WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1933. rwo TIIE NEBRASKAN The NEBRASKAN Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska. Official Student Publication and Bulle tin of the 1935 Summer Session. Published Wednesday morning dur ing the summer session and circulated free to summer students and faculty members from boxes in Social Sciences and Teachers college buildings and Andrews hall. Directed by Student Publications Board Telephones: Day B6891 Night B6882 Virginia Selleck Editor Johnston Sn-pes Associate Editor Truman Oberndorf. . Business Managr Give Them Responsibility. A contriDutor 10 the Student Pulse column today points out a very lamentable situation on the university campus. R. V. asks why Drofessors at Nebraska manifest SO little interest in the university, its projects, and its standing. This is a question which many thinking students have asked themselves and each other for a number of years, and none yet has satisfac torily answered. Strangely enough, R. V. has hit upon the one answer that has oc curred to student leaders . . namelv. that professors are not given an important enough place in the university's system to en courage them to make the prob lems of the university their own. Every year or so, good men leave this college to instruct in other schools; and we understand that many more are looking every year for some place to go. If professors could help to form, in however small a way, the poli cies of the administration, it does seem that they would be more like ly to feel themselves an integral part of the university. Their busi ness is to teach those who attend their classes, yet is it not also their business to help build up the school in which they teach so that more and better students will attend those classes. Many times, instructors are com pletely in the dark as to the atti tude of the administration on any controversial subject. This is not particularly sad, but it serves to show what a small part they are given in the really bigger part of the school ... its life outside the classroom. YE see in the last "Current HLs- tory that in Moslem countries there is no rrouchinir about the weather. If it be bad, then Im shailah" (Allah's will be done) To complain of natural phenomena would be offensive to Allah. We might do well to imitate this re straint when the thermomoter hits 105 here on the campus. A MAN in Kansas City is suing the relief administrator for re fusing him funds thus causing him to go about dirty and forcing him to make his own living. He evi dently can so no value to a gov ernment that forces a man to find bis own bread and butter. ..and there might be something in that, t that . .il A WOMAN at the university hospital in Omaha is slowly turning to stone. She has been ill for two years and is the mother of two children. Think of that when you want to fuss about exams! TVTTH this issue, the Nebraskan suspends publication for the year. The editor wishes to thank those who assisted in its publica tion during these hot summer months, when, without their help, the task would have been a pain rather than a pleasure. If the Ne braskan has provided students in the summer session with enter tainment and instructive reading, in any small measure 4t has not been printed in vain. Now that Huey Long has con signed Franklin Roosevelt "Slap dab to hell should not the presi dent feel grateful for Huey's gen erosity in making room for him in Huey's own domain ? The Louis iUe (Ky.) Courier-Jomal. STUDENT PULSE Brief, concise articles pertinent to student life and unlverHity mutters will be welcome In this column under the rules of sound newspaper practice which exclude all libelous material and personal attacks. letters mux! bear the name uf Uxr. writer which will not be published uikcks desired, loi ters should nut exceed two hundred and fifty words. Why No More Interest? To The Editor: Why is it that so many profes sors on this campus have so little real interest in the university it self? They spend a great deal of time and enthusiasm on their academic work and many even take a personal interest in the stu dents, yet they somehow fail to take any pride in the university they serve. The Nebraskan this summer has pointed out that registrants in the summer session do not seem to have the same enthusiasm for the school as do the winter students. This is easily understandable. In the winter time there is a unity among students which is not achieved during the summer. If instructors and professors never seem to have any feeling for the college in which they are teaching, and in which they may have taught for several years, how can their students be expected to ao so when they have no organized group to encourage such a feel ing? Of course, this does not mean that the professors themselves are at fault, but can they be given no part in the administrative pro gram of the university so mat they can feel their responsibility towards that school as well as to wards their own work? Does the administration take these men and women into its con fidence, ascertain their opinions on subjects of interest, or seek their advice and comment? If it does not would it not be a worth while idea in an attempt to oring about a greater unity in the faculty as well as in the students? R. V. Contemporary Com men t Employment Obstacles. According to Dr. Burton Morley, professor of economics at the Uni versity of Alabama, the greatest obstacle in the pathway of the col lege graduate as he seeks a job is nis own inertia. 'The better half of my graduat ing class those with the better scholastic and extra-curricular records usually have little trou ble, for most of them will be em ployed within a period of not more than six months after graduation." Dr. Morley claims. He goes on to say that those students who are in Ihe lower half of the scholastic rec ords and who show no interest in activities of the student body are the same ones who fail to find em ployment. Such a state of affairs is easily understandable. It takes energy and ambition to spend many hours a day doing something just for the sheer joy of doing it as one must do to become successful in any extra-curricular activity. And it is the same energy and ambition that appeals to the man who intends to hire someone to help him make a success of bis life work. The advantages of taking part in outside activities during a school term are many. Besides pre venting the students from becom ing stale and discouraged they give bim self confidence, practical ex periences, and tdd much to bis en joyment during his education. Daily I Hint. Rule by Terror, Terrorism seems to be the order of the day in Germany. Recently the dread people's court, which has its headquarters in Berlin, sentenced one Rudolf Clans, whom the prosecutor described as "an incorrigible communist and rogue, to die under the head man's axe. The headman's axe and recent suppression of the Jews and the Catholic church indicate a trend toward combating the opposition of Hitlerism with violence and despotic rulings rather than in telligent and fair presentations of both sides of the questions, letting tne people decide the issues rather than the issues being decided for the people by a relatively few. Despotism has led and always will lead to revolt Hitler some day will learn that violent, heavy handed suppression is no antidote for 'riticisro directed toward his policies. A tragic and scathing in dictment of Hitler and his regime was tue report made recently by the League of Nations that thou sands of Jewish families are wan dering over Europe, attempting to find a new home and readjust their lives the years they spent building their homes, wasted, There has to be an answer some day there will be the people whom Hitler now beats down with force may use those same tactics for their answer. Indiana Daily Student. DAMES TO ENTERTAIN HUSBANDS AND WIVES University Married People Invited to Picnic at Antelope. All married faculty members and married students are invited to attend the all-university married people's picnic, sponsored by the University of Nebraska Dames club, to be held Thursday evening, Aug. 1 at 5:30 near the bandstand in Antelope park. Tickets for the affair will be on sale by the bulletin board in teach ers college from 10 to 12 and from 1:30 to 3 Wednesday and from 10 to 12 Thursday morning. Tickets are 60 cents a couple and those attending are requested to bring their own dishes. Women9s Softball Team Also Fulfills Baseball Requisite University women play softball and baseball in the same series of games by merely adding one more player to the baseball team and making a softball team of it. This week there are two softball games scheduled, one with Rokeby and a return game with Davey. Earlier in the season, games have been played with the General Tires, Bethany, Davey, Zephyr and the Campus Cleaners. There are plans for two more weeks of soft ball, altho arrangements for next weeks' games are not yet final. Among those to whom a total lunar eclipse is no novelty are sev eral score former candidates for governor and several dozen for mer presidents of state teachers' colleges. The Daily Oklahoman. TO THE STUDENT BODY DR. REED GOES TO EXTENSION CONCLAVE Neic Method of Study by Correspondence Is Discussed. Dr. A. A. Reed, director of the university extension division, at tended a conference on supervised correspondence study in New York City, July 26 and 27. He left last Friday by plane. The correspondence study is a new phase of extension education work, and Nebraska is one of the pioneers in the field, according to authorities. Prof. Reed will stop in Wash ington, D. C, July 29 and 30 to confer with the national education department concerning emergency relief organization. He will visit the national secretary of the Na tional Extension association in Bloomington, 111., on his way home. Dr. Reed is president of the ex tension association. LANGUAGE STUDENTS HEAR FRENCH MUSIC Noted Composers' Works Featured in Recital Thursday. French music will feature a pro gram given for French students by Miss Lenore Teal, Thursday eve ning at 8 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall, according to Prof. J. R. Wads worth in the department of ro mance languages. The following selections will be given: Scherzo in C sharp minor, by Chopin; Debussy's "Second Arabesque;" "Delphic Dancers," The Little White Donky," and 'The Little White Donkey," and "The Giddy Girl," by Ibert; and Ravel's play of "Waters." Re freshments will be served. Get Your Beauty Work Done Before You Leave at Correll's Beauty Salon Let Mr. Losey Shape Your Hair. 228 No. 13th B2936 The business firms of the city of Lincoln who have actively supported this publica tion have appreciated your patronage during the summer session. In return they have made it possible to continue your summer paper at a time -when every dollar is spent with care. In return, it is no more than fair that the students PATRONIZE business firms who PATRONIZE the institutions of THIS UNI VERSITY. The NEBRASKAN brings to your attention the greatest values in history. Business men expend hundreds of dollars each summer with the NEBRASKAN in turn for which they should receive your fullest consideration. Patronize The Advertisers Who Patronize Us Tiie Summer nebraskan Novotny to Give Last Administration Talk Prof. E. L. Novtny, super, intendent of schools at Beat rice, will speak Wednesday morning on "P. T. A. and the Superintendent." This lecture is the last of a series spon sored by the department ot school administration. Miss Flora M. Thurston, visiting instructor in home economics from Oregon State college, spoke on "Family Re lationships in the Curricu lum" on July 24; and Mr. o. H. Bimson of the Lincoln school system gave a talk on "Tying up Philosophy with Classroom Instruction" on July 29. Miss Baker Plays With Iowa High School Band Mary Louise Baker, 'cello stu dent with Bette Zabriskie, was soloist with the all state high school orchestra of Iowa at the final concert recently, when she played the Saint-Saens concerto. Margaret Baker, student with Emanuel Wishnow, and Con stance Baker played with the adult orchestra in connection with the Iowa all state course. BIBLE EXPECTED AUG. 21. Dana Xj. Bible, head football mentor of the university, is ex pected to return to the campus Aug. 21. He has been attending the Texas Technical coaching school since July 21. K Summer Garments Heed Frequent Cleaning! To keep them Fresh and New Looking Send Linen, Palm Beach and Flannel Sport clotbea to the Save 10 Cash & Carry Modern Cleaners Soukup & Westover CALL F2377 FOR SERVICE mm rntmimm- ft