communist Professo r * IIIINRL 14Ju L11I l Kharkov, Russia, Sept. 20. (By jol IN CEVEANDi Mail) .-Students were paid by the ; h, NATIONAL. EDUCATION' ASSOCIA. Soviet government last year to attend 6Ka TIO1N DEPARTMENT TO MEET classes at the University.of Kharkov, age IN CLEVELAND but this season they are paying their m 'Er own way, and the enrollrient, is larg- the Cleveland, 0., Oct. 21.-School sup- er than at any time since the war. erintendents and leading educators The unusually large attendance for from all parts of the United States the beginning of the fall teri is at- S1 are expected here ]oebruary 26 to tributed to the fact that' many of the March 1, for the 1923 convention of old professors have been reinstated the departmiient of superintendents of to their university positions. Last the National Education association. year many of the regular' professorsti In addition to the gewere replaced by Colnmpnist profes- tio of dn the onvtion general sessionssors. As a result the attendance fell tion of the convention; 115 separate' daily f materially. and eventually there i be meetings of committees and subsid- .off, materlly tndnvetgalthee iary organiations will be held it is iwas a gvernent inestaton. Can announced. Piy Higher Than Aierage ; tere "The dpIt was finally, decided to try the The "Ts e tdepartmntd isthen most re scheme of paying, the students to at- ons r'esentative of and , one-f the more tend school the scale of conpensation" stud important educational groups in the being 6,000 Soviet rubles a month. The - country," A. J. Kennedy, convention average government employe was re- manager, states. "It is virtually the ceiving at the same time 4,000 rubles backbone of the educational system," a month. : he added. The majority of the university stu- The various subsidiary organiza- dents here are not doin hunist sym- tion's includes deans of women, pro- pathizers, They objected strenuously feseors of various subjects and semi- to being taught by Communist pro- educational organizations. fessors, even though paid for it. So when the students threatened to strike other plans were thought out, E HILEN it being evident that the Communist WOED MAEHALM N professors were not at all popular in 9A REF RED CLASSOlPrfsosberk Just before the university opened this fall, it was announced tliat near-- 10WA MN ASSERTS MOVE WILL ly all of the old time professors, many SECURE COUNTRY FROM 1 of them great favorites for dears in GENERAL STRIKE Kharkov, would take up their former duties again. This caused gee-ral re- cing, and there was a rush from arkov and other cities to fill up the asses. The students- willingly reed to pay 2,000,000 rubles a onth tuition fee in order to have ir old professors back. TUDENTS TO HOLD. PROHIBITION MEET tudent delegates from forty na- ns will be present at an interna- nal student confernce which is to held November 24-29 in Toronto, ada, under the auspices of the.In- collegiate Prohibition association..I purpose of the meeting is a dem- tration and discussion of the world dent movement against alcoholism. Leaders from the different countries unregulated selling in France, the new1 will tell of the situation in their own after-war movement against liquor in Countries. The proposed methods of Germany, and other related subjects solution of the alcoholic problem, pro- will be described. hibition in the United States, govern- As a means of furthering interest in ment control in Great Britain, 14 per t conference the association is offe cent. prohibition in Norway, the sys- inlg a prize essay contest which is op- tem of liquor permits in Sweden, pop- en to all students enrolled in colleges, ular boycott of liquor shops in India, universities, or other institutions of non-alcoholic cafes of Switzerland, higher learning in the United States We Call For and Deliver or Canada. Students who are inter- ested in either the conference or the SOMETHING NEW! THE DAYTON - A bank-wound variometer. Also a bank-wound vario-coupler. A real inno- vation in tuning apparatus. COME IN AND SEE TJ1M The andK RadioSupp ( 711 N. UNIVERSITY 2355-F1 CASH CARDS 204 N. MAIN TEN PER CENT DISCOUNT zi A g-Iance c els admirationf 0 Chicago,, Oct. 21.-Placing of rail- road employees in "a preferred class" in exchaige for the right to strike, was sugges.ted by W. H. Stackhouse of Davenpprt,, Iowa, speaking here Friday before the twenty-third annual1 convention of the National Association of Farm Equipment Manufacturers. ; "Such a measure should effectively protect the country from a repetition of the disastrous strike through which it recently passed, and usher in an era of comparative tranquility insofar as the nation's railroad transportation: industry is concerned," he declared. "Were congress to enact a law rec- ognizing all railroad employees as of especial value to the service and com- fort of the public, decjare them to be a preferred class, and fix their wages periodically on a basis slightly in ex- cess of those paid in other industries, coupled with the provision that any concerted vefusal to continue such employment would constitute a felony, such a measure should effectively pro- tect the country. "This would be especially true if such an act-contained the stipulation: that such employment would at all times be open to men and women of proper qualifications, regardless of their affiliation or non-affiliation with 'any' organization. "It would become imperative that congress likewise guarantee the car- riers a fixed rate of return on their property values, if the great transpor- tation- systems are to Ie saved from the destruction and extravagant ef- fects of government ownership and operation, with the people at large the greatest victims of so false apoli- "The recent coal strike terminated in .a complete victory for the miners without the operators losing anything, as they will recoup through advanced prjces to the consuming public. This strike demonstrated the fallacy of considering industrial and economic problems solved by the employers ac- quiescing-in all of their employers' de, mands and transmitting the addition- al cost to the consuming public.". Huron St. Taxi 25c- 445.--Adv. I , Soviet Goverument Maldki Seer Moscow, Sept. 2.-The Soviet gov- ernment is manufacturing beer, and using posters in Moscow to .adver- tise it. 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