JjclOl QommxunL and Qhilkhdm. " 1! THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THIRTY-SIXTH VI' Alt IMIOUUI. STAFF rrfitnr Geoi-ae Pipnl Maiiaginn Editors Dor Waqner. Ed Murray r.lSIM.SS STAFF News editors WilUid Wrtlcott Spprts Editor. Society Editor. Desk Editor . Night Editor . Bui'iitv. Helen Pascre, Jane Howard Kaplan, Mornt Llpp, Barbara Rotewnter. Erf Stfvi , . Virginia Anderson ON THIS ISSUE Murray . ' ' ' Burney Business Manager Bob Shellenheig Assistant Managers Boh Wadhams, Web Mills, Tran'( Johnson. Circulation Manager Stanley Michael siiisckiption katk $1.50 a year $2.50 mailed Slnqle copy, 5 cents $1.00 a semester $1.50 senirster mailed Under direction of the Student Publication Board, Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4A. Telephoi-.i-D.iy! 06891; Night: B6832. B3333 (Journal). Entered as second-class matter at the poatoffice in Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congress, March 3, 1879, and at special rate of postaoe provided for lit ee'lon 1103, act of October 3. 1917, authorized January 20, 1922. y?6 Member PJ7 Flssocialed GoUe&ate Press Distributor of Go!le6iafe Di6cst Published every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings of the academic year by students of the Uni. versity of Nebraska, under the supervision of the Board of Publications. aseasssNTso ran ntionl aovsstisin sv National Advertising Service, Inc Collrt Publisktrt rJfff(r 420 Madison Ave. Ni York. N. Y. Chicago Boston . San tranchco u0 anoilss portland sattui ShidsmL (puhsL One Man Who Deserts The 'Cull of the Now The crowd thnt thronged the CornhusUer ball room Sunday afternoon to hear the vesper services of the (ireat Cathedral choir was hushed, compelled to a reverent silence by the simple beauty of the music nnd idras. They listened ns Dr. Tatteison decried the mod ern tendency to worship false pods; they seemed impressed when he classed them as Idolaters of the "present moment, ' members of the "Cult of the Now." U was Dr. Hartley Alexander, formerly inns, who defined our" shallow populace with their lack of interr.-.t in thnifis spiritual as the short sighted "('ult of the Now." The audience seemed deeply moved. As they listened to the choir a magnificent symphony of voices their thoughts went wandering over men and things, over their own lives and the lives of those around them. And hardly any of them could have helped as they glanced about, but to come to this conclusion: One man in then- midst, had cast aside the false gods; h? no longer worshiped with the "Cult of the Now." He was the director of the choir, John Ros borough. a true disciple of the "Cult of the Eternal " For nearly two decades John Rosborough has worked with little thought of present reward. His ideal his greatest achievement in his mind lies in the future. Around a group of university stu dents whose singing has already won the sincere acclaim of the nation, he builds his hopes for the future. They receive no more present reward than he: they only share in the opportunity to contrib ute to something lasting and beautiful. We would deny that his ambition Is not par tially realized: no one can hear the Great Cathedral choir and say that it is not the work worthy of a man's life. But to John Rosborough, the choir is only a glimpse into the. coming: years an imme diate future when the entire student body, regard less of creed, sect, or denomination, can worship in a Great Cathedral, a' monument to the "Cult of the Eternal." The entire campus can share John Rosbor ough's dream by attending the vespers of the Great Cathedral choir. Support will come naturally. With the example that the choir offers, it is not hard to envision such a temple on the Nebraska campus, a tribute to those who live for the future. lis Costs Money To Flunk a Course. Oklahoma legislators are spending part of their time this week considering the abstract question "Just how much money does the state, under a democratic form of government, owe to its students in the form of educational services?" Specifically, debate centered around a bill in troduced by Representative Edgar L, McVicker, which would abolish the University of Oklahoma's famous "flunking fee," forcing the board of regents to reverse its recent decree. The regulation re quires that, all students failing to pass a course must pay $3 for each credit hour failed before they can re-enroll in the subject. McVicker has the backing of a good share of the legislature, the Oklahoma News, the Oklahoma Daily, student newspaper, and the signatures on petitions of 2,000 students, a little less than half the total enrollment. Opposing the bill are the board of Regents, the Daily Okluhoman, and prob nbly some students and faculty who have not pub licized their sentiments. Arguments for the bill center around this theme: Those college playboys who waste their time instead of studying don't miss the extra fines, but the extra fees hit working students whose heavy schedule of courses and employment result in flunked courses. Against the bill: 3. The legisla ture should not interfere with the activities of the board of regents: 2. The rule will actually increase studying; 3. In rebuttal, the fine would not affect the indigent, scholars as much as the indiscreet students. Reverberations of the fight at Oklahoma may provoke some needed discussion at Nebraska. Even students who flunk a course once in a while should be interested in improving the general level of scholarship. To pass a "flunking fee" as Oklahoma has done, with no accompanying changes in curriculum or effort to enlist student co-operation, has shown it self to be a miserable mistake. Purdue has a flunk ing fee, levied after a student has failed in a course for the second time, which has worked with a meas ure of success. One of these days some bright soul will find a painless way to penalize the indolent and reward the industrious. The editor of the Purdue Expo nent has suggested publishing a list of the recip ients of failing grades. The competitive system used by the Nebraska law college deserves observation. Some other Ne braska colleges might advantageously require their students to stay out of the delinquent 20 percent of their class, not merely aim at beating a flat 60. At Leasl You're Frank Alton! It. To the -dltor: To a great many students the "Rag" means very little. Most of the farm boys, ninny who have NYA employment, and many who ent on 3D cents a day, find noth ing of Interest In the Pally Ne braskan. They have no Interest because there simply Is nothing to Interest thein. The "Rag" Isn't much good, as far as they are concerned, and they don't pay much attention to the "Rag." Of course, most of these farm boys belong to the Barbi, but there's very little about Barbs In the Nebraskan. Why don't you turn some of your young aspiring reporters loose on a column concerning the Barbs? They don't get paddled on pol ished floors, nor do they wear snay brim fuzzer and Balmac cars, but they're doing Interest ing work all over the campus. The column "Seen on the Cam pus" is punk. Since when has the Tasty Tastry shop been a part of the campus? The column itself is merely about "affiliated" men and women, and lacks pep and punch. The Daily Nebraskan is stale, flat, dry, wearying; it lacks en ergy, enthusiasm, and democracy; and it doesn't nearly use all its possibilities. This is just a note. You'll hear more from me later now that the staff has awakened. Unsigned. QomwvwdL 'Medicine for Disordered IincU." Mil. Vote: The (nllnivlnc article Is i-mv,.,-rj nf fxrerpts nf a letter from .Stephen II. Hush. Iiend nf the Rimanee i-anKtiase department nt the nlveralty ,if Iuhh. tn llr. Kur. head nt the Inenl detuirtnienr. Hp i?rrent It with the rnni ment nf Or. Kurt, who term the letter 'the (-nnrhilnn nf a mature mind that has reflerted oer (irnhlrms fnr u aond many jears.") "To nie our job is one of spread ing the special culture that can come by the study of French. Our subject properly studied stimu lates ami widens the mind as few subjwts do. To mc without a his torical sr-r.se there can be no edu cation worth while. The present elone is practically important, hut for the mind it is as nothing in one sense. An intense preoccu pation with the present alone de stroys ail perspective. I often proclaim that if a man were mag ically endo'ved with a complete detailed factual understanding of everything in the world of today and at the same stroke cut off from knowing anything of the past, the world and man himself would instantly become a com plete confusion. Our subject is in itself historical. The method of comparison is the one fruitful method for comprehension of our selves, others and the world we live in. To go outside of America and understand how a nation with the maturity, the intellectual quality and the artistic genius of expression of the French can view humanity, may be and often is the most enlightening experience that a youngster can get in col lege. "Scientific thought is necessary and without some notion of mod ern science one cannot undar stand. But science is only a means to ends. These means are terri fying to anybody who thinks. The sudden expansion of communica tion and the grinding juxtaposi tion of nations and individuals so far have only brought hatreds. Our command over nature may well be the destruction of our gen erations and many following ones. The tempo has been interrupted and speeded up. The consequences are in fact terrifying. Science is in itself neutral. It is the attitude and the mind but also the emo tions which will make what sci ence gives us fatal or beneficent gifts. It is not science in itself. A murderer may use machine guns and airplanes. A Hitler may gather up a great nation and use it to destroy humanity. "But the broad view of the march of humanity and a pro found understanding of what society is and has been, some notion of the endless experi ments, tendencies, reactions, and united efforts of humanity, such a view coming from an under standing of other civilizations and literatures, are the best medicine I know for a sick and disordered mind, bewlldared by the chaos of the world." the state once turned it down and therefore the resolution should not be presented again." One car. easily read between the lines of this flimsy excuse, hur riedly brought forward by some congressman who feared the suc cess of the measure. Before long, the Kansas legis lature will have to deal with the problem. Perhaps a sufficient number of far sighted citizens can band together to put the measure thru, but the opposition will be stiff. We I egret Any MWonslrnanfe. To the Editor: Alt ho I am nursing no resent ments because of the misconstru ancc of the passing thought, sub mitted to this paper, nevertheless, I should like to clarify my posi tion. Unfortunately, perhaps, the part of my contribution which stated in no uncertain terms my apprecia tion and love of purely cultural learning had been expurgated. The point I raised was to the effect that today practical learning must take precedence to cultural learn ing. Obviously, the students today spend their time more judicious ly by preparing systematically for a definite career than by speculating as to the nature of God or studying the trend of 17th century literature, unless of course, one contemplates en tering the field of literature, theology, or philosophy. With success depending largely upon demonstrable excellence in some particular field, how many students can afford, as did Aris totle, to stroll about in a zoologi cal garden and venture specula tive abstractions ? Paul Bstandig. WADSWORTH SEEKS REVISED REQUISITES Desires Class Admittance Checks in Romance Department. Believing that nn economy of time and money will result from a revamping of class admittance re quirements in foreign language courses, Pr. James R. Wndsworth of the department of Romance languages at the university haa filed his objections in an article appearing in tho French Review. He believes that the majority of students who fall in second year language classes might have suc ceeded had they acquired a better foundation in the beginning work. Says Dr. Wadsworth: "These pleas for professorial leniency recur as each semester brings its total of casualties. Un fortunately' the professor can do nothing about It at the end of the semester and the impless student departs into outer darkness nurs ing a broken heart, a shattered fraternity bond, a deflated ego, an inferiority complex, and a more or less permanent dislike for ad vanced courses in general, the pro fessor in particular and a cordial hatred for the whole institution." The university Romance lan guage department recently experi mented with specialized and gen eral tests to inquire tnto the cause of these failures. Dr. Wadsworth concludes that the present system which allows a student to continue into second year French because somewhere, sometime, he once made a passing mark in his first year work is undoubtedly ineffi cient. He reasons that the students who pass poorly would probably have better employed their minds elsewhere. Probably most import ant was the fruitless expenditure of vital energy and the damage done to teacher and student morale by this endeavor to accomplish the impossible. He pleads for a place ment test which will determine at the beginning of a semester a stu dent's probable success in ad vanced courses. Nebraska Teacher To Send Delegates To Math Convention Nebraska section of thn Nation al Council of Teachers of Mat he matics will send at least one and possibly four delegates to the council's annual convention, to be held in Chicago Feb. 10 and 20. Trof. A. H. Congdon of teachers college, state representative of the council and a regular delegate, will be unable to be present this year, as he is planning to attend the superintendents' section of tho Na tional Education association at New Orleans Feb. 20 to 28. REVISED CHARTER CASTS NEW LIGHT ON COUN CIL'S CORNCOB INVESTI GATION (Continued from rage 1.) beyond its province as a pep group, or whether it should serve a dual purpose, accepting as a part of its routine the commercial activities often relegated to such an organization, the matter was dropped, and the remainder of meeting spent in heartrtg and com menting on the proposed charter, Operating under the new char ter, each fraternity should have the privilege of appointing three men, one of whom will be elected to membership by the active mem bers of the society. Tho barb council would be extended the same privilege being permitted to appoint three candidates for each of their six pledgcships to be filled. It is the intention of the new doc ument that these candidates should be entertained at a smoker imme diately after Ivy Day, when they would be voted on by the chap ter. "It is hoped," Corn Cob Pres ident Web Mills stated, "that such a scheme would result in a strengthening of the chapter thru the acceptance of more interested active members.'1 The new document, stipulates that the executive chair shall be filled by an Innocent sanctioned by the society. The remainder of the officers secretary, treasurer, vice president, and sergeant-alarms shall be filled, according to the proposed charter, by mem bers of all political factions, al ternating in offices from year to year. Such a plan is designed to rid the organization of the polit ical problem w hich has become so complex in the last few elections. In their attempt to promote (BuUsdin Tatteli. Tassels will meet tonight at 7 p. m. in social sciences, room 105, Orcheiis. Orchesls will resume lta regular meetings Wednesday evening. Miss Moore requests that all members be present. Work will begin on the spring dance recital. Kotmet Klub. Kosmet Klub members will meet in the Klub rooms In Uni versity hall at 5 p. m. today. - 9 At the Campus Studio. Tlcture of the W. A. A. execu tive council will be taken at 4:45. Pictures of the W. A. A. Intra mural board and of the W. A. A. sports board will be taken at 8 o'clock. greater interest among members of the society the committee mem bers have provided that any mem ber, charged with four absences from anv function of the society shall be 'liable to expulsion. Such cases are placed under the juris diction of a committee on com mittees acting under the presi dent. After hearing the new document members of the judiciary commit tee proposed minor changes, and then tabled the discussion until a future meeting, when they will make their final decision on the new constitution. The committee on organizations, representing tho Corn Cobs was composed of: Dave Bernstein, Web Mills, Don Boehm, Karl Headlund, Bob Martz, nnd Bob Wadhams. The student council judiciary com mittee includes: Student council president, Arnold Levin, Jean Walt, chairman, Marylu Petersen, Flea nor Clizbe, and William Marsh. Prof. Carl Lantz, faculty sponsor of the council, also sat as a member of the committee. PROF. IRION FLAYS The State Have Failed Education Demands Small Percent of Wealth Thruout Year. Daily Kansan. Mary Rutter, Editor. An argument most frequently used against the federal govern ment's assumption of the power to administer relief and social se curity, is that "the states can do it better." On one important issue, the states have been given a chance to show how much better they can do it. and they have failed to meet that challenge. Child labor is an ever growing menace to the future of America, yet comparatively few states have passed laws regulating it, and many of these are so hedged about by restrictions as to be almost useless. Further, a sufficient num ber have as yet failed to ratify the child labor amendment to the constitution which has been before them since 1924 when congress passed it The Missouri legislature is now reviewing the amendment, which they have refused to ratify in three previous years. One news paper reports that "In past ses sions opposition has been raised to the ratification on the ground that "The percent of Nebraska's ! (wealth devoted to education forj any one year since 1930 has been i less than one-half of one percent," i says Dr. W. H. Morton, chairman of the department of secondary education at the University of Ne braska. "The direct property tax I cannot be fair unless their is I equality in the assessments. For example, in 1935 Lancaster coun- j ty reported 6.211 electric refrig erators while Douglas county with more than twice as many people reported only 6,456. One year, Ce dar county assessed 1,277 electric washers while Wayne county as sessed 99 washers. And again Lin coln was assessed in one year for $209,000 worth of jewelry whereas all the citizens of Omaha reported jewelry to the amount of $136,000. "In Nebraska, a manager of a corporation received a salary of $20,000 per year. He lived in an apartment and paid only $19 prop erty tax for the year. Dr. Morton says that a recent study showed that one rural school had an assessed valuation of only $23,855 while a similar rural school in another county had only $796. 125. The first district levied 16 mills to try to maintain a one room rural school, but could raise only $445. The other district levied only one mill but it had $796 with which to maintain its school" In j other words, says Dr. Morton, Ne i braska needs more equalized cd 1 ucational opportunity Turn About Is Fair X&, To the Editor': Last semester the University of Nebraska students were treated to the ice cream and cake of fascism as propounded by Dr. Schoene mann. The quintessence of education thru the ages, expressed by the great teachers of all time and still at least verbally adhered to by university officials today, is the search for truth. Unbiased, un bigoted, with open mind, clear conscience, and pure soul the stu dent is supposed to be guided in the realm of learning truths by instructors equally as guileless. Dr. Schocnemann presented one phase of the search for truth the fascist side. Bui. every ques tion, especially in the field of gov ernment and economic theory, has two rides. Unfortunately, propa ganda for but the one has been allowed on the campus. If this university professes to be true to the educational ideal of learning all that is possible about any controversial subject, it would not confine its activi ties in the opposite field radi calism, communism, leftist, so cialism, call it what you will to a few supposedly educatory courses, but would invite with open arms and a cheery smile an exchange professor from the other side of the fence, notably Russia. Dr. Schoenemann was well at tended at the university, and in terpreted the fascist creed at the numerous opportunities given him by agencies acting in private, or semi-public capacity. He made his point, it is only logical that now an interpreter of communism makes his appearance in a similar role. I do not expect this suggestion to be acted upon favorably by the administration of this university. They perhaps are not wholly to blame. Public opinion guides their policies to a miserably unfortu nate extent But no member of the university administration or professorial force can -ieny the truth of my statements and still claim honest adherence to instruc torial tenets. Ivan Krolovet Vesper Choir Tryouts Wednesday at 5 1. M. Additional members for the vesper choir may try out at Ellen Smith hall at 5 o'clock on Wednesday, Feb. 10. Heitkotteri ""ft Market QUALITY MEATS AT LOW PRICES Makers of Fine Sausage and Barbecued Meats 8-3348 M0 So. 11th Just Like New Hint's what lln-y all say when they have their jtar nienls Snnitone cleaned at the old reliable Modern Gleaners Soukup A Westover Call F2377 Service 1 Second Semester Subscription Rate Reduced to 75 for 75 Issues of Campus News Don't be an Introvert Read the Nebraskan offices in University Hall yf SI Me- i