TWO TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1931. The Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY Or NEBRASKA Published Tuesday and Friday morn lng during summer scnooi. . Entered as second class matter at the postoffice in Lincoln, Nebraik under act of conaress. March 3. 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for In Section 1103, act of October 1917. authorized January -20. 1922. Directed by the Student Publication board. SUBSCRIPTION RATE . For Nine Weeks CO cents mailed 25 cents on campu t Single copy 5 cents. Oscar Norling Executive Editor Jock Erickson Editorial Assistant Bernard Jennings. .Business Assistant REGISTRATION Registration" totals at the close of the second week indicate" that the total enrollment this summer may even be greater than that of last year. This comes as a surpris to those who predicted that on ac count of adverse economic condi tions the 1931 summer session would attract a fewer number of - students than in normal years. Reasons given by many who have enrolled for work this sum' mer after an absence of a few years show it is on account of ad verse conditions that they have re turned to school once more. This is also true for many students who are continuing their r e g u 1 a studies in the summer session. Many teachers and students took advantage of various kinds of work during past summers. But this year such opportunities were very scarce. There were no jobs, or else they had been taken by men who, being temporarily out of work, were forced to depend upon chance bits of work. So, having no work, many decided that now would be a good time to do gradu ate work or add to the number of credits necessary for a degree. New requirements have also resulted in the enrollment of many teachers for summer work. Hav ir.g taught for a certain length of time, they must come back for ad ditional study in order to continue m the teaching profession. Especially gratifying is the in crease in the graduate college and in academic work. For it would seem to indicate that an increasing number of teachers are coming to the realization that even more im portant than experience and the mechanics of teaching is the devel opmert of a cultural background. WHAT THEY SAY GRINDING FACES OF THE F00R When Mr. Steele of Kimball county gets home from the pres ent session of the legislature, he should take down his Bible and read the fifteenth verse of the third chapter of Isaiah. For fear be will not have time, here is the verse for bis consideration: "Wliat mean ye that ye beat My people to pieces, and grind the faces of the poor? saith the Lord God c f Hosts." In the house, Saturday, Mr. Steele supported a motion to re " ice the wages and salaries of all ttate employes, and of all the fac ulty and employes of the Univer sity of Nebraska as well. In bis argument for this action he boasted that he is now hiring men for half as much as he paid two years ago, w hen wages were $6 and $8 a day. 'And I'm getting a good deal more work out of them, too," he loid the house. "It used to be that they would not work more than eight or nine hours a day. Now they get out at sunup and keep right at it all day." When all employers have adopted Mr. Steele's program, and work men are driven from sunup to sun down for meager, starvation pay, v ho will buy the wheat and sugar beets Mr. Steele is interested in raising? And what prices will he pet for the farming implements be is selling? Employers who selfishly take advantage of the dire predicament ff men seeking work these days might also read the fourteenth verse of Isaiah III: "The Lord will enter into judg ment with the ancients of His peo ple, and the princes thereof; for ye have eaten up the vineyard; the spoil of the poor is in your DANCING KEEPS YOU YOUNG Learn to Dance Special Rales In BALLROOM' DANCING Borner Sisters Studio MUSICIANS HEAR OWN VOICES ON MACHINE In order to improve their per formances, several University of Nebraska students and faculty members have made personally recorded phonograph numbers at the local Speak-O-Phone station. Howard Kirkpatrlc, Herbert Schmidt, Oscar Bennett, Earnest Harrison, Edith Lucille Robbins, and Walter Wheatly are among the faculty members who have found the records useful in their work. The Delta Tau Delta instru mental group, Minnie Nelson, graduate of 1931, J. Miller Richey, Loie - Stephens, Margaret Mack echnie, and Berniece Cline are among the - students who have made recordings. Jerry Mickle and Janet Mickle recently recorded the balcony scene from "Romeo and Juliet." STUDENT OPINION If Pythagoras Should Come to N. U. Should the ancient Greek philos opher, Pythagoras return from the realm of shades to increase his wisdom in TC at N. U.; he would no doubt paraphrase his statement of old that if he had a place where on to stand and a lever sufficiently long, he could lift the earth .and say as many a Grad. feels: "Jt i had a place to stand or sit in the classroom and a library not so hot, I could get my lessons. The schooldads who pay hard earned "iron men" to get courses that will fit them for larger serv ice to the state of Nebraska feel that they are imposed upon when compelled to be jammed together in classrooms like sardines in a box. If this be hot air, make the most of it. We do. One of the TC Grads. Knockers! Knockers! You'd be surprised to know how many subnormal knock ers are. to be found among the poker faced schooldads that re turn to the campus of good old N. U. every year. This summer ses sion is worse than ever. What do they knock about? They grumble about their grub, holler about the heat, crab about the courses, sweat about the study hall in the library, whimper about why they have to write a thesis, sputter about parking space, growl about grades, prittle-prattle about Profs., wail " about the wets, de fame the drys, gabble about golf, knock on everything. Every time they open their mouth they show how unfit they are to direct the affairs of a school system and how rotten they are as community leaders. They are to be pitied. They have never learned the meaning of the maxim, "You can t saw wood witn hammer." A STUDENT. OTHER CAMPUSES LAWRENCE A ten day fish ing trip on the gulf near Corpus Christi, Tex., is the outing which Chancellor E. H. Lindley, Univer- lty of Kansas; Dr. Richard L Sut ton, University of Kansas medical college faculty; President W. A. Jessup, University of Iowa; and President L. D. Coffman, Univer sity of Minnesota; are holding. They are fishing for tarpon. Last summer the same group spent two weeks in Canada. DENVER At the Junior Prom held recently at the University of uenver, nearly 200 extra favors were ordered by mistake. Total profits on the affair amounted to sixty-two cent.). COLUMBUS Because on Ohio State student suffered two broken vertebrae during a "ducking,'' of ficials of the college have banned all forms of hazing at that school. IOWA CITY Latest of addi tions to the University of Iowa mseum is a forty-five pound cat- Mi ;r-T INTERESTING EDUCATIONAL SIDELIGHTS PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY (From "Time" Mogaxlne). In the extreme southeast corner of New Hampshire, fifty miles north of Boston, is the town of Exeter, where John Phillips in 1781 founded Phillips Exeter Acad emy. Twenty-five miles nearer Boston is Andover, where John's nephew, Samuel, founded Phillips Academy one year earlier. (His school later became "Phillips Academy at Andover" to distin guish it from his uncle's school at Exeter.) Exeter and Andover have flour ished mightily until today they are the twin giants of prep schools in size and in prestige. Other schools are certainly more fashionable, possibly more potent scholastically, improbably more prolific in first- string athletes. But no other schools have the glamour of Exe ter and Andover whose histories are as long as their rosters of stu dents. Three weeks ago many wealthy and scholarly alumni returned to Exeter for its 150th anniversary wnere, among other things, a let' ter of congratulation from Presl dent Hoover was read at the alumni luncheon. Scholars Recognized. True to its New England tradi tions, .mxeter welcomed to its 150th anniversary not primarily men of weaitn or family but men of learn ing. At the commemorative ex ercises, the platform was crowded witn the deans and presidents of great eastern schools and colleges. Speech of the day was that of President Abbott awrence Lowell. of Harvard, who asked for less coddling and babying in modern education; declared that a child should read "fluently" at five and certainly at six" and went on to say: "This retardation runs through tbe whole process. In sec ondary schools we study what should have been finished earlier; in college we do what should have been done at school. . ." A better theme could not have been chosen because Exeter, with its sister school Andover, is noted for its grownup atmosphere. Its students are older and more ma ture than in most prep schools. Many of them come from the small manufacturing towns of Massachusetts and New Hamp shire to work their way thru Exe ter by waiting on table at Alumni Hall and doing odd jobs around the school and town. fish caught in the Iowa river by a former student. COLUMBUS The universities committee of the Ohio house of representatives was committed to a policy of non-interference with the business and academic affairs of Ohio State university. It decided there is no need to inquire into the action of the uni versity trustees in dismissing Her bert Miller, internationally known sociologist. It also concluded that nothing is to be gained by investi gation the trustees' business trans actions or the question of compul sory military training for stu dents. Dr. Miller's case developed a lot of debate when the professor ap peared before the committee and told them he could discover no rea son for the trustees' action "except the personal animosity of Julius Stone, chairman of the board." REGATTA COURSE, New Lon don, Conn. Flashing a sensational finish, Harvard's varsity crew de feated Yale by three lengths on the Thames. Harvard's unofficial time for the four miles was 20 minutes 16 seconds. This was the RENT A CAR Fords, Reos. Durantf. Austins Your EBusiness Is Appreciated Motor Out Company 1120 P St. B-68.9 ALWAYS OPEN Quality Foods at Reasonable Prices (C Cft MEAL C PJdU TICKET. . v Y. M. C. A. CAFETERIA 13th & P Sts, No Special Attention. Few boys who need special at tention find their way to Exeter, or last long after getting there There are few rules. Smoking is allowed in the rooms tho not on the street; seniors must be in their dormitory by ten, all others by eight: there is no lights out- time. The chief faculty check on undergraduate amusements is the famed, and perhaps legenaary. "Black List" of town girls. To be seen with a girl on this list means instant expulsion. This freedom, almost that of a college undergraduate, stems largely from the practice of letting students room i n private nouses around town instead of concen trating them in dormitories. Tho the new dormitories recently built have ereatly reduced the number of "out students" the idea that a student's extra-curricular activities are his own business still persists. Even the force of public opinion, so power ful in smaller schools, is com paratively weak in Exeter. The great Exeter tradition is of course, rivalry with Andover, which is all the more comparable to the Harvard-Tale rivalry be cause Exeter has been a predomin antly Harvard school, (tho of late she has sent many sons to Yale and Princeton) and Andover has been almost completely Yale. And so the climax of the sequicenten nial celebration for the rank and file of alumni and boys, was not the impressive official ceremonies but rather the fiftieth Exeter Andover baseball game which was played at Exeter in the glow of the evening sun and which re sulted in a victory for Exeter, to 2. Ancient tho it is, Exeter is changing rapidly. Last November, Edward Stephen HarKness, him self not an Exeter man, gave $7,- 000,000 for a house plan, salary increases, and new dormitories Also active was the late Col. Wil liam Boyce Thompson, who spent much of his great mining wealth in giving Exeter a big modern gymnasium, athletic, science and administration buildings and, last year $1,000,000 more. At present the school has some 650 students, sixty-five teachers, many handsome Georgian build ings, a Gothic church designed by Ralph Adams Cram, one of the outstanding prep school libraries, and an endowment of over $6,000,- 000. end of three consecutive victories for the Yale crew which had an average of nine wins in ten races. 2,596 STUDENTS TAKE SUMMER TERM WORK (Continued from Page 1.) pleted, but it is still possible for late enrollments to be made in the nine week period. The list of nurses who are taking summer work at the College of Medicine at Omaha will also add to the 1931 total. In the list of special registra tion for the one week course on operation and care of school plants was held yesterday. A two week period on the study of social case work beginning July 27 will com plete all registration for the 1931 summer term. H oa Sundaes B LUNCHES I 2 t Sandwiches Salads g WMfrWlC j2?tL Rector's Pharmacy I 1 IM$2' i C. E. Buchholz, Mgr. 13 A P I Z ' X ifLA Need F request Cleaning To have your summer garments locking fresh they should be Modern Cleaned at regular inter vals. We call for and deliver promptly all' work guaranteed to please. bwIODE (b Souk up & BOOK EXHIBIT DRAWS STUDENTS TO ARMORY Publishing Firms Show School Textbooks And Lab Supplies. Many summer school students who are teachers 'and professors are attending the educational ex hibit by textbook publishers which is being held in Grant" Memorial ball from June 10 to 29. Many representatives of various school textbook and supplies companies have displays set up. The pub lishers represented and their re- spective exhibitors are: ' Central Scientific Company, c. E. Widick; Iroquois Publishing Company, Chicago, C E. Mason; Rand, McNally & Co., Chicago, W. C. Hardirlg; Macmillan Co., Chi cago, R. H. Jones; Laurel Book Co., Chicago, Geo. E. Lee; Silver Burdett & Co., Chicago, E. O. Har vey; Southwester Publishing Co., Cincinnati, J. E. Morresy; Lyons & Carnahan, Chicago, I. N. Clark; Ginn & Co., Chicago, L. E. Mum- ford, H. B. Vifquain; W. M. Welch Mfg. Co., Chicago, Gomer A. Jones. John C. Winston Co., Chicago, W. K. Fowler; A. N. Palmer Co., Nettie I. Miller; Scott, Foresman & Co., Chicago, T. R. Crawford; Allyn & Bacon, Chicago, A. P. Hill yer; H. M. Rowe Co., Chicago, O. J. Kersten; Ben J. H. Sanborn & Co., Chicago, A. J. Faber; Univer sity Publishing Co., Lincoln, Clara J. "Smith, G. W. Saunders; Web ster Publishing Co., St. Louis, L. B. Stacy; Laidlaw Bros., Chicago, Paul W. Kidder; American Book Co., Chicago, B. E. Bell, Arvid Olson; American Crayon Co.; World Book, Roach-Fowler Co., T. O. Elliot; Heath & Co., D.C., Chi cago, M. B. Thompson; Houghton, Mifflin Co., Chicago, S. E. Sleeves. INSTRUCTORS AT MEETING Agricultural Engineers Hear Senator Dickinson and Cyrus McCormick. L. J. Dickinson, United States senator from Iowa, and Cyrus McCormick, vice president of the International Harvester company, are among the prominent speakers of the program of the twenty-fifth anniversary meeting of the Ameri can Society of Agricultural En gineers at Iowa State college, June 22 to 26. Several University of Nebraska instructors are attending including Prof. E. E. Brackett, chairman of the department of agricultural en gineering; Prof. C. W. Smith, Mr. E. B. Lewis, research engineer in agricultural engineering; Mr. D. Wood, extension agent in agricultural engineering; Mr. P. R. Hoff, assistant xtension agent; Mr. O. J. Trenarv. instructor. Antelope Park LEADERS Westover at r l.'3 "P" St. CALL F-2377 FOR SERVICE E4819.