THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1931, TWO THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan ' Station A. Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Assort ntrct (Kfttttnintr 'IJrfss 'K""i " -' I9JJ (J,H0.MLCrKTJi!,"By Je Cntsrad as second-cisst matter at th poatoffica In Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congress. March 3, 1870, and at special rata of postaage provided for In section 1103, act el October 8, 1917, authorized January 20, 19SS. THINTV.THIRD VtAR Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings during tha academle year. SUBSCRIPTION RATI J 1.60 year 6lngla Copy 6 cents $1.00 a ssmtster 2.60 a year mailed 11. M) a semester mailed Under direction ot the Student Publication Beard. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4A. Telephones Dayi 8-6891) Nlghti 8.6888. B-3333 (Journal) Ask for Nebraskan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Laurence Hall Edltor-ln-chlef Managing Editors I) rues Nlcoll Violet Cross News Editors Burton Marvin Jack Fischer Margaret Thlete Virginia Selleck Society Editor 8 porta Editor Irwin Ryan BUSINESS STAFF Bernard Jennings Bualness Manager Assistant Buslnsss Managers George Holyoke Olck Schmidt Wilbur Erlckson Without A Quorum. pO more striking example of student lethargy could be found than the lack of interest that found the Student council without a quorum present at the time of Its Wednesday evening meeting. The men and women elected by the student body last spring were chosen for the purpose of di recting the affairs of campus activities. But was the council representing the student body Wednes day night? It was not; there were not enough mem bers present for the council to represent anything. There would be some excuse for lack of inter est in the council, perhaps, if it were a body with out power or without work to do. Members might very well be excused for not taking proper interest in -the council if it was aimless or without value. But the council is not aimless. It has power, if the members will but stir themselves from their intel lectual coma, and there is work for the council to do. Broad purposes are set forth In its constitution. For the enlightenment of the deadhead members we quote: "The purposes of this organization shall be to act M the supreme) student governing body in the regulation and co-ordination of all phases of student self-government and extra-curricular activi ties and to serve as an agency through which fac ulty relationships with student activities may be maintained." Ths council's constitution is set forth in detail in the university catalog, and if the mem bers of the body will read it they will discover that under its provisions the powers they may exer cise are of a broad and general nature. But the council can do nothing if its individual members do not take sufficient Interest In their duties to attend meetings and take an active part in the body's work. Already this year there have been enough pos sible projects to make council membership a posi tion of responsibility. The questions that have been raised, however, will remain in the realm of mere possibilities as long as the legislators continue to manifest their disinterest in everything but their own comfort A short time ago, for example, a proposal to establish a permanent university booking agency was broached. Nothing has been accomplished. At the beginning; of the year the institution of what was to have been i "clean-up" policy called for a comprehensive examination of the constitutions of campus organizations. The survey got as far as the Corn Cobs, who were reorganized, but no fur ther. Attempts to institute a series of "varsity part ies" were made. No definite council action has ever been taken. So it goes. There is work for the student leg islature to do, but as long as the present situation persists, everything falls on the heads of perhaps half a dozen representatives. Other council mem bers, when they come to meetings, do nothing more vital than sit in passive stupidity. Only one conclusion can be drawn from the facts as they have revealed themselves throughout the semester; council members, chosen in the pres ent way do not fulfill their obligations to the student body in any satisfactory manner. Absence from meetings that fall at 5 o'clock indicates that the alleged legislators represent only their own animal desires for food. The situation is disgraceful. To Clarify Any Doubts. REVELLING a barrage of statements against the activity tax plan, "Timothy," whose letter ap peared in yesterday's Nebraskan, labels the project a "farce." Criticizing ths 'student council for not "leaving well enough alone" he continues his objec tion to the plan by assuring us that he, for one, is against the plan which he characterizes as "a scheme to force student support of publications and athletic tickets." We admit that "Timothy's" criticisms of the tax plan are timely. We assume, also, that the attack ho makes upon the project is typical of a small per centage of the student body. We believe, neverthe less, that the present council has acted wisely in furthering its efforts to revive interest In the pro ject. Outlining its procedure in a more comprehen sive manner than the method used last year, the student council has set about to insure a represent ative and accurate picture of student opinion on the question. Setting up a special committee composed of student organization heads, the council has col laborated with this group since the middle of the semester. As a result of their efforts, the tentative tax plan, which in itself required an infinite amount of work to complete, has been drafted. During the payment of rees for the second se mester, students will be given an opportunity to vote upon the tentative plan. Using the results of this poll as an indication of student sentiment, the remainder of the semester will be spent by council members drafting a blanket tax to be presented to the board of regents. That group will decide the fate of the project. This, in brief, is the proposed line of action which the council has outlined for its major project of the year. gOME justification, perhaps, may be found to up hold Timothy's objection to the compulsory feature of the tax plan. He indicates that compul sion attached to the plan may work hardship upon no small percentage of the student population. It must be admitted, pereforce, that Timothy's point is well taken. But exemptions to students whose budgets could not stand the additional strain created by such a tax, have been considered at length by council members. Realizing, at the out set, that the activity tax would be little more than useless if put upon a voluntary basis, the council has spent much time in perfecting a workable scheme, thru which students actually in dire straits would be granted exemption from paying the tax. Items included in the present plan, Timothy charges, have not enough value to justify the claim that they are of all student interest. It must be realized, however, that a necessary discrimination between activities must be made If the plan was to be at all feasible. Confronted with a maze of stu dent activities and enterprises, sponsors, of neces sity, have made an arbitrary discrimination, based primarily upon two arguments: First, that those activities which were most representative of the stu dent body be included In the plan; and second, those activities which have the greatest possibility ot campus-wide participation. It must be admitted, however, that whatever standard is used will be open to criticism. The ballot to be used in voting, however, has space for students to write in what ever activities they feel should deserve campus wide SUDDOrt Timothy very bluntly albeit foolishly, admits that he doesn't care, regardless of the outcome. Un fortunately the utter complacency which finds its voice in Timothy's letter, only too truly character izes the attitude of many Nebraska students. Such a complacent run of mind is, in a measure, the cause that lies behind the exceeding dullness of the campus extra-curricular life. , While it must be admitted that the tax plan will guarantee publications financial support, it cannot bo said that such a design was prompted by selfish motives. It has as its purpose, on the other hand, a financial guarantee upon which ubllcatlons and othere student enterprises may lay definite plans, thus insuring a consistent and better quality of service to the students. The tax plan goes further than that, however, by making far more probable a unified spirit on the camnus. since all instead of Just part of the students will be taking part in various student enterprises. DRIEFLY, arguments in favor of the proposed ac tivity tax plan, may be summed up as follows: Under the nlan. every student pays the tax, thus making the cost of the various enterprises to each individual greatly reduced. All enterprises and publications which are a part of the activity tax plan, are guaranteed a cer tain financial support and enn lay their plans de finitely to insure a uniform quality of their services to the students. The tax plan provides a means for financing such contemplated campus improvements as a stu dent union building, which is, it appears, clearly the best way of financing the projects. The tax plan eliminates the necessity for so many subscription sales and campaigns. The tax takes care of these items in semcsterly payments. For those who are unable to pay, exemption will be made. Contemporary Comment The Liberal Youths. For sheer poverty of thought and complete lack of intellectual courage no recent occurrence on an American campus is more strikingly representative than the refusal of the American Student Federation to approve a resolution condemning censorship of the col lege press. To the resolution offered by a delegate from Columbia university the reactionary representatives of 175 colleges and universities turned a cold shoulder and indif ferently voted to table it. The shoddy thinking of the convention was accurately expressed in one delegate's dismissal of the resolu tion with the assertion that he for one "did not want his college's dirty linen hanging on the line for public gaze." In coldly turning their smug backs on the proposal for a free and uncensored college press the National Student Federation Is definitely committed to the con tinuance of worthless campus house organs which persistently close their eyes to the real issues of the present day American uni versity, and, Instead, confine their Pollvanna efforts to continuous glorification of the picayune af fairs of the campus. That such a condition of journalistic poverty exists among American universi ties and colleges is amply demon strated by careful reading of the scores of dailies and weeklies which clutter up our desk every day. It seems almost incredible that the moss-covered minds of the delegates who voted for a "kept" press were not In some small measure, at least, exhilarated by the wholesome atmosphere of the new. liberal spirit in the nation's capital. That they have refused to accent the challenge for a free press and free exchange of con flicting idea3 is striking evidence that a great mass of American students trod far behind their elders in the march toward social and intellectual progress. Wis consin Cardinal. Starting to Work Sooner. Willie is a sfudent In the school. Thru a period of years he has struggled for an education. During his high school days he worked after school, giving up the chance he had for athletic prominence so that he could help at home; where what little help he could give was needed. With graduation from high school, Willie thought of college. . . but only thought. Circumstances did permit his starting to school, with a Job on the side, selling eggs. With the debacle of 1929 and the resultant drop in egg values, Willie found himself with all his eggs in one basket and they a dime a dozen. So Willie sought other outlets for bis energy, and bis desire for an education. He found a job that kept him up until 1 o'clock in the morning and paid $30 a month, on which he was able to continue in college. The next year, Willie ad vanced a bit He got $40 a month and twenty hours more work per week. When Willie arrived at the es tate of senior in college he was worn out but game. He landed a job working only forty-eight hours a week, which kept him up until 2 o'clock. Then came the NRA and Willie's wages were reduced to the minimum as were his 'lours. But that solved few problems. While Willie had been drudging away at his work, grinding out his lessons, supposedly getting a col lege education, his youth was fly ing out the window. One day he took a look at himself abstractedly. Here is what he saw: A man of 23, averagely dressed, stoop-shouldered from his indoor work, pasty-white complexioned, unmannered socially because of lack of opportunity; without friends, without social contacts, without acquaintances among the girls at college, and with three fourths of an education. Willie found himself burned out, physi cally and mentally. There was lit tle thrill in college any more. That had gone out the window, too. A college education without the fullness and wholeness of college life is not a college education. If a part must be sacrificed so that the other part may be realized, it is better to do without any. Working one's way thru college used to be the finest embodiment of American youth that the educa tors could hold up to a bedazzled American public, intoxicated with the idea of a college education. To day as a result, there are too many Willies looking abstractedly at themselves and not finding the pic ture pretty. THE SUNFLOWER. The State That Was. The people of California do not deserve the ill fortune that the gods of weather and eathquake have showered upon them. But the ballyboo artists of those coastal re gions had it coming, and we are pardoned a bit of midwestern gloating when we point to the sev eral acts of an irate providence that have done much to mulllfy the more attractive features of the ho boes' paradise. Los Angeles has admitted that it had a slight quake last year, and its schoolmen have Intimated Chat many of Its school buildings are now unsafe. During the holidays a slight "clearing-up" shower burst the parched banks of the Los An geles river and carried scores of cottages toward the sea. While coroners worked overtime, Gov. James Roloh lent bis vocal aid to the relief workers. He declined to state that the flood was Cali fornia's warning to kidnapers. To cap California's tragedy, a well-fed Stanford team was thrown to a lean pack of Columbia lions In a wet Pasadena pold-fish bowl. Alonr with ColumWa ana possi bly some few other unfeeling mis anthropes, we contemplate with satisfaction the complete debunk ing of California tha state that was! .. Minnesota Daily. Interviews With Ghosts by Maurice Johnson This Is one ot a aeries ot imaginary dialogues concerning the Ideal university Ille. The dialogues will appear at regu lar bi-weekly Intervals. CONFUCIUS "I was a teacher who went among the people and talked," said Confucius. In his exotic robes this ghost inspired awe, and yet he was humble as he spoke. "Then you approve of the So cratic, rather than the mass method of university education?" I asked. He nodded sagely. "Words of wisdom should not be flung into the winds. I personally answered my pupils' queries and discussed matters of life with them." "You found no difficulties in your method?" I asked. "No." he told me. "Only girls and servants are hard to train." "In what should university stu dents be instructed?" I asked. "The wise professor," said Con fucius' ghost, "will keep old knowl edge akindle in his students' minds and add new knowledge as well. He should subject their minds to poetry. Poetry vould ripen them, teach them insight, fellow feeling, and forebearance. "What is the purpose of learning under a professor?" I asKed. "Wisdom, rather than prowess," he told me. "Wisdom is to know mankind, just as love Is to love mankind." "Would you advise meditation Chinese-fashion?" I asked. "Study without thought," said Confucius, "is vain." "But vice-versa," I began. He nodded. "Yes, it is also true that thought without study is a dangerous thing. "If you could choose an ideal pupil," I said, "what -ort would he be?" "Such a scholar, to be taken into my heart," said Confucius, "should The manly art of self-defense Two Commercial Clubs Will Hold Joint Party a 4;nf narftf nt h men'8 and A JW"i f J 7" ... - women's commercial club will te eiven Saturday. Jan. 16 at the Lin- dell hotel. Music for the occasion will be furnished by Julius Luaiam and his band. The -wty is ror members of the two cluu - 'y. 71EIV5 SUITS, TOPCOATS AND OVERCOATS A HEN'S FELT HATS 55C Ladies Plain Dresses & Coats 75c Additional Charge for Pleats, Frills and Fur Trimming Souhup ft VTettorrr CALL F2377 for Service 21st aV G Streets "tow a - -. iB . now applied to telephone cable Western Electric, manufacturing unit of the Bell System, now makes a tape armored telephone cable ready to meet all comers. When laid directly in the ground, this cable defends itself against moisture, grit, corrosion and other enemies. Besides the usual lead sheath, the tiny copper wires in the cable are guarded by seven layers of paper, jute and steel tape all saturated or covered with asphalt compound. In pioneering and producing improved appa ratus, Western Electric contributes to the year 'round reliability of your Bell Telephone. BELL SYSTEM WHY NOT TAKE A TRIP HOME BY TELEPHONE? TONIGHT AT HALF-PAST EIGHT be In quest of truth. It would not matter whether he had wealth or nothing. A student who is ashamed of poor clothes and poor food it is idle talking to." "That is true," I agreed. Confucius was silent for a long while, slowly nodding ills head. Then he said: "True knowledge Is this to know that you know, when you know, and to know that you do not know, when you do not know!" One of the traditions at Purdue university in Lafayette, Indiana Is that there is no smoking in any building on the campus. There are certain areas on the campus in which students are allowed to smoke, but there is a traditional aversion for even that much. Editorial Staff to Have Photos Taken Thursday Workers on the editorial side of the Dally Nebraskan will meet at 4:30 Thursday afternoon at tha studio to have a group picture taken. All reporters and staff mem bers are urged to bo present The Student Pulse Brlel, ennclee contribution! perti nent to matters of stnaent life and Ihr university are welcomed by this ilp-irt.iieut, under the aeuul testrlc tloni of sound newspaper practice, which eseludre all Undone matter and personal attacks. Letters mint be slsnrd, but namee will be with i eld from publication If so desired. Rebuke for Tax Opposition TO THE EDITOR: Will someone please tell me was "Timothy" trying to be sar castle or funny? In any case thought was not a part of his de cision. Neither the student control nor anyone else is trying to force an activity tax upon students. Ex emptions are a part of the plan. As to the merits of the tax, there are many, I suspect that "Timo thy" has a queer and peculiar sense of valuo after reading his np- praisal of campus publications. I suspect, further, that ho has little regard for any puoucations. in truth his attitude is Comparable with that of a man who commen ted on my decision to enter Jour nalism by saying, "We need black smiths but we do not need news papers." Of course, he vas a blacksmith. The value of campus publica tions exceeds by far the few dol lars of cost. "Timothy" forgeta that the seniors who are working hard for a tax will never receive Its direct benefits. "Timothy" evi dently does nothing that is not di rectly beneficial to himself. Obvi ously he cannot profit from the tax with such an uncompromising and narrow attitude. He alone is the loser and he should be. J. H. B. GOING TO f CALIFORNIA . Send for Book with complete de scriptions on Where-to-go and What-to-see. 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