to follow in remedying this situation is hard to say, especially when one views the lack of funds to support pood professors. However, after surveying suggestions made and carried out in other schools we con suggest a few innovations which might help to lessen the inadequacy of the present lectures. There can be no little doubt that n system of student criticism would be of jjreat value. Anyone who has noticed large numbers of students falling asleep day after day in some classes must realize something is very wrong with either the lecture or the lecturer. True, some students sleep because of sheer lack of rest and the absence of any desire to take an nctive inter est in the course, but it is also true that an other reason is that the course is not presented in an interesting manner. Some eastern schools have faced this problem and have tried various means of combatting it. At Harvard each department selects a number of graduating majors each year to give their criticisms of courses and lectures. This system is reported satisfac tory. And at Princeton, the recent results of the poll have prompted the Daily Princeto nian to advocate a joint faculty and student committee "which would be able to see the problem from all angles and thus come to a fair exchange of ideas." Some universi ties, such as Northwestern, have actually gone so far as to let representatives of the student council sit in on faculty committee meetings, in order that students may present problems representative of their group and bring about a better and more co-operative relationship between students and faculty members. It is impossible, as yet. to decide the cor rect solution to this problem. Hut it seems quite evident that some solution should be fought. It must be remembered that no matter how intelligent and capable a university ad ministration may be, it cannot see the stu dent's problem as the student sees it. For that eason, the university should give the students sin opportunity to present constructive criti !ism, based upon their experience, that would increase the value of their education. Hammond Blames Indians for Standards in Mexico (Continued from Page 1.) of priests and closed many of the churches because of the over abun dance of them, which Is Illustrated by one town which has a church for every day In the year. The churches are very old and are elaborately decorated because of the devout giving of the people. Most of the people are engaged In agriculture In Mexico. Some of the natives raise cattle or herd goats and others have small pieces of land to till with their crude Im plements. Mexico is very rich in minerals and produces more silver than any other country In the world. The Mexican dollar is called a peso and there are a little less than four pesos to the American dollar at the present time, which means that a person can buy al most four times as much with his money in Mexico. Certain prod ucts such as gasoline for example are an exception to this rule. The centavo is the Mexican cent. Ham mond said that the railroads are an example of the low costs and that he rode 80 miles for only 70 cents. Heart Rending. The existence of the Aztec In dians is recalled by the two an cient pyramids some 30 miles from Mexico City. These two large pyr amids are called the pyramids of the sun and the moon. Some of the smaller pyramids were used by the Aztec Indians for human sacrifices to their god, the sun. They would Free Theater Tickets Leaded Bronze Gas 17'o White Gas IS1-,0 Deep Rock Oils HOLMS ty cut the victim's heart out and hold It up to the sun aa their sacrifice. Today, on religious occasions many of the people climb up a steep hill on their hands and knees to the shrine of Guadalupe as proof of their devotion. Hammond took exception to the prevalent dislike for the Mexican national sport, bull fighting. He says the fighters see how close they can come to the bull without being hooked, and display admir able grace In avoiding the horns. The matadors with good reputa tion! for their bravery and skill make very good money. When the bull fight starts, the picador comes out into the arena with a long pole with a short spear to heckle the bull. He is riding a blindfolded horse which is padded in front and on both sides to try to avoid useless slaughter. The picador angers and tires the bull. The banderllleros appear next with colorfully decorated darts which are about a yard long. These darts are hooked in the bull's shoulder to make him more enraged. Finally, the itar of the show ap pears, the matador, with his red cape and narrow sword. He tanta lizes the bull until it is very tired and then when it comes past htm with its head lowered ha thrusts the sword through its shoulder into its heart. If this falls to kill the bull he finishes the job with a short dagger which is plunged be hind the horns into the cram. Hammond also aaid that there is a threat of another revolution in Mexico aa a rebel general, Ce dllo, has 20,00 men and wants to overthrow the government. CIVIL ENGINEERS HOLD SUMMER SURVEY CAMP (Continued from Page 1.) attitude, aptitude, and quality of work. Students planing to attend the Summer Surveying camp shall be required to register for tha courses in the office of the De partment of Civil Engineering, Me chanie Arts Hall, room 210, from May 9 to May 14, inclusive. ANC TONIT 9 P.M. FREDDIE EBENER and His Orchestra "A Chicago Name Band" Admission Women 25c Men 25c Torol $ .50 Par Couple Student Union TO MR. VAN SANT, OUR UNION CHIEF: Barb A.W.S. Sponsors Hour Dance in Student Union Building Tonight An hour dance for unaffiliates will be held at the Student Union this evening from 7 to 8 o'clock. mis dance, sponsored by the Barb A. W. S. board, will have as chaperons Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hark- ness and Mr. and Mrs. Ho A. Trlve ly. Admission is 10 cents. VAN ROYEN GOES TO WORLD CONVO. AT AMSTERDAM (Continued from Page 1.) will be the Geographical institute of the University of Naples, the Koyai High Naval institute of Naples and Professor Mlgiorini of the University of Rome, who is the editor of the Bulletin of the Royal Italian Georgraphical society. Also at Rome he will attend the International Institute of Agricul ture meetings which will be held there during the summer. While in the vicinity of the Italian capital he will be taken on a visit of the world famous Pontine reclamation project, where the Italian govern ment ia in the process of building villages on former swamp and march lands. Dr. Van Royen also plana to visit the Benito Mussolini university at Bail Confers With Geographers. After leaving Italy he will pro ceed to Yugoslavia where he will be In conference with officials of the Geographic Institute of the University of Beograd and the geographical society of that coun try. At Istanbul, Turkey, he will visit the university there and in Rumania the Royal Rumanian Geographical society. In Hungary he ia scheduled to meet the mem ber! of the Geographical Institute of tha University of Budapest, and at Vienna he will vtait at the Geo graphical institute of the Univer sity of Vienna. Dr. Van Royen la looking for ward to see the archeological sites of Czechoslovakia, well known because of their pleistocene man deposits and several of the more prominent sites in Germanv and France. Returning to Holland for the meetings of the geographical conference, he will take time to visit with educators at the Geo graphical institute of the Univer sity of Utrecht, where he received hie university education. Most of Dr. Van Royen's relatives live in Holland and his return there this summer will be in the nature of a homecoming. The work of the Union is just beginning. Its purposes and re sponsibilities for every student Who has paid In his three sheck lea is Just beginning to be seen. We thought it appropriate, then, Mr. Van Sant, that we register with you a few suggestions that will, no doubt, be carried out next year. We are in no way critical of the progress which the Union has already made. But words criticizing the be ginning efficiency of the Union have been spoken behind the backs of yourself and those with whom you work. C-C It is to be taken for grunted that the functions of the Union arc new and have been organized only several weeks. Specifically, however, Mr. Van Sant, students have hastened to criticize the serv ice which they obtain in both the caking rendezveous and the ban quet rooms. These individuals have argued that a Union of students should be able to carry on a busi ness Just as efficiently as a profit making private enterprise. Comment has also been leveled at the amount of food given at the Union in proportion with that which is plated in the more popu 1 a r down-town establishments which cater to banquets. Atmos phere and accessibility should be considered but the students will demand Just as much, if not more, than they would in a private es tablishment. C-C Many professors, if not a ma jority, eat their noon lunches near the campus. Many of them who have been told of a special noon luncheon at the Union tor a certain price have been cha grined when they finally had their plate set before them. Professors, you know, are of the hurry-up type. They also are wise enough to have a certain sense of values. Most of them, however, are not critical and realize that routine must be es tablished. C-C But most important of all is the tradition which will be brought about by the Union. It is not your duty, Mr. Van Sant, to see that new ideas cretaed by Union are formed into well rounded tradi tions. The students, themselves, will do this, but they must be guided. To be specific, something miiNt be done to see that students start "cutting" at the matinee dances. The purposes of these dances, we are told, is to promote new friendships. What student on this campus would think of "cut ting some girl that he never knew. C-C This campus, imbued with a midwestern spirit, is lacking in tradition and isn't any too fa vorable to friendliness. Students those young men and women who have extraordinary oppor tunities of attending an institu tion of higher learning never speak to one of then fellows that they do not know. Suoh an Idea never enters their head. To speak to their own fraternity or sorority members is some times a hardship. C C The Union is designed to alter this situation. It Is designed to cre ate a common bond of friendship and co-operation such as that which is well established on most eastern campl and all of those in the south. And It's the same way with the spirit on this campus. The majority of students are ready to let things go as they will; they are prone to stand by and watch. For that reason, then, we were somewhat enlightened to see some long lost spirit ooze from the veins of members of two political fac tions and end In the first real student display since 1930. Our football rallies are often small and J4ik(iLt On the It's gargantuan, It's stupendous, it's terrific. , .we doubt the verac ity of the adjectives, but that's what CBS publicity reports say Mark Warnow's fifty-five piece "Hit Parade" band, which broad casts America's favorites over CBS every Saturday evening. Before any of the musicians in this band the largest dance or chestra ever to be heard on a net work series piny a note, more than a million little flag-decked black notes have to be written. Eleven arrangers and eight copyists work on twenty-four hour shifts to orchestrate the ten hit tunes of the nation, chosen each week by secret poll. These arrang ers and copyists use 1,200 sheets of musical manuscript paper, and 300 of manuscript paper to say nothing of the innumerable pens and bottles of ink that figure In this behind-the-scenes activity. Forty-five minutes on the air means hundreds of hours of prep aration and twelve hour days for musicians in rehearsal each Mon day thru Thursday. The total staff, numbering eighty persons rests on Sundays and reports to start the task all over again on Monday. Warnow, genial black haired magician who welds his seemingly unamanageable mixture of music, humans, and harrowing details into a perfect whole, refuses to discuss the amount of rosin used by the thirty-six men who com prise the string section of the band. "I've troubles enough without worrying about that," he sighs. Sixty-three of the Carol Lom bard fans who mobbed the stage entrance of the CBS Music Box theater after the blonde movie star's appearance in the Radio Theater's varsion of "My Man Godfrey," were rewarded With singularly appropriate souvenirs. Each got a page of Miss Lom bard's script as there were ex actly sixty-three pages to the script, only that number of fans received pages. I ' iixi 1 1 vn it aw" !; : COME TODAY! . . , f rom out of (lit West enmet anothtr treaty itory Ihr first In TECHNICOLOR! "GOLD IS WHERE YOU FIND IT" with Gcorfe Brent Olivia Dellavilland Claude Rains WTI Snt lor 25c Starts tnZT ) DABDT X OF ALL X THWIXMIt 11:11 T.H. "FRANKENSTEIN" with BORIS KARLOFF PLUS "Female 2 Fugitive" wit IN View. oaCK VAN hi .c ALt r " t 3S& "-nd Fcttur hl Kcltlni Ccmndy I Man Without a Houii... "Midnight Intruder" ORPIIEUM TODAY! 4 Comlnc "Gala Anniversary Week" rius! Canted Thit Cot "Vumph"! "MAID'S NIGHT OUT" with Joan 1-onUln Allen Lino I J te , fir r 1 r n r v r.s I' 4 ' . 'jJK i ' i 1 1 EXTRA! SPECIAL! Whgr do mother no loafer drrod THE BIRTH OF A BABY Set 'That Matheri Mlihl Lit' DONALD TtVCK In Donald Niphawil MARCH OF TIMC a Lait Minuto Ktwi i from KrOR HENRY BUOQE Friday "THt TRUMPET KINO" In canon and kit world Famout Orehoitra 1 mntloiana, Th wan wn mad "Hot Llpi" lamoui. Oat raar ticket! at Schmollor A Muelleri. IS NEWS PARADE 1 Mof'on'e Churchill A MCE IDEA RUT The tax exemption Issue conies to light again, with Senator Brown proposing a Joint congressional in vestigation of existing tax exemp tions. Securities and salaries of federal, state and municipal gov ernments will come in for their share In revenue raising If the administration's proposal goes through. Whether enactment of a statute will be sufficient is doubtful. Con stitutional restrictions against fed eral taxing of state Institutions and state taxing of federal insti tutions, however, will make It ex ceedingly difficult to get any re ciprocal tax by the nine guardians of governmental propriety. BOOMERANG The part played by German fas cists In Brazil's recent revolt rouses alarm in the United States to the extent that Roosevelt asks investigation of European propa ganda In South America. Fascism approaching eo uncomfortably close to the United States awakens all the old clamor for enforcement of the Monroe doctrine, with America for Americana and Euro peans on their own side of the water. German propaganda, strangely enough, represents a highly mu--cessful specialization and emula tion of methods borrowed from the United States. Germany took Un cle Sam as her tutor back In the days before the World war, and he now looks in wonder at the pro portions to which his brain child has developed, and the speed with which it has returned home. TANKSTERETTES TO HOLD ANNUAL DINNER TONIGHT Coed Swim. Club to Install New Officers; Banquet Held in YW.C.A. Tanksterettes, gii'ln' swimming club, will hold their annual eprlng banquet this evening Ht 6 O'clock at the city Y. W. C. A., when newly elected officers will be in stalled. President of the group for next year Is Jane Cook; vice president, Elizabeth Waugh; secretary, Vir ginia Bergman; and treasurer, Jean Miller. Miss Nellie Good Is the faculty sponsor of the group. Want Refined Girl to accompany family of three, (In cludlno two amnll children) to cot. t.ige In northern Minnesota for Slimmer. Duties Include onerl household work and care of chll dren. Wages small, but If you want a summer vacation on one ef Min nesota's finest lakes this Is an op. portunity. If Interested write Bor No. 1, care Ran buslnesi offlea. Give name, address, phone, qualifications. HOTEL LINCOLN slim lion JJoils Jltis 'Jeclt lo E. L. Wilbur, Manager h'riilny Daily Nebraskan Staff Sigma Nu Saturday Big Six Director! our NEW TRUMP has A RECORD - BREAKING COLLAR! D Imagine a soft collar r that will give you at least two years of or dinary' wear! That's the wear you'll get from the specially woven collar on Arrow's New Trump shirt. And this is not an idle claim. Washing tests have proved it Our New Trump is cut in Arrow's Mitoga form-fit de sign, too. And it's Sanforized-Shrunk if one ever shrinks. I K . J Ad m a aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa a . ' V I S.WOKIJCO a new shirt free ARROWS NEW TRUMP S2 Fifty trips to the washboard without a whimper that's what happens to that astonishing new col lar on the Arrow New Trump Shirto You'll never beat It for long wear and smart styles Tbe price is two dollars. Mitoga shaped to fit --SanforUed-shrniik MAY20TH I ' "all lax fata, none prlee, He. CBAIO BB1 WOLDS mm r-r J v--t--"""- KIT IVH.TN Vr.NABI.U