THE DAILY NEBRASKA! The Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OP NEBRASKA Under direction of the Student Publication Board TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR Published Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday j saetrninsa during- the academie year. Editorial Office UnWersity Hall 4. , Bns'ness Office U Hall. Room No. 4. Office Houre Editorial Staff, 8:00 to :00 except Friday and Sunday. Bueineea Staff: afternoona except Friday and Sunday. Telephone! Editorial and Business i B6881, No. 142. Night B88 fcntered aa eecond-elase natter at the pottoffiea in Lincoln. Nebraska, under act of Consress, March 8. 1879. and at special rate of poatase provided for in eeetion 1108, act of October , KIT, authorized January 20. H22. It a year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE Single Copy I centa 81.26 a aemeeter WILLIAM CEJNAR La Vance Arthur Sweet Horace W. Gomon Rath Palmer EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Managing Editor NEWS EDITORS Iaabel O'Hallaran Gerald Griffin James Roue Dwlght McCormack CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Evert Hunt "Asst. Managing Editor . Asst. Managing .uiior Oscar Norllng Dwlght McCormack Robert Lasch survive through the junior and senior years. We don't mean to imply that the instruction in the upper classes is neglected, but only that instruction there is handicapped and can not be improved as much as might be desired. Faced with the immediate necessity of providing many instructors for hordes of incoming freshmen, we have found it impossible often to reward ade quately or furnish adequate laboratory and research facilities for the men of professional rank. Our one possible solution of limiting the number rt iintl1aasrriAn i'u nuif a mmstacMri ! 4V faun r4 vr HiiuviviHuuiiivii AO VWibV 411 IJUOiIlll ill J.UVC V4. public disapproval. An immediate increase in appro- We are rWpivpH an to the true na ture nf tViia fnnfir.utinn of learning. After all, our subtle state legislature has succeeded in making tne Unl- J T , 1 il 1 L wwrmiA 4m --- iversiLy oi iNeorasRU inn ioow wuiu m priations is quite unlikely. v7e must therefore put up, Teachers Colleges. The subtle state wim cunaiwons as iney are ior some lime at least, not forgetting, though, that though they may not be the best, they are far from being the worst. The Campus Pulse Letters from readers are cordially welcomed In this department, add wBI b printed in all caaea subject only to the common newspaper practice et keeping out all libelous matter, and attacks against Individuals and reUgiona. Dear Editor: Here, the truth! We borrowed "The Hard Boiled Virgin" from our lab assistant, and after a careful perusal (of the H. B. V.) we are ready to state irrevocably that the title is poorly chosen for two reasons the first part of the book, and the last part because in the first part, she isn't Hard Boiled We-Me. Florence 8wlhart ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Mary Louisa Freeman Gerald Griffin T. SIMPSON MORTON Richard F. Vetta Milton McGrew William Kaarna BUSINESS MANAGER Asst. Business Manager Circulation Manager Circulation Manager TUESDAY, APRIL 10. 1927. 60,000 OUT OF 200,000 That 70,000 out of the 200,000 or more fresh men who entered college last fall will not return as sophomores next year, and that only 60,000 out of the entire 200,000 will ever graduate, is the predic tion made in a recent article dealing with University enrollment. The article further states that 80 percent of the energies of the faculty and administration are absorbed by the lowest 15 or 20 percent of the stu dents. We have here in concise form two of the biggest reasons why American universities are having a hard time of things, especially in their efforts to attract and keep high-class men on their faculties. If the finished product and aim of colleges and universities, at least in so far as the student end is concerned, leaving out of consideration research work, is the college graduate, there appears at once a tremendous waste in the lower classes when 200,000 freshmen dwindle down to 60,000 graduates by the end of the four years. The .freshman and sophomore classes of prac tically all colleges and universities from the largest to the smallest are glutted and choked. Instead of rinrrr - top heavy oiauiauon, we have a bottom heavy organization which drags down the rest of the structure the flowering junior, senior, ano? graduate years. Drags it down because too large a part of the faculty must of necessity be occupied with instruction of students in the elementary courses. This means either that good professors must spend much of their valuable time teaching elementary courses when they should be leading older students in advanced work, or th"t the faculty is glutted with a lower level of instructors who understand well the mere mechanics of the subjects they are teaching and are able by simple rote method to impart their grain of know ledge from year to year, but who are not qualified enough to attain the higher professorial ranks. It also means that really capable young instructirs are doomed to several years of submerged teaching be fore they -can hope to break through the ranks of fellow instructors into professorial chairs commen surate with their abilities. Above all this disproportion of underclassmen means that colleges and universities must spend too large a share of their expendable funds on half-baked education of those who drop out, at the expense of a more complete education of those who get the full benefit of the full four years and are best able to return bck to the university and the public the bene fits of their education. The problem of the colleges and ujniversities, then, is in some way to select out of the 200,000 eager freshmen the 60,000 who will be able to survive most creditably the full four years. The saving in cost of instruction of all those that drop out, applied to the education of all those who remain would solve all money problems for Borne time, and make it pos sible to attract and keep first-class men in the face of competition with industry and commerce. In addi tion there would be eliminated nearly all of the present low 15 or 20 percent of the students who sap most of the energy of the faculty and administration. In Other Columns STUDENTS AIDED BY BULL SESSIONS Syracuse Professor Says Popular Discussions Promote Clear and Logical Thinking; The time spent by university men and women in the popular "bull sessionss" is not wasted, according to Dr. Wilson, head of the philosophy department at the Uni versity oi byracuse, but it is valuable since it makes students tninK more logically and dearly. "We are here to think and to learn how to think. If the fraternity discussion group, or 'bull session,' makes us think more clearlv and more losrieallv. it hna nrnven its worth, whether or not the discussion has reached any conclusion," Dr. Wilson stated. A survey made at the University of Syracuse shows that fraternity women spend an average of three hours a aay in Dull sessions , while fraternity men spend only a little over an hour a dav. The favorite time for sessions seemed to be around luncheon or dinner time, or from 12 to 1 o'clock at night. Favorite discussion topics for the men were "Women in General," "Prohibition." and "Choicn nf while those for women ranged from "The Unreliability ana inconstancy of Men," to "Modernism," and "Value oi college rraining." The Minnesota Daily legislature has made of the Univers itv of NpVimsVn n neminarv. a finish ing school, for professors. With such a purpose in mind, the suDtie state lorialofiiTA oa(ot1ir Innlrfl fnrWArd to tho time when the best professors in all Universities will have come from dear Nebraska. It is a noble, though subtle project. However, the system used is rotten with corruption. What right has the subtle state legislature to PAY the professors for enrolling in this institution? And by what right does it compel us, the stu dents, laboratory material for the professors, to pay tuition? Indeed, we should receive salaries for serving as subjects for the professors and the professors should pay tuition for the privilege of working with us. Then would Nebraska become a truly- scholarly university a shrine of cul ture. - Anything for reform! LON. Notices Now the above sounds mighty simple in writing, but in practice it is a tremendous task. Many of the old eastern colleges which for years have been swampod with applications from more stu dents than they can possibly take care of, have for many years selected their students on the basis of merit and qualification with the direct 'intention of limiting the student body to those who would benefit most. The systems vary from recommendations of graduates to the most advanced intelligence tests. Just how successful these various selective measures are is hard to say, but several university executives have only recently spoken in favor of still more quali tative selection of students. At private colleges and universities such as the above-mentioned old eastern schools, such a selection of new students can be relatively easily accomplished. The governing bodies in most cases have absolute power over such matters and matriculation is a priv ilege rather than a right. But at state universities which probably have the largest disproportion of underclassmen, it is a differ ent matter to attempt to limit enrollment to those students whom the faculty would select as most capable. Practically everybody is a taxpayer in some form or other, and, therefore, practically everybody pro claims in consequence the right to send his son or daughter to the state university. Practically every attempt of stats universities to limit enrollment meets this opposition of people who demand that their children be admitted. In fact there are many people who even question the right cf the university to dismiss students who fail after matriculation to meet the standards expected.' St.ite universities, then, are under a peculiar handicap. They receive more than their share of the thousands of students who come for only a year or two. They must accept practically all these students without discrimination. And they must, in many cases, accomplish all this with the limii,d funds appropria ted by legislatures which often do not appreciate the problems involved. , . The relation of this discussion to' the present agi; l n about the professors who are leaving Nebraska le evLVnt Nebraska like every other state uni- 1 i a large number of freshmen and sopho tr -whom elementary fntrviction must be pro- ' ! i'5Wuciion, in the absence of increased fiura Ui3 fcU'-a nuft be givn at the cJ !" S'rv.-tion of those students who Back to the "Clinffinr Vino" Is the boyish girl losing her popularity to the clinging vine type, and are majors in physical educa tion unattractive and masculine? These contentions have been made recently in many colleges and univer sities throughout the United States. For several years physical education for women has been regarded as a forward step in woman's ad vancement, bportsmanship and participation in sports were stressed as a regular part of the college girl's life, and physical education for women was beginning to be thought of in the same light as that for men. But now there is a sudden reaction to women's physical education. Men are said again to prefer the girl who "clings." Several Washington men have de clared that they always did prefer the "clinging" girl. Perhaps this is because some men like to believe them selves king of their little world and the "elincino vina" girl is more conducive to this belief. Other men have said that the girl who majors in physical education is unattractive becausp cho i mno. culine. It is true that a small number of sportswomen nave adopted boyish haircuts, high collars, heavy bro gans and mannish suits. But the majority of them dress in the current mode of short skirts, kick-pleats, and slim silhouettes as do the other types of girls. Almost every woman likes to be thoueht femininp her heart is essentially feminine. University of Washington Daily. Second-Year Pledging Opinion of university students on Senator Ban ning's bill requiring all students to wait one year be fore joining a fraternity or sorority seems to be about evenly divided. If anything, there is more opposition than support. Perhaps the students object to having the plan forced upon them by the legislature, but its merits should be none the less apparent. With the present system "rush week" is a mad scramble, and when the smoke has cleared away one can view the wrecks. All of t.hpaa organizations arc much alike, hut in the eyes of the freshmen there is a considerable difference. Hence many feel they have made mistakes and experience considerable regret. The stock argument against the bill is that, if a fraternity is of any value, it should be allowed to get in its work on the freshmen. The value of a frater nity is highly problematical, but that is of no great concern here. However, fraternity men are inclined to clique together and leave the non-fraternity man outside. Perhaps in this first year an unorganized group of freshmen might learn a little of the democracy that sometimes comes later, if at all. Passage of the bill would occasion some trouble for the fraternities for a year, probably, but they would no doubt curvive. With proper safeguards to prevent too much "rushing" and endanger the scholarship of fraternity man and freshman alike, the new law should be a blessing, instead of the feared innovation it now seems to be held. Lincoln Star. No "Drunks" Wanted One of the outstanding features of "Ole Miss," new college comic magazine which makes its first ap pearance this month and which is edited exclusively by women at Mississippi State College for women, will be tne absence of the customary "drunk" story. Beer episodes are not welcomed by the editors. Editors of colleee monthlies throuo-honr. thm nn try immediately will direct gibes at the young ladies i or excluding the "wet" material and will cry like so many grimalkins. In the meantime the fair editors will continue with their faces in the other direction, put out their magazine, and, without much doubt, sell it. There is need right now for nuhlirnti genieally affecting readers in courses that lead away irom, ratner than toward, liquor. To Judge from our montldy college magazines, America, and particularly young America, is steeped in inebriation, whereas, as a matter of fact, conditions are not half so bad as they are made out to be. Continual harping on the subject only serves to bring about more injurious effects. Getting 'drunk, either the reveling in it or the avoiding of it, is not a real problem in the lives of very many of us and it has no constructive element to offer for consideration Why flaunt the subjeet before us, then, in tiresome way? The young women of Mississippi are to be coir merded for their courage in attempting a publication that is free from all reference to the hackneyed sub ject of "fire-water." The risible qualities of the maga zine probably will not suffer any because of the lack of "light wines and beers." University of Washington Bally. TUESDAY, APRIL 19 Home Economics Club Hnm Fennnmir, f'lub meeting Tuesdai Anril 19 Ell.n Smith Hall at 7 P. M Program. Th.ta S rnu fhl Important mwtlnit Theta Sigma Phi in SS 21H at fi o'clock Tuesday. April 19. X....1. Tassels meeting Tuesday night April 10 at Ellen Smith Hall. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20 C -Ul 1 .-J RUila Scabbard and Blade meeting Wednesday in JMebraska Hall zuo at 7:10. Girl's Commercial Club Girl's Commercial Club meeting Wednes dny at S o'clock at Ellen Smith Hall. Scabbard and Blade Scabbard and Wade meeting- in Nebraska Hall 205 at 7:15. THURSDAY, APRIL 21 Viking Viking meeting and initiation at the Delta Tau Delta house Thursday at 7 :16. Nebraska Has Great Year Of Sport In 1899 (Continued from Page One.) yard dashes. In' 1899 Nebraska howed H: skill on tho cinder path and won from Kansas University, and Iowa that vear. Although track at Nebraska did not have a large fol lowing of fans, the interest in the spring sport was increasing every year. The interest in spring usually found Husker fans watching a base ball game rather than a track meet. Basketball Team Was Sensation The basketball team of 1899 was the sensational court team of the west and defeated every quintet it met on the floor that season. It was the champion team of the west and middle-west. The most important game of the season was with the Kansas University five. Dr. Nais- muth, the father of basketball, brought hi Kansas Jayhawker caee team to Lincoln for the important clash of the season with the Husker five. The Kansas team was complete ly outclassed and the Cornhusker quintet had rolled up 48 points to the 8 for the Kansas five at the end of the game, Kansas was the onlv conference team appearing on the schedule that season. The champion basketball team at Nebraska back in '99 was not outfit ted in regular basketball uniforms but each man had his own suit and there were as many varieties of bas ket ball suits as there were mea on the team. One player wore a foot ball jersey with red trunks while an other would wear an ordinary work ing shirt and white trunks. Tennis Association Formed Another association was formed at Nebraska in the '90s and this was the Nebraska tennis association. The tennis association was founded in the Husker school with C. D. Chandler as the first president. Nebraska had but two tennis courts that year and they were located at the west steps of U-Hall. Tennis had a large fol lowing from the start and continued growing. At the present time it holds the interest of a large number of stu dents during the spring and summer months. Ever since the great collegiate gams of football was played at Ne braska, the pigskin pastime had al ways met with treat success ud un til the season cf 1899. This was the big off year for Nebraska, after the years of success on the gridiron. Cornhusker followers were somewhat disappointed but not discouraged after the poor showing of '99. The disastrous year of 1899 was a boon to the coming years for Husker grid men. For m the next year the Ne braska football team came back to prove to Cornhusker fans that their hopes were realized and that Nebras. ka still reigned supreme in the foot ball world. The defeats of '99 srave rise to a new and greater Nebraska lootball team. Disastrous Football Year Seven teams were met on the field in that disastrous year of 1899. Out of the seven games the Huskers onlv won two, tied one and lost four. Lin coin high and Drake Unlveinily were the only teams to fall before the Nebraska team, while Kansas Uni versity, South Dakota, Kansas City Medics, and Ames defeated the Corn husker eleven. But With an unsuccessful season on the gridiron, the baseball team that spring tried to even matters and when the season was over the Ne braska baseball nine was proclaimed the strongest that had represented the Husker school up to that time. The Husker nine took a long road trip to the east where they estab lished their name or all the big east ern college diamonds and returned to Nebraska with four wins neatly tucked away. . Thus closes the eighteenth cen tury in Nebraska sports and with the opening of the twentieth century, which we will take up in the next issue, Nebraska is well on the road to the pinacle of success in the field of sportdom. ' (To be Continued.) Tucker-Shean 1123 "O" ST GIFTS FOR THE GRADUATE Silver Plate Jewelry Cut Glass Watches Clocks Leather Goods Fountain Pen Sets Fine Stationery Plan Your Gifts Now Tucker-Shean jewelers Stationers 1123 "O" St. FEW FILED FOR SPRING ELECTION (Continued from Page One.) sophomores the highest man and the highest woman offices in this semes ter s freshman class, will make up the official Student Council next year. There will be three persons named for the Student Publication Board for next year by this election, one junior, one sophomore, and one sen ior member. Rule are -Listed There are certain rules concerning the eligibility if the candidates which the Student Council has asked pros pective candidates to watch most carefully. They have also asked that all candidates check their standing in the registrar's -office before filing. The rules are: 1. Any student with less than 21 semester hours shall be a freshman. This is to include all students with such university credit rating whether a four-vear rmi-o than a four-year course! " eM 2. Any student with from 2 . , hours shall be a sophomore t0 62 3. Any student with from 60 to sn semester hours will be consider! junior, and is eligible for" ship on the council. c"ioeiv 4. Any student with 89 semester hours or more so long as he 1 candidate for graduation shall fcl senior. 09 6. Candidates shall be members of their specific school or colleM class. 6 811(1 6. Candidates shall have made at 6. Candidates shall have made t least twelve hours the preceding sm ester and have a scholastic avera," of at least 75 per cent for all sef esters in school. 7. A candidate can have no stand, ing delinquencies. These rules will be watched cai. fully by the Student Council in order to make the election as fair a. sible. 8 pos" Members of the election committer are: Richard Vette, Sylvia Lewis Bv ron Weeth, and Esther Zinnecker -rASMIalf 7W' shall I do with that Call 33367 CLEANERS aAND DYERS YOU SHOULD HAVE THESE NEW RECORDS Just Released At Sundown Tenor Solo Somebody Else Fox Trot Coronado Nights Walts I Always Knew Fox Trot It All Depends on Yon Tenor Solo Muddy Water Fox Trt Victor Brunswick Columbia Schmoller & Muel ler Piano Co. 1220 O Street Lincoln, Nebraska outstanding Tourist THIRD CABIN SCrVlCC to ieiy muJirni. a(?Q5(upJ In, our fleets you have the choice of ROUND TRIP $1?0 (up) 1. The only ships in the world devoted exclusively to this type oi travel no other pasaengera carried. Minnakohdo, Minnesota, Winiredtan, Devoni an. You have the freedom of all decks, public rooms, etc The world' largest ship. 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